ZIbe Comentan MORAVIAN COLLEGE STUDENT WEEKLY

Volume LXVIII Pa. Bethlehem, Saturday, April 24, 1965 Number 23 Alumni Roundtable Nicaraguan Missionary Reviews Honors Receives Alumni Award Moravian College's honors pro¬ gram, in which superior students Mrs. A. David Thaeler Jr., whose adult life has been devoted are invited to take additional ac¬

.. .. to helping the ill while serving as an aide to her physician-husband ademic work in their senior years, was reviewed in Nicaragua, received the Comenius award from the Moravian at the Second Mon¬ day Roundtable of the Alumni College Alumni Assn. at a testimonial dinner Saturday, April 3. Assn. April 19 in the Mrs. Thaeler, whose husband College Union dining room. founded a mission hospital in Bil- Dean James J. waskarma, Nicaragua, was honor¬ Journalism Students Heller, moder¬ ator for the ed for her contribution in the panel of five persons, Tour Phila. Bulletin explained the program from the nursing - missionary field. More than 150 alumni paid tribute to positions of the student and fac¬ Interested students currently her at the annual award dinner ulty members. enrolled in the Journalism course in the College Union Panelists included Dr. Building. met at the Philadelphia Bulletin Lloyd L. The award is presented to an Burkhart, head of the building April 6 for a guided tour English alumnus "for Department and former chairman outstanding achieve¬ of the large-scale operation. ment" in commemoration of the of the honors committee; Dr. With two press lines each anniversary of the birth of Bishop long¬ Stuart S. Kulp, Chemistry De¬ er than a football John Amos Comenius, "the father field, an under¬ partment chairman and current ground freight line of modern education." permitting 14 honors committee head; Griffith railroad boxcars to unload news¬ Dr. Thaeler, who received the Dudding and Mrs. Beverly L. print at one time and the Comenius award in 1950, and Mrs. most Strohl, members of Moravian's modern typesetting Thaeler retired from the mission machines, the first honors class now on the fac¬ Bulletin today ranks field in November. But they have among the ulties of Muhlenberg and Cedar world's largest and most efficient not lived a life of retirement, com¬ Crest Colleges respectively, and newspaper operations. ing to the Mary M. Olin Clinic at Daily cir¬ Michael Young, Moravian senior culation has grown from 6,317 in Penney Farms, Fla., where Dr. with honors work in history who 1895 to the present figure of over Thaeler is a resident physician recently was awarded a Woodrow 700,000. The students saw each and Mrs. Thaeler a staff nurse. Wilson Fellowship. stage in the The alumni association publishing process, inaug~ Fifty - six from the students, including urated the award presentation in original gathering and eight candidates this year, have writing of the news to the dis¬ 19 41. First recipient was the late enrolled in the honors program Dr. Howard E. patching of dozens of local de¬ Rondthaler, Class inaugurated with the Class of of 1896, and former livery trucks. president of 1960. This year's candidates are: Salem These College, Winston - Salem, tours are scheduled hour¬ Bill Horwath, English; Jane Ju¬ N.C. ly, six days a week, and are open lius, English; Helen Kovach, Boston, photo by Haupert This year's award winner was to the public. A pamphlet giving Spanish; Jim Morgan, Psychol¬ the second woman recipient, join¬ a complete step-by-step descrip¬ ogy; Dick Schaffer, Biology; Tom ing Mrs. Mildred Diefenderfer tion of the Bulletin operation is Vadasz, History; and Mike Young, Ladner, Class of 1939, a wri¬ on file in the Library Annex. History. ter-journalist from Tulsa, Okla., College Choir On Move who was honored in 1962. Mrs. Thaeler is the former Mar¬ Wilson Fellows: garet Heidenreich; she received During her Vacation B.A. Spring degree from Moravian in The Moravian 1924 and her nursing degree in College Choir left the campus Monday, April I 2, Mike on a 1934 from the Kahler School of Gary Miller, Young three-day tour of New York and Massachusetts. Nursing at the Mayo Clinic. She The first stop was at Hastings-on-Hudson, New taught in the Moravian school in York, where the 70-voice Honored at group sang at a high school afternoon. This Bluefields, Nicaragua in 1924-29 Banquet Monday concert was when her father was a arranged by a former missionary Two Moravian College Wood- the Classics pastor there. Department, faculty pupil of the high school and pres¬ row Wilson Fellowship winners, advisers, presented and ent In husband Young member of the Choir, Lou assisting her with Michael B. Blackfriars Young, a senior ma¬ Miller respectively. Cadwell. hospital Mrs. Thaeler was duties, joring in history, and D. Gray Dean James J. a nurse, teacher, Heller spoke The same evening the Choir dietitian, cook, Miller, an honor graduate last briefly about the Wilson Present gardener, organist and laundress. Founda¬ Play gave a concert in New York City June, were honored by the col¬ tion, Dr. Clarke at the The couple has three children, G. Chapman Jr. City Tabernacle. This pro¬ lege Friday night, April 2, at a Mary, wife of Gordon of the Religion Department, on gram was jointly sponsored by the B. Mowrer dinner in the College Union Build¬ the Danforth By Sartre of Bethlehem; A. David Foundation, and Dr. Metropolitan Moravian Churches, Jr., form¬ ing. Herman E. Collier, chairman of St. John's erly with the Peace Corps, and Jean Paul Sartre's one act play, Baptist and North Pres¬ Young, of Red the now a resident of Lion, York, Department of Natural Sci¬ byterian Churches. Oxford, Ohio, No Exit, will be performed by the County, is considering offers of ence and The and John, a student at Salem Col¬ Mathematics, on the Na¬ students were housed for admission from Moravian College Blackfriars on lege. Harvard, Wiscon¬ tional Science Foundation. the night in private homes in the sin, and Columbia. Miller, 322 S. May 7 and 8 in Prosser Audi¬ Mrs. Elwyn Martin Mariner of Dr. Raymond S. Haupert, col- metropolitan area — including St. Lucas St., Allentown, is study¬ Arlington, Mass., a classmate of 1 e g e president, introduced Dr. torium. Under the direction of Manhattan, Long Island and the ing for a Ph.D. degree in classics Bronx. Choir Mrs. Thaeler, was toastmaster. Lloyd L. Burkhardt, chairman of Eugene Jacobson, the cast of members found that at Harvard. Three of Mrs. the English Department and even though this was a Mariner's brothers Dr. characters includes Mary Everett big and There were and a sister also are Moravian 1,385 students from Hwa Yol Jung, chairman of the dirty city, they were graciously 361 as Estelle, Steve Levine as Cra- received graduates. colleges chosen for fellow¬ Political Science Department, who by their hosts. Mrs. ships this deau, Robin Veluce as Inez, and Schantz The award was presented by year from more than spoke on career opportunities in received a bouquet of 11,000 as flowers Louis W. Bender of Doylestown faculty-nominated college college teaching. Burkhardt and Bruce Weaver the bellboy. from members of the host¬ seniors in R. 3, alumni the United States and Jung were recipients last ing church after the performance. president, and Dr. year of The play involves two women Raymond S. Canada. Recipients receive tuition the Lindback Foundation The next day the two chartered Haupert, college awards and one man locked up together and fixed buses fees at a graduate school for "excellence in t e a c h i n carried Choir members to president, reviewed the life of g." for eternity in one hideous room of their choice quite a Comenius in addition to $1,- These awards were made different environment — Bishop and the history possible in hell. As the plot evolves, each of the award. 800 for living expenses. a small New through a grant to the college by character's soul is shorn of its England town. Here, in The Rev. Robert - the trustees of the Christian Haverhill, the W. Woosley, Twenty five Moravian sopho¬ R. secrecy and hidden sins are mer¬ Massachusetts, mores and group performed at the First Jr., chaplain, delivered the in¬ and juniors whose aca¬ Mary Lindback Foundation cilessly exposed. Bap¬ tist Church vocation and Miss Mary Pongracz demic achievements qualify them of Philadelphia. as part of their 200th Tickets are available at the main provided piano dinner music. as superior students, as well as Anniversary Celebration. desk of the C.U.B. Curtain time is That The awards committee consist¬ seniors who were nominated this night, as in New York, 9:00 Graduate Record p.m. on May 7, following the the students ed of William H. year for national fellowships were Exams stayed in the private Gross, Free- movie. The invited Saturday night per¬ homes of members of the mansburg, Mrs. Alice F. Philips, to hear of opportunities Tuesday morning, May 4 Baptist formance will begin at 8:30 p.m., available from Woodrow Church. Miss Fannie Harrar, Miss Ruth Wilson Administered to all seniors following the hootenanny. Since The Choir travelled the Overfield, William Woodring, Eu¬ and other national fellowships. follow¬ Look for additional inform¬ there will be only two perform¬ ing gene E. McColm and Rev. Arthur Dr. J. Richard morning, Wednesday, to near¬ Jones, senior ation this week on the ances, it is suggested that stu¬ by Boston to do a little sight¬ Nehring, all Bethlehem, and Hen¬ professor of the History Depart¬ bulletin board. dents obtain their tickets as soon seeing before ry Schlegel of Nazareth. ment, and Dr. Walter Moeller of returning to Beth- as possible. (Cont. on p. 4, col. 3) Page 2 THE COMENIAN April 24, 1 965

Editorials: Beecher Elected It's Time To Unscramble Time

V.P. of French Asso. The uniform time legislation introduced in both houses of Congress Professor Jean Beecher to end clock confusion is long overdue. has Optimism and recently been ejected On Sunday, April 25, America will again live on "scrambled time." vice-president of the Lehigh More than 100 million Americans will advance their clocks to daylight Valley chapter of the Amer¬ saving time, while 90 million people will not change. ican Association of Teachers Bigger and Be "This annual time scramble complicates the operations and schedul¬ of French. Other officers ing of the transportation industry. It confounds the television viewer, With a mingling of optimism and trepidation I assume with this named for the next two bewilders the vacationing traveler and aggravates the businessman," issue the editorship of The Comenian. The shoes of the past editor, years: for president, Dr. Senator Norris Cotton (R.-N.H.) said. "A flood of missed appointments John Van while at least three sizes too small for this one, will still be hard to Eerde, professor and late arrivals will plague many Americans," he continued. of romance languages at fill. Yet, we will have as our primary goal to continue the recent Lehigh University; for sec¬ Let's see what happens: upward trend in the quality of our newspaper. retary-treasurer, Mr. E. I. • 15 states start daylight saving time the last Sunday in April and Bigger and better things are planned for the next fiscal year, Czechowski, teacher of Latin end the last Sunday in October. and French at Shull Junior and an eager staff (whose names appear below) has been hand- High School. • 16 other states either start or end daylight saving time—or both picked to put them into effect. If you to would like work for the on different dates. paper, step right up and volunteer—I know the experience will be • Of the 31 states, 15 observe it on a statewide basis, while the beneficial. Otherwise, just wish us luck . . . and write me a letter College Educators others have local option. some time. WAT • And across the country isolated areas observe "wildcat" DST A ttendConferences without official sanction. Some states do not observe it at all. During Recess This legislation to have time and date uniformity wherever daylight saving time is adopted should be encouraged. A Fascinating Eleven Moravian College edu¬ cators were delegates to various conferences and conventions dur¬ WHAT TIME IS IT? ing the college's two-week mid- Open Again semester recess. Three days ago, on April 21, the 646-acre World's Fair grounds Dr. Raymond S. Haupert, pres¬ came to life for the second time. That means that only six months ident, Vice President and Dean remain for your visit before the exhibits at Flushing Meadow are dis¬ James J. Heller and Dr. Herman mantled. E. Collier, chairman of the De¬ The Fair is better this year than last, and it was the biggest, best partment of Natural Sciences and world exposition in history last summer. For reasons yet unexplained, Mathematics represented the col¬ however, foreigners and people from far-away states came in droves lege at a meeting of the Danforth in 1964 and New Yorkers and their near away. neighbors stayed Foundation Wednesday in Wash¬ Some of this was due to fear, or worry about costs, or a feeling that ington, D.C. the fair is just for the hoi poloi. Yet by the time September rolled They heard a preliminary re¬ around many of these skeptics were sneaking in, some wearing dark port on an educational study by glasses, because they had realized they were missing one of the big the Foundation, which recently extravaganzas of the century. What's more, they liked it. completed a nation - wide survey They had to like it. The only way you could see things like the of Protestant and Catholic church- General Motors and Ford rides into the future, the Pepsi-Cola fantasy- affiliated colleges and universities. land, the Johnson's Wax movie, GE's Progressland, the Pieta by Michel¬ Donald K. Kirts, dean of men, angelo and the hundreds of other exhibits and not like it was to be attended a three-day meeting of sick, sick, sick. the National Assn. of Student About $5,000,000 has been spent for new exhibits, including a show Personnel Administrators in of 60 modern artists and sculptors and a tribute to Sir Winston Church¬ ill that features an exact replica of the study of his country home, Washington, D.C. He also partici¬ Chartwell; 30 Churchill paintings, many of them never before shown pated in a pre-conference work¬ in public, will be on display. In addition, some $2,000,000 has been shop and seminar. spent on revamping and improving many of last year's favorite pav¬ Dean Halcyon S. Mueller at¬ ilions. tended a session of the National So if you "did" the Fair in 1964, going back in 1965 ought to be Assn. of Women Deans and Coun¬ even more fun. It's the most fascinating square mile in town, a meet¬ sellors in Minneapolis. ing place where people from all parts of the world share and compare The Rev. Robert W. Woosley the best products of their skill, imagination and culture. Jr., college chaplain, attended WAT meetings of the National Assn. of College Chaplains at Cornell Uni¬ versity. Attention Men! Submit Mineralogy students o f Four members of the language last semester who have not your date's picture for the staff represented Moravian at the Senior Farewell Queen. Pic¬ collected minerals at Corn¬ Northeast Conference of the Mod¬ tures should be submitted wall are welcome to go on ern Foreign Languages Assn. in to the CUB desk before this semesters trip to that New York City. Dr. Paul E. Muel¬ Monday, April 26, at 5:00 mine. It will be on May 11, and the bus will leave ler, associate professor of German, p.m. Girls need not be sen¬ south Michael Elias, assistant professor iors or students at Mora¬ campus at 7:30 a.m. of Spanish, Mrs. Dorothy Tyler, vian. In order to be assured a assistant professor of French and seat, please notify Dr. Myers German, and Mrs. Jane R. Haynes, Escaping the no later than May 3. French instructor, attended the Through the valley just west of our two campuses winds the Monoc- French Examinations sessions. acy Creek, a small stream draining the Pocono foothills and emptying into the Lehigh River. It may not look like much from your dorm Given "Cry The Beloved by AATF The window, but a short walk up Country" Comenian the raUroad track to the north leads On Saturday, April 10, while 866-1682 into a more rural setting, one of the last holdouts from the current Canada Lee, Sidney Poitier, Moravian College students were building boom within city limits. We are fortunate to have an area Charles Carson away on vacation, 128 pupils from Saturday, April 24, 1965 such as this within easy walking distance of school, where a car-less First a best-selling novel, individualist can escape the rigors of campus life for a short time. neighboring high schools and jun¬ Editor Walter Thurber then a -play, this com¬ ior high schools visited Comen- Before you take your wilderness sojourn, or a pelling story Managing? Editors A1 Garratt, buy browse through ius Hall to participate in the Na¬ of faith and Judy Thatcher the strange workings of des¬ copy of "Bethlehem's Birds As I Found Them" by Catherine L. Bar- tional French Contest sponsored News Editor. .Mary Jane Edmondson tiny has been made into an lieb, a retired city schoolteacher. Robert P. Snyder and the Moravian locally by the Lehigh Valley chap¬ Copy Editor Carol Gress absorbing, penetrating mo¬ College Conservation Association have made it possible to have her 30 ter of the American Association Business Manager Dick Bogert tion picture. Canada Lee years of nature notes put into print at last. All remaining copies are of Teachers of French. Circulation Manager available at cost in the C.U.B. bookstore or at Moravian Book Shop. portrays a simple country Tom Geissinger The examinations, set for each Mrs. Barlieb has observed all of nature's intricacies with a trained eye, priest, drawn to the city in Advertising Manager. .Bill Farquer of the usual four high school most of her walks having been taken along the Monocacy. By consult¬ search of his son. There, Photographers Bob Bryan, levels, test aural comprehension Eric amid the squalor and Christenson, Ken Hubbard, ing this booklet, the novice hiker will be alerted to all aspects of the evil Tom Dick as well as knowledge of vocabu¬ Jacob, Sassaman atmosphere, he Monocacy's natural heritage. finds human News Writers Barry Derr, lary, structure, culture and civil¬ WAT misery and tragedy in the Kay Hill, Carol McHugh, Linda ization. The French government Moggio, John Stauffer discovery that his son has awards medals to the best papers Feature Writers. . .Mary Ann Hunt, been sentenced to death for Toni Ippolito, Cecilia Matus at each level. The local AATF murder. Photographed in Columnists Harvey Glick, chapter is offering book prizes. South Africa, the camera Kathy Broczkowski, Joella Ham- The national winner at the fourth len, Will Starbuck SPOSAC Rally is approaching. has taken full advantage of Sports Editor Alan Wildblood year level is given a six-weeks the Johannesburg slums in trip to France. Sports Writers Arlene Ebner, Those interested register today with Jim MacMonagle creating a mood of rejection Alan Wildblood Mrs. Tyler is in charge of ar¬ and despair. Faculty Adviser Eric Rhodin or Scott Stoneback. rangements for the contest, as¬ Also a W. Fields Short: sisted Published at the by Mrs. Kromayer and Mrs. "The Fatal Glass of Beer." Globe-Times Printery Beecher. April 24, 1965 T H E C O M E N I A N Page 3 coMENii& Zerfass Shuts Out Temple Greyhound Hurler PORT. Starts First Game; MC Nine Now 6-2

MoMo Baseball Dark clouds that threatened to blot out hopes of the Moravian 4-2 Record baseball team for a banner sea¬ During son blown have away on the air Moravian College had a two- On Friday and Saturday of the currents set up by Bob Zerfass' week Spring vacation, but its baseball-filled week, the 'Hounds strong arm. baseball team got only one week. came back for two more wins to The senior righthander, last The Greyhound nine spent the bring their record to 5-2. They year's workhorse, was unable to first eight days of the Easter re¬ exploded for five runs in the sixth start for coach Gil Gillespie in cess in almost daily appearances inning to top their Drew guests, any of the first seven ball games. on the diamond. In that time 6-4. He returned to a starting role coach Gil Gillespie's highly touted Musselman and Zerfass then Tuesday and pitched a six - hit nine added four victories and two shared mound duties in a 9-0 vic¬ shutout of Temple University at setbacks to an opening win over tory at Lebanon Valley that end¬ Philadelphia, winning 1-0 on a Franklin & Marshall. They took ed the vacation games as they batted in in the ninth inning two more easy victories before started, with a shutout by Mora¬ by Doc Nagle. The 'Hounds record running into trouble. vian. Jack Fry banged home five was brought to 6-2 as Zerfass Terry Musselman shut out visit¬ runs with a and a pinch- joined Terry Musselman in the ing Muhlenberg, 6-0, the day hit grand slammer against the ranks of complete game pitchers. classes ended. The following Tues¬ Flying Dutchmen. Jack Fry, who had opened the day Hank Nehilla got four hits, Mules Beaten, 6-0 inning with a single, stole second including a two-run triple, to batters could do Muhlenberg and then came across with the pace the 'Hounds to a 7-2 road nothing against Musselman. The only run of the ball win over Wilkes that game on inaugurated senior righthander gave up only Nagle's two-out five consecutive days of baseball. grounder up the two hits and two walks in pitch¬ middle to center field. Walks Fatal ing the only complete game so Fry and Nagle collected two Swarthmore ended the three- far for the injury-plagued Grey¬ hits apiece, as Owl pitcher Charles game Mo-Mo win skein, outscor- hound mound corps. He struck Bishop was as stingy as Zerfass, ing Gillespie's charges, 4-2, April out nine, and it wasn't because of yielding only five base knocks. 7 when three runners that Bob amateurish umping because Am¬ Zerfass had walked crossed the erican League arbiter Jim Hono- Evens Record plate for the home club. chuk, who lives in Allentown, took The Mo Mo hurler, who drop¬ his Lafayette dumped the Grey¬ place behind the Moravian ped a game in relief to Swarth¬ hounds again a day later at Steel catcher. more earlier, evened his season Five hits Field, 6-3, despite Zerfass' fine gave Musselman four record at 1-1 as he struck out 11 relief hurling and a 13-hit Mo¬ runs in a fourth-frame uprising. and walked five. His opponent ravian attack. (Cont. on p. 4, col. 4) fanned 10 and passed only three as he made a strong bid to repeat the 2-0 shutout that Temple hand¬ ed Moravian last season.

Both pitchers had to get out GREYHOUND of jams in the middle innings to keep the game scoreless. The Hounds filled the bases in the fifth, but Bishop got George Pit- GRAPEVINE silos on a ground out to end the inning. by Alan Wildblood Zerfass came through with a of Jesse Hodges in the Six different pitchers started for Moravian in its first six baseball sixth to strand three baserunners. THIS PITCH by Moravian pitcher Bob Zerfass didn't turn into a games as a result of injuries and a tight schedule. Temple run, because the 'Hound hurler shut out the Owls, 2-0, Tues¬ The Moravian righthander nar¬ VINCE SEAMAN, Terry Musselman, Frank Dox, Ralph Eltringham, day in his first start. rowly escaped in the seventh, as Gary Laubach and ED McCANDLESS all had a chance to prove them¬ Carm Ferullois' liner to left went selves worthy of getting into rotation as they drew successive assign¬ foul with runners on first and ments from coach Gil Gillespie. third. MUSSELMAN alone pitched a complete game, a two-hit Cartier, Kelhart, Still win Unbeaten, Albright comes to Steel Field over Muhlenberg. Seaman lasted 6% innings, while Hound Netman for a header this after¬ yielding only one run to Franklin and Marshall. LAU¬ noon. BACH, against Moravian Faces Lafayette, and McCandless, against Drew, Undefeated In '65 both stayed in for 6% frames and gave up four runs. ELTRINGHAM was relieved after four innings of shutout Bill Cartier, George Kelhart, OGO "A" Softballers Win ball against Swarthmore. Dox and the Moravian team all re¬ pitched only two innings, dur¬ ToughGolfTest Third Intramural mained unbeaten in tennis action Game ing which Wilkes failed to score. Moravian's undefeated golf The only hurlers on the roster who failed to draw a as the Greyhounds edged Muhlen¬ OGO's "A" softball team starting nod team warmed up for today's big in berg, 5-4, on at Allen- early action were Bob Zerfass and JEFF FEIST. Feist has a sore Tuesday match with Franklin & Marshall brought its intramural record to arm and town. 3-0 with two wins the week be¬ Zerfass, who came out of the bullpen on thre® occasions with a 15-3 lashing of Muhlen¬ couldn't start until this week because a broken The Mules were the third vic¬ fore finger prevented him berg Tuesday at the Bethlehem Spring vacation. The OGO from tim of the Moravian netmen, who club tallied 12 times in the fourth swinging a bat. Adding to pitching woes, Musselman got a welt Municipal Golf Course. on his throwing arm after he was hit by a pitch in the Wilkes contest. were tied, 4-4, by Lafayette. In¬ inning to knock off defending cluded in the wins was The defeat of the Mules follow¬ And finally, Seaman was sidelined in the same game when he pulled a 9-0 champion TKE "A" and then beat ed equally decisive wins over Al¬ his shoulder after only four deliveries. sweep of PMC. their "B" brothers, 13-10. ***** Cartier won his 22 straight bright, 16^-1%, and Upsala, 15- TKE "B" also won two games, 3, during the pre-Easter recess. The "TEN RUN RULE," that says a Momo intramural singles match, dumping Mule Dan downing the Underdogs, 8-6, on softball game ends when one club gets a 10-run lead is Garrison, 6-0, 6-3. Kelhart stop¬ Yesterday's home match pit¬ a three-run homer by Gil Keller. provoking many gripes. The the chance of de¬ ped George Wells' winning streak ted the 'Hounds (3-0) against a rule denies Bob Scammel ripped a triple and veloping character that athletics at three. bunch of usually affords. The ten Diplomats who defeated two singles for the losers. The run rule a Besides the undefeated 'Hounds, reinforces tendency to give up in the face of previously unbeaten Lehigh, 14-4. TKE seconds also knocked off high odds. If DENNY ROBISON, star playmaker for Mora¬ Gordon Rupert registered a sin¬ Each time out a different mem¬ OGO "B", 14-3. vian's 1964-edition courtsters, worried about gles win against Lafayette. Car- odds, he ber of coach Terry Jackson's team would have tier, teamed with brother Fred, Ernie Yarborough hurled the given up basketball because of his height defi¬ has been low man. Freshman Don TKE first ciency. scored a doubles victory in the stringers to an 8-2 vic¬ Powell paced the 'Hounds in the A quit-whi.le-you-are-behind darkness-curtailed match at Eas- tory over SPO, after the latter provision is especially dangerous in an F & M match with a 74 for the ton. had shut out OGO "C", 2-0. intramural softball loop. If two slowballers are alternating on the hill par-72 course. The closest sets were 6-2 in —and this can happen—and the best defensive players are back in Next week's schedule: the slaughter Fred Laist shot a 74 in the the dorms "booking" for a Health hourly, ten runs can be scored every of PMC. Monday, April 20 inning. Take the big defeat of visiting Upsala, while rally out of the diamond sport, and what is left? 4:15—Hassle Horns vs SPO Dick Fisher missed par by only The biggest horror of Fast-Pitch Softball Rule No. 1 is Moravian Book 5:00—OGO "B" vs Underdogs its last Shop one as he fired a 73 in the Al¬ phrase, AT THE UMPIRE'S DISCRETION. An ump Tuesday, April 27 - bright match. who may be the pitcher's roommate may find it difficult to BOOKS GIFTS 4:15—TKE "A" vs OGO "C" 5:00—Whefcomes vs OGO "B" be that discreet. A hungry official may stop a 33-23 ball 428 Main Street Mark DellaFera, Mike Reber, Wednesday, April 28 game when DELMONICO is on the menu, but let a 56-0 Bethlehem and Don Brown round out the 4:15—OGO "A" vs SPO one continue if he is afraid to face another SALISBURY. six-man Moravian squad. 5:00—TKE "B" vs Whefcomes Page 4 THE COMENIAN April 24, 1965 Board of Trustees Ratifies C.U.B. News Six On Friday, April 30, the Sen¬ Faculty Promotions ior Farewell Dance will be held in Johnston Hall. SEE Six faculty members of Mora¬ of Westhampton College of the US FOR THAT Some students vian College have received promo¬ University of Richmond, where might enjoy waitress tions effective Sept. 1. The an¬ she received her bachelors de¬ service; some may not. To nouncement was made by Dr. gree, and has taken graduate work satisfy both, the following ar¬ SPRING FORMAL Raymond S. Haupert, college pres¬ at Marywood College, Scranton rangements can be made: The Cafeteria will be ident, following ratification by the and Lehigh University, receiving open for the Board of Trustees. her masters degree at Lehigh in regular Friday cafeteria-style RENT THE LATEST STYLE meal. Dr. Dorothy Tyler, assistant 1962. The Dining Room will be par¬ professor of French and German, Mrs. Haynes, a graduate of FORMAL WEAR titioned off, with waitresses serv¬ is promoted to associate professor Butler University, Indianapolis, ing either of the regular food and becomes chairman of the De¬ Ind., received her masters degree items that evening, Grilled Cube partment of Modern Languages. from the University of Illinois, Steak for the meat selection and Dr. Herman E. Collier Jr., and has studied at the Sorbonne Lobster Tail for the fish option. H. at the M. WALTERS chairman of the Division of Nat¬ University of Paris and Be- Tie and jacket, heels and hose ural Sciences and Mathematics, is sancon University in France. A attire would be required. Table¬ promoted from associate to full member of the Moravian faculty cloths and candles will provide a 1036 LINDEN ST. professor. since 1959, she previously was an BETHLEHEM, PA. pleasant atmosphere. Cost: $1.85 instructor at both Butler and the Pour instructors are promoted — Steak, 2.35 — Lobster (for to assistant University of Illinois. 868-9651 — professors. They are Guests & Day students). Diagonally Across From Liberty High Mrs. Rae N. Miss Griffith, biology; Mrs. Whytock, daughter of In order to make this service Jane R. Haynes, French; Miss Mr. and Mrs. John Whytock, 1835 feasible, a minimum of 20 people Christina Whytock, physical edu¬ Main St., joined the faculty in will be necessary. Kindly sign up 1962. She is a 1960 graduate of cation, and Joseph L. Powlette, at the CUB desk by Tuesday, physics. Springfield College and taught April 27, 11 p.m. If the mini¬ physical education at East Mead¬ MoMo Baseball Team . . . (Cont. from p. 3, col. 2) Mrs. Tyler succeeds Dr. Mar¬ mum number have not signed up After ow High School in New York be¬ Bob Corradi singled and gave up the fifth and sixth Leo¬ garet Gump, who will retire from at that time, you will be notified fore returning to Bethlehem. Tom Evans walked, Doc Nagle pard tallies in the ninth. full-time teaching after 22 years on Wednesday of the cancellation. drove in Corradi with another sin¬ In addition to her Moravian outhit Lafayette, 13- of service and 11 years as depart¬ responsibil¬ Remember—this is an arrange¬ ities in the woman's gle. 10, and knocked out starting hurl- ment chairman. Dr. Gump will physical edu¬ ment for optional service, as the cation Subsequent one - baggers by er Preston Denby in the seventh continue in a part-time capacity. department, she also is di¬ cafeteria will serve cafeteria- Musselman and rector of the George Pitsilos after he had allowed 10 base In the inter-collegiate and style as usual. The candidates departmental reorganiz¬ knocked across two inter-mural more, and knocks. ation, Dr. Tyler will advise French programs for women. for the Queen of Senior Farewell Andy Straka brought the Mora¬ In that inning the Powlette is a Moravian will be Greyhounds majors, Dr. Paul E. Mueller, as¬ gradu¬ eating in the Germantown vian pitcher home with an op¬ brought the score to 4-3, but saw sociate professor, will advise Ger¬ ate, receiving his degree in 19 60. Room with their escorts. posite-field double. their bid for the lead thwarted man majors and Michael Elias, He was a teaching and research when Fry's long line drive to assistant from 1960-63 at Cornell Wilkes Loses, 7-2 assistant professor, will serve as Choir . . . Nehilla added right with two men on was haul¬ Spanish advisor. University, where he earned his three singles to (Cont. from p. 1, col. 5) ed in by Dan Kristoff for the final masters degree. his triple in the defeat of Wilkes, Mrs. Tyler was formerly head out. lehem. Some spent their time as the winners overcame two un¬ George Pitsilos accounted for of the As a Moravian Department of Modern Lan¬ undergraduate, three of the Moravian hits. viewing historical sites, while earned Colonel runs with five guages at Moravian Preparatory he was a member of the Triangle others toured the shopping area. scores in the fifth inning. Mus¬ Drew School, serving there from 1952 Honor Society and one of the Edged, 6-4 Most members were tired and selman picked up his second win Freshman to 1963, when she joined the col¬ early participants in the honors pitcher Ed McCand- ready to leave for home at the in relief as he pitched in his third less won his first start for Mora¬ lege faculty. She is a graduate of program. He was president of appointed time. straight game. vian on the 'Hounds Cornell University, where she re¬ Sigma Phi Omega social frater¬ big inning The program of music used on Swartlimore ceived her bachelors and masters nity, a member of the band and took advantage of against Drew. the tour included contemporary four walks McCandless, degrees and a doctor of philoso¬ of Rho Alpha Upsilon science fra¬ given up by Zerfass having given up the composers, early American Mora¬ in four first two runs of the phy degree in Comparative Liter¬ ternity. innings of hurling. The game in the vian composers, and a Bach Can¬ ature. totiil equaled the 'Hound throw¬ top of the sixth, saw the Mo Mo tata. The Choir also sang batsmen come two ers' free - pass output for 44 in¬ back with their five Besides teaching in public American folk songs, accompanied nings of work in 1964. in the bottom half of the inning. schools in Marcellus, N.Y., and by the guitar. Ron B e r t Only Six More Days Zerfass, who relieved starter a, Fry, and Nagle as a substitute teacher in Bethle¬ The student group is directed drove in four of the barkers with Ralph Eltringliam in the fifth, hem, Mrs. Tyler has taught at by Mr. Richard Schantz and ac¬ to SENIOR FAREWELL had a 1-0 lead singles, in a rally that got an Keuka going into the College, Keuka Park, N.Y. companied by his assist from three Drew errors. wife, Mrs. Mon¬ Swartlimore sixth when he and gave Wells College, Aurora, N.Y. ica Schantz. Dox had to up two runs. The Moravian right¬ put out the fire in Dr. Collier was the next frame for McCandless, formerly on the hander issued a pair of bases on as the losers closed the college faculty (1955 - 57) and balls. gap to chairman of the Department of 5-4. He then held Drew scoreless Both runners scored on a sin¬ Chemistry before entering the in¬ ARTS & SCIENCE GRADUATES for its last two times up to save gle by Jim Truitt, after they had dustrial field in 1957. He has the game. advanced on a wild pitch and be¬ served as a technical research con¬ Picnic In The come the first earned runs charged Valley sultant for Superior Metals Corp. Coming on the heels of two to the 'Hound staff this year. of Bethlehem and from 1957-63 TEACH losses and a squeaking win, the The Garnet scored two more was research analytical chemist game with Lebanon Valley was the next inning on a single, two with E. I. DuPont DeNemours Co. Earn while a picnic. Musselman, in seven learning . . . walks, and Dana Carroll's bases- in Wilmington, Del. Mr. Collier innings, and Zerfass, in two, gave • Master's loaded single. returned to Moravian in Septem¬ Degree up only three hits between them. • ber 1963. Professional Certification Leopards Score, 6-3 Musselman won his third. • Annual Income of $5,300 + Gary Laubach started his first Meanwhile Fry hit He is a graduate of Randolph- safely three • game against Lafayette, but was times himself after he Macon College, Ashland, Va., Placement and Tenure pinch hit replaced by Zerfass in the seventh in the third. Five of Moravian's earning his bachelors degree in after allowing the Leopards to nine safeties were for chemistry in 1950, and received Qualifications extra bases. take a 4-2 lead. Vince Seaman won the his masters and doctorate in 1952 opener, • No Education Courses Zerfass entered with the bases as he held F & M hitless until and 195 5 respectively from Le¬ Required • full and only one out after Laf¬ John Crawford high University. Dr. Collier stud¬ Bachelor's Degree singled with two ayette had already scored once in out in the seventh. Bob Corradi ied under a Socony-Mobil Fellow¬ • A Liberal Education the frame. The reliever fanned had kept the no-hitter • going with ship in Chemistry at Lehigh and Preparation in a Subject Area the next two batters and held the a backhand, has studied also at Massachusetts shoestring catch of winners scoreless in the eighth, a line drive to left field. Institute of Technology. INTERN TEACHING PROGRAM but then had to leave for a pinch Doubles by Straka and Riccardi Mrs. Griffith has TEMPLE been at Mora¬ UNIVERSITY hitter because a finger injury pro¬ scored two of the 'Hounds three vian since 1958. She is a graduate Philadelphia, Pa. 19122 hibited him from gripping the runs, while Musselman finished bat. up pitching. The Diplomats got His replacement, Frank Dox, only two hits. CAMPUS AGENTS yes,Gort...IVe been Mmmm...Porffc think And thatYi'II be gort selected to give names Pterhaps I can help. so. We'll call it...oh... 'Uintatherifln." For to all Well, Adam, X hear cattle,and to the Take yond small "Eohippus* While over there,say, a fowl you've been entrusted of the air, and to brute vor instance... And that thing there "Protoceratops" SENIOR FAREWELL r with a most every beast oP the How about calling will be yonder a'Tyrannosaurus" field. important task. it "horse"? "Glyptodont" while there a.... FORMAL WEAR t

Chuck Laudermilch

- and - Woody Grossman