eat Foll P. 1. C. i{euiew The Team! Ollft lhmtrgrabuu.tr Wttltly of tlft llnhttr.etty Iff Btlamsrt VOL 'ME 54. NUMBER 6 PRICE TEN CENTS Music Feature Of I. -Riiiiieiiiiieiiiiinaiiiii ciiiiitiiiiiDiiiiiriiiiia iiiiimiiiiiaiiiiio;:::f:;;J::o::::::b ;::I:;:;:n ::;:M=i=::tc:-:h:;;;;;e:;;;;;II:;;;;;H:;;;;;a:;;;;;JJ:;;;;;T:;;;;;o:;;;;;m:;;;;;o:;;;;;r:-ro~w---:::::::: Out To Avenge Last Year's Defeat 1 Job Dramatization lin Saturday's Tilt With P. M. C. f6 ' ======~ , Thursday Evening Swann Says ~ook T0 Sun Blae Hen Ele•e• To Have Stiff Struttle To Wia A•aaal Clas- Dr. W. 0. Sypberd And Fialey l For New Energy Supply' I sic Ia Atlaatic City Wit beat M. K. Foster, Co-arranters Addrea1es Collate Hoar On 'Cos- Clever Aad T•ompsea Of Script Especially Prepared 1 mic Ray' Aacl Its Poteatiality Ip AnElSON TO DO PUNTING For Eveat As Electricity DR. C. R. KASE, DIRECTOR The University of Delaware gridiron eleven will face P. M. 0. on Saturday evening at Conven­ Onr• of t h<• features of the dram­ tion Ball on the boardwalk of At­ atizn ion r f th Book of Job to be pre11cnt d this Thursday evening lantic City in the most important in Mit ·hrll Hall will th use of game of the Blue Hen ec:hedule. mu ir dnting ba k to the period Coach Clark's eleven will have 8. . Front Row, left to right- T. Willey Keithley, Alice Stubb , Jane Yo t, and Marshall McCully. Second Row-Dr. Thomas F. Manns, a difficult time to ave~ last om b nutiful old Hebr w mel­ Irvin Malcolm, Thomas Warren, Lawrence Willson, G. C. Cox. year's 12 to 0 defeat at the banda odi !I will b u d which were Dr. W. 0. ypherd, co-author of the dramatization, face the cast. made available through the cour­ of the Chester Cadets,. and the ab­ tesy of Rabbi Solomon Schulson, of sence of Ed Thompson through Wilmington, and are taken from a ineligibility and Captain Jack very valuable and ancient book of Chesser's Modernistic Set IDr. Harter Celebrates Glover because of a serious lee in­ Chants which he has been kind jury will destroy the eood chance enough to lend the producers of Wins 'Dark Tower' Applause 82nd Birthday Thursday given Delaware earlier in the ...,. th play. According to Rabbi son to conquer the military ma­ Sehulson, the melodies were sung chine. about the period in which the Book Weak Fird Act And Eadina Pre- of Job was composed, and are sung ' , r P. M. C. bas played six game~ each year in the Synagogue when I veat Pappets Paay Frem Be- to date and has won only a sincle contest, which was a victory ov r th Book of Isaiah is read. i•l Success Expected W t Chester. Bucknell, N. Y. U., The music has been especially Villanova, Franklin and Marshall, transpos d for the organ by Mrs. By Ca.rl Bleiberg and Lebanon Valley have vietored harles D. Harding and Mrs. over Jud Timmon's outfit, but aa each of tho teams is thou~ht su­ perior to Delaware's gridmen, the outlook is not optimistic. DeJa­ war has played none of the teams which P. M. C. has faced tbia sea-

L1dwig Lewisohn Th~ Sunday In Wilmington REVIE\V 2 UNIV t Uit lU v .. ed-It Snoop 'n Pep B arl Bleiberg By T d B rman Th

I Fnr(•cn..;t. I When a stud nt attempts to We look for n most. desperate murder .a whol~ class he is either att mpt to win a gam when Dela- a left wmg radtcal,_ or he ha, made war plays P. M. C. a m1stake.1 It hap- Sat. nite. Reason: pen~d in the Or- Aside !rom the tra- game lab. cla . ditional rivalry, it H r~ Levitan was was Jud Timms, makt~g Hydrogen coach of the cadets, ~yantd gas (which who phon d D c 1 dange~ou !l !y poi- Doh r t Y abo u t sonous) m such a Thompson . . . but great volume that it h h h-h h about forced tears to the hiR outraged virtu- _oth r s url .n • y s. wo P. M. . players Professor kmner hurnclt b or- w rr in the lin •up of that same d£>r~d all stud~nt ~ut of thf.' lnb., game last year! whtle he ber01cly rtd ~he room of the gas. After the exc1tement waa (lu tion 7 over Professor Skinner gave the Is Sheesly, the "spearhead of class a five minutes recess, while L banon Valley attack" (Philadel- he had a private "intervi w" with phia Record of 11-2-!{5) th sam the arch villain! Final cause and h esly who limped from the effect proved that Herb had mere­ training table, to classes and to ly mixed Benzoyl Chloride with his b d without a minute of playing ingredients instead of Benzyl Chlo­ h r at Delaware last year? And ride. if so, what about his eligibility onsidcring he flunked out and One of the plays whirh has then transferred? And did you caus d a great deal of comment is know that Ben (Lou) Robertshaw, "Tobacco Roads," by J. Kirkland. captain of Navy, could not be pre­ Already this play has had a year vail d upon to stay here beyond and a half run on Broadway. Re­ pr -season training in 1930? cently ·t was much publicized by the Mayor of Chicago's d elaTing hock. . it unfit for public performance. The cln::~. ical tradition of Heloi This decision was defeated in and Abelard was broken undeT the court, giving the play v ry mueh hypnotic influence o.f Herb War­ publicity. The main theme of tbe burton. In the ''Dark Tower" play is life in reality as is lived in Georgia. d1, w 1 \i anl to know why, so I hal w • an JlC'loi Ae nnrl Abelard wer two white mic ha had it all over their impi'O\'P th' JHlp r in th' dir '·tion whi h th prototyp a in that they lived to- Last year one of our athletes, • t udt•nt ~ fn r r. If th y do not, w wan ge h r in a cage. Net result: A who had a lif -long ambition of know '\' •u rnor •. Tlti. n w. 1 ap r i. tJUblish cl litter o mic he day before pro- ecoming a world's champion, took du ·tion. ick. The doctor was called. M- fot· t h ' · t ud n R. ft is, l 1 ~r' ror · our cI u Y t 0 ter he arrived and exnmincd his eatPr tn lh .ir ln. te~ wi hin r<>rlain limit · Looking Around. "victim" he finally said that the In an al 'tll t to s •tur n cone '0. us of What joy-loving enior from sick boy had a tempera ure of l 1. 1'10 :. IIAitTI•; lt . . . . I .· · , ·h ll on oftheFrntrnityhoue that l 103° tlrl nnit ~ to rongrnt ulnh• dt•nt ·~ nuul-ho n hnllot on ~ haeh w r qu · ~ n t'r hat h playNl Tnrzan .. . our h ro f bly asked. Jlt•. ; •nt • \ lint ,,. oil lht• trl'n~ion nf hiH him to \ ol . \\ c nr' alA di. lribu ing h 8 only to fnll out of a tre a 3 a. -- bttllot~ nmong h' faculty m mh n~, in .th(.• m.? · · · Th , arden of Eden I "Friendly" queries: Is Fresh- ••i ht . ~ 'l'lltlll hirt hdn,\. and '' i:-~h him n . · t t• under construct1on ha. already man George Davis going to sha e 1 HlH'I't\) I' 'it)\ I' fl'lllll hi JH't'HI'lll iltllP ~. lll hop(' t hnt w' nught R ·ur ,R m c n ru IV' b n graced with ov r 4,000 shrubs 1off that peach fuzz simply beeau li'Ci 1' t h t l11 nun t•njn~ nwny more yPat·~ ~UJ.r~ ·~l iotl~ from t h m. \\ a. k e\' ryon to nnd plants with more to follow j th Fir t Li utenant wan !I all of 1f h., It h tltHl hnppittt'~~" \ hirh lw :u·twd in pl«>a~l' cnop<•rnt ' ·it h ug hy filling in hi · · · th wis rat will be de- "his boy "to be presentabl during . 't. tl . 'l . tail t count th blad . 0 T ;nsp ction' n hn nl tH ( r p]Hllg 1 m 1 nJ\' r!'IJ y mat 1 d fiR· · · c· " · · · · D hi. f111il ful ,•n n•c•t' . II I I . . . . Krn s. . . . What professor in· forg t z orgi if you tar ha ·. n. h' r 'l' •i\' ~ tL F.at'h optnton 1. s~. $ t.hat "t .o ~nlves of two ing n~w you'll 'be ~ hairy mon r nve s 1 on rtvet ? • • . Dean by th time you become Fi Tl I BIU L C H 'I A .'I '? u on a8 unabl to op n hi of- I "Loo y,. . . . Ask Frank DiCeeo fi on morni!'~ Ia~ week : . . . 1 about that inspection arms epi· fr • hmen antlctpating cond1tions od · it' oo tunny tor word ! j mm d too hpick into the key- ' h I . . . W un r nd that Dean Robin on having completed w nty ye rs of meritorious r- vic I to r tir next year, bein ligi I for n · n . . . Dr. ~rl\UAt in i to her. UNIVERSITY OF Delaware Squad Faces P. M. C. In Night Game Saturday Tank Team Awaiting I ~· h the Blue & Gold Archmere High JSt. Joseph's College Defeats . RttumOfCoachBardo rt a, Joe Perki Defeats Jay Vees 1 Delaware In Football Trlt Oahlllillttd Dtlawart Chid• ======Swimming Mtnfor Nor11 Engagtd tor I Unablt To Chtclt Aclvanct1 Atrial Atta • uad• to I -13 With Socctr Sqaad; Mtrmtn Victory For Pltiladtlphian ; Of Grttn Elntlli Final Scort In Shapt and Rtady For Ad­ MtJYn Rruu 5 Yard Ro rl Of 20-0 A1ailut Colltgiatt~ I vanctd Pradiet 64 Yards for Dtla ., Tallit1 When soccer season is completed and Coach Bardo is able to take ov r the reigns as swimming conch, he will find his mermen in excellent condition and in readi­ ne~R for his stiff instruction. The candidates for the team have been practicing conscientiously for the coming season wftich they hope to mnke uccessful. The team is banking on the great backstroke work of Bill roe , one of its co-captains. His . wi mming in competition sinee 1931, his being a letter man at elaware every year, the fact that h<' was high point scorer in his · ing in the . ophomore year, and his establish­ with bon ing a school record for the 150- Schedule For Sword yard backstroke event give ample pr proof of his ability. In addition to hi Team this, he was third in backstroke lking Arrangtd ev nt at the Eastern Intercollegi­ ate M ets last year. Bill, with all the other veteren11, will be ready to go when the time Jo of Glover, if it occur . trials are called in the near future. certain! do much to make oach ' first y r h re Third Straight Loss one filled with mi fortun . Be­ fore Thomp on and Glov r Talren By Hen Boottrs wert> out of th lineup, w Rtvamptd Ttam Faih to End rated D )&war a good hance to tr unc P. ~ . ., in fact, Hard U.clt Strtalt; Fraraltlin­ we put our a h on th R Marsltall Wins, 3 - 1; Fact no ~· e regr Bacltntll Today • • • • Th University of Delaware soc­ cer team Jo t th ir third .tTaight gam of the sea on to Franklin nd Marf!hnll Colleg on Frazer Fi ld last Thur day by a score of

Out To A•t~~_f~ lhftat J Tilt Frti P. . C. UNIVERSITY OF ELAWARE REVIEW ~------~------~~~--~------r---~-----St. Jo1epla '1 College --- A LEN DAR Among Our Exchanges DtleatJ Delaware Wo•en's Colleft Notes lng By udrey Dnl• .'a urday, Nov. !1 - Football, D !aware> v . P. M. ..,. , at A • orority at the University of (Continued from Page 3) tlantic 'ity, night gam . Minn ota complained that the Hawks were looking for another Mondny, Nov. I I Ath nean boys in the neighboring fraternity score, but their drive ended on the So i ty m t1ng, ld ol­ hou did not pull down the shades Blue and Gold 15-yard marker. l•g, 7.:J p. m. in the shower room. Finally the DELAWARE ST. JOSEPH'S Dean of Women decided to look . nnell ...... · · · ·· L. E ...... bncauskaa Nov. 12- A. '. Ylorrall ...... L. T ...... Gillupic Tue day, M. into th matter. The girls show­ Hodraon ...... L. G ...... Gilliran B. m ing, Evan. Hall. ed her th window through which Dillon...... c...... ueherty ) . Carey...... R. G...... fcLaughlill W dn sday, Nov. 1:3- Wom­ they could s the boys' shower 'ouert...... R. T...... Bobb n's oil ge 'd nc Club, room. "Why," remarked the Dean, Patterson...... R. E. . , ...... Barry Records ...... Q. B...... Smale Hilarium, 4.15 p. m. "thiN window is to high to s Mayer ...... L. H ...... 1 arb~lka out of." Thur ~ day, Nov. 14- Tau B •ta ~~3~~~; :: :: :::.·::. ~: g: ~::~::::: : ~ ~~ ~':! Pi ml' •ting, Evnns Hall. " h !" chorused the girls, have to tand on a chair." , Wom(•n'. Coll(•g ,'upp r lub. • If\ keeping with an old army . ubstitution - Che sem n for Hiemenz MU!;ic C'Juh, 4.10 p. m. ellenger for Cole, Iliemenz for Cbees man' tradition, olonel J ohn L. Hol­ Roberts for F . Carey, Hartman for .hr: combe, head of the Temple Uni­ htlka, . filler for Oreuko, Schweim for Gil· lespie, McGee for McLaughlin, Fleminr for v rsity military department, has Hartman L. Carey for Records, Hiemenz ann unced th appointment of ten for Flemmg,1 M11ler for Oreszko, F. Carey for :\layer, Records for Ryan, Drozdov for II mmt•r tl nd Hickl<' . nior women as honorary cadet Worrall, Hartman for Marbelka, Schuster captains in the University ROTC. for Bobb, Fleming for Smale, Cbe~~man you nr£' in n hurry, Kkip to I-..u ·h y •ar, co- d ·aptains nr ap­ lnr ole , Pluck for Lougherty. llw la 11 t purngmph. Th • rl'!lt P int d and are given cadet capes juMI n co lumnist wi h n (•olurnn o and caps. Discloses New Racket d hy four o'<'IO k. • A player on Susquehanna's foot­ New York, (A. C. P.)-"Insidi­ 11 <'1'<''14 a book hut ' a ball team wore the number "13" ous advertisements" which claim during a game. At the next game, to teach people to write constitute he appeared a numb r "3." liJ!'ht "one of the worst rackets of the injuries suffered while wearing present day," Mary Ellen Chase, t he "13" jersey caused him to novelist, recently told a class of ask oach Stagg for the change. Columbia University extension • tudents. Thousands of people, a Honor students at LaSalle will high percentage of them young from now on be granted some spe­ men and women, are being mulcted cial privileges such as additional by the "racket," Miss Chase de­ cuts. This is supposed to spur stu­ clared. d nts on to better work. Considerable ability, plenty of • • time and patience and an inde­ Debate teams from Oxford and pendent inc9me were classified by ambridge arrived in this country the author of "Mary Peters" as on October 29 or the B ren.gan-ia. important prerequisites for a li~ for a d bating tour of the coun­ erary career. luh t •·y. Th Oxford speakers will tour the mid-we tern states, the This week's advice : Don't : ay m lng ambridge team will meet schools burp- ay eractaite. w a h In In Ill , ut 12,:W p, m. DEER PARK HOTEL DINR ORIN It DANCH REASONAILf PRICES

CHARLES J. SISOFO Cuat- Tailor ud Haberdasher TUXEDOS TO HIRE 515 W. 4tla ST. WILMINGTON Dial 5577

EVERYBODY IS THERE­ DEL XE C NDY HOP Light LuDehes and Ta ty T ted andwich - I'LL MEET YOU THERE

Party ~>«oration• and FaYora B TL R' IN . HOE HOP t r Th t ppr lat 415 Market R nt EW OLD SON'S

ar , l. h aJMI ark .it in • Del. Il · t Th of Kells, DTB n n nt STORE 0 TR D 0

E AR TRU T CO . Mr. Cooch Of Wilmington

Addresses Athenaeans 1 Gregg And Saville Chosen To Attend International Relations , Club Conveatien In Syrac:uae

A the regular meeting of the 1 Athenean Society held on October !W, the meeting was addressed by Mr. Cooch, of the Equitable Trust Company in Wilmington. Mr. C orh is a former member of the ocicty. ~f r . Cooch discussed the history of t he society telling of various interesting events that occurred du ring his co1lege career. He con­ clucl d with an explanation of the qualifications necessary to pro­ curing a job after leaving college. Th executive council of the A hencan Society has elected Em­ mort Gregg and Joseph Saville to at end the convention of the In­ t rn ational Relations Club of wh ich the Athenean Society is a member. The Convention will be held iri Syracuse, N. Y., on No­ Ev retl . John n v mber 22 and 23. "H 7>lant d a rose and plucked a thom Wh r v r h thought a. rosf' would grow." Chesser' a Modernistic Set Wins Applause (Continued from Page 1) play reveal th assassin and promptly excu es the deed with a hint that murderers are always caught in the end. (Continued from Page 1) o much for the melodramatic pnrt of the play. As a comedy T. member of the Board of Trustees, lncr Wi.lley Keithley was uproari?us and was esp ially popular with I York - D fini a d I thtoughout as the . be~r-guzzhng students of both colleg .s. He ~as sub. tanlial enrollm n gain!! in h;·o h r who free~ h1s stater ~rom known to have mntenally a1ded olleg and univ rsi i !II through­ \ a nee by murdermg the rat m a many young men and women stu- ou the coun ry ar th , ord r of 1 clever double impersonation, tho' I dents here. h1 . teered c1ea: of entangling For many years Mr. Johnson alliances b! ~~kmg Max Sarnotf took an active part in the Alumni polyglot mdlVtdual. Beulah Pap- A!'l ociation, of which he wa p rman was an unusually refresh­ ing a pect of the per nnial maid . . artorial Bette McKelvy injected the flippancy of Daphne Martin well. Other 1 s r character fed he principals their cues, but nevet' r ally emerged a p opJe. More worthy than a footnote wa Stage-Manager Chesser's mod­ Prni tic t. pontaneous appJau gr ted the opening of Act 2, . cen 2 and we clap oor bands

allroom Dancing INSTRUCfiO S

• • • 6 ELAWARB REVIEW maintaining the high standard of Music Feature Of Job ' Ludwig Lewisohn This I First 'University News' th studen paper, THE REVIEW is Dramatization Thursday Sunday In Wilmington issued w ekly, primarily for the --- · d f p 1) ( ontinued from Page 1) I Walmin(ton: To Go Out This Friday und rgradunt s, and i concerned (c ontmue rom age m inly with undergraduate inter- Rams y. No efforts are being are g nerally recognized as among 1 ~ cy ~u~T F~i.F~~~~ J~' '' f modern times. Among b Olutely authen the be t O 1 Will Bt Issued To Alumni Ei1ht sts and activitie . This paper, · par d t 0 cure n s - 1 1 · . d thl f ti costumes. them are The Island Within, Up- I n~d 1d\~:~tu~e4' We ' ' At· • • • • 1 Time Aanaally By Chu. W. th e N ws, 1s 1s ue mon y or 1 Rlalt W'eek of , ' a\. E ... . the alumni and friends of the Uni- The cen ry 1s bemg destgned str am, and Mid Chan.nd. These ety Doctor," with 'Cheater lash, Editor v rsity and will concern it elf with an~ built by ~r. Go;don Chesser, are all to be found in the libraries forris nd \'irrmi Iln:ce undergradpate interests only in so asslsted by ~~l Eh.z~et; Arm- 1 and reading rooms all over the 1 1 This. Fri~ny, the first issue of far as they are a part of the gen- 1· tron~.. rr. mer · enson, 1 world. One of them u stream, th mverstty Ne.ws ~11 be .issued. era! news of the Uruveraity." l~ctnctan for th~ E 52 Playe!s, •. P S~~ o :ne.~. ot~t36" 1 r .• "B~ . , This new bulletm 18 to be pub- M B h' . . d. . . Will be at the sWltchboard. Mtss has be n translated mto fifteen Fri. and Sat., ''Annap, :, Pare. liBhed eight times a year in order . r .. us fsFprmhc1pa 1 ewttokna 1Hls fargaret Waples is in charge of differ nt languages. well" . . d . m prat e o re man . ee . e mak op . . . ~~oFI:e~~. Tues , " 1a.rd r lA to k p atumn1 and .f:t?n 1'1 1n- contrasts this ystem whereby the · . . I The admtsston charge for tb1s for.med . of campus acbvlttes. The I ntel'ing tudents are told "what .The mustc for the production lecture is fifty cents. The general Edttor JR Mr. harl . W. Bu h. to do where to do it and how to Wlll be played on the organ by 1 bl' . d'all1 . 'ted to t- The first isBue containl'l eight tackl~ it" with the old hit-and-miss I Mrs. Charles D. Harding. pu lC IS cor Y. mVl a paying up to $40 a mon h, it wu pages and gives a summary of the I syst m in which the :fre hmen Preceding the play, Dr. Sypherd Itend. announced here I t week. prin ipal o curr nc s at Delaware floundered about, feeling as will deliver an address on the sub- • The work will con :i. rhit>fty of Bince last June. It also contains . through they were unwanted out- ject, "The English Bible." The Yale Accepts N.Y.A. Aid research investigations in ape. faculty changes, new courses, ath- siders. Imaterial for this talk has been for Needy Students cialized fields. The rea on for re­ Jetic schedule!'!, and editorial com- In another article on the fresh- gathered by Dr. Sypherd after ments on all of these. • men, it is pointed out that the many year of .work as a Biblical New Haven, Conn., (A. C. P.) fusal of aid last year waa aald Mention il'l made of the fact that I days in which freshmen were "fair scholar and edt tor. -Yale has reversed its attitude to b th fact that a thn ti me the maximum amount offered waa f15 th News is in no way to conflict game, with no closed seas n" ar The general public is invited to of last year and will accept Fed­ I I a month. This prevented the stu­ with TnE REVIEW. To quote the over. The whole ystem is changed participate in the celebration. No eral aid for its needy graduate dent from seeking other emplor­ article in the Un.i·versity News, ' and, according to Mr. Bush, for I admission is being charged. No I and professional students, with "With the efficient staff which is ' th better. eat will be. reserved. 102 students slated for NY A jobs ment. I •

Well to start with, we take tobacco from our own Southland - mild ripe tobacco with lots of natural flavor but no harshness or bitterness.

TIIEN AS A SECOND STEP- We blend this home-grown tobacco with spicy, aromatic Turkish tobaccos from across the seas. These Turkish tobaccos, you may know, have a flavor and fragrance entirely different from our own. AS A THIRD STEP- The e tobacco are cro -blended­ welded together-the be t way we•ve found to et a more plea ing tlavor and a b tter taste in a cigarette.

THAT1S WHY CHESTERFIELDS ARE fiLD D YET THEY SATISFY

''· ie>----- AND PARAGRAPH I U '

rHE l ' 1PI R E M I SED THIS NE , , But the camera caught thts smooth tackle

I ,1nd tlH' ht t of tnct I ntt~l han !work, hy ,ahfornta ' P rry Thomas (46 ), when th P...-.tr d,· ,. 1 l'd St M .uv · 'l.

y ~ ..,.

FAMft

e If you haft snrcbed for cipnne mildn mark the word o( Geor1e Lott, the tennis champioo, and tbe 7- loal polo cu, yril Harrison. "Camels," says Mr. Hanison, "are so mild tb

Some of lht famous alhltlts who apJW()f)e of Camel's miiJ11ess

ASIIALLs Gabby Hartnett, Chica1o Cubs; Tommy Brid1a. uoit Ti1en; Dizzy Dean, t. I uiJ Cudinal ; Lou Gehris, New York Yaakees; Memo Ott, New rk Giants.

T NNIS: Ellsworth Vines, Jr.; J1 illiam T . Tilclea, 2nd; Geor1e M. I tt, Jr.; Lester ll. S«oefn; Bruce r a.

UsGflMSe.rue Crail Wood, 'lllllll'l An.oar, illie Macfarlane, I len Hicb, Denoy ute. f R. ~ < ~ JH . , , -; ur h ·"' m.tktng th '1 o ll )l('.tliiV Llt'.IOI ", .11r th' tn.IJ!ll tntt'll'" ' " o dW'l(' m ·mht'l · n Mu C:ht St~m . t , ymct I. JUJ)(:I·J Y '" tlw tw ptt•stdt·nt of tht· wnnwn 's dormttnrv hono r .tr v '•nt·r1 1 t' · 11 nrt tv .1 I l ~'i.l k 1.1111111 ,tl w. .... hutgloll l lnt vn ·HIV {St Lmu o; ), .I m.qor .tmpu<, P t•nn ~;y l v . ttll . l ( :nl lt· ,,. for n flllt' t ll\' t' ft• d h\ fl i ,UIV. W nnu•11

harnt · u.;uallv ht Jd,· n I

e If you hav searched for 1p;arctt~ mlldne \, mark ch~ wore! of , orp;e Lon, tht' tt•nnl\ hampion, and th 7 Jtual polo \tar, ( yrd Harri on. " .amels," ay, Mr. Harrison, "are 'o mild th · don't Ufl ·c tht• nerve: or aff·et the wmd And when I'm tirt:"d I .R 1 .. ' lift' wuh a Cam~l." And lott •dds : " I undt'r tand that mo rt' l"ll fl """ cuhat cos ar us d '" .am •b . Th • art' p;t-ntl on th throat And am I nt'v,.r g~t my wind." Turn to Camels and njo to th • full thr pit-;~ ure that omcs from coJ t/'" tobaccos.

ome of the famou athletes who approve Camel's mildne

ASEIALL : Gabby Hartnt'u, hica ~o ubs ; Tommy Rrid.Rc tr it Tiger ; Dizzy 0 n, t . o uis rdinal ; lou G hrig, New rk Yankee ; M~lvin tt. New ,rk iants.

NNIS : Ell wonh Vint',, Jr.; tlliam T. Tilden, 2nd ; eorgc M n, Jr., ~ ter R. toe fen ; Bruce rn .

LF:Gcne anun, .raitt W ood, myArmour,WiiJ_j Macfarlan , le n Hi ks. Denny hutr.

CK AND FIElD: Jim Baus h. p1c athlon Ch mptnn , •rtc Barker, Formu lntercol· te Cro~ - ountry bamp10n . t n, 01 mpic hot · Put rnpion.

IMMING: H I ne Mad1son. r ruscr. J05-Cphinc M K 1m, ,. , n~. Jane Faun

• J I II .,f 111 " It !1 uf 'I\ •'I 11. 111 11111 ttrt 'u.:lt r ' I h rttllt , ...n, ·•· r,·.l hv

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lontal ttmcs c;urvtv ~ m the e nttally box-hk hall th.lt fir o; t w re [ rtm uth, Dtckmson, nd Rutgers. The fir t frankly wtthout ben fit of archttect, both h oth rs boast profe 1onal as 1 tance. Begmnmg m 17Qt, I al carpenter bwldmg Dart· w m uth H. II d man d c;om dec ratton even m the llc-g that ro ao; a teach r-trammg , dJuhct to 0 ~ I zar Whe I k' backwoods lndi n hool. A s m . 0 ..olomal t1m , th contmuous cornice g ts the mam t~EAC@ 1cc nt. Th ongm I cupola, very light an up-to-date EVE A. YTH in , cht vmg a som what "Chmese" effect, te ttfie to &LA C'< F th sklll anu f ncy f som Hanover carpenter. Archttectural alfatrs were radically dttferent in OW L HE r8o3 when Otckmson' .. ld Wet lleg " was IT IS Nl hudt. The tmposmg talents f Ben.ramm Henry HOO TS tr he were ngaged to d tgn tt, between much FRO G C v !; t r proJ cts m archttecture and engineering for Phtlad lphta nu Balttmore. In f. The ground floor is "treated" as a basement IN TI ME around r8oo. uterally a base for the "composition "- aJl more or ASS IGN Architect or non • howev r, Dtckinson's "Old less French ideas, which were then prevalent. NEXT l " har th virtues and limitation of Colonial Judging by what is left today, Rutgers profited colleg buildings whtch "Time has consoled" as a more from her architect's cidvice than did Dickinson r ward ~ r their straightforward reflection of their But the Colonial tradition, ruling alone at Dart­ ttm and plac . mouth, was stiU virile evervwhere. Traces of tt remain as a stabilizing influence ·all through the R T RS in r&x) 1 the first coll(>ge to show the architecturally troubled 19th Century. archttect's careful tudy. He was the mysterious John M e m • a nat1ve Am ncan, of whom little is known except that he wa . lso nga ec.J in building 'This is the fifth in a stnes of exclustve articles on N w York' Old City Hall. American ollege Archttecture. 7'~ sixth, to appear "Queen's Budc.Jm~( ts tmprPsstve at fir t sight by next wee~. w1ll d1scuss interesting histories and bUJldmgs v1rtu of its carefullv cut and dre d stone- a local of Union College and the University of Virginia. ASLEEP wooo. 0 BLOCK ON OWl'S HEA ':@) MAKING EVE ~ H HING GO &LAC ' FOR THE OW L HE THINKS IT IS N IGHT AND HOO S SCAR.I N G FP.O @WHO LEA S FOR VPP R PLATFORM DRA GGI NG MATC H ACROSS SA PAPER@. MATC H Ll GHTS SKYR OCKET WHICH TIPS BUCKET OF WATE R® ON STU DE NT AND AW AK ENS HIM IN TI ME TO HEAR ASSIGNMENT FOR. NE XT LECTURE Colonial Hangovers: What Price Architecture?

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