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STIjp ^uutt HampshireThe Library V O L . 30. Issue 18. Z 413 UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE, NOVEMBER 24, 1939. PRICE, THREE CENTS Student Musicians Hampton Institute Prexy Frosh Dining Hall Sorority Rushing Famous Historian Give First Concert and Cafe Enlarged Sends Message of Thanks Following is the message of appreci­ Ends Monday Eve Speaks on British W o rk is now under way w hereby ation received from President Arthur on Sunday Evening With sorority rushing ending Mon­ service will be speeded up and more Howe of Hampton Institute, by Pres­ day night, tomorrow and Monday will Policy Toward U. S. space will be provided for both in the ident Fred Engelhardt. Glee Clubs and Orchestra be the last d^ys of open rushing. Theta freshman dining hall and in the cafe­ Herbert Agar Presents Directed by Bergethon in Hampton Institute U psilon ,has its rush banquet tonight, teria. Initial Musical Program Hampton, Virginia with Alpha Xi Delta tomorrow and Liberal and Unbiased Additional seating space for about N ovem ber 10, 1939 Kappa Delta Monday. Sunday and Talk on World Affairs With Director Bjornar Bergethon sixty people will be made in the fresh­ President Fred Engelhardt Tuesday are days of silence. on the conductor’s platform, and with man dining room by throwing the fac­ University of New Hampshire “We, as' Americans, should accept Each sorority must file a list of the 175 undergraduate musicians participat­ ulty dining room and the freshman din­ Durham, New Hampshire definite responsibility for the deporable girls to whom it is giving bids with mess the w orld is in today,” was de­ ing, the first of a series of concerts ing room together. My dear President Engelhardt: will be presented at the women’s gym­ Dean Woodruff by ten o’clock Monday clared by Herbert Agar, associate edi­ The faculty dining room will be mov­ Word has come from the Quartette nasium on Sunday evening, November night. Girls receiving bids, will be tor of the Louisville Courier-Journal ed to the ground floor to what is now group of the very great kindness and 26, at 8 P.M . notified by noon Tuesday. Those girls and one of the country’s most out­ a section of the male help’s quarters. cordial reception they all enjoyed at who do not live in the dormitories may standing journalists and historians, The program for the evening will in­ The rest of the quarters will be added the University of New Hampshire. get their bids in the Commuters’ room Wednesday night in Murkland auditor­ clude selections by the women’s glee to the present cafeteria, thus providing Thank you ever so much. in Smith. ium, in the second public lecture of the club, the men’s glee club, and the sym­ space for about fifty additional people. *You do not know what it means to fall series. phony orchestra. These musical units It will be also so arranged that both be so kindly received, particularly for At six o’clock on Tuesday evening, Mr. Agar’s talk, entitled “What Eng­ will present a variety of numbers the faculty dining room and the cafe­ those who so often find the way diffi the freshmen and transfers will meet land Wants from America,” covered ranging from music written by the teria can be thrown into one big room cult, even in democratic America. in Room 14 in Murkland to signify the following points: 1. England wants royalty of Europe to American folk or two rooms or three rooms so that With renewed thanks to you, the their choice. They may give both their us to be sympathetic with their moral­ songs. This is to be done in an at­ dinners may be held while the cafeteria members of your faculty and student first and second choice. Returning at istic argument, 2. England wants us tempt to please the majority’s musical is in use. body for their recent cordiality, I am 7 :30, they will be given notes telling to put pressure on their government at fancy, no matter in what type of music them where they were bid. Sorority Very sincerely yours, that fancy is found. Other renovations being made in the girls will call for their pledges at the the end of the war to determine peace cafeteria are a new entarnce, a new (signed) Arthur Howe, pf plans, 3. W e should accept responsibil­ The conducting of this concert is to dorms, and the freshmen afe allowed counter arrangement, and new serving President. ity for the present world crisis, though, be the first public appearance of Di­ to stay overnight at the sorority house. equipment. Work is expected to be o f course, not all of it, and 4. England rector Bergethon at the University of finished and ready for use after stu­ This year the sororities are on a wants us to believe in the genuine New Hampshire, and it is generally quota basis. dents return from Christmas vacation 1495 Mid-Semester fundamental importance of Britain and agreed that this public demonstration France winning. of Universiity musical talent is likely Warnings Sent Out A number of interesting features to be but a prelude to Mr. Bergethon’s* Lillian Gilbreth Durham Print Shop were brought out by Mr. Agar while avowed determination to make this A total of 1495 m id-sem ester warn­ covering these points, one of them be­ University a “musically-minded” uni­ ings were issued to students of the and Bishop Dallas Holds Open House ing that it was not the duPonts and versity. University last Tuesday, a loss of 253 the Morgans who were the underlying since last year. These warnings were The program: Address Graduates Monday Evening cause of our entrance in the World sent to 642 men and 243 women, that 1. A Suite of Music by Royalty Maganini War, as many historians have empha­ is 46% of the men and 38% of the (Orchestra) Well Known Consulting Nation Celebrates Three sized, but the drift of public opinion women received notices. The percent­ which finally became so irresistible (Continued on page 4) Engineer is First Woman age for the w hole school is 44, whereas Hundreth Anniversary of that we couldn’t let Germany win the To Speak at Graduation it was 51 last year. Five hundred and Printing in This Country war or have it end in a stalemate and forty-nine of these warnings were be­ Dr. Lillian M. Gilbreth, one of Amer­ A s a local gesture in a nation-wide so entered the conflict. Another in- Hennessy Selects Cast for low 60, and the rem aining 946 were be­ ica’s leading consulting engineers, will observance of the three hundredth an­ tween 60 and 70. continued on page 4) Mask and Dagger Play be the first woman ever to address a niversary of printing in the United As we go to press, Mask and Dag­ commencement of the University of The drop in the number of warnings States, Durham Print, Durham’s only ger’s latest production, “What a Life!” New Hampshire when she speaks at issued this year can probably be ac­ printing establishment, will hold open Tufts Professor to a farce by Clifford Goldsmith, is in the the 70th commencement on June 17, counted for by the fact that there were house on Monday, November 27, from Visit Writing Classes process of being cast. According to an 1940. Dr. John T . Dallas, bishop of no warnings given this semester, in seven to ten o’clock, p.m. English 1, because of the change in the John Holmes, an English professor announcement made today by Director New Hampshire, will deliver the bac­ One of the interesting exhibits will course. at Tufts who is also a well-known New William Hennessy, the. following stu­ calaureate sermon. be that of the Holmes Electrotype England poet, will visit the creative dents have been assigned roles in the Foundry of Worcester, Mass., featur­ Professor of management at Purdue writing classes of Dr. Carroll S. Towle play: Jean Adams, Charles Craig, W al­ University, Dr. Gilbreth is widely ing the various stages of manufacture ter Webster, Francis Edes, Justine Dean Lord Speaks of the U.N.H. faculty Monday and known for her courses in motion study. of electrotype plates, wax plates, and Pillsbury, Elizabeth Kinsman, Elwyn Tuesday, N ovem ber 27 and 28. H e For many years she has been a con a new process, rubber plates. Dearborn, William Hall, M-ado and at Faculty Dinner will also appear at the Monday evening suiting engineer for leading American The primary purpose of holding open Donald Crafts, Leona Deaumont, Bar­ meeting of Folio, at Dr. Towle’s home. firms, also serving as a m em ber of the “ Capitalism is a great force and must house will be to enlighten Durham bara Ames, Lurlene Gordon, Ralph Members of Folio who plan to attend President’s Emergency Committee for be directed and controlled the same Print’s customers and friends in the Bentley, Phillip Smith and Claire Rich­ are urged to come promptly at eight Employment and the Organization of as other great forces,” stated Dean various steps and processes required in ard. A large number of other parts o ’clock. Unemployment Relief. She has re­ Everett W. Lord, of Boston Univer­ the production of printed material in a have not been cast as yet. Mr. Holmes, who attended the Writ­ ceived degrees from Brown University, sity’s college of business administration variety of forms. ers’ Conference here last summer, has Chosen as one of the best plays of Russell Sage college, Rutgers, and the in an address to the faculty at their The actual printing of “The New had three volumes of poetry published, 1938, “What a Life” was produced last University of California. fall dinner meeting Monday night. and is at present at w ork on a fourth. year in New York by George Abbott, Hampshire” and the utilization of five Bishop o f N ew H am pshire since 1926, Dean Lord pointed out that all great M any o f his poem s have appeared in famous producer of farces. presses, one Kelly automatic cylinder Dr. Dallas is a graduate of Yale and forces may be destructive and are made “The New Yorker.” While he is here Mast and Dagger will present the press, and the linotype will present a the Union Theological Seminary, and beneficient only as the educated human he will be glad to talk with anyone in­ play in Murkland auditorium on Febru­ vivid picture of a three-century-old in- has received degrees from Dartmouth, mind has turned its attention to them. terested in poetry writing if arrange­ ary 21, 22 and 23. Norwich, the University of Vermont, “The present distress in business,” continued on page 2) ments are made through Dr. Towle. and the University of New Hampshire. remarked Dean Lord, “is largely due to the many ill-advised efforts of a benevolent government to over-ride Sphinx Dance Cash Prize Plan EARLY AMERICAN University Groups economic principles.” Dean Lord is the founder of the bus­ Sponsor Book Fair iness administration college at Boston Approved by Student Leaders University. H e is a prom inent educa­ by Sumner Fellman Mask and Dagger and th& University tor in the business administration field. sharing scheme. I, for one, plan to be That student opinion on campus defi­ of New Hampshire Writers’ Confer­ there.” In the same vein, Jack Han­ nitely approves of Sphinx Society’s ence will join with over twenty other lon, varsity football player and presi­ plan to award a pair of cash prizes at organizations in sponsoring the first Joseph Jarest Heads New dent of Lambda Chi Alpha remarked, its informal dance tomorrow evening New Hampshire Book Fair which will Micrographic Laboratory “Orchids to Sphinx for a fine idea. was effectively demonstrated by a sur­ open in Manchester, Tuesday, Dec. 5. I’ll definitely be there, and believe you The engineering experiment station vey which was conducted this week by Under the direction of Professor me, I’ll be hoping to win one of those will open a new laboratory soon, ac­ the publicity committee for the dance. Hennessy, Mask and Dagger will pre­ p rizes!” cording to a recent statement issued sent Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer prize As a part of the survey, a number by Dr. Daniel E. Eppelsheimer, head The President of Senior Skulls, Vic of prominent student leaders were play, “Our Town,” starring Walter of the station. Tyson, joined in the chorus of .ap­ Webster, Dorothy Briggs, and Phil queried concerning their opinion of the The new laboratory nears comple­ proval when he declared that he, too, Smith. plan; and the answers received were tion in the basement of Conant hall. thought the idea a fine one, and plan­ Miss Shirley Barker and Dr. Carroll overwhelmingly favorable. Dick Nell- It will be a micrographic laboratory, ned to attend. This was also the re­ S. T ow le will act as critical advisors son, president of Student Council and with Joseph Jarest in charge, and will ply received when Ray Doyle, sopho­ to the symposium which will be held Blue Key, made the following state­ be used to aid metallurgical research more class president, and Charlie Saturday afternoon, December 9. Miss ment: “It’s a great idea and Sphinx at the station. A Leitz “Panphot,” Craig, president of the junior class, Barker has also been asked to serve on deserves credit for its well-timed profit- combination microscope, microprojector (Continued on page 2) a general committee in charge of the and microcamera, is a feature of the +■ book festival. new lab. This piece of equipment will I Mrs. Ella S. B ow les, w ho is In enable the station staff to analyze and We Have charge of the fair, announced yester­ photograph the internal structures of day that Robert Frost, New Hamp­ A Fine Display of It’s the fragrance Early American specimens. The laboratory has been shire’s leading poet, will serve as hon­ beauties compounded of roses-and- organized on a unit plan, in that it has orary chairman of the affair. spice—re-created expressly for self-contained facilities for developing ★ ★ You! Use it to accent your own Other distinguished authors through­ and printing the negatives obtained. piquant American charm. The out New England will participate in the Dr. Eppelsheimer stated that the antique-type glass bottle has a con­ CHRISTMAS symposium discussions held each after­ new lab, together with the super-sonic venient pewter sprinkler top. Other noon and evening, December 6 to 9. distinctive bottles, up to $5.00. generator now being developed, would CARDS Goodman’s Bookstore at 25 Hanover provide the station with equipment to The College Pharmacy Street will serve as the headquarters facilitate metallurgical research for P. O. Block Durham, N. H. for the fair. small industries of the state. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE, NOVEMBER 24, 1939. W \ t JJeftr Ipmpsljtre Campus Notes The Broader Campus With the Greek World by Gertrude Meinelt Phi Mu Delta — Twenty-five of the Art Trip Postponed Published every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year by the students of the Univer­ boys went down to the Harvard Because too few students signed to sity of New Hampshire. This Modern World — game. Mickey McFayden was down Entered as second class matter at the post office at Durham, New Hampshire under the act go, the trip to the Fogg Art Museum of March 3, 1879. Accepted for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in section My wife left me and took my bank­ Friday night. Al Campbell, Ollie in Cambridge has been indefinitely act of October 8, 1917. Authorized September 1, 1918. roll with her — my house burnt down Dennet, Mas McLane and Bill Gard­ BUSINESS OFFICE postponed. This trip was to continue EDITORIAL OFFICE and I haven’t any insurance — my iner went through the Somerville Room 203, Ballard Hall, Phone 289-M the series of guided tours inaugurated Room 202, Ballard Hall, Phone 289-M business has gone bankrupt and all my Ford Plant and the Mystic Iron last year by the University Fine Arts represented f o r n a t i o n a l advertising b y investments are total losses but I m Works on the M.E. trip Friday the Member Committee, and was under the super­ National Advertising Service, Inc. satisfied. I smoke Chesterfields. 13th. Art Madden has been initiated. vision of Assistant Professor Paul L. Associated Cblle8iate Press College Publishers Representative — Sambo (The DePaulia) Dancing class in the chapter room Distributor of 4 2 0 M a d i s o n A v e . N e w Y o r k . N . Y . Grigaut. Monday nights promises a good CHICAGO • BOSTON • lO S ANGELES ' SAN FHANCISCO A Fish Must Live a Lovely Life — showing at the House Dance. Colle&iateDi&est Biological Institute Kappa Delta — Helene Donnelly, Beta The various departments of the Bi­ A fish must live a lovely life, Creeley S. Buchanan Perplexed by neither clothes nor Province President, is visiting the E D I T O R ...... ological Institute are planning a series Alpha Sigma through rushing sea­ ...... Robert Lewis wife. BUSINESS MANAGER ...... of monthly teas, to be given on the He swims or dozes at his will, son. - BUSINESS BOARD first Wednesday of each month. At EDITORIAL BOARD And from about him eats his fill. Kappa Sigma — The following men these times the laboratories of the de­ A ss’t. Bus. M g r...... Richard H. Hay His outlook varies with the tide, went to Harvard: Dumont, Roch- Associate Editor...... Donald A. Lawson Circulation Mgr...... Winston Leavitt partment giving the tea will be open His eyes are trained on either side, leau, Morin, Frost, Rains, Judkins, Adv. M g r...... Irving Thom as to inspection. Managing Editor...... Sumner Fellman And if one view’s confusing, say, Piretti, Nervo, Monica, Nitten, Evans News Editor...... Priscilla Taylor Business Assistants: He calmly looks the other way. Costanzo Tufts, Lennon, Reed, Lib­ Phi Lambda Phi News Editor...... Albert Sharps Charles Martin, Alice Webb, Jean He makes his home north, south, erty, Farrar, Haley, Lanyon, Muel- A meeting of Phi Lambda Phi, the News Editor...... Myron J. Rosen nette Peno, George Leloup, Doris lar, Steele. A rio Piretti is in H ood honorary physics society, was held or west, Moscardini, James Moulton, Francis Wherever suits his fancy best. House. There will be a vie dance Sports Editor...... Richard C ook Tuesday evening in DeMeritt hall. Dr. Robinson, Virginia Fuller. He lives or loves or loafs or broods Board Secretary....Winnifred Kennedy Gregory Hartmann, new assistant pro­ Friday. According to his passing moods. fessor of physics, gave an interesting Phi Mu — There will be a vie party H e is the captain of his soul D U R H A M , N. H , N O V . 24, 1939 talk on supersonics. Friday night. Alumni guests at the Dr. Hartmann limited his address to In pond or ocean, depth or shoal. formal rush party were Mrs. Edward a consideration of underwater signal­ I have been known, at times, to wish Blewett, Mrs. George Prindle, Mrs. THANKSGIVING ling, useful in determining the depth That I might have been born a fish, Albert Baggett, Mrs. Carlton Strong. of the ocean, presence of icebergs, So that my life might be as tidy Elizabeth Picard has been spending Yesterday was Thanksgiving in some twenty-two states and Wash­ presence of submarines, and a host of On any day, that is, but Friday. a few days at the house. — The Fortnightly. ington. The rest of the country, including New England will celebrate other uses that await further develop­ Alpha Tau Omega — Burt Mitchell ment. The device was thought to has a new green hat. Frank Heald the holiday next Thursday, the day that has been celebrated by decree h a v e 'possibilities as a “death ray” but W hy Not to Marry an Engineer: has organized the I.H.J.T. Club. of custom and tradition for generations. W e are inclined to agree with Dr. Hartmann pointed out that this (psalm to an Engineer’s sweetheart) There will be a vie party Friday. use was far from being realized. Verily, I say unto ye, marry not an Phil Richards has begun his winter’s the governor who said in his Thanksgiving proclamation that Thanks­ New members, not present at the engineer; employment at Exeter Academy, giving was a day to be set aside for the manifestations of our thanks meeting, may obtain their shingles at F or an engineer is a strange being and where He coaches basketball. Phil to the Almighty and had been since the first one in Plymouth, and that the next meeting. is possessed of m a/iy evils. is also an official at nearby high Yea, he speaketh eternally in parables * school games. Russ Sanborn is lo o k ­ it shouldn’t be changed to satisfy the whims of certain selfish commercial Aggie Notice which he calleth formulae, ing for a ride to Meriden Thanks­ and business interests. More than 100 growers, officials, and And he wieldeth a big stick whiqh he giving. students attended the third annual calleth a slide rule, Phi Alpha — A'regional meeting was Regardless of which day we celebrate, here in America it might be Turkey Grading School held in Dur­ And he hath only one bible, a hand held with the national president and well to stop for a moment and reflect on what we have to be thankful for. ham Thursday, November 16. The b ook. district officers presiding. Twelve school, sponsored by the New Hamp­ He thinketh only of strains and stress men from the chapter of Boston Uni­ Surely no country has more reason to be grateful than we. shire Turkey Growers Association, the es, and without end of thermody­ versity were present, and Judge Da­ Paultry and Agricultural Engineering namics. vid A. Rose of Boston was the Our daily papers are not filled with censored news of the fate of departments of the University, and the He showeth always a serious aspect speaker. A mascot for the fratern­ our military and naval forces, carrying lists of names which strike fear New Hampshire Department of Agri­ and seemeth not to know how to ity has been officially adopted. He culture, featured dressing and judging smile. is a great dane and his name is and pain into the hearts and homes of our citizens. Night doesn’t see the birds, and a general discussion of And he picketh his seat in a car by the Amoco. A well-konwn Boston or­ our streets darkened as a protection against air-raids. The approach of the turkey-raising business. springs therein and not by the chestra has been secured for the Mil. an airplane or a group of airplanes isn’t the signal for everyone to hie damsels. Art. house dance. Animal Husbandry Neither does he know a waterfall ex­ himself to a cellar or subway. W e are not obliged to stint ourselves Last week the Advanced Animal cept by its horsepower, nor a when we sit down to the annual Thanksgiving dinner, as 'are some unfor­ Husbandry class and the General sunset except that he must turn Farming class of the Applied Farming on the light, nor a damsel ex­ Students ! ! tunate countries, suffering from blockakes and war rations. Our streets course, visited the Diamond Slash L cept by her weight. Would you like a chance to win do not resound from the rumble of moving soldiers and war machines Belgian stock farm in Pittsfield. The Always he carrieth his book with him $2.50 after the expensive Harvard week-end? O f course you would! leaving for the scenes of the fighting. God willing, none of these condi­ students had the opportunity to see and he entertaineth his sweet­ And you can have just that chance the best Belgian horses in the East, heart with steam tables. and at the same time enjoy a tions will prevail in this country. and were especially interested in a Verily, though his damsel expecteth pleasant evening at the shipment of horses just recently arrived chocolates when he calleth, she Therefore, for us here in America, yesterday or next Thursday from Belgium. Judging classes were openeth the package to discover Sphinx Informal Dance should be even more an occasion for grateful reverence on the part of held, with the classes placed by Pro­ samples of iron ores. tomorrow evening at 8:00 P.M. in fessor L. V. Tirrell of the Animal Hus­ Yea, he holdeth her hand but to mea­ the W om en’s gymnasium. Two all for the great privilege of living in a country where girl cheerleaders prizes of $2.50 will be awarded— bandry department. A valuable dis­ sure the friction thereof; and and football games are headline news and where the instruments used a door prize and a spot dance prize. cussion with Mr. Ayles, manager of the kisseth her only to test the vis This is an opportunity you cannot in air-attacks are leather footballs, notv steel bombs. farm, followed the classes. cosity of her lips, for in his eyes afford to miss. Tickets will be on there shineth a far-away look sale at the door. Admission 40c As a matter of fact, at his particular time, we’d like to go the presi­ German Club that is neither love nor a long Any members of the German Club ing look—rather a vain attempt dent one better, and declare that for America and Americans there should who play the piano, violin, or accor­ to recall formula. ------be 365 days of Thanksgiving instead of one or two. dion, or who sing, are urged to display Even as a boy he pulleth a girl’s hair their talents at the meetings. The but to test its elasticity; {FRANKLIN audience has proven itself to be a very But as a man he deviseth diffeYent de­ understanding one and deserves to be vices, | DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE Editorial Notes complimented. No monotony* is guar­ For he counteth the vibrations of her FRIDAY NOV. 24 anteed; good and bad are always gen­ heartstrings and A thought for today: What this world needs is fewer Fuehrers. erously intermingled. But it is the He seeketh ever to pursue his scientific COAST GUARD Randolph' Scott - Ralph Bellamy spirit of the thing which everyone en investigations; Frances Dee - Walter Connolly joys that is important, rather than the Even his own heart flutterings he Glad to see some action in regard to Nesmith’s front lawn, but why SATURDAY N O V . 25 possession of professional abilities. counteth as a vision of fluctua are they eliminating some of the already inadequate parking space behind The club members are practicing tion, HERE I AM A Janies and Morrill? Christmas carols and intend to learn And he enscribeth his passion as a moi^e than the first stanzas. Booklets form ula, STRANGER of carols have been sent for and will be And his marriage is a simultaneous Richard Greene - Richard Dix distributed among the members. equation involving two unknowns Roland Young - Brenda Joyce By the way, what ever became of the plan to allow seniors unlimited And yielding diverse results — Russell Gleason Verily, I say unto ye, marry not an cuts ? Has that gone the way of most reforms ? Lens and Shutter S U N D A Y N O V . 26 At the last meeting attention was engineer. focused on a series of Eastman slides - Shakeloose (Northeastern News. JAMAICA INN OPEN HOUSE explaining the manufacture of Christ­ Charles Laughton (Continued from page 1) mas cards by the photographic method. Radio Broadcasts Missing Feline MONDAY - TUESDAY Next Monday evening Professor dustry gone modern, while a recently- November 27 - 28 Jackson will lead members of the club L O S T — Three months or so old Saturday, November 25 installed air-conditioning system and a in a series of discussions on various kitten, striped, with three white feet, 9:45 A. M.—4-H Club of the Air, flourescent lighting arrangement will THUNDER AFLOAT types of cameras and their operation. and answers to the name of Maisie. Mrs. Elizabeth Roper, Straf­ emphasize the attitude of modern in­ Wallace Beery - Virginia Grey Several members will explain their Please return to Dr. Thomas G. Phil­ Chester Morris - Douglas Dumbrille ford 4-H Club Agent, in dustry towards better working condi­ cameras. lips, Woodman Avenue. charge. tions. After Thanksgiving the club will Monday, November 27 Durham Print, which is rapidly be­ hear a lecture by Mrs. Sackett on por­ 12:15 P.M .—Book Review, prepared coming a Durham institution, was traits. EAT REGULARLY AND ECONOMICALLY by Miss Shirley Barker, library founded in 1931 and was situated on WITHOUT SACRIFICING QUALITY staff, Robert G. Webster, com­ the proposed site of a new postoffice Freshman Notice mentator. Freshmen are again reminded to be 1:00 P.M.—Farm Program, Gor­ which will be built in the near future. . A 21 - MEAL TICKET at the Commons on Sunday nights don Percival, assistant chemist. In 1935, it was m oved to its present from 5:30 to 5:50. If they are not 7 BREAKFASTS. 7 DINNERS 7 SUPPERS Tuesday, November 28 location and while it has, to all in there at this time they will not be able 12:15 P.M .—Garden’ Chat, Dr. Al­ at $5.75 points the w#y. tents and purposes, been going quietly to enter the dining hall. It is planned bert F. Yeager, Horticultural about its business, it has steadily been that there will be an entertainment or Department, “Opportunities in modernizing and enlarging to such an guests at every meal on Sunday nights. Horticulture.” extent that Durham Print is today one Boys wishing to bring girls may do so Farm Reporter, Digest of agricul­ of the most modernized print shops of University JDiiaiinigl Mall and those wishing to come alone may tural news of the week, Jack its size in the state of New Hampshire. sit in the annex. C n o v o n Pti+3 tnr I THE NEW HAMPSHIRE, NOVEMBER 24, 1939. Sports Scene Changes With fall sports completed, the stu­ ^bwiUam B>ull dent athletes now turn their attention by Dick Cook to winter activiies. New Hampshire will soon be represented On the basket­ ball court, hockey rink, board track, With the first flurries of snow that 'fell on campus Wednesday SPORTS SECTION rifle range, and- ski trail. afternoon, came the remembrance of rapidly - approaching winter. Intramural News Coach Swasey is Each flake that hit the ground, New Hampshire Football Team hesitated for a minute, and then Editor’s note: The following account Confident of Good melted into a drop of water, brought was written by a member of Theta back more scenes to our mind’s Completes Mediocre Season Kappa Phi and was presented to “The Basketball Teams eye.- New Hampshire.” It is quoted as re­ by Dick CoOk a baseball score with New Hampshire Soon the ground, which is now ceived. Six Lettermen Return to on the short end of a 3-2 decision. frozen in the early morning before Starting the season with a veteran Squad for Pre-Season the sun hits it, will be permenantly line but with few backs of any exper­ On Dads’ Day a favored Vermont Theta Kappa Phi captured the intra­ hard, ready to receive its white ience, Coach George Sauer this year team was thoroughly beaten by the mural six-man football championship Conditioning Sessions winter overcoat. Then the skiers produced a football team which won Blue and White as they rose up and Wednesday afternoon, crushing Sigma The University of New Hampshire’s will take over! W e will hear talk three games and lost five, for a per­ conquered, 22-6. By ' scoring three Beta by a score o f 25-0 in a gam e play­ varsity basketball squad is rapidly of powder snow, sugar snow, centage of .375. This was an im prove­ touchdowns in the third period, the ed in a setting of snow flurries and rounding into shape after an intensive stocky snow, wet snow and dry Durham team routed Len Taylor and ment over the 1938 season when the freezing weather. It was the Theta conditioning process that was begun snow. Jumping skis, cross-country Wildcats were victorious in three his mates. Kap’s second straight win over Sigma during the first part of the present skis, down-hill skis, the Dartmouth games in a schedule of nine. Such Beta, the first of the series, ending in month. Carnival and Sohm’s wax ^will be formidable opponents as Harvard and Team Ends Season a 36-6 rout. Coach Swasey is blessed with a re­ discussed. Rutgers appearing this fall made the Paced by Lou Cryans and Ed Plod- turn of six lettermen from the varsity The New Hampshire Winter Car­ competition tougher and thus the squad zik, T.K.P. led from the first two min­ squad of last season: Herb Adams, Lou nival will draw outstanding com­ was really more capable than the won utes and never was in danger, although Cryans, Matt Flaherty, Jim Hatch, petitors form all over New Eng­ and lost record indicates. the game was characterized by the Ken McLeod and Ted Plante. Eleven land and we will have one glori­ The New Hampshire team scored 71 savage defensive play of both teams. other men, many of them stars on last ous week-end. points during the campaign against 125 Lou Cryans startled the spectators year’s freshman squad, likewise have Soon we will be trudging up to for the opposition, as they were shut with a 55 yard touchdown run on a reported ready for work. the Field House on cold nights to out in only two games. Maine edged pass interception early in the game watch our basketball team play on the Wildcats 6-0 and Harvard didn’t and Ed Plodzik scored from the ten Confident! the spacious floor. W e will sit in give them a chance in the 46-0 trounc­ yard line on an end run just before the towering stands and watch the ing. the half. After bringing the ball down sweaty players toss the ball around Burt Mitchell, veteran backfield ace, from mid-field on quick line thrusts. A under the bright lights. Afterwards and sophomore star, Harold Hall, pass from Plodzik to Cryans made the we will slide down over the rail­ shared the high scoring honors with score 13-0 at half time. road bridge, elated that the W ild­ three touchdowns apiece or a total of Midway in the third quarter, “Toot” cats are, this year, a winning team 18 points. . Dick Gordon, burly full­ Plante rifled a 25 yard pass', to Bill on the court. I back, and diminutive Stacey Clark, Fitzsimmons in the end zone to put Hockey games will be played out both playing their first year of var­ T .K .P . in the lead 19-0. “ H erb ” John­ on the rink and we will stand and sity competition tied for second place son, Sigma Beta quarterback, nearly shiver as we watch the puck with 12 points each. “Pepper” Martin got away with the ensuing kickoff, run­ chasers, under the direction of booted two field goals and two con­ ning it back to the T.K.P. 25 yard line. Tony Dougal, dash around on the versions for a total of eight points. The third period ended here, and on ice. The boards will resound with Matt Flaherty spilled the Springfield the first play of the final quarter, Plod­ a continual bang, bang, bang, as safety man behind his own goal to add zik broke through and blocked John­ we try to keep our feet from freez­ two points to the season s total and son’s pass, caught it in mid-air and Ario Piretti kicked one conversion. ing. ran 70 yards for the last score. The The freshman hockey and bas­ Opening the season after only a lit­ remainder of the period saw several ex- ketball teams will be quite success­ tle more than two weeks of practice, changes of the ball but no serious scor­ the Sauermen were defeated by a sea­ ful and will reveal several varsity ing threat. stars of the future. soned Colby aggregation, 20-6, on T.K.P. won nine games, tied one and * * * Lewis field. Stacey Clark scored the lost one during the prolonged season, lone New Hampshire tally on a bril COACH SAUER With another football season rolling up an amazing total of 211 liant 70-yard return of a Mule punt. all over except for the election of points to the opponents’ 38. Except for this highlight the play was The longest trip of the campaign an honorary captain, we take a Herb Johnson and Dick Smith star­ dominated by A1 McCoy s veteran-team carried the New Hampshire team to little time and space to recognize red for the losers. from Waterville. Rutgers and defeat in New Brunswick, those seniors on the squad who Ably supporting the starring cast of N.J. on November 4. The Scarlet have performed on the Wildcat Bouncing back from their initial de Cryans, Plante, Fitzsimmons and Plod­ team, the biggest faced by the Wild­ gridiron for the last time. The feat the Wildcats outplayed a weak zik were Bill Cone, Walt Angers and cats this fall, triumphed 32-13, Clark Harvard game was a glorious cli­ Northeastern team in the second game Tom Houlihan, ends; Maurice McKen­ and H all scoring on runs of 88 and 85 max to the careers of the ten men and won 15-6. Pep M^artin s field goal na and Dave Sullivan, centers; and yards, respectively. even though it will go dow n in the came in the second quarter sandwiched Ken Noseck and John Syster, backs. record books as a lop-sided contest. between touchdowns in the first and Tufts, our Homecoming Day guest, The team was in the hands of Head It is too bad that the students, a third. The Huskies were unable to scored first on Lewis field but with Hall Coach Jim Martin and Assistant Coach few years in the future, won’t be score until the final period when they doing most of the ball carrying the Paul Nugent, regulars on last year’s also able to read in the books of pushed across their single tally. home team won 13-6. Burt Mitchell freshman team line, who were unable the fine spirit and fight that the A rainy day in Orono damped and scored both NH touchdowns in the to participate in varsity competition COACH SWASEY underdogs exemplified throughout. slowed up the play of both Maine and final period. 1 this year. Backfield NH winners who are New Hampshire but the Bears inter­ The famous Harvard game which is It is, of course, a little to early to graduating 'in June include Burt cepted a Wildcat pass and thus eked still quite fresh in our memories, was name a starting lineup, but Coach Swa­ Mitchell, Ed Sauer and Jack Han­ out a 6-0 victory in an otherwise un­ an overw helm ing defeat as far as score Big Squad Out for sey believes that his firs twTo teams will lon. All of these men were con- eventful game. went but the spirit displayed by stu­ be something to write home about. He The Gymnasts beat the visiting dents, team and cheerleaders was the Frosh Basketball intimated that during each game he will Sauermen under the lights in Spring­ talk of Boston. use tw o unts, or teams, as a w hole, field with a 39-yard field goal. A With many promising freshmen mov­ With the season’s opener scheduled For Student Rooms rather than single substitutions. Much safety made the final result look like for December 13, less than three weeks ing up to the varsity, several lettermen more information in regard to the in­ MAPLE BOOK CASES returning, and a schedule of teams away, the freshman basketball squad is working out nightly under the direction dividual players and their team status sistent performers in the backfield m ore in its ow n class, the W ildcat $5.50 will be printed after the squad returns for the last two seasons and Mitch­ football team should prove quite suc­ of Johnny DuRie. from the Thanksgiving vacation. ell has been hailed as one of the Some 50 candidates turned out for MAPLE LOUNGE cessful next, fall. The basketball floor has been com­ greatest Wildcat ball carriers in re­ the opening session on Monday eve­ CHAIRS $19.50 pletely set in the Field House and years. ning, and will take only light work­ everything is in readiness for the open­ outs until after Thanksgiving, by In the line, Coach Sauer will Students Offered ing of the season, The floor this year, which time the squad will be trimmed miss many stalwarts. Frank Leary, is in much better shape than last year, E. MORRILL FURN. CO. Peter Urban and Fred Winterbot- Inexpensive Cruise to 20 or 25 rnen and will be able to 60 T H IR D ST., D O V E R Tel. 70 when considerable trouble was experi­ tom are the ends who will never get down to serious business. Completely circling South America enced. It is expected that the student again race down the field under While Coach DuRie stated that the on a leisurely 72-day cruise, the Amer­ body of the University will give its un­ punts or leap for passes. Buck prospects didn’t appear any too bright, ican line “Baranof” . . . chartered from stinted support to the team s; as it Buchanan and Harry Haynes, let- he admitted that it was hard to make the Alaska Steamship Company . . . stacks up against many strange oppon­ termen for three seasons, will no any predictions at such an early date will afford United States students a ents this season. If the students do as and mentioned several candidates as longer hold down guard positions, fine a job cheering for the basketball rare opportunity to combine education having showed up well in the early while Ario Piretti and Tom John­ team as they did for the football team, with adventure at unusually low cost, workouts. Freedman and Rowe, a son are graduating tackles. nothing more can be asked. The Field DOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE according to Continental Tours, spon­ couple of Portsmouth boys, look like House seats 2500 students, so there is sors of the cruise. comers, and Bob Martel of Hanover plenty of room to stretch and yell for FRIDAY - SATURDAY Sailing from the Pacific Coast ports and Charlie Hartshorn, lathy center Nellson and his “gals.” STAR t h e a t r e in early January, the Baranof, former­ from Meredith m a/ see plenty of ser­ R O B E R T T A Y L O R in )J 1 / a lv Newmarket The schedule for the season has not ly the Grace line “Santa Elisa,” fea­ vice. Others mentioned were Bob Jos- been released as yet, but will be pub­ tures a special Student’s Dormitory for lin, Towne, Sammy Askenazy and Red REMEMBER FR I. - SA T. N O V . 24 - 25 lished after the coming vacation. men. Although these accommodations Davis. Gene Autry - Smiley Burnett Th complete squad lists; Herb Ad­ with Greer Garson - Lew Ayres are little more than half the regular The schedule is, at this writing, still MOUNTAIN RHYTHM ams, Lou Cryans, Dave Egan, Matt fare, student travelers may enjoy full in the tentative stage, but will be an­ Frankie Darro - Dick Purcell Flaherty, Les Griffith, Harold Hall, A1 SUNDAY - MONDAY run of the ship. nounced as soon as it is released. IRISH LUCK Hatch, Phil Hodgen Roger Judkins, TUESDAY To those interested in foreign trade Ken McLeod, Harold Monica, Ted or mining as a career, the cruise offers cities of the southern continent as well SU N . - M O N . N O V . 26 - 25 Plante, Ray Rivers, Bob Rowe, Bob a practical means of discovering the as some of the lesser known tropical ANOTHER THIN MAN Alice Fay - Don Ameche Wood, Morris Pinks and George Ste­ commercial opportunities of South ports. A highlight of the tour will be - HOLLYWOOD vens. America. Likewise, students of polit the voyage through the Straits of Ma­ CAVALCADE gellan, with a stop at Punta Arenas, ical science, Spanish and Hispano- Granite Notice WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY American history will find this Latin world’s southernmost city: TUESDAY NOV. 28 All girls who participate in class American travelogue a rich soilrce of Optional shore excursions enable the CASH NIGHT and All-star hockey please report to SECRET OF knowledge in their particular fields and collegiate traveler to see the colorful Irene Dunne - Fred MacMurray Memorial Field on Friday, November an excellent cultural opportunity. hinterlands of Mexico and Guatemala, DR. KILDARE 24, at 4 o’clock to have their pictures INVITATION TO The itinerary has been carefully the Chilean Lake region, the pampas taken for the “Granite.” Lew Ayres - Lionel Barrymore HAPPINESS planned to include the major coastal of Argentina and the jungles of Brazil. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE, NOVEMBER 24, 1939. MSSSSmUm Student Rating of Teachers Dies Committee Tony Dougal Talks Inaugurated at California Called Stool Pigeon at Hetzel Smoker War Mongers Explaining his duties as a scout and by Edith M. Blake covering three questions: How were his method of notation while scouting the outside reading assignments in pro­ The Liberal Club, campus agitation the Harvard-Army game for New “Professor X doesn’t seem to put his portion to the credit given? How did group, branded the Dies Committee as Hampshire, Tony Dougal, coach of lectures over . . . Professor Y is a poet the lectures and outside reading in­ “Un-American” stool pigeon war mon­ freshman football, gave an interesting of the ‘ivory tower’ and never gives a ^ BRAD Me I NTIRE terrelate? And are the examinations gers, yesterday in a public ultimatum. and enjoyable account of the experi­ thought to practical matters . . . He DURHAM,NEW HAMPSHIRE fair? After the plan had been rejected Appearing as a feature article of a ences and strategems of the job at a walks around too much while lectur­ by the University, groups of interested pamphlet produced by the club, the smoker held in Hetzel Hall last night. ing . . . He may be a brilliant man but students printed and distributed a new “Liberals” attempted to point out that Mr. Dougal also showed two reels of he never should be allowed to teach and more complete questionnaire called Americans could choose the Dies Com­ film on the New Hampshire-Harvard . . . Professor W is o.k. . . . We need the “Pestalozzi Reaction Scale” which mittee or Democracy. game to illustrate his contention that Durham Dribble more courses like this . . . We need were given to any student who wished Harvard was one of the smartest teams more professor like Dr. Z.” The “Liberals” charge the commit­ to fill them out. As finally adopted, he had ever witnessed in action. tee with attempting to “whip up war D aily Impressions These are a few of the comments by the questionnaire contained six ques­ hysteria, curb the Bill of Rights, sus­ “A scout’s job,” asserted the fresh­ students about their professor in a tions to be answered as they applied 8 o’clocks, 9 o’clocks, 10 o’clocks, labs; pend civil liberties, and to suspend all man njentor, “is really no bed of roses. unique reaction plan which was inaug­ to a particular course. The questions Histories, ’Ologies, Physics, and gabs, active trade unions fighting to improve He must be on the alert as much as urated at the University of California covered lectures, organization. of Dances, romances, athletics and Dover; conditions of the'workers.” The writer any player on the field. He must watch and described by its sponsor, Franz course, collateral reading, stimulation Elation, deflation, vacation — school’s of the comment was especially dis­ for any giveaway signs, for any faults Schneider, in “Students Examine Their of interest, examinations, and attitude tressed by the tesimony of witnesses on the part of the line or backfield that Professors,” published by the Pesta- of lecturer toward students. Space called in the investigation of the Na­ could be capitalized on, for any un­ tozzi Press. was provided on the reverse side for Cows tional Maritime Workers Union, show­ orthodox types of defense or style of Starting with the proposition that general comment on the course. Cows^have ing decided sympathy with the follow­ play, and a host of other things. If colleges are built, professors are hired, In spite of the limitations of such G ood times ers of Bridges and others who have the opposition’s tackle likes to charge, and libraries enriched for the benefit questionnaire it should render definit-. In meadows and pastures tied up United States shipping, at will, make note of it—we may be able to of the student, Professor Schneider at­ services by giving the professor And things. for the past few years. mousetrap him; if their end likes to tempted to determine what the alleged chance to know just how efficient his When it’s sunny cut in sharp, remember it— perhaps we subject of all scholastic activity actual­ course is, it will protect the good teach The tirade was ended with an at­ They don’t sun-burned —• may go around him. Does the enemy ly thought about it. Professor Schneid­ er from the usual haphazard gossip, it tempted justification of the comments Or freckled. favor off-tackle plays or end sweeps; er criticizes his fellow teachers for be­ will show up the defects of the poor in the following words: F or flies ing standardized conformists and ama­ does his quarterback like to take teacher, and will give the students an “And we, the liberals of America, T h ey have a g ood tail teur politicians. “If students are not chances on fourth down; and how do opportunity to make suggestions which see the necessity of preventing continu­ That gets around as good as we should like to have them, they line up for a kickoff? All these it w ould be im possible to make in any ation of this anachronistic witch-hunt- To the difficult places apparently they are the best which our points must be watch, and a hundred other way. ing committee bent on destroying Best o f all system at present can produce. Our others too. Now perhaps you can un The plan has not been a complet American ideals of progress and de­ W h en it rains students can be no better than the derstand why I am really tired after success, primarily because of the small mocracy. We as liberals must fight They don’t have mamas standards of their elders in the com­ the game, just as though I had played proportion of the students who partici­ Dies and his stool-pigeon war mongers. That tell them munity and the nation. This does not in it m yself.” pated at the University of California. And in so doing we would preserve T o com e in out o f the rain mean that students are paragons of However, it has illimitable possibilitie peace in the country, rights of indi­ The movies shown displayed clearly Bulls either. virtue, but, as has been pointed out, in improving teaching standards. The viduals guaranteed by the constitution, the truth of Mr. Dougal’s statement education can’t be better than the need for such a plan at this universit;, and a wholesome attitude which would that Harvard depended on deception Rushing Dates teachers.” is not as great as in many institutions be every American citizen’s right. and the “button, button, who’s got the The tall boy scanned the number on The Schneider rating plan was first because the newly-formed Student button?” type of play. It was demon­ the door before him. “308—this is it.” proposed by a University of California Other features of this pamphlet in­ Committee on Educational Policy per­ strated graphically that what appeared One of his companions tapped his publication. The proposed rating was cluded: “A Prayer for Young Lib­ forms the function of suggesting to be the same play was really four arm. “What’s his first name, Joe?” to be in the form of a questionnaire erals,” by Shirley Barker; “Labor and changes or reforms in policy. entirely different ones, with any one He consulted the pocket pad in his the War,” by John Hall; and “The of Harvard’s backfield likely to end up hand. “Robert. Robert Durgin.” Revolution,” a one-act play, by Shirley New Books at the Library with the ball in different places. It He knocked. In a moment, the door SPHINX DANCE Evans. was extremely difficult to decide from Fiction (Continued from page 1) opened and a pimply-faced freshman Two rather contrasting and concrete the films just who did have the ball, stood uncertainly before them. were asked for statements. Said Char­ Aldington, Richard, “Rejected Guest.” greetings were included, one by Pres­ and the audience could appreciate the “Robert Durgin?” lie: “I still remember how the members Asch, S., “The Nazarene.” ident Engelhardt, and the other by Mr. difficulties that. New Hampshire was “ Y es.” of Sphinx helped out the Sophomore Bacon, Mrs. J. D. (D), “Root and the Hobby. Mr. Hobby puts the issue facing at Soldiers’ Field. “My name’s Joe Scudder, Bob. I’d F low er.” Hop committee last year, and I hope right up to the “Liberals,” and his Several questions were discussed af­ like you to meet Russ Stratton, Jimmy Benjamin, H., “Saber-tooth Curricu­ that their dance will be as successful remarks are in contrast to the rather ter the movies, with Mr. Dougal affirm­ Gorm, and Harry Beaudin.” lum .” as ours w as.” leactionary content of the pamphlet. ing that Torby McDonald was truly “Please to meetcha, please to meet- Brown, Mrs. Z. (J.), “Mr. Pinkerton at The committee received the co-ed all that has been claimed for him in cha, please to meetcha.” The freshman the Old Angel.” slant on the question when Madeline LOST sports news. Asked about Harvard’s shook hands with each. Cloete, Stuart, “Watch for the Dawn.'” Papachristos, secretary of the junior | chances against Yale, he said, “ I think “We’re from Delta Gamma, Bob. Di Donato, Pietro, “Christ in Con­ class, remarked, “It’s about time we Green Felt Soft Hat at the rally and I they will beat them. In fact, I’ll bet W e’d like to have you come up for sup­ crete.” had something new in Saturday night bonfire before the Harvard game. Find­ ) any part of a nickel on it.” per, Thursday night.” Downes, Mrs. A. (M.), “So Stands the dances. Sphinx has a swell idea in its “Aw gee, I got a date, I’m going er please return to Chester Kulesza, Refreshments of cider and doughnuts R ock .” plan to award cash prizes.” over to Chi Beta.” Eberhart, M. (G.), “Chiffon Scarf.” 226 East hall. were served. This fine response greatly encour­ “How about next Tuesday nite then, Fisher, V., “Children of God.” aged members of the Sphinx commit­ B o b ?” Golding, L., “Mr. Emmanuel.” tee, who had wondered whether or not “Yup, sure.” Groseclose, E. E., “Ararat.” the plan would receive a favorable re­ New Educational Plan Offers “And come over Sunday. You can Hackett, F., “Queen Anne Boleyn.” action. Now, assured of the support play football or ping-pong or some­ Heyward, De B., “Star Spangled Vir­ of the student body, they are rushing Students Chance for Benefit thing, and meet the boys.” gin.” arrangements for the dance to comple­ “Sure, be glad to.” The freshman That the University of New Hamp­ It is necessary that great care be taken Household, G., “Rogue Male.” tion. The affair, which will be held in shire is^becoming more a progressive scuffled his shoe against the threshold. Huxley, Elspeth, “Red Stranger.” in drawing up the proposed course, the women’s gymnasium, tomorrow “Well, awfullv glad to have met you, educational institution every year is in­ however, for once the petition is grant­ Lincoln, J. C., “Ownley Inn.” evening, features the music of Vic Roy B ob .” dicated by such innovations as the new ed, the studentjs expected to hold to Merrick, E., “Frost and Fire.” and his popular dance orchestra, in social science section of the College “Yuh, me too.” Montgomery, L. M., “Anne of Ingle- it during his 'entire college career. addition to the pair of cash prizes. The door closed and the four boys side.” of Liberal Arts, established this fall When a student enters this special with Morrill Hall as headquarters and turned down the hall. Steinbeck, J., “Grapes of Wrath.” group, he comes under the control of The tall boy made a mark on his pad by the recently-formed student ad­ the Senate Committee on Curricula, Sttevenson, D. E., “Green Money.” HISTORIAN SPEAKS and spoke. visory group, organized to facilitate which usually appoints a special ad­ Strong, L.A.G., “The Open Sky.” (Continued from page 1) improvements in curricula and aca­ “Wet smack.” Thirkell, Mrs. A. (M.), “The Bran­ visor for him. teresting comment was the one in demic relations. Another comparative­ “Aren’t w^e all?” dons.” It is not to be inferred that this which he said that before last March ly new plan, which has received little Vance, E., “Escape.” plan provides an easy means for a stu­ many influential English leaders and a publicity, is the system put into effect dent to rid himself of some require­ STUDENT CONCERT majority of English people did not last year by means of which superior History and Travel ment which he considers distasteful. (Continued from page 1) want us to in any way meddle in the students, having proper justification, To the contrary, the committee looks 2. Prelude from “ Cycle of Life” Ronald Bolton, H. E., “Wider Horizons of European problem but since then all are permitted to take special courses with disfavor upon any petition which A Bridal Party on the Hardanger K jeru lf American History.” parties have united in wanting us to of study, even if these courses cut seeks merely release from a require­ The Blue Swan Mueller be in. across departmental or college lines. Boyd, L. A., “Polish Countryside^.” ment, and demands that the student In the Luxembourg Gardens Manning Mr. Agar’s talk, on the whole, was The system works in the following Campbell, W. S., “The Old Santa Fe present a complete, well-planned and (W om en’s Glee Club) manner. If a student finds that the Trail.” one of the most liberal and unbiased well-justified course of studies for his The Men’s Quartet existing major departments and cur­ Churchill, W.L.S., “Step by Step, 1936- heard on campus for a long time, es­ remaining years in college. In fact, Richard Hawkins, Robert Austin ricula fail to satisfy his educational 1939.” the committee actually refuses to con­ Gaylord Davis, Fredrick Clark pecially in a world which at the present needs, he is at liberty to draw up a sider the petitions of students who From the Mountains, Op. 41 String field Commager, H.S., “The Heritage of time is so full of prejudice and par­ special course of studies, containing his want permission to drop one of more a. Mountain Song A m erica.” college years, and to petition the Sen­ tiality, when it would have been so requirements. b. Cripple Creek Cotterill, R. S., “A Short History of ate committee on curricula for permis­ easy to have presented propaganda, As yet, few students have availed (Orchestra) the Americas.” sion to adopt this special course. No and his underlying theme seemed to be, themselves of this excellent opportunity Brothers, Sing On! Grieg Curtins, E. R., “Civilization of France.” matter what requirements are broken in pursuit of justice. to get the most out of their college A Moonlight Night IVennerberg — that is, within reasonable limitations BuBled, V., “La Societe Francaise de education. It is expected, however, Rain and the River F ox — or what combinations of subjects are XVI Siecle au XX siecle.” that once the plan becomes better Short’nin’ Bread Gibb Biography selected, if the student can prove to Langsam, W. C., “Documents and known and understood, more petitions (M en’s Glee Club) the satisfaction of the Senate commit­ Readings in the History of Europe Austin, W., Williams Austin. will be received by the committee. Arthur Mullin, accompanist tee that his proposed course is wise Since 1918.” Bakeless, J. E., “Master of the Wilder­ and valid, he will be permitted to Pinkerton, K. S. (G.), “Wilderness ness, Daniel Boone.” adopt it. Thus, it is conceivable p os­ W ife .” EAT AT Boswell, J., “Boswell’s Note Book.” sible for a student to combine courses Rauschning, H., “The Revolution of Butler, N. M., “Acoss the Busy Years.” in music with courses in cattle rais­ Nihilism.” j ing, athough such an example is Canby, H. S., “Thoreau.” GRANT’S CAFE Riesenberg, F., “Cape Horn.” rather far-fetched. Dodd, W. E., “Jefferson Davis.” Singleton, E., “China as Described by This plan, which was largely pre­ THE FOOD IS EXCELLENT AND Green, F. C., “Stendhal.” Great Writers.” pared and sponsored by Dean Blewett, THE LOCATION IS CONVENIENT Loth, D. G., “Alexander Hamilton.” new head of the College of Liberal Stowe, H. B., “Palmetto-leaves.” Arts, is eligible to sophomore students Try our Modern and Attractive Cafe where you get Weaver, R. B., “United States History Partridge, Bellamy, “Country Lawyer.” who have a sufficiently high average. Service at the Right Prices. by U nits.” Perkins, A.J.G., “Frances Wright.” The student who adopts such a plan Woestemeyer, I. F., “The Westward Priestley, J. B., “Rain Upon Godshill.” usually has no definite major subject DURHAM, N. H. M ovem ent.” Skinner, O., “The Last Tragedian.” and is classified as a general student.