HAVERFO D NE S VOLUME 32—NUMBER 22 HAVERFORD (AND ARDMORE), PA„ TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1941 2 627 $2.00 A YEAR Roberts Chosen to Head Saturday to Mark Herbert Hoover to Deliver Student Body Next Year Formal Op. ening Gracliation Addre:ss June 7 Of Library Wing Whitehead Selected Plans Being blade As New Secretary Christopher Morley To Broadcast Speech In Close Election Will Deliver Address; Of Former President Amid tremendous applause, Ken- Inspection to Follow Former President Herbert neth Roberts officially signified his The new library building of the Hoover will deliver the Commence- election as president of the Stud- ment address- to the graduating College-will be dedicated at exer- 7. ents' Council by rising in the din- cises to be held under the new Seniors on Saturday night, June ing room last Friday noon _and Arrangements are being made to clock of the library at 3 P.M. Sat- a making his announcements. He an- urday afternoon. Christopher Mor- have the address broadcast over nounced that John C. Whitehead, ley, '10, will deliver the principal nation-wide radio hook-up at nine '43, had been voted by the student address. o'clock. body as secretary-treasurer of the Serving as Honorary Chairman Council. After the opening of the exer- of the National Committee on Food cises by President Felix Morley, for the Small Democracies now, Mr. The announcements of the re- President Emeritus William Wis- Holder has served the country in sults in the election had been de- tar Comfort will speak on "The many other responsible positions. layed a day due to the closeness of Haverford Library." During the last war he was Chair- the original vote for the secretary- Then will follow the formal pre- man of the American Relief Com- treasurer and the necessity of an- sentation of the library building mittee in 1914-15, Chairman of the other ballot. The voting by pref- to the College, which will be made Commission for Jtelief in Belgium erential ballot was made under a by Morris E. Leeds, Chairman of from 1915-19, and United States new by-law of the council. the Board of Managers. Professor Food Administrator from 1917-19. „„Members Selected Dean P. Lockwood, Librarian, will He has been Chairman of the Other members of the Students' officially accept the building on be- American Relief Administration half of the College. since 1919 and is also a Trustee Council include Neal Addoma, '42, courtesy or Bachrach Theodore Lawrence, '42, Morris KENNETH ROBERTS, who After Christopher Morley's ad- at his alma mater, Stanford Uni- Evans, '43, Robert Macerate, '43, dress, which will follow the pre- HERBERT HOOVER, who will versity. Ellsworth Alvord, '44, and James was elected President of the sentation, the new building is to deliver the principal Cons- Plan Evening Graduation Worl,• '44. Courts Oulahan Students' Council last week. be open for inspection by the iisincement Day address. Departing from the usual custom Editor of the NEWS, and Alan public. of morning graduations, the Clesa Dorian, '42, Chairman of the exec- Those who attend are asked to of 1941 will have their graduation utive committee of the Athletic enter the library by the front door ceremonies in the evening' preced- Association, are ex-officio. mem- Students to Attend of the old building. The entire stu- Ten New Courses ing the speech. Following the bers. The vice-president of Cap dent body is invited to attend the Hoover address, there will be a and Bells, who has not yet been exercises, but because of limited reception for the Senior Clams chosen for the coming year, will Model Legislature space they are requested to stand Planned Next Year members and ,their families to meet alsobe an ex-officio member. on the sidelines. Mr. Hoover. Roberts to Captain Soccer Departments to Alter Selection of the Senior Class Meeting Will Show Gift has been made by the Present Roberts, who attended Moores- How Laws Are Made Varsity Club Banquet Course Numbering and Executive Committee. It was town Friends School, has played on decided to donate approximately the varsity soccer, basketball, and Eight students from College plan To Be Held April 26 Numbering of the courses of $200 toward furniture for fixing baseball teams. He will captain to attend the eighth annual Inter- study listed in the College catalog the Recreation Building. The the soccer team next year. Dur- collegiate Conference on Govern- After Day of Sports this year has been almost univer- Present Committee and a Special ing his freshman and sophomore ment which will be held at Harris- sally changed upon the decision of Student Council Committee are to years be served on the executive burg from April 24 to 27. The Completing a reunion day cram each individual department. Ger- cooperate on re-decorating the committee and during the past Conference this year will take the med with athletic events, the Var man, Physics and Biology are building, with the Women's Faculty year has been the president of his form of a model unicameral State sity Club banquet will be held on among the few departments which Legislature with the appropriate Club assisting in an advisory rapa- class. He was a member of the Saturday, April 26, in Founders have not altered their listings. In city. Customs Committee his sopho- committees and general sessions. Hall at 8 o'clock. addition to these changes there more year and is a member of The purpose of the Intercollegi- Feature speaker of the evening are a number of new courses never To Hold Prom June 6 Founders Club. Throughout the ate Conference on Government is was to have been Mr. John B. previously given at Haverford. Voluntary contributions for the past year he has served as the to provide a means whereby stu- Kelly, Philadelphia Democratic These do not include any of the Senior Class Gift will be gladly secretary-treasurer of the Stud- dents may learn together how their chairman, but last minute changes courses listed in this year's cata- received by the Present Committee. ents' Council. government operates. The Con- this morning necessitated making log. The new courses are: Members of the Committee include ference is meant to supplement arrangements for a new speaker. Astronoy 9b, Celestial Naviga- Chairman Gerritt L. Ewing, Rich- Movie to Be Shown classroom studies in political and Mr. John S. Williams, '20, is to be tion, hours to be arranged: Eng- ard H. Bolster II, Henry A. Smith, social sciences. toastmaster. Movies of National lish 4b, Exposition and argumen- Jr., William R. Watson, Jr., and Saturday in Roberts; Students expecting to attend the and baseball are tation, written and oral: Monday, J. David Garmey. Conference from here are Edgar planned, and the new officers of Wednesday, and Friday at 9:30; Following tradition, the Senior Vic Dance to Follow D. Bell, Daniel B. Boyer, Robert the club are scheduled for an- French 16b, French literature Prom will be held Friday, June 6, W. Evans, Leslie Johnston, Charles nouncement. Admission will be through the sixteenth century, Dr. in the Dining Hall on the night The moat recent educational A. Olson, Leon Solis-Cohen, Wil- before graduation. As yet the development on the campus is the $1.50 for alumni, interested mem- W. W. Comfort: Monday, Wednes- liam W. Stainton, and David C. bers of the student body and pros- day, and Friday at 9:30; Govern- Dance Committee have not select- showing of foreign language sound Thompson. Professor John G. pective Freshmen, club members ment and Philosophy 18b, Political ed an orchestra. movies, the first being "Mayerling" Herndon will be a faculty advisor in French with Charles Boyer and being admitted for $1.25. philosophy, Professor Steere: Tues- and a member of the committee Campus activities during the day, Thursday, and Saturday at Danielle Darrieux. This film will which will interview those nomi- 10:30; Music 3a, Nineteenth and be shown Saturday night in Rob- nated for the post of general chair- afternoon include a number of ath- Public Opinion Group erts Hall at 8 o'clock after which man of the Model Legislature. letic events. Cosiinxed on Psge 6. Col. 4 a Vic Dance is scheduled. Delegates from each of the col- To Discuss Results The movie will be open to all at leges represented will prepare in Of British Victory an admission charge of 26 cents. advance certain bilis which will he Tommy Reynolds and Clarinet The management of the affair is referred to appropriate committees. Activity, in another section of in the hands of a committee head- These committees will report to the Committee for the Communi- ed by Professor Alexander J. Wil- the general session, and their To Offer Swing Tempo at Prom cation of Public Opinion will be liamson, The committee plans to recommendations will be debated BY JAEN. HOTJGH rocked the solid rhythms of this seen when the first of three round- show another film on May 10, and colorfu aggregation include Har- table discussions on current prob- if "Mayerling" is well received, Tommy Reynolds and his "music vard, Yale, Brown, Bowdoin, Bos- lems is held Wednesday evening at nth pictures will be displayed Steere Gives Lecture of today in the style of tomorrow" ton University, Williams, Cornell, '7:30 in the Common Room, every two or three weeks next At University of Chicago will be brought to the campus on Colgate, New York University, To contribute their special know- year. the week-end of May 2-3 to supply Manhattan College, Fordham, Ex- ledge on the subject—"What should Professor Douglas V. Steere music for the Junior Prom. With be done with Germany if the Allies Following the movie, the Vic delivered the last in a series of eter Academy, Norwich Univer- Dance Committee has planned an- the clarinet-tooting maestro will SAY, and the University of Ver- win the war?"—Professors Benja- other of its Common Room dances, lectures on ethics and religion at be vocalists Mary Anne McCall and mont min Gerig and Douglas Steere will the University of Chicago, Evans- Ralph Young to add songs to the Crispness of execution and be present. Walter Hollander has ton, Illinois, on Thursday night He orchestration. The band was ar- arranged the series of round tables spoke on "Some Foundations that bouncing tempos characterize the Greek Scholars to Act ranged for through the Consolidat- Reynolds orchestra. High spot of with Dr. Gerig's assistance. In Swarthmore Play Stand in Europe Today." ed Radio Artists, Inc. of New each arrangement is the solo clar- Professor Steere conducted the York City where Tommy is play- Good Friday services in the univer- inet of the leader, flashing out in "Peace," a comedy of Ariato- ing at the "Famous Door." brilliant and breath-taking impro- Phones, will be presented in Greek sity chapel, speaking on "Strength Harman, '35, to Give On Friday night Boston, which also saw Artie visations in front of choir voicings about the middle of May at in Extremity." Shaw sky-rocket to fame, first of brass and reeds. Here's a clar- Swarthmore's Clothier Memorial, he spoke at a Quaker meeting at Illustrated Lecture Northwestern, discussing the Euro- heard the rhythms of Tommy's inet style which is really attention- it was announced recently. The cast band when he was engaged at getting and worthy of rank with Tonight at 7:15 William Har- will be made up of students and pean situation today. faculty members from Swarthmore Levaggi's. Other of his engage- any current star. Special note man, Jr., '85, will give an illus- SMITH DISCUSSES ART ments were at the Casa Madrid in should be made of the four eases trated talk to the Engin Club on and Haverford. Louisville, Asbury Park Casino in which have a truly remarkable "Testing Machines and Other Ma- The Haverford representatives Professor S. Stevenson Smith, Educational Councilor for ASCAP, New Jersey, the Hampton Beach blend and attach. Soloists besides terials-Testing Equipment." are: Professor L. Arnold Poet, Casino in New Hampshire, the Reynolds are subdued. Mr. Harman is a graduate of Warren Anderson, John J. Hock, spoke on the combined topics of "Arta in the Democracy" and State Ballroom in Boston, the Tommy has been broadcasting Haverford and at the present time Robert E. Hecht, James S. Sutter- almost nightly over the Mutual, he is a sales engineer in the South- 1m, and Whitney S. Teeple. Re- "Creative Work on the American Playland Casino in Rye, New York, Campus" Thursday evening in the and the Paramount Theatre in CBS and NBC networks for the wark division of the Baltimore hearsals for the group have al- 2 Locomotive Company. ready started. Common Room. New York City. Colleges that have Coaracaul an Pagr 6, Col. Tuesday, April 15, 1941 PAGE TWO HAVERFORD NEWS

Haverford News Crow's Nest Escort The other day, as I was coming Fouzerd February 15, ISO. out of Founder's Hall, I chanced to .1 galley: Court. °Mahan, 45. Beebless Mamesec: W. C. Falconer. •05. look above me to a second floor Just Among Friends. Macmil- Managing Editor. Neal *adonis, 45. To the Editor of the NEWS: window ledge; there I saw a squir- an, 1041. 12.00. Theodore Lawrence, '42. rel, Bitting like a man and in an Sports Editor: Robert R. Miller, Jr.. 45. I noticed in the bulletin concerning the room- attitude of complete self-assurance. The Quaker witness to a simple, press Burma Manager: John Y. Radom 'AS. ing possibilities at Dr. Herndon's house at 2 College inwardly centered and outwardly His front paws were folded care- concerned religion is not unknown The NEWS Is published weakly In the college year- Lane that no mention has been made of the possi- lessly on his breast and he remain- except during vacations and examination periods,at 45 ed motionless, staring down at me, in the western world today. But Mittenhouee Place. Ardmore. Penna. Telephone. Ardmore bility of its being used as either a cooperative house no one has described it in so short 4127. Address all communication. to Havertord News, or a language house. Knowing that many people never blinking. We regarded one and incisive and pungent a way as Haverford Collega• Haverford. Penna. another for several moments in Annual subscription, payable in advance. $2.00; are interested in a cooperative house, perhaps the silence, until I became tired of William W. Comfort in his Just singlecopy, 10 cents. Subscriptions may begin at en/ tak- Among Friends which has appear- time. Entered ea second-clams matter at the postotRoe following information would be in ord '. It is those supercilious eyes and the ro- ed within the past month. The a0 Artheere. P.O.. from a repor't drawn up' by several s dents with dent smile, and called to him: Editorials in the NEWS do not necesearily represent en book .is written with the charm the opinion of any group connected with the College. the aid of interested members of the fac ty. • "Look, you absurd non-entity, don't and simplicity that marks a classic. Signedcolumns do not neceasarily represent the view- smirk d me. You are insignifi- It abounds with telling quotation point of the NEWS or of tiny groan oonnected with the On many of the campuses throughout this-coon- cant, eve h though you have climb- College. try cooperative houses are operating with great suc- and anecdote. Member Associated Collegiate Prose ed to a high perch,' and I could In the book, he has gone straight Distributor of Collegiate Digest cess. It has been found that these houses offer liquidate you without half- trying." He did not move, nor did he change to the question of hoie,and why considerable financial saving to students who be- some of these fruits which have In charge of this issue: Ned Anderson his expression of calm disdain and cause of modest means would be unable to con- atifusement. As I turned to walk intrigued the recent non-Quaker tinue their education. They have also offered valu- away, I r theught I saw him shake appraisers of the Society of Friends have arisen. First and central is able experience in group living to those associated his head and give a little tremble the spiritual communion of their Adding to the Curriculum with them. of suppressed laughter. It is a credit to the Haver- worship which is equally accessible HE recent announcement of curriculum According to present plans there would be 18 ford•San that we have all got- at any moment of the day. This he :hanges for next year will doubtless be students in the Haverford cooperative house. These associates with the words: "Behold T ten used to the new order so I stand at the door and knock: received by the student body with interest would be chosen by a joint student-faculty commit- quickly. Of course, they are if any man hear my voice and open tee on the bases of financial need, interest and will- everywhere: three of four of the door, I will come in to him and should be accepted with satisfaction. them sit in every class, listen- There is a large number of new courses of- ingness to enter into the experiment, college grades, ing for words of criticism, and sup with him and he with me." and participation in extra-curricular activities. The generally sleeping; there are About this center, he groups the fered. This shows that while income from work of housekeeping and the preparation and serv- hundreds in every dormitory, Friends' practice of a lay verbal ing of food would be done by the students and would trying to find out what the A ministry that springs out of the the endowment has been decreased, the Col- entail about eight hours of work for each student silent worship and when it sue- students are thinking, they s, that speaks with "a holy lege finds it possible to move forward by in- per week. The consideration of college grades have given up is blerion; they creasing the educational opportunities to be would be only to prevent a student's being caused seek to drive me mad by their p mency"; the suspicion with scholastic embarrassment by the additional hours taunting voices and grim which Friends regard creeds - found here. of housework. The actual cooking would be done by laughter, when I repeat to "Persecution entered with creed- a Veined dietician. Under these plans it is estim- them a magnificent witticism, making"; "the freedom from the Of particular significance regarding the ated that a student would save about $100 a year. torturing fear that science may they gasp and say "that gag one day undermine our faith"; the new government seminars is the fact that Not only would there be a financial saving to Was sill,e an awful choke." the students but it would also save the college the rapacity to regard the Bible as a the program of cooperationibetween Bryn It was remarkable the way they spiritual guide book, but as of cost of remodeling the house. If the experiment is carried through the scheme: en Mawr, Swarthmore, and Haverford is evi- a success, it will offer a means of expanding the 'value to Friends not because what were all going about our simpli is in it is true, but because what dently well under way. Not only may stud- College in the future. daily lethargies as if it were any Students who want to live in the cooperative is true is in it," and he makes all. day—and then suddenly then of these point to the sensible elm- ents circulate freely among the three insti- house should notify Mr. Wills of that desire, while. came a fierce, triumphant jibberins tentatively choosing a room on the campus. plicity of Quakerism as "a portable tutions, but faculty members may do the and ;chattering from the trees and verifiable religion." Very truly yours, the walls, every high and remot4 same, for two Swarthmore lecturers and one Rush Williams, '43 The kind of personl commitment point of vantage. We were beater sits closed enou h to life so from Bryn Mawr as Well as Professors Hern- • from the start; we could not dodgi that the lethal pellets painted likt that "men and women with grave don and Gerig of Haverford will conduct the To the Editor of the NEWS: personal -responsibilities have al- new seminars. acorns that they threw down upon ways been found ready to lay down I should like to call attention to slight errors us; we were forced to surrender, all their"ordinary duties at home The other new courses mark steps for- in statements of fact which have been made in two we could not get at them. . . . to conduct 'enterprises of ward in various departments. It is particu- recent issues of the NEWS regarding Honors As far as freedom is con- ;reat pith and moment' in which courses in the chemistry department. The courses cerned, we are no worse off ;rent sums of money have been larly gratifying that Dr. Comfort is to re- in glassblowing and history of chemistry, offered than before: they demand very intrusted to their skilled adminis- turn to active teaching next year, taking this year, are not "new courses," as was stated in little, and when we ask them tration," he believes comes out of the NEWS, but have been given in past years. what they want from us they his continual attendance upon the over one of the courses in the French depart- The NEWS also stated that all chemistry ma- only sneer and answer "nuts." inward guide. "After all, if whal- ment. All in all, the curriculum for 1941-42 jors take these courses. This is not correct, since Everywhere one finds the ers, explorers and warriors have these, as well as other Honors courses are in gen- edicts, though—the NEWS is absented themselves for long per- marks a definite advance in the effort to eral restricted to Juniors and Seniors who are can- full of them, on the bulletin eels from their families, Friends make Haverford more successful in carrying didates for Final Honors in chemistry. boards, and other places where may be allowed the same prem- . Very truly yours, no one will ever notice them. :at:ye. when called by the spirit out its purpose. William Fe Cadbury, Jr. Here is "It is unlawful to make to a definite task." any Comments whatsoever on His Haverford College colleagues Wilmer's food;" or "Demo- and student and alumni friends will crats will please report at the ye especially interested in his chap- Draftees and Degrees office of the undersigned to be ter on Quaker Education. The registered as Republicans;" nnpliasis upon character, both in ILITARY and naval authorities " may Perhaps in time our very man professor and in student, the de- M talk in terms of men and ships lost dur- How crazily the buildings sail about nor of speech and habits will b, mand for more friendliness between ing wartime, but not the least of the victims Before my aching eyes. There's Roberta Hall affected by our masters, for theL yofessor and student, the college Suspended in a copper beech; within words are of a strong, prisnitivt is an organic community of fac- of conflict are college and graduate degrees. A chaos rages—flashing lights, and men quality that puts our minced meta ilty and students where "in friend- Even today, with the country under a na- And women rushing heedless to and fro. phors to shame. How can we equa 'y contacts between older and There Uncle Felix stands upon one hand such a dialog as this one betweei younger fellow-students the beau- tional emergency, the arrival of draft ques- And dictates incoherent messages a proud male and his tremblini tiful prints of the spirit be cher- tionnaires is destroying the hopes of stud- While secretaries Scaife and Hancock swoon. mate? "Anything special you'. ished" are all central in this able Emaciated Tatman prostrate lien like to do tonight, baby?" "Gnaw !hapter that at points has the ring ents to complete their careers in undergrad- Beneath a block of granite chiseled "Work," honey." in short, I think I like be of a personal manifesto about it. • uate and graduate schools. And Archie Mac insanely stunts a plane ing ordered about by squirrels; it it The chapter on The Peace Testi- Among the tall white pillars of the porch. so amusing and as much less trou. mony is done with much skill. Of Not that students are unwilling to as- Within the Union disharmonious wails ble than thinking. he temper which the Quaker wit- sume the responsibilities of compulsory mil- Announce the Glee Club's leading Lindsay L. M. K. S. ness would keep alive, he writes, And Doctor Swann is singing drinking songs, COLLEGE CALENDAR "In creating a new attitude be- itary and labor service. That exemptions While in the doorway Sandy stands and hurls tween peoples or hostile parties, for those attending colleges and graduate Across the campus etchings, furniture, Tuesday, April 15: there is no use saying, as in a schools will be extended beyond July 1, how- Joe Bushnell's files and even Joe himself. Meeting of the Engineering child's game, 'You begin. We Upon a knoll stands Petey Lockwood's form Club at 7:16. William Harman have to say, 'I'll begin. It would ever, seems doubtful in the present world The library supported on one hand will speak. be something hopeful to see cer- situation. And turning slowly clockwise. There within, Wednesday, April 16: tain nations around a table with Lies Thomas Drake upon a bed of nails, / /Discussion group of the such counters as Singapore, Danzig, Yale has made the most of the situation, So madly writing autographs that he . ,Committee for the Communi- Panama, the Phillipines, Gibraltar, for last week university authorities an- Can scarce detect him. On the cricket crease cation of Public Opionion in Finland and Abyssinia. 'I'll be- nounced a program to dispel the student's Two faculty RI's scream and play the Common Room at 7:30. 8'111'2' Association football with a skull. Thursday, April 17: It is a great satisfaction to have fear for his educational future. Undergrad- Within the bowels of Hilles Otto Rentz Professor Raoul Aglion to so rich a fruit of this first year of uates called for military service will be read- Is forging thunderbolts of molten air speak in the Common Room at William W. Comfort's leisure. Which E. D. Snyder hurls, with perfect poise 7:30 on "The Free French in Douglas V. Steere. mitted without exaniination if no more than Into the midst of a procession long the Desert War." Of textbooks darting ghostily through space. three years elapse between their withdraw- Through clouds of swirling mist the textbooks float; Saturday, April 19: COLLECTION SPEAKERS al and return. The new arrangement will also Astride each one the wraithlike form is seen Dedication of new library Friday, April 18: enable the student, provided his withdrawal Of some professor brandishing aloft building, 3 P.M. Professor Cletus 0. Oakley: Some instrument of torture. Wheels and racks Baseball game with Drew. "Campus Club." occurs in the final month of the academic Set up a direful clattering above. Cricket Match with Tenny- Tuesday, April 22: year, to complete the year's Work by means But lookl The apparitions near my room son C. C. Ford Brown, Professor of And flood in through the window. Now I hear Showing of "Mayerling" in English, St. John's College, of anticipatory or make - up examinations. The wailing! of the hideous throng, who shriek Roberta Hall at 8:00, to be fol- Annapolis: "The New Program Witb a large portion of the junior and In unison, "Remember May nineteenth! lowed by Vic Dance in the at St. John's." senior classes subject to military and labor "Remember May nineteenth—you daren't forget! Common Room. Tuesday, April 29: "Remember May nineteenth and make your peace!" Saturday, April 26: Wallace McClure, Assistant service next year, Haverford might well in- Annual Varsity Club Ban- Chief, Treaty Division, Depart- vestigate the possibilities of adopting a pro- The doctor felt my pulse and shook his head. quet at 8 P.M. in Founders' ment of State: "International "Just comprehensive fever, nurse," he said. Hall. Agreements." gram similar to that announced by Yale. M. W. M. Mei; Ttuuus HAVERFORD NEWS Tuesday, April 15, 1941 118331 • News of Haverford's Graduates • 11941 Sagebeer, '22, Devises Instrumeits Willson Receives ALUMNI NOTES To Classify Yaried Information Logan Pearsall Smith, ex-'85, the School of Commerce for 22 Editor.. Notes The following La an quite well. GuggenheimAward years. article written for the NEWS by Rich- About this time I stumbled upon has recently had published his ard O. sagebero '50, under the title really book, "Milton and His Modern Christopher Morley, '10, whose 'The 111romalcel Chroilleationof Ed- what I believed to be a Critics." foreign rights to "Kitty Foyle" ueolloaal idearorereente.. bagebeer Is promising use for such curve-fit- For Scholarship are being handled by Marion Saun- now a teacher at Tower DM School ting procedures—a method for Henry G. Cox, '05, was recently In Wirodenton rod for emend years classifying students according to o member of a four-man team from ders, has recently completed. ar- has been axonal/neutron with calevlat- rangements for the translation of leg machine. of various kinds. Two the pattern or profile of their Historian Alumnus the Elmira Discussion Club which years aro he reported his d•vellelameate scores on a battery of tests. won a radio quiz contest with the the book by publishers in Sweden, hau4waser rend before the Education- Plans Biography Professional Women of Elmira. Mr. Denmark, Hungary, Brazil and al, Creference of the Educational Rea- A working model' of a device to Chile. Marion Saunders believed brit 1.tureett. accomplish this was built. Each Of King James I Cox is president of the W. T. Henry pass- Bible Class, the men's class of the that if it were not for the war she The classificatioln of individuals, card was "scanned" by light could obtain as many translation ing through its perforatfona to Dr. David Harris Willson, '21, largest Baptist church in Elmira. or of events, when each is describ- es He is also a member of the Board contracts for "Kitty Foyle" as were a quantity of measured fall on an "electric eye." Them has been named one of 85 North made for tGone With the Wind," ed by and Latin American scholars, of Trustees of the Elmira Unity qualities or attributes, is a mod- delicate directeurrent ampliffer Center. which had eighteen. was designed and built to handle writers, and artists to receive Gug- ern problem encountered in educa- the minute currents from the genheim Fellowships from the John Eliot K. Stone, '05, founded the Lester Ralston Thomas, '13, tional and sociologifal work, in vo- Simon Guggenheim Memorial Poets' Assembly of Philadelphia in Headmaster of Moses BrowneSchool cational placement, census analysis, "eye." This amplifier contained Foundation of New York City. in Providence, Rhode Island, mar- rectifiers, and was compensated no 1935 and two years ago was ap- and elsewhere. Mechanical devices that the device could be attached Dr. Willson is at present Associate pointed Poet Laureate of Pennsyl- ried Miss Editha Messer Maxham, are available to accomplish this at Professor of History at the Uni- vania by the Poet Laureate League daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George a high speed,by_...the sorting of to any commercial electric light versity of Minnesota. Azro Maxham, on March 29. —Such a procedure, plug and used for accurate meas- of Washington, an organization in- punched card:v. urement of the light pluming He graduated from Friends' corporated by the Federal Govern Dr. Carroll IL Champlin, '14, is however, can ultimately group to- now teaching at Penn State Col- through the card irrespective of Select School in 1917, and after meat with legal authority to make gether only identically -punched line-voltage variations. attending Haverford earned his such appointments in states where lege and is also active in clubs, cards. Each of these groups might Ph.D. at Cornell in 1925. Since the Legislature has not acted. educational conventions, teachers' be considered as one species. The The method appealed to me as then he has worked as a teaching Frederick W. Ohl, '05, head of associations and churches. , genera, families, ordiers, classes, potentially valuable in many fields assistant at Cornell and as a mem- the department of languages at Arthur Inman, ex-'17, expects to etc., can then be built up from the outside my own. The design prom- ber of the History Department at Simon Gratz High School in Phila- publish a new book of poems, species, but there are no speedy ised high-speed operation, and the Minnesota. He has also taught in delphia since 1931, and a teacher "Three Molds," about May 1, mechanical devices competent to use of the more rigorous root- the summer at the University of in the Philadelphia public schools through E. P. Dutton and Co. handle the larger groups easily. mean-square deviation seemed to Chicago and at Duke, and was a for the last 29 years, died recently The first calculating machine suggest its usefulness in analyti- fellow of the Social Science Re- Professor Emmett W. • Gulley, cal problems. The result would be at the Lankenau Hospital after an grad-'24, was chosen unanimously that I remember having made was search Council, '23-'24. illness of several weeks. Before a simple balance for averaging test classification of statistical data The grants given to the 85 Gug- coming to Philadelphia he taught as the next President of Pacific into a useful frame of reference. College at a meeting of the college results, and I guess I made it to Thus it might be applicable to the genheim fellows will total $180,000. Latin and Greek at Thiel College, board held January 17. He took his interest my students. It was slow- The fellows were chosen from 1400 Greenville, Pennsylvania. analysis of census returns or of degree of Master of Arta in the er than paper and pencil, but it did vocational placement data, the applicants. Dr. Willson plans to Dr. Gordon Graves, '06, has been T. Wistar Brown Graduate School compute the class average and spend the next school year in the classification of outstanding scien- teaching Mathematics at Purdue at Haverford in 1924. He was the mean deviation from that av- tists for defense activities or of preparation of a biography of for the past 26 years. He has then Secretary of the New York erage. for the air James I, King of England and three children: Margaret, now in meteorological data yearly meeting of Friends for four The "mean deviation" did not ap- arms. In the latter field it offers Scotland. His time will be divided Purdue, Richard, who will enter years from which position he went peal to me, however, for it is not between the Widener Library, Cam- Earlham next Fall and Bruce, who particularly interesting possibili- bridge, Massachusetts, and the to Pacific College as a member of as "ritiorous" as the "root-mean- ties. is in junior high schooL the Faculty in 1928. In 1939 he square deviation." I therefore Huntingdon Library, San Marino, Cornelius J. Claasen, '07, had a was given leave of absence for the built a gadget somewhat like a California. grandson, Milburn Aaron Classes, first half of the school year to work "wave-analyzer " employing circu- born on March 28, in Omaha, with the Friends' Service Commit- lar and spiral pulleys, cords, JAMES SPEAR Poole, '40, Appointed Nebraska. tee in the distribution of relief weights, and. discarded household STOVE & HEATER CO. T. Morris Loagetreth, 'OS, is the Spain. The following year funds in utensils. The spiral pulleys were Phone: Rittenhouse 7044 Vice-Consul at Montreal author of four boys' books: "At he continued his work with the empircal masterpices in my estim- Mountain Prep," "Trial by Wilder- Friends as a worker among German ation, and the assembly worked 1828 Market Street Richard Poole, '40, left last ness," "Trooper's Friend," and refugees in Cuba. PHILADELPHIA Thursday to take up his new du- The Missouri Clipper." ties as vice-consul at Montreal, an Thomas Hobbs, '08, Head of the It. H. LENGEL REPAIR SHOP office to which he has been recent- Faculty Atheltic Committee at The Cemplete Ausanotia Service ly appointed. Be will probably Guilford, has been elected Presi- Motor Overhauling • SpecalI7 EASTMAN,DELLON & CO. serve for one year, then return to dent of the Southern Conference Evening Stamp Shop Brake Service Members New York Stock Padang. Washington for further service, in Athletics for this year. Ardmore Arcade Phone Bryn Maw 834 to be sent somewhere else. John Carroll, '08, has been Head ARDMORE, PA. Corner Railroad Ave. and Pan St. lovarrirawn Poole majored in government of the Board of Directors of Guil- L. W. Perkins BRYN HAVE while at Haverford. His appoint- ford College for the past six years Ard. 2576 225 S. Fifteenth St Phila., Pa. ment came just three months after and a member of the Board for he passed his oral examinations 23 years. He has been Dean of or the job. He passed his written Bryn Mawr, Colonial 'loan app. College con-old verted into apts. still available. Charm of examinations in September. Bell Phone: Poplar 1018 surrounded with garden. Every time home 6 Mlta C. 0. FRANKLIN modern eons. 4 & 6 rooms, &BOUM.. EMLEN & CO. walk to sta. Live in this delightful College Meats Provisions Poultry M. HS or 112 So. 16th St. Pltha. Pa. BRYN hIAWR Hotels, Institutions, and Community. Please make appL B. ' COLLEGE TEA ROOM Restaurants Supplied KIN. 2446. 1824 RIDGE AVENUE Suburban South Pembroke Arch Philadelphia Real Estate reakf at — Lath — Ta — Diana otalaed by Plalladel- WINITTOWN Meeting of and College Preperata7 17$210.1. la Pearly Hoarding School for ande (itch Rt.) 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PAGE FOUR HAVERFORD NEWS Tuesday, April 15, 1941 Haverford Baseball Team Defeated in First Three Games

Drexel Wins, 6-1, - Trinity Wallops SPORTS CALENDAR Tuesday. April 15: Ursinus Triumphs Tennis with West Chester In Season Opener Haverford Nine Teachers, away„._ Wednesday. April 16: Over Ford Nine Three Ford Hurlers Fords Lose Second Baseball with Moravian, away. Yield Five Hits Game by 10-1 Score Golf with Baltimore U., Dorian Loses 4-1 Haverfoni's bid for a successful Haverford's baseball team lost away. Duel to Alaci1Ialion opener was given a jolt on Friday its second game in at many days, Friday. April 18: by Hal Evans, lanky right-bander, taking"a 10.1 trim 'ng from Trin- Tennis with Union, home. Howard Macblahon bested si who held the Randallmen to five ity, prbvious 17-4 victors over Golf with Johns Hopkins, Dorian in a tight pitching th Swarthmore. Weak itting is scattered hits as the Drexel Engi- s, and home. Monday afternoon to give Urges. loose fielding in crucial is were Satiday, April 19: neers overcame the home forces by a 4-1 decision over Haverford. a six to one score. the main causes of the lop=sided Ba eball with Drew Univer- - The wildness of pitcher Al score. sity, home. Mahon allowed only four hits s Dorian, who issued seven walks and Trinity got off to a fast sstart, Tennis with Gettysburg, Dorian's five, and mowed only hit three batsmen in the four in- touching Roberts -for three hits away, three bases on balls to Dorian', and two' runs in the first inning. Cricket with Tennyson CC., nings he worked, figured in all of seven. It was the third consent. Drexel's first four runs. In the Held scoreless in the second, the home, very first inning Deardorff singled visitors garnered four more safe J. ViTennis with Westtown, tive loss of the season for le to center, advanced to second as ties oft Roberts to tally a run in lioine. Fords. Dorian hit Quinn, and scored a the third, two in the fourth, and Monday. April 21: Haverford gained a 1-0 lead io moment later on Kolb's single to three in the fifth innings. Dorian, Track meet with University the second inning as Jerry Myers right for the Engineers' initial taking over the pitching duties in ,s4....yirginis, away. who got three of Haverford's foul hits, led of with a single. Captain tally. the sixth, blanked the winners for RALPH STROHL, sloe first one inning, but was touched for Ralph Strohl sacrificed him to sec- Ziegler Pitches and, and he advanced to third `s! baseman, who leafs Ife nine. two runs in the seventh as the re- Track Meet at Virginia, In the fourth inning four more sult of two errors and a walk. Don Magill dropped a single iota straight walks by the usually. reli- Ziegler, the third Haverford Ball Game With Drew lef field. He scored on a high tn. able Dorian and Deardorff's neat Jayvees Drop Baseball mound;man to appeal' in the game, To Climax Busy Week field bounder by Bill Hedges. sacrifice brought in two more Engi- shut out the visitors in the last Ursinus pecked away at Dorian, however, and with the aid of se, neer tallies. Ziegler came in to Opener to Drexel, 7.1; two frames. Roy Randall's Haverfoid pitch for the Fords in the fifth Haverford's lone score came in eral walks, errors, and passed Magill, Ziegler Hurl baseball team, having played three balls, tied the score in the third and was greeted by Clyde's single the fifth inning, the only inning games in four days, faces another that the home team managed to and went ahead in the fourth. The to right. But Watson threw out Held to one hit until the last busy program this week. On Wed- Clyde as he tried to steal second register more than one hit. Myers, visitors added their final runs in inning, the Haverford Jayvee base- nesday it travels to Allentown to the seventh and eighth. and Ziegler bore down to strike first man up, singled, and after meet a powerful Moravian team, ball team lost its opening game to one out, stole second. Watson The line-up: out the nest two batters. Two in- the Drexel junior varsity, 7-1, on while on Saturday it plays host to field errors gave the Engineers drove the ball to deep left center HAVERFORD mh the Haverford diamond Wednesday Drew University. Meanwhile Coach 2b I • another run in the seventh inning field, the longest hit of the game, "Pop" Haddleton's 'vanity track Doriaa. p afternoon. to drive in the run with the only Winslow. 3b • and Gordy Howe gave up the fvralt team will be idle until Monday, Myers, of tally in the eighth after Don Magill, the Fords' starting double of the afternoon. Ziegler pitcher, had trouble in each inning when it faces a strong University Stroh!. lb . . had been removed for a pinch Although losing by a greater Watson, c but pitched himself out of several of Virginia team at Charlottesville. hitter. score than in the first game, Hay- The freshman team, however, n. mogul. rt bad holes. erford's pitching was more en- en- !Lodz.. If Fords Hit In Seventh gages in a meet with Penn Charter Warner, as 3 With two out in the first inning, couraging. Three pitchers coms n Thursday. Except for singles by Bill-Win- Hardin, Kleinbach, and Bock reach- bined to hold Trinity, noted for its 20 1 2 gerd and Ralph Swohl, the Ford ed base, but Magill forced Barber power at the bat, to nine hits, Moravian has won 33 of its last TRSINUS at. h 36 games, and has a veteran team Tents. et . 3 bats were silent until the seventh to ground to the infield. In the four more than the Mainliners !tabu. 2b . when they managed to couple to- second, Hales and Seiders got on returning. Its ace pitcher, Elmer Fetterman, 30 . . managed to collect off O'Malley, MaeMlsbon, p gether three hits for:their single for the Dragons with one out, but the winning pitcher. Stetter, has won 16 and lost 2 in 5 0 his college career, while Rick De- Allaern•land. tally. With two men out, Winslow MacMillan and Simon struck out. The line-up: -MHO,,,.,. If 2 0 singled sharply to left and ad- Inning three produced a Drexel TRINITY 141/ Pue has a ten and two record. Hardin, lb 3 vaned to third as Watson singled score when Hardin walked and Boldlor, 5 Drew also has a veteran team re- Herman. of 3 Sueho, c 3 to right. Winslow scored as Evans came around on an and two turning, but has only one experi- I Harris, 30 enced pitcher, Ray Stan. Al Dor- bobbled pinch-hitter Gil Moore's infield outs. The Dragons added Ford, lb a 1 0 -25 4 5 2: grounder and Watson moved to three more tallies in the fourth on litturek, If i n, Ken Roberts, and Howie Zieg- %tromp-, e ler will probably handle the Hav- second. As Jimmy Magill singled a hit batsman, a , a eatly, of 3 • erford pitching assignments. to center, Watson tried to score balk, and &MOD'S double. Mulcahy, rt 5 • O.54•41eY, o ARDMORE but Quinn's beautiful throw cut Meanwhile pitcher Seiders was 4 • This is the Fords' first trip to Virginia, and they may meet more SERVICE STATION him down on a close decision at holding the Fords off the bases, ex- 40 I 55 1 the plate. cept for a walk to Logan in the EU TER FORD ab opposition than they can handle. J. L. MASSE'TTI J. Magill. 2b The Cavaliers are coached by the 213 W. Lancaster Ave. The second and Magill's third-inning Wirlierd, I/ : °assets Cob r b • single. Alen., rt 3 famous Archie Hahn, and in their Call for and Delivery Service Myers. of 0 Last Phone: 2247 If•Ida. Ziegler relieved Magill in the . meet dropped a 65-61 meet to Deardort. is Strobl. lb ---...- .... 4 LS North Carolina, conqueror of Gas — Oil — Grease Umaan. et fifth and struck out the side with Marlow, 30 4 lea b, 3b nine pitches. Carter, in for Seid- Rattan, c ...... -... 4 Princeton. Warner, us 3 ers, retaliated by putting the Fords Roberta, p ....- . 1 0 o .2: Nerii•RItut ....._...— 1 0 down in order. Three walks, a hit D. 11143311 t U batsman, and some shoddy fielding PETER PAN Ludt', a• 1 gave Drexel its final three runs 33 21 is in the sixth. Luden's Totals 31 II a 25 I 1RICHARD BAUER Dining Room ass-Esteems Cob • • O 0 Bell Phone -Ardmore 267 Opposite Meeks. Hall Menthol 4 2 SHOE REBUILDLNG 1 - Bell Phone: Bryn Mawr 18 !die, of . 1 BRYN MAWR ELECTRICAL Cough 8 COMPANY Haverford 3b . 0 we'd:Lies and Eweesisee Elwtried %Taiwan, 1 Contracting and Repairing ROBERT J. EDGAR Tennis Center Drops sic Ziegler. p 0 718 Railroad Ave. Bryn Mawr TABLE TENNIS Afternoon — 10e Totals 31 L 3 11 50 LIFE INSURANCE Evenings — 25e Rear of Last Straw Sold Everywhere The Most Popular Place ESTATE PLANNING On The Main Line Bryn Mawr New, Agency Haverford Pharmacy 1500 Walnut Street Bryn Mawr, Pa. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Get Professional Advice When 844 Lancaster Ave. Estate of Henry W. Press, P.D. Phone: Kingsley 2348 Phone: Bryn Mawr 1056-J Haveriont. Pennaylvenia You Select Your New Tennis Racket Ardmore 12:2 Arinions 2449

Milden & White, Inc. , Build Resistance NORM BRAMALL Over 60 years in basins.. 50 people at your service Poultry, Game, Buttes Eggs With Oar Vitamin Consoles Finest Lehigh Coal and all Sea Foods Tennis Coach 21s Mk & STOVE 9.95 1212 FILBERT STREET CHESTNUT 9.95 Has a Supply of Most Popular PEA 8.50 BUCKWHEAT $ 7.50 Rackets — $5.00 to $16:00 J0111% T120NCE1_1_1111 KOPPER'S COKE 510.75 Expert 24-HOUR SERVICE ON RE-STRINGING Hair Cutting HAMILTON See Coach Bramall About Getting Your Special Attention FUEL CO. Racket Re-strung During Vacation - to HAVERFORD MEN Ardmore Wynnefield and Bryn Mawr Ave. SERVICES AVAILABLE ON CAMPUS Arcade PHILADELPHIA, PA. Phone Ardmore 593 Cynwyd 808 Greenwood 0121 Every Week-Day — 3.30 to 6.30 Tuesday, April 16, 1941 HAVEEFORD NEWS - PAGE FIVE Scarlet and Black Cindermen Win Season Opener, 83-43 Fords Capture Ten Events Tennis Team. Tops Fust to Captain Southern Trip 194142 Fencers In Easy Win Over Hopkins Johns Hopkins, 6-3, John A. Foal, of Erie, Pa., Taken' by Netmen was elected captain of the fencing team for the 1941-42 During Vacation Haverford Sweeps Quarter and Javelin; For First Victory season at a meeting of the Glazer, of Visitors, Wins Three Events; varsity lettermen last week. Goerke, Blackwell, Fest, a junior, has been a Practice Matches Clement and Rogers Impressive in Victory member of the varsity for the Flaccus, and Vila past two season. Furnish Experience "Pouf, Haddleton opened his Weyerbacher and Phil Lukens, both \ Last oar he alternated be- For Promising Team twentieth season as Haverford Col- Fords. Score For Fords tween the foil and sabre din- In the two-mile race, Jim Gary Playing practice matches against lege track coach here last Satur- In their first match of the regu- sion.4,-but this season he corn- day when his squad of proteges had a very easy time and won by need only in the sabre diet- the University of North Carolio, faced Johns Hopkins. The track a terrific margin over his slower lar season, the Haverford College Mon, winning well over a ma- Duke, and the University of Riels- meet was a typical Haddleton af- Hopkins rivals. Gary, leading all varsity tennis team topped the jority of his bouts. He-suc- morld, eight members of Haver- fair in every respect. The events the way, was never challenged and racquetmen of Johns Hopkins by ceeds John B. Clark, of Minne- ford's tennis team took a trip came off like clockwork at their won in the slow time of eleven a 6-3 score on the Haverford courts apolis, Minn., as captain. solith during the spring vacation specified times, and the Scarlet and minutes and sixteen seconds. Gary Saturday afternoon. This was the to get in trim for the coining sea- third defeat suffered this season son. Black runners ran off with the looked strong all the way and it by the squad from Baltimore, meet. The final score was 83-43. undoubtedly capable of a much Although none of the matches faster performance. Take Three Matches Unbeaten Teams - were won, the squad got a lot of The meet opened with the mile practice and gained reach in ex- run, and in this race, which was Falconer Wins Easily Neither team- gained an edge perience. Those who made the trip one of the closest of the day, Dave The redoubtable Walt Falconer during the singles, with each tak- Receive HoYors were Captain George Swan, Bill Poole staved off a very strong won his half mile specialty in his ing three matches. Dever Hobbs, Stainton, Bill Newhall, Arthur threat by Hopkins' Jeffers. The typical effortless fashion. The two captain of the Hopkins team and Ashbrook, Dick Blackwell, Ed 4.51 time was rather slow for minutes and five seconds that it Maryland's Men's champion last Thirteen Awarded Goerke, Harry Vila, and Jerry Poole. But Dave looked very took Walt to cover his distance year, was victor over Bill Newhall, Addoms. strong at the end and showed nice 6-3, 6-4, although the latter made Keys in Collection would be considered pretty fair by a surprisingly good showing dur- Meet North Carolina judgment in keeping his opponent most runners, but to Falconer it in the outside lane on the last ing both sets. George Swan, cap- Thirteen members of the unde- After leaving school on Saturday, was just a preliminary to some tain of the Fords, won the first feated cross-country and wrestling turn. Bill Woodward, Haverford faster efforts that will be made March 29, the squad reached Chapel soph, took third place. set with fine stroking, but lost the teams were honored with Haver- Hill, N. C., on ;,Sunday and played later in order to try to lower his other two in a hard fought mara- ford keys at a brief ceremony in the University of North Carolina Rogers Scores Upset own college record in this event. thon with the Johns Hopkins num- Collection Tuesday morning. At the the next day. The team they met Al Rogers pulled a surprise in Morrie Evans- took second and ber two man, Pardew, 1-6, 7-5, and same time varsity letters in was somewhat out of their class, the quarter when he edged out "Iron Man" Jeffers of Hopkins 02. wrestling, fencing, and basketball with the result that, with every Captain Snipes after a very thrill- placed in his third distance event were awarded. of the afternoon by taking a third. Goerke Stars one getting a chance to play, Hay- ing stretch drive. Rogers, whose In the next three tilts the Scar- Six members of the cross-coun- erford failed to win a match. This, customary' event is the mile, ran The field events, which are sup- try team, which had an undefeated incidentally, was the thirty-ninth in second place behind his captain posedly the Weakest events this let and Black gained three tallies. year, turned out better than had Ed Goerke, a Freshman, made the season and won a quintangular consecutive match that North for the whole race, and it was only best showing of the day, taking meet at Swarthmore, received Carolina bad won. On Wednesday, in the last several yards that he been expected when McClellan and Olson took firsts in the discus and over Start, of Hopkins, 8-3, 6-0. keys. They were Captain David the team moved over to Durham barely nipped Snipes. Johnny Throughout the match Goerke's H. Poole, William Vete, James F. and played Duke. Once again Marsh took third place without javelin, respectively. Hopkins gar- Haverford was outclassed. nered in other first when Billows powerful forehand stroke gave him Gary, Walter_C: Falconer, Alan S. over exertion, thereby making a the edge. Playing a steady game, Rogers, and Manager Robert B. clean sweep in this event. won the shot-put with a toss of Dickson. Seven members of the Lose to Richmond thirty-seven feet and five inches. Dick Blackwell scored for the Fords On Friday afternoon they played' Jim Glazer took a first for Hop- by downing his opponent, Brown, wrestling team, undefeated in the Ed Howe of Haverford made a regular season, and Middle Atlantic Richmond, losing a close contes0 kins in the hundred, but the' Scar- leap of eleven feet in the pole 6-2, 6-4. With his all-round game let and Black made up for it when showing up to good advantage, Ed Champions, received similar 8-4, with almost all the matches vault, thus far outclassing all riv- awards. Those honored were Cap- going to three sets. The Haver- Eyrie and Amussen took second als in this event. Flaccus, with a 6-4, 6-2 victory and third, respectively. Glazer over Baartz of the visitors, gave tain Richard Bolster, Robert Evert, ford points were won by Ashbrook SHOTPVT-1, BGlowe, J-11.; I. Geoffrey Hemphill, William Shi- and Vila in the singles, and the didn't seem content, however, with nommen, H.: 3, L . H. Distseee. the home team its third point. combinations of Ashbrook and his efforts in the century dash, for 07 ft. 5 in. In the outstanding match of the hadeh, Lucien Smiley, Donald Kee- ONE MILE-1. Poole. H.t 2, Jet- ter, and Manager Samuel Murphy. Goerke, and Blackwell and Vila in he quickly proceeded to run off fen, 3.11.; 3, Woodward, H. Time, afternoon Art Ashbrook lost to the doubles. with first place honors in the two- 4.61. Tannenbaum, of Hopkins, in three Lettermen in fencing, not pre- 440-YARD-1„ Legere, H. E. Seism, viously announced, included Cap- twenty and the broad jump, to turn H., 3, Marsh, H. Tiros, 52.7 see. hotly contested sets, 4-6, 9.7, and in the meet's leading individual 100-TARDS-I, Glaser, JAL; 2, Ey- 9-7. tain Sohn Clark, John Hawley, PLAN YOUR CAREER performance. But as in the hun- rie. IL, 3, Aramaean H. Time, 10.4 see. Eugene Botelho, Gerritt Ewing, gulden. 111011 HURDLES-1, Clement, IL: Freshmen Star Benton D. King, John A. Past, For practical vocational dred, he was twice again trailed 2, Siegmund, J.H.: 2, Sbuffter, J.H. With the score three to three, and Arnold Satterthwait. consult Willard Tomlinson, '10. Tele- closely by two Haverford contest- Time, 17 sec. phone or yoke for Free Booklet H. ants. In the furlong, he was fol- RUNNING HIGH JUMP-1, Dun- Haverford gained three more points lowed by Snipes and Amussen in ham, 8. nd fleuther. J,14., tied foe in the doubles, two by default and Strathmore Career Counselors first; Lukens. H., nod Weyerbachor. one by victory. In the tilt that 2.20 S. 16th St. KIN. 2112 that order, while in the broad jumpj H., tied for third. Height, 3 ft. 0 in. 8115-YARD-1, Falconer, 2, Es- was completed, Haverford's two Rhiniea Dee Crabtree and Manuel aoe, II.; s, Jeffen, J.H. Time. E rain. Freshmen varsity players, Ed Gomez took second and third, re- 3 see. CAMERAS spectively. JAVELIN-I, fawn, H.; 2, Heys, Goerke and Henry Vila, were vic- 1I.• i. Shinn, IL Distance, 140 ft. torious over Stern and Brown, of And Evkyythong Photograph, Clement Stars in Hurdles 8 is. Hopkins, by a 8-6, 3-6, 6-2 score. 220-YARD -1. Glazer, 5.H.; a. KLEIN _& GOODMAN Herb Clement took things easy Snipes. H.; 3 Amossen, H. Time, 54 Unfortunately, the racquetmen in the highs and won quite hand- tee. " from Johns Hopkins had to default 18 S. 10111 Street Phila., Pa. TWO MILES-1, Gary, H.•• 2, ref- the other two doubles matches in ily in the slow time of seventeen fen, 1./1.: 3, CoLliwn, J.H. Time, seconds. Siegmund and Shaffier 11.18,2. order to leave for Baltimore. LOW HURDLES-1, Roane H 0 of Hopkins were the others to Clement, H.; 3, Siegmund, J.H. Time, place. Johnny Thacher, who was 28 sea. Patronize the other Haverford entrant, was POLE VAULT-I, Howe. H.; 2, LAST STRAW in third place midway through Pardsw,ken., J.H.; 3, Baker, Shipley, Le- "Jim" Gentle The Breyer Dealer this race when he tripped and took of H. tied , for -4 Sandwich Spot Life Insurance Philadelphia Washington an ugly spill. Clement, running BROAD JUMP-1, Glaser, Jiff.; 5„ Allentown Crabtree, O.; 3, Gomez, H. Distance, Lancaster Avenue PROVIDENT-PENN MUTUAL New York with Morrie Evans in the two- 21 ft. In. HAVERFORD Newark Harrisburg twenty lows, found the going so DISCUS-I. McClellan, H.; 2, 11111- 6th & Walnut Sta. Lom. 7300 Salisbury easy that,they finished neck-and- J.H.; 3, Smith, H. Distance, 115 neck in the farcical time of twenty- tt. I in. eight seconds. Johns Hopkins had another e s1.1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111E1 taste of a first place effort when SUBURBAN Heather tied with the Scarlet and HEDGEROW Theatre Ardmore Black's Wilmer Dunham in the THEATR E high-jump with a five-foot eight- Through Saturday: inch leap. The honors for third MADYLAN. PA. "WESTERN UNION" place were split up between Ken In Technicolor Tuesday, April 15: Sunday, Monday: "CANDIDA" The Aldrich Family in John P. Hallahan, '7 Wednesday, April 16: "LIFE WITH HENRY" INC. "MR. PIM PASSES BY" BUILDING CONSTRUCTION SEVILLE Philadelphia Thursday, April 17: Bryn Mawr Builders of The New Haver- "THE COMIC ARTIST" Theatre FINER FLAVOR ford Library Building Friday, April 18: Tuesday, Wednesday: "MAJOR BARBARA" "THIS THING CALLED LOVE" Melvyn Douglas Because of Saturday, April 19: Rosalind Russell "THE EMPEROR JONES" REAL ROOT JUICES Ardmore Theatre Thursday, Friday: ,Tuesday: Monday, April 21: Frederic March and "FAMILY PORTRAIT" Betty Field in Delicious, healthful - because Hires contains "PHILADELPHIA STORY" "VICTORY" nature's finest - no caffein or other harmful Wednesday and Thursday: SPECIAL STUDENT PRICE 76e Saturday: ingredients. Kay Francis in "LITTLE MEN" "PLAY GIRL" (Upon School Identification) L Jack Oakie - Kay Francis ALWAYS A TASTY TREAT Friday through Monday: Hedgerow boa meets train I and trolley Sunday: IN BOTTLES James Stewart and HORROR COMBINATION Hedy Lemarr is Call Media 305 or Sherwood I-"The Face at the Window" 2--"The Torso Murder Mystery" "COME LIVE WITH ME" 6666 for reservatioas ElitIMIIII11111111111111111111111111H111111111111H11111111111111H111111111111111HUHITE-; PAGE SEE HAVERFORD NEWS Tuesday, April 16, 1941'

To Play at Prom Drawing for Rooms Bryn Mawr Debate Diplomat to Speak Eight Attend To Be Broadcast To be Held Saturday On French in Africa Professor Raoul Aglion will Model League Students to Live . speak Thursday evening at Sunday Afternoon '1:30 in the- Common Rain. Boyer Heads Group At 2 College Lane His topic will be 'The. Free Following the custom of past French in the Desert War." In Peace Discussion Entrance Into War At the outbreak of the war years, the selection of rooms for Professor Aglion, an expert Negotiating a hypothetical world Will Be Discussed the school year 1941-42 will be with the Ministry of Foreign peace was the task accomplished Affairs of France for Near by the March 28-29 meeting of Friday With Penn decided by a "drawing" which will the Middle Atlantic States Model be held at 11:36 A.M. on Saturday Eastern questions, was sent as Joining with debaters from Bryn a special Attache to the French Assembly, which a Haverford dele- Mawr and Swarthmore, the Haver- morning in Roberts Hall. \The '''Legation atlfairo. He resign- gation attended, representing ford Debating Team plans to par- presence of students on that occii, ed after the mistice. During Czechoslovakia. ticipate in a series of radio debates sion is optional. that time he was a professor Professor Benjamin ,Gerig and beginning this Sunday afternoon, Rooms will be obtainable next at the French Law College of Dr. Hu Shih, Chinese ambassador April 20. Under the present Cairo. to the United States, addressed- the scheme, which originated with year at.No. 2 College Lane as well assembly as guest speakers. Pro- James Scheuer, Swarthmore de- as in the regular dormitories. In fesor Gerig also served as Critic bate manager, the series will con- the College Lane house there will Curriculum;Changes of the various plans submitted and sist of three debates to be broad- be five double and four single as Haverfond's faculty adviser. cast one on each of the next three rooms at $425 and one double and To Be Made Nati-Year In general, the assembly turned Sundays. two single rooms at $400. to the federal form of govern- This Sunday's opening encoun- The drawing procedure will be Contemned from Page 1, Col. 4 ment, with League of Nations ter, between Haverford and Bryn A much the same as in preceding Twentieth lawthry music, Profes- principles adopted in economic and Mawr, will probably be on the years. Each person who has paid sor Swan, hours to be arranged on social matters. The most ambitious question, "Resolved: That the TOMMY REYNOLDS, who his $15 retainer fee by April 15 Monday and Friday afternoons; innovation is a large Balkan coun- United States should convoy sup- will play at the Junior Prom will receive a number, and start- Philosophy 12b, the philosophy of try, Danubia, made up of seven ply ships to Great Britain.' At on May 2. ing with number one the,. rooms science: Monday, Wednesday and small nations, including Greece and that time Swarthmore will act as will be chosen. The choice of Friday at 11:30; Spanish 8, Ad- Yugoslavia. Moderator as will Bryn Mawr on rooms will begin at the 'Bursar's vanced Spanish, Professor Blanc- With Daniel Boyer acting as the following Sunday, when Has- Reynolds Orchestra Office, 9:00 A.M., Monday, April 21. Roos: Monday, Wednesday, and Fri- chaiyman, the College delegation erford faces Swarthmore. The final Fourteen of the lowest-priced day at 10:30. conidsted of Edgar Bell, Burns debate will be broadcast on May 4. To Play at. Junior Prom rooms will be reserved for the in- New honors seminars in govern- Brodhead, Robert. Evans, Edwin On Friday night the Haverford coming freshmen, who will be as- ment for both semesters will be Grosholz, Courts Oulahan, Leon team plans a debate with the Uni- Continordfron, Page 1, Col. 3 signed rooms on September 13, offered. Solis-Cohen, and John Whitehead. versity of Pennsylvania to be held past several months. His arrange- 1941. Students planning to reserve at Germantown Academy on the their present moms must notify topic, "Resolved: That the United ments appear on Okeh recordings the Bursar before 9:00 A.M., Mon- States should enter the war im- and are among the top sellers. day, April 21, beyond which date mediately on the side of the Al- Tickets for the dance are $4.60 no room or suite may be retained. lies." The debate will be run ac- stag si drag if paid for in cash cording to the orthodox plan with before next Saturday morning. ERRATUM Haverford supporting the negative. They will cost $5.00 thereafter. The statement made in the This afternoon the Haverford Accommodations for dates may be March 25 issue of the NEWS that debaters supported the negative arranged through Kenneth Roberts, Samuel M. Snipes was elected side against a Swarthmore team 411 Lloyd. Refreshments will he president of the Varsity Club is in- before a Germantown women's club served during intermission in correct. No election was held, and on the subject, "Resolved: That front of the Iles Laboratory, Snipes, who is vice president, be- the United States should form• a and punch will be served continu- came the ranking officer upon the permanent union with the South ously in the Common Room. Cut- resignation of Geoffrey Hemphill, American republics." Louis Grier ting will be permitted during the former president. and Burns Broadhead spoke for last number of each dance and Haverford in the meet conducted after the program dances are over. on the Oregon plan. Last night BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT a women's team from Swarthmore with visited Haverford to meet fresh- man debaters George Hopkins and INSURANCE FOR STUDENTS Charles Mathias on the same topic Life Property Liability RALPH PEIRCE of South American union. J. B. Longacre Prominent Main Line 435 Walnut Street Philadelphia Jeweler ADAMS RECORDS - RADIOS MUSIC Haverford College Next to Ardmore Theatre offers you a Phone: Ardmore MO Ardmore Complete Printing Co. Jewelry Service PRINTERS and ENGRAVER.9. Direct to Your Door SUITS PRESSED All Merchandise and Repairs "49 Rittenhouse Place Folly Guaranteed EXCELLENT Expert Watch, Clock and WORKMANSHIP BY Watch Repairng Ardmore Diamonds Watches Rings ARDMORE'S FINEST TAILOR Phone Ardmore 170e Optical Work The average Bell telephone ia Ser.4.1 the Ma. Da, Par to Yawl Leave repairs or orders SAM GANG at the COOP in working order The Peirce Jewelery Store is suns PRESSED AGENCY located In the 99.9% of the time! Arnold, Murphy, Wagner DENTISTRY Anthony Wayne Theatre Bldg. The fluid of dentJetryoffers to WAYNE, PENNA. But that doesn't satisfy college students an attractive Ca- st provides a worthy intel- this man. His job is lectual challenge, a life of pro- feeelonal eervice with eatisfactory income, and an opportunity for re- to hunt for trouble ... search and teaching hi this di/4- 111011 of medical science and art. E. S. McCawley & Co. The University of Peresficmla to check every line. has prepared more than six Moue- and graduate, who are occupying INCORPORATED positions of importance In the He finds weak spots p its course of Instruction is of the high- and gets them fixed est order. OFFER A.S7One interested in Wm pro- fession as a life work le invited to before they trouble you. apply for further information is RYTEX STATIONERY The Dean of the School of Dentistry APRIL SPECIAL So that the next time gattereits of Pei/eeriest/la 40th a Spruce Streets CURRENT BEST SELLERS you call the best girl ... Philadelphia. re. or telephone home ... Modern Library your message will go through Classics quickly and clearly— GENERAL WAYNE INN IN NEW BINDINGS around the corner Established 1704 Haverford Store or across the continent. On Station Road Number, please? Montgomery Avenue, Merton Lawrence Falconer THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA THE SMART RESTAURANT ON THE MAIN LINE Baker WOMEN IN THE DORMITORIES L The Students' Council has passed the following resolution concerning the presence of women in the College dormitories. This resolution goes into effect in September, 1941. Section I: There shall be no girls allowed in any dormitory after 9 P.M., except on the nights or festive occasions as here- inafter defined; Section II: A festive occasion shall be defined as any sched- uled evening entertainment or function and any other occasion

so designated by the Students' Council; r. Section III: On evenings of festive occasions girls will be allowed in the dormitories until 12 midnight, or until one hour immediately following the close of such occasion; Section IV: The honor system, placing complete respon- sibility on the individual student, shall prevail in every case in which this hospitality is extended by Haverford students to visitors on College property ; Section V: In conformity with the principles of the honor system, any undesirable circumstances attending the presence of a girl or girls in the dormitory will be investigated by the Students' Council regardless of the time of day or night it may occur, and may result in disciplinary action being taken.