i .,.

Show

+ JIEWM;{, ~ ! :_J: . . this Sunday's th naean So. ng d to "Lit . Pi tur s." Dr. ig inally sche. discu sion on iew on Amer. tUl,CW sl ides of the other p l aces ' ------literature oti \ ol. 82 udents should April 24, 1959 Newark, Delaware - No. 2-t especially

II be at 7:30 r_own Loung • fac ulty mem. Aquatic Club Perforins Tonight

Student Carnival Strokes~ Stunt To Feature Booths Based· on Hits In Carpenter Gym Of Broadway Dela w arP·,_ Ca mpu Ches t· AUCTION rnmrnittcr is staging a carnival in the Ca rpenter Field H ou ·e I n addition to the booths, H an~er tonight from 8 p. m . to there will be a n a uction sa le at 'Bubbling B',vay' 11 :30 p. m. 10 p. m ., si nging by the Pier - j Thr C' arnival \\' i J I · f eatu re rettes, a nd mus ic by a student boot hs from mo ·t f the Jiving ba nd. j Is Show's Theine groups Llll cam_pu. ·. and other in - ~ The booth that contributes the " Bubbling Broadway", which tcrestf'll organrza uons. mo t money to the campaig n opened l ast night, is being pre · Some of the boot hs are the will rc c ivc an award at the sented tonight and t om orrow. follo11·ing: Alpha Epsilon Pi, j Spring Da nce. The price of ad- 1 night by the members of the on11!ing 11·i th a ha ll a nd ch a in; mi ·sion to the carnival w ill be Aqua t ic Cl ub. Al phi T:~u Omega, pit ·hing pen. a dime per person. The girls, under the direction nics into :hot glasses; AlphaJ . of Miss Barbara W. Rothacher of Pili Onwga, ugly m a n co ntest. l A"d p ~ . Dtte the Physical Educa tion depart· HEARSE RIDE ~ CtJ bOllS m ent, have been pr acticing sev. era! months for the show. · Many Page J) Del til Tau Delta. hearse rides In Office on 1\'lav. l stroke a nd _stunts appear in the aracters ara in elurl ing rirlf"s up to Carpenter •' routines, which are being done vable. What Field Housr• from the A q uat ic Students wishing financial am to t~nes from " L 'il A bner", comedy wit!\ Cl ub shr>~\ : Kappa Alpha, ra - must file their scholarship- a pJlli ­ "South Pacific", " Damn Yank· central idea in g of Rif'hard the Ylouse. I ations by Fritia,Y. iVlay 1, an- ees", and other Broadway shows. the charac. Pi K <~p p ; , A lpha. comical pic- n_ounced ~ona ld P. Hardy, As- Most of the numbers are being even the ture takin~:; Phi Kappa Tau. s1sta nt Dean of Students.. · done by g roups of two, three or ported that playin' ...:kf'P Ba ll; ~ igma . u , Scholarship awards are de­ a few more girl s, except for the pic thrrn' in;:; C' Jntcst; ig m a Phi termined by both financial need opening n umber and the finale Ep:·ilon. thrrJI\·ing d <:~rts at ~al- 1 and academic merit. , / which contain the whol e club. Each group made up its own l!H>n .--: an rl ThP a ht, smashrng Approximately schoJar- 700 routine. There i s also a diving a f·ar 1\'11 h siNlgc hammers. ships, grants and l oans amount- BATHI~G BEAUTIES -Participants in this year's Aquatic Club exhibition by two women a nd annon ffall. playing of min- i ng to nearly $300,000 have been show, "Bubbling Broadway," on Thursday, Friday and Satur· two men with a comic touch pro. 1 iature g•df: K en t Hall, fortune awarded this pjlst year. Students day are Carolyn Joyce (on divi ng board), and Nancy Parkes. vi ded by Jeff Ollswang, fresh· rllin.{ hnoth; . myth HaiL unit are encouraged t o eek out a nd men engi neer. A. P~:tn~ .~ki ll of throwing make usc of the resource avail - Participating in the progra m halh I h (' rf"\\'ard of which abl e for fina nc ial aid and assist- H.- arry are Catherine Amend, H elen Ber· make" a girl go down a slide; 1 ance. Benek·e's Orchestra trand, Phoebe Bliss, Margaret un it B. a kissing booth. Dean H ardy stressed the fact deWilde, E l ea nor Eastburn, Ger. Feeny Hughes, Jean Fra. Squirr Ha ll, shooting candles that l oans a rc becom ing increas- t r ud ~ Plays U SiC cassi, Ca rol y n Joyce, Suzanne out II' it 1 a water pistol; Sus ex ingl y available to stu dents. A n Spring Dance M Hall. thrn\\'ing hoo p a round a emergency ' loa n program h as .· K leinfel der, Margaret Lowery, Diane Netsch, Natalie Newhall, mannequin IC'~; Thorn. on H al l. been set up throug h Dea n Hardy's T omorrow n rg h t at 8 :30 p. 11'_1 · cstra in th e .Student Ce nter. Ca rol y n Ol son , Nancy L ee Parkes, sel lin.£: lf"mon.-; placed o n candy office whereby sm a ll amounts of 'Delaware. students _and their H aw aiian music will be pl ay- Gail Pierson . c-anrs: an d Wa rner Hall, se lling cash needed at shor t notice are J g ues_ts Will be dancm~ to the cd on the ·un deck f or dancing Marjorie Pinney. Nancy Rober t. pink lr·monar!e. at the pqsa l of a ll ·tudents. mu 1c of Harry Beneke s Orch - eli. a nd listening pleasure if the son, Jea n Rovey, Coostance Seel· weather permit.-;. bach, Anne Simmons, Joan Lee ORCHIDS Smith, · I rmgard Stallman, Dor. Girls will be presented with othy Thomas, Barbar a Wood, a nd Campus Ceremony Installs baby orchids a nd paper leis as divers Betty Ann Robinson, Ca r . favors to help ca rry out the Ha- ol d Ann Wagner. Jeff O llswang waiian t heme. Additional or- and Cl iff Brownin g. I I· chicls will he used to decorate The show is being hel d at t he the bandstand as an isl an d. swimming pool of the W om en 's Sigma Xi, Science Honorary Palm trees a nd a Hawaiian vol - Gym. It begin~ at eight o'clock: ca ti o are being u ·ed to com- p .m . and admission is f ree. A · t 0 11 y wa" plete the atmosphere. 1 n Impor ant ccrcm • Ruth Scherer. chairm an of t he hel d at Del aware l ast Sat- J Ph B K u rday m arking the form al orga - Socia l Committee, extends an i eta appa n iza tion and insral lation of tlv~ invitat ion to a ll those w ho u t:iversity's chapter of the So - would l ik e to help decorate for cicty o.f Sigma Xi. t·hp sc ience the dance beginning tomorrow Ch E • ht eq uiva lent of the Phi Beta K ap- morning in the Student Ce n ter.. 00Se S 1g pa honorary schol astic society. AWARD i gma X i was t 0u ndcd in 18, 6 Dunng in te rm iss ion a silver New Me mh i-11 Co rnell U niversity. Its chap- bow l will he presented f or t he ers booth which ratsed the most j len; are found in about 130 dis- money during t he campus chest DcJawar Alpha Chapter ot . ling ui .- hed universities and co l - : arnivaJ tonight. I Phi Beta K appa. national li b· leges throughout the c? u_n_t ry. Tickets m ay be purchased eral ar t. and -"C i nee honorary, DPlaware 1vas the on l y tnstrtu- near . the information desk in at Its meetmg on April 9. el ected lion se l ected to receive a new I t h~ Student Ce nter for $2 eig ht cnior memb rs. . I chapt r i n 1959. Those elected to membership Dr. Frank C. Ca rpcntf"l', na- were. Robert Cat€'!', p h ilosophy I tiona] presiri en t of the oc iely c· H ld major, Margarc E . Gandy. psy. , and cha i r~an of the dcpan- IDema 0 S cho log_y major, Janet L ee Keller, mf"nt of brology at Harvard I English m ajor, Joseph W . May. I Universi ty was the i nstalling · bee. history major. Mary Lou I officer and presented the chap- 1French J?ilm Minztcr. mathemati c . and tcr nhartcr and, tthargc. chemistry major, Cynthia A. IPE RKINS A CCEPTS . " L e D~able Au c _oups," Devil Pease. chemistry major, Alvin A cceptance i n b half of the In the J. Jesh, rs being fe atured R. Ri ggs. English and history '1univ rsity wa · made by John in the campu · cinema_ this wee!<- major. and a ncy Paul Tai tt, A. P('J'kin , presi dent. who slat- nd. The mov1e IS C'ntcr d mathematics ma.ier. d th t' 1 ft b't At th e . a rn e meeting the fol. Fam iliar' rd, " In view of the imp o rta~ ce a roun c ~o iC anr o c,'' I . l owing officNs f or 1959-60 were I of sci ntific discovery and 111- ter love nffarr het\\'c n a l•rench pack or. vcntion in the mid 20th cen tury adolesc- ent s ·hooJ boy a nd Jh c elected : E . Wakefield Smith, a. · crush• a nd the posture of the United w ife of a .-o ldicr in the first sociatc professor of econom iC' !~ proof Pictured at t he recen t Sigma Xi chapter installati on arf7 : Dr. tatf"s as a l eader in a tech nolo- World War. and busincs · administration, gical worl d, i t is a propitiOliS This FrPn h film ' •ith Eng- president; Kimberley S. Ro bert. ·, box. William Mosh er, cha i rma n of the d epartm ent ~f chem,l stry; Dr. Frank M. Ca penter. national p resident of S1gma Xl; Dr. and necessitous time for the !ish subtitles >l'ill be shown in chairman and professor of mod. John Wriston, professor of chemistry; Dr. Walter Connell. Dela: fosl ring of scientific resea rch Wolf Hall tomonow ni g ht at ern lang uag s and literatur , ware cahpter president a n d associate profe_ssor _of entomol ogy, on this and all univcr i ty cam- 8 :15 p. m . and Sunday afternoon vice-pr sident; John M. D awson, and Dr. John Perkins, p r esident of the umverslty. ( onti-nued on Page 7) at 3 p. m. and :15 p. m. ( ontinued on Page 7) 2 The Review Aprii 24, 1959 Queen Contestants· Picl{_ed A May R

w ill be po ted on t he b u ll e~in N board in the t uden t Ce nter. 1en Senior CANDIDATES ' Candidal · (or "May Quee n in ­ 0 clud t he followi ng se nio r w o­ Non1in_atecl m en: Mar y A nn Cr awford, An· L In gela DiSa batino, J·1net Hedrce n, Adriana Herrmann, Ginger L a· nier, Joa n •.vens, Jane Person:;, D . Annt1alContest Joyce Sl eudel , and Joan Thomp· ,;o n. Angie DiSabatino Joan Owens Junior attendant a p i!·a nts arc Charl otte Pa tt rson , L cn na Watts, E llen chwai'z and Mol · ly Wei '1. : }<'or Class D uchcss Sophomore hopeful "' i nt:ludr B a lloti ng for th la:v Co u rt K ay 'am pbell, Virginia Car · wil l be he l d next :Yionday a n ~ well, K aren K f ill, an d B ar bara T ~~·~ day frolT) 9 a. m . un til ;J Tomlin . . p . m. in the St udent Cent-er. . FRESHMEN Seniors w ill vote on ly for the Fres hmen w i!J select thei r at· May Queen while fr es hmen , tendants from ·among the fol · sopllomtlres. and juniors w ill 1lowi ng: L ora Branin, Fai t h Cook, vole for t he l ay Queen i n ad· Vallory Hanby, andra Kimba ll, ditw n to one person from their Jo E llen Lindh, · Beverly Mac- Joy Steudel J ane P ersons Mary A , Crawford Joan Thompson w n class, to repr esent them Kay, Suzanne Mamges, Cl aire Christine Sundt in 1h e May Court Matt hews, Suzanne Shirey , and The May Co ur t will he co m · A nna T al arowski. posed o[ t he . M ay Q uee n, an Wit h the exception of the TtvO More .Honor Duche · , and two attend · Se niors, the girl with the high · Pageant Names n t:'i, a ll from the se n ior class ; es t vote w ill be the Duchess. j unior Duchess a nd two at· and the next two will be the t e11da nts frr> m the junior class; attendants. I n the senior class, a sophom ore Dur he s and t"vo t he May Queen will be chose n Co-Eds in 'Miss Delaware' att ndants from the ophomore ::J.S a resul t of t he entire campu.s c l s. ; a nd a frc hma n Duchess balloti ng, and the g irl with the Debora h Kieffer, junior musir and tw o attPndan L from the next highest number of votes .m aj or, and Mary Da l ecki, soph· ·f re ... hman cia.:. will be t he Duchess. omore educa tion m aj or. h ave rc· These 13 womf'q. wi ll be pre· The next .two ranking se nior cen tly bee n a nnounced as can · sent0c\ on 1\I ay 16 at t he t radi · wom en, after .the Quee n anrl dictates for the Miss Del aw a re tion fl l May Da ,· ce rem onies. the Duchess, will becom e the pagean t. Picture<; of <1 ll the candidate:- se nior a t tendants. Debora h is the 20-year ol d da ug hter o£ Mrs. Esther D. Kief· f ~ r . of 1301 V a n Buren Stree t, Wilm i ngton . She tands 5 [ el -E 52 Cl1ildren T.heatre Group 7 inches, has bl onde ha ir a nd g ray eyes. N oted for he musica l accom· Picks Cast for 'Many Moon s ~ plishments at the university an t\ I i n the New ark area, Deborah is . Ca ·t member for the E -52 Chil&e n's Theatre produc­ curren tly study i ng voice under The p tion of "Ma ny Moons," James Thurber's fa mous story, I van Tru ·ler , d irector of choral : entry w music at t he universi ty. As a I \\·ere elected recently. of a man T hey include Robert Pa·ck, freshman, in the role of m ember of the universi ty 's con · j t he devil Cha mberla in; Gretchen Berguido, senior, Cynicia; Jack ce rt choir, she w as al so sol oist contrib in the " M essi ah." performed at effects Erthal, freshma n, Wizard,; Sara Hinman, fres hman, Paret­ t he choir's C hri s tm a~ conce rt in I · Tom 'ta; Robert Anton, freshman, Mathematician; Kenneth Mitchell H all. Sh e has h en SO· lor w ere ~he l i n , sophomore, K i ng; Rose. ! Joist during t he summer m on t hs tors for DEBORAH KIEFFER .mary ~ aha ff ey , f r e h man, The happy so lution mak es with the Newark M ethodist MARY MARGARET DALECKI perform Cold ·m 1th's daughter ; Barbara this p lay, a·ccording to t he dra· Church choir. Tom DEEORAH WILL SING ical comedy theatre and li: ts st aff a nd gl ee cl ub. Slw att en d· Ma eyk a, sophom ore.. N ur se; ' ma depart m en t, "one of thP Rober t n rl Carl cl tzer, se n w r. under . 1 finest plays available for t he For her t alent se l ec tion in the as h er hobbies composing m u - eel ar t school a t the Dela\\'are ·turl y. Child ren's Theatre." pflgeant, sponsored by the Wil · sic a nd playing the pia no. She Art enter. I ming ton Junior Chamber of i a sc holarship holder a t the L a:t fall M ary w a. ni!Zill of· ADAPTATION PERFORMANCES Commerce, Deborah wil l sing university. ficer m anager in the c:a fe cria The story has 'bee n adap ted j . . . "Seguidilla" from Carmen. MARY DALECKI CH·OSEN department al the Ch ry slPr by 'Charlotte C hopenning, one .Followmg. the _o~enm ~ o£ the A dean' list student, Debo- Mary M argaret Dalecki, 1721 plant in N ew arl.;. During the 1 111 o f t he l ead ing pl aywrig h ts in 1 p iO d ~ tlon M t t .~ h e l~ H a ll on rah is a lso a m ember of the .Limestone Road, Wilming ton, is s ummer of 1!)58 she \\'orked as t he 'C hild ren's Theatr field. It Thul sday and F11d ay, M ~y . 7 university's Madriga l Singers the 18-year ol d daughter of Mr ·. receptionist a t rad io station describes a princess w•ho be· and 8, two performanc.e wtl l be and the E 52 T heatre. She par . Nora Milowicki a nd Mr. Frank WDEL. came i ll from eati ng too m an y sponsored by untverstty .a lum­ ticipa ted in the Fa r E astern Dal ecl :- ~nnrs 10 of l~is poe m s qn the evening of es, Mill ·boro, 'Selby ville, Del · mak e it su i ta iJI P w lll'ar anY Friday, Jay 15, i n M i tchell Hall. m ar and New Castle. A lso on . Li m of 1h e clay or l' ighl. Dr. Fros t is currently the Co n - the iti nerary a re perfor manres omas ets I Mary wi ll br ('ttTlll<' in~ ll'i th • ulta nt i n Poetry at the L ibra ry a t Governor Bacon i n Del aware Senior Eugene Th G a dozen other r·on lr'-;l :t!tls for ?[ Co n ~ress. H is usual. procedure City, in E lkton, Md., a nd Pe nns. ' the Ii: Dclawar" til'. SL200 1 to g1 ve an enterta1n 111 g, run · ville, N. J. of the year" Award i n cholarships. otlwr [JI'IZP.'. ·utd ning com men a ry on the poem s 'Aggie I the opp o rtunlt ~· t'l !t'l'''' en th~ h e has se lected for h is audience. Eugene Thomas, Jr .. a senior animal industry major state a t thr Miss .\mrri't fi :·,:: ls. Born in a n Franci co in 1874, Fund Develops from Marydel, r ece ived the Aggie of the Year award at' She woul d us an)· ..,c :wlar;htP h e h as bee n a f aculty member of se veral ollegcs, i ncl uding Co n tr i butions to the 19:39 a father-son banquet held recently at the unive 't w o n to contt nur he r Nluratwn A mherst College, t he University Al umni Devel opme nt F und of He shared honors with Dr. M . s . Co ver, w h o wasrs awarl y. d'- at t he umverstty. o f M ichiga n, and Pierson College, the university have already ex· ed the Feature Teacher award; The event i sponsored Y ale. ce ed ed those of the l ast two annually b e th e ....St u d en t A gncu· 1 tural C Jub Cl lOra} G1 ,.0U}J Dr Frost has w on the Pulitzer year s, it w as announced today Geo rge M . W orrilow dean ot · p riz~ f or poetry f our times- the by W a lter J. (Cal ) Coppock. f und agriculture, presented the award cfpient is nominated by stu · late ·t in J943 f or " A Witness cha irma n. The total to date i to Thomas, who is president of Tree." In 1950 the United States dents in the School of agricul ­ $22 ,222.46. t he Ag Clu'b and scribe of t he ture and ·ele tion i: made b y Hosts Trusler Senate unan imousl y adopted a In 1958, to tal contributions honorary agricultural f raternity, r esolution honoring the poet, a committee of the school of ag. I van Trusler. din'ctot of c1wral reached $20,292.67 and in the Alpha Zeta. He ·has been vice whose works " have helped to riculture facu l ty. Besid Thom ­ organi'Za tions, at the universil)·, previous y ear, $20,032.28. The president of the state Future guide American thought with as the fin~list s included Rob ­ is se r ving as guest musical con: a ll · time high for Del aw are Farmers of America and !rca­ hum or and wisdom, setting forth ert D. Dempsey, animal .. indus., ·ultant a nd adjudicator t oda~ al umni was $54,000 in 1950. surer of the Uni versity 4 -H try; 'Roscoe •L . Exley , h'orticul­ a nd tom orrow for the Carro. to our minds a reliable represen · Mr. oppock noted that re- Club. He is chapl ain 'or Phi tation of oursel ve · a nd of all ture; William F . Donnalley . ounty , M ary l and Chora l Fest! · turns to date have resulted from K a ppa !au social fraternity, i horticulture; Harlan E . 'White, Jnen .. . " response to class letters a nd a.ctt vc tn . the Wesley Founda­ val. 1·• As everyone who has read his Th two-day event. which .' only one of three mailing pice- twn and IS manager of varsity agronomy. b ing held at WP ·tern Marl; "Bi rches" or "The Road ot es which will be distributed to wrestling. He has served as co. Dr. Cover. recipient o£ the Taken'' realizes, his works are l and Co!l ge i nrlude. al umni' this year. The campaign editor of THE NEEDLE' AND Feature Teach r a w a r d, i s each~ on idered as "cl a sics" in Am.eri· the hig h school choirs in t e will close offici a lly with the end HAYSTACK and is a m ember of chairman of the department of can literature. of t he university 's fiscal y ear, Omicron D el ta K a ppa and The animal a nd poultry industry . co un ty. a cril· June 30. At t his early stage of Gold K ey Society. He received his do tor ate f rom Dr. T rusl r is to ;:( l'e ce Scrounge Hours the a nnual drive. which opened The Agg ie d.f t he Y ear award the Univer: i ty of Illinois. He ical ana lysis of thr prrf'lrm~ ~l', l ate in M arch, about 650 co ntri - is prese nted annually t o the earned his do tora te of v tcri n · of af'll choir rtnrl on S tur · The Student enter Snack B ar a I ctur o n ' met hod t: butions h ave been rece ived, he outstandin g ag ricultural stu . a r ~ m edicin degree at the r lto r~l w il l ·Jose a t 5 :30 p.m . tomorrow the high school musir director>. sa id. dent of the univ ersi ty. The r . U111versi ty of !Pennsyl va n ia. I or the pring Cance. April 24, 1959 The Reyiew 3

A NO-'No .. ifts · THI\f (Q.Lfu~AA->' READiNG- iS SO $HAJ.&.oW! R ~MIGS .. .' NQr C&.ASSiCS! N 0 L D

PiKA Wins First In Playbill; N~w Va.rsity Chorale Bailie Gives·Award To Dean ~!.~~~.dE~~~~.. f~~~~"~!'"""'•h '· br:eakfast ? That:s no initiation; / has , only one more appearance Pi Kappa Al pha's, "The Left Doug Madd~x as the Drunk, and I ~ine and singers, the bar found it's just the Varsity Chorale lea v- I this year: the Pop. s Concert on Handed Pa th'', ca ptured first John Ta yl01 and Douglas Prot- Itself faced with the demands of ipg for another tour. The Varsity Alumni Day. The other two prize in the annual IF Playbill hero. . a protection racket. C,.,orale are the new · hi'ghly se- groups still h ave a tight perform- Tuesday night, and . Do'nald "A D · ~ • ay m the Dry Gulch Bar," RUSHING SCENE · lected, sixteen-vo·ce men's cllor- ing schedule. The Chorale sings H ard ~ ' . assi tant clea n of stu- f t · 0 ld t' 1 1 dents received ·· Ia n of The Year" ea unng · I me cowboys in "The Mad Rush" a typical us who· toured Delaware high· next on Monday for the ~acuity award. the s ilent screen style of yester- Sunday morning in rus hing sea- schools · recently, receiving tre- Club . . On May_7 ~hey wlll per- clay was the theme of the second son featured Delta Tau Delta mendous applause wherever they form at the WJ!mmg ton. armory Kappa Alpha and Pi Kappa place winners. Ka authors were brothers trying to impress the sang. for two thousand leaders of the Tau placed second a nd third in Edwa rd Smyth, John Hildreth, unexpected rushees. Boy Scouts of America. the two night pia festival fea - and Edward LaFond. Dave Hilt, The program was repeated at turing skits by seven fraternities. Ed Smyth, and Graham Lowden Sigma Nu presented Deer Pa rk Smyrna, Dover, and Millsboro Presenting the trophy to Tom , were the directors for the skit, in Dodge City. Aimed at present- high schools. The Dover students Lackman. sophomore, was Robert j featuring a cast of KA brothers ing the true early Ameri can booed their principal when he Baille. president of IF Council. and pledges. c?wboy instead of the one glori - stopped the appl a use at the end He also presented this year's : fl ed by TV westerns, the s kit of the concert to thank Dr. sch olarship trophy to Danny RUSSIAN COLLEGE included gamblers, the "Old ITrusler. . Har:vitz, . junior . from ~lpha Phi Kappa Tau's "From Here Timers", ·"Billy Joe" and "Blacky Epsilon P1. A E . P1 had an J.ndex to Absurdity," written by Bob Ace." Friday a week ago was the clay of 2.64 for the f1r t sem este1. ISamworth , and FenwJ·ck Babbi'tt J d for h b'l for the Co ncert Choir tour, and u ges t e 1959 P 1ay 1 1 the Chora le and Madrigal Singers Dea n Hardy, was singled out was a humerous satire of the were Mr. Leeta Morton, Sig Ep joined the choirs ·in two concerts as the recipien t of the " Frater- "University of Delakov," a col - housemother, John Vorath, in - for Wilmington schools. The ni ty l\1an of the Year Award," lege in Moscow. Fraternity m en structor of modern la nguages Madrigal Singers opened the pro­ pre ented annually to the man I commented on the sit.uation a t arid li terature, and Mrs. Mono- grams; the horale concluded \\•hom the fraternities feel ha · the coll ege a nd offered reform han. them. The choir followed the do ne th e mo ·t for the fra tei;,nity I sugg ·lions. · madrigals with their e ntire system that year. j Al l award winning plays were W M group of con temporary pieces -DRAMA WINS presented Monday night) as w as iVeS tO eet by the visiting c om p 0 s e r, Alpha T!,l.U Omega 's "Really The Delaware Student Wives R o b e rt Ward. These selec- The prize winning pla ybill Wide World." This was a repres- Association will hold a d inner tions were the Co ncert Choir's entry was a dramati c portrayal entation of the TV show "Wide portion of the Contempora ry of a man who desired power from Wiel e World." The skit featured at the Hollow Inn on May 2 at Festiva l in Mitchell Ha ll last 7 the de\·i 1. The cemetery setting m ovie cenes tal< en from a Rus- :30 p.m. night. Accompanist for the choir J. PAUL SHEEDY,• hair experr, says: "Wit(; contribu ted to the s uperna tural ' sian university's meal serving, Mrs. Merry Converse is chair- was'Miss Mildred Gaddis of the r~~~-~eep' hair neat and bJmsome all day effects created by the dialogue. ' infirmary and other aspects of man of the program. Part of the music department; m ajor soloist •.tm so. llarm ii•IIHd .,_ w,u."'"'"'" .. N.Y. · Tom Lackman and John Tay- coll ege lif ~. . a ffair wiJI include dancing. in the contemporary music was lor were the authors and direc- A E Pi opened the program on There wi ll be a feat u r.ed speak . Joseph Pichette, freshma n music tors for Pi KA '. a ward winning Tuesday night with "It Pays to er. Mrs. Con verse said that res. m ajor. Student conductor for the Jvstalittlebit ~ of Wil d root · ~ _' ~'-- performance The cast included 1 be Ins ured," a portraya l of a ervations must be made by Mon . University Madrigal Singers is Tom Lac·kman as the Man, "Speakeasy" during· the clays of clay. They may be obtained from Anna Tatnall. and . .. WOW! . Robert Anton, as the Stranger, Prohibition. Complete with chorus her at EN 8-5387. The Choir, having given its

s nig ht of· cafeteria ' , Chrysler Durjng the e worked as a ct io station Do JfJu Think for JfJurself ?(~':.~s/::c:~~ g~~~J 1. When your friends impart confidences, do you feel (A) uncomfortable, or AD sO ~!\·~~'' 5. Doyoufindthatyouworkorstudy AD eO _ ~:·.:~ ···./' · more effectively (A) under supervision. , ies are a rch· (B) complimented? or (B) on your own schedule? baking and 7:fJ3 et) the Women's on a rchery e university, 2. Do you prefer a task which demands 6, Is it your feeling that close o 8 o of h e-r clothes, ~ (A) the organization of ~plex details, A friendships with superiors would be sel zction will ~ - -~~ or (B) a constant flow o 1deas? (A) a great help, or (B) actually a dress of her hindrance to your career with a firm? a one hasic • "'i t by chang· 3. Would your first reaction to a difficult ri es to Which, to your mind, has the greater committee appointment be that you haJ 7. to wear a nY. influence on you in making a good grade; been (A) "stuck," or (B) honored? night. (A) the instructor, or (B) the subject ' p tin g with matter of a course? · te Lant: fo r ti tl :!, $1,200 r prize:, and 4. lfyou were a contestant on·a quiz rcptP';ent the program which of these question 8. Do you believe that the saying "haste mcri :: a fi nals. categories would you prefer: (A} popular makes waste" is (A) always true, or scholarsh ips songs of today, or (B) current events? (B) often false? her education

9. Which would weigh more · heavily in your choice of filter cigarettes: (A) the opinions of friends with similar tastes, or (B) your own· considered_judgment?

It is usua11y the case that men and womeri who really think for themselves come around to VICEROY as their brand of filter ~ cigarette .•• for two very good reasons: VICEROY is the one cigarette that gives them a thinking man's filter and a smoking man's t aste. *If you checked (B) on any si;c of the nine questions ... you r alLy think for 1JOurself I

C J 9G9, Drown It \YIIJiamaon Tobucco Corp. . k L H. If Kn ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN'S Th e Man Wh o Th tn s TOr tmse ows- FILTER ••• A SMOKING MAN's TASTE! Students Win AND SAWTI-4AT 1!\tlatuart I 1\tbittu T~~y W~R[ The Undergraduate Weekly of the University of Delawc..re SICO Awards '714f(ec{. .. Page 4 The Review Vol. 82, No. 24 Three outstanding Df!laware high school students have been Jimmy's Night awarded srco Schol'arships. for study at Delaware t:text year. The recipients are Lois Ellen Carmean, Laurel, Janice Irene CampUs' Chest Carnival Ellingsworth, Clayton, and Lor. -· etta Pauline Lazarczyk, Wil· mington. ••• Jimmy is six years old and deaf. His parents couldn't The STCO Foundation was take care of him, so he was left to roam the streets, even conceived by the late Clarence ~N [55RY ON TJ..l[ Bt:RT G~NERRTION after dark and during cold weather. Finally Mrs. Cardula Schock of Mount Joy, Pa. It took Jjmmy into Happy Home. owns the assets o'f the srco By KLAUS TH. GUENTER . ~Company, distributors o'f petrol. There are fourteen other parentles.s and ailing kidS in eum products, and uses the pro· Recently the traditional Western philosophy of Dualism, which · U f t at I f r "d h 1 formed mainly by Hebrew and Greek·traciitions, has been ex. H appy H orne, an d H appy H orne lS poor. n or un e y 0 fits therefrom to pr'OVl e sc 0 • w:ed to Zen Buddhism. ('Zen' comes from the _Japanese 'zazen' the Happy Home kids, human nature .is against them in one arships for worthy h·igh school P d means to sit and meditate. It is the meclitahve sect of Budd­ very important respect: an indifferent human being can't graduates who wish to be·come ~~sm in which the dualism betwen meditation and activity is force himself tq l;)e enthusiastic about something even if elementary school teachers. abolished). he feels he sould be enthusiastic. And as long ~s he lacks . Each scholarship is an out- Western minds were d~ply sho~ked and impressed by the "i.:i on enthusiasm the chances are that he will 'do nothing unless ~tght gra~t of $300 per year and of vast spaces, which Oriental _ Phtloso~hy presentt:d, a.nd Paul. fJ!. he is under obligation to do something. ts rene~a;ble ~or f?ur years. The lich described ·modern man. bet_ng lost~~ !hose umverses a _ a rae­ money ts patd dtrectly to the ing of meaninglessness' whtch ts very dtfflcul~ for ever~ raliuna_ll_s t. So it is with charities. He realizes it's "for a good cause", college or university the stu- In western philosophy Kant had already pre~tcted the mevtt abt llty but he dGesn't feel it. Somehow he feels more irritated .dent elects to attend and is ap- of limits to reason, and Godel in mat~el?attcs and Hetsenbetg tn than sympathetic when anything jeopardizes the precari­ plied to his or her account. physics have shown those ineluctab~e limtts to huf!lan mmd: r ec~g ­ SICO Scholarships are valid nizing some paradlem is pa~nful and_ requires deep thought and suffering of_ the mmcl. Or JS lt _not pamful to thtn~ : These students will probably go to the Campus Chest Carn­ A mountain is a mountam. But when you thmk more, a moun tai n ival tonight so that they can give something extra, some­ Area Award is not a mounta in and then again a mountain is a mountain or thing more than the standard quarter or fifty cents they in other words: 'A' (self) is 'A' a nd also 'Not-A' (Self and th erP fore Delmer W. Nicholson, senior 'A' is 'A'. gave in the personal solicitation drive. Most of the other electrical engineering student, university students won't ·.Je willing to go out-of-their­ was honored as the top electri­ This is Zen-logic. Black is only know~ by means of white and way for the kids because they don't know them. They are cal engineering student in the white is only known by means of black. Inorder to reach. the world aware of the Carnival, they have seen publicity, and they of infinite Reality it is necessary to stop pursuing log1cally and Philadelphia area at an awards plunge into the primary feeling (Kierkegaard: "plunge into God"), may even read this editoriaf, but they won't have any dinner of the jnstitute of Radio free from bondage and "go the way of one's own annihilation real desire to give, and you can't justly blame them be­ Enginee.i-s held in Philadelphia through dwelling a long time in a state of extreme and total hu­ cause they don't know the kids. recently . . miliation." (Cimone Weil). A d an's li t tudent, Nichol­ Happy Home is on.ly a couple of miles away from cam­ Zen Buddhism is digging for the truth by one's own annih ila tion, pus, but to the student who has never been there it is as .-o n is a commuter residing at 1505 We. t Seventh Street, Wil­ looking for the roots o~ one's O\-Vl1 being. It is indiviclualist il' and, remote as tl'~ charities that ring the doorbell, and it is threfore, a help against the American 'psychoanaly ing and tearing probably in no more need of money than, for instance, mington. He was awarded a him into pieces when there should be a unity. brief case a rhe top prize in Muscular Dystrophy or the Albert Schweitzer Foundation the competition with students In their mystic search for God (Kerouac: "'l want Gorl to . hO\\' me which are the other two charities that will benefit from from some eigh t colleges and his (acE>") the Beat Generation became interested in Zen Buddhism the Carnival. universities in the Phil'adelphia wh'ich said: "Find yourself and you will be free and safe. The elf · is God and God is the Self . .. a nd there is no longer room for con · It is a tribute to Campus Chest that this year's cam­ section, including t h e U ntvers. tradictions." And the Beatniks made books about Zen required paign has been conducted in a spirit of, "give if you want ity of Pennsylvania, Drexel reading . to and whatever you want to." At times in the past this Tech, Swarthmore, Villanova, spirit was lacking. Lafayette, Lehigh, LaSalle and I doubt that any member of the Beat Generation has reall y under- Bucknell. stood the essence of Zen Buddhism, becau e so far they still hare In the Campus Chest drive there has been no can jingl­ The occasion· was the a nnual not uttered a word which is r..:a lly vital, original or crea tire. ing under your nose while you fumble through your pock­ Furthermore, the Beatniks did not even pass the tagc of fulfilling ets and your face turns crimson. Nor will there be tonight. Students Night of the Philadel- the experiences of humiliation in order to come to their own beings But you will give if you are one of "the hundred," and if phia sectio~ af the IRE, held at by means of annihilation. Probably they chang d fhe word "plu n ~e the Sylvania Hotel. Over 200 '-itlto feeling" into "plunge into sensation" without knowing the d1f· you aren't one of "the hundred" Jimmy won't complain students, faculty and members ference in philosophical terminology, and soon - inst ad of find · if you have a good time on his behalf at the Carnival to­ oJ industry were in attendance. ing them elves- they lost faith and found themselve "hurried by night. Speaker for the event was Dr. others in every po. ible way." (Rinzai.) You can g ive tonight under the guise of "buying the Gordon S. Brawn, chairm'an of Alan Pryce-Jones, editor of the Times Literary Supplement. de · Review," and fool no one by your intention, or if you don't the electrical engineering de­ cribe the writer. of the Bea t Genera tion: want to s how how benevolent you are, you can find there partment at !\1a:sachusetts In . "They sense all around them the visions of Apocalypse and they more subtle and more amusing ways of giving. stitute of Technology. do not know how to react ..• (They) take refuge in indirected vita· Let's give - g ive b ecause we want to ,and want to be­ lism ... (To them) life is reduced to an immense hitch-hi ke, inter· posed with parties, orgiastic half-hours. mild delinquency, and a cause of Jimmy. studied absence of coherence· ... (They) run about like hares on an ae.rodrome. The great machines of everyday life land and take Campus off Without paying any attention to them, and they in their turn. blinded by noise and light are more concerned with running than Calendar with getting away ... " (The Listener. London 3-7-58) At this point I want to explain my headline-picture. One of the ~be l\ebiehl ~taft CAMPUS CALENDAR most famous Japanese gardens is the Ryoanji Garden- a great APril 25 - May I impact of simplicity and vacant space. It consists of fifteen differ• Time Place Event ent rocks, composed, as in the sketch, in live groups on a flat. rect· Saturday, April 25 8 p .m., Dover Room - Student Cen. angular area of white sand. There is nothing else. Yet this garden Scott Wilson EdUor-ln-Chlef SGA Spring Dance is based on philosophical thoughts, especially on Zen Buddhism. Stan Gruber - Bualneaa Manager Dot Levy - Managing EdUor 8 :15p.m .,Women's G ym, Aqua tic Ctu'b Show Just_ as black can only be experienced by white anrl goo? only Dave Heeren Jeanne Molitor Nina :vlatheny 8 :15 p .m .. Wolf Auditorium. Univer­ b~ ~vii. we realize e mptiness onl y through form. Thi nking 111 Eu · News Editor Senior Aaaociafe Editor Associate Editor sity Movie - "' Le Diabte Au Sheldon Weinstein c ltctt~ ~err~s it ounds paradoxical that something b e c om~· em ptY Barbara Nolt Ernie Levy Corps '" National Ada Manager Sporta EdUor Sunday. AprU 26 by ft~lmg It, here, the and serving as vacant pace. This IL'eltng ~ f Ellen Tantum Irving Hershfield News Au'ta Priscilla Emmans 3 :15 & 8:15 p.m .. Wolf Auditorium, emptmess could not be expressed by one si ngle stone, because It Local Ada Manager Copy Editor University Movie - "Le Diabie Au would become a center of interest two rocks are two such foca l Jane Doran Corps'" 44. Head Typist Frank Helms Monday, April 27 • points, three rocks create the thou~ht of a triangle a. \\·ell as four :Circulation Manager 4 p .m .. Agnew Room - S.C .. Univer- stones the impre!'sion of quadrangle. Only five rocks pent>trate deep j 1 er and forbid fixation, creating an inseparable unit of rock anc 45. Newa Staff: Patrica Craven, George Carlisle. Mike Lewis, J udy Sha- 7 ~~;x. , ~~~t~~~s If~~~c~ ~~~~. niPo Webots sand. The five big rocks are furthermore deemphasizecl by_ smaller ~~t~on~~~~:esf:n~~l· :.;~b.!r~stN:r~:V~~ll T-¥~o~i> s~~~bJ~~ n~'r~;~~; 7~J~ 7 p .m .. Blue & Gold Room - S .C., stones close around them. altogether fiftee n. Limited homont~ ll~ Cleek, Richard Bullock, Candy Wilson. APO Meeting 7 :30 p .m .. Dover Room - S:C. Fa- the space is a lso controlled by an earthen wall and thus becomtn,. 1. Copy Staff: Denise Granke, Wy nn Hammond. c ulty Club Dinner - Entertain- not vast but introspective. Into t his space the rocks cem to bum ) Circulation Staff: Bobbie Lafferty, Harry Pogaeh, Barbara Edwards. 6 from below !as they are buried in the ground) . It is th e sy mbo Typleta: Ann Bugher, Audrey Hall, Lynn Roff. ' -.. ~~~ia nb~~~n~na~ l a~~ig h!~ PR~om~n Tueday, AprU 21 ?f man los_t in infinity. It is "the man of Existentialism . throw~ Photography Staff: Malcolm Siegel. Dave Balley. 12 n oon, Vallandigha m Room - S .C .. mto the votd: the concept of nothingness tha t sta nds apart, eper Sporta StaU: Jay Gorry, Howard Isaacs, Bonnie Baumgartner, AI Gold·

Outstanding Junior Women April 24, 1959 The Review 5 ' - Saidenherg Little · Symphony Attain Tassel Membership Visits University Next Week Barbarr ociety Beta Beta, honorary biol ogical c h-osen as ch airman of thf' society, and Kappa Del ta Pi. in edul'al ion, a nd Phi Kappa training committee for new jun­ Phi. national Sl'hol astic honor ior co un elors ; in addition. to ~iss .Wyndham, a psy cology soci et_\·. rhe e activities, she i s a m em- m a]or, ~ ~ the current head oJ' b r of the publicity commitree house of :r;ent Hall,_ a memb~r HODGSON for SGA and a m ember of K ap- , of Women s Executtve Co uncil, :\! iss l!orlg ·on. an ed uca ti on pa Delta Pi. th~ Dean:s Advisory Board, Ho~- maj r. i;; a vommuter and is M i . now a French m ajor or Co uncil, ar.ld has b ~ en nomJ ­ curren tly s rving a 'ommuter is currcntlv ;erving a s e c r e tar~ n'ated to. run Jn .~he curren~ elec­ reprcs n tat ivc tu W_omen's Ex . of the junior class . presiden t of t tons fOI t~ e ofttce _of chaJrm.an ecurin • l'uurH'il a nd as w om en's the French l ub a nd Music of Women s Executtve Council. commuter represen ta tive lo the Chairman for 2VIay D ay, and is The new Tassel members will The Saidenberg Little Symphony under the direction of enatP. :-i llc is a lso a member a m ember of Phi K a ppa Phi sophomores and freshmen next Daniel Saidenberg will appear in Mitchell Ha ll next Wed­ of Kap JXl Dr l ta Pi a nd a junior I and K a ppa Delt a Pi. IJ e introduced to outstanding nesday at 8 :15p.m. in the final artists series perfor-m <::J ce cou nsP lor. a nd Ia. i fal l \\'as se . :\1is · W eisel, a hom e econom . , Tue.c; day evening at T assel's IQ for this season. Iec tecl a,; Homecoming Duchess. : ics m aj or, is' a cheerl eader, a tea ro honor fre hmen and soph . In 1926, when Daniel Saidenberg wa with the P hiladeJ- ., :\li.· s :\!c\'ult ~ · . a history m a. ' jun ior co unse lor. a nd se rve I a om ore women on Dean's List. phia orchestra, he was chosen 'cellist of the Contempora r y .· Music Society of Philadelphia. Within the next few y e R r ~ . ~ tory and i t shall have the per­ the society performed al most all Hastings Announces oga tive of ref erring a ccl se to a the great contemporary chamber alway s p l aying for full house • . uperior co urt if conditions war­ music of worl d composers. The progra m for next W cd nes- ra nt this action. In 1930 Mr. Sa idenberg joined day. is as foll ow s : the Chicago Symphony . as so l o ~~~~ ~r ~e a~ 1~05~~? !"Spring" ~~~~~ ~ .. ,~ t~ · Charter Completion The establishment of such a 'cellist. It was in Chicago that pe Allegro (Spring Festival) judiciary body wil-l be hel pful found an audience hungry for L~~~g 1, :~ s :«j,:fs 1 ~~·a ~ 11 6 a~i~~~ s) in the establishment of a Stu ­ the 'great music for chamber Or· Double Conce rt o for T wo Sol o Vi o ! i n ~-: dent Courr and is, in fact, a pre. chestra written by the old as invPva~~~n o r J . s. BACH. For Men's Executive requ isite to a Studen t Court. well as the contemporary com- L a;{fi~g~ non tanto Ken Hast ing , senior chair­ muting m en. Ken Hasting·, who wrote posers. St. P..aut Suite HOLST' the consritution with the co. Recognizing this l ack in the G~s tin at o man of the Ylen ' Executive A new duty introduced by operation of the interested par. musical life of Chicago, he form- Interm ezzo Council, has a nnounced the the constitu tion is the establ ish. ties, stresses the fact that this ed a sm all orchestra of 20 fine Finale complE> tion of the Council's con. ment of the Men's Judiciary constitution is a framework for players to present all the music Piano C o ne~ ~~~~~~~~ ~;~~ J. s. BAC H st i tution. the fir ·t ever drafted Board, a su b-committee o'f the the future devel opm ent of the possible that was not in the re- (No te mpo indica tion! for the organ ization. MEC. This board shall have MEC. He says, "The c;o uncil pertoire of the symphony orches- La;~~s to the authority to try cases that will gmw as the ca mpus grows tra. This group " becam e known Serenade tEine kleine Na chtmltsik ), The Cou ncil is t he student ! are n ot within t he jurisdict ion and the Constitution is so struc­ as the Saidenberg Symphonietta KA.~~~ro MOZ ART governing body for men, con- of the IFC or the M RH A cas­ tured that it w ill grow with the a nd in 1941, the Saidenberg Little Romanze : An.-lanle cerni ng itsel f wi th the r u les, es . over wh ich_ t h o e organi· Council." Symphony made its debut in MF;~~~~t~ ~ : A~t~= ~~et to reg ulations a nd ocial activities zatrons a. tn ~tspute , cases re . Town Hall. Ticln us no oth r cover the genera l economic de. For Junior Sign-up ' a. ,·,na ll SPniors ciguretles do 2R. Horsey velopment of Brazil , i ts present· !J're ent juniors who will b ar.. \ •·•l••r d ay "'luivalent of 38 co ndition a nd future possibili ­ i u P ar 1s gra du a ting next y ear musr sign a leash ti es . A special aspect of his :17. I ud f• rga rrn f' n t 29. 'l'ht• E!l!! t , but up by unday for y Parbook por. t hrtt muy h 1 far fr om 42 work, which is under the spon­ traits, announced Carol Hoff' ck· a misluk,_. i vy League so rshi p of the N3.tion . Wide In ­ er, yearbook ecli1or. ~~- It's properly :\ 0, :B onehead plays 1--J...---1---+--+--;-- cl unkahlt• 31. _ up a Kool; 4.4 sur.a nce Group of Col umbus, 4ll . P l f.• ll!WS it's Snow Ohio, will· be the history and The sig n up sl1ect s are loca ted m igh il y FrPsh! g row th of the BrazUian in ur­ in the Studen t ent r lotiby at 42. S ni per'• s pot 3a. h 's randorn 4:1. Cal m in t he dark ance indus try. meal time. T he portrait. will be 4 1. It's l'i m•· y ou :l 4. Sa n _ taken the week of April 27 b -ll plt ·k :!F,, E l<•ph:.nt hoy Dr. Shelton is no tranger to previous appointment on ly. T her fJ r K ool-. :w. Kind of haul!(! outh America, having com- 4 .·• . l<. om un tu· s u i~ :11. Lady's narn~; w ill be a si tLing f ee of $.50 .. :!9. Any lfttle pleted a similar project for th e DOW N Rpor l s ear ationwide Insurance Group This wil l probably be th e on l y 4 1. Washi ngton I. Kind of face & _ there in 1957-58. This research. time to have the portrait· taken, a study of in uran·ce institutions . o don't forget to sign up tod ay , a nd economic development in tom orrow, and unday. * * * Flt.:rER What a wonderful difference when you switch to Snow Fresh KOOL! At once '' Where You Get the Best for the Least" you r mou Lh [ els c l e~m and cool .• • your t hroat feels .· moothed, refreshed! STEAKS Enjoy he most refreshing experience Angie's SUBS i n !lmoking. Sm ok KOOL .•. with PIZZAS mild , mild ment hol ... for a cleaner, (57 f r f'~ h r taste all through t he day I ..m~MENTHOI. •KlN G·S tll An swf' r on Pg. 00 Spaghetti and Ravioli Dinners KOO L GI VES YOU A CHOIC E-REGULAR .. . Open Daily 10:30 A.M. - 12:00 P. M. OR ... KI NG - SI Z E WITH FILTER! Closed Mondays; Daily 2 · 4 P.M. ~ 10 38, 81o"r\ n & W l\ll•meon Toheccu Corv. . ~ · _,.,.

. . . CAMERA .CLUB . .I, · ~ CONTEST . ~

BLACK and WHITE 8 x10 . ENLARGEMENTS ·. MINIMUM SIZE

~ :·

Must Be In Review ~1ice by NOON, APRIL Z7

As Much _Technical Data as possible should be given, but none is needed.

EVERYONE WELCOME ! As Many Entries As Desired. bett

, II I .I I' I' (By the A t1 /!:or of" Rall y Round the f'lag, Boys!" an d, Baref oot Boy_w ith Cheek.")

THE CARE AND FEEDING OF ROOM-MATES

j{.,.. tn -m :l!el' are not onl y h e~tp ~ of fu n, but they are also very ~ duc:ttio td for the propPr : tud,v of mnnki nd i. rnnn, :md there . ~ 11 11 IJPt tPr w:ty to le:tril the d re:.un: s nd drive: of a nother man ·an t11 ~h:t n • ·a room wi th him. Tl1i' b1•ing the c:t:e, it i;;; \Yi. e not to keep the same room­ . :Itt' t1111 lu nK , hecaul'e the more room-mate. you ha ve, the .ttrf' _\'lilt \\·ill know ahout the dream: a nd drive: of your 'tll,,w tn:tn. :-;o try to change room-ma-te. a . oft.en a. vou ca.n. :\ n•cc· t1t ~tudy 111:1 de h ~ · •'igaf oos of Pri nceton : how.· .tlt at the ' 1·-t ini<'n·:d for clmnging room-ma te: il' every four hour: . ll"w do yo11 thuo,;c a t·r,o m-mate? .\fost counselors agree I lbt tllf• tno~t iritportant th ing to look for in room-mates is that ~ 11 t·y lH· peo pl e of regula r habits. This, I l':ty, il' arrant n o n ~e n s e . . ',\'! ,a if nne of their regubr habits happen · to be beating a 1,i II"'. l!tmg from rnidnight to dawn? Or growing cul t ure:s in TAPPED FOR T~SSEL - These eight junior. W:lmen were recently selected for membership im :-•o~ t r t"''th gla,,;? Or recit in g the Article. of \\'ar? Tas~el, honor soc1ety for women outstanding in scholarship. leadership and service to the uni­ v_erslty. Seated l~ft to right - Martha Skeen. B ubara Snow. Jeanne Hodgson; standing, le ft t nght, Molly We1sel. Barbara Fox. Nancy Williams. Louise Wyndham. Amy McNulty.

Sigtna Xi underg radua te or g ra dua te s tu ­ Seni ors na m e d H!'iSOC ia ){> dents or membe rs of the faculty, m embers are Frank G. A nrl rw ·­ (Continued from Pa ge 1 ) regardless of he ir q Ha lifica - puses. T]1e directi on which ti ons. ko, Robert A. Ba il lie, Ma rga n 't nig he r learning mus t go if it j \\l ith the ins ta lla ti on of the E . Ga ndy, Ala n L. GoodmaJ •, is t? m ~ k e its inimitable contri· ch a p te r, 17 faculty me m be rs and James F. Lea th rum, :vJa ry Lo..:t butwn In t,he years a head is , I three g radua te s tudPn ts have Mintzer, Im K. Park a nd Jrw j ·1 beli eve, c lear to a ll- thinking bee n e lected to full m e mbe rsh ip D. Zimmerma n. me n . a nd 24 g radua te s tude nts and " In accepting thi challe nge eight se ni ors have bee n elected , - ' , a nd cha rte r I a m confident tha t a ssocia_te me m oers. The g ra du - Phi Beta Ka}lpa the scie ntific e ndeavors with in a te students na m ed tO full the unive rs ity will in t he years membe rs hi p each have ~ o mp l et · (Continued from Pa ge l 1 a head happily coincide with ed three or more re ear-c h pu b - .director of Jihra ries, secre tary ; those of• Sigma Xi. " lica Uons. Regular habits, my foot! The most important quali ty in a E a rlie i·, Dr. Pe rkins had ob· OFFICERS OF CLUB Hobe n F. Jack son, professor , ' .., ruvlll-l llute i. that he ::; hould be exactly your size. Otherwil! e serve d that both Sigma Xi a nd Office rs of the Sig m a Xi Club m athem aties, treasurer; a n··,j Ph i Be ta Kappa ha d establis hed Will continue to serve as chap- Quaesita C. Drake, profes o:r yuu willlta\·e tu have his clothe. a l t e ~ed to fi t you,· which can chapt·ers a t t he u nive rs ity dur- ter officers unt il e lections are e meritus of che mistry, h is to r- L€ a co n ~i d e r ab l e nui ~a n ce. In fa ct, it is sometimes flatly im- ing h is te nure a s preside nt. he ld in May. They a re 'A' alte r ian. r. - ~ib l e. I recoll ect one time I roomed "i th a man ·named "T he o-p portunity does not A. Conne ll , associate professor To be e ligible for membe rs h i.o

~ a J.!< ' Trernblatt who wa: just under !-'even feet tall and weighed 1 com e to m a ny univers ity pres- of e ntomology, preside nt ; Har- in the Socie ty, a s tuden t mu.:t Ltarly fo ur huudred pounds. There wasn't a blessed thing I ide n t in the sp a n of three yea rs old Kwa rt, a ssociate professor be a top ra nking libera l a r•··; cuu ld w-e in hi eutire wardrobe-until one night when I was to witness the ins ta lla t ion of of' che mis try, vice preside nt ; ca n didate for the Ba che lor ~ f ·11\·ited tu a masquerade party . I cut one leg off a pair of Trem- chapters of both of these g reat John C. Wri ton, J r., a ssistant Arts degree in J une. Phi BeT a sy mbols of schola rly e xcell - profe.<:;so r of c hemis try, secre - Ka ppa is the oldes t honor so- la t t' .~ trousers, jumped into it, sewed up both end!', and went e nce," he said. tary ; a nd Jack Ge rs ter, professor C'i e ty in the United States. :1t o tl1e party as a bolster. I took second pri ze. First prize went RECEPTlON HELD of c he mical e ngineering, treas- was fou nde r! in 1776 ar Wi lli a n to a l! irl muned An tenna Radnitz who poured mo l a ~s e s on~ r Follow ing a n orga nizationa l urer. and Mary Co llege in Virg inih. lrto r head and went It S a ca ndied apple. m eeting in Brown La boratory ~ ac uit y e l ec t ~ d to me mber· Toni ght the annual Phi Be :·<\ !J ut I digres ·. Let us turn ba ck to the qunlities that make Auditorium at 11 a . m . a nd the ship a re Dr. W lll a rd E. Ba xte r, Ka·ppa di n ne r wi ll be he ld j ·1 installa tion _ a nd initia tion cer- Da llas E. Boggs, Euge ne P. 1 th e Morga n and Vallandig h i1.1 1 (lt·•intlJie ruorn -rna tes. ~ot the least of t he:e is the cigarettes 1 e monies in Ag ricultura l Ha ll, Br ~s ~ e r , Dr. Da le F. _Bray, Dr. rooms of the Stu de n t Cent · ~ thE:-y ~111o k e. \VIr en we bum cigarettes, do we want them to be new me mbe rs a nd g uests w e re WJJ_il a m J . Be nton. Rich a rd D. After the dinner the new m en' ­ t- '"tidy aut! m!lld esc ri p t~ Certai nl y not! \\'e want them to be ente rtaine d a t a receptio n in the Ewing, Dr. Ha rold F. Feeny,, bers w il l be initiate d in t h" di-tin)!ui:bed, gentl y reared, zest ful and zi ngy. And wh at ciga­ cafe teria. Dinne r in Ke nt Dining Dr. ~ o h a n J. Groot, Dr. E. Ve rno_n _ Fa culty Lounge. John :vi . Ja c)·­ rt· tt- i~ di ;; ting;uished, gently reared, zest ful a n~ zin gy? Why, Ha ll was followed by a public LC' w ts , Don a ld Ma cC reary ,_ ~ I t- son, director of libra ries will l lf' 1-' hi li p .\ lon i:, of con·i:! An y further question ·? a ddress in Brown La bo ratory by I$ ha .M. Ra hn, Cla ude Ph tl l1.ps, the speake r. Dr. W . D. McE lroy, cha irmp.a DPan Ca rl J. Rees, Dr. Ru sse ll ------Tu I!IJ ur1. fn select in g a room-mate, find someone "·ho wi ll of the bi ology departme nt and Re m a ge, Dr. Joseph So nne nfe ld . , ·r:H Wf:ll , wb orn you'd like to keep as a perm anent fri end. d irector of the McColl um -Pra tt Dr. F: obert H. Wood, and Clin · SAM Plans Toue .\l :n1 y uf lri,;tory'8 great fri endshi p. first started in coll ege. Are Ins titute at .J ohns Hopki ns U-n i- to n Woodmansee . yuu a w a re~, fo r exa mple, of the remarkable f ~t c t thn.t Johnson vers ity. Hi s s u bj ect was the / Grad uate s tude nt na me d to IO f R h L b ;.nd Hu~wp ll 1w· re room-m'ates at Oxford in 1712? Wba t makes ph f' nom e non a nd essence of bi - full m e mbe r.s h ip a rP Ha rvey 8. CSC'al'C a ~ olum inescen e. O lrwy. Fra nk J . Murphf'y ar.d tl.i · fnct •o rt-rn;.t rkabl e is that in 1712 J ohnson wa. on ly three Althoug h m e mbers hi p in S ig- R0bert E. Ta ,·Jor. 1 T!1 e Dela wa r ' Cha pter of tl ·"l yP:'r" uld :.111d !Jo,well had not yet b en born. But, of to ur~e , ma Xi is restricted to resea rch GRADUATE STUDE NTS Soctety for the Adva ncemen t

- ,_.,. . ~ --- ~ ' Pageant Head April 24, 1959 The Revie'v 9. Levy Levels the season w.hile Neiger has gotten off to a blazing stal't, Announces Big which, it is hoped will never cease. In the words o( Coach Harold' "Tubby" Raymond, "P. l Advance Sales On Spotts · has wonderful stuff, his fast ball is 'sneaky' quick. It Joo~~ s A large a dvan e ticket sale for as though he is throwing easy and before you know 't the :'>1 iss Delawa re Pag_eant Sa~ - the ball is upon the batter." The mentor added a fa .d urday, ;vtay 2, appears l1kely _th•s By Ernie Levy evaluation, "One of the best I ever coached." W e year on the bas is of reser~at10ns opine that AI could easily rate second to no previous Ra y~ Win accepted to date, a~co rd~ng _to Spor/J Editor . mond . · Thomas La ngrell, t1 cket chair· 111 an for the pageant. . Believeing that Neiger's only weakness would be tn · Langre ll announced recently AI N ~1g~r could put a very pleasant kink into our form- hiUing, we asked Raymond about this talent: the joviarl that a ll $4.80 seats in both !he 1 er . predictions for. the outcome_ of the Delaware baseball reply was, "He has never been hit by a pitch." orche tra a nd the m e zza~me s~ason. ~he 1 previ?US prognostication gave the Delaware ~a ve bee n sold, and he adv•sed ~me a fairly certam .600 average with a dubious possibil­ Neiger is affectionately labeled the joker of the squad, p ro spec ti ~e b ~, ye:s to order ~· 20 ~ty of ~tretching it to .yoo. Although .-800 does not look but it is understood that all frivolities are dispensed with tickets. 1 he $2.7;::, h ~ J co n y seat <> Impossible, we won't alter anything now. when the star hits the rubber. He is full of energy and •re nearly gone, wh1le the . med- W'th . . . displays an "enthusiasm that is infectuous". m-priced $3.60 ti ckets are mov- 5 1 nme games ~omplete 1t 1s easy for the most s~g rapidly. casual observer to p1ck out the "Blue Hen of Every As for the rest of the team, a very interesting and e:·l­ The ti cket head stated, how- Week" ~s the ace hurler, Neiger. Among his some- lightening comparison can be made with individuals of ever, tha t plenty of good seats what miraculous achievemen· s the fantasmic pitcher last year's star studded squad. This contrast will be drawn ere still available if buyers act has refused the opposition any_earned tallies, has al· when there is more space. fast. Reservatio11s will be ac ~ept - lowed but 15 free trips to the first sack, has aimed ed through this week. by ma•l ~t third strikes past 76 ashamed batters, and has sparse- Wil mington Post Office_ Box 22;::, , ly scattered about a dozen hits. Space must be found to express our happy observa­ 01 by phone a t OLympia 4-4459, . . . . tion of .the already athletically and academically well ~ fter wh ich a ny remaining tick- In oomparmg this year's ace With last season's Jerry rounded Don Osmun's decision to throw his hat into :ts wi ll be placed on general sale Bacher, the nod, in our opinion, would have to go to our the SGA ring. Don, running for president, if suc· 1, The Playhouse box office. current asset. Bacher was extremely effective throughout cessful, would be a rare case with varsity football, swimming, a~d wrestling already under his belt. the ir co r­ peri od, spectators Penn Relays to Feature y the Blue the Ga r­ time per­ re team to ut soft! What taste from 1\lterations· According Delaware yonder I~~~ TER- BLEND J. ead Lewis, To Track Head~ Doherty perform­ s. Team ­ Sweeping changes have been there are eleven individui'll n, ta llied a nnounceq for the Penn R e l ~y events. Among the defendi r:.g consistent Carnival a t Franklin Field, April cha mpions in the individu, l ·gi and Hal 24- 25, a ccording to di rector Ken events expected to return a .re goal and Doherty. Elias Gilbert, Winston Sale .-11. ha d fo ur The feature race, and the one Teachers, in the ·120- yard high a round which t he Relay Carni· hurdles; John Law lor, Boston val was built since its opening University, hammer throw ; W "'" in 1895, is the One :\1ile Re lay ley King, Pittsburgh, disc 11 s Ch ampi onship of America . This throw ; Ca rl Shine, Pe nnsylvania, , year the race will be restricted s hotput. 1 to the fas test six teams filing a n Special AA U competition h ."'\s en try. The selection will be been listed fo r high jump a ml 1 m ade by a committee on basis pole vault. John Thom as, Bo.·­ of previous performances this ton University's freshma n worJd I year. · indoor ti tleh older, \.v ill be the · . The lOS coll ege mile relay top favorite in the h ig h juJW_ .- 1 teams tha t competed a year ago Pole vault entries have been re - have been invited to participa te ceived from Don Bragg, wo r l~\{.lr in Bi g 50 College Seri es that will door recordholder ; a nd Bob L.L•t · I wind up the Carnival. From the ~;s ki , world outdoor recordhol l · top 50 teams whose entries are I accepted only 38 will be select· eel to complete in final six one · i m ile rela ys, Eight team s will be Wesley-Plans four big nomi nated, on the basis of tim · nJ. Ta king I es recorded this season, for each ayma king I of the fi rst fiY e relays w it h the lied twice, six fastest com peting in the one Mavol W eekendi. in on ce. n) ile relay cham pionship of defense Ameri ca. in the The spri nt medley relay cham ­ At Rel1obeth · pions hip of America will a lso be Goalie li mited to the six fastest teams. Wesley Foundation m em bt':i'!'l Ed Ben· Additional pirit medley ra ces a re m a king pla ns for the a nnu <'~ l (440, 220, 220 and 880) will be weekend at Fenwick Isla nd, ne. T sched uled for the other colleges. Rehobeth, Friday, Saturday a nd For the fi rst time there will Sunday, May 8, 9, and JO. the sched· · be two races in the 440- a nd Apartme nt s ha ve alread.y be t-'ll n Coll ege 880-yard rela ys. On the basis of secured for the planned retreAt,. Potenti a ll y, the Friday q ua lifying heats, the re.ports the Reveienrl Lf" la nd .n. ha d pro· six fastes t foursomes in each Ha ll, co-dn ector of the as OCI.'l­ team Del_a · race •Vlll be in the relay cha m · tion. Any F o u. n d~t i o n me':lbers is season. • pionship of Ameri ca event with \ ~ h o have not 1nd1 cated their c - e a th ir· the second six fastest teams s1re to . attend ~re . urged to do . a. run ning in a separate race. 1 ~a nforth ,. MISSIOn a ry to . Ed .t· Radica l changes have also cat1on , Dav1d M. Green, w1ll he been ma de in the set up fo r s ix the speak: r at th:_ re_g ula r Tu Pol· of the fi eld events. Ken Doherty day m eetmg at I :b p.m. n .·d a nnounced a specia l invitation week. college competition for the six Mr. . Ha ll will speak on '_' Wha t outsta nding men · in the shotput, the Bible Says About Growing PL S ITS WHATS UP FRONT rHAT CO~NTS discus throw, javelin throw, a Christian," next Thursday, hammer throw, high jump and 6:30 p.m ., at the Wesley Hou:... e. pole vault. All other college men 1 This filter, be it e'er so pure and white will compete in a sepa ra te I Must needs give flavor too, full clear and bright event running concurrently with Else would the trusting smoker, filled with hope the cha mpionship. An additional Again be dashed, dejected be ... and mope. set of prizes will be availa ble I for 1he new events. Among the outstanding col · 1 And ·thus we come to Winston's obvious truth lege tea ms who have filed en · It's what's up front that counts- and 'tis, forsooth tries this year a re Abile ne 1 Christia n (defending champions ; In that the fine tobaccos, in the end in the 440-a nd 880-yard relay> ; Are by exclusive process-Filter-Blend­ Vill a nova (current champions in 1 Become the tastiest taste th"'at e'er hath played the one-mile, sprint m edley, and Your Across your dancing taste-buds, man or maid! dista nce m edley events I; Win · ' I ston -Salem Teachers (winner of I the huttle hurdles title last Be ye not slow, therefore, totes~ the ~it. Iyea r ); St. John's (the four-mile Of what we say. that Winston, fnend, IS If; winners a year ago ), a long with Canl}JUS Southern Methodist a nd Flori da For that with ev'ry smoke ye do delay State fr om the South, uch Big Ye are not gath'ring. rosebuds while ye may! Te n Powers as India na , Ohio Sta te, and Michigan, as well as s uch Eastern standout as Ma n · I • t• .1 U hatta n, Pe nn Sta te. Morgan , -·We are advertised by our aov1ng nenas••• State, Pennsylvania, Ya le. Navy, KING HIN,_Y VI. ~ART Ill. ACT V, SC. Ill St. Joseph' , LeSalle a nd Bo ton Univer ity. · · I In addition to the ei ght relay R, J , RE YNOL DS TOB ACCO CO .. WIIISTON· SAlEM. N.C. championship of .America e ents, '------10 The Review April' 24, 1959 WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Doris Wild Wins Fellowship

Here's tbe Answer World Banner ;aHiil IN 111':1 ,,d-. _jil .1. n v For University of Denver HORIZONTAL 3 Story Doris Wild, senior from Wyom. 1 Depicted flag 4 Not (prefix) ing, Delaware, was awarded a of the United 5 It was founded fellowship by the Socia l cience at Dumbarton Peggy Ramsey Represents . Founda tion at . the Univer. ity of 8 This group Denver. She Will be w orking to was formed to 6 Number wards her master's degree in in. promote world 7 Glance over Women's . Executive Council ternational relations in all scope 8Look ~ '3 .1. N "ilr~-:> I "11'111...,1~1"' in ·luding economi · ·, geography 13 Semitic 9Half an em l;:rl..,l'o" 31a:tl IS NIC I r-.rN Peggy Ramsey, junior elementary education major, rep­ and foreign policy. ' language lOAbove 42 Solar disk An e ~ em~ ntary education maj. 14Come in 11 Albuminous 28 Repose resented the university Women's Executive Council at the substance 31 It meets at 43 Older (ab.) Intercollegiate Ass

DORIS WILD branch of foreign sen·iee or in · ternational relations somell'here overseas, preferably in Russia. Having studied Russian this past year, Doris plans to continue to increase her knowledge of tile language next year at the Uni · versity of Denver. A graduate of Caesar Rodney High School, Doris comes from a family of five girb. Her pa re nt are German imm igrants ;•,1 ho '1 s came to this country sc\'eral English: CAMPUS TOUGH GUY years ago. ·Doris has distingui -heel her· Thlnldish translation: This character belongs to the beat generation, self by having received e1·e ral awards in the last four vrar. in · as any black-and-blue freshman can testify. When he cracks a book, eluding two Outstanding tuclent it ends up in two pieces. His favorite subject: fistory. Favorite sport: Award , and the Brta Beta Beta biology a wa rd in her fr eshman throwing his weight around. Favorite cigarette? Luckies, what else? year. Her scholastic rpcord ha Puffing on the honest taste of fine tobacco, he's pleased as Pwich. If been excellen during ail her col· lege years, e videnced bv the fa cl you call this muscle bounder a schooligan, bully for you! that s he has made D ~an ·.~ List every m ester of her college career. Miss Wild's activitie:;: on ca m· 1 pus have been numerous and ,.. , English : UNHAPPY MARRIAGE vari ed. Doris has been on Tire Review staff as a re] orter and se retary and treasurer of :'\e11·· man Club for ti''O different year . Musically inclined . she wa accompinist for the junior musical last year. musical chair· man of last year's May Da~·. and musical head of her dorm's Pl ay· bill for her first three years at Delaware. · Doris has beeF! a member of the local chapter at Delaware of the ...... , ...,.. .. Co ll egiate ouncil for the nited Nations, a group interested in in· ternational relations. Think/ish: FLEAGLE Along with her extra -curricular activities and . tudies, Doris has ROBERT O ' BRIEN . ISCONSIN STATE COLL. found thf' time to hold an assist· antship from the Department of Eng/ish: ILL TYRANT Education.

~ ~· ., , ·~ BING'S BAKER Y HOW-TO A CAKE FOR ANY OCCASION 253 Main St. MAKE$25· Ph. EN 8·2226 -- ~ Take a word-celebration, for example. With it, you can h ave a football rally Jackson's Hardware (yellebration), a gossipy bridge party (telle­ for bration), or a clambake (shellebration). SPORTING GOODS SLEMMON S, TARLETON STATE COLL. .$ That's Th.ihklish-and it's that easy! CIGARETTES 90 E. Main Newark We' re paying $25 for the Thinklish words Get the genuine article judged best-your check is itching to go! Send your words to Lucky trike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose your Get the honest taste name, address, univer ity and class. of a LUCKY STRIKE grover surratt •5 east main stretl Product of ~~J'~-·~~i.s our middlt naJ newark, delaware ! April 24, 1959 The Review 11 Four Guest Lecturers Visit

from Wyom. Delaware Campus Rec"ently awarded a l Science Miller, Walter in_dust!· ia l designers, Walter Dor - Korlak, Co lonial Stores. . National aJini·ver·sitt' of u~ay~~~-d ~ea- ~ 1 king to . . qri •k RI ~~ . m Goode, ~~d Fied· Win 1 eague, was the featured I Cash Regi. ter, Sr. ripto, General .' ou _mger: a ll vt tted the speaker a t the closing session of J Foods, and many others ree in in­ campu eally th1s week as g ue ·t the two-day symposium on "Art · all scopes · lecturer . and Indu try" held Monday and SOCIOLOGY PROFESSOR geography, Raymond W. Miller, president Tuesday on campus. . . of Public Relations Re earch As· Mr. Teauue is a past preside nt Wd lllhi a~ J. Gf oohde, profe sor cation maj. ociates of w h ' t D C ~ "' a n c a mnan o t department tice teach­ as m g on, . . ., Ot th ~ . Am~r i c an In titute of of sociology at Columbia Uhi· wa th e guest lecturer for a Graphic Arts and in Engla1ld he . · · · · the third . tral Public pecial_ s_em ina r tours~ on "P ~b - h o l ~s the distincti'on of R~yal ~-2h~llt;'; a~vat~le a~sn~ve~sit v t s~~~8g .interest is l ~ c Optni?n and Foretgn Poltcy De ·tgner for Industry (Hon.) tl · k Y y Formulatwn" at the univer ity Mr. Teague is the founder and l iS wee . ds, history. on Tuesday. seni or partner of the indus trial . Dr. ~oocle syoke to classes. in sociology. Dr. · M iller spoke on "The Work design organization of Walter mdustn al s?c ~ ology, o~to l ogtc~l of Washington Public Relations Dorwin Teague As ociates, and t ~ e~ry, s~ 111 0 1 a nd staff semt· F irms." The a uthor of the book, he a nd his six partners and staff n~rs. He. ~ s the author of nu~­ ''C'a n Capitalism Compete," ·just of moce than 130 a re serving etou:' a i.~ t cl~s . a nd books, _m· released, Dr. Miller a lso is con· such clie nts as Boeing, Du Pont, ~; . udi~? .. ~e!~gt~n AmS?n~ PnRm. s u ltant and acting director of A. B. Dick Company, Eastman 1 I v~si , ~ '~fs ofD. ocial , e· the new graduate school of pub· seatc 1, an ter 1vorce. lie a nd_ internationa l affairs at I E~UCATION COMMISSIONER the Um vers ity of Pi ttsburgh, He serves as visiting lecture r at the . Frederick Rau_binger, com miss· g raduate school of business ad- !Oner of- educatiOn for New Jer· ministration at Harvard Oni - 1 sey, was the featured speaker versity on public relations and I at a semina r bn "The Role of the J. D. Quillan, president of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity world affairs. School in Community Develop. presents certificate of membership to J. Caleb Boggs, governor ART anci INDUSTRY i ment" held last Saturday. of Delaware. One of the' nation's I Dr. Raubinger was the fourth guest lecturer in the special seri es, Hi s topic was "Develop· Student Center ing a Program of Fioancing Ed· Governor BecoDies ucation." by Ruth Scherer A native of Aurora, Miss our~. Dr. Rauhinger is a graduate of The SGA a nd Student Center OPERA - Puccini's "La Bo· Southwest Missouri State Col· Alpha Phi Omega Social Committee is making .f in· heme" is now showing at the lege. He holds advanced degree ,al preparations for the last big Edge Moor Theatre in Wilming­ from Rider College and Prince · dance of the year. Looking back ton The movie, a Sal Hurok pro· to·n. over the year we fe el we have duction. opened last Wednesday ~_,raternity Meniber had a rather successful year -in and will last a week. Hurok is utilizing the Student Center. the noted impressario who ad· Letter ·to the Editor J. Ca leh Boggs, of the State professor of education, and Dr. Much was done by trial and er· ministered the apearance of the of Dela \\·a re. \\·as one of six new Jack N. Behrman, professor of Bolshoi Ballet in New York re· To the Editor: ror and mistakes were made, but E. B. White once · wrote: "De­ mrmhrrs initiated Ia t ni g ht by economics and business admin· we · hope the improvements were cently The theatre is located on the Dcla\\·a rc chapter of the na· istration. the Governor Printz Boulevard, mocracy is the recurrent suspi­ appreciated and next year should one-fourth of a mile from the cion that more tha n half the tiona! srn ·i ·e fraternity, Alpha AI ·o welcomed to the frater­ prove · successful from· he start. Pbi Omega. The ceremonies nity was Donald P. Hardy, as­ Merchandise Mart people are right more than ha lf \\"l'f'f' hrlcl in the faculty lounge It was decided to carry out the time." Thi. seems to be rhe s i t'- S T AN LIT • tli-Fi Components iiNOVGI-I'TO .F Payments Due snack bar was closed and they i from Annapolis, Maryland. ~

COLLEGE -PUZZLE CONTEST,! Uni FOR STUDENTS AND 1\lar

LIGHT UP AND LIVE IT UP! 3greatcigareHesofferyou627chancestowin! So pick your pack-save the six wrappers-and get going! It's crossword puzzle fun and real smoking pleasure all the way! ENTER OFTEN-HAVE FUN-AND WIN! But think care fully! This puzzle is not as easy as it looks. At first the DOWN and ACROSS clues may appear simple. There may appear to be more than one "right" answer. For example, the clue might read: "Many a' coed will be given her best date's P- -N." Either "I'' 500 FOURTH PRIZES: (PIN) or "E" (PEN) would seem to fit. But onfy one answer is apt and logical as decided by the judging staff, Cartons of America's finest cigarettes and therefore correct. Read the rules carefully. ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISH. Good luck! ------HURRY! ENTER NOW! CONTEST CLOSES MAY 29, 1959 ------, RULES-PLEASE READ CAREFULLY CLUES ACROSS: I Dr. 1. The College Puzzle Contest is open to college 1. These may indicate that a nation is prepared to wage war in t he air. students and college faculty members except em­ 6. Some college stude nts. pl oyees and their imm ediate families of Liggett 10. When at ...... Light up a n Oasis. 1 & Myers and its adve rtising agencies. II. S inki ng ship deserter. At 12. Plural pronoun. I 2. Fill in all missing letters ... print cl early. Use 13. One expec!s ...... discussions in a sociology class. 16. A s~u !l e nt s careless ...... might annoy a s hort-story instructor. I The a of obsolete, archaic, variant or for eign words 17. Intllals of Uruguay a nd De nmark. prohi bited. After you have completed the pu zzle, 18. Germanium (Che rn .) south s s.:md it along with six empty package wrappers 19. Nova Scotia (Abbr.) I Reub of the same brand from L&M, Chesterfield or 21.. It pro?ably w~llllrl count whrn you pick a horse to bet on. of Reso Oas·is cigarettes (or one reasonable hand-drawn 22. Somcttmcs a g1rl on a date must ...... into he r pocketbook to help facsimile of a complete package wrapper of any pay the tab. I Gustavs one of the three brands) to: Liggett & Myers, ~~: {;\~~~~;~;t-~>~~~~; · ( Abh~.) · · · may fascinate a poorly developed man. Clas es P. 0. Box 271 , New York 46, N. Y. Enter as 26. am per.; will probably be ...... by a forest fire. h pushed often as you wish, but be sure to enclose six I for all ~~: ~V hh~~~~rting a trip, tourists usually look forward to the first ...... I package wrappers (or a facsimile) with each 1 ceremony. entry. Illegible entries will not be considered. 32. Lite rate in Arts (Abbr.) al ly meet 33. Famili ar ior faculty member. I 3. Entries must be postmarked by midnight, 3ii. Associate in Arts (Abbr.) at 12 Friday, May 29, 1959 and received by midnight, y6· Onr rould appear quitP harm1Ps9 at limes. Friday, June 5, 1959. 37. R!'verse thl• first part of " L&i\1 ". I 38. What wil l soon appear in a bombed-out city. 4. Entries wiil be judged by the Bruce-Richards Corporation, an ind penden t judging organiza­ CLUES DOWN: I I. The bP gi nning and end or pl easurP. t ion, on the basis of logic and aptness of thought 2. A rural ...... ran be invitins: to a \'acationis I of solutions. In the event of tiPs, contestants will 3 . SPrond and third let tcrs of OASIS. . j be required to compl ete in 25 words or less the , II . WhPn on~ is · · · · ·. · .. packed, it could he exas perating to remember PRINT CLEA_RLYI ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU WISH I foll owing statement : "My favorite cigarette is a frw art 1cles that should bP mduclcd. · (Chesterfield) (L&M) or (Oasis) because . .... ". 5. I t would pay to be carcful whrn p:lass is ...... Mall to Ugget & l•tyers. P. 0 Box 271. New York 46, New York . Be En ri es will he judg!'d on originali ty, aptness of f,, Grounds to relax on with a mild C I! C:STERFIELD. sure to at Jch m empty package wrapper s of the same bra nd (or I thought and interest by th Bruce-Richard 7. Author ...... A mbl<'t. lacsrmlle) from Che;Jerfrela, L&M , or Oa srs Cigarettes. Corporation. Duplicate prizes wi ll be awarded 8. District Attorney (Abbr.) in event of final ties. lllegihle entri i'S will not be ~- A . : ...... from Paris ~ h ould please thr avrragr wnmnn. I 1 ~ . An Inveterate lrav!'l r wtll ...... about distant l and~. Nam•------ronsirlered. By entering all entrants agree that 11 ...... nrc hnrd to study. I the rl ecision of the judges shall be final and I !i. StonC'. Bronzr and Iron ...... Linding. 20. II ow Mrxicans say, "Yes". 2 ~. All L&l\l ciga~P.Ilcs a rC'" : ... : .·.·. hi ~h" in smoking pleasure. Address 1 5. Solu ions must he the original work of the 2.1. M~~ be a dcctstvc factor m wmntng a horsro race. con testants submitting them. All entries become 27. Tnt! H\ ls of qgiPthorpc, l ona, R utp:crs and Emerson. I th property of Liggett & Myers and none will ~~: c:~Wr~o~~:{ons Organization (Abbr.) Collece------be returned. · 32. Colloquial for plare where the finest tobaccos arc lcsled £or L& 1 Thi s en rv mu; t b 11 stmarked before mrd ni ght , May 2,, 195, a"j I G. Winners will be notified by mail 'as soon as g~: ~~~;r~an~l~.alc (Abbr.) . received a P. 0. Bllx 27 1, New York 4&, New York, by mrdn, gh • 9 possi ble after compl etion of the contes . 3rl. What AbnC' r might be caller!. June 5, 195 • I 7. This contest is subject to all Federal State (_36 . Bach lor of Education degree • llzaelt & Myers TobJ(<" Co J and local Jaws and regulations. ' ------~------