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About Wescolite (Dillon, Mont) 1949-2009 | View This Issue
Wescolite (Dillon, Mont), 05 Dec. 1962, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/Wescolite/1962-12-05/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Thespians To Perform On December 11-12 “All the Way Home,” a drama in three acts, will be presented Dec. 11 and 12 in the Western Montana College auditorium. This play is based on the Pul itzer Prize novel, A Death in the Family, by the late James Agee. It was also the recipient of the 1961 Pulitzer Prize for plays and winner of the 1961 New York Critics Award. Students Make Toys For Boulder Eighteen students of Elemen tary Woodworking have complet ed their woodworking projects of making toys for the children at the Montana Training School at Boulder. The toys will be given to the children for Christmas. The class is a beginning project in woodworking. Hand tools are utilized to develop basic skills. Values to the students in mak ing these toys for the Training School at Boulder include the student’s choice of projects, shar ing of construction ideas, and per sonal satisfaction in helping others who are less fortunate. Those students who completed their projects are as follows: Jer ry Asay, Joel Barry, Granville Bauer, Leonard Benjamin, Myles Carpenter, Dennis Fisher, Dan French, Francis Hash, Roy In body, Larry McAllister, Fred Mc Donald, Gordon Pauly, Ken Spev- acek, Dean Staton, Bill Stevens and Jack Sullivan. Short S E A Meet Ends In Outburst Specialized committees for the all-school fireside were selected under the direction of chairman Dan Corcoran, at the SEA meet ing held last Wednesday, No vember 28. The fireside will be held on Friday, December 18, at 8:00 p.m., and will be followed by a dance and entertainment. Refreshments will be provided at the fireside, and student's will be required to show their activity tickets for the purpose of culling out those peo ple who are not enrolled at Western. It has been suggested that everyone wear winter cloth ing to give the affair a seasonal atmosphere. Peggy McEnaney, president, closed the short meeting with a heated speech in which she strongly reprimanded the lack adaisical members of the various committees and the lanquid peo ple who do not participate at all. She also expressed her desire for all of the members of SEA to show a more active interest in the organization in order to make it a more worthwhile project. Vol. XLI, No. 9 Western Montana College of Education Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1962 Registration To Begin Today Mr. Paul Picton, Western’s Registrar, announces a new and dif ferent process for early registration for Winter Quarter. Early reg istration begins today and will continue until 4:00 p.m., Monday, December 17. Students may fill out their schedules, grade cards, and all other necessary forms during this period, then pay their fees, and check out their text books on January 7, Registration Day for Winter Quarter. Here is the new procedure for early registration: 1. Fill out application for “Permit to Enroll” in the Regis trar’s Office. 2. Take your registration packet to the counselor named on your “Permit to Enroll.” 3. Work out your schedule with your counselor. Fill out all cards in packet. Have your counselor sign your class schedule. 4. Pick up Grade Cards and Permits to Attend Class from the Departments as indicated on your instruction sheet. 5. Fill out all Grade Cards and Permits to Attend Class. Place all cards in packet. 6. Return packet with all cards to the Registrar’s Office. No packets will be accepted after 4:00 p.m. on Monday, De cember 17. 7. On January 7 pay your fees in the Business Office. You will receive a “Statement of Fees Paid.” Fill out the infor mation and take the “Fees” card to the Checkout table in the Library. The cards in your packet will be stamped “Approved” and you will be given the cards you are to have. 8. Pick up your textbooks and you are finished registering. Any changes in your schedule after your packet is turned in the Registrar’s Office must be made by “Drop and Add Cards” after Registration Day. Registration for all students who do not register during the early registration period, will do so in the Library on Registration Day, January 7. The Registrar’s Office hopes that this new early registration pro cedure will make the necessary job of registering easier and more rapid for all concerned. Forensics To Attend Debate Tournament Members of Western’s Forensic Association are continuing their research on this year’s collegi ate debate topic which deals with the pro’s and con’s of a pro posed economic c o m m u n i t y among the world’s non-Commun- ist nations. Speakers are presently prepar ing for the Treasure State For ensics Tournament which will be held on the campus of Montana State College in Bozeman on Jan uary 17-19, 1963. Western stu dents will compete in debate, or atory, extemporaneous speaking, and interpretative reading. Com petition at this tournament will be with speakers from some of the largest colleges and univer sities in the Northwest and Inter mountain areas. Students who are interested in speech activities and in this in valuable intercollegiate competi tion are asked to see Mr. Cebull, sponsor of the Forensic Associa tion. Art Club Plans Christmas Sale “Deck the Halls” is the theme of the Art Club members as they busily prepare for their Christ mas sale. The Art Club workroom looks like Santa Claus’ workshop as members come and go to work on yule logs, Christmas trees, wreaths, and candles. The mem bers have been tramping through the snow and over the hillsides gathering logs, pine cones, and boughs. This will give you a chance to shop for those last minute Christ mas gifts and support the Art Club at the same time. Watch for exact dates of this sale in next week’s Wescolite. Funk Wins First Bout In Tourney Jim Funk has won the first round in the chess championship by defeating Frank Hayes in two consecutive g a m e s Wednesday night in the SUB. By winning the first round Jim Funk has a two-game lead over Frank Hayes. The contestant win ning the first four out of seven games will be Western’s chess champion. The two contestants will meet for the second round Wednesday, December 5, in room 2 of the SUB at 3:30 p.m. Pretiz Speaks, Plays At IVCF Rev. Paul Pretiz of the Latin America Mission was guest speak er at the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meeting, Friday, No vember 30. The Latin America Mission is a non-denominational mission which works in Central and South America in the fields of evangel ism, education, literature, and ra dio. Mr. Pretiz, who is the dir ector fo the radio division of the L.A.M., oversees the four radio stations directed by the mission: TIFC in Costa Rica, HOXO in Panama, YNOL in Nicaragua, and YSHQ under construction in El Salvador. He also is on the board of directors of a network organ ization in Costa Rica which ties in all Christian radio stations in Latin America. Mr. Pretiz, who is from Boston where he attended Gordon Col lege and Boston University, is en- route to San Jose, Costa Rica via the Pan American Highway in a recently acquired Renault. He has been traveling in the States for (Continued on Page 4) Student Wives To Hold Christmas Party Mrs. Frank Hoey is the new sponsor of Student Wives Club, along with Mrs. William Straugh. She is replacing Mrs. George Mc Cormick and assumed her duties at the November 28 meeting held at Vigilante Electric. A Christmas party with an ex change of gifts will complement the December meeting, according (Continued on Page 3) In Sympathy The faculty, students and the Wescolite staff of Western Montana College wish to ex press their sympathy for the parents of Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert Clark who lost their lives in an automobile accident dur ing the recent Thanksgiving Holidays. Robert (Mabes) was a junior here at Western, and Mrs. Clark (Lois Jean Miche- lotti, Dip. ’61) was a grade school teacher in Butte.