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Show THIEETMHD STUDENTS AGAIN EBTER COLLEGE Largest Frosh Gass in WU" History Reg. ¦ isters Registration Of All Stu-dents Nearly Completed The campus resourced morning with the footsteps el three thousand -returning students, approximately two thousand oi whom are upperelassmen. Freshman enrollment took place from Thursday till Saturday at last week, the largest class in the history of the school enrolling. Qw-er nine hundred appeared Thurs-day and, with the assistance of between three and four hundred two-year graduates of Salt Lake's high schools, by Saturday the total was almost eleven hundred. The three days were spent instructing the Frosh as to what the University has to offer them and what the University requires of them in return, the feature talk being given by President Thomas. ^ Approximately three thousand students had successfully unwound the maze of red tape which accompanies registration when the registrar, Mr. H. J. Norton, announced that the preliminaries were over. Then suddenly college life became all-engrossing. Sales campaigns, to include those who had not purchased Utonians at the time of registration, were begun. All organizations competed, with the Pi Kaps and the Chi Omegas winning the prizes. Coach Ike Armstrong's gridsters got into action and gave an indication of their power by defeating the University of Nevada Sage-hens, on October 5, and students began prophecying another Rocky Mountain Conference championship. And then came the formal installation of a Pi Beta Phi chapter on the Utah campus-the Gamma Phis had been granted a charter during the summer. Sorority grils aflutter . . . congratulations . . . and the unfamiliar arrow took its place among sorority pins on the campus. . *'1* *i* >*>f ij*i* ,..:, The North Campus Pane 13 |