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Western Carolinian Volume 15 Number 08

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Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).

  • PAGE SIX THE WESTERN CAROLINIAN February 2, 194s Officials Confer At Catawba Game You're crazy! Momentary pause in hotly contested Catawba-WCTC ball game. Shown conferring with officials Munday and Chambers are WCTC McGuinn, No. 6, Tate, No. 9 and Lane, No. 8, and Catawba's Walsor, No. 11. Beck Featured In Radio Show; Trumpeter Has Music Honors Show Trumpeter; Won Contest At 13; Played With Marines Sammy Beck and his trumpet were featured in a radio program presented by Western Carolina over station WHCC, Waynesville, last week. Mr. Beck was accompanied by Clayton Curtis, of the school's modern language department. Mr. Beck, who won first place honors at the National Music Contest in Chicago when he was 13 years old, plays with the American Legion Concert band in Asheville and has his own 18-piece dance orchestra at W.C.T.C. Sammy began studying music when he was 6 years old. At 17 he was playing first trumpet with the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra, and later played with the Richmond, Va., Symphony and the Charleston, S. C, Symphony. During the recent war Sammy joined the Marines, and after the usual rugged boot training, and after having successfully completed an audition, he was sent to play with the world-famous Marine Band in Washington, D. C. From there he was ordered to the "Hall of Montezu. V program, originating in San Diego and broadcast daily over the Columbia Broadcasting System, and short-waved over seas. Later he was transferred to the Third Marine Division band on Guam. After this he was selected to play with the Marine Band under the direction of Dick Gergens and Bob Crosby. Here he performed with * number of internationally known musicians—Gergens. Crosby, Vido Musso, Neal Read, and others. After the war he returned to school at WCTC where he is now a senior with a double major in business education and music. Sammy is temporarily the as sistant director of the college orchestra. The college plans to present AfoAH Numskull ^DEAR-AIQAH-IS A PPIVATE EYE^JUSTA KEYHOLE" PEEKTeR: WITH -A coLLese &&sreeE-? jack flAf-y rt* -MEACvtmr DEAflr^40AH=js FIFTY POUNDS OF BUTTER — A SCAT? J.ft-. A1C t>OVWB-l-l_ Bowu*i« «Ree«( OHIO— _ ^ S£NOYOGliAJ<mc*MSToNOA.H THAT PUMNY OLDQUtPSTefc/ rsmtrtta *t Oil fi«!s»m tztamti. Sa. NO GIFTS FOR HLM " A grateful mother called at the office of the doctor who had brought her child through a serious illness. After thanking him profusely and declr ring over and over that such service ss his could never be fully paid for, she said: "But 1 hope you will accept as a token this pocketbook, which I embroidered for you" The physician retorted coldly that his fees were payable In money, not gratitude. "Presents maintain friendship," he commented acidly, "but they do not maintain a family." "What is your fee?" the woman asked quietly. "Two hundred dollars." She opened the purse and t^ok five $100 bills out oi it. Replacing three of them in the purse, she laid the 5200 un his desk and walked out Sammy in another program, ten- 'Mively scheduled for broadcasting over Ashevillc's WWNC at a later datt Popular Trends By LOEE ALLEY "Oh, she's trying to look glamorous for the snow" was a crack I heard about one of the neater girls here at Cullowhee. True, there are a few girls who can rig out in slacks, boots, jackets and kerchiefs for a tumble in the snow and still look nice. That's what we should al! strive for. Blue jeans and slacks have a place in our campus life, but most of us are inclined to overdo it. Let it be cold and out come the slacks. Let us over sleep, blue jeans to breakfast. Our favorite skirt gets wrinkled and we wear peddle pushers. It happens ail the time. It doesn't take expensive clothes to be well-dressed. Just dress for the occasion and be neat and clean. Three of the neatest girls on our campus are Hilda Crawford, Margie Holcombe and Betty McPhee- ters. You never see those three girls unless they look like they had taken pride in dressing. It's the little things like hems in, skirts pressed, and blouses ironed that make these girls really attractive. Have you ever noticed Hazel Annis' hair? It's always clean and shining. Ellen Burnette never looks like shed forgotten to roll her hair either, Two of the neatest hairdos we've seen lately were those of Nancy Blanton and Louise McGinn. What is the predominant Varsity Quint Defeat* Apps. 56-48; B Squad Loses 47 To 39 Here At 3 o'clock on Tuesday night. January 20, the W.C.T.C gym resounded with the roar of the crowd, for inside the powerful Catamount basketball team was showing that it really was a "'hot- rock" ball club. Led by Bob Tate with 17 points and closely followed by Rhodes with 16, the Catamounts downed a luck'ess Appalachian team by 8 points. It was really an easy win for the Catamounts, who stayed ni front most of the game by a comfortable 15-point margin. At the half the score was 3e to 18 for the Catamounts, who stayed in dication of bow-it was all through the game. To use an old phrase the boys were "shooting them out of their ears." Preceding the game Appalachian had revenge, to a certain extent, in the fact that the Kittymounts lost to the Appalachian S'B" squad in a hard-fought battle. The score was 47-39. Davis led the Kittymounts with 13 points and Barranger led Appalachian with 14. Following is the line-up for the game: APPALACHLVN Player FG FT PF Tot. Craven 2 3 5 7 Collins 10 0 2 L. Wey 2 12 5 Lancaster 12 3 4 Stephen 2 10 5 Causey 10 3 2 Hope 2 13 5 Beach 0 2 2 2 Moir 0 12 1 Hiatt 3 0 4 6 C. Wey 10 3 2 Fidler 0 2 3 2 WESTERN CAROLINA Player FG FT PF Tot Tate 7 3 2 17 Carter 0 0 2 0 McGinn 4 12 9 Pryor 0 0 0 0 Rhodes 2 12 3 16 White 0 0 0 0 Barnhorst 3 2 4 8 Lane 0 0 3 0 Pressley 2 2 3 6 Gregory 0 0 0 0 Davis 0 0 0 0 Collins 0 0 0 0 Free throws missed: Appalachian—Collins 2. Stephens, Hope 2. Beach, Moir, Hiatt. Western Carolina—Carter, McGinn, Rhodes 5, Gregory, Barnhorst 4, Lane, Pressley 5. ALWAYS BATHING Teacher: "Jimmy can you tell tiie class what an island is?" Jimmy: "It's a piece of land out for a swim." feature in both instances?—simplicity. You nearly always wear clothes, but do you always wear them at their best? Let's all strive for that clean-cut look. HALE'S The Store for Women SYLVA, N. C.
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).