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BARBARA VESLEDAHL CAROL REINHART MARY ELLEN DOYLE DARLENE McCONNELL PEGGY OWNER TODAY'S FEATURES * MUN, Page 1 * Legislature, Page 2 * Photo-Feature, Page 3 * Features, Page 4 * Editorials, Page 5 * Sports, Pages 6-7 western Washington Western Washington Coljege, Bellingham, Washington Vol. U, No. 27 •-. April 24, 1959 Who will win? Prom Queen Chosen Tomorrow "WE'RE PREDICTING 234 couples will attend the Junior Prom," Co-Chairmen Nancy Parker and Dennis Fish prophesied Wednesday. The Prom Chairmen expected that most of the tickets would be sold toy Friday afternoon but added, "There will probably be a few tickets available at the door Saturday night." "Being the only formal all-school event of the spring quarter, the Prom will be held in the Bellingham High School gym this year in order to provide facilities for a larger turnout than would be possible in the College gym. Tickets have been on sale on the main landing all week for $1.75 per couple. With each ticket goes a vote for 1959 Junior Prom Queen. The Junior Prom Queen title this year is being sought by five girls. tional Federation of Musicians for the best dance band. He will participate in the national contest in June. The musician has p e r f o r m e d professionally for over 25 years, playing numer7 ous dates for college dances throughout the Northwest, for the last 10 years, as well as for many dance groups in the Seattle area. DECORATIONS FOR THE DANCE will carry out the "Exoti-. que" theme announced last week. "The dominant colors will be varying shades of pinks and reds, accented with the chartreuse on a black background," Decorations Co-chairmen Karen Brunstrom and Sharon Blaine explained. "A wall mural will have long pieces of bam-bo and large, striking flowers," they added. Pink and red sparkled flowers will be used to lower the ceiling. There will also be masks similar to the ones on the posters advertising the dance. The posters and programs were designed by Neil Pfundt. The theme and colors will be carried out in the refreshments,, to be served during intermission, as well. Pink lemonade and colored sheet-cakes will be served. Anyone (not only juniors) interested in aiding with the decorations is welcome to come to the High School gym Friday evening at 6 p.m. The High School is on Cornwall Street next to the Assumption Church. The gym entrance on the Church side only will be open on Saturday evening. HONORED GUESTS for the Prom will include Dr. and Mrs. Haggard, Dr. and Mrs. Murray, and Mr. and Mrs. Stan Garland; Dr. and Mrs. William Budd, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Flora, Mr. and Mrs. William Elmen-dorf, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Flanders, Mr. and Mrs. James Hildebrand, and Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hiller will be patrons and patronesses. Committee chairmen work- (Continued on Page 2) Reporter Sends Story Direct to Collegian from MUN Delegation (Editor's note. Lyle Price, COLLEGIAN reporter, is in Los Angeles with Western's MUN delegation. He sent this story direct to the COLLEGIAN by mm KEN CLOUD Vying for the honor are Darlene McConnell, Carole Rinehart, Mary Ellen Doyle, Peggy Owner, and Barbara Vesledahl. Music for the 9 to 1 p.m. affair will be provided by Ken Cloud. Cloud is rated as the number one dance band in the Greater Seattle area, having recently won the regional contest of the Na-> APRIL— 28—A&L—Philip E. Church, U of W, speak on Artie Research. -- 29-sGolf—Western at PLC; Evergreen ASB Registration 6 p.m. 30—Mixed Recreation—7:30. MAY— 1—Baseball—Western at CPS 1:30 p.m. Evergreen Student Conference, 9 p.m. AWS- Assembly—Fashion Show, Campus School Auditorium 10 a.m. 2—Tennis — Seattle Pacific here, 9:30 p.m. Track—Vancouver Relays, there; "W" Club Banquet. MIKE BARNHART, Chairman of Western's MUN group, briefs delegates on responsibilities to Panama, their country. Western Union Telegram late become familiar at this ninth ses- Thursday afternoon.) sion'of the Model United Nations. By LYLE PRICE Thursday the Soviet delegate THE WORDS "I RECOGNIZE . \ u n c„L!«Ir r w L i #£*. . , - . » • • .... „„„„„ ^ to the Security Council, Chris the delegate from the USSR" have ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^ ^ of Oregon State College, finally won acceptance of one proposal; A ten minute recess. Thrice previously he had been rebuffed by the ' Council, attempting to seat Red China. "USSR is up to typical practices," comments Mike Barnhart, chairman of the WWC group. "They are attempting to throw meetings into chaos. Bonte-Friedheim, as an individual, is a case in point of the caliber of personnel in the ' he spoke to the first meeting of MUN. A citizen of West Berlin, the General Assembly in fluent Russian. The US delegation, holding a speak softly attitude, has established effective behindrthe-scenes control of the entire Security Council, excluding Russia. Barnhart has r e a f f i r m ed Panama's intent to stay with the United States and the Free World. i Panairianean d e l e g a t e Mina Ghattas momentarily took the Security Council aback when he voted negatively with Russia on a rule interpretation. The United States, as the roll call vote continued, abstained. Ghattas, sitting next to Chuck Anderson, the US representative from the University of (Continued on Page 4)
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Western Washington Collegian - 1959 April 24 |
Alternative Title | WWCollegian; WW Collegian; WWC Collegian |
Volume and Number | Vol. 51, no. 27 |
Date Published (User-Friendly) | April 24, 1959 |
Date Published (machine-readable) | 1959-04-24 |
Year Published | 1959 |
Decades | 1950-1959 |
Original Publisher | Associated Students, Western Washington College of Education, Bellingham, Wash. |
Publisher (Digital Object) | Digital resource made available by Special Collections, Western Libraries Heritage Resources, Western Washington University. |
Editor | Wayne Ehlers, Editor; Robert Dunlap, Managing editor; Frances Evans, News editor; Sharon Koivisto, Copy editor; Doug Simpson, Sports editor |
Staff | Louella Vaughn, Business manager; Peggy Stehr, Assistant business manager; News: Dick Perry; Pat Palmer; Ann Allen; Linda Lawson; Brenda Lindsley; Faith Hearsey; Norman Richardson; Howard DeWitt; Perry Glover; Lyle Price; Dean Gregorius; Special coverages: Faith Hearsey; Neil Clough; Dave Amos; Sports: Doug Simpson; Howard DeWitt; John Greer |
Photographer | Ken Robertson; John Zuanich; Glenn Taylor; Chuck Stutz; Ted Johnson |
Faculty Advisor | Bliss, James |
Article Titles | Who will win? Prom Queen chosen tomorrow (p.1) -- Dateline (p.1) -- Reporter sends story direct to Collegian from MUN delegation / by Lyle Price (p.1) -- Elections chairman named: Jung walks out on legislature (p.2) -- Modern dance group left Thursday on high school tour (p.2) -- Spring play practice begins on WWC stage / by Dave Kalles (p.2) -- Construction of two new buildings progresses ... / by Ken Robertson (p.3) -- Our dedication: Solution for campus problems / by Lyle Price (p.4) -- 'Truth wanderers'? No, just serious case of indigestion / by Tony Clinton (p.4) -- Can an honor system work at our college? / by Jim Phegley (p.4) -- 81 new fire doors will be constructed (p.4) -- Senior planning Day; 200 visit tomorrow (p.4) -- Western may get Larrabee Marine Biological Laboratory (p.4) -- Campus marriages undesirable and highly risky says NY Times (p.5) -- Collegian supports long-range plan of repairs for Lakewood (p.5) -- Out of chaos: Amos has assistant / by Dave Amos and B. Z. Bub (p.5) -- Golfers edged by Seattle U. (p.6) -- Intramural leaders continue to pace softball standings / by Larry Ottele (p.6) -- Intramural standings (p.6) -- Selective Service (p.6) -- Convention on campus next week: ECSA student leaders will discuss problems (p.6) -- Davis breaks record: Vikings capture Eastern meet / by John Greer (p.7) -- Sports / by Doug Simpson (p.7) -- Western opens league with two victories over Gladiators / by Howard DeWitt (p.7) -- Viks meet PLC - CPS (p.7) -- AWS present annual campus fashion show (p.8) -- Klipsun distribution set for June (p.8) -- Coming ... going: a Collegian roundup of campus doings (p.8) |
Photographs | Barbara Vesledahl (p.1) -- Carol Reinhart (p.1) -- Mary Ellen Doyle (p.1) -- Darlene McConnell (p.1) -- Peggy Owner (p.1) -- Ken Cloud (p.1) -- Mike Barnhart briefs Model UN delegates (p.1) -- Dr. William Gregory and Sandra Clark talk about "Out of the Frying Pan" (p.2) -- Student Union Building construction (p.3) -- Student Union Building construction (p.3) -- Science Building construction (p.3) -- Science Building construction (p.3) -- Dennis fish, Wayne Ehlers, and Jack Rabourn (p.6) -- Catherine Cresap and Nancy Philips prepare for Spring AWS fashion show (p.8) -- [Miss Kay Turner] (p.8) |
Cartoons | "I wonder if the alums would cheer ... " / by Doug Smith (p.5) -- "What do you mean a strike ... " / by Ron Safsten (p.7) |
Subjects - Names (LCNAF) | Western Washington University--Students--Newspapers |
Subjects - Topical (LCSH) | College newspapers--Washington (State)--Bellingham |
Related Collection | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/261544368 |
Program | Special Collections |
Geographic Coverage | Bellingham (Wash.) |
Object Type | Text |
Original Format Size | 39 x 27 cm. |
Genre/Form | Newspapers |
Digital Reproduction Information | Bitone scan from 35 mm silver halide, 1-up negative film at 600 dpi. 2011. |
Identifier | WWC_19590424.pdf |
Contributor | The digitized WWU student newspapers are made possible by the generous support of Don Hacherl and Cindy Hacherl (Class of 1984) and Bert Halprin (Class of 1971). |
Rights | This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact Special Collections, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103. USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to Western Front Historical Collection, Special Collections, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University. |
Language | English |
Language Code | Eng |
Description
Title | Western Washington Collegian - 1959 April 24 - Page 1 |
Alternative Title | WWCollegian; WW Collegian; WWC Collegian |
Volume and Number | Vol. 51, no. 27 |
Date Published (User-Friendly) | April 24, 1959 |
Date Published (machine-readable) | 1959-04-24 |
Year Published | 1959 |
Decades | 1950-1959 |
Original Publisher | Associated Students, Western Washington College of Education, Bellingham, Wash. |
Publisher (Digital Object) | Digital resource made available by Special Collections, Western Libraries Heritage Resources, Western Washington University. |
Editor | Wayne Ehlers, Editor; Robert Dunlap, Managing editor; Frances Evans, News editor; Sharon Koivisto, Copy editor; Doug Simpson, Sports editor |
Staff | Louella Vaughn, Business manager; Peggy Stehr, Assistant business manager; News: Dick Perry; Pat Palmer; Ann Allen; Linda Lawson; Brenda Lindsley; Faith Hearsey; Norman Richardson; Howard DeWitt; Perry Glover; Lyle Price; Dean Gregorius; Special coverages: Faith Hearsey; Neil Clough; Dave Amos; Sports: Doug Simpson; Howard DeWitt; John Greer |
Faculty Advisor | Bliss, James |
Subjects - Names (LCNAF) | Western Washington University--Students--Newspapers |
Subjects - Topical (LCSH) | College newspapers--Washington (State)--Bellingham |
Related Collection | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/261544368 |
Program | Special Collections |
Geographic Coverage | Bellingham (Wash.) |
Object Type | Text |
Original Format Size | 39 x 27 cm. |
Genre/Form | Newspapers |
Digital Reproduction Information | Bitone scan from 35 mm silver halide, 1-up negative film at 600 dpi. 2011. |
Identifier | WWC_19590424.pdf |
Contributor | The digitized WWU student newspapers are made possible by the generous support of Don Hacherl and Cindy Hacherl (Class of 1984) and Bert Halprin (Class of 1971). |
Rights | This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact Special Collections, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103. USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to Western Front Historical Collection, Special Collections, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University. |
Full Text | BARBARA VESLEDAHL CAROL REINHART MARY ELLEN DOYLE DARLENE McCONNELL PEGGY OWNER TODAY'S FEATURES * MUN, Page 1 * Legislature, Page 2 * Photo-Feature, Page 3 * Features, Page 4 * Editorials, Page 5 * Sports, Pages 6-7 western Washington Western Washington Coljege, Bellingham, Washington Vol. U, No. 27 •-. April 24, 1959 Who will win? Prom Queen Chosen Tomorrow "WE'RE PREDICTING 234 couples will attend the Junior Prom," Co-Chairmen Nancy Parker and Dennis Fish prophesied Wednesday. The Prom Chairmen expected that most of the tickets would be sold toy Friday afternoon but added, "There will probably be a few tickets available at the door Saturday night." "Being the only formal all-school event of the spring quarter, the Prom will be held in the Bellingham High School gym this year in order to provide facilities for a larger turnout than would be possible in the College gym. Tickets have been on sale on the main landing all week for $1.75 per couple. With each ticket goes a vote for 1959 Junior Prom Queen. The Junior Prom Queen title this year is being sought by five girls. tional Federation of Musicians for the best dance band. He will participate in the national contest in June. The musician has p e r f o r m e d professionally for over 25 years, playing numer7 ous dates for college dances throughout the Northwest, for the last 10 years, as well as for many dance groups in the Seattle area. DECORATIONS FOR THE DANCE will carry out the "Exoti-. que" theme announced last week. "The dominant colors will be varying shades of pinks and reds, accented with the chartreuse on a black background," Decorations Co-chairmen Karen Brunstrom and Sharon Blaine explained. "A wall mural will have long pieces of bam-bo and large, striking flowers," they added. Pink and red sparkled flowers will be used to lower the ceiling. There will also be masks similar to the ones on the posters advertising the dance. The posters and programs were designed by Neil Pfundt. The theme and colors will be carried out in the refreshments,, to be served during intermission, as well. Pink lemonade and colored sheet-cakes will be served. Anyone (not only juniors) interested in aiding with the decorations is welcome to come to the High School gym Friday evening at 6 p.m. The High School is on Cornwall Street next to the Assumption Church. The gym entrance on the Church side only will be open on Saturday evening. HONORED GUESTS for the Prom will include Dr. and Mrs. Haggard, Dr. and Mrs. Murray, and Mr. and Mrs. Stan Garland; Dr. and Mrs. William Budd, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Flora, Mr. and Mrs. William Elmen-dorf, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Flanders, Mr. and Mrs. James Hildebrand, and Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hiller will be patrons and patronesses. Committee chairmen work- (Continued on Page 2) Reporter Sends Story Direct to Collegian from MUN Delegation (Editor's note. Lyle Price, COLLEGIAN reporter, is in Los Angeles with Western's MUN delegation. He sent this story direct to the COLLEGIAN by mm KEN CLOUD Vying for the honor are Darlene McConnell, Carole Rinehart, Mary Ellen Doyle, Peggy Owner, and Barbara Vesledahl. Music for the 9 to 1 p.m. affair will be provided by Ken Cloud. Cloud is rated as the number one dance band in the Greater Seattle area, having recently won the regional contest of the Na-> APRIL— 28—A&L—Philip E. Church, U of W, speak on Artie Research. -- 29-sGolf—Western at PLC; Evergreen ASB Registration 6 p.m. 30—Mixed Recreation—7:30. MAY— 1—Baseball—Western at CPS 1:30 p.m. Evergreen Student Conference, 9 p.m. AWS- Assembly—Fashion Show, Campus School Auditorium 10 a.m. 2—Tennis — Seattle Pacific here, 9:30 p.m. Track—Vancouver Relays, there; "W" Club Banquet. MIKE BARNHART, Chairman of Western's MUN group, briefs delegates on responsibilities to Panama, their country. Western Union Telegram late become familiar at this ninth ses- Thursday afternoon.) sion'of the Model United Nations. By LYLE PRICE Thursday the Soviet delegate THE WORDS "I RECOGNIZE . \ u n c„L!«Ir r w L i #£*. . , - . » • • .... „„„„„ ^ to the Security Council, Chris the delegate from the USSR" have ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^ ^ of Oregon State College, finally won acceptance of one proposal; A ten minute recess. Thrice previously he had been rebuffed by the ' Council, attempting to seat Red China. "USSR is up to typical practices," comments Mike Barnhart, chairman of the WWC group. "They are attempting to throw meetings into chaos. Bonte-Friedheim, as an individual, is a case in point of the caliber of personnel in the ' he spoke to the first meeting of MUN. A citizen of West Berlin, the General Assembly in fluent Russian. The US delegation, holding a speak softly attitude, has established effective behindrthe-scenes control of the entire Security Council, excluding Russia. Barnhart has r e a f f i r m ed Panama's intent to stay with the United States and the Free World. i Panairianean d e l e g a t e Mina Ghattas momentarily took the Security Council aback when he voted negatively with Russia on a rule interpretation. The United States, as the roll call vote continued, abstained. Ghattas, sitting next to Chuck Anderson, the US representative from the University of (Continued on Page 4) |
Language | English |
Language Code | Eng |
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