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vol. cvi — NO. 104 , N.Y., MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1962 a^^^fe>222 FIVE CENTS Romulo Will Will Live at New Hall Grad Council Speak Today College Alumni to Present Disturbed By On Far East KnickerbockerHolidayHere DormPriority By Arthur J. Grebow College alumni will return to their Alma Mater in June for Philippine Official Will five days of sightseeing and visiting with classmates. Living in New Professional Schools Get Talk on Communism Hall, the alumni, their wives, and children will participate in ac- Residence tivities both on campus and at- Preference Carlos P. former pres- Members of the Graduate Fac- Romulo, Baker Field, in the second annual have ex- ident of the United Nations Gen- Knickerbocker Holiday. ulties Student Council pressed concern that priority in eral Assembly, will speak on The five day reunion, from the projected graduate dormitory Aggression in June 1 to June sponsored by "Communist South- 5, is will be given to students from the the Alumni Association of the east Asia" today at 4 p.m. in professional schools of Law, En- College, under the direction of Ferris Booth Hall. gineering, and Business. Thomas E. Monaghan '31, presi- The speech, sponsored by Joseph Nye, the dent, and Frank Safran '58, P. director of Citizenship Council, will be his executive secretary of the Asso- Men's Residence Halls, explained Friday since last before leaving his present ciation. that these schools Carlos P. Romulo promised funds towards construc- position as Philippine delegate to The price for the holiday week, tion costs, while Graduate Fac- to the UN. He is returning to his including room, meals and all ac- Managers Approve tivities, is fifteen dollars per per- ulties did not, students from Law, country to become president of Enginering and Business son per day for double occupancy would receive priority. the University of the Philippines. Financing Library tand twenty dollars for single oc- Mr. Romulo was a general in cupancy. But he went on to assure the US Army during World War For Humanities A Arriving on a Friday afternoon, Graduate Faculties students that , which now houses 11. He served as an aide to Gen- The Board of Managers of Fer- the alumni will be able to attend has passed a mo- a buffet supper in Ferris Booth both graduate and professional eral McArthur's staff, and re- ris Booth Hall tion to open a charge account in Hall and a production of "Guys students, would give priority to ceived numerous decorations for those students low on the list for the Columbia Bookstore in the and Dolls" or a Glee Club con- Thomas E. Monaghan his services. name of Assistant Professor of cert. the new dormitory. After the war Romulo became Russian Robert L. Belknap for The activities on Saturday will The new building is planned for an outstanding spokesman against the purpose of establishing for include an all-sports program at Students Sponsor the East Campus, on Momingside the rising Communist influence in the Humanities department, a li- Baker Field, followed by a picnic Drive between 117th and 118th Southeast Asia. He was awarded brary of critical works. luncheon and a rugby match. Film Presentation Streets. According to Mr. Nye, it a in 1941 for a The honorarium is a gift to the Two alumni seminars and a Filmmakers of Columbia con- will be three or four years before series of reports on the possibility department in recognition of their buffet luncheon, to which seniors cludes its first series tonight it will be ready for occupation. of Japanese conquests. outstanding work in preparing and their families are invited, with a performance of F. W. If University plans for two new - A political power in the Philip- the Humanities Lecture Series. highlight the June 3 program. Murnau's "Sunrise'' and College dormitories materialize, pines, Romulo was influential in Although the motion for the Columbia College Class Day will Georges Franju's "Blood of the Mr. Nye said, John Jay will con- electing President Raymond Mag- grant has been unanimously take place on June 4, following Beasts," in McMillin Theater. tinue to serve as a graduate saysay to his office. passed, the allocation of the exact which seniors and their families "Sunrise," named "the greatest dormitory. If not, new provisions Romulo gained a reputation amount of money must be ap- will be the guests of the Alumni film of all time" by the French will be sought for students re- during the post-war period for proved by John Burke, Assistant Association and the Parents' periodical Cahiers du Cinema, re- jected from the 750-unit, all- procuring foreign aid and pay- Director of King's Crown Activi- Committee at a reception and places "Border Street," which was single room new dormitory. mens for war-time damages from ties, who will examine the budget luncheon. In addition to these ac- originally scheduled. The concern of Graduate Fac- tivities, are the for the Philip- and determine what appropria- alumni invited to the Series profits will help finance ulties students arose before fund- pines. Commencement on June 5. tion is feasible. the group's first major project, raising for the new dormitory be- "The Saint at the Crossroads," a gan. It was conceived as a grad- sound film written and directed uate building with no priority for Lowe, Goldstein Receive Awards by Phillip Lopate '64. Shooting any schools. At no time, however, has already begun on the film, was the dormitory planned solely Two scientists, Donald V. Lowd which is expected to be screened for Graduate Faculties. 'HE, and Professor of Nuclear in the fall. In the cast are .Mitchell Construction costs for the grad- Engineering Science Herbert Hall, Richard Alba, Bill Finley uate dormitory are estimated at Goldstein, have been named re- and Hildy Fuss. (continued on page three) cipients of Columbia's Egleston Medal and the Atomic Energy's Commission's E. O. Lawrence Memorial Award, respectively. Students Create Gradualist Mr. Lowe, commissioner and former chairman of The Port of Council to Promote Peace New York Authority, received the and graduate schools have award for "distinguished engi- Students from the College, Barnard Way to neering achievement." formed the Columbia Student Council for a Gradualist Peace. The student group will be affiliated with the Council for a Gradualist The announcement of the Way to Peace, which is composed award was made yesterday by of faculty members. The student Robert D. Lilley, president of Memorial Services the organization will not, however, Columbia Engineering School be involved in the policy-making Alumni Association. Conducted The actual Will Be decisions of the faculty group. presentation will take place on The students plan to hold a re- Saturday, April 28, as part of the For GS Teacher cruitment drive, and to obtain annual Engineering Dean's Day Memorial services will be held program. the endorsement of student re- tomorrow at 5 p.m. in St. Paul's organizations. Talks have Mr. Lowe is vice chairman of ligious AWARDS GIVEN: Donald V. Lowe 'HE (1.). who received Chapel for Joseph Edward Tar- been with Unitarian student the Columbia Engineering Coun- held Columbia's Egleston Medal, and Herbert Goldstein, professor groups, planned with cil, a member of the Friends gett, instructor in English at Gen- and are of nuclear engineering, who won Atomic Energy Commission's Protestant and Jewish groups. of Columbia Libraries, and a eral Studies, who drowned April E. O. Lawrence Memorial Award. member of the Columbia As- 5 on a kyack trip. He was 37 Dr. Amatai Etzioni, associate professor of sociology, sociates. Dr. Herbert Goldstein, profes- not more than five US citizens 45 years old. founder of the faculty group and an adviser The Egleston Medal Award has sor of nuclear engineering, was years of age or under who have Mr. Target joined the Columbia to the group been made yearly since 1939 in one of five American scientists made recent meritorious contrib- faculty in 1960 as an instructor student commented that religious organizations honor of the of Thomas named today to receive the utions to the development, use or in the Program in American Lan- are being contacted because "relig- Egleston who founded the School Atomic Energy Commission's control of atomic energy in all guage Instruction, a series of ions are naturally in business of Mines at Columbia in 1864. Ernest Orlando Lawrence Mem- sciences related to atomic energy. courses designed to teach Eng- the of peace." Former recipients of the Egles- orial Award for 1962. Professor Goldstein came to lish to foreign students. The student council also in- ton Medal include Admiral Hy- The scientists were chosen by Columbia in 1961. He was pre- The service will be attended by tends to try to have the National man Rickover, a leader in the an advisory committee to the viously the Nu- a few close friends and col- associated with adopt development of nuclear sub- Commission and their selection leagues of Mr. Targett. There will Student Association its clear Development Corporation program. In the marines; Dr. Irving Langmuir, was approved by President Ken- be no speeches or eulogy, but addition, group of America, where he made sig- hopes to persuade the Nobel Prize winner; and Major nedy. Each winner will receive some music that Mr. Targett Student Edwin H. Armstrong, inventor of a citation, a medal and $5,000. nificant contributions to reactor liked during his life will be Peace Union to utilize their the FM radio. The award is given annually to physics. played. strategy. 2 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Monday, April 23, 196:

and prevent students from registering for WANTED URGENTLY HENRY VERBY courses they will later regret taken. for creative projects. Your ability and drive are having — the only limits to the money you can make. Be PHOTOGRAPHY — your own boss. Work at home. We will accept COLUMBIA,®PECmDR _ Though these booklets have been used MEDS experienced and non-experienced. Send sample Pre- dent successfully elsewhere, the one to be pub- of work (if published), background resume, LAW BBth YEAR OF PUBLICATION references, $1 to cover processing and credit APPLICATION and I. D. PHOTOS investigations, and stamped return lished at Columbia must be guided only by envelope. -:- Recognized For Quality -:- Aristocratic Publications, 465 Wooster Street, The Columbia Daily Spectator is the official the needs of this campus. There is no neces- North. Dept. CU. Barberton, Ohio. 2884 BROADWAY College. It is published on tho of the students of Columbia to concentrate campus of every weekday of tho aca« sity on an evaluation of large periods. 30 DAYS RUSSIA demic year except holidays and examination or introductory courses, or on required of- N.Y.-Amsierdam SAS Jet ONLY 19 DAYS 'TIL ferings. These are either sufficiently well- Editor-in-Chief Return Kopenhagen, Stockholm, PAMPHRATRIA known and appreciated, or, as in the case Helsinki, & Dov M. Grunschlag of Leningrad Moscow.

- - CC B, are being evaluated by a faculty com- Camping Visa Transport - Tour SPRING CARNIVAL Business Manager mittee. The evaluation should concentrate $595 complete Tel: WE 3-8695 May 12 John M. Eckel on the more specialized, familiar courses STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE within each department, and it should be reviewed from year to year. CITY EDITOR: Rosenblum. rspEcStfor^^ COPY EDITOR: Stein. Every effort is being made to eliminate SPORTS DESK: Perlstein. inconvenience to NEWS BOARD: Grebow, Lambert, Schultz. students, but members of ASSOCIATE NEWS BOARD: Katz. Action and Ted Kremer cannot fill out the ( Sterling. HAIRCUTS 75^ ASSISTANT NEWS STAFF: Levy, questionnaires themselves. It CANDIDATE: Goodman. would be 1 i | Professional Service NO WAITING NIGHT EDITORS: Gold. Goodgold, Horowitz. worthwhile for College students to exert PHOTOGRAPHER: Goldman. themselves a bit and submit the form. The 1 BARBER SHOP | VOL. CVI — NO. 104 course evaluation booklet may save them I i | 2875 Bway. corner 112th I MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1962 more exertion later. I 1-flight-up | Preparation f The Board of Managers of Ferris Booth Hall b As Professors Wishy and Dewey have 1 Presents f demonstrated in our letters column, there is "ILLICIT serious disagreement among faculty mem- | INTERLUDE" 1 bers over what constitutes the best prepara- I directed by INGMAR BERGMAN study. Those, like Professor tion for graduate | Tuesday April 24 at 4:30, 8, and 10 Wishy, who advocate more intensive training I in WOLLMAN AUDITORIUM in the student's chosen field, are countered I Admission: 50c and C. U. Identification by others, like Professor Dewey, who would preserve the traditionally general liberal arts 11 curriculum. It appears, however, that the College curriculum can accommodate both points of The Board of Managers Presents view without damaging either. The new al- ternative to English A next year is a case in point. OPPORTUNITIES 1 § It will be a one-term study of a single IN major literary work, to be conducted in the 1 detailed manner that is sometimes falsely considered the exclusive province of gradu- BUSINESS I of ad- P ate schools. Open to three sections 1. Should You Work For A Large Firm &3 vanced freshmen, the course hopefully will book, 2. What Is The Best "Business Training" provide an insight into an important LOVERS' QUARREL |j and, more significantly, into the methods of gaining that insight. A Coffee Hour with MR. WAY of the v- course to at- Certainly the is designed In the Provinces Placement Service of the School of Business fe tract and prepare better English majors, and By Joseph T. Lamber as such it is of great value to the department. The between the Penn- EgI But it will not interfere with the general lovers' quarrel Daily sylvanian and the coed Pennsylvania News may It will be as TODAY 3:30 P.M. I liberal arts curriculum. offered be over. m an alternative to English A, not in addition During Ihe recent suspension of the Pennsyl- | to it. vanian, which was imposed following a parody West Lounge of F.B.H. The major purpose of freshman English issue of the News, the sister newspaper published three issues and incurred a $1000 deficit. Now the — — training good writers should not be Dean of Women's office at the University of Penn- neglected in this special course. Training in sylvania has refused to allow the News to print literary criticism need not preclude training any more issues this year. in lucidity. The Pennsylvanian, having felt the sting of administrative curtailment of their freedom, has gallently defended the News. A recent editorial Course Evaluation said, "The administration's lack of concern with the fate of the Pennsylvania News represents Action and the Ted Kremer Society soon either a deplorable indifference toward student will distribute a questionnaire that hopefully activities or a conscious strategem to control the will lead to the publication of a booklet undergraduate press through the pocket veto." evaluating Columbia courses. But Dean of Women Constance P. Dent has The enterprise is nothing new; it has remained adament. "The additional expense should have been considered when the decision to been tried before — and failed. But there are print ihe extra issues was made," the Dean com- reasons to hope that this attempt will suc- mented. ceed. The questionnaire will not simply be Had the News and Pennsylvanian kissed and left stacked in Hall to wait on the made up a long time ago, they would have saved pleasure and curiosity of undergraduates. It themselves a lot of trouble. >:= * $ will be distributed in the dormitories. No The Penn campus has a long-standing tradi- one rely on student to insure will initiative tion which goes by ihe name "roboitom." that the forms will be filled out and returned. A "robottom" for the uninitiate is roughly The two organizations will send men to col- equivalent to the occasional spring sprints across lect them. Broadway by panty-hunting Lions. It is, however, Course evaluation booklets are used at in an entirely different class. Several years a robottom occurred which Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania and ago resulted in ihe arresi of 138 students. many other schools to supply students with Symptomatic of the difference is this state- information on courses and teachers. At Col- ment from the Pennsylvanian: "Students today are umbia, they would be a valuable aid not confident that they may rely on police generosity only Nothing for your grease. Let Vitalis \ and, at most, will be arrested, jailed for the night, rasher hair than to students, but also to the faculty and ad- keep your hair neat all day without grease. S reprimanded and released." with V-7 *T f\ ministration personnel now concerned with Naturally. is the greaseless grooming discovery. Vitalis® with \ -—.;' Nevertheless, a "baby robottom," which took V-7 curriculum review. It fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness, keeps your j ~=^=- will give more infor- place last week, only found one student in police V-7® jiair neat day grease. Try Vitalis today. You'll like it! miiitim mation about courses than the Catalogue, custody. all without :onday, April 23, 1962 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR 3 Will Participate Graduate Council Sigma Nu National Grants Hofstadter Protests Priorities In Conference at Princeton In Planned Dorm Michigan Unit Bias Waiver D e W i 11 The High Council of Sigma Nu ing a , (continued from page one) Regents by-law forbidding RlMinton Professor of American National fraternity has granted discrimination. According to re- ■ History, will participate this fall $7,720,000. the the University of Michigan chap- Stewart Loud, head of the Grayson Kirk in the American Civilization Con- port by President ter a waiver from Sigma's Nu's Michigan chapter, expressed "sur- ference at . entitled, "The Next Six Years constitution which says that prise and delight" at the High Are the the The conference, being held this Present," building "members must be men, free Council's move. The National will cost more to maintain and ; spring and next fall, is on Amer- born of free ancestry, and without Executive Secretary of Sigma Nu, undergraduate Jican industrial Culture, 1865-1915. construct than an Negro blood and have the char- Richard R. Fletcher, said there While at Princeton, the Co- dormitory. acter and bearing of gentlemen." are absolutely "no strings at- "While it may be possible to lumbia professor will give three This waiver will probably eli- tached" to the waiver. from public lectures. He will commute borrow part of this sum the minate the possibility of any Loud said that the waiver also to Princeton once a week for the government," the report says, punitive action by Michigan's eliminates a "more recent by-law conference while he retains his "the building cannot avoid being Student Government Council which excludes Chinese, Japanese teaching responsibilities at Co- against different in size and character the fraternity, for violat- and others of Oriental descent." lumbia. It finally all from that of an undergraduate eliminates discrim- Professor Hofstadter, who inatory phrases in the fraternity's dormitory." teaches a six point research semi- Evans Is Named initiation ritual. Loud explained nar in the College, was awarded that the Michigan chapter was a Pulitzer Price in 1955 for his Moonlight Sail To Library Post the only one to get the waiver book, "The Age of Reform." He without specifically indicating a the The Trustees of Columbia has written a new book on anti- Moonlight Sail, boatride date when University have named Luther discrimination would intellectualism in American his- sponsored by the Ted Kremer So- ended. H. Evans Director of Interna- be tory which will be published Professor Richard Hofstadter ciety, is scheduled for Friday, Legal next winter. tional and Collections at May 11. Tickets, at $4.50 per the University. Professor Hofstadter's three sit in on all three seminars of couple, are available in the Ted Dr. Evans was Spectator Seeking public lectures will be on the the conference and will aid in the Librarian of Congress from theme of his new book. He will supervision of papers. Kremer mail room. 1945 to 1953, and CU Photographers director general of UNESCO, Spectator is seeking from 1953 to 1958. He will as- to increase its sume his new post July 1. photographic coverage of both The new director was born on- and off-campus events. It is Notes and Notices therefore accepting applications in Sayersville, Texas in 1902. for He received bachelor's and the photography staff. Students in improv- FERRIS BOOTH HALL listening on the Columbia campus, with master's degrees from the Uni- interested Campus organizations or faculty ing their Sheila. versity of Texas and a Ph.D. photographic techniques BASR, Board Managers luncheon using Notes and Notices of — Respighi — La members 10 Concert Hall from Stanford University. and becoming an integral part of at noon in 214 FBH. Botique Fantasque (Arthur Fiedler, Bos- must file forms in 208 Hamilton Evans is the newspaper's operation are BASR meeting at 4 p.m. in 212 FBH. Symph. Orch.); — Poeme Dr. the author of ton Bloch urged to contact Photography Di- or 213 Low before 4 p.m. two Glee Club rehearsal at 4 p.m. in 302 Mistique (Ja'scha Heifitz, violin; Brooks "The Virgin Islands, From

— rector Dan Perl at MO 2-8400, publication days in advance. FBH. Smith, piano); Glazounov The Sea- Naval Base to New Deal" or Speech by Carlos P. Romulo, Philip- sons (Robert Irving, Concert Arts (1945). at the Spectator offive, 318 Ferris — GENERAL pine delegate to the U.N., at 4 p.m. in Orch.); Stravinsky Agon (Stravin- Booth Hall. Wollman. sky cond. Los Angeles Symph. Orch.); Action debate with Mark Lane, Mi- Milhaud — Autumn (Milhaud cond. En- chael Harrington, Robert Schuchman. RELIGIOUS semble of the Concerts, Lamoureux). "The exquisite sensation of intense sexual pleasure." and Ralph Toledano on the "Legacy of «

McCarthyism" at 4:10 p.m. in Harkness International Student Club luncheon — Hollywood Quarterly Theater, a-t noon in the Dodge Room. of the Art Exhibit Alumni-Faculty Committee Intervarsity Fellowship luncheon at "Not since the earliest, simplest motion picture . . . of coffee hour at 3:30 Board Managers noop in the Schiff Room. Today is the last day that -p.rr>. in the Dodge Room. such a joy motion." — Louise Bogan Matins, according to Lutheran use, in Astronomy Club lecture and discus- "Eighteen Painters of the 19th at noon in St. Paul's. sion on "Tracking of Artificial Satel- Century," an exhibit from the Seixas-Menorah — study BUT WHY DID THE CRITICS OF CARIERS DU CINEMA lites" at 5:30 p.m. in McMillin Theater. Atid group collection of the 1.8.M. Corpora- at 8 p.m. in the Dodge Room. Board of Managers reception at 8 p.m. tion, will be shown in the second (the world's leading film magazine) VOTE Gallery. Student Zionist Organization meeting in the floor gallery Ferris Booth Hall. Economics Society-G.S. Faculty Tea presents talk by David Brodsky, Direct- of for foreign students at 7:30 p.m. in G.S. or of the Youth Department of the All eighteen paintings are Film Makers of Columbia present Jewish Agency on "Israeli Immigration scenes of nineteenth century Am-

— SUNRISE "Sunrise," directed by F. W. Murnau 1962" at noon in 302 Barnard. among the and "Blood of the Beasts," directed by Union Theological Seminary dance erican life. Included by F. W. MURNAU George Franju at 8:30 p.m. in McMil- program at 8:30 p.m. in 207 U.TS. painters are Thomas Birch, lin Theater. Thomas Rossiter, George Inness. THE GREATEST FILM EVER MADE? Graduate Sociological Society informal and Albert Pinkham Ryder. meeting at noorr' in Fayerweather WKCR-AM (590 Kc.) Lounge. FIND OUT WHY TONIGHT J Music Department rehearsal at 3 p.m. 8 a.m. (till 9:40) Reveille with Ron Kohn in McMillin Theater. Phillips. Music, news and to Fellowship humor And stay if you wish, for ... Orchestra rehearsal at 5:30 p.m. in open your day. Frequent time and Avi Decter '64 has won the McMillin Theater. weather checks. Richard Lewis Kohn Traveling "BLOOD OF THE BEASTS" 5 p.m. Music Hall with Clive Cuth- (shown last for the benefit of the squeamish) ATHLETICS bertson, featuring the "comedy corner." Fellowship. The fellowship is for

Freshman Baseball, vs. 6:30 WKCR Sports — a five-minute study in the junior year at the Colombia at 3 p.m. at Baker Field. summary with Charlie Mayer. University of London. McMILLIN THEATRE 8:30 P.M. $1.00 7:30 Classroom — The History of the Presented by Filmmakers of Columbia BARNARD American Republic with Professor James Barnard Dormitory Dinner for old and P. Shenton.

new executives at 4 p.m. in the Deanery. 8:30 Campus Closeup — The WKCR Campus News Barnard Foreign Students Tea at 4 Department interviews peopCeuuto p.m. in the Deanery. students on topics of both local and Barnard Spanish Contest at 4 p.m. in national interest. Recorded at noon in the Spanish House. Ferris Booth Hall.

8:35 Club 590 — The center of easy >lIIIIIITIITXIIIIIITIIT^ Make VACATIONLAND SPECTATOR H \y|

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- t -. • '--t-.m...i. . m m - 444 Madison Ave.. New York PL 8-2433 4 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Monday, April 23, 196 Columbia Downs Colgate, 8-1, EarlyScientific Exhibited In ButlerLibrary Kaplan Hurls Three-Hitter A collection of early scientific veying instruments, measuring As is presently on dis- instruments and calculating devices, drawing play on the third floor of Butler instruments, number games, and from first base on a double up Library. miscellaneous related materials Rain Doesn't Stop the left center field alley by Bruce The exhibit, which consists are on display. Toelle. Kaplan then settled down primarily of astronomical and These articles have been sup- Bohaboy, VaseIt and retired the side as two Red mathematical devices, is part of plemented by manuscripts and Raiders flied out. a collection accumulated by books that have been drawn from By Andrew B. Schultz Midway through the inning, the David Eugene Smith, a former branches of the library. The Light Blue nine walloped umpire was once again forced to professor of mathematics at Co- The instruments have been col- Colgate 8-1 Friday afternoon on a stop the game. Sixteen minutes lumbia. A large number of sur- lected from all over the world day that was more suited for later, a determined bunch of fans and include such things as an- meteorologists than for ball- returned to the thoroughly soaked Weekend Sports cient Roman dice, early Greek and geometrical tools, and some pre- players. seats action started once Due to the closing of the print- again. The torrents became a ing plant for Easter Sunday, decessors of modern slide rules A stellar three-hit pitching per- and calculating drizzle and the sun shone weakly Spectator will have coverage of machines. formance by Bob Kaplan and through an ominously cloudy sky. all Saturday's athletic This is the first time in many solid home run shots by Doug events in The delay apparently did not tomorrow's The years that the Smith exhibit has Bohaboy and Tom Vasell guided issue. varsity improve the delivery of Lynch, heavyweight and lightweight been shown and it will continue Columbia to victory in the ab- until July the Colgate southpaw. crews, golf, rugby and track 1. breviated seven inning game, Back to back circuit clouts fol- teams saw saw during called on account of rain. action the Double Edge Razor Blades. Finest on succeeding pitches, in lowed past weekend. The freshmen surgical steel, honed in oil. Full Before the umpire mercifully Columbia's half of the fourth. teams also competed on Saturday. money back guarantee. 25-35c, ended proceedings, the thinning Bohaboy began barrage the with 100-$l.OO, 200-$1.75, 500-$3.75, ranks of spectators had been a straightaway center field blast treated to a rain-soaked afternoon Tom Vasell 1000-$6.50. Postpaid. Packed 5 that cleared the fence about three- TYPING blades to 20 at Baker Field — marked by two package, packages to hind scooted to hundred thirty feet from the rains first. Bohaboy Theses, Manu., Papers, Resumes carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. pauses when the came plate. Teammate Tom Vasell sent third. Postcard brings general merchan- down. a sphere into Spuyten Duyvil Day and Evening The inning ended as Tom Vasell on dise catalog. Emerson Company, The visiting Red Raiders did Lynch's next sent a rocket-like liner right at offering. FA 4-0280 406 So. Second, Alhambra, Calif. very raiding. hitting little Their third baseman Wade Staniar. The In the sixth, the Lions loaded was light and fielding ef- their bespectacled little Colgate in- the bases on a single by Bohaboy forts were marred by the muddy fielder stood his ground and and two walks, with nobody out. turf. But the seemed Lions not speared the drive, to the surprise One run scored on a fielder's The Students for MARK LANE and ACTION a bit bothered by the elements. of some wags on the sidelines, choice play when a hustling John present They jumped off to a two-run who thought it would knock him O'Brien managed to beat a throw lead in the first inning. Mike Oli- home. Catcher Steve Russo sub- down. a debate on phant singled sharply through With two out in the top of the stituting for John Roche, then anti-"subversive" legislation the fielder John came through with a clean single middle. Left second frame, a light drizzle sud- THE LEGACY Ognibene walked on a 3-2 pitch. denly became a- downpour. The to center, driving in two men. of McCARTHYISM After John O'Brien's sacrifice bewildered umpire called a tem- When Colgate's Jim Heilman with pushed the runners up a base, porary halt. The crowd scurried to bobbled the ball, a third Lion both scored on a single to short the covered area underneath the scored. Russo, trying to reach vs. center Bohaboy. The Lion first third base on the was a by football stands. They impatiently error, MARK LANE, ROBERT SCHUCHMAN, baseman advanced on a wild the Hudson Day little too ambitious. He was watched River Assemblyman from National Director pickoff throw to first by Colgate Line pass by, its horn loudly thrown out by at least thirty feet. East Harlem and of Young hurler Malcolm Lynch. The ball blowing. Following a six-minute When the Red Raiders went Americans wound up in the underbrush be- interruption, the game resumed. down in order in the seventh, and Candidate for Congress for Freedom In the fourth inning, Colgate more rain began to fall, the um- MICHAEL HARRINGTON, RALPH pire made his last decision of TOLEDANO. Big scored its only run of the after- the author of contributor to Red Gridders — With one Ted afternoon to end the affair. noon. out, Cushmore THE OTHER AMERICA THE Spring walked and scored all the way For Practice EXPEDITION to COLOMBIA - In Daily Sun Poll Tennis Managers PANAMA. Share adventures, duties, inexpensive. Free litera- MONDAY, APRIL 23 HARKNESS THEATRE freshman in In a poll conducted by the Cor- Any interested be- ture, airmail: Yacht Fairwinds, manager nell Daily Sun, forty of 48 foot- coming a tennis please Box 1288 E, Thomas, Virgin Si. 4:00 p.m. (basement of ) ball players from the two most re- call Mel Aronoff at UN 4-9507 or Islands. cent Big Red teams said that they RI 9-9237. favored spring football practice. The is the only major college football conference which doesn't allow spring prac- I Citizenship Council Presents: I tice. The 1954 President's Agree- ment, which formally established the Ivy League, specifically stated that no spring football practice HON. CARLOS P. ROMULO was to be held despite the out- I I cries of players, coaches and fans. Philippine Delegate to the U.N. j The Sun poll I indicated that | the players didn't feel that foot- | Pulitzer Prize Winner ball and good grades were mu- Former President of the U.N. General Assembly J tually exclusive. In fact, many J players stated that their grades . 1 Speaking On: |1 actually improved during the sea- I son. A similar poll by the showed that 55 of the 62 j COMMUNIST AGRESSION \ players on the 1960 team favored the return to spring practice. j TYPING SERVICE IN SOUTHEAST ASIA 1 ' All Work Done on 1 | Electric ' Typewriters 1 MONDAY APRIL 23 4 P.M. FERRIS BOOTH HALL { Pick up and Deliver 1 BA 3-6231 TN 8-9144 GLEE CLUB at TOWN HALL

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