Viking_Yearbook_58

STUDENT REVIEW The staff this year was (left to right) Wes Per­ rin , editor; H a r " e y Steele, associate editor; and John Terry, pub­ licity_ Not shown are On­ Ke Yee, art editor; Jim Giachario, assistant art editor; Curt Krouse, typ­ ing; J err y Robinson, business manager; and John Rupp, editorial as­ sistant. One dark, dank day last fall a simple and innocent maid paused 10 the halls of Portland State and asked a fellow student, "When is the Review coming out this year?" This inquiry was greeted with a shout of derisive laughter. "Ho, foolish maiden," the fellow replied rubbing his tattooed wrists, "better you should ask me something simple, such as who will win the student body elections in 1963 or when hell will freeze over." The general tone of this little tete-a-tete may give the reader some indication of the general difficulties encoun­ tered by the Review last year. Because of limited resources in the student body coffers, the magazine was able to publish only once_ The year before the Review had come out once a term_ This year's edition issued Spring term was the largest yet, however, containing 48 pages of printed material and four glossy pages of art. For the first time a prize fund was sponsored by the Division of Humanities. Contributions were judged by a faculty committee consisting of John Lawry, Robert Tuttle and Dr. Stanley Johnson, and cash prizes were awarded for the best effOlts in fiction essay and poetry. -WES PERRIN Review p r i z e win­ ners receive awards from Al Littlefield of the Co-op_ From left to right the winners are Sharon Welker, best illustration; Al Littlefield; Paul S hoc k ley for his short story, "A Sum­ mer Before the Fall"; Isabel Stevenson for her poe m, "With S nee z i n g s in the Spring"; and Harvey Steele for his essay, "The Ancient Quar­ reL" 62

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