University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA)

 - Class of 1933

Page 29 of 304

 

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 29 of 304
Page 29 of 304



University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

Wf w I -.I ' innrf; ' A THIS WAS THE FIRST and just about the last snow the campus saw this year, although we did have some on the first of April. And even if we didn ' t have snow, the ground and student noses and feet were frozen for weeks at a time. The library — the bouncer — the half-owake rush to get a re- serve book back before 8:10 a.m. — the tiny oronge glow of cigar- ettes smoked In the dark of the pillars and steps — those heavy, heavy doors — and the library will not soon be forgotten. Law peeks in at the left, and Physics at the right. ▲ DENNY STEPS are hollowed out by generation after generation of sun-bathing. 10 o ' clock Meany his- tory students. Millicent Doncaster pauses on a step in the right-hand corner. How do you like our new low building. Economy, my deah, and simplicity itself. Slim Lynch of the P. -I. gets his camera ' s eye busy looking for pretty coeds. Slim and Smitty , of The Times, are almost Washington traditions now. A DID YOU SAY just a bunch of Rot Corps men. Ah, such a sad mistake. Perhaps you didn ' t know that high and mighty Daily Editor Harold Mansfield was, two years ago, a bugler in the R. O. T. C, but there he is, at the extreme left in the front row. Not only does Mr. Mansfield play the bugle, but also the saxophone, and several times during his administration as editor he considered taking lessons on the harp. But this drum and bugle corps is even more famous, for on the extreme left, front row, is Gene Nicolai, and somewhere in the melee is Art Owley. A DENNY STEPS AGAIN, but a different group of collegians. Chimes tower peers over the trees at the Greek district. This year George Bailey had some new fa- vorites, but The Bells of Saint Mary ' s and Maytlme are still far in the lead. I Wake Up Smil- ing is one of his best, for he can hit every note, and this year he startled some of us with The Old Man of the Mountain. A LOU MORRIS, A. D. Pi ' s grand old lady of the campus. But where has Lou been this year? Betty Hartnett and Flo Davis, Daily women who are good society writ- ers, sun themselves In the back- ground. Looking up Memorial Way in the snow, toward Memorial Gateway and the Fiji and S. A. E. houses. Tiny astronomy stands on the right, the baby of the campus in size, but next to the oldest In years. In the spring, campus moon gazers stop in on Thursday eves to view the canyons of the moon through the telescope, and then go out to a campus bench and hove a really good look. liiiBRviiuiiBiiii M r Hill i?i? '

Page 28 text:

i if AWASHINGTON ' S NEWEST building, Condon hall, is a mag- nificent structuie and the piide of Dean Harold Shepheid of the law school. Because of its new build- ing, Washington ' s law school is now one of the six best in the West. ▲ HERE IS THE OFFICE of the Washington Law Review, with John Ritchie tiying to pretend he ' s getting a scoop over the telephone. The two serious men who ore prob- ably looking at a book upside down ore Leslie J. Ayer and Frank Meachem. The Review is published three times annually. A HERE ARE TWO CORNERS of the little den at the end of the low library, o special reading room. The view in the center of the low building is token fiom the faculty entrance end. This entrance may never be used by any but faculty members. And another thing, no one may enter the faculty offices except at special times during the day and by special appointment. ATHIS IS THE MOOT COURT Room, where law students hold their mock trials. If you ore a pol- itician, you know already that the picture on the right is that of the large auditorium, where Stevens Debate Club held its 1933 polit- ical forums, and where Mr. Brick Lawrence launches his ten-minute orations beginning Now I don f want to take up time but I want to ask the candidote one simple question about this A. S. U. W. — and so on for into the night. ATHE LAW LIBRARY, with its individual reading lamps, paneled walls, and handsome fixtures, and on the left the lowyei-s ' lounge, where law students may gather to smoke and talk. The only such room on the campus provided for a select set of students — no won- der the low students hod to buy larger hots. In addition, there is a typing room for lawyeis, on inno- vation which brought coids of thanks from the Daily Shock and its well worn typewriters, and to top off the season, the lawyers locked one of the doors to the building, because they didn ' t like the poli sci students fussing around in the halls while they looked for their classes. ATHE PICTURES were given to the Tyee by the Alumnus Mag- azine, managed by Dove Pollock, and ore o collection of the best photographs in captivity of the law building.



Page 30 text:

▲ MOTT RtEKE of Theta Chi stops for a chat on the library steps. This is collitch love, people, at least Freddie Wyatt thinks so. Tekia Aagaard doesn ' t look so comfortable, and not at all thrilled. Mailing homecoming editions of the Alumnus, mailbags and mail- bags full of invitations to Wash- ington ' s thousands of grads, kept the alumnae busy in November. The homecoming rally, showing Ray Eckmann caught with his mouth open, and Hec Edmundson in the background. A JIMMY LARPENTEUR, perma- nent president of the class of 1933, and the smoothest man in the Chi Psi house, if not on the campus; yet Mr. Larpenteur has a terrific Failing for Coffee, such that he can ' t sleep nights for worrying about the gal ' s picture. Part of the crew in action — showing some very different oar technique, to soy the least. Miss Aagaard, Town Girls ' president last year, smiles for the birdie. And she may talk baby-talk, but she got her degree and was graduated about six months before the rest of the class of ' 33. A WHAT HAVE WE HERE? None other than sotto voce Bob Brattaln, campus leader, so he says. Mr. Brattaln claims to know all kinds of politics both backward and for- ward, but he is not at all backward in telling you about It. This Is the way they came bock to the 1933 Homecoming, on trains, airplanes, steamers, bicycles, and hand -cars — and It looks like Lud Horsfall and Ray Eckmann at the controls. This Is the mon they called Boss Peters for a while, until he sudden- ly dropped personal politics and became manager of the winning Achenbach ' s campaign. This pic- ture was token early In the fall when Mr. Chet Peters spent his time writing names and more names In his notebook. ASIMPLY BORED of education. Miss Marion Harper, Town Girls ' president for next year, pauses for a moment on a sorority davenport. The Columns ' lunch club, exclusive organization of chiselers, which discussed weighty journalistic problems over the 12 o ' clock re- past and is a miniature political ring. Reading from left to right: Bob Trumbull (B ' way Baby), Jim Long, Jack (Winchell) Jar vis, Dick (Stag hound Bill) Stephens, and Ernie Cohen. Another informal picture of Modelon Firnstohl. one of the beoutlf ul-eyes gals. And now, after all this publicity, Mode- lon, would you like to run for A. S. U. W. president?

Suggestions in the University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) collection:

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University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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