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Show PARSONS PUT OUT IN SUMMER WORK Summer! What do you have to say when someone asks you what you did for a vacation? Well, if you worked all summer, you form a frown of utter disgust on your face and say Work, as you shrug your shoulders. You probably wish that you could have been traveling all summer like Charla Towner did with the Westminster - sponsored American International Acad- all cant However, emy. be that ambitious yet. Work can be interesting, just ask Bonnie Dungan who was in New York all summer as a unit leader in a Girl Scout camp. She can tell you some stories of the mountains, hikes, swamping canoes, bugs of various types crawling into the sleeping bags, mosand best of all, quitoes . . . a wonderful trip and vacation combined with a job. Jude White-hea- d stayed close to the inter- mountain area to work, but she still got to be in the while working at a lodge in the Yellowstone park area. About the people who stayed What was there to do? home. Bob Barber, Curt Well, Gertchens, Bob Sturges, and Pete Munk seemed to keep Westminster alive with their Gary Jenkins, Eric Trunnel and Dave Reich. (They just couldnt stay away!) Mary Indindoli went home to Italy to stay with her father. we t ODESSA 10RIN (seated) receives makeup from Kitty for the Nov. 5 debut of the Traveling Assembly. Brown Vesfy Road Shov; To Matte Dehut Nov. 5th out-of-do- ors ers Help stamp out wicked city women! Thems the kind that wear them slinky black dresses; drown in paint their faces; perfume; run through fellows their fingers hair and dance . Knicli Knaclis college. has reported that very few students have signed up for their mailboxes. It is required that all students be assigned a mailbox where student news and SGAC minutes can be slipped: She requests that students sign up immediately for their box assignments. Blondie in and more fun is to come when the second scene of Blockbusting Braodway falls into action on Nov. 5th. With their roadshow the members of the assembly will travel to the various high schools in Salt Lake. They hope to travel, in coming years, through Utah and the western states getting a little free advertising for the Those students wishing to catch: the October 10 football action at Cedar City are asked to contact Dean Stewart, whos accepting bids for five persons per automobile. Both drivers and interested passengers are sought for the Parson college of Southern Utah game. Charge will be $2.50 a person. Dr. Deville is seeking members for a flying club to be organized later on in the year. All interested should contact Dr. Deville as soon as sible so membership lists can be prepared. Freshman Joe Bernolfo is looking into the possibilities of forming a ski club. Anybody in- terested? them sexy dances. Fun, huhl? Yeeaa! This years show has been picked and pieced to jigsaw a vivid forty minutes of entertainment. The scenes are: from Whatever Lola Wants Damn Yankees, Bessy, You Is My Woman from Porgy and The Telephone Hour Bess, from Bye, Bye, Birdie, Youll Never Walk Alone from Caroufrom Officer Krupke sel, West Side Story and One Hundfrom red Million Miracles Flower Drum Song. Along with the singers and dancers the cast wiU include the other necessaries: directors, stagehands, make-u- p artist, costume designers, lighting technicians and promoters for the Oscar. C- -4 CARDWELL'S VARIETY MARKET Little Enough To Know You Big Enough To Serve You 1790 South 11 th East Open Every Day 10-1- 1 get to see Bob Barber who went with his famthe old country ily to visit where his father was bora. Larry Williams kept business going all night at the Carson City Nugget seven days a week She didnt from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. trying to stay awake. That was quite a business wasnt it, Larry? that Alan Lee seems It summer like his didnt either, since he worked for his father and sunned on the beaches of Hawaii. (Whats with him?) Westminster opened its first summer school session and sev- : Editor Assistant Editor Adviser Feature Editor Sports Editor Art Editor Columnists ...... - - Fil - Bill Beck Whorton Byron Sims Marilyn Pierson Bill Whorton Tom Dawson Mike Mitchell, Jim Haig, Dick Paff, Toni Franzolino, Earle Norris The red bricks of the WiUiam T. Nightingale Memorial Library stand in the center of the campus surrounding some 25,000 books, an assortment of magazines, typewriters and records. Miss Joane Bock, assistant librarian, heads a staff of Miss Harriet Suckow and Mrs. Louise Engel, who is in charge of West- minster history. Ground breaking for the W. T. and "Caka" art rajlitarad 1964, SCHEDULE Th Cooipony Coco-C- i - (From Pg. Col. 5) team and your school, and you can make it or break it. TTiat the cheerleaders will evening a sponsor dance, and it looks like 1, it will be a Victory celebration. One word in passing; the perennial problem of student particespecially those who ipation, do not live in the dorms, is still with us. If S.G.A.C. has not provided something to attract your interests, let us know. The planned activities are for everyone, Freshman, Sophmore, Junior, Seniro, married, single town, or dorm, so lend your support. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain. - should be taken. A Bulletin of Information containing a list of test centers, and information about the examinations, as well as a Registration Form, may be obtained from placement officers, college school personnel departments, or directly from National Teacher Examinations, Box 911, Educational Testing Service, Princeton, New Jersey 08540. I i'L ' K V iI' ' , ' ' , it it . , t ' f s t,s t ' '' ' ' f "t' ' t , '' ft ' S ' , fff ''' '9 . ' ' ty'," L , t , ", ,f t ', ' f. v" , , r ' ? t '' '' ' 4r f ' ' '- ' 't fff U'',; W '! "S',',"-'"-' , t t f ft ts ' f y ,, , ' ' vf 't t s4 ' tjt , f ' ' ' , t ft , ' , "' '"t''f, ' A , w'fttt t tt t "V ' ' 4 ' ' JF ' "ssfs y t 's ' Coke has of... always refreshing. Thats why things go better with Coke . ; . after Coke . . . after Coke. Everybody cheers for Ice-co- ld Coca-Col- a. the taste you never get tired loMod ihr Ik . authority of Tha Coca-Col- a studied - which Idaallfy caly Ifca product of trada-mari-u in who ents, on the second floor of Converse with a capacity of 22,000 books. The most popular time at the library this year, according to Miss Bock, is at night,- with (LIBRARY, Pg. 4, Col. 5) it. (From Pg. 2, Col. 5) their colleges, for specific advice on which examinations to take and on which dates they take and on which dates they furnished on request. Nightingale Memorial Library began on May 28, 1964 under the Arne Purhonen, architect and McDowell and Rapp, builders. The Library will now shelve to 60,000 books and 50,000 accomodate 200 to 250 stud- (by ANNE QUIGLEY) enty attended. Next year there will be more opportunity for the homebodies of last summer to find the time to go abroad. What will you do? Its never too late to think about EXAMS Weekly publication of the students of Westminster College, Salt Lake City, Utah. Advertising rates Memorial Library on Campus Has Over 25,000 Volumes, New Building Coapaiy tyi Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Salt Lake T |