, Founded 1876 Vol. LXXV, No. 216 PRINCETON, N. J, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2. 1952 Price Five Cents II - The Death of a Free Country Dean Says Date of Late Spring Vacation Tritschler Named Determined by 'Late Swing' of Formula Captain; "Spring Vacation is the latest that and spring vacation from April 2 to9. Bunn Award Goes toDeVoe Freedom From Fear it can possibly be scheduled this year, Easter falls on the fifth. from April 5 to 14, because we've hit Affects Bermuda Vacations A Message From Behind the Iron Curtain the late swing of our formula for de- This year, however, many students By Paul B. Firstenberg '55 termining the school year," Dean of are complaining because most of the Fred Tritschler, junior forward, the College Francis R. B. Godolphin Eastern college have their vacations a was named captain-elect of the Tiger '24 stated yesterday. week earlier. Reservations at the Stu- squad for 1952-53, and "Every university has its formula, dent Travel Bureau for trips to Ber- senior guard Chuck DeVoe was sometimes vacations coincide, and muda have, fallen off by 75 per cent awarded the B. Franklin Bunn Tro- sometimes they don't," he continued. with only 15 men registered at that phy, the highest honor Princeton can "This is the first time in my experi- agency. The Princeton Rugby team confer upon an individual basketball ence that Princeton has been this far will be unable to compete in the tour- player, at the annual basketball out of step with the others." naments at Bermuda. awards dinner held last night in Oi3- Depends on Commencement born Field House. The University's formula for de- Tritschler was high scorer on this termining the school year states that year's championship Commencement must be on the. Tues- Yale's Buckley quintet, racking up 333 points and day between June 11 and 17. This smashing two Princeton scoring rec- year Commencement is the latest it To Talk ords in the proccus. Both Bernie can possibly be, June 17. The college Tonight Adams' mark for most points scored year must start 38 weeks before this by a Princeton player in one season date and spring vacation comes eight About Freedom and George Lawry's record for most weeks after the beginning of the sec- points scored by a Princeton player ond term. William F. Buckley Jr., the author m one Ivy League season were topped If Easter is on the eighth Sunday of the controversial book, God and by the slenddr forward. after the new term, the vacation is Man at Yale, will speak on"The Su- 30 Points Against Penn scheduled from the Thursday before perstitions of Academic Freedom" to- The new captain-elect turned in one of the top individual performances to the Thursday after Easter. How- night at 7:15 in the Common Room of ever, this year Easter falls on the the Graduate College. of Tiger basketball history when he HRADCANY CASTLE, with the spires of its Cathedral rising above it, ninth Sunday; so University 1 scored 30 points against Pennsylvania | the. gives Buckley, who went to Yale in 1946 captain graces the skyline of Prague. Ten thousand students tried to reach Presi- i FRED TRITSCHLER, elected ] on court. inspired its vacation during Holy Week. after serving in the Army during the of next year's basketball I their home His dent Benes in the castle after the Communist overthrow of the government. team. performance Next year the University will start war, headed the Yale Daily News enabled the Tigers to By George Hartman as told to William S. McClanahan '55 on the backward swing of its formula during the year before his gradua- top the Quakeits 79-77 and sent them (George Hartman, a graduate student in architecture at Princeton with Commencement one day earlier tion in 1950. A.s chairman he aroused SDA Will Support on their way to the Ivy title and University, was born in Czechoslovakia in 1925.He. has vividly recalled three an apathetic readership with his live- the NCAA playoffs. episodes from his experiences as a political prisoner of the Nazis from 1942- ly editorials which the class historian Stevenson in 1952, Playing his best when the pressure 1945,as a witness of the Communist overthrow of his democratic Czech gov- Nassoons Will Sing said "neatly undercut tolerance and i was at its greatest, Tritschler also set ernment in 1948 and as a refugee from the grip of Red terrorism. The sec- everything to the left of Senator Paul '53 Announces the scoring record ond of .these episodes follows.) In Puerto Rico Hotel Taft." by dunking in a new high of 24 pointa againet Cornell in the Ivy League's In April, 1945, when the first Subversion of Christianity The Princeton Chapter of the Stu- American tanks liberated Buchen- Vacation Jog dents for Democratic Action an- game of the year. Communist programs. Even President During God and Man at Yale is Mr. Buck- wald hoped a new Both Tritschler and DeVoe were prison, I to start Benes was not allowed to speak to his ley's answer to what he terms the nounced yesterday that they were life forget the To live backing Governor named the All-Ivy League quintet and past. in people. The police were infiltrated by The Princeton Nassoons will travel subversion of Christianity and indi- Adlai E. Steven- to of such would of Illinois for with picking up the additional the shadow memories the Communists. •to Puerto Rico on their annual spring- vidualism by allowing individual fa- son '22 the Democratic DeVoe be ghastly, if not impossible. For candidacy for President. honor of topping all other Ivy league Students March to See President vacation trip, tour manager Barry C culty members to teach as they see more years un- yesterday. SDA president players in minutes played this year. three I tried to live The next day, some 10,000 students Phelps '53 announced It is fit, if they are "honest and profes- Peter C. Paul '53 der the pretention that there would from Charles University assembled to the first time, that the group has sionally competent." made it clear that the decision was Three-Year Veteran no more wars, or made an- DeVoe captained be camps. I tried to proceed to the residence of Benes at traveled such a distance from the Buckley believes that a university before President Truman Cappy Cappon's do that would second club the last as anybody else would—to live the Hradcany Castle. Everything seemed U. S., although they have been to faculty should represent the alumni nounced he definitely not title-winning in a run three years and the first Princeton normal life of college student with lost. The absurd had happened. We Bermuda in the past. through the rulings of the trustees. again. The vote was taken in his daily worries about connection with a poll being con- basketball team to compete in a post- examinations, marched, with no noise or shouting, in The popular songsters will enter- Buckley is alarmed at the evidence sports and girls and simply enjoy of ducted by the national board the season tournament. This veteran of to perfect single file. While we were tain with their repertoire 50 songs of atheism on the Yale campus and of the. life of a free Czechoslovakia. Beach Hotel San organization, which is composed of 80 three of varsity competition, marching to the castle, thousands of at the. Condado at in the classroom, and how these seasons That this was not possible is ob- chapters. two as a regular, was Cappon's organized Communistswere assembled Juan, Puerto Rico. The trip is being views are fostered by the faculty. vious enough today. The story of American Airlines. The organized primarily to steady performer this season. The in the main square of Prague. sponsored by Pan He also states that the Yale Econom- SDA, well known all of Room promote student interest local and Bunn Trophy winner was an- Czechoslovakia, to We. wanted to see the President, to Sing In Fiesta ics Department undermines individ- in out- you, should serve as a warning any national also plans standing ball-handler and paseer, to reassure him that the students would The Nassoons will leave Princeton ualism by concentrating on collectiv- political affairs, act- big or which is delegates Convention of ing as Princeton's field general. democracy, small, not yield to. any terror, no matter on Friday and fly directly to Puerto ist theories and "Responsibilities of to send to the carrying on a fight against a totalit- whether it was Nazi or Communist. Rico. While there, they will do most the State." Americans for Democratic Action to Hal Ha.bbestad, high scorer on this arian regime. the same c.f their entertaining at the Fiesta fee held in Washington, D. C, next season's yearling squad, was named In 1939, nine years earlier, "Extraordinary Incongruity" Communist Arrival Is Surprise type of student demonstration had Room of the hotel, popular meeting month. captain of the freshman team. Buckley believes that "an institu- you had come me a few days place for island's American col- If to been checked by the Nazis with sev- the tion deriving its before the Communists took over the lege contingent. moral and financial eral executions and hundreds of de- support from Christian coalition government of Czechoslo- Eleven to Make Trip individualists portations. produces an extraordinary incongru- Murray-Dodge Ceiling Collapses, vakia and had told me that this would Police Block Street Eleven men will make the trip, ity by persuading the sons of these happen, I would have laughed in your This time again we faced the police. Phelps revealed. First will be tenors supporters to be atheistic socialists." face. The idea sounded absurd. Czech- The tragedy that it was not the Phelps and William R. Pickering '53. Nearly Strikes Princeton Student was Tonight Buckley will talk on how the oslovakia, with her traditional dem- German police, but that the Czechs Second tenors are Dunbar Abston Jr. ■ Superstitions of Academic Free- ocratic spirit, with leaders such as going against their own coun- James Larkin '53 and William were '53, D. dom have, caused this situation. President Masaryk and President trymen. A cordon of police blocked G. Thomas '54. In addition to his activities on the Benes, was not going to follow the ex- us in the, narrow and steep Nerudova The baritones are President Lamb- paper, Buckley was Class Orator and ample of Russia, Poland or Hungary. Street, leading up the hill the cas- ert Heyniger '53, Garrit L. Schoon- to a member of the secret Skull and On February 24, 1948,none but the tle. demanded that a delegation maker and Jeremiah Ford We '53 III '54. Bones society. Communist newspapers were distri- of students be sent to the. President. Lewis T. Byron '53, Clark M. Drie- buted in Prague. The government ra- We began to shout very loudly and in meyer '53 and Richard G. Jones Jr. dio station broadcast nothing but (Continued on page four) '54 are the basses. Triangle Club Plans Two Princeton Alumni, Stevenson and Williams, Songwriting Contest In Older to distribute a new tune Considered Presidential Nomination Possibilities with possibilities of becoming a popu- lar hit this summer, the Triangle Club will sponsor a songwriting con- Adlai E. Stevenson '22, Governor of terested in doing what I can to serve ernor in a January cover article, and test for the writers who responded to Illinois, seemed yesterday one of the them." Life cited him among the top pos- the Triangle call yesterday. most likely candidates for the Demo- With President Truman not a can- sibilities. In the. past several Triangle songs cratic Presidential nomination. didate, Williams will almost certainly Stevenson-Kefauver have become national favorites. These The Princeton alumnus, who has go to the convention as a favorite, son Mercer County Representative include two songs by Brooks Bow- not yet indicated whether he would choice. Despite these votes-in-hand, it Charles R. Howell, a Democrat, an- man, "East of the Sun" and "Love accept his party's bid if it were of- was generally felt that Williams does nounced yesterday that he would sup- on a Dime," from the 1934 show, fered to him, returned to Illinois from not intend to make a serious bid un- port a Stevenson-Kefauver ticket. "Stag at Bay," directed by Joshua Washington leaving behind him a til 1956. More commonly mentioned has been a Logan '31. Last year Charleston fans great wake of political speculation. Vice-Presidency, slate led by Stevenson and Richard across the nation wild went over Photo by Richard Weeks '54 Although he said in Chicago that He has already indicated that he Russell, Senator from Georgia. "Steam Roller Ball" from F. Operators FALLING PLASTER nearly hit a Princeton Sophomore yesterday in the "my status is quo, I'm running for would accept a Vice-Presidential support for former not Popular the "Too Hot for Toddy." lounge at Murray-Dodge. The hole was about twelve feet square. Governor of Illinois," many observers nomination. If he changes his mind, Managing Editor of the Princeton- At the same time Donald J. Suth- felt that Stevenson was more unlikely his chance of winning the spot de- ian began to appear yesterday. erland '53, Publicity Director of Tri- Arguments for the speedy construc- Weeks was standing at the maga- than ever to turn down an offer. pends largely on Stevenson's eventual In St. Louis and Chicago, -Steven- angle, announced that songs from tion of the proposed Chancellor Green zine rack in the present Center's A.nother Midwestern governor and position. The Democrats almost cer- son-for-President clubs were formed, Eye," with lyrics lounge, when about twelve square written Campus Center received a substantial Princeton alumnus was also men- tainly would not put up a slate head- and Governor Dennis Roberts of by F. Scott Fitzgerald, will be pre- feet of ceiling nearly crushed him. boost yesterday when a large section tioned as a possible candidate. ed by two Midwestern governors. announced that he fa- sented on WPRU tonight at 11:15 There was apparently no connection Williams "Interested" Williams' possible candidacy was vored Stevenson. by the Triangle Club. of the Murray-Dodge ceiling collapsed. between yesterday's mishap and the G. Mermen Williams '33, Michigan not widely mentioned until President It has been generally believed that Charles H. Schultz '54, Hugh G. The heavy plaster fell at about closing of the Center earlier this year governor, announced Monday that "if Truman withdrew. On the other hand, President Truman's own favorite can- Hardy '54 and Peter A. K. Reese '54, 3:05 p .m. It ruined a table, a lamp because of filth. Some students, nev- the people want my services on the Stevenson has long been considered. didate was the Illinois Governor. Tru- accompanied by Glenn G. Paxton Jr. and — nearly — Richard F. Weeks ertheless, saw in the event another national level, I certainly will be in- Time magazine featured the. Gov- man has refused to deny this. '53, will do the singing. '54. argument for the new Center. 2 THE DAILY PRINCETONIAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1952

Behind the Screen A Valuable Commodity SENSATIONAL The Daily PRINCETONIAN By Richard L. Milliard '52 The star creates the category of picture Western, 2S*~FoundecL 1876 ~\*± — musical, comedy, romance, cloak and dagger, etc. If you see that Esther Williams is billed in a certain feature, Record by The Daily Princetonian Publishing Company, Inc. 1910 Sale Issued 30%-OfS Julius Ochs Adler '14 President you go for certain reasons and if the studio is clever, B. Franklin Bunn '07 Secretary-Treasurer Whitney Darrow '03 Edmund S. DeLong '22 you are not disappointed. Hollywood feels that, unless a EVERY RECORD AND RECORD ALBUM IN William H. Rentschler '49 picture is of such a fascinating nature that it needs no OUR ENTIRE STOCK SLASHED A GIGANTIC Published five times a week during the college year by The Daily star appeal (The Thing, Wlien Worlds Collide), it must Princetonian Publishing Co. Offices: Blair Hall, Princeton. Sub- 30%-0FF...50 COME, COME, COME TO THE scription rate: $1.25 a month : $5 a term ; $9.50 a year. Bntered at the otherwise have a big name attached Post Office. Princeton, N. J., as Second Class Matter- under the act of MUSIC SHOP YOU'LL SAVE, SAVE, 12, 1879. to it. It is interesting to see how the WHERE March RECORDS John A. Corry '53, Chairman studios calculate the type of audi- SAVE ON RECORDS OLD AND NEW, ence which will be interested in the R. Quiintus Anderson '53. Business Manager YOU'VE ALWAYS WANTED, RECORDS YOU film and try to star a person who NEWS STAFF MAY NEVER AGAIN BE ABLE TO GET AT Jon O. Newman '53, Managing Editor will reinforce the appeal or draw in Vincent R. Duffy '53, Associate Managing Editor new I however, ex- THESE SENSATIONAL LOW, LOW PRICES. John K. Maitland '53w Associate Managing Editor customers. cannot, Thomas C. Matthews Jr. '53. Feature Editor plain the rumor that Van Johnson SALE POSITIVELY ENDS SATURDAY, APRIL Richard M. Schisgall '53, Sports Editor James W. Effron '53, Operations Director will play the part of Vincent Van Winthrop D. Thies '53, Personnel Director sth; REBATES AND CHARGING PRIVILEGES Gogh. Possibly, the studio feels that Wednesday, April AS ALWAYS AT YOUR REBATE MUSIC SHOP. 2, 1952 the bobby-soxers (or whoever John- Hilliard son appeals to) will be drawn into EDITORS FOR THIS ISSUE: intrigues of the painter's life. me William B. Hetzel Jr. Peter L. Garrett A star cannot be created by the studio. The publicity Business Editor: Bill Berghuis men can do a lot to surround a "name with glamour and MVJIC legend," and the producer can be sure, the star is cast 16 Nassau Street well, but the public must provide the final ingredient. /HOP Phone 80 Princeton Will Benefit It will be lured by a "name" when it discovers that the star can be counted upon to provide consistently a cer- From Glee Club Trip tain type of character. It is a known fact that such an actor is usually not

the year Princeton organizations i— Throughout past able to act different roles, In my opinion the most skill- . of all sizes and varieties have been making trips to - - ful star in American movies is Clark Gable. In The ~ ___—_ the name various parts of the country and spreading Hucksters he retired into a .telephone booth, inserted — of the University in the process. First it was the the proper coin and made a call to one of his numerous wh its to more re- Your Best PRINCETON ° *»■'*«» / team and trip Omaha, and girls. Nothing could be heard through the booth, but he 1 the tour the five's Go to the Best SHOE SERVICE Shir,» B»t? cently Triangle and Varsity par- provided every intonation through a superb pantomime ticipation in the NCAA finals in Chicago have con- JACK HONORE'S Serving Princetonians " ItpvT^P and ended with a sly kiss into the speaker which brought since 1919 w*~ ,\ M yf) fH&hvr^*~ However, none uAT?Tnr¥> cirfYD . tinued the trend. 11AOSAU appreciative sighs from the feminine audience as well SS Nielli street « have on d»mssau street (Entrance' through Zinders) M /^v^__ of these groups embarked as envious giggles from the males. fkjK as ambitious a project as that un- this "acting" the finer sense of dertaken by the Princeton Glee Obviously, is not in word, but it brings in the cash. Obviously, too, one Club in its trip to the West Coast the must have cash to make a movie. Therefore, in most pic- starting last night. necessary make a compromise. If the di- Besides setting some sort of tures, it is to sincerely interested elevating en- precedent in travelling so exten- rector is in providing he star his expected per- sively by plane, the Glee Club is tertainment, must use the in also the first Princeton organiza- sonality but add subtleties to other parts of the film. Carrigan started with an almost tion to journey west of Denver, A work like A Place in the Sun hopeless cast from the point of view of versatile acting' where the hockey team made an appearance a year used his opponents' abilities to ago. President Stokes Carrigan and the other Glee ability, but the director advantage created a very fine film. The fact that Club officers are to be congratulated the amount and fc/r lack of work have put into this trip in order to in- other directors cannot do the same illustrates the they rather than sure its success. of ability and poor aspirations of directors inherent defects of the "star system." A large amount of credit is also in order for the the Princeton alumni in the cities to be visited by the Club. Besides putting up most of the money to fi- your nance the Club's appearance, these alumni are doing Behind the Ivy Curtain Aviation most of the work in organizing the concerts in the various cities. It is especially encouraging to note Kaz Enters New Field; that in the West, where the alumni have not been Career so fortunate as their Eastern classmates in entertain- Dodds Saved From Water ing groups from Campus, there is the same sort of By Princeton Cholly spirit and drive to make the Glee Club's visit a KAZ HAS DONE IT AGAIN!, according to an ad in successful one. Without such strong alumni support, a nationwide magazine. The advertisement, run by the a concert tour like this would be impossible. House of Kaz, 210 Fifth Aye., New York, leads off with will be the direct beneficiary the statement, "ONLY 5 MINUTES A DAY for a MORE WORK of this tour, if the good-will aroused by similar GLAMOROUS BUST LINE." The item then goes on to INTERESTING AVAILABLE IN journeys to other parts of the country in past years describe a new scientific discovery called the COIL TEN- THE FOLLOWING FIELDS: is to be any criterion. We wish the Glee Club the SION DEVELOPER, "a lightweight, streamlined ex- . greatest success possible on its transcontinental trip. ercising developer specifically de- AIRPLANES signed to help DEVELOP, TONE • and FIRM the underlying muscles HELICOPTERS supporting the breasts which are im- • A Building Revolts portant for bustline beauty." The, ad GUIDED MISSILES concludes with the startling info that • The collapse of the ceiling in Murray-Dodge Hall PROPULSION yesterday has many implications which bear the most the COIL TENSION DEVELOPER plus Chart can be had for only $5.95 • serious thought. Contentions that it was merely a Fool's joke the old building prepaid, and a manual for Bust harmless April that Henry campus was trying to perpetrate on unsuspecting loungers Beauty Care will be included free. Mr. Bursian will conduct interviews serious Commented former, "Prince" chair- at the Bureau of Student Placement on Wednesday, beneath do not hold up under investigation. Cholly what the old edifice was trying to protest is man Bill Rentschler '49, who sent in April 2, and Thursday, April 3. Applications and Just apparently multiple interests." hard to ascertain, however. the item, "Our hero has company literature are immediately available from One cause might be the impending removal of * * * the Sykes. the Campus Center, which has livened the place up ALAN W. RICHARDS, übiquitous and unquenchable office of Mr. Gordon considerably. Maybe, even though the SCA is an- University photographer, was approached at the finals the, Saturday night by a For those Princeton graduates who seeking the xious to be rid of the sandwich bar, Murray-Dodge of NCAA swimming meet young are itself isn't so happy about the whole thing. townie, who offered to push President Harold W. Dodds most challenging work in the engineering and devel- The janitor issue might also have shaken loose into the pool as he was congratulatingwinners for a mere opment of high performance aircraft, there is an five-dollar fee. townie was to get the not the plaster. That Princetonians could get so excited (The fee, excellent opportunity at McDonnell for you. You about the impending possibility of having to make Dodds.) Richards nobly refused to get the picture of the chief declining was are invited to call on Bursian and discuss in detail their own beds may have come as quite a shock. year, but apparently his motive in Mr. Or maybe the plaster fell over religious contro- fear of not getting satisfaction for his five dollars. your future. versy. The chosen spot was right under Keith * * * knack Beebe's office, but the possibility that Mr. Beebe PROFESSOR GORDON CRAIG, noted for his LAMBERT ST. LOUIS MUNICIPAL AIRPORT might have been stamping his feet was ruled out by of lighting a cigarette in lecture without missing a syl- the fact that he is in the Middle West. lable, fouled up last week and had to ask a student for a injury, the prof's lighter LOUIS 3, Mo. The fallen plaster has one good ramification. All cigarette. Adding insult to ST. the ceilings in Murray-Dodge received a thorough was out of fluid and he had to get matches from another check yesterday afternoon. student. THE DAILY PRINCETONIAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1952 3 OFFICIAL NOTICES Marriage Course Members desir- 6:00—United Press World News ing rebates stop at — Tues- 6:05—Dinner Music Tiger Wins IAA Cage Title day and Wednesday, Apr. 1-2, 1:00- 6:55—New YorkTimes World News History Theses All theses being --1:20 to get questionnaires. 1-2 7:00—Romance and Rhythm Sports written under the—supervision of the Outing Club — Meeting of execu- 7:30—The Girlfriends History Department are due on or be- tive committee Wednesday, Apr. 2, 8:00—United Press World News In Last Second, 48 to 47 fore Monday, Apr. 14, at 5 p. m. at 7:30, 121 Cuyler. 1-2 8:05—Drama: The Hitchhiker the History Office. Students are re- Pre-Medical Students — Opening on 8:55—Tiger Sports Parade minded that the original copy, either Princeton Summer Camp Staff as 9:00—Ford. Concert Hall Angles permanently bound or in a temporary Camp medical and health'officer. Con- 10:00—Nickelodeon Palace binding, must be turned in on April tact Clark M. Simms, 231 Wither- 10:30—A Date with Dixie 14; a permanently bound carbon copy spoon. 11:00—Bill Linden and the News By William T. Dalton '54 must be in the departmental office no Sons of Confederate Veterans — 11:15—Music of Princeton with Ln 1904, Princeton graduated one later than the beginning of Compre- Meeting, Green Room, Nass, Wednes- Triangle Show 1915 ever hensives. day, Apr. 2, 8. Talk by Prof. Craven. 11:30—RequestParade of the best center fielders to 1-3 J. A. ISELY of 1-2 12:00—Midnight Symphony cavort around the outer pastures Junior Year Abroad All applica- —Meeting, Tuesday, 1:00—Sign Off University Field. More than that, tions for Junior year abroad— must be Apr. 1, 4:30, Murray Theatre. Wallace B. Cosgrave gained a reputa- in Dean Finch's hands by 4:30 today. Tiger Edit staff, candidates, re- ATHLETIC NOTICES port to — Wednesday, tion as one of the freshest but funni- Students for Germany should make a office, 4:15, Apr. token application at this time even est guys ever to take leave of Nas- though their formal applications will Advertising Staff turn in reports Hockey Pictures — Pay for pictures sau Hall via a respectable route, and not be complete. by Thursday, Apr. 3 to Gregg, 113 Jo- immediately. See Jerry Eckfeldt, 81 Wally added this in subsequent D. W. ALDEN line. Holder. to Wrestling Banquet Wednesday, years as a semi-pro player through- Life-Saving Course Instructors Undergraduates Turn in contri- — course begins — butions of short stories,— Apr. 2, 6:30, Osborn Field House. out the East. Monday, Apr. 14, 4:30. artioles, plays, (Continued on page: four i Senior course begins Monday, Apr. 21, poems, for Houseparties Issue of Nas- Princeton officials have long since 4:30. Classes will be held Monday sau Lit at Lit office, Whig Hall base- given up attempting to locate the through Thursday at 4:30 entire ment, by April 19. 2-4 number of baseball uniforms which spring term. Sign up at pool office Westchester Club Party, Thurs- this day, Apr. — the week. 10, 2:30, Parking Lot at disappeared from the campus in 1-4 H. L. CANOUNE Saxon Woods. Bring beer, date. In more than years 1901-1904, but it's Marine PLC's—Those who desire to case of r-ain, party Saturday. 2-3 likely that Eddie Donovan would take part in firing demonstrations on WPRU SCHEDULE gladly give up a few uniforms if he afternoon of 16 and 17 April contact Wednesday could find a Cosgrave to hawk the Lt. Poillon prior to noon Thursday, from WTOA-FM 3 April. 4:oo—United Press World News fly balls which go center field out 31-3 ARTHUR J. POILLON 4:os—Record Hits way this year. The tall, lean out- s:oo—Bandstand Review fielder captained the Tiger nine in his senior year and returned as a UNIVERSITY NOTICES coach in 1906 and 1907. one beating JACK DODDS shoots for Tiger in IAA championship battle with Pyne last Cosgrave was not for night. foreground. Tiger won game, 48 to 47, Princetonian—Editors for next is- Dick Conroy of Pyne is in the sue: around the bush. On the day after on a last second free throw by Jack McCune. Main, Dalton; Heads, Femald. graduation he found his way across Meeting of the News Board in the of- from A free throw by Jack McCune in the last second of play gave Cabinet Room of Murray-Dodge, 4:30 the mud-flats this afternoon. Today thru Sat. Tigertown to Hoboken and strolled a 48-47 victory over Pyne and the lAA basketball championship last night. Chapel Choir Rehearsal for tour- into offices of the local semi- McCune's free throw climaxed a hectic eecond half during which the- lead — "DEADLINE, U. S. A." the ing choir Wednesday, Apr. 2, at 5 in With pro club. There he learned that changed hands nine times. the Chapel crypt. sank Humphrey Bogart manager Dave Driscoll who later Dodds Leads Scoring a percentage of .305 while Pyne Freshman Glee Club Rehearsal — 20 of 66 for a .303 percentage. — became an executive with the Brook- Jack Dodds scored 19 points to out Wednesday, 7:15, Alexander Hall. Ethel Barrymore Kirn Hunter cor- Box score: Jazz Club Meeting, Wednesday, - lyn Dodgers was down at the lead the scoring for Tiger, while — Joseph dc Santis — (Continued on page fouj) Apr. 2, 4:30, 51 Little. Bring Record. ner having a shave. Dick Conroy scored 18 for Pyne. 1-2 3:00, 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. went down to the corner Cosgrave Warren Perkins of Pyne was third ". so this witch doctor says, barber shop, opened the door and . with 14 points. Read... 'Me want Angostura* in drink hollered, "Is there a guy named Dris- Tiger . unable solve the Pyne was to like connoisseur—or else!' coll here?" defense for most of the game, having OUR LEFTIST ECONOMIC THESES AND " Driscoll, an amiable but quick- to resort to long set shots. TEACHING tempered Irishman, raised himself broke a lead MANUSCRIPTS Tiger into 19-to-8 at by Lvdwig yon Mises Today & Tomorrow slightly from the barber's chair and the end of -the first quarter, but a TYPED answered "Yeah, I'm Driscoll." Pyne rally cut the margin to 26-24 "CAGE OF GOLD" you." A British Production—With "Well, I wanta play ball for at the half. . . . by . AROMATIC BITTERS "If you could wait till I'm through . . Jean Simmons David Farrar In the second half neither team MAKES BETTER DRINKS and would lower - my shave your with could move more than four points in JOAN COMINS Madeleine Lebeau is the word what be able to talk to *P.S. Magic for voice, I might front. With one minute remaining James Donald Angostura does for Manhattans and Old you." two free throws by Conroy tied the First Nat'l Bank Bldg. 3:00, 7:00 & 8:50 P.M. Fashioneds. It brings harmony lo the in- "Well, how long're y'gonna be?" score at 47*11. Tigers stalled until gredients—and a smileto your face. 9 "About ten minutes." the final five seconds when McCune "I GUESS I can wait." drove in for a shot and was fouled by Read... After learning from Cosgrave that Perkins, setting up the winning point. not than he was as good if better Shooting Percentage Close TEXTBOOKS anyone on the club, Driscoll went The game was actually decided on FOR COLLECTIVISM over the clubhouse and told his to free throws, as Tiger hit on 12 out "We got the freshest kid by George Koefher players, of 21 while Pyne could only sink Whip I've playing for today $<& Smart as a our thoroughbred topcoat g) ever met us seven of 15. boys give a It's f§J> and I want you to him Shooting percentages from the floor C§K» in the lithe, new, lighter-weight Whipcord loomed expressly for us. work-out." \

■-■■'■::-.\ 1 B CONSULT PLACEMENT BUREAU FOR DATE AND INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT

Butlon-in All Wool Warmer, §12.25 Lola Arnaux is grandwith beginners . . . FIXING THE ROOM? CONSULT . . . because she inspires them with con- fidence and enthusiasm right off. THE MOLITONE "How can people gothrough life not Roger dancing when it's so easy to become § Kent § VENETIAN BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES * a good dancer 'The New Arthur MHOiVtDUALIZED CLOTHES FO ft ME ]V Fire Place Screens Linoleum Rugs and Carpets Murray Way.' Try a lesson today Z\ fX Radiator Cabinets Rug Anchors and see how quickly you learn I" & 1505 Walnut St. : 1215 Walnut St. Awnings Aluminum Combination gj ...... Windows x-rv We are open Wednesdays noon to 9 P. M. f>, . . . — ARTHUR MURRAY 180 Nassau Street. . . Phone 2231 \M NEW HAVEN • CAMBRIDGE NEW YORK # BOSTON fe? or WX 9420 Phone Trenton 2-7427 • (No charge on W.X. calls) 32 E Hanover St. Trenton ' ' *"<<<"< ' r 4 THE DAILY PRINCETONIAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1952

Varsity Stickmen Will Face Party After Virginia Game Tiger Whips Pvne for IA 4 Cage Championship Immediately after the Princeton- Virginia lacrosse game at Mt. (Continued from page three) Pyne (47) Score by Periods: Three Top Teams in South Washington, Baltimore, on Wed- Tiger (48) Tiger 19 7 9 13—48 nesday, April 9 at 3:45, there will FG FT P TP Conroy, f. 7 4 3 18 Pyne 8 16 8 15—47 be a cocktail party for Princeton Princeton's lacrosse faces a by an Nunes, f. 1 3 3 5 Slack, f. 0 0 4 0 team team epidemic of intestinal and Virginia, alumni and under- rough Spring Vacation With- grippe, Guy Hollyday, star defense- Sheehy, f. 1 1 3 3 Lewis 0 1 0 1 USE schedule.. graduates at the Lacrosse Club. Sigler in the short space of six days it plays man, has bieen sidelined for weeks McKim, f. 1 0 1 2 6 0 1 0 two Tickets may be obtained from three major games; the team will op- and several other members of the Dodds, c. 8 3 3 19 Jackson, c. 2 2 3 r, Nelson T. Offut, 8 South Street, Princetonian pose Virginia, Duke and the Mount squad have been affected. g. Del g. for both the McCune, 5 3 0 13 Tufo, 4 0 3 8 Washington lacrosse, Club. Baltimore 2, Md., Because of the epidemic, Coach party and the game. Tryon, g. 2 2 2 6 Perkins, g. 7 0 4 14 Classified Virginia and Duke have both lost Thomsen has not been able to have one game. Virginia dropped a close first-stringers practice together. his 18 12 12 48 20 7 IS 47 Ads one to 12-11, while the Blue As a result he is not satisfied with (Continued three) Devils lost to the Maryland lacrosse the coordination between the mid- from page Club by a score of "9-2. Both winning fieldere and the attack. RELIGIOUS NOTICES teams are considered very powerful, Mahoney Hurt however. Episcopal Evening Prayer — Mar- Mount Washington is a different . Thomsen is pleased, however, by the quand Transept, University Chapel, Coach Ferris Thomsen consid- play of Captain- iGasey Miller, goalie 6:00-6:15, Monday through Thursday. story. Roman Catholic Mass—Alex- Cy Horihe and "attack Mike Mahoney. Holy ers them the best team in the na- ander Hall, 7:30 a.m. Tuesday through Worsted, tion. In a 23-gaine series Princeton Unfortunately Mahoney hurt his Saturday. j hais won only once, and flhis win was ankle in practice yesterday. It lis garnered by last year's championship not yet known how bad the injury is. team. When asked about the chances of CLASSIFIED ADS I Gabardine and 1 Grippe Epidemic the team, Thomsen said that although Coach Thomsen has been greatly it was not going yet, it is the kind of hindered in his efforts to rebuild the team that plays well under pressure. HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR THESIS TYPED? Why not call Dorothy K. Couchman, 2828, and I Sharkskin Suits I George Hartman Recalls Brutal Routing let her assume the responsibility? 352 MORTGAGE MONEY NEEDED — Of Student Demonstrators by Communists Approximately ten thousand dollars 10% Discount on All Merchandise | for completion of home — excellent I (Continued from page one) veniences are natural as a result of credit and security rating. D. Asen- dorf, RD 1, Cranbury, N. J., Plains- unison, "17 November," the day in progress. Now, it is no good to criti- boro 3391-R-2. 355 1939 when the Nazis killed a number cize. We need you; we need all the of students as they tried to defend good people. If only you join, you can CAMPUS TYPING AGENCY We QTfje Charles University with machine .help us build." are open over spring vacation—every bailor e%>Jiop guns. The activities of the students' Com- day, 2-4. Come in and talk over your thesis plans with us. We will type MURRAY-DODGE HALL At that moment, cars approached, munist party, as they outlined them, theses by portions if necessary. Call I | packed with more police who had been included organizing working brigades 2300, Ext. 571. Located in basement ordered drive the students. As skiing distributing of Murray-Dodge Hall. 356 to out and tours, free, 1 •'*■ ■ ■ ■ they approached us, rifles in hand, theatre tickets, sponsoring the ex- — ' we started to sing the national an- change of foreign and many GORDON-NICK customers:* Linen students service will be halted during Spring them. The police, surprised, stopped other things. "Now," they said, "will vacation and will resume on Monday, and stood at attention. But as soon as you join?" April 14. 358 we had stopped, an officer gave the Politely, I threw them out. I real- order to attack. We started to sing ized I had made a big mistake and GOING WEST? We need a ride to again but the police no more that sooner or later Ohio, on Apr. 3rd or 4th. Will share respect- my time would expenses driving. Call Jim Mel- it. and ed They opened fire and several come. Once you are asked to join the chert or Don Cantrell at Prospect students fell. A girl next to me was Communist party, you dare not re- Club. 361 bleeding. Several other girls, trying fuse. A compromise in a Communist to make an escape into a church, were state is not possible. The slogan, "If LOST Man's Bulova wrist watch, Nassau— Street, Thursday. Initials /V VS ##/ dragged out and beaten by the police. you are not for Communism you are J.A.W., deceased; reward. Call 376-R In front of me was an old, white- against it," held true. It was also or 1280. 362 haired policeman who was weeping. clear that the place for the person His son was among the demonstra- who was not for it was in a "re-edu- ting students. In a little while we cational" can^. Who Launders / University were dispersed. Powerful Laundry Most Factor—Fear B t* First Thought of Escape Among all the known aspects of It was then that I first thought of Communism, I would like to stress escape. Free Czechoslovakia existed one: the fear. Fear, abstract as it is, no longer. The only successful fight can become the most powerful factor against Communism would be from in the Communist policy. Not know- the outside. But it took me ten more ing our enemies, many of whom had months before I succeeded in my been our close friends, we were afraid plans. to talk, even in our own homes. It Jazz-Purr presents the As I was still a student at Charles was the uncertainty—or better, it wac University during those ten months, I the certainty that one day there had a real opportunity to witness would be a knock on your door and JIMMY ARCHEY what was going on under the Com- you would disappear like the rest, BAND m « munist domination. As Communism that drove, one crazy. of American Jazz had been one of the four political After ten months of such life, I, Concert parties in Czechoslovakia since 1918, my brother, and other stu- Jan, two Jimmy Archey Trombone the tendency was to think of it in in- dents finally decided we could not Henry Goodwin Trrfmpet ternal, purely national terms, while wait one day longer. Slipping through Benny Waters Clarinet in reality it was Russian. the Iron Curtain would be dangerous Dick Wellstood Piano Invitation to Join Communists —it was really °f bullets. But made Pops Foster Bass One afternoon two students, a girl had reached the point where death we Tommy Benford Drums and a boy, came to my apartment with was deterrent. When the decision no AND: an invitation join the Communist was made we felt free already. The The Blues by to Bessie Proffitt and Don Frye party. Tlyey devoted -their time for four of us started to the border, un- this missionary work every Sunday. der the pretention of going for a va- April 5, 1952, 5:30 P. M. They began this 'way:' ~ "We know cation skiing trip, and with the in- THE TOWN HALL everything you are going to tell us, tention of never coming back. 123 W. 43 St., New York City George. There are manythingswrong. i(ln tomorrow's chapter, entitled Tickets at Boxofflce $2.40-$l.BO-$1.20 Brings you *L There are camps and prisons and "Flight for Freedom," George, Hart- < ffr there is not enough criticism in the man will conclude this series by de- party, but you must understand that scribing his actual escape across the this is a revolution and some incon- heavily guarded border of Czechoslo- LUXURIOUS WHITE valna into the American American Tourists In Bavaria, in here is the full nap . . the velvety feel zone of Germany.) Europe only While Buck, tanned from Impor'zd Skins, . Theses—Term Papers found in genuine . Saint Christophe We make photo reproductions of YOU! and only genuine White Buck is so completely cool and comfortabk. any line copy, drawings, printed The Red Cross is Motor deep-yielding Red Rubber Sole. pages, or colored pictures which Answer the call! help Europe Walk upon the soft, might Will you see inex- be used as illustrations in pensively in your own car. Buy a You'llknow real foot luxury. thesis work. low priced American or European Our Photostat marlines will en- car on arrival with resale guaran- large or reduce the size of orig- teed on your departure. We arrange inals, if necessary. DANNY'S everything for you— Once typed, extra copies may be reproduced at only a few cents a Shoe Shine Parlor fnsurance, License Plates copy by our Ozalid process. Permits of Travel Between Advice and estimates cheerfully Countries etc. given. "For the Finest Shoe Shine ever" Different Saint Christophe PRINCETON PHOTO Specialists in renewing tired PROCESS CO. leather Motor "FINE FOOTWEAR" Witherspoon St. 3, Rue Scheffer, Paris 16e 11 WITHERSPOON ST. Phone: COpernic 4626 (Under the Army-Navy Store) 78 Nassau Street Telephone 38 Cable: Saintor, Paris

The Date Room or GreTenfßoom peaCOCkQIIeiJ PFACOCK TNN Meal for Organizational meetings and banquets and Prep School Reunions LANE JL

mm MiwiMiiiiiMit Mill iiiiimb— mm iihiiii i«——m—iimi ihumiimi nn mi iiihbbmeb—w