OCR Text |
Show rage THE WESTMINSTER PARSON 2 September 20, 19 Join the Choir, See the West By Stan Jones In opening this article. I would like to extend my personal welcome to all new students. I hope that your year at Westminster will be a prosperous and an eventful one. Contained in the folder you received with your name tags is a brochure about our choir. I would like to take this op portunity to introduce you more fomally. I First of all, you do not nerd a trained voice to participate. The choir would be a quartet, if this were the case. Secondly, a music major is not a requirement. The choir is made up of people who just plain like to sing, and ranges from art students to engineering majors. Though we are a churcn-relate- d college, the choirs music does not follow strictly in this vein. By the time the choir goes on tour, it will be doing two grand opera arias, (The Anvil Chorus" from II Trovatore, by Verdi, and The Waltz Song, from Faust by Gounod) and a finale composed of several tunes from Broadway shows. As you can see, our numbers are varied, and are enjoyable both to the audience and to the choir. In the springs the choir takes a tour that lasts for eleven days, and covers several Western states. The many friends that you make, and the sights that you see are worth going for by themselves, but the choir has a ball together as well. I hope that I have enticed you enough to come and sit in on one of the rehearsals to see if you might like to join. If you decide to join, Im sure you wont be sorry that you did. Important! S.G.A.C. Meeting Tuesday September 26 9:50 a.m. Room C-- 2 All Club Representatives and Class Presidents must be in attendance. Others WELCOME! First Row: It. Hauser, D. Baldcrston, M. Mendenhall, W. Murray; Second Row: F, Mendez, J. Adams, T. Hunter, L. Eldrcdge, P. Bates, J. Floyd, L. Peterson; Third Row; J.Prisby, J. Buckley, J. Scott, K. Ricci, W. Hill, R. Nay, R. Larsen, G. Brown; and Fourth Row: R. Varoz, IL Sokal, D. Bowling, E. Owens, J. Barron, B. Terry, G. Long. PARSON FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Parsons Begin Grid Campaign Returning lettermen from ast years team and incoming With the crispness of the reshmen making the trip to Ore. are: Wes Hill and Larry new fall weather and the ldredge at Quarterback, Dick beginning of another school Don Bowling and year, the football season at Balderston, at Fullback. Hunter' Westminster College begins. Terry Ron Larsen, Ron Nay, Ron This year Coach Lee (head football coach at Westmins- lauser, Ken Ricci, Ray Varoz, Leon Reyes, and Monico ter) welcomed some forty at Halfbacks. At Ends aspirants to the first day of Trujillo are Jerry Adams, Jerry Barpractice which started on the Lannie Peterson, Mel ron, first of Sept., with two scheduled practices a day and a Mendenhall, and Everett Rasnumber of meetings in be- mussen. Jerry Floyd and Paul tween and after the last prac- Bates head out the Guards tice of each day. along with Jack Prisbrey and Practice started at 6 a.m. in Karl Sokal. the morning and at 4 p.m. in At Tackle, Coach Lee has the afternoon. So the people John 13th in Scott, Ed Owens, Charles and the around living East school were so being Baldwin, and Frank Mendez. awakened by the sound of Rounding out the center spot crashing helmets and thud- on the team are Wayne MurBy Larry Eldrcdge ding shoulderpads. Coach Lee along with his new assistant, Coach Mehn, and a handful of returning began welding the sound of crashing helmets and thudding shoulder pads into a smooth running machine, and gearing them for their first game against Oregon Tech, at Klamath Falls, Oregon, Sept. 16th. let-term- These are the men who will carry the colors for Westminster this fall so lets show them were right behind them all the way by turning out in force for the Home game next weekend against Eastern Montana. . VoL 9 Salt Lake City, Utah, September 20, 1961 Editor in Chief W. U. Smith Associate Editors Business Manager No. 1 Adrian Chan and Kathy Schwartz ... 'Sports Editor Writers and Contributors Jerry Chinn Larry Eldredg Judy Durfee, Blenda Goldsworthy, Karen Kelly, Carol Hewitt, Jim Morris, Stan Jones, and Sharon Pratt FREEDOM THROUGH RESPONSIBILITY PAY OFF! "Classified ads will be accepted from students, faculty, and the general public, by phone or in person. A service charge of $.10 per line will be made. A line is one line of type, one column wide or 33 spaces." Ads Will B e Taken At Parson Office During Hours September 16 September 23 September 30 October 7 October 14 October 28 . November 4 . November 11 November 18 . To the south is Converse Originally called Talk lall because of the originating gossip, rumors, and adBy Jerry Chinn ministrative dicta, the name New people to the campus was changed after Talk conatwill likely notice several noted an buildings on the campus. The mosphere for so enlightened structures range from modcampus. President G. M. new Dumb ern, elegant, striking, I dont commented, think talk is no kinda name girls dorm to the rustic, Hall oughta have. Two Bit Tour Jail. al ivy-covere- d, full-of-traditio- n, build- We visit next Fairy Hall. ings that comprise the rest of the campus with the excep- It all began with O. B. Sweet, tion of that squatty, match- box building, Science Hall. One will probably see these if one opens ones buildings ry, Gordon Brown and Bob notice and that they are eyes, Terry. all aptly named. CLASSIFIEDS THE PARSON Oregon Tech, (away) Eastern Montana (home) College of Idaho (away) Colorado College (home) Colorado School of Mines (away) LaVerne College (Homecoming) Dixie College (home) Carroll College (away) Weber College (Ogden) First there is Pain nasium, named by Gym- floor-burne- d, splintered atheletes and viewers who occupy the spacious, ever-sof- t bleachers. Just down the Burma Road from the gym is the boys dorm. Note: when traveling the Burma Road, please refrain from using your horn as a silent reminder that this short strip of road has been the death of many a rattle trap and made rattle traps of the slickest Detroiters. Warning: small car owners. It is advisable that you carry in your car at all times a flare gun as a signal device should your car plunge into one of the numerous caverns that plague the road. The boys dorm was originally an extension of the old Salt Lake Prison, and when the Prison was tom down, no one claimed the structure. The College, an ever growing enterprise, realizing that there must be some place where football players could be locked up safely at night, adopted the collection of maximum security cells, thus the name Adopted HalL (Pres. 1905). One night Sweety put his false teeth under his pillow and woke the next morning to find a handful of pennies in their place. Mr- - Sweet, being very superstitious, believed that the good this great fairy ' had done ' thing. '1 To repay the good fairy, 0. B. Sweet started to build Fairy Hall as an FHA housing unit for all homeless good fairies. Unfortunately, just i s the building was hurriedly completed, lowed one had been his teeth, Mr. Sweet swalof the pennies he using in place of and died. . His successor, not so superstitious, decided to put the building to practical use, because all the good fairies had homes. Hence Ferry Hall. Across the Appian Way stands Science Hall. This is a temporary structure and will be razed to be replaced with a giant, spacious, fully equipped crater, as soon as someone mixes the right chemicals wrong. Last of the main structures adorning the campus, is Hoglc Hall. The money was donated to the Hogle Zoo for the construction of a new. super-dupe- r Hen House. Resulting structure was a Girls Dormitory. (Or is it still a hen house?) |