| Show b t Hong I By LINDA COVEY Chronicle Editor-in-Chief Over the years things have slowly changed on the University Twenty-nine years ago the Chronicle was a seven-column weekly paper appearing each Thursday January 1933 Students returned to campus after a two and a half week Christmas About students registered the first day and most were finished by 11 a.m. that morning E. J. stated that the total enrollment would to all indications be about the same as the previous L. L. dean of the medical left for the leper colony in Louisiana to conduct experimental work in finding the cause of the disease Low finances prevented the Chronicle editor Maurice Knight from attending a press convention in He had been invited to lead a discussion on the of the Sports The committee on scholarship announced that st u- dents were dropped because of scholarship failures and were placed on probation students with over a average were sent congratulation Plays were popular in The speech department presented a play by Gail Plummer Wilbur or Missing Try-outs were to be held for the freshmen class Family The Extension Division presented a well-known Don for their Minds and Artists A chronicle reporter Blanding is six feet and weighs He has often I been mistaken for Gene An entertainment column Town reCo mended the Green Dragon as entertainment It also simply must join the horde of students having a grand time at the Coconut The Union Binding barber shop offered a haircut for 35 cents Each participant in intramural sports had to present a health card or the team lost two points The faculty team was leading in handball The Chronicle published a map showing areas on campus where smoking was The Board of Control urged students to take note because the regulations would be strictly February 1933 Headlines on the paper Groups Declare Cour-sage and Inter-fraternity Council passed resolutions that will not be worn at the Junior The action met with by the student body Junior Promenade tickets cost for dancing and a The University offered a course in character building taught by Milton Ben-nion A review of the freshmen class play stated that audience was keenly disappointed in the mediocre play The Phi Mu's celebrated the opening of their new house with a The Pi Beta Phi's decorated their house with and for a dance honoring new pledges Student wives organized Dames Speicher's Shoe Store advertised or Ladies' Military boots for Jerry's Shack announced a sandwich all the for 25 |