,a:VERFORD, r-di 4 1336 HAVERFORDNEWS VOLUME 27—NUMBER 18 HAVERFORD (AND ARDMORE), PA., TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1986 $2.00 A YEAR `Bird In Hand' Is Founders Club To Delegates Will Go Dine Here March 12 S. Duggan, Political To Be Spring Play To Model League Founders Club will hold their Scientist, To Talk In Roberts May 1 annual banquet in the Alumni doom of Founders Hall on At Vassar Thurs. Thursday night, March 12, at 7 At Commencement 3 Act Comedy By John o'clock. Harvey J. Harman, coach beer from 1922 to 1928, Two Groups Represent Drinkwater Chosen and present head coach at the Professor At C. C. N. Y University of Pennsylvania, will Switzerland And Last Night Is Widely Active be the chief speaker. Austria Others on the program are In Education Sames McPete, former soccer Tryouts In Two Weeks roach and now coach of the Hay- erford Club team, Roy E. Ran- Adkins Committee Head "Bird In Hand," a three-art com- dall, A. W. Haddleton and James Holds Titles Abroad edy by John' Drinkwater, chos- Gentle. Since so many of the Two delegations will represent en for the annual spring production Founders Club members were ac- Haverford at the session of the Stephen P. Duggan, professor of of the Cap and Bells Club at a tive in athletics while at college, Model League of Nations to be held Political Science at the College of meeting of the committee on selec- a record turnout is expected by for three days. beginning Thurs the City of New York and author- tion of playa last night. In an- Theodore Whittelsey, Jr., '28, day, at Vassar College. Headed to ity on international affairs and nouncing this selections, L R. president of the club. Professor John G. Herndon, Jr, education, will deliver the Com- Garner, '86, chairman of the com- and J. S. Pugliese, '36, twelve stu- mencement address on June 6, ac- mittee, said that the play would dente will speak for Austria and cording, to an announcement from be given in Roberts Hall on May 1 Switzerland in the discussion of the President's office. and 2. world problems important to the Dr. Duggan was born in New Tryouts for the comedy, which Founders Club IP League. York in 1870. He atended C. C. has a cast of six male and two fe- More than 240 students and fac- N. Y., where he received his B. S. male Parts, will be held in two ulty members from thirty-one col. and M. S. degrees in 1890 and weeks. A director has not been VaryRequirements leges are expected to attend the 1896. He then took his AL A. and chosen. The committee is still un- tenth annual meeting of the Model Ph D. from Columbia University decided on the question of who will League. Haverford and the hoist J. S. PUGLIFSE, '30 In 1898 and 1902. He also holds an play the feminine characters, Wolf To Propose New of the assembly, Vassar, are the LL. D. from Rollins College, Flor- thought there is some possibility only colleges to have two delega- Who is student leader of the ida, (1927), a Litt. D. from San that Bryn Mawr will cooperate Membership Rules tions. Dr. Herndon explained our two Haver-ford delegations Marcos University in Peru (1931). with the Cap and Bells in that re- double representation. saying that representing Austria and and an LL D. from the University spect. March 12 in as much an all but one on the Switzerland at the Model of Michigan (1933). Unlike Drinkweter's famous Austrian delegation are seniors. a League of Nations at Vassar Prominent In Education this week-end. character portraying plays, such At the annual banquet of Found- second unit was arranged In order He has been instructor, assistant to allow underclassmen to gain ex- professor, and professor in Poli- as "Abraham Lincoln," "Oliver ers Club on March 12, R. B. Wolf. Cromwell," and "Robert E. Lee," perience in the work of the model tical Science at C. C. N. Y. sines '36. secretary of the club, will pre- "Bird In Hand" is a romantic com- assembly. 1896 and director of the Institute cent an amendment to the Coto of International Education since edy which centers abou tthe ro- Adkins Heads Committee News Board Votes mance of Joan, the daughter of old witution designed to bring the 1919. In 1922-23 he held the posi- Thomas Greenleaf, proprietor of membership requirements up to D. E. Adkins, Jr.. '36, hat been tion of president of the New York the Bird In Hand Inn, and Gerald date. Several positions which chosen chairman of the committee Yes On Amendment Academy of Public Education, and Arnwood, the squire's eon. In spite have increased in importance have on "Technical Assistance to Unde- the following academic year he lec- of her father's consternation over bean given recognition while others veloped Countries," one of the tured at C,olumbi• in international their , Joan sees no harm in the have been dropped entirely. three committees, which in the Columns Change Hands relations. young man. But the old man takes As previously, activities Sr. di- past year have been engaged in re- Dr. Duggan has also been secre- matten into his ewe hands and vided into two groups, with one of- search into the respective studies. As '36 Members tary of the American University drives his daughter home from a flee in the first group and two In wag among Mow nomin- Memzei eT.Igrgrnispagem meeting of the young people, there- the second required for election. ated for the Position as president of the Assembly but he lost out in tinned Survey Commission in 1925, by arousing the inmates of the The activities in the second group Form men were weinged to moat also be In two of the follow the final consideration to Dailey Neon and is a member of the American- Inn, who discuss the situation and positions and an amendment to the Brazilian Commission of Concilia- help Greenleaf make his decision. ing subdivisions: (a) Athletic, fb) K. Young of Columbia. Business, (c) Literary, (d) Musical Members of the Austrian del.- constitution was unanimously ac- tion. Cost. on Page e, Cal. and Dramatic, (e) Miscellaneous. cation are G. B. Bookman. R. cepted for a second approval at the Trustee at Vassar A new provision is that any- Braucher, I. A. Brown. W. A. Besides these full time employ- Crawford, Pugllese, all of '36. and meeting of the Board an Monday, Rhodes Scholar IS to be automat- February 24. ments, Dr. Duggan is a trustee of Francis Kane, Winner ically elected to the club. B. H. French, '37. R. C. Bone. Jr.. Vassar College, the Institute of W. A. Pointer, J. W. Van Cleave The four men who took new posts Janitor's School Recognized all of '37, T. N. Cook, C. H. Mori. Pacific Relations. the World Peace Of Bok Award, To Talk are W. H. Bond, '38, who succeeded Foundation, and 'averd colleges in Several changes are proposed in ian. Jr.. and T. X. Saylor, Jr., all J. K. Weitsenkorn, II, '36, in writ- To Liberal Club Thurs. of '38, will represent Switzerland Turkey and Greece: he is a direct- the first group. Instead of Captain ing the CroWn Nest: R. M. Clay- or of the Council on Foreign Re- delegation will uphold con- ton, '37, who became the editor of of certain sports only, the amend- Each lations, the League of Nation, As- commonly_ supported by Student Opinion with the resigna- Speaking on the progress of the ment reads "Captain of any recog- tentions sociation, the Carl Schurz Memorial thew nations. tion of E. D. Adkins, Jr., '36; T. "defender" movement, Francis F. nised vanity apart." For manager Foundation, the Italy-American Kane, recent Bok award winner, of any varsity sport, the proposed The auditorium In the ancients L. Simmons, '38, who became Al. Building will be the scene of the Society, the Hungary Society and will address the Liberal Club on reading Is "manager receiving a utmni Editor In place of G. B. Ronk- the Netherlands-America Founda- man, '36; and .7. R. Harrison, Jr., Thursday, March 5, at 7:30 in the varsity managerial letter. Chair- Came. on Pere t, Col. tion. who was chosen to write the new Union. manship of the Play Committee He is a fellow of the American As holder of the Bok Award, will be omitted in the future. Theatre column. Association for the Advancement which is presented to the man or In the second group, membership STEERE TO ADDRFSS FORUM Amendment Concerns Dividend. woman who has contributed most on the winning team of the Sen- Cont. on Page 1, QC to advance the best interests of ior-Junior debate has been cut out Professor Douglas V. Steers will The amendment, suggested by Philadelphia, Mr. Kane is the re- since thin debate has not been held speak on "Higher Religion" at the F. E. Nelsen, '37, states. "When Francis Witmer To Talk cipient of a mow prise. A prom- recently. In the Miscellaneous Race Street Forum on March 22. the accounta of the retiring busi- inent Philadelphia lawyer. he is a Students of the College are wel- ness manager have been clamed, di- To Engineers Wed. On Cent on Page 8, Col. 5 graduate of Princeton and Penn- come to attend. vidends shall be declared out, sub- `Bear Mountain Bridge' sylvania Law School. He was the ject to the following restrictions: Democratic nominee for Mayor of (1) the capital most be maintained Philadelphia in 1903 and received at a figure not lower than $750 and Francis P. Witmer, Director of • legal appointment from Wood- Senior Deplores Lecture Policy, (2) the excess of cash on hand and the Civil Engineering Department row Wilson in 1913. in the bank and accounts receiv- of the University of Pennsylvania. The "defender' movement is the Social Boorishness Of Students able over accounts payable must be will address the Engineers' Club effort that is being made to fur- at least $500 with the further re- on "The Bear Mountain Bridge" in nish attorneys for impecunious de- Criticisms Include Intellectual Conceit, Lack Of striction that $100 of this amount Hines Laboratory, at 7:16, Wed- fendants. Mr. Kane lute long been must be in east." nesday. essoeiated with this movement. Interest In Arts, And State Of Dis- The resignations of S. G. Carr. Bear Mountain Bridge, near '37. J. A. Evert Jr.. '38. and H. A. Peekskill, New York. was, until the repair In Roberts Hall Heilman, Jr.. '39. were accepted construction of George Washington with regret. FL C. Gulbrandsen. '37, Memorial Bridge, the bridge near- est the mouth of the Hudson River, Mine, ante: The following as- person or organisation. Bat I wish was made Attalstant Sports Editor. \ration Wide Hook and was designed by Mr. Witmer. mairmerifot mar deoped et the I knew where it does lie. If those and S. K. Harper. '38, was made Up For Glee Club door by • betaibleti Julian meaner who secure Assistant Composition Manager. He has also been' employed as some of these "dispen- Structural Engineer wbo begged mouldy !bet the nom of sers of knowledge, inspiration and by the Brook- lyn Rapid Transit Company, and the writer rennin former • , The wisdom" are intent only on big Mr. William P. Bents, coach Newn will not be beld acecniniabie for has been Professor of Civil En- of the Glee Club, has just con- names (very seldom even big) or nay of the file= expenell t. tbos article: gineering at the University of fided the date for a nation-wide on personal friends, they have 2 Works Of Beethoven the oath were only known, dm writer been successful. Pennsylvania since 1924. hroadenet by the Glee Club on As speakers, the Mr. Witmer's talk will deal &mull probably regret, Mir whole affair well-paid lectern pounders, at least At Hour Friday Saturday, March 21, from 12 by now. We preterit it with the construction of the bridge, noon until 12:15, over station m an M fr.-riling for the last four yearn, have been commentary on she pew ityk of • eel. notably poor. Two works of Beethoven, the and the difficulties involved in it. WCAU and the Colombia hook- He will show some of the original up. lege imam witb four years of "education" This succession of distinguished "6th Symphony in C minor" and blue prints to clarify his lecture. &dal bine. men but unentertaining lecturers is the "6th Concerto for Piano and The concert scheduled for thin Orchestra ('The Emperor')" will All studenta are invited to attend. Friday at the Tower Hill School By a Member of the Class of '36 finally proving a boomerang. A vicious circle begins whereby few be played and diecossed at the mu- in Wilmington, Del., has been sical appreciation holm held at DISCUSSION GROUP TO END Postponed until April 17, Mr. I'm a sucker. For four years attend because of the lack of in- I've attended all too many of the 7:80 Friday in the Music Room of Bents also announced. terest and because of lack of in- W. Richardson Blair, Jr., '30. strongly-advised and high-sounding terest no good speakers are obtain- the Union. continued his discussion of the The next appearance of the leetures offered at College and the ed. I'd rather study Soc. 1. Well, "Much more detailed criticism functions and organization of poli- singers will be at the Friends' worthwhile ones (my teeth are real- that's exaggerated, but the idea will be given the Symphony than tical parties before a small group School, Moorestown, N. J.. this 1y quite simple) could be counted Isn't has been spent on previous works in the Union last night. He also Saturday night at 8:80 P. M. on the fingers of a mutilated hand. Enough for unfortunate cultural during previous hours," declared P. stated that meetings of the dim The fault does not lie with any one IL Page, '30, conductor of the mu- eussion group will end for the year Cost. oar Putt I, Cot. 2 sic hour. on April 12.

PAGE TWO HAVERFORD NEWS Tuesday, March 3, 1936

Cadbury Tells Of'lkews Finds Obsolete Methods 1.8 Days Of Snow: Debaters Gain Win And Equipment In Power House Squirrels Protest Over Princeton On Challenge To Meal On January 10 it began snow- Stokers Recall More Severe Winter While Feeding ing. From then until 'Thursday, In Pioneer Fields Ton Meal To Furnace; Generator February 27, 48 days to be ex- Topic Of Conquest Wt., the ground remained com- Museum Piece pletely covered with snow. More First Doctor In China snow fell, and • hard crust 25-18 Vote Supports G Poole '38 two yarn; ago, when the tem- formed on the ground. The Legal And Moral Few students realize how much perature was at 20 below for two squirrels which throng the And Canton Hospital days, they need one and one work has to be done in order to trees about Lloyd were unable Justification quarter tons of coal per hour. Cited As Examples k. p them warm in this cold to obtain food from their usual --I. The month of February, 1934, weather. At least it wan a surprise sources, and were forced to sub- was the wont I can remember," to the s reporter, interviewing sist on the dried toast and other New said the fireman. .When I came Dr. Herndon Presides Much Yet To Be Done the power:, that be in the power dainties fed to them by kind- house, when he' learned that the on duty one morning all the pipen hearted Lloydites. But it's 'all were frozen. It took us about an Taking the affirmative aide in a "Adventures for a New Age coal used in the large boilers which melting now. By the end of the hour to thaw them out and get debate: Resolved, that territorial was the subject of the Library Lee- supply all the College with heat. is week, probably all that will re- everything working all right. This expansion by conquest is an in- tore delivered in Roberts Hall Wed- shoveled by hand, not by mechanic- main will be a few scattered year and last are the first years herent right of nations today, the neselay night at 8:15 by Dr- Will-, al means. Indeed, said one of the track, bearing evidence of the that the boiler tubes haven't blown Haverford debating team wen a ism W. Cadbury. '90. lo °Pe^m4. firemen as he scooped up his fif- popular door-to-door Lloyd Auto out," he added. 25-18 decision over Princeton to the his lecture. Dr. Cadbury presented teenth shovelful, Haverford Col- Service. The coal is kept in a large open Union Friday. A modified version a challenge for "men of daring in lege has a rather rare plant, in fields of adventure. He confined his this respect. bin Just outside of the power house. of the Oxford Plan was employed. It has to be moved from there in- E. D. Adkins, Jr., '36, opening talk to medical missionary work in Every fifteen or twenty minutes. the debate, listed the three points China. . me of the two firemen has to feed to the power house by meant of Rev. Walker Speaks On on which the Haverford team plan- Peter Parker wan cited as an ex-_, coal to the hungry furnace.; wheel barrows, which in another hand labor job. With the use of be- 7 Elements Of Prayer to work: "that expanison by ample of the IFFe of men '''''d"' there are three huge ones, ranging ned for new adventavere Parker was, in horse-power from 125 to 326. In tween 1900 and 21041 tons of coal tongueat has been necessary in the , formation of nation., that it has the first doctor to enter China. He, normal weather the boilers con- year, one can easily picture the Seven key words for the "en- his passage to the Orient1, eume about three-quarters to one amount of work necessary to keep richment of worship" in Meeting been necessary to their existence, secured f cool through the kindness or a frientk !on o per hour. In very the dormitories warm. This year were enumerated by the Reverend and that it is justified in interne- " He then After he arrived at his deatinationi Severe weather, such as February Cow[. on Pg. 5, Cpl. 4 G. Morton Walker, minister of the Hon law and in fact. he opened a "hospital" for the Be Bryn Mawr Baptise Church in C01 dealt with the historical perspect- treatment of eye troubles in a back leetion this morning. ive, touching on Rome's expansion, room of a merchandising store. At 500 They were: (1) adoration, fo Brandenbu rg's development into first no patients came to the room "even in our religion there is too modern Germany, and the develop- but a few days after his first treat- Attend Films 5 Professors Will much selfishness"; (2) thanks- ment of the Italian peninsula. "Ex- ments patients came by the hund- giving; (3) confession. "for we al pansion by conquest was the in- in"; (4) petition for Divine gelid herent right of those nations," he reds. In Goodhart Hall The natives were puszled by Aid Student Union once; 15) interceesion for our Bald. Parker', work, Government of- el.. and others; (6) communion- Turning to the right of conquest &ha. placed a "eliY" . (1) dedication , of nations today, Adkins declared, ploy. The spy's nnly reporthi—I was Harold Lloyd Picture Chapter To Be Formed "Italy hoe no raw materials; she must have them, no she takes." that Parker wet doing good but he Features Guild's Here At Meeting could not see the reason. No para- AMUSEMENT CALENDAR Quotas League Covenant llel could be drawn between this First Showing Wednesday man of charity and the usual profit- .1111,11011E—Tutia, 'Hose or the Albert Moore of Princeton open- seeking bovine., men. "The Freshman." starring Har- Five Havel-ford professors have inwho- with John Hole, and ed the attack of the negative side old Lloyd, was presented Weds.- consented to serve as faculty ad- tfludye Swarlhout; Wed.. by outlining the two position. Trusted In Chinese Thum.. Zero"with P. M. in Goodhart Hall. which his team would take, "the day at It visers to the College branch of the Jain. Canner and Pal ("Wien: By this means, Parker finally Bryn Mawr College, under the American Student Union which is Fri., "Fresilunitu Love" with legal point of view and the moral achieved that which is the most dif- sponsorehip of the Bryn 'Mawr di- to be formed in the near future. Frank StcHugh and Patricia angle." "Why," he asked, "should ficult thing for any foreigner in vision of the Museum of Modern They are Professors John C. Hern- Ellis; at., -The Invisible Ray' nations be allowed to take from with Radon% Logged and Fran- other nations when individual citi- China: he became accepted on a Art and the Haverford Film So- don. Jr.. Arthur J. Mekeel. Doug- ea DrAke. common level and was trusted. ciety. Attendance wee around 500 las V. Steere. Frank D. Watson, KVILLE--Tuen.. Ronald Col- zens cannot? In the days of pi- Twenty year. after his entrance to more than 100 of these being from and Albert H. Wilson. n In -Tale ne Two Cities": oneerbeg, in the past, there was an the. country hr was appointed by Haverford. Dr. Wilson expressed the follow- Wed., Edgar Allen P.,e. inherent right of conquest. Today •s•rimr of lie. Cresior: Thur.. Unitedl o la F:nement to Three short comedies preceded eny attempt Is to violate human gtetwe ing sentiment about the formipg Lue leant inetere. one nem. 1,1- Inevilreop: —ft"Mteitairtffar ffid- eighte." lie crobted Article 00 of treaty with China. He was the [hove was "The Doctor's Secret," a dent. are beginning to think about Motional Sold Sun., -Lives the Covenant of the League of Na- only one whom both nations could film made in 19X0, which was a public affairs. er a 9eneai e tions to prove that war has been Tune., "Fang and trust to such an important task. farmal treatment of a fat man s The Bryn Mawr Chapter. whose declared Illegal by international Parker was the pioneer. Upon reducing trouble., Following this. NeTH PITZEI:T—Tlien., —Centex membership totals 26, met Thurs- Xere'; Wed., Thurs.. Fri- law. his work was established the Can- "Gertie the Dinosaur," one of the day night fur the purpose of "FoddY O'Day After this speech. as before, the ton Hospital, and thus it was, first of the animated cartoons drawing up a constitution and the ToWlitel—Tuesi.. -Anything a..." floor was opened to members of through his early efforts, that the made in 1909. was shown. .The eleition of officers. A similar con- with Wog Crueby and Ethel the audience who wished to ques- benefits of the Western civilization third short. "His Bitter Fell, Merman; Wed., ThUre., "The " was vention was held at the University tion the speaker, since the debate were introduced into China. In a parody on the popular "West- Informer- with Victor McLast- of Pennsylvania, where a constitu- len ; Yet to Mon., "Excluelve was held under a modification of contrast to thin, Dr. Cadbury ern,'' made in 1915. In thin one 'ion was adopted and committees Etna' With Framing Tone Rod the Oxford Plan in which the pointed out that ouch a movement Mack Sennett veered away from were chosen. Madge Evans. members of the audience choope into Japan was not effected until hie customary slapstick towards WATNK—Tpee., -King of Hoc- The meeting of the Haverford imorve-, Wed., "Seven FUSS to the winning side. Commodore Perry opened Tokio by devastating satire. ;troop has been called for March 5, lioldpate• . Thum., Fri., Ent. means of cannon. Law Termed Customs vrter the Liberal Club lecture, and 'Tole of Two Cities." The foundation of this Canton Nest Program March le Philadelphia Predeetleas 's defense Respitel was due to the combined chairman and exercutive com- Continuing Haverford "The Freshmen" is marked by mittee will be elected. A close co- ALDINE—Tura.. Wed., Kathar- of the premise, G. B. Bookman, efforts of several medical mission- ine Hepburn In -Sylvia Scar- its goodnatured satire on under- operation between these organize- let"; Thurs., "Little lord said. "The right of conquest Cow. nu Pah- 5, Cot • exednate ambition. Harold Lloyd Voris in eepeetere Fetelllerny" With Freddie liar- still exists today." He declared that as Harold Lamb. struggles to Although many of the problems thoinmew and Dolores International law is only cuatoms adapt himself to circumstances lharrymore. which the Union is attempting to 1101•11—••The Story of ismis Pas- nations find it expedient to live more complex and more sophisti- solve are not present on the Haver- teur" with Paul Hunt by and is to be set aside at neces- ated than are natural to him, and ford campus. the A. S. U. needs an Ellf-ENtiEn—ehuride chnnun sity. France, Italy, and Germany EUROPA as usual, successful in the end. large a membership as possible to In -Modern Times.- were named as nations which would The second program is sched- Ruppert the Nye-Kvole Bill, and to EARLY.---The Bohemian Dirt" not deny the right of conquest. Merkel Aber. idtb Eirrsi uled for March De at which time aid in fhe peace strike which is be- with Laurel end Hardy. "England," he said, "seems to op- will be shown Sarah Bernhardt in ing organized by the National ROPEe---The Informer- with pone the right of conquest, but Victor Bieloglen. "Queen Elizabeth." Later features Strike Committee. It has been net self-interest is the only basis of op- VON--Tite Prisoner uf stork SIXTH BIG WEEK will be Mary Pickford and Lionel for April 22. and It is believed that Island- with Warner Plotter. position." Barri: move in "New York Hat" and from 150.000 to one-half million KEITIPPI—••The Petrified Forest. Alfred Stokely, turning to "the Thed• Bara in "A Fool There students will participate. Lexile Reward and Retie moral angle," continued Princeton's "THE INFORMER" Was." on April 0; "Underworld" Davie_ attack, wing "We have lost the with George Bancroft on May 13; HAV. YOUNG FRIENDS MEET STANLEY—"Frillow the Fleet" inherent rights of the cave man; with Fred Mane And flinger with Victor MeLeglen, Margot Emil Jennings in "The Last Com- civilization puts a limit on these Members of the Haverford Young Rogers. Grahame and Wallace Ford mand" on May 20. These pictures, He declared that until Friends Group met Sunday night. STANTION—..Woman Trap. with rights." chosen to show the development of tierlefulle Illehnel and George fifty years ago it was the "white The Year's Hest Picture Meetings of this kind are being motion pictures are released by the Hurling. " to carry civilisation held all over the country in an at- man's burden film division Reg. ermeseite. to backward nations. Now nations tempt to familiarize young Friends 1.10AD---equennx the Circle,.. have a right to exist but they mus with the subjects which will be dis- CEEMTN UT—,Tebtiee0 Road" also progress. "My nlea is fo WARNER BROS. sussed in the national convention with Henry Hull. sanity and progress," Stokely con 'n be hell in Septerriber 19.37. The FORKEET—,At Home Ahmed- eluded. discussion was The Individual with liettisice Lille and Ethel TOWER Witter, Since, through a misunderstand- 69th St. Theatre Christian and the State." This fiERVIIC/t—"Thrre 5fen on a ing, the Princeton team Included Garrett Read and West Chester grottn is one of many such local Horse." meetings of only two men to Haverford.. three. THEATRE Pike one of the rive con,- CORI. va Nxr 1, Col. 69th St. UPPER DARBY, PA. mitteea. WARNER EROS, Tuesday: Tuesday for Three Days SEVILLE THEATRE WAYNE THEATRE "ANYTHING GOES" with ARDMORE THEATRE Bryn Mawr, Pa. Wayne, Pa, Ring Crean', Ethel Mennen, Jane Withers Tuesday: Tuesday: Tuesday: Charlie Reggie., Ida Lupine in " ROSE OF THE RANCHO" with RONALD COLMAN in "PROFESSIONAL SOLDIER" JOHN BOLES "TALE OF TWO CITIES" Wednesday and Thursday: Wednewley and Thursday: "PATTY O'DAY" Wed. and Thur.: Wednesday: "RIFF RAFF" with Two Day' Only "CEILING ZERO" with Edgar Allen Poe'. Fly Popular Demand Friday. for One Week Jean Harlow and Spencer Tracy JAMES CAGNEY "CRIME OF DR. CRESP1" THE INFORMER" and PAT O'BRIEN Thum Fri.. Sat.: Friday and Saturday: with Victor MeLegten Jeanette Macdonald Friday: Victor MeLaglen in "MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION" "FRESHMAN LOVE" "PROFESSIONAL SOLDIER" Irene Dunne and Robert Taylor Fri.. Sat.. San. and Mon. and Nelson Eddy with FRANK McHUGH Sunday: Sunday and Monday: "EXCLUSIVE STORY" with in Saturday: "Lives of A Bengal Lancer" "COLLEGIATE" with Franchot Tone. Madge Eva.. "THE INVISIBLE RAY" Monday and Tue..: Jack Oakie, Joe Penner and Stuart Erwin "ROSE MARIE" with KARLOPP. LUGOSI. "FANG AND CLAW" Frances Langford - Tuesday, March 3, 1936 HAVERFORD NEWS PAGE THREE NEWS OF INTEREST TO ALUMNI

Graduates Show John S. Garrigues, '71, Recalls • Extension Comm. A Two-Building College Compus ALUMNI NOTES I Love For College 1. Of Six Undergrads Railroad Ran Under Meeting Rouse Bridge. 1966 In Many Letters Dr. Leslie B. Seely, Principal of Cricket Was Supreme, In Days Of the Germantown High School, has Appointed By Kane Early Morning Classes just been appointed Professor of Centenary Office Gets Physics for the year at the Wagner By C. R. Eberaol, '38 Free Institute of Science. I'. Congratulatory duties, the students took very Whittelsey, Founders Two buildings, three professors, largely the same courses. A few, 1906 Club Pres., Suggests Letters and fifty students made up Hay. he smiled, dabbled in something erford College when John Sharp. extra,—such as Spanish or French. Francis R. Taylor, member of the Its Revival less Garrigues entered its eon- As for the more rigid rules, he re- Board-o3 Managers. Pisa been ap- Alumni Support Drive fines in 1868. Since then, two sons called that the students were re. pointed a member of the State For- and a grandson, J. A. Lester, Jr., (mired to be in at a certain hour est Commission by Governor Earle. To Welcome Visitore By T. L. Simmons, '28 '37, have carried on that tradition at night. And with a twinkle in his eye be sairlgo"Noeradahy: I a ' 1924 begun sixty-eight years ago, hay. htenaiti. Six students have been appoint- Accompanying many of the 617 ing seen and taken part in the the students Charlet H. Frazier, Jr., is the au- pledges received to date at the Cen- growth of the institution. hours of the thor of an extended illustrated ar- ed by A. B. Kane, Jr., '36, to make tenary Campaign office, letters All his life Mr. Garrigues has July 12 was the day of his grad- ticle in the February 1936 issue of up a Student Extension Committee. lived within earshot of the cam- uation, proof of Mr. Garrigues' the Review of Reviews. entitled at the request of T. Whitteleey„ have come in from the contribut- statement that the college year "Yardsticks and the Consumer." ors which oboe the loyalty and love pus. When the DOW'S of Lincoln's was a good bit longer than today. '28, President of Founders Club. assassination come to him, he and 1932 The purpose of this committee for Haverford which prompted his father were plowing their fielJ Collection, instead of coming twice their gifts. There have been let- along the railroad near where a weak, came twice each day. The Philip L Ferri' is employed with are to receive Freshmen on the tern from members of all the student body woad attend meeting the Continental Can Company, opening days of the College in Sep- Merton Hall now stands. Today on Sunday as classes, from the very early toes he lives on College Avenue in a well as Thursday in 100 East 42nd Street, New York tember; to appoint men to welcome down through to the Class of '35— the same building that is used to- house that he built shorty after City. prospective Haverford studenta or many coming from alumni living leaving college. day. Reminded of meeting, Mr. too far from the campus to be able Garrigues told the reporter how 1938 their parents when they visit the Coming to Haverford College students used to drop off the to renew their old associations William S. Stoddard is workng College; and to establish contacts but rarely, if at al]. straight from Weattown. young bridge that in crossed in going to Garrigues joined the Sophomore in The Photo Reflex Studio of the with boys in prep schools who are All these letters, however, have meeting, and which seed to go considering coming to Haverford. Class and thus swelled its member over the railroad when it followed G. Fox Company, 370 Seventh Ave indivated the spirit and interest of nue, New York City. Those whom Kane appointed on the alumni who have on heartily to thirteen, then bite largest clam, what is today Railroad Avenue he believes, since its founding in the committee are W. A. Masan, supported the Campaign, even not passing freight trains and ride 1933 '38, L. B. Seely, '37, J. A. Lester, 1833. AU college centered about into Philadelphia. Jack Lester though time or apace may have old Founders Hall, which then John .1. Stoudt has an article in Jr., '37, H. R. Taylor. '38. and F. separated them from the College. thought he hod heard his grand- G. Brown. '39. The duties of this served as dormitory, dining hall, father tell of how the students once the January 1936 imam of the pub- The selections from various letters recitation hall and chapel. The lication Pennsylvania History en- committee will be to see that new quoted here have been chosen an greased the tracks so that the tram men are given a friendly introduc- seniors, he noticed, lived a life al• slid all the way bear to Bryn titled. "Daniel and Squire Boone— typical of the enthusiastic response moat apart from the rest of the A Study in Historical Symbolism." tion to college life, call on Hav- and support which has been en- Mawr; but the elderly mancould erford men to get in touch with college with their rooms large not recall any such student pranks. countered thus far. enough to hold a desk as well as their preparatory schools, and with From a member of the Class of When asked about buggery or Cadbury Tells Of prospective fiaverfordians, °verses a bed and bureau. Meals were hazing in his college days.Mr. Gar- '34 comes the following- word of served by colored waken in the the welcome accorded to visiting encouragement: "I thought I would rigues could only remember the Challenge To Men school teams, and to be a board of basement. initiations given freshmem or other write you a short note wishing you The only other building on the five whom the administration can and the College the greatest suc- new corners, such as moving all the Gent. hos Poe 2, Col. call upon to assist in welcoming campus was the library. While furniture mat of the room. Your cess in the Centenary program. It was visitors at any time. seems to me that the demand for he in College, Mr. Garrigues reporter suggested that he visit aries in China. Its 100th anni- In his letter WhIttelsey tells of mid, the farm owned by the in- Barclay sometime to see how the versary was celebrated in Novem- certain improvements in the Col- stitution was rested, ay.. toss To past attempts in this direction. A lege has become imperative, and theush rise Oetlege that prugresseo in Mat nem 0000roo... milk from its dairy found its way of endeavor. made in those intervening years, laity active in the years 1926 and am fully in favor of the drive to to the dining table. Crioket, was Dr. Cadbury stated that the hoe- meet these demands." Though he had lived all his life 1917 but later committees were less the chief sport in the sixties while so near the campus, Mr. Garri- pita] now consists merrily of Chin- active and the activity was Really the students sometimes found time gues has not visited his Alma Mater ese medical men. This achieve- dropped. In 1932.33 Founders Beek To Repay College ment was not brought about by un- to play baseball. There were no for ten or more years. He thought Club again created a Student Ex- An expression of appreciation official athletic fields in that time. the last time he had been here disturbed progress. Many times tension Committee for "making for the academic learning acquired When mentioning that ice skating was on Alumni day or for some in those hundred years the hos- friends for Haverford" which, he while at Haverford is found In the on the pond was the winter setiv• lecture in 1925. Since 1930 he has pital and all its accomplishments states. was quite active. However, letter from a member of the same ity, Mr. Garrigues could not recall been retired having served the was threatened by political dis- subeequent committees functioned Clam, who was asked by President any enow that lasted as long as the Bryn Mawr Company for forty turbance, fire and race opposition. less effectively in 1933-34 and Comfort to work for the Campaign Dr. Cadbury spoke in detail of these one that has just disappeared. one year.. Now his hobbies are 1984-35. "I wish to thank you for the op- The curriculum wee muds more reading and listening to the radio_ things and showed that the present "Prom our experience over past portunity to help in the Campaign," restricted and college life and rules Learning this, the reporter departed standing of the hospital wan due years," writes Whitteittey. "-we writes this alumnus, "and if there stricter then than today, he said. in order to allow the old gentleman to the enthusiastic labor of men have reached the conclusion that is any other way I can be of as- With a faculty of four, because to continue listening to the "Meis- of daring spirits. there is a real need for the com- sistance I hope you will let me President Gummere taught as well tersinger". which could be heard Last year at the 100th anniver- mittee of representative under- know. as performing hie administrative in en adjacent room. sary a cornerstone was laid for a graduates who make it their inter- "I found this year that certain medical school in conjunction with est to further the reputation of the knowledge acquired at College Lingan University. The Canton college." while I was there has a substantial, Debaters Win REUBEN COLTON. '76, DIES Hospital, Lingan University. and a "It is felt that no formal cam- marketable value. My best outside Presbyterian missionary society paign for Haverford should be con- job Is tutoring a college freshman Over Princeton Ward has been received of the are responsible for the establish. ducted in the prep schools nor in English, German, French. Math death of Reuben Colton, "18, at his assent of this new institution. De ehould we have a prep school vis- and Chemistry, and I'm thanking home in Worcester, Massachusetts. Cadbury said that although this itors day." Cost. frees Pee 2. Coll 1 A noted artist, he was shows a great my lucky stars that I happened to Progress in the ...li- take those subjects at Haverford." Stokely delivered his team's re, fer many years the president of cal field in China there was still From a member of the Claus of butte] after a short period of ques- the New England Alumni Society. mach to do. '26 come. another word of 'mere- tioning. He said, "The world is so Beside. holding the position of Dr. Cadbury concluded his lee- HAVERFORD CLUB interdependent today that patriot- Librarian of the American Anti- tore by ciaiton for direct, material help re- giving Kipling's "Explor- .1.1a >ow at MR • y•ar, No ImItto• ceived from the College. "The sug- ism has ceased to bring about pros- quarian Society, he was also a er." The last two lines especially We I.. geation about letting scholarships perity and conquest has teased to member of the Saint Botolph Club present the idea of adventure which tat orla •tkos Ousel at t1a. TO1m.t•. be the measure of one's gift ap- bring about progress." in Boston. was the theme of Dr. Cadbury's act o11.1 foot oAll poatnil Ice peals to me strongly and I should talk. "Anybody might have !sued Dr. Herndon Defines Law 1807 Moravian Stems like to contribute according to the it, but its whisper came to me." Philadelphia following plain. 1 believe that the R. B. Wolf. '36, in giving hie WAPLES, '14. WINS AWARD maximum amount I received in any team's rebuttal, declared, "We may Douglas Waples, '14, was one of one year was $200, no I want to condemn a course of action as anti- five to receive part-time Fellow- EstAbliabNI 1173 pledge that amount, $100 to be paid social, but right is more than mor- ships for study in Belgium during now and $100 on next Alumni Day. al: it in legal and necessary. Any- the coming year /roan the Educa- Hopper, Soliday & Co. Buy good books and read "If I remember correctly I alga thing necessary for the existence tional Foundation' Commission of them; the beet hooka are the received two $100 scholarships. of nations is an inherent right—if Relief. The Commission also INVESTMENT SECURITIES commonest, and the last edi- Family obligations do not permit 100 years ago it was thus, it is an awarded two special scholarships 'lambert MI. Stock lescbange tions are always the best, if me to repay these at once, but today. If any other avenue of ex- to Americana to continue their 1422 Vf•LNDT .rata the editors are not blockheads, perhaps you will have the pleasure pansion was offered, moral and Ie- studies at the Urtiversity of I' MLA DILPII IA for they may profit of the of recalling them to my mind at gal pressure should be brought to Louvain- former. some future time. Until then, my bear to make them take that ave- —Lord Chesterfield, best willies to you and all my other nue; as it is there is no ether way." Lettere March, 1750. friends at Haverford." At the request of a member of INVESTMENT BANKERS The final selection was chosen as the audience, which was composed E. S. McCawley & Co. a typical representation of the R. WILFRED KELSEY C. C. Collings and Company largely of Government students, Lit. tiommorataa) continuing interest in College ac- Professor John G. Herndon, Jr., , 709 Fidelity-Phila. Booksellers to tivities taken by all the contribut- who wits chairman of the debate. Provident Mutual Trust Bldg. Haverford College ors, even though some of them defined international law as it is IR] 5. BROAD ST. Philadelphia, Pa- HAVERFORD. PA have not been able to make as large considered today and called for the Ph11•441phia . contributions as they would like. vote. PENoypar.A•r 8160 "It Is hard for me to pledge only love no much," another member of this small amount to a college I the Class of '26 writes, "but unfor- Standard-Shannon A. C. Wood, Jr. & Co. Speedy Call & Delivery tunately that is all I can gee my Brokers Ardmore Shoe way clear to promise at present. Supply Co. 211 Cbestaat otrott ARDMORE 3263-W Phibulolo b lo EsPrrl Workmanibip I want you to know how much INDUSTRIAL and RAILROAD miss coming to College to aeo the Members W. WH/TITER, 38, Agt. Rebuilding Co. athletic contests. It is no leek of SUPPLIES 12 mourn Lawrie eras= Arad h4 5114"rook Rs bun 61 W. LANCASTER AVE, ARDMORE interest or love for Haverford; P•11.101021.1 PR- Nom York Chub Roocas,: a.Coarto, just that I can't afford It. PAGE FOUR HAVERFORD NEWS Tuesday, March 3, 1936

Haverford News THE CROWS NEST 'February IR. less. Haverfordian Review

ESliar: Melvin A. Weight:non. '37. ept. Lines on a Departing Winter. Ilselams Wagoner: Freacke E. Noise, '17. Poesy D Edifor't wan AM, exprriteries goer Kuntz, is a little more difficult to Managing EdDemi William A. Ponder. '17, Carl E. ilifigelfy u. erifigra lardry veelvr to criticize. Mr. Kuntz hovers un- All huddled in our wool pajamas Al1Uu r. '37. 'grim, Me camel Hagerfaggling, gbr Newt comfortably dose to the border- snorts Editor: William IL Slum, '25. We raged to hear of the Bahamas' timpani is go ontilokre poi op- line between perfect simplicity and Our wrath role up beyond all measure farmed is inlemed made. of fie Merl bend. His perfect inanity. The psychologic- EDITORIAL STAFF pictures in the "Evenimg Ledger" At rrifkies of the Cgolksr agearbiy al situation offer* untold posaileli- R. Of maiden. basking 'swath the palm-trees broil Esther.. CharIso nibereol. '35; William with jerieolri effloorremory, for rrolim ties. Unfortunately for the general Kriebel.. 'III; Gear E. Poole, '33. Amorists.: Harry While we sat here and watched the pond freeze; H. Nell '321; Trumbitll iSingrione. lb; Charles H. Wil- wild will middy be marina. Wordless impreselon, the last paragraph is son, '31; John M. Finley. •711; Harry J. Goodyear, Jr., Did any wish to start a feud, a fa uy, the Mom prom sal °faciallysib- distinctly reminiscent of one of '39: Hubert D; letter, Jr. '35; John M. Man.; 'OP Simple mention of Bermuda g,itar to big swigs. Yoe cool rageb Thornton Burgess's Little Stories Maurice A. Webster. Jr., 'W. Would soon be found to quite suffice; it Mid rally. for the Bedtime- Seemed a second age of lee hit With William Bond's "Dr. John- /WORTS STAFF. Thin' poor campus with its bludgeon; The March issue of the Haver- son is Diverted" we have no quar- aasiela: Daniel C. Frrintiger. '37: Henry ow- Our lingers, fronted atom to gudgeon, fordian manage. to attain a eel rel, because he quotes fre- breglsee. '37: Aubrey C. Own. Jr.. '36 ; Ans. P. With frozen radiators fumbled: Leib, '28: Akehem H. Albert, '36, spectable mediocrity, which places quently enough to obscure any Through piled-up snow our cold feet stumbled: it somewhat in the Was of the av- glaring faults in his own atyie, but BUSINESS STAFF What joy would from our poor heart pleb erage college magazine. The mostly, we suspect, because he is At just one roadway minus slush; poetry is inoffensive, if uninspired. Aselidens Reeimem Maaammt Robert .T, Thompson. a member of the News board. In Jr, '10. Cireeletbra Masagerr, Thomas L. Shannon, Jr., But here's an end to all our aorrow- and the stories for the molt part "Dr." J. R. Harrison. Jr., we have tomorrow!" '37. Comireeiblos Manager. Bernard M. FloilanDer, '37. The weather-man says, "Warm unspectacular and strangely sat- another News feature writer, and grenuary. William W. Allen, '37. Aneselecheet Charles H. tialr. :as; Cheater It. HaW. Jr., 8. Koss • • • isfying to a reading public harassed therefore a man to be handled with Harper, 'ER. II A. lielinmn. Jr.. : A W. bineeiey, Jr., As a mere matter of self-protection by amateur Hemingway, end em- kid gloves. "The Underestimated '35; II. W. Phillips '39.; E. C, Winslow, Jr., 19. Footnote. against Haverford's army of eagle- bryonic Caldwell* for le! these Cuttlefish" is a delicate and airy these many moon, eyed spotters-of-erro rmieetigne-on-the-bulletin-board, bit of fancy in parts: is fact, Mr. PHOTOGRA1461 Y emcee "Vincent," by Grover Page is a a would like to go on record as stating that the hap- Harrison, we were definitely Henry C. Seibert, '37 of the above outburst was brief comment on the Van Gogh amused. At times, however, the Jam, L Mich, 'It I. A. lisklalisn, Yes lea infinitive in line nine fed. Mr. Page entertains when he split intentionally. Also we are fully aware of the whimsy is a little Poe:demotes, in confirm-III himself to straight re- somewhat dubious rhymes and the metrics) peculiar- the manner, shall we say. of a 'rim NEWS le published weekly In the colicge year porting. But-his smug assumption Greek professor convulsing the fac- iambi during vocation.. and exam...maim periods. at 49 ities of the piee. But our public (Il will just have with the sweet. Furthermore, we that Vincent will be present when ulty wives at a Sunday afternoon litirtenbututs Place. Ardmore, Penna. Telephone. Ardmore to lasts bitter the roll of great artiste is called HOS. Address ell cormannIcallons Haveelurd Neve, realise that the meteorological instability (are you tea. But the introduction of a ray Havurford College, Harerford, of the aeason makes the statement in the up yonder is a trine irking. Why is of sunshine, however feeble, into Aimee) oubeeripiluis parable Inadvance, 13.00: listening?) Vincent an humeri-el, Mr. Page? the lark and forbidding page. of single copy, tpc. Subscoplione ToRy begin at any Unit last line somewhat shaky. Just charge it off to po- Entered as am-end-rimrr moiler at the postoMm It Ard- etic license and we'll have no quarrel. Should we House-painters have "simplicity the Haverfordian can elicit nothing and directness": will they live? A more. Penn a. In the future ever muster enough courage to pub- but grateful and appreciative eight Ilembere of the lateroullegiale Neenrosper Association little more careful analysis and • of relief from this reader, at least. DCat the MiddleAtlanticA tai. Member of the National lish more material of o similar type, pleath bear Press Associate.. t S this in mind, And as for the first quibbler to ap- little less juvenile genera/faith:1n Dissuasion of the poetry has pur- proach us and point out our obvious errors to ue, would be not at all out of order, posely been reserved to the last EDITORIAL POLICY Mr. Page. we shall simply whip out our trustily nallfile and Carl Wilbur experiments with what Edituriste In elle NEWS du nut necessarily represent Wallace Van Cleave's "Portrait Dr. Snyder would call very, very the opinion of AM KM. ,11.3111vCIONi with the College stab the villain to the heart. Contribution.. to ilm column are meletrined. of a Man with a Small Beer" is left-wing free verse. which is the They Intuit be elgued, but skignaturs may be withhold from • • tolerably true to life. Mr. Van next thing to prose. On second PublIcatIon if Writer desire.. e„o, We are really a bit annoyed Cleave has acquired the dangerous, thought, perhaps this is prose. and re Questionnai •-•. at the action of the editorial but pleasant habit of having his should he included in what the New A number of students have re- board in running a questionnaire on the college food characters speak casually and off- Yorker calls the "Thought for this Liquor Rule. quested that a definite state- .situation. We were just drawing eaself up to hurl handedly, regardless of the gravity Week" department. Any school- of the situation in which they find ment of the Liquor Rule be made by the administra- forth a terrific blast from this mouth-piece of public child, though, could look at Sey- themselves. Since, in this case, the eon. Olhers feel that an arbitrary settlement of opinion when they took the word, right out of our mour Rogers's. or James Dailey 'e situation is utterly unimportant contribotions and say with Con- each case as it comes up is most satisfactory. It mouth. Some action. however, is necessary, and it and inconsegeential, the dialogue le fidence. "That's poetry!" Whether is not a question of the rule being stated, President they handle it, we don't care. But it would have been a line way for on to fill our allotted space, ;surprisingly appropriate. Con- a critic's reactions would be the Comfort told the editors of the News yesterday. The which is our chief objection. We repeat: some lo- gratulations. Mr. Van Cleave. same, we are not sure. Shall we administration policy, he mid, is well-known; the tion is necessary. We have always ben a firm be- 'Rohe and Unordnung," by Paul await the verdict of posterity? "definite statement" has already been made, in a hover in man's inalienable right to manna. With Collection speech in the autumn of 1033, and he still horror we recall the awful night not long ago October 1.r 173.3,1reslettl &Mink sjiBiteruNdIVe awn we sac clown to corner. fly 'to learn thee general subject of liquor. The speech was reported demand had exceeded supply rat it has an unfor- in the New. of October 1'7, 1033. The only part bear- tunate way of doing) and that there were not even MUSIC THEATRE ing on actual mentions is here quoted. By quot- Nets an tb meet-course available fur nor table. ing the Bible, President Comfort snowed that over Sir, when you strike at our stomach you strike at two thousand years ago it was discovered that 'wine US Now a ouggestion to questionnaire makers. This coming week Joe Iturbi oil Anything a critic may gay in a mocker' and suggested that any Heverford stu- We have never liked the complete finality of yesen-no act as guest conductor with the shout a propaganda Play, as such, ouestione We sit for hours (well, for minute., Philadelphia Orchestra. Ilia pro- dent wishing to disprove this or to test tea capacity is apt to show more about the crit- for liquor should find another residence." 'hen) with our pencil poked above a single quea- gram will be: Overturn to "Ober ic than it in about the play. For The handbook for 1953-34 contains the follow- lion. weighing the pros against the cons. In order on," by Weber; Symphony No. 1 in that reason I intend to fight shy ing information. "Having liquor in one'n possession, to Fume time. we propose that question. In the fu- C major, by Schubert; "Concerto of dismissing the effectiveness, drinkine, or being in a state of intoxication, within ture should be phrased somewhat as follows: No. 2 In A major for Piano ad from a Merman point of view. of the College precincts or at any function sponsored No. 753. Do you favor a floor show or other Orchestra," by Lint; Five Minia- "Squaring the Circle," which is the by a Haverford College organization is punishable similar entertainment with Seturday night sapper/ tures, by White; "Till Eulemple- distinctly Communistic piece now by a suspension of two weeks for the fleet offense ) Yes. ( ) No. ( t Well, maybe. gel." by Strauss. We feel it is playing at the Broad on a return and a recommendation of emulsion for the second rather a mistake to force ramie engagement. 1 can say, however, "(fly a vote of the Students' Association in Wee and this is especially true of the that because this Rawson comedy the liquor rule is now under Faculty Administra- when the spirit is not willing (by Valentine Katayev) is cant in tion.)" Whether the rule itself in unchanged. the Liszt Concerto, where the public the idiom of the Bolshevik credo it News is not in a position to say.. STUDENT OPINION of today is almost completely out approaches familiar probleens in of sympathy with Liszt However • • • an unfamiliar and stimulatang the program as a whole is admir- fashion. It is interesting, for ex- In stating several *ma am that the Col- R. 01. Clayton, 17, Editor ably chosen, being totally within ample, to see how the dissolution lege only barked the Student Musicale for the The War Department Purge the scope of a conductor who is of two marriages can be described Centenary Fund 200 per cent. we were eery laboring under the difficulty of in- The summary dismissal of ?:rd.-General with Shavian plausibility a. the re- happily in error. A friend of Haverford, har- terpreting what is a new typo of sult of bourgeois "profiteering" and ing that the goal was $909, generously rontrib- liagad far criticizing the W. P. A. before a con- nomie for him in what is still a "opportunism." And it is Interest- eressional committee has stirred up a torrent of uted 5300 to make up the difference. new mode for him. We remember ing to see on what grounds the Rel opposition among opponents of the New Deal. The how magnificently he overcame district organizer dame a victory • • • action of the War :Department would be question- these handicaps in his exceptional for Communist able under any circumstances: in the doctrines of Mar- The News has received a letter present case, reading of the Cesar 1,Oranek riage when, after a few words aus- General Hagood wan High-Grade, from Thomas Wetter, '08, which specific-sally instructed to speak minor Symphony, last season. piciously bourgeois in their pater- reads as follows: . freely. It might be just to dismiss an officer on the We are still suffering under dif- grounds that his lack of sympahty with government nal tone, he has managed to paten kulties in fully placing the con- up two rather ordinary marital "Your editorial 'The Privileged' is inter- eolicies hindered his efficiency in carrying them out ducting this last week of Werner ' rating. Ent le not your envy misdirected? squabbles. But at the end one to Sot no charges of neglect of duty are brought Janssen. Because of his marvel- Inclined to say that in spite of Perhaps progressive education has long been sgainst General Hammen his humiliation is due ous technical prowess, we were in- at Haerford without your honing it, and that Marx, Morgan, or anyone sloe the solely to his frankness in expressing an opinion. tree/watt to a "new high" in the whole thing •is probably the work Your real discovery is students who are there This ease will make good campaign material possibilities of obtaining excellence 'to learn something'...... en the Janitor's Sehoote of dot ole debit Inc. I, at least, 'or the foes of the administration, but it has a in interpretation through extreme am willing to let it go at that. Mr. Wither has a '*ltd point arguinent here: 'honer significance. It is a vivid illustration of the rare and clarity of beat and mo- The plot of "Squaring the Circle" perhaps progressive education has long been at reactionary attitude of the War Department, an tion. But we suspect that this is no simple that I intend to violas Haverford; The point which the News was trying -ttitlide which contains a far greater threat to could not have been all. There all the pompous canons of criti- to make. however, is that under the grade system freedom of thought and expression than the ouster must have been a fire brightly cisms and reveal it to my reader. students consistently fail to acquire any. of one individual. Secretary Dern and his militaris- 'miming in his eyes which com- There are, it seams, two young Whether the administration realizes it or not, tic colleague Secretary Swanson both lend their mended the orchestra mensbero, married couples. Sundan, of support to high. merits do eat depend wholly upon a compre- the Tydinge-McCormick Bill, a measure which we were unable to fully course. The husbands fall in love lien:tem grasp of the subject and are thus not a fair which extends the principle of gag rule to the entire judge. We heartily join in the (pardon me, the husband. estab- emulation. Thin bill paled the Senate tat of the student's actual knowledge. Assuming at the last ovation which Philadelphia gave lish meperideve solidarity) with that the primary purpose of a college education is session of Congress. Liberate In the present session him, and are mast sorry that he have had some one another's wives. They find than to give this broad and balanced point of success in combatting it but the was here only for the one set of A student w view, the issue is not yet settled. the original marriages, were based ho has crammed and promptly forgotten concerts. on unworthy aims, and the new at- is just as much a failure a the F student. The If ed,t ed wouldbFehee t pearcem-timnte sedi- In listening to the Sibelius First tion la w-ma tachments are properly legalized grade system tends to emphasize the immediate and rfailr s G e Os- Symphony we were most impressed tot good form. tensibly It is intended to prohibit communists from tangible rewards of study, the scholarship, or the by the broad lines which he main- The plot is admittedly thin, but, mere satisfaction of high marks, and disregards the Inciting mutiny in the military forces. To prevent tained. The work was carved out after all, the thing is a comedy and mutinym y d d sob ence long-term advantages: the application throughout aidsy a ve but of huge chunks of material, rather when set in one of Moscow's over- a nd vy alr h ve hu ocbienecip than being a series of musical life of knowledge trained as an undergraduate. for w teaseled boarding houses in which this; It is net necessary to gag the civil popu- "gems," which has lation. typified the both couples - are forced to occupy These two members of the administration readings previously. And the cre- the same Snowball throwing fear that the Communist Party, with its 28,000 mem- room, and when peopled has moulted in re- scendi piled like- the Gothic struc- with amusing and eametimes bers will find time between other subversive activi- strik- markshiy few broken windows and consequent ture of a Each fugue rather than ing characters, it becomes both 12 firma this winter. Alm: nom of the students, ties to win over the United States Army and Navy. coming like a sudden bleat tray, diverting and instructive enter- has That rest for destroying property that led Such an idea may seem plausible to readers of Hearst from somewhere in Poland orSog- tainment. one undergraduate a and McFadden, but more intelligent persons are land . few yearn ago to gigli up it were.) Though the au- I do not think, however, that all with Werner first—and then go out and bom• skeptical. dience did not approve of the Mae the possibilities of the situation bard college buildings with a dear conscience. Cent, 0.• Pair I, Cal.' Cool. on Pap 8, Col. 4 Coat. as pear t, Cet, I •

Tuesday, March 3, 1938 HAVERFORD NEWS PAGE FIVE Senior Deplores Bready Elected To News Finds Lecture Policy Dr. Flight Visited Office Sends Two Store Committee Obsolete Methods Cost. /row nem I. Cal. 1 Ur On Sabbatical treatments outside the elms room. Cool. from Pox, 1. Ca/. 1 • Letters To College Many Charge Accounts How about the rhinieis euggestion will probably prove to be s record last week regardin Trip From Damascus Payable; Privileges g new courses? year as far as coal consumption is Major Requirements, How about the general reading concerned, 1800 tons havin course sugg Fraught With g already May Be Limited ested in the News sev- been used. Sr.. Plans Are eral menthe ago? It could deal Difficulty with anything, each student spec- The other function of the power Subjects Charge secounts at the Coopera• ializing if he cared to. Current af- house has been that of supplying he Store are bein By G. E Peale. 'ff t g very badly fairs might be well-considered. I electricity for campus lights. The Two letters, one to the College dare say, hig Visiting archaeolo at larg abused. Manager S. G. Cary. '37, hly touted and brainy gical sites, in- College used to generate its own e concerning difficulties en- announces. Every week about Haverfordians will come down a cluding a 2000-cuili.. auto .journey electricity until last year, when a countered in meeting Major re- little from their hi gh horse the from Darnanesis to . contactwas made with the Phila- quirements for graduates and an- thirty dollars worth of goods are afternoon of May 2. 1:Yr of the Chal- other to the seniors dees took up the major jilt of Pro. delphia Electric Company to sup- asking for in- charged up to students and the Since there is no ade ply the Colle formation about their plans for quate me- teaser John W. Flights ti ge. This is merely an overage amount payed off is usually thod of spreading information con- me on his experiment and it is possible that next year, were circulated last leis than ten dollars. Consequent- cerning courses, thus allowing ig- recent sabbatical tenve roc the first the now idle generators In the pow- week. ly the books now show that the norant underclassmen to be sucked semester of this year. Dr. Flight er house may be put into use again. The principal decisions, reached Stare Is owed 3223, much of It due into talking our lousier courses, also vent considerable time atten- "The generatorsrs are rather out by the seniors and the Faculty since last fall. Cary gays bills how about requiring every senior, ding archaeological 'shoot,- of ditto and need repairs," stated Committee on Student Affair. and will be sent out this week, and tan- anonymously of course, to hand in He studied at the Americas Mr. Chapin, the College eng net down in the first letter, are in. School of Oriental Research in ineer. eluded in the followin ks. there is a good return charge what he thinks of the courses he Mr. John 0. Rentz, assistant in g summary: aeeennite may have to be curtailed. has taken. Would he take them Jerusalem, Palestifir from July to Engineering, backed up this state- (1) The purpose of reducing the the end of Noverabet, In con J. H. Hermits '39. hes been chos- over again, what ones would he nection ment with the fact that the Frank- number of courses from b to 4 in with his studies Professor Fli the last half of the. Senior year is en Freshman number of the Store omit and add? This would tend ght lin Institute has on display a gen- Committee, it was announced to- to weed out the lees satisfactory made numerous field trips to ar- erator almost identical in con- to allow the 'senior time to "review day. Bready came to Haverford and give the administration cheological sitee. " These trips," struction with the oldest one in the essential fields already studied by from Moorestown Friends' and an undergraduate line on the cur- said Dr. Flight, "constituted the power house. "That machine was him, to complete any special Ma- holdn a Corporation Scholarship. riculum, something that is sadly laboratory emit of our course." one of the first of its kind to be jor not covered by his having had the highest Freshman lacking at present It would make Among the sites visited were Am- installed in this section of the formalrruinments cornea but specified at the oversee at entrance. the whole curriculum tone up. man, Petra and Jerash, sometimes country," added Mr, Chapin. time of his becoming a major, and Even publishing a list in the News referred to as the Haverford College Mr. Rants then lapsed into a to attempt 'tome synthesis of mat- each year of the Seniors' opinion Archaeological Expedition, was in- state of reminiscence, revealin ters studied for convenience as iso- eluded in the course of the trips. g to eh manse would reveal important the reporter some interesting facts. lated." Yale Literary Magazine and desirable news. The auto journey from Damascus He said, for instance. that the en- (2) "When personal supervision to Ur One of the major criticism, I find was taken by twenty-two gineer who preceded Mr. Chapin is both possible and deeireble. the Celebrates Centenary with Haverford is the social im- people, under the auspices of the hah been here fourteen years) College wishes to encourage it. maturity of the student body as a YMCA of Jerusalem. "We repre- was a Mr. Dykes. father of "Jim- any Major Supervisor may devise The Yale Literary Magazine, the whole. Their lack of eareir faire is sented seven nations/item and three my" Dykes, well-known ball player, whatever plan of assistance seems oldest magazine in America. re- deplorable. They not only often religions- - quite a mixture." stated most suitable to him for his sen. cently celebrated the 100th anni- look but act like three-year olds. Dr. Flight. lie described two onus- Recalls Baran, of Barn ions in their '20k' work; the stu- versary of its birth. During its en- They eat like cannibals. The at- ual experiences the had during the dent's participation In this plan is journey. "In 1905 the College power tire existence, the form has not titude of everybody in to blame. es- house consisted of one AC generat- entirely voluntary." been changed except once in 1932 pecially upperclassmen. Certainly or and a DC generator, the latter Exemption. Unpredietable when the color Encounter Road Difficulties of the cover was we don't lead such a solitary life of which was constructed in the (3) "In the matter of excuse's: switched from brown to blue. How- here that the eight of a female "Part of the route lay across the College shop by Professor Levi ever, such a storm of pr T. seniors from June examinations otest was should draw forth stares, if not rat- Syrian desert, a section of the court- Eldnards. Three machines were their Major courses, uniformite arounsed that the ori try which ginal color calls. Not only females, bat bad had eight days of housed in a galvanised iron shed," the various departments -s Wm soon readopted. friendly conversations steady rain before the auto started. among between 'tu- said Mr. Rants. "Whenever It neither ppractical or desirable._ The anniversaryry contains dents and professors are regarded Evethinry g went along all right un- rained, everything short-circuited articles by former editors and con- til we g Whether a man is excused or no.. Is extraordinary. The effect of all ot in the middle of nowhere. and the sparks flew right and left. depends on circumstances not al- trebotors who have since become this horseplay is harmful thrmah Then the car got stuck in mud. In fact. in those days, you never famous, includin We were marooned there for seven ways predictable in advance." and g Sinclair Lewis, the impression it make" on ether knew when you were going to have these are listed. Stephen Vincent Benet, Thornton *maple, not to mention ourselves hours before we finally got going • short circuit. Wilder, Philip Barry and William (4) "Although each department • even more on the already in- 'Again." "Previous to 1900, the College must use whatever special Lyon Phelps. nufficient oppertmdttes for smrsdr- When the party reached the pro- used direst aormat tunditser. With vince of Divraniyeh, they were sur- methods of toedmbng and testing lne • few social amenities. such a system, the building near are best suited to its field Perham prised by being the newer house of Delegates Will Go so extension of intes- met by the Gover- got decent light knowledge, the Faculty is seeking toeial life would help remedy this nor himself, who entertained them but those far from it got very to obtain all desirable uniformity - To Model League deficiency. An extended use of the at his house. While the travelers neer light- In fact, the boys in werewe eatin Merlon in the quality and quantity of Union with pingpong table, and g and drinking the ruler got as much light as they work required for the various Ma- tors. (sow Pot 1, Cu!. billiards (oh my, what would told them that his province had just would have got by holding their jor programs." general sessions of the Lea Moerth say?) where students and had a rebellion and that it wasn't fingers in their eyes' declared Mr. The following recommenda- gue and safe for travelers. So he provided Rants. (5) rooms have been assigned in the even profs might knock off for tion was accepted by the Faculty, building for committee meetin came or a chat. There's certainty the auto with armed cars the rest When asked whether any serious "All instructors conductin gs. of the journey throu g courses Ds Charles Fenwiek of Bryn plenty of room there. And how gh his territory accidents had occurred during his calling for any papers, such as "lie even put an mined soldier in Mawr, Professor Howard Calder- about a few more dances—maybe time, Mr. Chapin replied with a term paper.. requiring more than wood of the University of Michi- with the orthlphonic and the Union our car," declared Dr. Flight. smile, "The most serious thing I regular weekly clam-work prepara- gan and Dr. Walter Kotschni to while away • few "scarce hot im- On the way back from Baghy- have ever Seen around here was tion, be requested to make May g, a Ion,the e group visited the reputed the burnin member of the League Commiselon esortant and necessary hour. learn- g of the barn. AA far 1st the latent date for submitting for German Refug ing the facts of life. Tower of Babel, Baalbek. Dr. Flight as I can remember there have been these papers." ees, will be the also visited Egypt, where he took no serious accidents in the power only professional instructors of the Wants Senior Dining Room The other questionnaires were Model League. a trip up the Nile to Luxor, Karnak house." sent out by Dean H. Tetnal) Brown, I need hardly mention that a Thebes and Alexandria, after spend Jr askin for information con- in g Dance Included In Program Senior dining room would probably g five day. in Athens, he traveled cerning the seniors' plans for the to France and Spain, Biter that he and in touch with those Seniors Delegates will register Thursday help in manlo g the whole busineas future. of eating one of conversation, en- returned to this country. who are planning to enter the big, Including questions afternoon and meet for the first wide world June 7 (say June an to wheth- tim ioyment, care; not a business of 8). er the senior had made any definite e at dinner. That evening Dr. In other words, a more ade Fenwick will discuss the back- stoking one's boiler to last a few quate plans, if ao what they were. wheth- ways acting in a fashion placement bureau would be of serv- ground of League problems and hours. If no Senior dining room, compli- er he had made qny plans to con- how about more singing, less rush- mentary to Haverford should we ice to all concerned. We were glad tintinue study. If se wheand there will be a reception for the all help mine our standards throu to see the Deatt's start in this direc- where delegates Friday morning Dean ing, more politeness sad palaver? gh where his application had been Only several more sugg tions increasing the number of candi- tion by his Questionnaire last week. presented or accepted, the object C. Mildred Thompson, of Vassar, es dates tryin Very few colle remain. I'll hurry over the mg- g for admission. Ham- ges are as inade- of the questionnaires is to help will welcome the visitors and Pro- ilton College reported last week quately prepared alon fessor Calderwood will speak en irestion that care should be taken g this line enters find suitable positions after either to elect men or accept of- that they are planning to enter- as we are. Prospective teachers, graduation. the problems of the League during tain for a big three-day week-end bankers, advertisers, newsmen, the past 'year. The afternoon will fices where several extra-curricular activities already are involved. One Over "subfreshmen" from New etc.. are on their own to find jobs, be devoted to committee meetings. Eng while the administration is in a 011at lototneo can't do justice to too many thing land. Maybe there will be Pvidla Dr. Kotschnig will address the s several good football players amon good position to offer collective Babb. Clamps eantagroontr evening tension which will be fol- at once. One thing, though. I un- g Fountain Poo intaltur /Mary derstand we are them. eervice on the matter. They could lowed by an informal dance and way behind on and should be careful in their re- entertainment by the Vaesar Sex- Usually a yearbook staff grows up, How About Employment? commendations in order to insure ALICE M. CAFFREY future editors coming from the • tette. After final meetings Satur- A youn satisfaction and thus to increase day forenoon, the committees will ranks. Here, this practice would g man's fancy may turn 108 Ir. Lananter Ave. be rather revolutionary, but how to thoughts of love, but a Senior's the demand for graduates. report in the afternoon to a plenary turns towards next year. Those Enos Are. 4771 Alison. Ts. amnion of the Model League, The about electing the succeeding year's editor and business manager planning to take graduate work sessjon will be concluded with the have little trouble gettin award of cups to the moat brilliant earlier Junior year and let them g into any LODGE TEA ROOM SALES RADIO SERVICE serve as assistants?. They'll at good graduate school. Just as ad- 196 LANCASTER AVE. speakers and a critique by Profes- vanced schools welcome our fel sor Calderwod on the conduct of least then know what it's all about. (Opposite Merlon Hall) Decca and Victor Records The appointment of a Student lows because they know they are the League's affairs. well-trained, so many business' SPECIAL LUNCHEON and AID. ZIA Extension Committee by the Stu- ISWOLD-WILSON, INC. dent Council is a step In the right today, seeking promising junior ex SUPPER for eeutivea, should HAVERFORD STUDENTS is surrzenomen PLACE `Bird In Hand' Is direction. But this isn't enough. be informed o • RDMORE, PA. Everybody, undergraduate's and Telephone Ardmore 4062 To Be Spring Play alumni, ought to make themselves responsiblesponsible for inter- Ir.. Pose I, Col. I esting good prospects for college At hut everything is cleared up In Haverford. President Comfort's For Men of Action— when the youth's father makes a suggestion just beforo Christmas John Troncelliti Proper formal proposal. was good. And not only by con- TOILET REQUISITES Professor A. Jardine Williamson, versation and discussion, but by Theodore Whitteleey, '28, Presi. al• by Lentherle, Paris Expert dent of the Founders Club, and aboolag Bast--Intorlan Crows William Maier, '31, are the grad- Attar @@@@@ rowdy Hair Cutting uate members of the play selecting Warner's Pharmacy Attar Shays esti*. committee. Under raduate mem- Ea. da Calagua--SaaIn Special Attention to g "The Corner Store" aumeaset bees are P. E. Page, '36, C. W. Haverford Men Yearley, '36, and W Clark. Jr., STUDENTS SUPPLIES W. E. Sheppard, II, "38, Vice- WHITMAN'S CANDY HAVERFORD President of the Club and A. W. BREYER'S ICE CREAM ARDMORE ARCADE Stokes, business manager, are ex- Phone—Ardmore 58 r PHARMACY officio members. Phone, Ara. 593

Tuesday, March 8, 1936 PAGE SIX HAVERFORD NEWS Matmen Lose Two Meets; Engage In Tourney Saturday Wrestlers Overcome By Strong Captain-Elect Courtmen Choose Rutgers And Hopkins Grapplers Poorman Captain The Sport Chet Haig Ends Mat Season With Seven Wins Jester While Joe Rivers Finishes Second Election Unanimous In With Six Victories Post-Game Voting; By WALISIN FIELD, Cary Manager Dropping a Close 15Yr-14Yr decision to Johns Hopkins During ell the excitement and Immediately following t h e University on Saturday afternoon, Coach Ben chapowe termini! of last Friday's dramatic Swarthmore game on Friday night wrestlers ended their season with a record of two wins out basketball game with Boardsmore, the Haverford basketball equal, by of eight matches. The Starlet and Black started strong, we wonder if two important and a unanimous vote, elected Stone taking the first two bouts on a forfeit in the 118-pound CLAM gratifying things were not over- Poorman to raptain next year's looked. Ind anyone of the and a fan by HaVerford's wiry 126-pounder, "Chick" Haig. passers. The lanky renter well de- Joe Rivers, veteran Qasker I35-pound man, won on a time thousand or no people who were serves the honor, since be has been pecked in every 11001E and cranny advantage, while Joe Weltatoiltern the only junior in the starting line- of the gyro notice any booing and tattled to a draw with Phil Hatt. up throughout the season. From hissing on the part of either of roue Aare mains up a lead of his position am assistant manager the undergraduate bodies or their 14W-10% in the first fear weight Close, But . . Steve Cary autematicaily moved up friends? We are sere that they division", the Haeerfordtens were to fill the also. of J. A. Brown, re- didn't, and wiat Pleeree ace more unable to cope with the more ex- 1111-•••••1 aalarra, than anything was that it was the perienced teazle:. of Hopkins in tarn. Simeon whit a ccccc n held. tiring manager. Both nominations Ttwa: /AC STURGE POORMAN Rest time that we have ever wit- the heavier okawsary. Times 4:41. Captain-elect sif the 1936-37 have been approved by the Athletic neased a contest between the two Ithinie Laird Simone started the 134-14.11.1 alaa•-111ala, itarhrfard basketball team. who nest end- Committee and are fully accredited. colleges when something of this Haverford seers rolling up when threw liaaark with • bar ...tat ed his third year as first-cuing After coming to Haverford from nature has Oct occurred. There he won by a default from the Da- 124.1roaltel elarr—r. c•.• Latara aniwory, ea. ate, LON. Ti.,. center. The former Lower Mee- Lower Merton where he was star was none of the familiar and un. te., who had no wrestler in this advaataw, 1,01. han High star held Hallowell, called for fighting between the division. 1.1a-p nal ear. —e weu.rhkere , sharp-shooting Garnet center, center on the Pennsylvania State students which has no unfortumae- .111 , threw thwerrenir. In the 126,pound division "Chick" with • half aehaa sad car arra. to fear paints in the climax. Championship Team, Poormen ly marked previous athletic con- Haig resumed his winning edema, Time: 1:26. quickly earned a berth on the local tests._ throwing hie man on a fall. Haig 155-Penal thhas—lhayka. Itareetreti, varsity in his freshman year and One of the reasons for this was awarded the advantage after wail Gear Nursed. Time tat-ramt and pinned him with a her and has seen duty at center for almost yr. hilt. chancery hold in 4:45. Joe Welt- welcome change was the fact neither man was able to gain in Moat.. every game in his three years of that the officiating was excel- 1110..itthadelaav—C. Vas senkorn, wrestling in the 145-pound court competition. A sterling the two minute period. Haig, with Raisers. thraw 111rilaat, with • etas, came out the victor in a lean In fact, we go on reviord some feet, soggreasive work, gained crotch mad eliathatIT hold. 'Oath jumper als well aa a pivot man, the as saying that it was the hest 4.33. tough match. He eventually pin- Captain-Elect has been especially a considerable time advantage 7711-hattail .Li.--Schwan. Bat ned his man with a half nelson and we have seen on the local over his man, but he was not able art, tbre, n ld* with a Ira noted for bottling up opponents SOOT In the three year. that we to drive him hard enough for a fall. sad chanime,er 11:44t. for arm in 7:25. with his air-tight defensive play. pare been here. The other llearywataht clatm—lbaystam, threw Tournament Next Week In college activities Poorman Roseengein, then given the ad- aatilaritas with aeltaltaary sad. di- reason might be, became of vantage, unleathed a powerful of- deal. bar. Time: 2:46. In the only other victory of the vides his time between basketball the faultless work of the offi- fense which Haig was unable to evening for Haverford, Bob Boyle and teack in which he alas excels. ciate. the game was unusually check, until a sudden bridge gave scored three points when he gained Sturge holds the Middle Atlantic free of roughness. There were him the advantage once more. Thin 11.1.-pautal time — Simons, Harry- a 5:40 time advantage over Mae- State Association'a high jump mark none of the temperamental time Haig kept a half-nelson and lard, we. be delimit-. ueei. which he net last year as a eopho- oedemata, between the oppos- a wrist kick on Rosenstein to force 126-paaad rittra-11.12. Hat.arlara, Much interest hail been shown in more, and he hes twice broken the ing players. True that the threw ltaatamilands with • bait a fall in 0:40. Time: the meet which is to take place this old college record established in game was fart-moving and Nat. a d *Hit leek. Saturday at Easton between Get- 1699. In addition Poorman also constantly changing, but there Rivers Wine Fourth 126-perad claim—Wren, Mare.' tysburg, Lafayette, Drainus and heaves the javelin and discus for was never • violent display of M.& wan reel Lagos Thaw sa- Haverford. Ail Haig, Rivers and. considerable distances. temper or an assault a most Joe Rivers, grappling in the 133- w...NOW ataa. Owen, eat.. Ma atting 146-ita•ad Maas — Weilitarkara Wei...kern Imee each beaten their Cary has been actively engaged gratifying thing indeed. of victories to four when he gained klaverlord, drat with Ilarlwaa. opponents from these respective in all sorts of campus activities. The other thing that might have a time advantage over Jim Dmpes. 125..panad elm—MO.1M, /alai colleges, It is expected that they He was a member of the varsity been overlooked was the fact that Illaplelm, weal oak, Bari. Thar will gain a first in their respective With • series of aggressive tac- advaalare: az/l. sneer team last fall and is a quar- history was in the making before tics Rivera gained an advantage 1.66.pc•ad r4s4--Clamthat. Saha divisions. Should the Scarlet and ter miler on the track. Recently the very eyes of that sdremaing which he held for most of the lloaktaa. has ere? hIoNeary. Black garner some second and elected manager of the Store, he is crowd. When Joe Taylor, local liter Thad advasalcal 1115. third place*. Coach Ben Charon's mach, thereby gaining the refer- 116-1•••ad clawa—Barnalt. Janus a member of the Customs Commit- forward, sank his last field goal ee's nod- [tepid..., wow aver Weida. team have an excellent chance of tee, the 1916 Basketball Dance for Haverford in the final few mn- Grappliag in the 145-pound Thaw advaathwat 7.41. coming out of the meet victerieua Committee and has held various utes to bring the score to 26-22. 11.44Twataitt meso—enue. dabs. group, Joe Weil:Ankara battled his threw Orldetata• with class offices beside.. He recently he broke the individual point scor- man to a draw in an extra period • head 10th nil back Inapt, Lew Fleccus And Henry resigned from his post as a sports hie, record for the College, which tuesle. Joe. starting out fast, Thant Ma. editor of the News. Oliver Melahoir with 128 points has the advantage only to lose Scattergood Lead Grads held since 1837. Joe, entering the mad scramble about the game with 117 points needed only middleIna of the match. Since the To Victory Over Garnet 7 more to break the record, scored difference in times was leas than half nelson.and scumneeded in A. Macintosh Approves exactly seven points, no more, no a minute an extra period was de- lasting out the period to lose by a Led by Lew Fleeces and Henry Swimming Team Plan leek So all hail to the new point treed necessary, after which the 7:41 time advantage. Scatergood, a fast, smpoth-working scaring cisampionl Hie eagle eye match was called a draw. Alumni team swamped an as- and his fight will be missed when Heavyweight Bout Deckles Meet sortment of Swarthmore grads by Swimming is the latest Haver- next year rolls around. MeNeary Lome Close Declaim a 33-21 count Friday, in a prelim- ford sport to receive the approval Captain Bill Tiernan made At this point the score was 14%- inary to the varsity encounter. of Graduate Manager Archibald hie farewell bow in an amide- Soh Bold*, *reeding In the lfirs- 101/2 in favor of the Scarlet and Getting off to a fast start the Macintosh, '21. The plan was ori- pound skeleton, proved no match Black, with the deciding bout in isms manner in the bitterly for the superior teaks of Crarton local grads rolled up the points ginally conceived and carried to fought game. A splendid guard the heavyweight boot coming up. and soon were leading, 13-1. At the its completion by Donald Mac- and a ateadyln McDaniel. Foray In the bout Mc- It brought together Lloyd Balder- g influence. Bill Dael got the advantage, which half the score stood 20.5 in favor Gregor, '39. MacGregor, a stu- has been invaluable to his ston and "Man Mountain" Ellis. of the locals. From then en the dent et Haverford School last year, he alheld through a slow mach to Balderston, although outweighed, team. It was extremely un- vele with a 8:61 time advantage. Alumni took thing. at a more has obtained the service" of the fortunate that he had to leave we. putting op a great fight leisurely pace. Haverford School tank mentor, JON- The Blue and Gold out • the game on persotud fools He eked against Ellis, when Ellis bridged In the third quarter Swarth- eph McQuillan, and has also se- . had played a brilliant game up clam decision when Ed Clentice soddenly and Apeethenlarly pinned cured the use of the pool on Mon- gained a 1:38 time advantage over more decreased Haverford'a lead to that point, holding the high Balderston with a head lock and to nine point's at 24-15 as Stetson day, Wednesday, and Friday searing Swarthmore captain. Sem McNeary in a hard-fought back throw in 3:48. and McCracken of the Garnet made nIghte from 11:30.10:30 P. H. 165-pound match. Traveling to New Brunswick on Jim Buckingham, to three several spectacular shots. The If there is any real development, liointe. Bill is certainly going In the 176-pound group Watkins Wednesday evening, the Haverford Scarlet and Black put on the atenno a practice meet may be scheduled lost by a referee's decision to Bar- wrestlers went down to a 23-19 de- to be mimed next year. DM again, however, and finished with for this year. The month of March Dug, who played a very good nett. In the last part of Ida bout feat M the hands of a "trent Rut- a 33-21 lead. and possibly April will be used in Tom Watkins put op a gallant fight gers aggregation. game in T16111.1Jia place, and to keep from being thrown by a Lew Flacons, captain of the rounding out some sort of a team Ted Wingerd tell be two very Hag Wins Again Haverford five in 1933.34, was high in developing and building material effective guards, but emiebow scorer with 14 palate. Henry for next year. The eneouriaring it won't seem eight not seeing "Chick" Haig, Joe Weitaankorn Scattergood rang up El, as did Mc- turnout consists of the following: Bill in there driving his ionain and Bob Boyle were the only grap- Cracken and Stetson of Swarth- Bird, Bailey, Dickson, Edwards, oil. breaking up enemy plasm, plers who were able to break into more. The Edgar brother', Al Evert, Gaines, George. Heitman, sad clipping down the sick- the winning column for the Hay- Thomas, and Bill Cadbury also Kona, Ligon, McCune, MacGregor, H. R. Jacob, Inc. erfordians, room to "aria 'em up." Waster Ave. at Much Road played fine games for the Alumni, Phillips, Etch, Bobbins. Rohrmayer, Captain-elect Sturge Poormarl In a fast match "Chick" Haig producing the strongest grad com- Steel, Trench, Webb, =name, and played excellent basketball against Ardmore, PIMA. gained the advantage over Honeek b nation seen in years. Joe Wingerd. the Garnet. He held Tommy Hall- owell, who is second only to Jiro Buckingham in the matter of acer- H. Lloyd Balderston b:1g, to four points, This enabled ch. of 1939 him to maintain his brilliant de- THE COLLEGE USES fensive record. Sterne Is a fight- Campus Representative Autocar er and will prove to be an inspire- in the Sales and Service of READING Famous Reading Anthracite tional leader of next year's quintet- me and H. C G. Ford V.8 14;3 1 WHY NOT YOU ? SNDTHe FREI! MENDING AND Lincoln Zephyr Studebaker Ask your noarost coal merohant or phone DARNING PHONES The Philadelphia and Reading Cricket Hand Laundry 41 OWEGIZT ATZPIV21 Ardmore 4800 Motor Trucks Coal and Iron Company AXD/a0a12 Home Ardmore 232-3 Philatterphla Penna. WALnut ass 0.2. Dame Anemia COWLES, ADKINS. CARSON

Tuesday, March 3, 1936 HAVERFORD NEWS PAGE SEVEN Garnet Quintet Defeats Locals, In Thrilling Contest Swarthmore Wins Close Game Retiring Captain North Lloyd Tean Jayvee Five Tops From Fighting Haverford Quintet Tops Dorm Loop Joe Taylor Leads Local Scorers With 7 Points; Swarthmore, 36-29 Jim Buckingham And Wrichie Wray Center Barclay Loges Webster, Mears Excel Top Garnet Passers First Game To In Contest With Aroused from the lethargy that has marked their play- North Garnet ing for a great portion of the season, the varsity basketball team played an alert, hard-fought game on Friday night in Standings in the Intramural Bas- Showing more fight and better ketball League were shuffled dur- the Main Line Gymnasium, only to be nosed out in the final form than heretofore this season, ing the past week as the high-fly- Coach Al Thomas's minutes of play by a highly favored Swarthmore College ing North Lloyd quintet took undis- Jayvee basket- ball teem took the Swarthmore puted possession of first place. quintet, 26-26. Shooting two foul shots after the final gun Jayvees into camp. 36-29, The game Center Harelay's formerly unde- had sounded, Sugar Kane, veteran local forward, sank only was played in the Haverford gym feated courtment guttered a set- on Friday afternoon. one to leave the kandeBatten one back at the bander of North Bar- Goals by Webster and Mears op- point behind. clay and were relegated to second ened the scoring activities., putting The game wan the seventeenth So Near .. . I place. Although five games were sched- Haverford in front, and from then contest in the brilliant Haverford- on the Fords were constantly in the Swarthmore series, in which the 11AVRAFORD (251 uled in the loop for the past week. only three were played. One game lead. The score at half-time was Garnet now lead, 10 games to 7. O. F. F. 22-13 in favor of the locals. Breaking the two-game winning Knee, I. • was forfeited, and the other was Taylor, f. In the third quarter the Garnet streak of Haverford. it was the 7 postponed until Thursday night of Poorten. e. 4 this week, staged a rally which brought them rimiest game played between the Ttornaa. e. up to within four points of Haver- two colleges singe 1924. Purvis. f. Lloyd Sete Scoring Record ford, but this was as close as BILLTIERNAN Swarthmore was able to get to the The game was hard - fought North Lloyd A. team showed its throughout, with the issue always Totals fighting Fords. 55 Retiring iieptain of the hese right to its position at the top of in doubt. No more than els points KW...115101D DM kethall team. which just Iota III the standings by rolling up the Webeter High Scorer separated the two rivals at any 11. F. r . Swarthmore. Tiernan ended 6eruoaltem. 3 3 a largest score of the season in their time. Haverford held the lead four yearn of court play in a victory over the Grad Students. The The only department of the game three times during the course of Kalindete, f. 3 • I in which the visitors excelled was e. • o 4 Mace of glory. holding the score was 63-12. In the other game the evening. and on three occa- foul shooting, in which they sank Wray. S. ▪ 4 a Gamete hircheworing Buck- played on Monday South Lloyd sions the score was tied. Twice tlerphy, a. • ingham to three points while 5 out of 9 to the locals' 4 out of Reek, a. • • held on to fourth place by defeating 12. Val deBeaueset, towering Hay- Swarthmore had apparently safe he was in the game. North Barclay, 29-18. leads, and thrice Haverford rallied — — erford center, furnished the Telole Is 6 DI On Wednesday the Day Students big to overcome tai.a. The Garnet's thrill of the game when on • jump- were unable to get together • eixepoint lead near the end of the TRACKMEN TO BE IN MEET er near the Garnet basket, he Four men are journeying to New teem and were forced to forfeit tapped the ball and sent it swish- game had been down to two points to Merion-Founders. North Bar- when the dourly minutes of the York Saturday to participate in the ing neatly through the hoop. he lead rapidly changed kends. Th IC 4-A Indoor Track Champion- Oay's second game were Over. game of the week, to "Webber Webster of Haverford score was soon 9-8 in favor of tb ships, according to Pop Haddleton, be played with South Barclay, was l Garnet. After no further scoring postponed by mutual consent of ed both teams in scoring by notch- Garnet Guards Outstanding coach of the Haverford track team. ed thirteen points. Frank Mears. or several minutes Wray dropped Captain Holzer plans to enter the both teams. Every man on the floor played 'n a beautiful one-handed stel also of Haverford, was runner-up 60 meter dash, where he will meet for scoring honors with nine points. a fine game, and there were few fom the corner to make it 11-S, several speedy record-breakers. Bevan Scores 22 Points erand-outs. A great deal of the the score at half-time. Starr, Garnet forward, was high Sam Evans, sophomore hurdler, North Barclay's strong five was scorer of hie team with 3 points. credit for Swerthmoree victory Basket,were made In rapid suc- will compete In the 60 meter high unable to get going on Monday, The line-op: goes to two guards. Wray and cession at the beginning of the aec- hurdles, while John Lester and Bill and as a result they :tattered their Beek. Time and again they broke ond half, and the game began to Myer will enter the high jump com- second defeat of the winter. Henry Reverses:me JAYVEE. (3.1 up local plays which seemed to be get rough. After quite a few "held" petition. All four men have been Gulbrandsen of South Lloyd was certain scores. In addition, Wray, balls, Purvis knotted the count, practicing on the indoor track of high scorer with ten points. North Wobalor. e. e II highly touted Sophomore, marked 13-13, with a foul shot. This con- atettgar. • • University Lloyd A's game in the evening was Mears, f...... . .... . Op.,/ total 01 8 points_ dition was abortelthed,-Alwereseer, erfeeesecoring contest arwrmeae ad.--Ahoesol7 CaptainBill Tiernan played the and the Garnet soon forged into by the score. Every man on the outstanding game for the locals. lead. The set plays of the Ran- The feet that he had failed and I I die Lloyd team had a total higher than itiram.' , • I I In addition to teeming with Joe dallenen began to click, and they could yet Mile was much in his that of any of the Grade, but Tom- , weeoleweeue-ei e• • • 0 Purvis in breaking up the fast- forged ahead, 20-111. favor. my Bevan was ▪ 6 high :scorer with 22 rrj:;.1;,.. - • 0 breaking attack of the Garnet, he and came up, handing the ball to points and Mel Weightman was Locals' Rally Sheet held Jim Buckingham, Swarth• Referee Abrams. As he walked close behind with 17. Total. 1.I 4 as more captain and the season's high off, the crowd cheered him. H The Swarthmore team pulled North Lloyd's B team also mark- rin.earstaithise JAYCEE. III) scorer of hie team with 102 points, themselves together and sank three was admittedly in a "tough" ape ed up a victory over the luckless to a Bindle point in the entire Rest baskets in a row after Kalkstein Grads on Wednesday with • 36-15 LITI•solon. r. . I t 1 half. His ejection on personal had tied the game up at 20-all. score. Sharpies& of Lloyd racked Lintiaeott. 1. l fouls near the start of the second With about two minutes left to up 7 field goals and • foul shot for solar, e. 2 a INTRAMURAL ReSSETrALL Baekaaae, f r I 5 half materially weakened the Main play, the Garnet tried to freeze the a 15-point total. while Stoical was Loyeseag, e. Liners' defense. Pet,.., g. ball, but they could not prevent the RESULTS 11F LAOT HARKS only one point behind with 14. o The game wee cleanly played Brows. e. • o locals from pulling up to two Feb y 24—Soath Lloyd. 10; Greybell was high man for the ato4a. e. throughout. Because of the fight- points behind. Kane got loose and art h Bo ref' y, la; North Grads with 7. F.D.. a. ing spirit of the quintets there was e was shooting as the final gun went Lloyd A, es. Geed MI Floorleen. a. n considerable roughness, but no de- off, when he was fouled. As the Crucial Game Tonight liberate fouling was evident. In gelowney 22-21001.• - Voundere, Told. I Swarthmore fans were beginning 1, nosteats tfurfe1e. A crucial game in the League in 5 21 addition to Captain Tiernan, Wray to rejoice over the victory, Referee Febreney ea—North Lloyd S. scheduled to be played tonight, and Beck of Swarthmore were 34, lira's s tttttt a, 15. Abrams pointed to Kane and said. February 17—North Barclay •a. when the League-leading North ejected on personals. "Shoot two!" rietith 11are1a.1 mastsosol)• Lloyd A Hoopstuffers meet the INTIITIOVAL POINT Here was real drama. Amine STANDISt. OF TEAM second-place Center Barclayitem. Taylor Stereo. 7 Pointe Kane, veteran forward, playing his SCORING Team W. L. Avg. The Center team has played one Captain Buckingham and Wrich- last basketball game for Haver- lees game than the Lloyd aggrega- North 1.10241 A 0 A47 Same Gamow G. ie Wray were the high scorers for ford, about to take two shots with Coder Beret. 5 A. tion, and • victory would give them F. P. Ty ter 14 4 3 Swarthmore with eight points his team two points behind and North Rawl. 4 All a good chance for the title. There TIonan 114 .1157 14 2 1 56 apiece, while Sam Kant:stein was the game technically finished. No. eath lioyd 4 were two games hest night, the Day Sank Lloyd B 4 All .r...rannta 14 I 1 ID tithe behind with Kix. Joe Taylor a single one of the 1000 spectator. s Students meeting North Barclay 13 1 45 wet.. • .445 ',raft 13 1 brought hie ammonia total to 124 by envied him hie chance to tie the tiny at 1 MI and South Lloyd meeting Merlon- comm 37 tend Mud... I .. It 1 1 36 marking up seven counters in the game for Haverford. Kane was Founders. Two games will be Ogg . I South emeetor I .154 nu crucial tussle. Kane was second braver than the fees, however, and played on Thursday, one btween Fr.. 11 11 after visibly drawing himself tO- THIN W111C11.41 SeltEDVLE 12.111,Serd I0 high scorer for Haverford for the Center Barclay and the Grad Mal. Is ill —Use ratedetsor. North / 1 11 evening with 6 points. ðer he stepped up to the foul Students, and the other the post- is. Corson 3 line. Amid utter silence he drop- DE 20102. 5:., Seepla Lloyd re. 5 The Haverford game* clicked Herion-Feenders, poned tussle between North and together beautifully in getting the ped in the first shot without the Tueoito—South Bare., 1120,2 South Bartley. Tote,. 14 15 II Ds ball up to their forwards, but the ball touching the rim. The second 0.500t11, 5.11, Center Bard. tithe guarding of the Garnet Cl. North Lloyd A. 11,30. hit the rim and bounced back, Therolay—Center Barclay vs. NEWS IN ERROR guarder made shooting difficult. live At•titmt.. 6:003 Nee. Swarthmore used a swift criss- leaving the Garnet victorious. rellt2 err. .oath Barelar. An error has been noticed in the cross in a semi-circle in front of Kane, visibly affected, moment- S:00. intramural wrestling article in last the basket, but the guarding of arily bowed his bead, bit his lip. week's issue. Instead of three Haverford was also good. Quite points being given for • fall in Thos. L. Briggs a few of the winners' shots were the final round. there will be three one - handed manning tosses, points given for a decision and against which it is impossible to five points for a fall. . & Son Muni effectively. "The World has Wen relatively conalatent In its ranking of gem. Kane Breaks Ice or .00,0 1105 yea., for Pliny Inferno us Mat after "Everything in For the first three minutes of the the ItInmend shemoat costly of human powleaslong known In kin. only and to •ery few of them: the Ardmore Sporting Goods" game there was no scoring, but Retnato ranked the Pearl, then the Emerald. and then Kane broke the lee with a long toss the 0.1. which put Haverford in thelead. The Five Grant Oen. of the Hindoos from time Printing Co. fl Stray Immenmrial have been the DiatnOnd. Pearl. Rub?, e first marker 'Emerald nnd FlapDire. In the 15th Century. the Fer- Discounts to Students Swarthmore with a foul shot, and mi.. ntnked the 5111021.1I after the Pearl, MOD. and Mace 1889 Mail Orders Solicited Emerald. list the primitive cutting of that day i brought out but a email traction of Ma Dlunand'S Printers for Haney and are." It was not until 1475 that a Belgian sticevered that by pounding Diamond. tO a powder Particular People R. H. Leagel Repair Shop end mixing with nit Diamond. mold bel pasha& "WE ARE AS NEAR YOU The Diamond. King of Om.. sun reigns supreme as a PHONE ARDMORE 1700 AS YOUR Oomaleta •.••••Uwe Berri. roe. of everlasting love. TELEPHONE" Meier Illeorhnallag • OP.111.1. Drake Bard. Jeweler 49 Rittenhouse Place Chester 9737 PRONE BRYN KARR Ill BF FRED J. COOPER Birth ID ROUTH evraLrta aTaErr. 1111LARZLPIDIA termer Railroad ova asil Po. IL Ardmore 7th and Welsh 8ta, Chestee,Pa. Saga Hawn FA. PAGE EIGHT HA VERFORD NEWS Tuesday, March 3, 1936

Houghton, President Of Swarthmore Game! Dean Brown Lauds `Food ,estionnaire THEATRE Spirit At Contest Bible Institute, Tells Followed By Dance! Students About Wisdom COW. /sow Pop 4, Ca. 4 student opinion on have been - realized. The bewilder. "The spirit shown at the Hay- Believing that ment caused in the trends of erforceSwarthmore basketball the some of the dishes served in the "Be sure to get wisdom" was the young Communists by their efforts Co-Eds Pay Admission game Friday night was most dining room may be of aid to all admonition given to students at to substitute the preposterous commendable on both sides," Friday Collection by Will H. language of love prescribed by Red was the comment made by Dean concerned, the News is running the As Leap Year Houghton. President of the Moody writers in the place of familiar, H. 'Pigtail Brown, Jr, following following questionnaire. Some of Aids Males Bible Institute at Chicago. Wis- smooth-flowing bourgeois phrases the classic contest. Furthermore the dishes listed below are pos- dom, according to Mr. Houghton, is naturally very amusing. Rut he said that if the game had sibilities; others are those now should be one of the primary aims this comic opportunity, like several By M. A. Webster, Jr., '39 to be lost it was best to lose with of all who are in mach of an edu- served about which opinion might others, is used with too much After the dramatic finish of the such a spirit. cation. abandon and not enough subtlety. "The referees," he added. be helpful basketball game Friday night the Although maintaining that peo- Unfortunately the, acting, too, is "were two of the best in the floor was cleared for the annual Check those you like, make a ple in general are sufficiently uneven. David Morris vicinity. The fact that they , as one of Basketball Dance. The bright, eras after those dishes you do not equipped with knowledge, the the young men. has his excellent kept the game so well in control speaker complained that the human glaring lights and wild cheers gave like as served here. Cut out the moments; but Edward Fuller, way to red, green and yellow bulbs and that there was none of the race has always suffered from a as box and drop it in your nearest the other young man, is uniformly and soft, soothing music. The gym common 'booing' following their chronic inability to apply it in the incompetent. Phyllis Cornell as decisions were factors which was thoroughly transformed as College mail-box. form of wisdom. And without the one of the young women, finally Sam Hansen and his 11-piece or- aided in forming the good feel- later knowledge is useless. Breakfast: gets warmed up to her job, and cheetra took the floor on the south ing." The institution which Mr Fray. Gilbert as the other young side and began to play. Grapefruit juice....Unsugared Houghton represents, he explained woman is convincing, sympathetic, At • little afters ten the doors fresh grapefruit .... Prunes .... teaches 139 different subjects all of and vital throughout. The Theree• were thrown open to general ad which are centered around the Scrambled eggs....Eggs in cups bars highapot, however, is offered mission and the crowd poured. in. Bible. Their 1920 students are by Aristides de Leon, who played ....Fried egge....Poached eggs.... taught that this book is not only an The committee estimated that there Student Opinion the district organizer. He gave o. were about 100 couples on the floor I Serapple....Bacon....French toast important aid in the instruction of kindly, virile, and intelligent per. altogether and at least 30 stags. Coml. fro. Pap 4. Cot. 2 —.Codfish rakes-...Fried mush .... how to live, but that it is the es- forinance. sence of life itself. They said the strangest thing was The bill makes it a crime to pub- Creamed dried beef .... Coffee Robert Harrison. '37. the way the Swarthmore girls non- lish or distribute any book or chalantly paid the admission while pamphlet which, on falling into cake the boys stood bah and watched. the hands of an enlisted man, Lunch: Founders Club To It is Leap Year Week at Swarth, might possibly "urge, advise or Vary Requirements more and it seems this Is the girls' Counsel" him to dleobey instruc- Hominy....Baked beans and MUSIC duty—to take the boys every- tions. It would be a crime for a pork....Navy (white) beans -- L where. Furthermore when the Stewed tomatoes...Potato cakes Cont. from Pap I, Cel. newspaper to protest against the Coo, brow Pot 4, Col. 3 girls paid, their bands were stamp- conduct of the militia during a ....Banana fritters....Corn frit- classification, the Chairman of the ed Instead of the boys' to show that strike. A preacher could'not de- ters .... Stew....Fried shrimp.... cis Prelude and Fugue, we feel that Customs Committee, the Chairman they were legally in the dance. nounce war if there happened to Fried oysters Soup and crack- it will be back and will ultimately of the Store Committee, the Head be a moldier in the congregation. ers, eliminating one hot dish—, win a place in our hearts in Phila- of the Janitor's School, and mem- Receipts Exceed Hopes This is the attitude of the War De- Omelette....Creamed tuna fish.... delphia, as is already has in other bers of the staff of the Janitor's Chairman W. H. Loesehe, Jr., partment on free speech. Liver....Sauerkraut .... Tapioca .. places. As yet we are not yet ac- School for at least two years have '36, Laid from the Committee's point Those who protest the ousting Rice pudding.... Mush.... Black customed to such prolonged dis- been added. In this same elaasife of view the dance went off very of General Hageod should remem- cherries....Canned raspberries.... sonance. Like the uninitiated on cation, instead of the presidents of smoothly and was a financial suc- ber that it is only one step in a Cup custard Junket .... Jells.... ship-board longing for "terra certain ePecified clubs, the Proses cess. In fact the receipts surpass- policy of censorship which has ser- Bread pudding-- firma." one aches for the pleasing ion reads: "The presidency of any ed their expectations. He was par- ious implications. They should not rest and cadence of • consonance. club approved by the Membership ticularly pleased with the orches- confine their opposition to this Supper: This ache stood in the way to fair Committee, this to be considered to tra, which he believed from all single ease but should oppose all Cream of asperity. soup.... criticism of the work. include the Captain of the Dehat- P. K. Page, '34. ing Team." comments he heard went over well threats to freedom of thought and Cream of tomato soup,-,.Oyster with the crowd. The young singer, expression. etew....fee cut- Kay Spencer, got a big hand from R. M. C. let—Ham...Corned beef and the audience as she sang some of cabbage....C.auliflower .... Broccoli STUDENTS HEAR MANNICHE 011;t.GF the current song bits. S. Duggan, Political —.Spinach .... Scalloped potatoes Peter Manniehe, Head of the In. scnom, Doe Leaks as usual was at the ....Potato chips....Tornips (yel- MI-national People's College. El- 61 Graduate; lateral 11 Calais is 1935 punch bowl and served the refresh- ..neentry Mart=alew Scientist, To Talk low)....Turnips (white)....Sqnash sinore, Denmark, has been a guest ments with his customary genial Cinnamon buns ...Pineapple —GT Dril te tie gem UassY pee smile, of Professor Douglas V. Steers. aieres. Set met ammel • se DM Cowl. from Pogo 1, Cot 1 upside-down cake....Cherry up- Sunday night he spoke to a group greet Imerielagu side-dawn cake..._ Demme. . lemel of Science end a member of the of students on the subject of "Dan- Onmeelea. 10 T American Historical Association, Other euggestions for addi- ish Education and the Cooperative G. WWII. a. tion or omission: Movement." 7117 (heap Ika.a, r• COLLEGE CALENDAR the American Political Science As- sociation, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Macomb s-• Sigma Kappa, and a number of TIJINVAlf—bloollag of Howe of. other organizations. WEDNESDAY—P.Accra In the News 55 Room at 7 Dr. Duggan has been honored '57, mistress. WhIcrimn,the Math by several foreign governments. He Club on -Trartscendetual was made a Commander of the Numbers" In the email .111sth Order of the Crown of Italy and of Room et 4.15. Fninele the Order of the Star (Rumania), mat will address the Engineer. a Chevalier of the Legion of Hon- Club en 'The Rear Mountain arida" in Rill. Laboratory or (France), an Officer of the Or- at 7:15. der of the White Lion (Csechoslo- TRURSDAY—Mmiln of Pram Bureau In 23g Lloydthe at vekia) and the Order of Merit 12:16; Vanity Fencing with (Hungary). Delaware at 5:05, home; He belongs to several clubs, in- Squash match with German- cluding the Century and the Town town Academy, home at3:30 Jayvee vereathog with Folio: Hall in New York and the Carlos scgal Academe. at 4, home; Club of Washington. D. C. H. Preach, Kane will address the books include: "The Eastern Qua- Liberal Club on 'The Defend- tion—A Study in Diplomacy," er. at 7:30 In the Union: • meeting for the formation of a 1902; "A History of Education," chapter of the American stu- 1916; and "The League of Na- dent. Union FIB be held In the tions," 1919. Union following the Kane tall, Dr. Duggan is married and has SATURDAY. — Jayvee fencing with Pennoylvngia, home, at four children. His office is located 1:30: Varsity fencing with at 2 West 46th Street, New York Pennoylrania. Mons at 1:30; City. logVanity meet quadrangular at Lafayette wreoG- with Lafayette, Urchins and Gettys- Moorestownburg: Glee PI-lend:4.Club concert School, at Marsh 10-16 TUESDAY—Meeting of the News Pleasant TRURIMAY—MeetIngOfficer!. at 7 In the Reim ofRoom. the Press Bureau In 53 Lloyd at customs 12:15: Prouder. Club Ran- quet In Alumni Room at 7. FRIDAY—Debate with WW1. "Who yelled 'Fire'?" herton UnivantIty, at home: Jayvee tensing with Radnor 'It's that Rhinle again. He's Me. got a quart of Blipplee ice zeTeaDew — Wary feadne cream and think; he with Johns MAW; away; an get us Jayvee Uncles with Clerrnan• of the way." town Academe. Supple• lee cosec Is a•Mlim pleasaat Haverford seelem—ter MO.. Gleesome me well ea Rhin- PROVIDENT trusteeship is as tee Made eattrehr with Rave/ higredleets. At the wog, integral a part of Philadelphia Remember! SUPPLEE life as are the city's important Breakfasts at historic landmarks. I C EaC R E A M; BACKED NY A filIFTURY OF The Coop PROGRESS Every Morning Nasal man tea Sagest Srla • Zaterrea7 Proirs-Psne 9:30 •

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