The of Wooster Open Works

The oV ice: 1961-1970 "The oV ice" Student Newspaper Collection

2-8-1963 The oW oster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1963-02-08 Wooster Voice Editors

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Recommended Citation Editors, Wooster Voice, "The oosW ter Voice (Wooster, OH), 1963-02-08" (1963). The Voice: 1961-1970. 51. https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1961-1970/51

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Published by the Students of The Volume LXXIX Wooster, Ohio, Friday, February 8, 1963 IV 1 1 O . nuiuuer id Mid-Wint- er Holiday jLg; sifii flu MOM Last year's innovation, the Late Pers Indoor Fun Sixth Section will sponsor the Hay-rid- e. Winter Carnival, will be made The granting of 1:30 late pers For those who prefer indoor an annual event with its re will extend the time for the dance entertainment, free cocoa and folk In Babcock on Saturday newal next week end. to follow. night dancing will be available in Comp- folk singers from Oberlin will lead At ton, where Stan Wong, Lynn Jaf-fe- y, siinging, while dancing and re- Offering its piece de resis-tenc- e 6 a.m. Saturday, a car cara- Dave Baradas and Rina freshments down- first, the Student Senate van will leave from the rock for and will be available a day of skiing Menahem Less will teach their stairs. will present the nationally known at Mansfield. Cars will return by 9 dance specialities. trio, the Lettermen, at 8 :30 in the p.m., in time for Livingston Lodge will be the most of the Wooster High School Gym. evening's entertain- Refreshments decorations location for a twist party, "Wooster ment. and will be arranged by EKO's, KEZ, Goes Collegiate," where a Twist Tickets Afternoon Events First and Fourth Sections. Combo from Canton will provide Tickets for the Lettermen con- entertainment and music from 8 :30 vjsi I Meanwhile at 2:30 p.m. Satur- Also -- tentatively -- planned for the to 12. Peanuts, and If -- $2.00 Pyramids -i cert are apiece - mmwmmiMy" I , i i mammJ for students hr, rm rrn.Minm day, skating and may be purchased at Snyder events will begin on afternoon is sledding at the country Eighth Section are in charge. NEW STUDENTS THIS SEMESTER . . . Enjoying a brief respite the outdoor rink between Drug Store, the book store, at the Wagner club. Hay wagons will serve as B-B- from Wooster's inundated walks are, left to right: Edward and Compton Halls. all Games door or from dormitory represen- transportation, and toboggans, Trapp, freshman, of Stockbridge, Mich.; Mahmonir Keyhan, sleds and cardboard Section basketball games will tatives. Faculty men will be will be pro- freshman, of Teheran, Iran; Carolyn Tausch of Cuyahoga opposed by vided. take place in the afternoon there a girls' team if Falls, freshman transfer from College; and Pat- Under consideration as part of captained by Linda is no ice. Davis, and by rick Gorman, junior philosophy major, of New York City. Not the weekend's activities is a torch- a men's team led Food for All by Doug Keen. Dave Pancoast and Merry Lomas pictured are juniors William Michel and John Shields, sopho- light parade from the college to Trumps, Sphinx, Third and are in charge of the weekend with mores Mary Schroeder and Charles Fossett, and freshman the high school before the con- Merrily Siepert will lead ice Fifth Sections will take care of artistic assistance given by Kaaren Dale Hamalainen. cert. games for everyone. refreshments for sledders. and Henderson, poster designer. x Campaign Readies $ Million RUNCIMAN ILL Sir Steven Runciman, Byzan- Boerum leads flltacheHi' tine historian who planned to Wooster has passed the $8 million mil- 7. Foundations The most not- mark in its $20 lecture on campus next week, able gifts in this area have been lion Centennial Development Program, according to figures has postponed his visit to nearly $800,000 received from the To Wooster due to illness. H Ivfrrchcover through the end of 1962. Ford Foundation in 1956, $100,000 Senior Bob Boerum is di- two major 'portraits'." ThV $8 million plus figure represents $7,949,465.41 for scholarships from die Baker Foundation in 1959, $100,000 from recting a production of (Wil- This version of Macbeth will be received imcash the de- gifts since the Given Foundation for library presented as an independent stu- velopment program began in Sep- in this area. liam Shakespeare's Macbeth endowment in 1960, and $250,000 Dancers Give dent production, under the spon- tember 195o and 5. Bequests $850,000 has come which will be presented in $703,297.54 in from the Danforth Foundation for sorship of the Department of Eng- pledges from wills . during the six the Chapel Saturday evening, Feb. outstanding. past a biology chair. lish. It is not being produced as Of the $20 m7illonr$8 million years, including the Henderson be- 16. an Independent Heading up the entire develop- 'Shoe' Show Study Project, nor has been allocated for new build- quest last fall of $400,000. Be- Although the original intention is it in ment program is Mr. Winslow S. any way connected with a ings, $7 million for $2 quests are a major source of en- "Life at Your Feet" sets the was to present a fully staged ver- endowment, vice-preside- course requirement. Drummond, nt for de- million for renovation, and $3 dowment funds. theme for the Orchesis modern sion of the play, Boerum has since "It is being velopment. Under him are three presented for the dance show tonight and modified the production into a ex- . tomorrow sheer million for general operating Church Aid directors of development, Mr. creative satisfaction of the penses. at 8:15 p.m. in the gym. "dramatic concert version" of participants," said 6. Religious groups Approxi- Smith and Edward Arn with offices Boeruny "It's The performance will present Macbeth. kind of According to G. T. "Buck" mately $33,000 from the Board of in Centennial Hall and Eben Peek answering the call!" various aspects of life shown by "The change in plan resulted Boerum Smith, a director of development, Christian Education of the Pres who works out of . In will be playing the role the shoes of the people who wear from a series of conflicts involving of Macbeth, and there are seven major sources of byterian Church and $80,000 from addition, Mr. John D. McKee, Senior Nancy them, Dingil-ian-, the use of the limited facilities on money in the Centennial Develop- the Synod of according to Arlene Winfield will portray Ladv Mac Ohio are received former Alumni Secretary, also as- this as the co-hea- d of campus, well as inade- beth. ment Program. annual! sists. Orchesis. She and The six readers will be: Da- Mikell Kloeters are responsible for quate amount of free rehearsal vid Ramadanoff, Karl Gross, David 1. Alumni The Alumni Fund time organizing and planning the show. we could schedule by the Newby, Lizbeth Roman, Jean Muir has exceeded $100,000 for each of NTENNIAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM In some of the dances, the type 16th," according to Boerum. and Karen Schell. the past five years. This year's V "Since we discovered GIFTS RECEIVED of shoes will be emphasized by a it would -- IN goal is $160,000 while $250,000 . CASH: Sent. 1. 1956 - Dec. 31. 1962 Open Show ' spotlight on a pair of shoes and be impossible to execute a polished will be the goal in 1966. In addi- The performance will be open Total the performance of such a complex Year New in other numbers dancers will to the students, faculty and other tion, alumni also gave $1,050,000 Bfttas. Renovation Endowment Operating for Year play as Macbeth in the time avail 9-1-5- actually wear the shoes that they 6- personnel of the college. will to the Alumni Building Campaign, able, we ver- It 8-31-- are doing a simplified 57 are m the $ 198,547.66 $ 539,317.79 $ 377,-50.9- 5 $1,115,016.40 representing dance. not, however, be $870,000 of which was spent for sion which, a public occasion. 9-1-5- in its own right, should 7- The shoes presenting a point of renovation of Kauke. "There will be no attempt made 8-31-- 58 X prove an interesting and imagina- 306,172.00 565,921.09 359,440.48 1,231,533.67 departure in the interpretation of to ' attract a large audience merely 9-1-- 2. Industry and Business This 58 tive undertaking," he said. the dances range from Japanese for the sake of numbers," said 8-31-- figure has averaged about $75,000 59 U27.269.06 17,510.70 429,387.24 1,974,167.00 Acting, thongs, bare feet and toe shoes to Reading Boerum. "We-ar- e Mac- 9-1-5- presenting 9- I per year since 1956. Major con- work shoes, military boots and "The play will be 8-31-- a combination beth for 60 96,767.64 those who have an interest tributors are Esso, General Motors, 196,811.601242,129.81 479,576.11 1,015,285.16 elephant shoes. of formal 9-1-6- acting and 'dramatic in Shakespeare, 0- or a desire to see Shell, DuPont, and Ohio firms The 8-31-- dances, ranging from, solos reading'," 61 Boreum continued. "The the play 509,398.95 , 265,724.36 280,405.80 424,108.23 1,479,637.34 performed." which contribute about $35,000 an- to 9-1-6- large group dances, include roles 1- of Macbeth and Lady Mac- There will be nually through the Ohio Federation no admission 8-31-- 62 about 15 48,729.50 256,690.01 159,425.78 463,025.99 927,871.28 Orchesis members. Miss beth will be acted in normal fash- charge for the performance, al- - 6f Independent . A major 9-1-6- Nan 2- Nichols is the faculty advisor ion while a 'chorus' of six readers though the doors will be closed at 12-31-- gift under this category was 62 . 13,089.85 69,103.92 34,674.68 89,086.11 205,954.56 for the group. will play the rest of the parts and 8 o'clock to prevent disturbing $100;000 in 1960 from the Timken " " Admission charge the partly-narrativ- e, partly-characterize- late-come- Total to for pro- create a d noise by rs once the play Foundation. is 25 Date $2,499,974.76 $ 788,329.89 $2,039,385.65 $2,621,775.11 $7,949,465.41 gram cents. framework for the has begun. Business Gives Additional Pledges Outstanding as of December 31, 1962 Included: Danforth Foundation $150,000.00 For Endowment Wooster in 1962 reecived un- Alumni Building Campaign 153,297.54 For Renovation restricted gifts for operating funds Henderson Bequest 400,000.00 For Endowment from more busines firms than ever Total 703,297.54 9ti Memouam before, through the Ohio Founda- tion of Independent Colleges, re- ports President Lowry. La In "The proof a poet is that his The OFIC reports 1,547 business Judson ire Stars 'Gideon' of country absorbs him as affectionately as he has gifts totaling $1,087,835 during absorbed it.' In Judson Laire, veteran Broadway and television actor best known the introduction to the 1855 edition Leaves 1962. This is an increase of of of for his role as Father in "I Remember Mama." will be euest star in Grass, Walt Whitman might well have been $82,363 over the previous calendar writing the Little Theater production of Paddy Chayefsky's "Gideon." of Robert Frost as he stipulated the year. qualifications to be fulfilled by the American poet. he does Wooster's share of $1,000,000 The play will be presented March 6, 7, 8, and 9 and will be "If not flood himself with the immediate age . . . based on autumn fulltime enroll- directed by Mr. Allen N. Kepke. and if he does not attract his own land body and ment was $34,010. Through the Tickets sale 1 go on at p.m. Thos. Mann's Life soul to himself and hang on its neck with incom- distribution at the end of last Feb. 25. parable love . . . and if to him is not opened the school the College had re- year, Subject Of Display eternity which eives similitude to all oeriods and ceived a total of $323,465 since the Student members of the cast are : As part of the Library program, locations . . . ": Robert Frost did all these thintts. beginning affiliation with Doug Keen, Pete Russ of its Nielson, an exhibition on the life and works In a century when men have grown and OFIC. afraid Badger, John Weckesser, Frank of Thomas Mann will be presented so ever more indifferent to other men, Frost faced Building Funds Gilbuena, Steve Moran, Earl during the month of February in the mystery of the human condition with as much the Library Lecture Room. uncertainty as did his contemporaries; but in him 3. Board of Trustees Members Walker, Pete Lawrence, Walter Copies of this German novel- there was an integrity of spirit, an acceptance of of the Board of Trustees have con- Hopkins, John McCreight, Dave ist's own books and all the works, the responsibility of being a man, that marks him tributed funds for the construction Noble, Pete Fabricant; texts and books to which he con- very nearly unique in his times. Especially in his of Wagner Hall, the Wooster Inn, tributed will be on display. lyric and wisely humorous-satirica- l moods, he re- the Service Building and Andrews Eldon Trubee, Dallas Coughlen, Photographs picturing the writ- corded in his poetry what it means to be in Library. Jeanne Smith, Phyllis Young, Joan a man Kara-tino- er's life and environment will sup- the twentieth Browne, Persis Rogers, Nick s, century. Non-alum- 4. ni This has group Paul Browne, Dan Cryer and plement the written material. Critics reviewing his last volume, In the Clearing, .contributed $1,200,000 during the D r .William Schreiber, chair-ma- n spoke his Joe Berlant often of "Escapist NeverAnd perhaps -- .... Vpast six years, including the Gil- of the German Department, tliat phrase is ROBERT" FROST - a iaF more fittinz eoitanh than------I t KJ I 1 lespie Professorship and the Harn Judson Laire's most recent roles will hold lectures concerning Mann laureate or American poet, though these names, too, As he spoke in the chapel at the dedication Professorship of Physics. The have been in "Third Best Sport" during February on Monday, Wed- are his. tie has taken his road, he has gone his of Andrews Library last spring. Friends of Wooster has recendy and as the President in "Advise nesday and Friday at 1:15 p.m. in miles; we are infinitely richer for his journey. been established to unify giving and Consent." the lecture room. Thomas D. Clareson

M!lW'llHr PgO TWO WOOSTER VOICE Friday, February 8, 1963 'Election Competition Wooster Peace Corps Volunteers Render Student Senate President Dave Mortensen's announce- ment that he will not run for re-electi- on for next year leaves the field wide open for potential candidates, of which there Services From Africa To The Philipines are several sophomores and juniors well qualified for the post Seventeen Wooster Graduates serve as physical education instruc of student government president. Editor's Note; The following description of the Peace Corps is and former students including one tors in lunisia. the first in a series of articles hv Wooxtpr ernAiuitj will Next year be a crucial year for Wooster' student trustee are now serving in the John Bayer teaches English in students who are serving as Peace Corps Volunteers. Jack and, Self-governme- government as it operates under a new constitution. nt reace Corps. Somalia. In West Africa, Marilyn Angene Wilson, both '61 graduates, are teaching in a mission operates best with a loyal opposition and healthy Two seniors. Doue Worthinston Hartzell teaches English and his- school in Suehn, Liberia after training last summer at the Uni-- . versity 1959-6- 0 competition for elective offices. Wooster has not had such and Mikell Kloeters, have been ac tory in Ivory Coast, John Levy of Pittsburgh. Angene, who edited the Voice, teaches wrote this competition for three years. Effective student government cepted by the Peace Corps and English in Nigeria, and first contribution. i Margaret White teaches in Ghana. has come in spite of the system, not because of it. plan to start training in June. Jack and Angene . Wilson are Serving Central in and South teaching speech, history and Eng- WUai 9 Peace 6&m&? America are Chris Dav in Colum lish in Liberia and Terry and I bia as a physical education teacher Jean Sidley teach in Cameroon. Peace Corps is involvement with a people in Rooming Problems and Larry Jones in the Dominican a country. Wooster's percentage of gradu- It is the woman with groundnut-brow- n Republic as an English teacher and wrinkled face and faded head ates and former students serving in tie and breasts Tlje College campus may see two new men's dormitories aide in community development. sagging which have fed 14 children, all dead. the Peace Corps is of the high- She "Ma-ke- ready for use by the fall of 1964, should prospective govern- one grins toothlessly when you say " or "Good Day." It Mrs. Werner C. Blanchard. who est in the country. Following are is the mud house where she ment loans materialize in the next few weeks. Working plans lives and the mortar and the rice graduated from the college in 1924 the number of volunteers con- fanner leaning against the house. will then be made as soon as such loans materialize, the and has been a trustee since 1956 tributed by a few other schools ac- It is the Ghanian taxi driver who speeds past the slowly-risin- g execu- thought behind which will have influence the is teaching cording to Peace Corps statistics. fast-sproutin- g a great upon English in the tive mansion and the electric lines and who says character of the future life of the College men. To inform of California 233, at the end of your ride: "We have Peace Corps in Ghana, too." University of 67, Har- is the all men of the present plans and of our opinion we include In Iran are John Lerov and Rich Michigan It washwoman who can't comprehend you come from across vard University 65, Stanford Uni- the and this discussion. ard Eaton. Both are teaching Eng ocean the schoolboy who wants to learn to drive the versity 60, Michigan State 57, Ohio "Peace Corps" jeep. One plan would call for two dormitories each with three lish. State 25, Oberlin 24, Miami Uni- It is telling about Mansa Musa's pilgrimage to Mecca in 1324 ac- largest silk-clothe- units, or sections, of 48 men each, (either in the present The erouD is serving in versity 22, companied by brocade and d servants and 80 loads Kenarden vertical style or on a floor basis). A separate lounge various parts of Africa. In Moroc- 17, Kent State 14, Swarthmore 12, of gold to the Baptist descendants of that great Mali emperor. for each unit would be located on the ground floor. Kenarden co are Beverly Bowie and Marilyn Ohio Wesleyan 10, Capital 4, Mus- And it is watching blue and white uniformed seventh graders Charles who are both teaching Eng- kingum 3, Wittenberg 2, Denison act out the spider would be modified and converted to a freshman dormitory story as part of a study of African literature. lish. Lee Jennings and Kurt Liske 2, Kenyon 1, Mt. Union 1. The greedy spider wanted to go to two feasts so he had each along with Andrews. Douglass would become a common dorm- party tie a rope around his waist and asked each to tug the rope itory for men of all three upper classes and any or no section. when their feast was ready. Unfortunately both tugged at the Use of Livingstone and possibly Crandell House or West- same time and now Ambullah who plays the spider writhes as his minster Cottage by sections leaves only about 30 students who Head Operator Explains waist is squeezed to the narrow waist of the spider today. 18-ye- It is the glow in an ar old fifth grader's eyes as he talks about might live off campus. Long range plans call for a third men's Sir Rola who died for his leader Charlemagne. "My grand- dormitory to accommodate a slight increase in enrollment College Phone father told me about Gola warriors like him. So brave," he says and replace Livingston and other cottages. System admiringly. It is also the pain in a sick baby's eyes. The baby's is We do realize the benefits to campus life of a predomin- tongue so swollen it cannot cry when Mother Mae, doctor to hundreds, injects penicillin. antly resident college, yet we believe that the wisest solution It is frustration with the washwoman who scrubs off buttons and the would be one of enough flexibility to accommodate the vary- child who leaves a new book in the rain and the student who ing preferences of individuals. Forty or slightly fewer men 5f & memorizes Venice but can't think why cities are the home of in each section would be preferable to the presently con- civilizations. It is being patient with people; and cockroaches sidered 48. and rain .and dust . . . but the red dust is good ; it covers all and makes blacks and whites the same even on the outside. would be Forty a large enough number to maintain unity Peace Corps is learning, teaching, growing, giving in connection with for the larger sections and yet small enough to suit the smaller a vague yet concrete idea that men are meant to know each other sections. Inter-sectio- n roommates in common dormitories and respect each other and maybe in a far-of- f day love each would not be as rare. Section membership would tend to be other. less exclusive and some of the vicious intra-sectio- n strife in black-bal- l sessions inherent in plans for larger resident sec- tions could be avoided. Seventy men, or thereabouts, could Robert Kennedy Speaks still choose to live off campus. That the administration has such considerations in mind To Congressional Club and is willing to hear all suggestions is heartening. We hope that the desires for strong sections and a resident college are "I had a helluva time getting through college myself," not carried to extremes. the young man behind the big desk sympathized. Mrs. Treva Hensel In light of the extreme importance of this entire matter, The speaker? The Attorney General of the United we call for the Men's Association to schedule a discussion by Anne Grigsby Sixteen city trunks nine in- States rtobert Kennedy, iriis audience t More than 20 mem within the following week open to all campus men. coming, seven outgoing are avail- oers ot tne L.oneressional Uub A visit to the glassed-i- n college able for college use. Across cam- of the Colleee of Wooster who High on the list were the Mona We are not trying to force anyone's hand. We do wish, switchboard office in Lower Galpin c pus (or rather beneath campus as spent Monday, Tuesday and Wed- Lisa at the National Gallery of however, to see this most is enough to make student re- urgent matter considered a underground cables) 178 lines nesday between semesters in Wash- Art, National Archives, Library of consider his complaints next time connect 270 telephones to the Gal- ington, D.C., engaging in a series Congress, Senate and House Ses. he gets cut off. pin switchboard. of interviews with numerous gov- sions, Smithsonian Institute, Lin- With head college operator, Mrs. ernment officials. coln Memorial, Washington Monu- In the back room located be- Treva Hensel, as a guide, he be- ment, an dvarious embassies. News Of Interest In This Weeks hind the switchboard office are The interview with the Attorney Voice comes acquainted with rather, or eight giant batteries, ready for General, held in Mr. Kennedy's confused by miles of varicolored Wooster's Centennial campaign has passed the $8 emergency use in case of a power huge office on the fifth floor of the MILLION wire, thick colored "cord pairs," mark, according to most recent figures. See story failure. Justice Department building, con- Editor's Notebook 1-- 3. bars, relays, on page 1; cols. bays and batteries. three-da- y cluded the visit. Mr. Ken-ned- y Dust Interferes by The Editor "Papa" of "I Remember Mama" comes for the Little Since the "cut-over- " on Aug. commented on topics ranging Editor's Note: This is Theatre production of GIDEON. 1;2. 11, Mrs. Hensel explains, new Dominating this room is a steel from civil rights to Cuba to labor a column well-substantiat- for ed but. uncon- A Wooster alumna in the PEACE CORPS writes her im- equipment and procedures have and glass cabinet full of bays, legislation, answering questions on firmed news items and for other pression of her work. 2; 5-- 6. made service slow. The innovations which are sections of bars and re- an individual basis for 45 minutes. should prove worthwhile in the lays to complete the connection off-be- at news. Contributions will Ode to an I. S. CARREL. Editor's Notebook. 2; 6. Other "big name" personalities be accepted. future, however. between speakers. A speck of dust If requested, the A NEW THEATRE BUILDING is one step closer met by the Congressional Club in- identity the to reality. in these huge cabinets can cut off of source will, under 4; 2. Beginning Problems cluded Ted Sorensen, Special no circumstances, be revealed. or cross-conne- ct telephone mes- Counsel Toedt-man- "I know service terrible at to the President; Pierre Charlie Ritter relates SHAKESPEARE to SPORTS in 's was sages. 1-- Salinger, Presidential Press Secre- "Warming Up." 5; 2. , the beginning of school," she re- marks. "But we were grateful that Cabinet Additions tary; Secretary of Health, Educa- Indications are that Miss Peters,

BILL . GRIBBLE gets mentioned in basketball story. 5; 3-- 6. i students were very patient." tion and Welfare Anthony J. Cele-brezz- e; Director of Dormitories, is con- What DAY IN HISTORY The cabinet, installed this Aug- would you relive, parity raid or Tal-madg- e ust, will Senators Herman cerned about Scotch tape being 1-- She attributes the problems to receive additions which Babe Ruth's famous home run? 2. (D-Ga.- 6; (R-N.Y.- ), Jacob Javits ), used by professors on their office possible faulty wiring and the dif- will necessitate knocking out a wall and John Tower (R.-Te- x) ; doors in Kauke. She is consider- ficulty of learning the cord-pai- r of the lower Galpin room when ing a new device on which pro- system, a procedure involving the three proposed buildings, with Speaker of the House of Repre- fessors may post notices. Wno&ttx Vain twice as much work for the opera- their 33 phones are completed. sentatives John McCormack; Con- tor. "In 10 as college gressman Hale Boggs; former am- Published weekly by the studenU of the College of Wooster my years a during the bassador to Russia Llewellyn school year. Opinions expressed in editorials and features are those of the The town of Wooster is serviced operator I've never found the job The college will receive 40 per students and should not be construed as boring," Thompson ; several members of the representing administration policy. by the Ohio Central Company, an comments Mrs. Hensel. cent of all receipts from use of Ohio Republican delegations to Member of the Associated Collegiate Press, Intercollegiate Press and the independent firm with controlling "We feel as if we're one of the the four new pool tables in Ken- Congress including Frank T. Bow, Ohio College Newspaper Association. Entered as second class matter in the company headquarters in Lima. principal connections between the arden recreation room. Poet Office, Wooster, Ohio. college and the public," she said. Robert Taft, Jr., Clarence Brown, According to manager William William McCullough, Frances Bol- Editor-in-Chi- PHILIP BROWN, ef C. Fritz, the company serves more ton, Oliver Bolton, andWilliam Credit for the following "Ode ot FRANCES HOPKINS, Managing Editor rural subscribers than does any WOOSTER Ayres; and represertfaTivesof the an I. S. Carrel" goes to Liz Sloan: ANNE GRIGSBY, News Editor DAVE HAMILTON, Sports Editor one of Ohio's other independent Central InMligence Agency, Peace Back to the womb JANICE TERRY, First Page Editor JOHN ATEN, Business Manager telephone companies. Corps, Departments of Commerce, Enclosure from gloom, JANET FREEMAN, TERRY REDDICK, Agriculture, Treasury and State, Replacement for tomb Second Page Editor Advertising Manager Fewer Operators THEATRE Com,-mitte- Pentagon, and House Rules e. Rebirth not till June. JIM McGAVRAN, Feature Editor LIBBY CRABTREE, The local company does not EMILY UMBARGER, Circulation Editor y have as many operators, servicers FRIDAY SATURDAY Proofreading Editor JON HARPER, Photographer The interviews, during which and circuits as a larger company, Individuals closely connected Assistant Editors ANNE SCOTT, MIKE STOTT, Tony Curtis time members had an opportunity such as Ohio Bell, could provide. with the $20 million Centennial ALEXANDRA KEITH, JUDY BLACK Yul Brynner to ask the individuals questions Development Program consider Averaging approximately six Staff: Jim Alexander, Dave Allen, Barb Austin, Bobbie Bentz, Barbara Boyce, on a wide variety of issues, lasted $15 million "clearly attainable" line phones each in Barbara Brondyke, Catherine Browder, Mamie Bryan, Dunge Gcconetti, party for private from five minutes with Sen. Javits by 1966. The final $5 million will Betsy Clark, Jean Combellack, Elizabeth Crowell, Ted Dyer, Tom Dyke, line, the town of Wooster made TARAS BULBA" who took time from an exhausting Eeeleston, be the "ultimate challenge." Ron Claudia Pask. Nancv Green. Carolvn Hav. Bettv Heilman. 32 million local calls last year. debate over the Senate filibuster Sandi Hill, Kay Hori, Sarah Huddleston, Lynn Jaffray, Janet Jones, However, such individuals -- are f! - A J.l Iff 11. V m-- r. lA ..... local tele- rule to over one hour Virginia:l iwiiH,V! mc ixciui, iviarceua iverr, ramT...1 wmary iviarun, The company rents with Mr. mciuiigni, " quick to point out that 'because Helen Marvill, Paul Menzel, Carol Merrier, Ken Morris, Diana Moseson, phones to the college for Sorensen. " " $1.50! SUNDAY thru WEDNESDAY 60. percent of the 10 years have Alice Olson, Jim Pope, Mary Prittie, Kathy state-approve- Ranck, Geri Rahrer, Joyce month, a d charge. Reibe, Rosalind Rinehart, Margaret Sampson, Bill Shear, Tom Stewart, Sophia Loren In addition to individuals, few passed and only 40 percent of the Jim Toedtman, Martha Webb, Linda Zaleski. Ohio Central also owns the of Washington's other tourist at- funds have been raised, it is not coin-operate- Anita Ekberg .Circulation Staff: Courtney Irwin, Lynn Jaffray, Jan Jones, Edna Mayer, Judy seven d phones on tractions escaped a visit from at correct to assume that the cam- McBurney, Alice Olson, Andy Reber, Pam Patterson. campus. "BOCCACCIO 70" least some members of the club. paign is way behind schedule. Friday, February 8, 1963 WOOSTER VOICE Senate Seeks Choir Sings Mass Tlie Pelititiaa Westminster Choir of Westmin- Alternate Plan ster Presbyterian Church will be by Jim Pope heard Sunday at 5:30 pjn. on radio station WJR, Detroit, on the V t w weekly Con-cert- For program, "Campus ." Economic liberty might be called a twentieth century 'Fever Day' necessity which is often attacked by nineteenth century Marxian Students will have to find an The choir will sing "Mass in G criticism and has been defended from these attacks both then alternate plan to replace Spring Minor" by Ralph Vaughan-Wil-liam- s. Fever Day in future years. This is the third appearance and now by eighteenth century ideas harking back to Adam It was revealed at Monday's of a Wooster music group on the bmith and John Locke. If liberty Senate meeting that the faculty, Campus Concert program this to remain vital and workable The corporation is an economic in- is a after discussing student petitions year. concept it must be defined and stitution. Its form of organization to reconsider its previous action, A practiced rele- is a hierarchy. Its natural role is tune will also be dedicated in terms' that have had narrowly defeated the student to seek to in honor of Wooster on "Sig's vance to our 20th century society earn profits. This role, proposal. and culture. however, tends to subordinate the Show" heard on WGN radio, Chi-casr- o, preservation of liberty to the profit In addition, the Senate also de- from 11:05 midniVht nn Those who defend ac- liberty motive. If liberty is to be pre- cided that the sole function of next Monday, Feb. 18. cording to Adam Smith's argu- served, the corporation must, with- year's Academic Board will be the ments either fail in a democratically organized so- administration of the Honor Code. r i to realize or ciety, assume an unnatural role of A separate group, the newly-create- d, HUT a social and political institution six-memb- er "curriculum Violinist's Program Smith's basic as- committee," will as well with a sense of social re- take over the CARNEGIE STRING QUARTET . . . members of the musical sumption of a Board's sponsibilities. This includes a con- other functions. group performing Monday night are left to right Allen freely competi. Ohmes, Spans 300 Years sideration of the effect of the ac- Members of both bodies will be Michela Spivakowsky, Stein Mallow and Aaron Juvelier. tive economy in tions of the corporation on in- appointed from student applicants A recital featurine music in which n o one dividuals, on communities, and two atter the next spring elections. parts will be presented by Michael firm or individ- on the economy as well as on the ual could influ- corporation itself. The present Academic Board, led Siring Quartet Gives Show uavis, violinist, and Daniel Win- ence supply or by chairman Jean Muir. reported ter, pianist, Sunday night at 8:15 The Carnegie String Quartet will in Memorial Pope demand suffic- Corporations not only must but Monday night that they have been present a concert on Monday Chapel. are doing this. Heads of some of to at o:io in me memorial Lnapel. iently to alter the unable deal with many problems The program of familiar and prevailing level. This is hardly our corporations are becoming in- because of the time required to Featuring Allen Ohmes. violin: Miopia Snivfllr nxtfclrv vinlin unfamiliar music consists of com-- the case now. creasingly aware of their new role clarify and administer the new Barbara Stein Mallow, cello; and Aaron Jubelier, viola, this quartet positions covering a span of 300 in the economy and in society. It Honor Code. as The 20th receivea recognition lor sim years. century has experi is a role which makes economic plicity in its The Board has renewed the sys- approach to music. enced a capitalist revolution which liberty a realistic concept at a Scots The Sonata for violin and'cnn. has been tem of faculty evaluation question- For their Wooster concert the Participate described by Adolph time when large institutions seem tinuo by Johann Walther composed Berle, Jr. The freely competitive naires this year, as well as receiv- Quartet will play Beethoven Quar- to preclude its practicality. In of several short closelv-linke- d ing administrative approval of a tet No. 11 in F Minor, Band Festival economy of Adam Smith's time opus 95; movements is four-da- y Four an early example of has become dominated by three "reading period" before Walter Piston Quartet No. 1; and members of the Scot Sym phonic Band participated writing i or the violin in two parts. major institutions the state, the final exams, begining next fall. Debussy Quartet in G Minor, opus in the Ohio Intercollegiate Band Festival labor union, and the corporation. Science Profs Get Other questions, to be dealt with 10. Cesar Franck's Sonata, a work at the University of Akron during of four by the new committee, include the Tickets for this performance are movements rich in mdnAv The development of the tech- the weekend ot semester break. Research Grants possibility of an open I. S. file in on sale at the and harmonic invention, is a pro nique of mass production has al bookstore and in the library, Sunday study facilities, the Music department Participants from the Scot Band duct or tne romantic period. lowed for the development of the Three grants have been made by for 50c if and uses for the new television were trombonist Stan Ryberg; de- the National Science Foundation bought bet ore Monday. All tickets Followine this will hp. the. thrpp large corporation to fill the trumpeter Ken Hook ; hornist John to Wooster to support scientific re- equipment in Scott Auditorium. sold at the door will be $1.00. Paganini Caprices which- although mand for high mass consumption. Ragan; and flutist Karen Chenev. - search. they of The large corporation has become Dr. Stuart Ling, director of the are no significant musical aepui, are the dominant economic institution A sum of $7,600 was granted Scot Band, assisted with the Satur lull of violin virtuosity. in society. The of Glee Clubs our economies over two years to support research Schedule Concerts day auditions. Ending the recital will h the. scale have encourage the formation -- on "Hydroxamic Acid Complexes This 85 piece band consisted of Prokofiev Sonata in F minor. The anti-tru- The Men's Glee of oligopolies while st laws Club, directed a full schedule of concerts of Transition Metal Ions," under top college musicians selected by lyric movements and sardonic wit have largely discouraged by Mr. Karl Trump, will sing a planned before it goes on tour extreme direction of Dr. Donald Tarr of their respective music directors. that made Prokofiev the "enfant monopoly only. joint concert with the women s over spring vacation. the chemistry department. Richard Franko Goldman, leader terrible" of the Soviet musical Chorus of the College of Saint well-know- of the n Goldman Can economic liberty be de- The chorus will sing in Newark Band, scene are heard in this composi Both chemistry and biology de- Mary of the Spnngs, Columbus, conducted. fended in this new context? Can and Coshocton, Ohio, on Sunday tion. partments will continue research Ohio, at 3 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 17. Organized in 1929 by Professor eco- Foundation-Undergraduat- and on Feb. 24 in Cincinnati and the corporation give us the on National-Scienc- e e Each group will present selec Arthur Williams of Oberlin Col-leg- e nomic goods we want and still Research Participa tions from their touring programs, Dayton. On March 24, just before their they tradi- and the band's permanent sec- leave a basis for liberty? Is the tion grants this summer, for the and will join for a performance of tour, will hold tional retary, the Ohio Intercollegiate corporation of today what the in- Le-Ro- concerts in two churches in fifth year. Drs. John Chittum, y Foure's "Requiem," under the dir- Band has been conducted dividual firm was in Smith's day? Parma and Cleveland. by many Haynes, Theodore Williams ection of Mr. Trump. well-know- n band directors. Since and Tarr will direct one student Tickets at Merz The high point of the tour it- its founding, the festival has been each in chemistry 10 Dow Offers Job projects over Tickets are on sale at Merz Hall self, beginning March 29, the first held at 15 Ohio colleges and uni- weeks this summer, on a grant of at $1 for students who would like day of spring vacation, will be versities. An eight week Congressional $7,600. SLIM-FIT- to attend the concert, to be held Washington, D. C, . with several The musicians meet on Fridav S internship in the office of Congress- the Erskine concerts Dr. Chittum's and Dr. Haynes' in Theater on the in various evening and rehearse Saturday and man Frank T. Bow has been made campus of Saint Mary's. towns on the both work is in synthetic organic chem- way to and from Sunday. Sunday afternoon they available to any male, Republican Before Washington. istry; Dr. Tarr's in complexes in leaving on their spring give a concert. junior at Wooster. the Glee Club will give con- inorganic chemistry, and Dr. Wil- tour, Ur-ban- Application forms for the job liams' on some acid base equili certs in Circleville, Troy, and a, which will pay $50 per week may bria in selected titrations. Ohio; and in Punxsutawney be picked up at the Institute of and Vandergrift, Pa. The home In AGENTS WANTED Politics office, Kauke 15, next week. the biology department Dr. concert is March 22 in Westminster Donald Wise will be assisted by Chapel, one week before the tour. Congressman Bow, who repre- two students in work on overcom Girls' Chorus sents the district including Woos- ing alcohol toxicity and Dr. And- for Compton and Wagner Halls The Girls' Chorus, under the di- ter, announced the job opportunity rew Weaver have will one assistant rection of Miss Eve Richmond, has this week. Selection will be made in studies on insect muscle his- by the college. tology, on a grant of $4,200. PATRONIZE OUR Julie Fooe Exhibits IS Art Project ADVERTISERS Bright colors and the new tech- A resident of St. Louis, she niques of using a palette knife to plans to paint in Boston until next spread water colors characterize year, when she will enter art Julie Foote's Independent Study school. project in Art. & Among the paintings are several Nadelin's Restaurant Catering Service Fifteen of her paintings will be impressionistic treatments of still in the Josephine Wishart Museum life subjects and city street scenes. through next week. Valentine's Weekend Special Although several paintings, such The display opened last Sunday as "Three Cherries" in bright red CHOICE BROILED SIRLOIN STEAK with an afternoon reception. and greens, make use of bright FOR TWO A January graduate, Miss Foote colors, blues, browns and greens 1 X? ' studied at the Sorbonne and Ecole predominate in others, such as t Till I de Louvre in Paris last year. "Evergreens" and "Underbrush." $3.89 !

FOR VALENTINE'S DAY 3 WHAT BETTER GIFT THAN ! M5 -- . 1 Rugged J ,. $4.25 FLOWERS JZ: k-- T Twill JEANS Phone 262-404- 5 Delivered to the Dorm or Sent by Wire to the Girl Back Home Washable $4.95 Open 24 Hours a Day, 7 Days Cotton i' a Week CASUALS To Order Simply Call START PLANNING NOW FOR YOUR SPRING PARTIES. WOOSTER FLORAL prenner pros;. FOR A SNACK AFTER THE WINTER CARNIVAL, WOOSTER, OHIO ON THE SQUARE Lower the Cost of Dressing Well Phone 263-288- 6 MAY WE SUGGEST OUR 25 VARIETY PANCAKE MENU

V Page Four WOOSTER VOICE Friday, February 8, 1963 Furman Heads

by Mike Stott pool and school record in covering ter) 2:28.8 2. Kenworthy (Wooster) Radio Station; 2:38.8 3. Sawyer (Akron) 2:40.0 The Scot swimming the 100 yard course in :52.4. V team 400 yd. freestyle relay: 1. Wooster off with Other records Ged squared Muskingum in went to (Pope, Dunlap, Leech, Harley) 3:40.8 Severance Natatorium this after- Schweikert in the 200 butterfly, 2. Akron (Washer, Coleman, Malcolm, Jacobi Assists noon in hopes of avenging an ear- Gerry Meyer in the 500 yard free, Pete Boggs) New school record Old record by same men (3:41.8) Dec. 15, Chuck lier loss to the Muskies, 53-4- 3, at and Dick Doerr in the 200 indi- Furman replaced Ralph H ! 1962 Jennings as Station Manager of lliliipiifi1 Muskingum. vidual. Ted Malcolm swiped two free-styl- firsts es Muskingum 52, the college radio station, WCW, On Wednesday Wooster mermen in the 200 and 500 yard Wooster 43

Fur-man- for the Zips. 400 yd. medley relay: 1. Wooster and Peggy Jacobi took over 's traveled to Ohio Wesleyan where The Scots' (Riggs, Doerr, Schweikert, Pope) 4:12.4 former position of Assistant they absorbed their third defeat next action will be 2. Muskingum (Purdum, Lindeman, Manager at the beginning of Feb- in six outings. at home on Thursday when peren- Wessley, Dadd) 4:29.2 ruary. The Scots fell victim to host nial conference champion Kenyon 220 yd. freestyle: 1. Quiggan (Mus- 52-4- invades the Severance kingum) 2:08.1 2. Fulton (Muskin- Muskingum 3 on Jan. 11 as pool. Meet Furman's new responsibilities 3. Leech (Wooster) 11 time is 4:00. gum) 2:08.2 2:08.3 include correspondence with net- pool and school records were set. Dick works such as the Canadian Broad- Wooster's Doerr claimed Wooster 56, Akron 30 New pool record, new school record a new Scot record in the 160 yard for casting Company British 400 yd. medley relay: 1. Wooster Quiggan and New Broadcasting Company, whose ma- individual medley and a new pool (Riggs, Doerr, Schweikert, Pope) 4:00.3 Wooster school record Old rec- ord by Leech 2:18.4, Mar. 3, 1961 terial is recorded by means of a record in the 200 yard breast-strok- e. 2. Akron (Paul Boggs, Sawyer, Smith, Pete Boggs) 4:08.2 New Pool 60 yd. freestyle: 1. Harley (Wooster) short wave and used on :30.3 2. receiver and school record Old record held by Dadd (Muskingum) :31.1 3. WCW. Junior freestyler Sid Leech Wooster (Spierling, Doerr, Schweikert, Dunlap (Wooster) :31.6 160 yd. picked up the other record for the Harley) Feb. 17, 1962 individual medley: 1. Doerr Peggy is now in charge of pro- (Wooster) 1:49.2 2. Kerr (Muskin- Scots by the 200 yd. freestyle: 1. gramming and is chief supervisor covering 500 yard Malcolm (Akron) gum) 1:53.4 3. Zimmerman (Muskin- 2. (Wooster) Col- of staff members. freestyle in 6:04.7. 2:03.7 Leech 2:04.0 3. gum) 1:58.6 1-- 2-3 lins (Wooster) TESTING . . . Chuck Furman 2:09.4 record-O- and Peggy Jacobi check Muskie Bill Quiggan set two in- New Wooster school ld Peggy, a junior, and Chuck, ea 50 yard freestyle: 1. Harley (Woos- bulletin board for radio programming on college station. dividual marks the record by Dick Doerr 1:54.0 at Mus- senior, are both speech majors. in 200 yard ter) :23.6 2. Dunlap (Wooster) :25.1 3. kingum Dec. 16, 1961 free, a pool and school record, Smith (Akron) Each night's program is super- Diving: 1. Stoneberg (Muskingum) in the 100 200 yd. 1. 57.10 2. Mcllvaine 55.50 vised by five members of the WCW one yard free, a school invitational medley: Doerr (Muskingum) Noble Heads Fund Campaign mark, and capped the afternoon (Wooster) 2:18.7 2. Paul Boggs (Ak- 3. Lazor (Wooster) 53.25 staff. Allen N. Kepke is adviser to ron) 3. Randolph (Wooster) 200 yd. butterfly: 1. Kerr (Muskin- by anchoring the 400 yard free- 2:31.5 the staff of about 30 members. New school record Old record by gum) 2:34.1 2. Schweikert (Wooster) style relay which set a new pool WCW's situation is unique in For Doerr (2:18.9), Feb. 24, 1962 2:34.2 3. Wessley (Muskingum) 2:44.8 Theatre, Speech Center and school standard. No Diving 100 yd. freestyle: 1. Harley (Wooster) that it has no transmitter of its :56.0 2. Quiggan (Muskingum) :56.1 The meet was and 200 yd. butterfly: 1. Smith (Akron) own, but broadcasts through the Plans have been completed for will begin March 1 and will be nip tuck all 3. Pope (Wooster) 2:24.5 2. Schweikert (Wooster) 2:26.7 the way in the murky Muskie pool New Muskingum school record FM facilities of the local station. a campaign to raise $1,300,000 for concluded by April 30. 3. Pleune (Wooster) 2:37.0 with the de- 200 yd. backstroke: 1. (Mus- This arrangement gives WCW the a new theater and speech center for "By April 30, we hope to have outcome not being Purdum cided until the final the 400 New school record Old record by kingum) ' 2:30.6 2. Riggs (Wooster) advantage of having a greater cov- the college. the money needed so this project event, Schweikert (2:28.6) Jan. 8, 1963 yard freestyle, in which the New 2:31.7 3. Williams (Muskingum) 2:37.0 erage than any other college radio According to Donald E. Noble, can move ahead as rapidly as pos- 100 yd. freestyle: 1. Harley (Wooster) New Muskingum school record Concord contingent barely nosed station in Ohio and an average president of Rubbermaid Inc., and sible toward actual construction 52.4 2. Pope (Wooster) :55.3 3. Cole- 500 yd. freestyle: 1. Leech (Wooster) Scots. 2. (Muskin- 5-70- out the man (Akron) :57.8. 6:04.7 Zimmerman audience of 00 people each and use of these facilities," Mr. a member of the Board of Trustees gum) 6:15.5 3. Meyer (Wooster) night. Noble said. The appearance of freshman New pool and school records Old of Wooster, $500,000 of this will school record (:53.6) Harley Dec. 6:23.8 New pool record New Dave Lazor on the diving board by WCW is in operation Sunday be raised in Wayne County. Mr. Architects for the theater and 15, 1962-O- ld pool record (:52.8) by Muskingum record for Zimmerman welcome New through Thursday evenings from Noble is general campaign chair- speech center are Spahn and was a sight for the Scot Bank of Baldwin-Wallac- e, Feb. 24, 1962 Wooster record, for Leech Old Barnes of Cleveland. The building tankers as Lazor copped a third 200 yd. backstroke: 1. Paul Boggs (Ak- record 6:09.3 by Leech Jan. 8, 1963 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. man. 200 yd. breaststroke: 1. Doerr (Woos- will front on University St. across place, less than four points out of ron) 2:21.4 2. Riggs (Wooster) 2:23.1 The college radio station, an ex- The new building will house not 3. Folden (Akron) 2:36.4 ter) 2:32.8 2. Linderman (Muskin- off-stre- from Taylor Hall with et first. gum) 2:39.1 3. Mcllvaine (Muskingum) clusively educational station, is in only a theater but also speech 500 yd. freestyle: 1. Malcolm (Akron) 2:49.6 New pool record its 14th with therapy clinics which will be avail- parking on Pine and Bever Streets. After exams the Scots evened 5:48.1 2. Pete Boggs (Akron) 5:54.5 3. year. It operates 400 yd. freestyle relay: 1. Muskingum their season record at 2-- 2 when Meyer (Wooster) 6:03.6 funds alloted to it by the depart- able to children with speech dif- (Fulton, Dadd, Kerr, Quiggan) 3:45.4 they ment of speech. ficulties. traveled to Hiram on Thurs- New school record Old record by 2. Wooster (Pope, Dunlop, Scot day, Jan. 31, and soundly spanked Leeech (6:04.7) Jan. 11, 1963 Leech, Harley) 3:47.0 New One of several unusual projects "Our present theater is actually Debaters Place 66-2- 200 yd. 1. the host Terriers 5. breastroke: Doerr (Woos Muskingum pool and school record undertaken this year is a series of the auditorium of an old prep A sparse audience saw Wooster four half-hou- r programs of "Cam- school, with limited seating, poor Sixth In Tournament take nine firsts, five seconds, and pus Concerts" for WJR in Detroit. ventilation, and makeshift facili- Wooster debaters placed sixth two thirds, to Hiram's two firsts, These programs include tapes of ties in just about every respect," 45-4- among more than 25 teams entered five seconds Dehs Top Second, 1 and six thirds. Double . campus musical Mr. William Craig, head of the various activities. in the Marshall Wythe Debate winners Al Harley and Dick Doerr speech department, told a Wooster A short portion of the program Tournament held at Williamsburg, provided the impetus for the strong by Mike Stott meshed 27 against Eighth in lead- audience 50-3- is devoted information about recently. Beta 1 to Va., between semesters. Scot attack. The Delts took their time Tues- ing to a victory. the college. The Wayne County campaign Dave Petersen and Rich Eppley Doer flashed home first in the day afternoon in downing a game With just the barest returns in

representing the affirmative and 200 individual medley and the 200 Second unit 45-4- 1, running like the for the young Douglass season, Dave Noble and George Lyons the yard breaststroke while Harley cap- amous miler Ron Delany only Colonial-Cranda- ll have moved into negative won nine and lost five tured the 50 and 100 yard free-style- s. when they had to. first and look to be the team to beat. In a dual, Poff At half time the score stood 14- - scoring Jim University of Richmond and Last Saturday, a packed house in 14 and Second never trailed by pumped in 29 points as his Section 56-3- E Sec- William and Mary tied for first Severance thrilled to a 0 troun- more than six most of the second team lost to Rod Dingle and tion D. Dingle had eve- make the place in the tournament. cing of Akron. Seven pool and half and then usually only by two 26 for the most The topic this year is "Resolved, school records were set by the o four points. ning. That the non-Communi- st nations of Scots as they registered best their Fifth spurted with 1:30 left and STANDINGS AS OF TUESDAY the world should form an economic performance of the season. summer was able to stay out of reach the "A" Division "our community." Both relay . teams set school Team L rest of the way. Seconds offense, W Pet. Four debaters will go to Kent marks with the 400 medley team Seventh 4 1 .800 Marty Manning who tallied 29, State tomorrow for a tournament 4:00.0. Al Harley, who won the 50 Fifth 5 2 .713 couldn't quite match the competent Sixth " .667 there! and 100 yard freestyles, set a new 4 2 AT Delts though both teams performed Third ' 4 3 .572 below par. Second 1 5 .165 Fourth 1 5 .165 THE Fifth playing another lax game, "B" Division this with Fourth before the semes- UNIVERSITY Team W L Pet. ter recess, squeezed out a 40-3- 9 win OF Phi Delt 5 o 1.000 as John Mayfield gunned in 18 Rabbi 6 l .857 WISCONSIN Wayne Book markers for Fourth. Kappa 3 2 .600 County Store Beta 1 4 .200 Before exam week, the resur - 220 EAST LIBERTY STREET Sig 1 4 .200 gent team was Sixth, which Eighth 1 6 .125 Your Paperback Book knocked off the Delts and Store Third in Results mm- one week only to lose to Seventh NEW YORK TIMES HEADQUARTERS Beta 50, Eighth 31

33-3- 0. 'In the , indeed the Sixth 35, Third 25 and Phone 263-188- 6 TO In the B Division, the Phi Delts Sig 19, Kappa 17 world, rank as educa- Delt 52, Rabbi 31 few have moved Phi out in front of the Sixth 41, Fifth 31 tional institutions achieve- ofoutstanding Rabbis as they downed the Oat Third 62, Second 35 ment and influence. The University of Juniors 52-31- : With the season a Fifth 40, Fourth 39 Seventh 33, Sixth 30 Wisconsin is little more than half way over, it one of these." J5 Rabbi 48, Sig 25 off on Our Entire would seem that the battle for first Kappa 37, Eighth 23 will remain between these two advance your credit standing at one of the most Second 48, Fourth 45 teams though Kappa has only lost Fifth 44, Third 40 distinguished Doubleday Dolphin Stock universities in the United States two games. Rabbi 37, Beta 34 choose from among 8 sessions, 60 institutes, and Friday, Feb. 8 Saturday, Feb. Schaeffer continued Phi Delt 46, Eighth 26 and 9 Jim to pace Fifth 45, Second 41 600 courses in 80 departments all Kenarden League scorers as he Two overtimes combine lakeshore living with a full range of aca-- . demic offerings and leisure-tim- e learning activities Rousseau Velasquez Goya Raphael ' Dean L. H. Adolfson, Extension Building, Madison 6, Pinturicchio Wisconsin: I am interested in the 1963 summer pro- gram at Madison, so Please send me your 1963 bulletins on summer 20 off on All Hard Bound Books Plan a Dinner Date Now for the study, including course catalogs and guides to stu- dent services and accommodations. The Complete Works of Shakespeare WINTER CARNIVAL WEEKEND I can't come to the campus this summer, so please Illustrated by Rockwell Kent send me your catalog describing Wisconsin's Special Carnival Dinner famous correspondence instruction program with Garden City Books more than 400 learn-at-hom- e courses in 50 fields $6.95 Friday Night, February 15

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COME Dressed in Your Winter Sports Clothes! 1 963 SUMMER SESSIONS Wooster's Most Complete Bookstore THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN The Treasure House of Books at Madison on Lake Mendota A Prize to the Student and Their Date Wearing the Most Attractive Sweater TWO DINNERS FREE Friday, February 8, 1963 WOOSTER VOICE Page Five

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D-- TT . 1 I XJ by Dave Hamilton average. Bite bobL Hartshorn is with..i 65.3 percent of.....their shots right behind in sixth position with making the rim. with Erupting in a late second-hal-f 185 rebounds for the same aver- Wooster has third-bes- flourish, Wooster rode be- put on the t Sharks To Perform age. offensive show in the confer- JIM TOEDTMAN 13-poi- hind nt Bill a Gribble Minton is listed 11th with a 10.3 ence this season, scoring 70.7 96-8- 5 165 outburst to a win over average on rebounds. points per game, behind Baldwin-Wallac-e Kaleidoscope Revue Kenyon As a team, the Scots are the and Akron Tuesday. averages. "Kaleidoscope," Now that management and the various organized labor factions ninth best team in the OC in field Scot defensive a water ballet The win moved the Scot rec- weaknesses show show based of the Wooster Voice have come to terms and are printing again, goal shooting with a 39.2 cent, on a color theme, will 8-- per up as they are not listed among will follow ord up to 7 for the season be presented by Sharks on March maybe the Cleveland papers our example. The one sad and sixth in free throw accuracy the top 10 in defensive average. result of such a long layoff is the abundance of material that piles and served as due reward for 6, 7, 8, 9, in Severance Gym pool. up. Consequently, the following is another conglomeration of STUFF: two tightly-foug- ht Con- Ohio The theme of colors will be de- Severance Gym also has a curious background. In 1913, it was ference losses suffered by the veloped in each routine through the finest physical educational facility in the state. Today it is Ohio's Scots in recent weeks. colorful costumes, backdrops, oldest complete gym still used for intercollegiate competition. In Wooster faces Baldwin-Wallac- e colored lights, and appropriate the early days, women held their gym classes in dormitory attics on the Berea court Saturday with music. 6-- and were understandably jealous of the men. Women were not al- a 6 Ohio Conference record, good The sixth-plac- people in each number plan lowed into the gym until Thanksgiving vacation when they had free for a e tie in the 15-tea- m by David Allen - . , have heen the w marginO of defeatVXVfc forJl VI their own costumes, including

T-Tnn- ca run of Severance for one day. loop. rni-,.-U .C ! T- -- i. WoOStPT. T)nn Van J-i- a nlcr iso a l LOUll vi laoi 3 W X Col-- auu colored suits, hats and extensive Wooster suffered losses to Wit-- " 1-1- fought editor-turne- ling action the Scots -1 a hard match even though additional Charlie contributing d scholar of Shreve, held a costuming. Ritter 72-5- 0, tenVrg, and Akron, 83-6- 9, link between football and Shakespeare and is plan- recoru. Alter dropping ine season ""rr111 ucuiaiuu. has suggested a league-leadin- g I on recent Saturdays. The a 1 Under the direction of co-manag- ers ning Independent Study project on the topic. He will use as his opener to Kenyon by one point, Wooster vs. Akron an Tigers, who visited Akron Nancy Bourns and Sue Ad- the following "Let him but kill him Wooster defeated Otterbein and Wt. Winner evidence quotations: not pass, Wednesday in an OC showdown, Wrtstlar Match ams, Sharks will present routines Othello; "Tis to maul the runner." Anthony and tied Akron. 12-3- Snouffer (W) draw rather." sport were ranked number one small ranging from solos to groups of "We have bloody and cracked crowns." Schwartz (A) Cleopatra; and must noses Visiting Otterbein was held 130-Woo- college basketball team in the na- to ster, Balloon, decision eight, with the exception of the Henry IV. tion by UPI, and Akron rated 7th only 3 points as the Scot grapplers 137 Wooster, Burkett, decision Overture and Finale which include place on the same poll. fought to a 27--3 victory. Sopho- - 147-Ak- ron, Daily, decision the entire club. My private wire service produced the names of fellows chosen 157 Gordon (W) draw A as- Opponents Too Tall to Cleveland's "Straight-- All Star football team." The coaches Piero (A) Men Also Swim 167-Ak- ron, sure me they are checking on these student-athlete- s. Their names and In both games, the Scots stayed WEDNESDAY RESULT Yung, decision (Brush), Flunkin Tackles: 177-Ak- ron, Wilfong .decision A special number in the annual high schools are: Ends, Fuller (Latin) with their taller opponents until Hiram 18, Wooster 6 UNL-Woo- ster, Cotterman, decision show Ninth-an- d will be men's swimming in Attaint (Hay), Bumpee (Rhodes) Guards: Drugsat (Marshall), the late stages of the game before Total Team Score: Woster 13 13, Akron a sailor routine. Another highlight (Euclid) Center: Bardov (Avon) Quarterback: Wrick (Shaw) falling behind for good. The next scheduled home meet more Bill Balloon and freshman is Senior Judy Mack's solo with a Halfbacks: Neare (East), Phar (West) Fullback: Wuthering (Heights) Tuesday's fray was just the op- Dave will he Saturday, Feb. 16, as Burkett both won on pins, Chinese theme featuring the color posite, though, as Kenyon (2-- 9 in Oberlin visits Wooster. Second Team Ends: Holdemat (Bay), Shimmy (Shaker) Tack- Warren Welch, a freshman, out- orange. OC play and 3-1- 1 overall) stayed les: Bottled (Chanel), Weaksyde (Strongsville) Guards: Kordjul rode his opponent to gain a close with the taller Scots until fresh- 9-- (Benedictine), Deepe (South) Center: Shudstoodin (Bedford) Quar- 8 decision, and Sophomore Don Senior members of Sharks are man star Gribble came alive with terback: Dodgerless (Brooklyn) Halfbacks: Klassicar (Lincoln), Van Hoose and captain Jim Gor- Keglers Deadlock; Gretchen Smith, Rita Schontz and 13 straight points in a three-minut-e Auldman (River) Fullback: Oppand (Adams) don also wrestled to decisions. Judy Mack. stretch that gave Wooster the lead Wooster's scoring finished as Barr's Game High Nancy The latest word on former Wittenberg basketball coach Ray Mears and the game. Bourns, Jean Bowman, freshman Phil Cotterman At the half-wa- y Reggie Minton won a mark in the Sharon Yoder, Sue Brunk and is that he is making satisfactory progress and is expected to be re- was the Wooster 5-- 2 decision in the UNL weight WRA bowling season Peanuts, Mary leased from the hospital very soon. Mears took the reins as head scoring leader with 26, and Gribble Hartley are juniors who are division. Frosh and Sphinx lead the league in Sharks. basketball coach at the University of Tenneessee last spring. An ex- hit 23. Wooster vs. Otterbein with identical 4-- 1 records. tremely intense person, Mears overworked and suffered a nervous Eighth in Scoring Sophomore Sharks include Jennv Last Friday saw the Sphinx breakdown just before the start of basketball season. After a brief "Gribbs" is eighth in OC scoring Wt. Winner Wrestler Match Dodds, Mady Miller, Marty Home, first few 123 Wooster, Snouffer, forfeit notch victory number four while respite, Mears coached the Volunteers through their games standings with a 16.2 average in 130 rioily Ad- Wooster, Balloon, pin the Peanuts fell before a strong frost, Marge Allen, Sue then voluntarily quit for the season during a road trip to Arizona. 13 games, throwing in 48.8 of his 137 Wooster, Burkett, pin ams and Vicki Pyramid team led by the Fisher. field attempts and 79.6 of his free 147 Wooster, Welch, decision high scor- Confusion resulted last Saturday night the Akron basket- ing of Ann Barr. during throw tries. 157 Wooster, Gordon, decision Ann led all other Freshman members are Pat ball contest, when both official scorers missed a successful free throw 167 Wooster, Van Hoose, decision bowlers with 158. The The former mark is third in Frosh and Finefrock. Marcia Tuttle. Karen attempt by Akron guard Wyatt Webb. At the halftime intermission 177 Otterbein, Wacker, decision Trumps both forfeited. Kingseed and Betsy Aukerman. the loop behind Wittenberg's Al UNL-Woos- ter, the scorers and officials conferred and decided to award the missing Cotterman, decision Thrasher and Capital's John Beach. Total Team Score: W. 27, O. 3 point to the Zips. The decision was based on the "testimony" of statis- At the foul line, only Wittenberg's Saturday the Akron Zips met a ticians from both schools and the numerous quasi-official- s who con- Bill Fisher and Capital's Dave fired-u- p Wooster squad and battled tributed their two cents worth during the hectic moments. Mumau are better than the Woos- to a 13-1- 3 tie. The Scots' hopes As a result of the decision, Wooster began the half-tim- e inter- ter ace. lay in the final match as Phil Cot-

34-3- 35-3- 2, hard-foug- mission trailing 2, and resumed play trailing although Minton moved up to 12th in terman won a ht 4-- 3 de- not a basket had been shot during the stop. OC scorers with 14.1 average, and cision. sophomore Dave One of the best wrestling 'matches in Ohio was held last week Guildin stands Jim Gordon and freshman Rick 16th with a 13.2 scoring mark. Snouffer both wrestled to draws. at Berea and Baldwin-Wallac- e College. The Yellow Jackets enter- Goldin leads Wooster rebou'nd-er- s Walt Manger, also a freshman, re- tained defending Ohio Conference champion Hiram and had a 12-- 9 and is fifth the OC with lead going into the final contest of the evening, the heavyweight in fused to give up his match. An 186 grabs 16 11.6 match. in games for a Akron pin in this match would In this clash, Hiram's 212 lb. Bill Pierce faced 350-lb-. Leroy Sprague (a former classmate of mine) and soundly downed the heavy Ship'n Shore heavyweight, last year's OC champion, 10-4- . Pierce's herculean effort Freedlander's 12-1- tied the overall match, 2. fa ' embroidered Young Modern's Shop I ) blouse decor: Scot Menu for the Day: a spray of long-ste- m TAKE ONE BALDWIN-WALLAC- E TEAM, roses STIR EVER SO GENTLY UNTIL V v $3.95 An Editorial from the Life Insurance Courant a leading Trade Journal THOROUGHLY BATTERED, AND THEN A ; FV BEAT WITH VIGAH! All Alike? "Somehow the impression has got about that life in- surance companies are all about alike, and that the WOOSTER LUMBER prospect should be carefully steered away from that obnoxious subject, 'net cost.' The important thing for him is getting the amount of insurance he needs, not shopping around for the cheapest policy.

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SEMI-CLASSIC- need, even CLASSICAL AND AL without the doubtful luxury of unnecessarily high costs. So refined, from neat notched sleeves to $1.98 "When a prospect asks 'How much will it cost?' the French-lin- e Dacron polyester and collar. 65 question can often be evaded by saying, 'I can't tell SERIES . RICHMOND 35 cotton: easy-care- Fresh white. 30 to 38. you until you tell me how long you are going to live.' This changes the subject neatly and is quite proper at Sportswear Dept. Second Floor a certain stage in the selling process. "But the life insurance agent is the publicity man of life The College Book Store insurance. What kind of publicity job is he doing if he high-pressur- es a prospect into paying a seventh more P. S.: When you write home, make it official! vDuvvam dvvva! than he needs to pay for his protection?" Use Our COLLEGE OF WOOSTER STATIONERY Good Merchandise Our Business and Pleasure Since 1879 "The low net cost record of Northwestern Mutual life insurance merits your consideration. This unparalleled record is not just for one year, but covers a period of more than half a century."

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WATERLOO OR PANTY RAID? Committee To Review Union Plans The College Union Planning draw up plans for a new Student WoosJeite "Wish They Were There' Committee has been formed at Union BuUding. WHAT'S President Lowry's request The present committee, headed by Chuck by Will Johnson by Boswell in The Life of Samuel tions which landslided Europe in- This group will consist of three Osicka, has arranged for NEW game tables to be available in the What Johnson' to the World War." members of the present Student IN THE FEBRUARY day in history would you lower TUB from Friday afternoon relive Paul Kendall, junior: Union Committee, five other stu- if you had the opportunity? Teresa Richard, freshman: until Tuesday afternoon each dents, and five non-stude- nt repre- ATLANTIC? "I would want to relive the day "I would have liked to week. Think a minute and then read spent a sentatives: two from. the faculty, "How Not to Taach Teachers": Tht of the Battle of Waterloo to see day in Rome when Nero Other training what a sampling of students and reigned two from the administration, and matters being studied by of American teachers is "un- what kind of sandwich Napoleon the wieldy, slow-witte- d, bureaucratic . . professors answered when asked to see if he really sang as poorly one from Food Service. group are "breakfast specials" . held under his coat" Dr. Calhoun for late failure," says James D. Koerner in this question recently. as said in Western risers, individual lighting this Incisive, critical analysis. With the all-camp- Dick Doerr, sophomore: Gv. class." help of a special con- for TUB booths, and an us v sultant, the ping-pon- g John Pierson, freshman: I want to relive the day of the new committee will tournament. ALSO Mr. James Norton, Religion Dept.: "I would like to relive the day great Wooster panty raid of 1962 J. B. Priestly : Reminiscences about "My the author's service in World War I before Christ was crucified to because I missed it" choice is the dav in 1555 judge for myself if He really had when Thomas Cranmer was burned "Lampedusa In Sicily": An Atlantic divine power, or whether He was Mady Miller, sophomore: in Oxford, England. In Cranmer's Extra by Archibald Colquhoun simply a man with mortal limita- "I would also like to relive the death one saw not only the reli The One Stop Archibald MacLelth : On hatred exhib- Popular Mohair ited In racial conflicts tions." i great Wooster panty raid of 1962 gious intensity of the stakes in to see how much more successful volved, but also the conflict within Coin W. D. Snodgrass: A new poem Mr. Raymond Operated Sweater Kits McCall, English it would have been with Dick Cranmer himself, who died holding "The Indiana Dunes and Department: Doerr present." his right hand which signed his Politics": Laundry $8.98 and up William Peeples "My choice is May 16, 1763, recantation." Mr. Robert Walcott, History Dept.: The pursuit of excel- when James Boswell first met My day occurred in 1588 when Barbara Croyle, senior: Here, amid soothing music, lence is the everyday Samuel Johnson in a London book- Job of the Atlantic's the Spanish Armada was defeated. store. My purpose is to compare "I would like to have lived the the student can study while editors be it In fic- This was the glorious spot of the tion or fact, poetry their conversation to the one given day when the Parthenon was un- his laundry is being cleaned or prose. In ever-Increasi- ng Lhzabethan Ace which also in veiled (assuming to be a good cluded the famous Shakespeare. numbers, friend of Phidias) and to have in any of our 20 washers, those In pursuit of Drake and Raleigh." gone to the party that night." 10 dryers, clean- academic excellence or our dry find in the Atlantic a Madge Langer, freshman: HOUSE OF RHODES Mrs. Wishart ing machine. Everything but challenging, enter- "I would like to relive a typical 105 W. Pine St. taining and enligh- tening Wooster day 100 the laundry can be found at companion. years ago and POSTER PAPER 263-278- Phone 1 Get your copy today. y on Funeral services last Friday see if the seven deadly sins were Werners, including coffee y SALE closed an era at the college which the same then POSTER BOARD JUST A STEP OFF :iT NOW as they are now." that study break. CAMPUS began in 1919 when Dr. Charles F. Roger Fink, junior: for Wishart, long known students would CARDBOARD to "I liked to have been pres- Werners is new, clean, com- as "Prexy" became president of ent the day Babe Ruth called his MARKERS Wooster. shot in Chicago during the World plete, and open 24 hours The death of Mrs. Wishart, born Series by pointing to the fence CREPE PAPER a day. Josephine Long, came Jan. 29, less where he would hit the next pitch Bnxuim fjewel&il than three years after Dr. Wishart for a home run. This was the TEMPERA COLORS died. greatest moment in sports." WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY A graduate of Philadelphia's Dave Mortensen, junior: Drexel Institute, WERNER'S Mrs. Wishart was "My choice would be June 28, Repairing Engraving married in 1904. At Wooster she 28, 1914, the outbreak of the First Duds in Wo- Suds was a member of the College's World War, because of the ex- men's Advisory Board. 245 E. Liberty St. Wooster, Ohio tremely interesting communica- - City Book Store 348 East Liberty St. Mrs. Wishart, for whom the Art

2-67- Museum in Galpin was named, was on the square Ample Parking in Rear Phone AN 81 the mother of a son and two daughters. DICK MORRISON She was 80 years old last June. DARDER THE BELL Mr. Curt N. Taylor, secretary SHOP TELEPHONE COMPANIES to Ur .Lowry and previously to PUBLIC SQUARE Dr. Wishart, remarked, "She pre- SALUTE: sided over the president's home WOOSTER, OHIO FRANK KIRK and all the social duties involved Illinois Bell's Joliet Accounting Office prepares 370000 Frank Kirk has accomplished a lot in with authority and dignified charm. "We Solicit Your Patronage" SS!0I??cbills 3 month' And Results Supervisor the two years he's Frank been with Illinois Bell. He's seen his There was a deep love for the Kirk (B.S., 1960) makes sure the job is done ideas adopted and efficiently. rewarded by an interested management. College back of everything she 2-49- 74 Before his promotion, Phone AN Frank supervised 20 key punch Frank Kirk did." operators. That and other young men like him in Bell Tele- responsibility was given him soon after phone Companies he completed the throughout the country help bring the management training program offered finest by his company. communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America. SELECT YOUR BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES

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