Phoenix College - Sandprints Yearbook (Phoenix, AZ)

 - Class of 1945

Page 19 of 168

 

Phoenix College - Sandprints Yearbook (Phoenix, AZ) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 19 of 168
Page 19 of 168



Phoenix College - Sandprints Yearbook (Phoenix, AZ) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

VOL. I7 PHOENIX, ARIZONA, OCTOBER 6, i944 NO. 3 BOND CAMPAIGN STARTS SOON Mr. Newnam, newly appointed chair- man of the Bond Committee, announced that plans which are being made for the coming campaign will be made public shortly. Next week faculty chairmen for the sale of both bonds and stamps will be appointed. Mr. Newnam plans to have the Associated Students select a member of the student body toxbe chairman of the campus sales. Tables will be set up in the cafeteria for the sale of stamps during the noon hours. Any student who wishes to pur- chase bonds or stamps before the faculty and student chairmen are chosen should contact Mr. Newnam. He says, What we want this year is not a spurt now and then of stamp sales, but a steady flow through the year. Cadet Nurses On Campus ln addition to the regular students on the campus, this year we have 32 girls studying to be Cadet Nurses. They will attend one full year at J. C. taking chem- istry, anatomy, hygiene, physiology, psy- chology, pharmaceutical math, ethics, micro-biology, and physical education. Nursing Arts is also included in this course, but it is taught at St. Monica'sg After this year at J. C. the girls will go to the Nurses' Home at St. Monica's for three years. During this year, how- ever, they will have floor duty at the hospital on Sundays. Those studying for Cadet Nurses are Virginia Antone, Cora Baptiste, Dorothy Case, Betty Cavanaugh, Nellie Clarence, Margaret Ellis, Cyrilla Endfield, Dorothy Ferguson, Vera French, Lois Glass, Vir- ginia Godsell, Angelina Gutierrez, Wyona Jofar Hinkle, Clara Johnson, Mary Lou Hext, Audree lo Holmgren, Mary Eliza- beth Lauer, Lillian Moneth, Mary Ann Rodarte, Jessie Ross, Blanche Sargent, Gwendolyn Schurz, Tempie Margaret Smith, Maria Auguila, Marion Sauls, Mable Kayhill, Uretta Thomas, Margaret Thurman, Barbara Wade, Evelyn White, and Lillian Miller. TOUCH FOOTBALL TEAMS WILL PL Y TOURNAMENT III- - 1 W -,. 1 ,, I. in . I I Here is a picture of Mr. Cook talking about the good old days in the good old days . He will speak on Tuesday about tl-ie good old days . - MR. COOK TO TALK' IN ASSEMBLY TUESDAY Mr. Neil Cook, former director of Eng- lish, will speak next Tuesday in assem- bly. He has entitled his talk Looking Backward or The first 70 years aren't so bad once you get used to them. Mr. Cook, who retired two years 'ago to his citrus farm, began as English di- rector 2l years ago: therefore, he's well qualified to speak on what Phoenix Junior College used to be like and how it grew. L I'm pushing a tractor around now, and believe it or not, it's fun, he said. And then he added with a chuckle, Tractors are easier to handle than stu- dents. Birthday Parties To Be Held Dean Vera Gibson announced that a birthday party for all women students whose birthdays occur between October and March will take place in the club room next Tuesday afternoon beginning at 3:30. The party 'will be sponsored by the AWS. Four teams, the Smith Grave- diggers, Gray's Garbage Collec- tors, the Kruft Commandos, and the Henderson Terrors, have been organized for the intra-mural football games to be held during October. No definite program has been scheduled, but it is believed that the games will be held every Tues- day and Thursday afternoons at four o'clock. These football games will be climaxed by a tournament. During the Tuesday- Thursday games, two teams will be elim- inated, and the two best teams will battle for championship honors. The tourna- ment will be held shortly before basket- ball season starts on November first. A playoff was held on Thursday, Sep- tember 28, and another yesterday, to de- termine how evenly the teams are matched. The first playoff was between the Smith Gravediggers and Gray's Gar- bage Collectors. The second was between the Kruft Commandos and Henderson Terrors. These games were held in the afternoon, as will be the regular games, since there are no lights on the field. u The Smith Gravediggers are: C. J. Smith, captain, Glen Francis, Bob Camp- bell, Bob Davis, Larry Cantor, Herman Lipow, Manny Travaini, Foster Turner, known as Muscles , Tom Gann, and Clayton Niles. Gray's Garbage Collectors, with Bill as captain, consist of Bill Berry, Gray L. M. Olivas, Frank Gullege, Joe Castel- Don Churley Yeager, Don All- lano, strom, Jack Rozboril, and George Mueller. On the Commandos team are: Bob Kruft, captain, Warren Hinkle, Bob Ar- mour, John Krell, Bob Gardiner, Bob Hen- derson, Glenn Baker, Harry Dong, Vern Fetz, James Koslow, Bob Olson, and Earl Goodman. The Terrors are: Bill Henderson, cap- tain, Les Metzger, Tim Mitchell, Dan Nelson, Louis Hallman, Albert Zeitlin, Jim Hassell, George Prince, Leon Black, Henry Wilkinson, and Max Ward. Continued on Page l3J

Page 18 text:

Page IO BEAR TRACKS-PHOENIX JUNIOR COLLEGE Miss Montgomery Joins Faculty Miss Mary I. Montgomery, formerly a teacher at Superior High School, and last winter a teacher at the Butte High School at Rivers, has been added to the Foreign Language Department at Phoe- nix Junior College. Miss Montgomery, whose home is in Tempe, received her B. A. degree from Kansas Wesleyan University and her Mas- ters degree from the Arizona State Teach- ers College in Tempe. Until recently Miss Montgomery had planned to do Latin-American work as a teacher sent by our Government to one of the Latin-American countries. Having necessarily postponed her South Ameri- can plans, she became a member of the .'unior College faculty, After spending her vacation in Guada- lajara, Mexico, Miss Montgomery ar- rived in Phoenix Wednesday to take up her duties as teacher. In addition to teaching in the Foreign Language De- partment she will aid Mr. Smelser in some of his English classes. -.lo-..,. Wiittpiklis lContinued from Page 57 PHI LAMBDA ZETA Mary Ann McKesson was elected pres- ident of the Phi Lambs in their first semester held Monday. is vice-president, Bar- secretaryg Jean Landis, Ridgeway, social com- meeting of the Genay Schoeny bara Lee Cavin, treasurer, Jean missioner. Ruth Baum will be pledge mistress, while Jean Landis is senior representative to the Inter-Society Council, and Lois Terry is junior representative. THETA CHI DELTA Martha Griswold, president, presided over the Theta's first meeting held Mon- day when officers for the semester were elected. Cynthia Alford is the new secre- tary and Jane Freeny is treasurer. Rosemary Jagger is senior repre- sentative to the Inter-Society Council. Dorothy Beach was elected iunior repre- sentative. Plans were made to assist at the Co-ed party being held tonight, ALPHA SIGMA GAMMA Pat Haire presided at the meeting of Alpha Sigs held Monday and Faith Niles and Marjory Menard are senior and junior reoresentatives respectively, to the Inter- Society Council. Other officers will be filled at the next meeting. A potluck supper at Miss Hubbard's home was planned for Monday eve- ning. S Dean and Mrs. Wyman greet Miss Stevens, new Director of Home Economics, as she arrives in Phoenix from Ohio Wesleyan University. Pictured above is Mr. Sydney Tre- tick, new faculty member and music instructor. ..,1O.,-1 MR. TRETICK NEW TEACHER Mr. Sydney Tretick, noted violinist and new faculty member in the Music Depart- ment, will be the organizer and director of a Junior College orchestra and string ensemble. In addition to these duties he will offer private instructions in violin and perhaps viola. Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Mr. Tre- tick was playing the violin at the age of three. He studied at the Peabody Insti- tute at Baltimore and in the Musical Art Quartet affiliated with the Juilliard Insti- tute of Music, and did graduate work with a pupil of Wieniawski, an artist of the I9th centrury, and with a professor at the Peabody Institute. He then spent con- siderable time on concert tours, and as a soloist with large symphonies. Mr. Tretick was formerly in the Air Corps training at Larry Field, Colorado. Having been advised by the Chamber of Commerce that there was no place like Phoenix, Mr. Tretick is inclined to agree with them after spending a summer here. Seriously, he likes the city and has already lived here a year. l?-O. .. THIS WEEK'S EDITORIAL BOARD 7 Editor., .,.,, ,..,.,..........,...,,.....,.. R osemary Annon Editorial Staff ....,.,..... Pat Haire, Ruth Condrey, Elizabeth Land, Gertrude Mack. Reporters ...........,.... Mary Fitzgerald, Ellen Rex, Leona Walters, Lulu McCausIand. Photographer ,,,.,..,, ...... . . ..,,.. .............. V ic Pulis Faculty Adviser ...... ...James Stewart an X Qfwgef Q2 ZW M yea,



Page 20 text:

Page l2 BEAR TRACKS-PHOENIX JUNIOR COLLEGE BEAR TRACKS Published By the Students of Phoenix Junior College Member Associate Collegiate Press Democracy Or Thuggery . Monday morning thoseaof us who were at school early enough saw the maintenance men busy scraping signs off the windows, the doors, the steps, and the sidewalks about the campus. Some person or groups of persons put these signs up during .the night, and, in addi- tion, they painted the flagpole, the sidewalk by the flagpole, and Bum- stead. Approximately five man-hours were lost in cleaning this up. This apparently was meant to be political campaigning. lt was, however, nothing more nor less than vandalism. When Bear Tracks decided to sponsor a straw vote of student opinion about the presi- dential nominees, we assumed that the students of Phoenix Junior College were adults and could be treated as such. We insist that our assumption is correct, but we confess that we forgot that there was a small group on the campus which must be dealt with as one would deal with children. The person or persons who created the damage on the campus were either maliciously destructive or very thoughtless. A small group of inconsiderate people, with their misguided enthusiasm, have cast a reflection on the entire student body and have put a black mark upon the reputation of the school. lt has always been thought smart by the Joe College set to paint the opponent's campus before a big game. This is even worse. A presidential election is a serious matter, and it should not be treated as if it were some big game. lt is true that most of us cannot vote yet and that our straw vote means little, but all the students now in P. J. C. will be able to vote in the next presidential election. Now is the time to develop an intelligent, adult attitude toward politics. lf we are to be good citizens we must learn to treat a serious subject in the manner which it deserves. We think that a candidate's prestige is not increased by cheap publicity stunts, particularly when they are destructive of public property. We are sure that all the presidential candidates would repudiate support of this kind. When we of the Bear Tracks staff heard of the outrage on the campus we considered cancelling, or at least postponing, the vote. We decided, however, that the majority of the students should not be punished for the actions of a few. Therefore, you will find the re- sults of the voting in another part of the paper. The New Books By GENAY sci-iosuv Indigo , by Christine Weston, is the story of three boys who' meet and grow up in India, their influence upon one another's thinking, and the effect of their association upon the vast prob- lems that confront India today. One is Jacque de St. Remy, the son of French parents who own vast indigo fields in India. There is John Macbeth, the typical Englishman, the son of an'army officer stationed in lndia. The third is Hardyal, a young native whose father had been educated in England and wished the same for his son, but was disappointed when he did not return to England after two years of school. l-iardyal could not make himself return, for, although he had his father's progressiveness, he was steeped in the age old traditions of the country. lt is also the story of India in the early twentieth century. The author has ample background for her story, for she lived in India until her marriage on her father's indigo plantation. She gives an excellent picture of the conditions that led to the upheaval and tumult in lndia today-the Hindu's hate of the Moslem, the French- man's hate of the English superiority, and the immigrant's hate of the native. All these combine to give a picture as inter- esting'as it is pathetic. These three boys have not only the problems that face one who is an out- sider in a'strange country, but also the threat of the prejudice of their parents which has a powerful influence on their lives. lndigo is one of the new books in the English reading room. SIGHTS 'N SCENES ' 'N STUFF SPEAKING OF SPIRIT, you should have seen the huge turnout at the first intramural football game of the season. Almost four rooters sitting on the side- lines . . . naturally, lack of attendance was due in part to lack of publicity . . . last night's game was fully announced, heralded, and what not, and if you weren't there, you're just a dirty stinker. That's all. A little help was needed to razz the referee at the first encounter-poor guy, his eyesight seems to be shot. FUNNY THING, THOUGH . . . you can't get much spirit up about a foot- ball game, but the minute politics comes on the scene everybody's up in arms. You can get spirit all right, if that's l'd call it the and demented when it's de- well, stick up what you wanna call it. product of a perverted brain. Spirit isn't spirit structive. All goodrand for your candidate, campaign, put up signs-but not in a manner that defaces building or campus. Maybe we sound preachy, we're not angels ourselves-but paint is going a little too far. THE AWS SHlNDlG last Friday turned out to be a live party. Things got under way with a bang-Ruth Baum making love to the dumb waiter, Faith Niles with her foot-long cigar fit smoked like a torch but just wouldn't drawi, Anna Smith sliding across the floor flat on her . . . face, Hagerty with her own rendition of boogie woogie, Annon and Barabe jitter- bugging their way to famef Dora Kline's sad face and long shirt when Mary Lou Johnson and her unidentified partner fwe'll never tell!! won the waltz contest, and Vic, the foto fiend and lone male, sneaking around to take undignified pic- tures. The square dancing eventually turned into a community sing-ask any babe on the campus, they'll tell you There's a hole in the bottom of the sea. NOT TO CHANGE the subject, tho it might be a good idea, but aren't you all on edge to discover who Snowflake is and why? Odds are people will sit up all night long, waiting for the paper. And we'Il be one . . . See ya then. H.A.A.S.U. THIS WEEK'S EDITORIAL BOARD Editor ............................................ Elizabeth Land Editorial Staff.. ....,.............,..... Rosemary Annon, Ruth Condrey, Gertrude Mack, Pat Haire. Reporters ....,.. , ,...,..... . .,............. Mary Fitzgerald, Ellen Rex, Leona Walters, Lulu McCaus- land, Dora Kline, Billie Axline. . , Photographer ...... , .......... , ........................ Vic Pulls Faculty Adviser. ........... . ........ James Stewart

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