Show THE WEEKLY CARBONICLE Page Two Friday February 11 1949 though that the average American has lost the art of doing nothing We are becoming machines of accuracy and effiFriday January 14 1949 ciency In our futile efforts to achieve success we are forgetting literature and fine arts that are so important to EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-ChiJolene Bryner culture Helen McDonald Associate Editor CARBONICLE ef Sports Department — Sports Editors Stanley Anderson Don Duffy Kayo Niwa Stiff Competition Leon Donaldson Feature Department News Editor Feature Editor Jerry Exchange Photographer Alumni Lee Gordon Janet Beckel McFall Joanne Phillips Stanley Barras Sadie Westenskow Dolores Wheeler February 4th and 5th the Carbon wrestling squad took a beating from Grand Junction The Carbon wrestlers put up their best possible battle hut were able to win only one match Results of Friday’s wrestling matches are as follows: 127 Louis Crococo lost to R Beye by Teddy Niwa lost to Waldo Galleges by 1 138 Veloy lost to Ree Petek by 0 148 Grant Turner lost to J King by 6- -1 154 Fred Civish lost to Bill Perry by 0 154 Gean V to lost DeRush Plaga by 161 Happy Plaga lost to Norman Carrol by 6175 Harold Cunningham lost to Jim Bennet by a pin fall heavyweight Non Merrill lost to Alvis Fetters by a pin fall Team scores were Carbon 0 Grand Junction 31 The second day scores are 148 Bobby Thomas lost to J King by 155 Fred Civish lost to Bill 0 155 Gean Plaga Perry by lost to V DeRush by a pin fall Happy Ray Plaga won over Norman Carrol by 4 heavyweight Non Merrill lost to Jim Bennet Team scores Carbon 3 by 0 Grand Junction 14 4-- Reporters Nan Leonard Beth Frandsen Nick Nikas Non Merrill Arlen Clavel Darlene Christensen Lorna Grames Dorothy Hardee Lyle Conover In Memory of Him Pic-cio- ni 6-- 4-- 1- Business Department Business Managers— Jim Bergera Nick Kiahtipes Washington Rewrite Proof Readers Henry Ellen Chidester Dorothy Hardee Ellen Chidester Fred Civish OUR LOST ART By Olive Branch Slow down folks! You're going too fast We Americans are forever going We fly too high and whiz too fast Even the verbs we use reveal our inner compulsions We “catch" a train We “grab" a bite of lunch Everything has to be active and electric Our reading too is on the production line I wonder how many people think as they read We lap up the printed page with practically no pioneering The great consumption of and tabloids proves this Most of this fodder our doesn’t contain even a single vitamin for the mind Today if the average American is confronted with a single hour of leisure he is likely to palpitate with panic He jumps into his car and drives in pursuit of diversion He usually ends up with his name in the obituary column of the morning newspaper What should we do then slow down our pace to that of the Chinese? No I'm afraid Americans would have a hard time adjusting to that life It just wouldn’t seem American I think best-selle- rs -0 -5 4-- 5-- 1- 8-- 6-- A customer entered a saloon and ordered a dozen martinis He poured the liquor onto the floor and began munching contentedly on the glasses themselves The stems however he would have no traffic with A barfly watched the performance with absorbed interest but pointed to the twelve stems and said “You darn fool you're leaving the best part” By Dorothy Hardee He was indeed the man of self-edu-cat- eed ear was bleeding furi“I bit myself ” he ex- A man's ously plained “That's impossible” said the doctor “How can a man bite himself in the ear?” “I was standing on a chair” Penn State and Pittsburgh U football teams have met for 48 seasons WE CARRY ONLY NATIONALLY KNOWN FURNITURE NOTICE AND HARDWARE 1 Join the Ranks of Our Satisfied Customers 2 & THE CAMPUS INN Mnmtual IFurmitiire (If you have any cents) (sense) and Hardware Company Helper 4 — 6 & 3 & 1 —- 4 & 9 equals enough to buy a Hot Chocolate at & Utah the people Aspire of might to which they looked for protection His story is so very well known that only the skeleton of it need be recalled Born in a log cabin in Kentucky of pioneer parents he knew nothing of the comforts of civilization But civilization was soon to hear of Abraham Lincoln Abe Lincoln did not wait for the civilized world to come to him but he prepared himself for the time that he would enter into it As a youth his greatest treasures were books He was a man He built for himself a style of simplicity When the time came for him to take his place at the head of this great nation he had developed within himself the quiet sincerity that gave him the love and admiration of the American people Abe Lincoln returned the affection which they held for him His great love for his countrymen gave him an insight into what they really felt He suffered and proospered with them He was Abraham Lincoln |