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The College of Wooster Open Works

The oV ice: 1951-1960 "The oV ice" Student Newspaper Collection

3-7-1958 The oW oster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1958-03-07 Wooster Voice Editors

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Recommended Citation Editors, Wooster Voice, "The oosW ter Voice (Wooster, OH), 1958-03-07" (1958). The Voice: 1951-1960. 167. https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1951-1960/167

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Volume LXXII Wooster, Ohio, Friday, March 7, 1958 Number 18 Songsters Tune Senate Announces CSass of 1917 Lectureship For Home Stand Petitions Available Presents Roland M. Frye Men's Glee Club, with its bags by Angene Hopkins from their For Eight barely unpacked i Positions Professor Roland M. Frye comes to the Wooster Tour in the east, will sing Spring for the Spring Senate a college audience at their Petitions campus on Tuesday, March 18, to present the Class of for elections will go out Monday, home concert on Friday night, 1917 lecture in Scott Auditorium at 8:15. " March 17. The positions open March 14, in Memorial Chapel. - i are President, Vice President, His address, Reason and Grace in the Christian Epic: The Men's Glee Club officially and Treasurer of the Student Feb- and Milton," will be the thirty-firs- t opened its season with its S Senate, and woman Senators Dante, Langland, ruary concert for the Apple Creek for the senior, junior, and sopho- lecture given under the auspices of the Class of 1917 this State Hospital, and followed more classes. The office of Presi- Lectureship. Strasburg, where As- with concerts in X x'" dent of the Student Christian . All-Sta- This lectureship was establish- the audience consisted of 600 I sociation will be filled and Female rs representatives to a statewide candidates will be chosen for ed as the memorial to the class on its tenth anniversary. The an- Eastern Star convention, in Cam- Color Day Queen. Compete In Gym bridge, Coshoton, Circleville, and nual income provides a lecture For the Senate offices and the Tonight will continue a series in the field of inquiry which is Akron, Ohio. SCA presidency, the petitions Lionel Trilling, noted critic of projects sponsored by various allied to departmental study. must contain signatures of one-sixt- h Touring with the Glee Club and novelist, will lecture The fund is now approximately of the campus. The candi- campus organizations to support this spring are soprano soloist Monday evening on the $5,200 and is administered as dates for woman senator must the Wooster-ln-lndi- a program. Judy Pennock McCullough, bag- place of English literature in a trust by the Treasurer's office have signatures of one-sixt- h of Sen- pipers Julie Jerabek and Lynn American education. The Part of the proceeds of the of the College under the class's their respective class. In addition Stanhope, and Club accompanist will given 8:15 ate movie tonight will go to- direction. lecture be at to each Betsy Moffat. Mrs. Donald Comin the petitions, candidate Tomorrow the in the Chapel. for platform ward that end. Last year Carl R. Rogers, Pro- is in the official capacity of chap- senator must have a WRA sponsors an All Star bas- fessor of Psychology at the Uiii- - eron for the group. which is to be turned in at the Scotsmen Capture same time. The candidates for ketball game at 7:30 in the gym. As usual, much work has gone queen will be chosen by the The teams will be composed of of the pro- into the preparation junior and senior classes. girls who have been judged the gram. Prof. Trump said he be- Intercollegiate Cup Petitions will be available in best players in the intramural I - lieves that this year's Glee Club the Senate Room., They are due Admission will be is among the best Wooster has The University of Cincinnati Friday, March 21. The elections competition. if had, despite the fact that it is played host to the first Ohio in will be the following Tuesday, $.35. somewhat smaller than some tercollegiate talent contest last March 25. Candidates will be A social sponsored by Clubs of the past. And he pro- Saturday, March 1. The Cincin snack introduced in Chapel that Council will follow phesied that the Men o' MacLeod nati Union sponsored the show the Interclub Box lunches will be will again prove to be the popu- and provided a traveling trophy the game. off to the men of lar attraction that they have with the hope that this even) auctioned share its been since the formation of the might become an annual affair. the campus who then Mrs. Hayes Talks with the donor. Five group some eight years ago. contents ' ' Wooster was ably represented booths will be set up for the ' f I More Concerts by the Second Section Quartet, On Asian Trends auction and bids will start at alias "The Scotsmen," who fin- Several more concerts are be- Mrs. John D. Hayes, widow of $.25. All proceeds go to the ished as runnersup out of a field Wooster-ln-lndi- a fund. There ing presented in the Ohio area. a noted missionary to China, will of 14 contests from seven differ- Club traveled be on campus this week. She will will be a Sock Hop following On March 2, the ent colleges and universities. The ' to Upper Sandusky and Findlay, speak in Chapel Monday and the auction. U' "Tri-Clefs- " from the Cincinnati address an open meeting of IRC 'v Ohio, for afternoon and evening of Bill McAfee, the first Wooster College Conservatory Music 7: 1 5 Low- on Thursday at p.m. in I in Presby- In-lnd- concerts, respectively, took first place honors and the ia representative, will be March 21, er Babcock. Mrs. Hayes has lived terian churches. On 1 in Chapel Tuesday to explain Roland M Frye traveling trophy. Second place in China and the Philippines, and the Club will present a concert I the program which this effort and the engraved cup went to for briefer periods in Maylaya, versity of Chicago spoke to a in the auditorium of Calvary Mr. McAfee taught at "The Scotsmen" who were the Japan, and Sumatra and brings supports. crowded Chapel for the annual Presbyterian Church, Cleveland, Ewing Christian College in Al only vocal quartet to place in a sensitive and intelligent alert- lecture. as a benefit for the Wooster lahabad, India, from 1932 to the top three acts. Miss Gloria ness to trends and developments The choice of Frye for the lec- Club of Cleveland. 1935 and is now employed by Rupprecht from Valparaiso Un- in Asia today. Raising a family tureship the State Department in Wash this year was made The Spring Tour began with iversity received the third place of five in troubled China, she after Dr. Howard Lowry and ington, D.C. He is the second an evening concert on March 6 award for her comic opera rou- was forced to leave home and Dean Taeusch heard him speak Wooster-ln-lndi- a representative at the Mount Lebanon Presbyter- tine. Miss Rupprecht had pre- possessions on short notice four at the Association of American viously division to be on campus this year. ian Church in Pittsburgh. won the talent times. During World War II she Colleges meeting at Atlantic City of the Miss America contest in and her children were in the Tuesday will also be Tag Day last year. Atlantic City as Miss Indiana of Philippines while her husband for Wooster-ln-lndia- . This Frye, presently Associate Pro- 1957. WSGA-sponsore- was interned in China. In 1948 d project entitles fessor of English at Emory Uni- they Researcher Jenny The Scotsmen, composed of continued their work under 3vryone who contributes to the versity in Georgia, was born in Bob Smith, Ralph Morrison, the auspices of the Chinese .:und on that day to wear a tag Birmingham, Alabama and Reed-er- , Church. Mr. -- It George McClure, and Paul Hayes was imprison- .0 stating. is the hope of the holds A.B., M.M., and Ph.D. de- - Receives Fellowship will make their next appear- ed by the Communists for nearly Wooster-ln-lndi- a Committee that ance on the Wooster campus in a year and his experiences dur- these projects will raise a sub Dr. Depart- ing this time were in Hans Jenny of the the forthcoming Flaming Follies written up stantial amount of the $3,000.00 Applications for scholar- has been the July 1955 issue of Reader's ment of Economics on March 15. budget necessary to support the ships and student aid awarded a Ford Foundation fel- Digesl'. program. grants for the 1958-5- 9 lowship for a regional faculty school year must be re- the Univer- research seminar at ceived by the office of the sity of Michigan next summer. Beard Builders evuew-- Deans before March 15. Dr. Jenny will do research in Face Judgment Present scholarship and connection with a project dealing Continuing a biennial tradi- student aid holders are re- I I i 1 with the "Social Responsibility o. tion, the Flaming Follies will take minded that their awards Big : Business in a Free Enterprise March 15 8:15 p.m. in ? are not renewed automatic- place at l,yM -- Economy," parMcularly in the the Chapel. The program will js' ally, but are dependent up- "Theory of the Firm" and em- consist of entertainment and the on satisfactory re-applica- tion phasizing Operations Research beard growing contest. each year. and its relationship to national of Applications are avail- income stabilization policy. A variety show composed musical and individual numbers able in the office of the Similar seminars will be spon- will be presented before and Deans. sored Duke, Johns Hopkins, after the judging of the beards. at M1 1 Yale, Tulane, Stanford, and Min- Talent consisting of comedians, - 1 j grees from nesota Universities. The seminars dancers, and instrumentalists iff.'- Princeton University. He at each school will consist of 10 will be awarded prizes in six previously taught at Howard College and Princeton. Currently professors will different categories. - -- who devote the , i 1 Y ' '1 on a Guggenheim Fellowship, he first part of the study period to of former To change a practice ,$ f will deliver the Stone lectures at a "survey of the most important years, it is not necessary for 1 Princeton Theological Seminary literature in the field since 945," individual to register be- every in the spring of 1 959. according to the Ford Founda- fore the night of the beard grow- A Lan- tion. The research projects of the re- member of the Modern ing contest. Contestants are - ' i - L" guage group will be discussed periodic- stricted to two categories, the h; Association, the Associa- of Lan- ally during the summer, and the longest, and one category of the tion University Modern guage Professors, seminars will convene twice dur- person's own choice. Surprise the Advisory 9 Board to the ing the 1958-5- year at the host gifts will be given to each par- Commission on university. Photo by Chuck Keiper Christian Education, National ticipant. Council of Churches, 'Making a big splash are members of the Sharks: Jan Moser, Frye has Dr. Jenny has been doing re- Tickets will be sold at the door also authored several articles on Debbie Dauber, Jackie Haas, and Molly Raley, search in his particular topic for $.20. Those with beards are as they Shakespeare, Milton, and Dante prior to the fellowship. not required to pay. practice for their annual show. in scholarly journals. Page Two WOOSTER VOICE Friday, March 7, 1958 SQA Mud Qti Virginia Editor s Note: This article is the first in a series by the President of the SCA. The views are his and do not necessarily reflect Dares the thinking of the SCA or the campus, but maybe they sh Id. by Ginny Wenger

by Sam Hunt Washington Semester students Just part does a religi- sity." The fruitlessness of creat- what soon become familiar creatures ous organization play at a col- ing still another extraneous or- in the Capitol building, I is "knowl- and lege where the motto ganization to gospel into the am no exception. Each day edge and religion from the same my community (since all of us attend face becomes familiar to more Should it be organized source?" a church service at least eight people. Ten days ago the eleva- a fellowship group along the as times a semester) is shown in tor boys began carrying on co- lines of the denominational the following quote from the nversations with me; nine days church groups, or does it have a same paper: "We must discover ago the guards in the broader responsibility to the corridors the social realities of our situa- NATIONAL BOARD OF FIRE UNDERWRITERS began greeting me; eight days whole "parish," which, in this tion or our evangelism will be ago the maid in the rest room case, is the campus as a whole? a hopeless invitation to men and spoke to me; seven days ago the It seems to me that we do face women where they are not to guards in the Senate gallery unique situation in a small a come to a place where they do stopped asking me for my pass; liberal arts college that main- ran into a Chicago train dis- not want to come." A Christian six days ago the lobbyists in the tains not only very close ties to patcher and an MSU coed who faith which is separated from the galleries started conversing with the church, but also has man- made it look sooo easy. We dull grind of the daily round, Off-Cent- er Kauke me; five days ago I escorted an aged to retain a more than re- closed our eyes and down we and exists only from mountain-to- p elderly couple on a guided tour spectable academic standing. If went. Smash. We must have experience to mountain-to- p by s. a. of the Capitol Building; three we are to take seriously the as- ! "snowplowed," when we were experience, or, as a matter of days ago Senator Lausche ap- of our president that the to "parallel turn," or sertion fact, from fellowship to fellow- supposed proached me and said, "Haven't church-relate- d col- only reason a something technical like that. I ship, is an irrelevant faith. Last weekend we tried some- been seeing you in the gallery lege has for existing is its at- Anyway, we found ourselves ly- thing different: skiing. We retired quite often?;" two days ago a tempt to be a Christian commun- With this as a background the ing in drift, from Wooster Winterland to Har- face down a snow certain Southern Senator showed ity, then we have some pretty SCA cabinet has pursued two the with one ski straight up in the bor Springs, Michigan, where me his "private, private" office,-an-d radical thinking to do about the courses: (1) wherever it is feas- air, the other 10 yards up the northern lights are clearer and yesterday I finally ate in place of the Student Christian ible in the future the SCA will hill, and the ski poles were the air somewhat more brisk, the dining room which says "For in this kind of com- contact speakers who can take dangling in Association and where in the wintertime aimlessly the snowy Employees Only." Who knows munity; in such a situation the part in the morning Chapel pro- breeze. everybody forgets about every- what may happen tomorrow! SCA is doing no more than the gram, be here for conferences thing except ski wax. Coed Rescuer college administration and trus- throughout the day, and deliver Host Tom Clarke led us to do. lengthy lecture in the At this point we thought A few days ago one of the themselves are trying to a more ski-lod- ge tees Harbor Highlands, a new somebody should lash the latter If this is so, then the SCA has evening often as a part of the Washington Semester students (one of 38 such centers together as a memorial to over-confidenc- e, obligation to make explicit program of some already exist- entered a crowded committee an in Northern Michigan), where he but thought better of the relation of the message of ing student organization; Dr. hearing late and was forced to promised to teach us the Michi- it. Then we started looking for Christ to the community in its Marshal Scott was the obvious stand up. Senator Kefauver, who gan way of winter life. a St. Bernard rescue dog, or many natural groupings; this precedent for this program. (2) was presiding, noticed the poor Ski Dress something of the sort. Instead, may include any or all of the The presidents of the dorms have lad had nowhere to sit. Not be- First he stuffed us into a tight the agile MSU coed came glid- ing one to dis- ar miss extra-curricul- activities, the lists of faculty members who a chance at short-legge- d ing down from above like a dorm situations in which we all would be willing to spend some pair of long underwear, a playing congeniality, the Senator Clara Barton on skis. We find ourselves, and certainly the time on Sunday evenings in the pair of ski togs, stocking were saw to it that our friend found metal-gadgete- d saved for more successful runs. daily Chapel program is a pos- dorms in informal bull sessions cap, and some a chair at the conference table, sible implementation. In any if they (the faculty) are invited ski shoes. We rented a pair of Soon having had enough for no less! case it does not mean that the by the dorm council; again, this skis, which looked like tooth- an uneventful first day, we re- SCA should set up its program is a structure that already exists, picks in comparison to what we tired to Western Civ outside Bill Van Tilburg, who has his within its own monastic frame- and the dormitory situation is thought necessary for proper reading and to watching the ex- own car here in Washington, has Then work; it cannot afford to separ- one that is common to all of snow travel. someone perienced north landers float quite a tale to tell. It seems that ate itself from the community. us. Out of this may come the handed us two metal sticks with gracefully over the glittering he has been pestered once too Such is the problem of the church opportunity for two or three to- round discs near the pointed end, white slopes. A pretty picture often by uniformed guides who today: "the church seems only gether to seek earnestly the explaining, "ski poles." they presented, too. make it a practice to stop traffic to be an institution drawing peo- relevance of their faith to their Meanwhile, someone stapled As a winter sport, it beats near the Capitol Building to ask ple unto itself, offering security community, their individual and a white badge on our jacket. anything our long midwestern motorists if they would like a and peace of mind, and using corporate responsibility to their This seemed to be a distinctive bones could experience in the tour. One morning when Bill was " mark of admittance. Only later flat late to them to perpetuate itself . . . society. Certainly we welcome country, and we'll return a seminar, he was once This is taken from an uncomfort- this and encourage it, but it did we discover that it meant: someday. again stopped by such a guide. ably clear paper by the pastor raises serious questions as to Warning ski patrol! Novice! Before the poor man could open at Penn State, entitled "The how it can be organized within To Hilly Elements his mouth, however, Bill himself Church's Ministry in the Univer- - the structure of the SCA. Thus properly outfitted and Atkins Addresses offered the man a tour of the labeled, we were led out against Capitol. After putting his teeth the hilly elements. At first every THE Corporation back in and recovering his com- Symphonic Band step forward resulted in a long posure, the guide did not detain WCW PROGRAM SCHEDULE slide backward, but finally Host Bill much longer. To this day Bill Through WWST-F- M Tom pulled us up to the rope Yednesday Might has not been stopped again by Features Jones 104.5 mc tow. such men. About this time some Michi THE Corporation this Wednes- The College of Wooster "Scot" 9 Week of March gan State coeds day night in Lower Andrews will Did you ever wonder is Symphonic Band will make its appeared as who onlookers. So with false confi- feature as speaker Mr. Robert M. responsible for a smooth operat- 1958 debut on Sunday after- MONDAY dence we bravely groped for the Atkins, General Supervisor of the ing legislature? The Congress- in 8:-8:3- noon, March 9, at' 4 o'clock 0 p.m. moving rope, grabbed hold Development Section of the men, you say? Perhaps I might Memorial Chapel. For the occa- Ohio College Network magnificently, hung on deter-- ! Cleveland Illuminating Com- have answered in such a way sion the 50-piec- e aggregation 8:30-8:5- 5 p.m. minedly, fell on pany. His job is to work with four weeks ago also. But after by Dr. J. Ling and flat our directed Stuart I Modern Sounds face, one ski headed NNW, the companies investigating North- having spent about 60 hours in will sport a new concert "uni- (Floyd Hastings) SSW. east Ohio as a location for new the Senate I I other After several embar-- j galleries may sug- form" consisting of formal attire rassing attempts we made it to industries, commercial, and resi- gest that the pages, the record- plus appropriate MacLeod plaids TUESDAY dential ers, ; the level expansion. He is a grad- the Senatorial brooch pins. where we received our staffs, and the and thistle 8:00-8:1- 5 p.m. ; first downhill instructions, i.e., uate of Duke University and has committee staffs are certainly will be The featured soloist Campus Spotlight j shift weight, "snowplow," bend a Master's Degree from Harvard deserving of a great deal of this Mr. and Robert Jones, son of (Tom Clarke) knees, etc. And off we went. Oh, Business School. He has had credit. Mrs. Glenn Jones of 421 North 8:15-8:3- 0 p.m. yes, we forgot to ask how to articles printed in national mag- Bever St., who is a sophomore Science Behind the Headlines j stop once we got going. Down azines, one of which was The Ray Machesney has learned at the college and concertmaster Harvard Business Review the 8:30-8:5- 5 the short slope by this time, we titled, art of riding street cars for Band for p.m. of the Scot Symphonic had but one embarrassing solu "A Program for Locating a New half price. He is doing this by the second year. He will play Footlight Favorites (John Beernick) tion: apply the rear brakes. Li- Plant." Mr. Atkins will speak to a slick manuevering of transfer Rimsky-Korsakov- 's for "Concerto terally, we sat down. We did, but THE Corporation on "Area De- passes. There is only one catch Band." Jones has Clarinet and WEDNESDAY the skis didn't. By this time the velopment and ITS Economic he usually has to switch street won many honors as a musician, 8:00-8:1- 5 coeds were very impressed we cars about four times! including numerous superior rat- p.m. Just for Record could tell by their experienced ings as a soloist in OMEA State the (Ralph Jennings) grins. competition, and positions with i Pulmo-li- ft Vo c 8:15-8:3- 0 e All-Stat- Wooster the e High School Orches- p.m. Scope (Hans Jenny Soon our patient instructor got Published weekly by the students of the College of Wooster during the school tra, Ohio Boys Band, and the year. Opinions expressed in and Ron Johnson) us manipulating on the three de- editorials and features are those of the students and Ohio Intercollegiate Band. should not be construed as representing administration policy. 8:30-8:5- gree slope easily enough. "On The program will include the 5 p.m. Member of to bigger things," cried our am- the Associated Collegiate Press and the Ohio College Newspaper customary variety ranging from Masterworks Association. Entered as second class matter in the Post Office, Wooster, Ohio. the seventeenth century to the (George Hover) bitious skis and foolhardy van- ity. So Editor-in-Chie- present and representing all we climbed onto the new TOM SCOTT, f Pulmo-lift- , of band music from Gold- $16,000 a mechanical types KEN ANTHONY, Business Mgr. JAY SHERIDAN, Advertising Mgr. to Gershwin. Other com- contraption which half pulls, half man NANCY McCARTHY, posers whose works will be Australia Calls lifts, skiers to the top of the big Managing Editor Ron-ca- hill. We only fell off this thing DONNA PHINIZY, News Editor DAVE played are Fillmore, Purcell, l, DICKASON, Circulation Mgr. twice, Possini, German, Mendel- Chemistry Prof which seemed to indicate ART HUMPHRIES, Sports Editor VICKI FRITSCHI, Copy Editor Dr. K. some sort of improvement. ssohn, Barber, and ProkofiefF. James Hummer, instruc- CHUCK KEIPER, Photo Editor The public is cordially invited tor in the Department of Chem- The Big Hill STAFF: Pat Alcorn, Stu Awbrey, Sue Baker, Cindy Barrett, this is ask- istry, will be leaving the College After Barbara Bigger, Anne to attend event and several successful jaunts Brown, Bob Carter, Ned Clydesdale, Beth Davis, Kathy Doob, Mary Dunham, ed to note the change in time in June to accept a State Cancer down a gentle ego-buildin- g trail, Margi Elliott, Bob Engstrom, Carol Ewing, Esther Gordon, Arlene Hallberg, from the usual evening hour. Council Research Fellowship from we just had to try the big hill, Dave Hartley, Sue Hill, Angene Hopkins, Jim Jackson, P. Livermore, Mary Madden, There will be no admission New South Wales at the Univer- so took a rope pull about half Sue Marshall, Boots Meirans, Sam Neal, Jim Null, Betsey Otto, Sue Reed, Carol Riemer, Ginger Shriver, libby Wallingford, Sally Wedgwood, Kent Weeks, charge. sity of Sydney, Australia. way up from the bottom. We Pete Wright, Laurie Zimmer. Three Friday, March 7, 1958 WOOSTER VOICE Page Democrat? - - Republican? YOU'VE HEARD Note: Politics is partisan. The article on the left is from a The one on the right is by Mr. ABOUT THEM! Woosler student in Washington. Dunbar, advisor to the Woosler Young Republicans. NOW ? t ifi The New Deal and YOU CAN HEAR the Fair Deal Paul Butler should be listed as the Institute of Politic's Republi- These outmoded programs THE are can speaker this term, for here of a Conservative Party which a campus guest who could for- was was so long in office that it quickly hack away most of the MEN'S got the desires of the People. untruths, petty prejudices and These Deal programs should not silly assumptions that prevent act like a benevolent Grand- the growth of a sturdy Republi- Brother in GLEE mother (similar to Big canism at the College of Woos-ter- . G. Orwell's 1984), looking in up- One can not inherit ideas child- on and taking care of her about politics, religion or life in CLUB is ren. The American citizen not general. Sound ideas can not like a child but quite often acts be developed in greenhouse HOME one in his foolish demands. He conditions, completely removed ANNUAL of often forgets the responsibility from those who may suffer. CONCERT life. These programs are stag- does it mean to be a nant. Their proponents have What participant in the Republican war-tim- e measures and Friday, March 14 taken up Why be a Republi- QeAAU Wheel emergency plans for a response Party today. 8:15 P.M. Bid A to the cry for leadership from can? There surely is no commonly Photos by P. C. Livermore the people. Where, oh where, is agreed answer to this question, Chapel of the Demorca-ti- c Memorial the imagination be satisfac- 1 Party? Have they become nor can any answer But perhaps 75 c completely inebriated with the tory to all persons. following may be of past? Quite often one hears a the points noted Democratic speaker telling some interest: of the areat accomplishments of 1. Civil rights or human the past or relating how testing rights, as Paul Butler called with immorality the opposition them, rest securely on the dignity is! But what about the Democra- of man. I see absolutely no room Junior Year tic Party of the future? Presently for compromise in these matters. in they have no program but the There can be no middle ground. maintenance of the one of the Either men are equal in all past. This truly is the party of compartments of life or they New York Conservative thought. They fear are not. Equality is not divisible, min- An unusual one- - year the future because they do not nor can its significance be I college program k f have the imaginative program imized. In order to maintain the 1 to meet the desires of the people. fiction of the Democratic Party One who proclaims himself a as a "national party" it must See your dean north-sout- certainly be- today compromise on a h or wr'itm liberal would not long to this party which appears axis. The Republican Party, for broch ure (o: - r is- v y before the people like an ostrich free from this fatal weakness, and founded by men like Lin- 1! W with its head buried in the sand DeanF.H.McCloskey r of irresponsibility. coln in opposition to the denial Washington Square DIAMONDS WATCHES of human equality can stand College DORMAIERS Taxes, Taxes up for truth. New York University Wooster's Oldest 2. Few thoughtful Americans New York 3, N.Y. Lahm's Jewelry and More Taxes St. Shoe Repair Shop today deny that a fellow who IIS 221 East Liberty citi- What does the American in lirge company has a 2-99- works a Phone 69 215 East Liberty Street zen get for his tax money that right to have his own organi- he willingly pays to his govern- zation (union), that this organi- Open Until 5:30 P.M. on Friday ment? For one thing Tuesday, zation has a right to represent Our Store at the Point February 25, he got an all-da- y him, and that trade unionism Cleveland-Bea- ll Office Public Square Office cocktail party, with two lavish is a rightful extension of democ- Phone 3-70- 15 Is really some joint; banquets and innumerable racy into the economy. But the Hotel speeches, the Statler, j It's perfect for Luncheons, at productive, creative processes of Wayne County National Bank aimed in the truly representative j labor and management get foul- Dinners, Snacks or Bruncheons! tradition, not at him but at his ed up whenever one group sets This leaders. particular orgy was j itself up against the other as if For the girl who is - - - part of the million-dolla- r plus they were two quite different campaign being administered by varieties of mankind. For the one Eric Johnson, using appro- foreseeable future too much hat- priated tax moneys to educate red class hatred inhibits the the taxpayer of the need for in- Democratic Party. Only the great creased foreign aid. i middle income membership of clothes Government Expenditures the Republican party, well root- We have all the ed in every sector of the econ- Vooster Maid In the most recent publication omy, can insure that fair play to end your yearning. of govern ment expenditures in industry which is needed. EE CREAM 1 DAIRY PRODUCTS there is included an item of 3. No one, I say no one, has a COME IN AND CHOOSE NOW! 125,000 rolls of toilet-pape- r for corner on the method by which Columbus, Ohio. Top aide to a we are to enter the space age watch-do- g Congressman sus- without benefit of terrible dis- BECHTEL SHOP in WOOSTER BEULAH pects that things are moving asters between nations no long- Columbus. Included also was an er at peace. The forum on for- "Fashions of Distinction" item of 80 purebred registered eign policy, our market place for FARM DAIRIES Guernsey bulls from the Heifer ideas, must be kept wide open. Project, presumably to produce In a wonderful way the geo- top-grad- e bologna. graphical difference of attitude These remarks are taken from between East and Midwest Re- reliable sources on Capitol Hill. keeps this forum open in the Party. fel- The author has remained un- - publican Labeling of low "isolation- I I biased in his reporting of the Americans as facts as he saw them. This will ists," an old Democratic trick, is not very helpful in public de- j close the first of these commen- - bate. taries which the reader, I am Because the two party system mm mAmmMm of I sure, will find informative and in United : the States provides mfflmt - l:lj::f f helpful. vP-:.'- THE OHIO BELL continuity when one party in Your Comrade in Arms, power falls down on the job, we TELEPHONE COMPANY Liberal. must insist that all parties , use fair play inside their own be will on campus houses. This is not easy, of course. We ought aso to keep Friday, March 14, 1958 Guys & Gals the way clear for third parties, for their existence can keep the 'AT s s s s s , The Friendliest Guys ,," ',, ,"4"-- to discuss job opportunities for college major parties alert and creative. in Town Invite You to women in the telephone business. Indi- But if we are to choose between Try Their Guaranteed the two major parties I urge will be arranged for I vidual interviews Dandruff Treatment anyone who is undecided to i it girls who are interested. choose the Republican Party LL and choose the Republican Party Dick Morrison's for good reasons. I list three rea- for an interview with the College Placement Office sons; who can give better ones? Make your appointment BARBER SHOP Wilbur Dunbar, Adviser, on the Square Young Republican Club. Page Four WOOSTER VOICE Friday, March 7, 1953 To College Looks Future EARN YOUR MASTER'S DEGREE by Ginger Shriver AND PREPARE FOR AN EXECUTIVE CAREER IN Within the past three years as the rennovation of Kauke, and elimination of the two dining RETAILING nine-mon- vast changes have taken place the construction of a service rooms would accomplish this Comprehensive th program for A.B. and B.S. building. feat. The next problem which graduates ; emphasis on executive direction in major on the college campus. In the stores dovetailed with classroom work. Total pay for arises is that of feeding the stu- store work $500. Co-e- d. Scholarships. Selective job place- When questioned fall of 1955 sophomore men further dents who would normally eat ment before srraduation. G. I. approved. Next class, Ion of September 2, 1958. Apply now. Write for Bulletin c! moved into Andrews Hall, at that about the grange plans in Holden. The men would be Mr. Palmer said The fol- the committee, fed in a proposed commons, GRADUATE SCHOOL OF RETAILING time a new dormitory. that generally the proposed plan and the women in Babcock and UNIVERSITy OF PITTSBURGH Pitt.burgh 1 3, p.. lowing autumn was the time of still a few years ago was the proposed Compton, and Stu- women to occupy He for sophomore valid. said that the college dent Union dining rooms. Break- Compton Hall for the first time. does work out these plans with fasts and lunches would be cafe- This January we watched the a single landscape architect, Mr. teria style, but the evening meals Henry Fletcher Kenney. Wooster freshman women migrate from would be served as they are does not consult a single college now. Miller and Hoover to Wagner building architect, even though Final Hall. These new dorms called it hopes to maintain the general Query forth other changes. One of the style of architecture of the exist- Our last question was prompt- FOR GOOD LUCK, ed by that brief hint of spring Douglass Units was removed. ing buildings. In the past the college has had several archi- which has already disappeared. Hall was abandoned Bowman tects at various times and has We asked him about the plans and given to the city of Wooster liked their plans and found them for tennis courts in the present COME ON DOWN AND to be used as a museum. More satisfactory, therefore it does not mud crater at the corner of Beall recently Miller Manor became a seem necessary to eliminate all and Wayne Avenues. You tennis ghost house, rhen was quickly but one of these men from the enthusiasts will be glad to know invaded by men hurrying to con- scene. that as soon as the weather is KNOCK ON WOOD! vert it into offices, and Hoover favorable four "Laykold" courts Cottage became a dorm housing The Future will be installed. They were to freshmen and transfers of a sex Looking to the distant future be put in last fall, but the weath- hitherto unknown to her upper of the college, Mr. Palmer spoke er iurned cold too soon. The floors except during college open of an additional wing at the special installation process re- houses (we assume). northern end of Holden Hall, quires a certain air temperature WOOSTER LUMBER COMPANY

U-shap- making the dorm ed. It for the proper of Next Project evaporation would then be large enough to some of the materials in the OPPOSITE THE FAIRGROUNDS Many students are pondering house all the freshman women. court base. The courts will have 2-80- PHONE 15 over what the college "Buildings The additional number of resi- a hard, spongy surface which and Grounds Committee" is go- dents would require more will facilitate drainage in rainy ing to undertake for its next pro- lounges, and utility rooms. The weather. "Tennis anyone?" ject. To learn the answer to this and related questions we inter- viewed Mr. Arthur Palmer, the college Business Manager, on the subject of the building pro- gram. He said that ground would be broken this spring for the College Inn. The funds for this building were donated by Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Wilson. Mrs. Palmer said that the plans were nearly ready to go out for bids, and that ground would be broken about one month from that time. Construction will also begin this spring on a 200 foot smoke- Don't just stand there stack for the college power house. This project was neces- sir STICKLE! MAKE 25 sitated when a group of resi- Sticklers are simple riddles with two-wor- d rhyming dents near the power plant com- answers. Both words must have the same number of ) plained to the Tow Council of syllables. (No drawings, please!) yiSL THAT MWC , ,A oH ? the "smoke and soot nuisance" We'll shell out $25 for all we use coming from the present stack. and for hundreds that never see So with Last fall print. send stacks of 'em the Board of Trustees your name, address, college and to voted y, provide funds for the class to Happy-Joe-Luck- Box elimination of the unfavorable 67 A, Mount Vernon, New York. situation. Consulting engineers from several firms were called in WHAT IS AN UNHAPPY BIRD? to study the problem. The con- sensus of opinion was that a new stack, 200 feet high should alleviate the problem. Beiswen-ger- , Hoch and Associates Inco- rporated, a firm of consulting en- gineers from Akron, drew the plans for the building. These plans will go out to contractors for bids soon. Mr. Palmer said harjorie osterwise. Sobbin' Robin he hoped the construction could PITT. NEAT FEAT? No! Slick A times no! begin in May so that the stack Trick? thousand could be connected to the power When a magician makes a pack of Luckies vanish, it's plant this summer. WHAT IS A MAN WHO DOESN'T WHAT ARE STADIUM SEATS Magic! claim there's PAY FOR PARKING? FOR PROFESSORS? a plain case of Tragic Connoisseurs What Building Program? one approved way to make Luckies disappear. That's to When asked just what build- smoke (Yum!) every last one of 'em! That way, you ings would follow in the pro- get the wonderful taste of Luckies' fine tobacco . . . of gram campus development, light, good-tastin- g tobacco that's toasted to taste even Mr. Palmer said that he was So, Ladeez-ann-Gemileme- n, a pack of not certain. "The private college better. observe is hampered by its inability to Luckies closely. Then carefully remove one (1) cigarette Teachers1 obtain government for best-tastin- g funds WILLIAM SE1F. Meter Cheater john eichling. Bleachers and light up. Presto! You're puffing on the building OKLAHOMA purposes. He also said C.C.H.Y. NORTHEASTERN STATE cigarette you ever smoked! that the acquisition of funds from private donors was a very

ODD-SHAPE- indefinite thing, and that the WHAT IS AN D EYEGLASS? WHAT IS A JOKING MONKEY? WHAT IS A BANANA PEEL? WHAT IS A GANGSTER'S MANUAL? funds determined the kinds of buildings and the order of their appearance on the campus. An- other factor along this line is that donors often prefer to give dormitories, rather than service or classroom buildings. It is hoped that the Centennial M Fund with its goal of two million ARJORI E BENEDICT. Conical Monocle DAVID G ERSHAW, Ribbin' Gibbon GAIL GREGG, Fruit Suit JOAN HEALY. Crook Book dollars will be able to provide MT. HOLYOKE U. OF MINNESOTA EAST TENNESSEE STATE U. OF DELAWARE for such buildings as we have listed above. Some contributions to the fund will probably be -- designated for specific purposes, LIGHT UP A Uqht SMOKE LIGHT UP A LUCKY! Mr. Palmer said, but there will r. Co.) Product cAa JVmjeAvzam. Uavcuzeo-Kcrrryic- ni is our middle name also be unrestricted funds. These ia. of Juwz& latter funds will go to such uses Friday, March 7, 1958 WOOSTER VOICE Page Five "Mose" Rings Down Scots Mail Third Rung In Conference; Curtain On Career; Zips Top Lutherans; Enter NCAA Play Ewers Named Head By adding two more conference wins to their record by Stu Awbrey last week, the Scots went into last night's finale with Case Ovations after the Case Tech-Woost- er Tech sporting a seasonal chart of 15-- 4 and a conference tilt in Severance Gym showing of 9-- 3, good for third place behind Akron and last night not only rang down the curtain for seniors Dixon, Wittenberg. The Zips downed the Tigers at Akron last Welty, and Totten, but for the Saturday, 46-3- 9, to take the conference toga and earn great-grand-dad- dy of them all, the right to play in the small-colleg- e long-tim- e (32 years) Coach E. M. section of the NCAA and Dan Thomas, caught up at "Mose" Hole, who coached the 56-5- 6. Five after this the Hole, basketball tournament. times Scots for the last "time. score was tied but Wooster of coaches, The Scots traveled to Heidel- dean Ohio basketball couldn't get out in front. Finally is retiring from the head coach berg and came from behind to 77-7- Thomas scored with just less record edge the Princes, 2. Woos- position after compiling a than two minutes to go to give 1 1 all way until there of 41 victories de- I x ! ' ter trailed the against lei If W h ' the Scots the advantage, 72-7- 0. ! were nine minutes to play, when feats. Now Gary Getter took over to 56-5- 6. Players, fans, former letter- - j they knotted the score at score five points in the last ac- men, townspeople, students and But it still took them seven more tion and give the Scots a hard-wo- n j minutes to grab the lead and faculty joined in the "Mose Hole verdict. Night" activities, which began walk off with the decision. with a pre-gam- e trophy presen- Tom Dennison scored all of Groman Takes Honors 1 tation by Captain Don Dixon and : I - I ! first to the Scots' nine points Bill Groman played a fine concluded with an after-gam- e 1 1 : I "4 keep the team within a point al game for the Princes and took reception in the gym for Coach 10-9- , but the Student Princes scoring honors with 30 tallies. Hole with the "W" association. roared to a 25-1- 6 I advantage The Scots were evenly balanced Head Manager Howie Hecht pre- ! the midway in the half. After with five in figures. sented Mrs. Hole with three Q $ men double fif Scots took time out in an attempt Dennison led the way with 16, dozen yellow roses, and Assist- to stop the onslaught, the Princes followed by Dave Bourns at 14, ant Coach Jim Ewers, a protege I continued to pour points through Getter with 13, Thomas with 12, of Coach Hole, was introduced the hoop and led, 36-2- 0, with

1 and Don Dixon with 10. as next year's head basketball six minutes to play. Wooster coach. i showed signs of coming to life Ohio Wesleyan came to Sever-

! 5-1- "All of us at the college want ! as they narrowed the margin to ance Gym with a 5 record

j Hole 40-3- 1 - but when they left, Scot fans to congratulate Mr. upon j by halftime and then be-

; wondering the notable record that he has gan to cre?p closer in the open-- 1 were how this could hard-presse- made as basketball coach," said j ing portion of the second half. be. The Scots were very d College President Howard Lowry j The Princes still held the ad- to take a 74-7- 3 decision, i Photo by Art Murray 49-4- 7, earlier in the week. "This has vantage, at 3, and 54-4- after leading for the entire game

is long live the King." Shown here I been a very important part of "The King dead are but the Scots, led by Dennison except for a brief stretch when Hole, Woos-te- r 62-6- his long service to the college. retiring head basketball coach Ernest M. "Mose" the Bishops led, 1. '18, and his successor as head coach, Jim Ewers, Wooster Dixon scored from the corner Congratulatory Messages game '54. "Mose" called it quits with last night's against Lord and Dale Weygandt added a The popular coach also re- of highly coaching. Finmen Reign Case, ending 32 years successful 3-- ceived numerous telegrams and free throw to make it 0 and the Scots began to pull in congratulatory messages bon. Ohio hiqh school. A three- - than the opposition." His teams, out 4th Straight Year front by ever-increasin- g mar- throughout the day, from friends year etterman, he led the Ohio utilizing, a minimum number of an 15-- 8 : gin. It was eight min- and tormer players. Conference in foul shots during offensive patterns, have main- after The Lords 27-2- of Kenyon for the utes and 1 Coach Hole will remain as njs senior year as captain. That tained a high scoring pace with after 13, but the ! fourth year in a row reign over Bishops drew to within four College Athletic Director as well was jn 1917-18- . In those days uncanny aggressiveness and fast al swimming in the Ohio Confer- 29-2- 5 shoot-Physic- ball-handlin- g. with six to as Head of the Department of man did all the foul al minutes go. one ence. On Friday, February 28, Thomas, Education. "In addition for a team. Dennison, and Dixon jng "It Won't Be the Same" land Saturday, March 1, at the to his other duties, said Presi- took over and stretched this to twenty-firs- t Annual Swimming 41-3- 1 43-3- Lowry, will devote con- Following graduation he ser- As Wooster student ex- but this was cut to 5 dent "he one and Diving Championships of planning ved briefly in the service, then pressed his feelings toward the at the intermission. siderable time to the the Ohio Conference Ohio for the returned to Wooster in 1919 as departing coach: "It sure will at It appeared that the Scots and actual promotion Wesleyan's Ffeiffer Natatorium, new physical education center assistant coach, stepping into the seem strange to sit in the gym were going to ice the game as He Kenyon splashed to a total of that is one of the main objectives head spot seven years later. and not see the complacent they ran to a 55-4- 1 lead after his de- 148 points with Wooster posting ial later received Master's of the college in its pre-centen-n- Mose, in black shirt and Mac- six minutes but the Bishops University. 19 points for fifth place. Ober-li- n financial gree from Columbia Leod plaid tie, calmly soaking it weren't dead yet. Trailing, 59-5- 1, campaign." was second with 85 points, Hole coached Wooster For many years Coach Hole all in and only occasionally midway through the half, has Ohio Wesleyan third with 58, scouted for Wooster football holding his in his or they reeled off seven in basketball continuously since head hands Wittenberg points a reputa fourth with 24, and 59-5- acquired 8. 1926-2- 7. His first league cham- teams, and beating the floor with his fists. a minute to come up to Akron sixth with 15. In this pionship three years later, tion in college circles as an astute ; There never was a camer coach It was 61-6- 0 when Jerry Vaughn came year's expanded meet Kenyon and since he has four other observer of the game. jney just don't them that scored to give the Bishops their won gr0w took firsts in seven the individu- 62-6- be- anymore only lead of the night 1. league crowns, the last time The trophy presented before waY al events and won both relays, at 2. , ing 1951-5- His teams of 1938-40- Dixon was the game by Captain The recognition program was leaving only five firsts for the T. D. Gives Scots Lead two consecutive Pre-ente- d winning inscribed: to t. M. organized by Mrs. Catherine rest of the conference to divide helped es- Tom re-enter- ed championships, also "Mose" Hole on completion of lunkin, secretary for the athletic up. Oberlin snapped up three of Dennison the tablish a record of 36 consecu- game this 32 years of successful basketball department, and the Office of these with Ohio Wesleyan get- at point and quickly tive still Ohio wins, tops for an coaching." Public Relations. ting the other two. added two buckets and two free Conference school. Coach Hole throws to push the Scots to a 67-6- 5 has also had many runnerup Coach Hole has been famous It had been predicted that lead and the advantage was rough-and-tumbl- e of 71-6- squads in the for his "racehorse" brand Poulson of Ohio Wesleyan would held at 7 with 2:29 to play, Ohio Conference. basketball, which usually insures j Qvi lite. Qidi be the outstanding individual but the Bishops rallied again to The longtime mentor formerly an exciting game. His emphasis performer in the meet. Enfered make it 72-7- 1 with 1:50 left. played basketball for Wooster, has always been on "stuffing the by Cindy Tice in the maximum events allowed Dixon got free on a fine drive after he was graduated from Lis- - ball through the hoop more times for any one swimmer (three), he shot to can a lay-u- p and make 74-7- took firsts it 1, 25, and 16 two and a second. In but Gene Richter tap- victories, scoring 22, 50-yar- the d free he ped in a goal 74-7- 3 respectively. Paul Haynes Tomorrow night in the Gym at style set a to make it Two More Wins points, new pool and conference record with but 40 left helped out with 12 against 7:30 something entirely new is seconds on the of 23.7 seconds on Firday eve- clock. The closing Fourth and 21 against Sixth, going to happen. The evening action was All-St- Give Fifth Title; ar ning. However, Saturday morn- furious with the Scots while Walt Ramage had 17 will start with a women's trying to The cheer- ing saw Borman of Kenyon take freeze the ball and retain pos- s-- Up Bruce Milne had Basketball game. 3rd against Second. 100-yar- Runner an early lead in the d session but two oc- eight for Fourth, Stan Galehouse leaders will be faculty, and jump balls Fifth Section will be free style over him that Poulson curred and on the second the added two more victims had 16 and Chuck Clark 12 for Seventh pledges to , so it should could not overcome. Poulson, Bishops got it and John Wil- its growing string to run their Sixth, and Ken Haine-- has eirp" the entertainment, 13-- 0 however, came back later to win liams' shot bounced off record to and leave only for Second to lead the losers in be fun as well as a good game. the rim Box the diving. Ray of Kenyon paced with the buzzer Third as the last opponent in these contests. Right after the game a Social going off to end Fellows, this is his team with three firsts. His the game. the season's play. Third picked Fourth marked up its second will be held. your up three victories to make their chance really to have some fun. winning time of 2:25.7 in the led triumph of the campaign as they 200-yar- Dennison the Scots as he d mark 11-- 2 to clinch The Box Social is sponsored by butterfly set a pool stand at downed First! 49-3- 4, with Milne piled up 25 points, with Thomas Inter-Clu- b Council. The WRA record but was a little over a second place but Fifth wrapped and Dick Dannenfelser leading teh and Dixon following with 15 and ! ICC second slower than his confer- up championship they 1 and will then go together their as the WQy with 20 and 5 markers, 13, respectively. Norman Ed- I . rrio ence record of In have been unbeaten since the .. r-0- Knnrllp in sponsoring the Sox Hop for last year. the Qcr,Q 1 v . led wards led the losers 22, fol- j v.1 jr with r" w,a, 100-yar- d 1954-5- 5 Admis- butterfly, a new season. 1 the rest of the evening. event : the losers with 6. lowed by Richter with 18 and sion to the is and in the conference meet this year The Phi Delts defeated Sixth, George Hover led Eighth to a game $.35 Dick Faul with 16. 80-3- be and hence an 7, on 3, 68-3- the snack boxes automatic record in 34-2- bids can and Seventh, 4 win over Seventh as he ac- no less than $.25, but better be for the winner, his time of 1 :03.3 The Scot JV's picked up their last week's action. Jay Decker counted for 16 points for game to if was a new pool and conference fourteenth and fifteenth consecu- had 18, as did Bill Zufall to lead honors. Humphreys led prepared pay more you Art to box. All standard. Ray also swam leg tive wins and they downed the ps a the scoring in the first contest the Tri-Ka- really want get That eight as 0, Seventh with 400-yar- Heidelberg 88-7- the proceeds are going to the of Kenyon's winning d JV's, and then while Stan Galehouse led the Sec- 15-ga- ended their season. me Wooster-ln-lndi- a medley relay snapped a streak of losers 16. In fund. This is team. with the latter a chance to tie for the 69-3- ond has Ohio Wesleyan's JV's, 7. game, Dave 17 one of a series of projects being Thomas had and third position if they win their Flower of Oberlin paced his Ron Bobel had 21, Karl Hilgert Decker held by campus organizations 15 to pace the action as remaining contests with Eighth team by setting a new pool rec- 17, and Cliff Wooster-ln-lndi- a. Perkins and Don 1 for the benefit of 200-yar- Dave Shaw led Seventh with 1. Eighth d and First. Meanwhile, ord in the breaststroke Davis 14 apiece against the , by Third rolled over three oppon-nets- can finish in the first division of 2:44.5, a pool and conference Princes, while Perkins with 16, 100-yar- 63-2- 0, they now Don't forget record in d breast-strok- e beating Fourth, upending Second as about the Shark's the John Hulls with 14, and Davis 82-4- 0, 56-2- 8. Sixth, and Second, rest in fifth place, only a gams Review. Which "edition" are you (a new event), and swim- - with 1 1 led the way over the Tom Wiley led the way in these behind Second. going to "read?" (Continued on Page Six) Bishops. Friday, March Page Six WOOSTER VOICE 7, 1958

MORE ON BEFORE YOU BUY Wooster Office WAYNE GIVE US A TRY Swimming Equipment (Continued from Page Five) THEATER ming on Oberlin's second place 400-yar- d medley relay team. Stu Smith of Oberlin set the initial TONITE & SATURDAY record for the 100-yar- d back- with his winning time of stroke Brigitte Bardot 1:05.6. Mason of Kenyon set a pool with in record in Wesleyan's 3-27- 133 N. Bever St. Dial 35 his winning time of 2:31.6 in " AT SEA" the 200-yar- d individual medley this was the first time that and

Pfeif-fe- 2-20- this race had been held in r Phone 85 Dirk Bogarde Natatorium. SALES SERVICE Kay Callard Joe Basehore paced Wooster 440-yar- RENTAL in with a fourth place in the d freestyle, fifth in the 220-yar- d Across from the Post Office '' freestyle, and a leg of Wooster's fifth place 400-yar- d free style relay team. Basehore's SHIBLEY & HUDSON time in the 440 was just 1 'A seconds away from second place. Other members of Woos- Will Completely Clean and ter's freestyle relay team were Captain Bob Watson, Dick Hawk, and John Doerr. Watson added Overhaul Your Watch a fifth place in the diving. Oth- er individual scorers for Wooster ALL FOR J L, X were Frank Kenworthy with a fourth in the 100-yar- d breast-strok- e and Dan Kropf with a sixth in the 200-yar- d butterfly. 400-yar- Wooster's d medley relay team of Ron Rolley, Kenworthy, Kropf, and Hawk rounded out Freedlander's Wooster's scoring with a fifth place finish. It Pays to Buy Quality Town & Country Shoes With 1 Year Written Guarantee Ax Above price of $5 includes cleaning, putting your watch in good running order; also includes stem and crown, main- Dressmaker Pumps spring and balance staff if needed. Automatics, Chrono- with a delicate air graphs, Calendars somewhat higher. Here comes the trail blazers walking on the smartest cam- PROMPT SERVICE pus feet. Best fashion value. $10.95 to $12.95

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8. Do you think your professors are too lenient in grading exam papers?

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