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~. OCT 2 61959 ·- iAtd , VELA . :1·· gJ p· ;, + I • tl pJ·n · t:>n re · •. re h't .. o. 1 ry tttl¢W ri · · ot· Ie. f8 . Co, D ~ ay, Vol. 83 October 23, 1959 N cwark, Delaware No.6 to lds n. m­ k< I( ch Tholllpson~ A Place First ta. Ft cc. ··- de. ! ' are ti1· · ·ate. Sig Ep, Phi Tau Li r·· will fi\ · de ·,_ men Sypherd Tl!ke tir ,.. ter's tht ·, " · ica~· us 1 ' ngi. Second Places Ja 1. '' . D~ he. m; ' Pe Thompson,Theta Chi Ha in f. ! Sharp, Sypher~ Win B1:(' Thompson Hall and Kappa AI· pha accurately: :predicted the outcome of the home<:omin·a: •game in the themes of their priM winning floats last weekend. Delaware slaughtered the cazta 'J as 'Admiral Nelson' steered tfte pe; - FIRST - Admiral Nelson leads his men to victory in Thomp. KA slaughtered the cat just as did the Blue Hens in their first· Hens to victory again. Oct son Hnll's winning homecoming float pictured above (left). place float, pictured above (right). r11) Thompson pictured Admiral Nelson in the USS .Delaware sa• st'tl : luting his blue hen team that thf c '";I. have just defeated the . 1 Frosh Election Ne'M Delaware Student Spends . Hampshire wildcats. M ~ t• _ The confident wildcat went of Plan Released in one end of the slaug~ter house, wi'l · Plans for the coming Fresh· but came out a skeleton in -K!A'a 'j. l l' ~ Summer on Kodiak Island· man elections have been an. mechanized float that •predict• · afl:v ;, . nounced .by Typ Morris, vice­ ed the Hens would "skin tMI cat." BY KEN STONEM~N side the door of 1 Sypherd Hall ly exciting thing that happene<;l pre~ident of the se~ate and where one Vernon Abbott Js said was Vern's falling off a brol listie drama similar to "The last year :by university authori- Corvettes, ann·ounced -Bill Brere• S"a Around Us." ties. casts that enrollment, conserva­ tively. ' estimated, will double ·Office Hours ton, chairman of the dance. . . 'T h~s weeke~d's Wolf Hall Au- STUDENT POPULATION DOU· again .by 1970. Dress will be info"rmal wtth d• tonum offermg ls one in a ser. BLED . The Review has office hours Of this prospect, !Dr. John A. bermuda shorts excluded. The it' <; of films selected by the De- \fonday thru Friday from 11 p:utment of University Exten- Delaware,. which of. !Perkins, !President of the uni­ price is $.50 per person, stag or recel~ed a.m. until 2 p.m. drag. sion and is free to the public. 1ficial recogmtion as a umversity versity, said in his 1958 report, 2 'fh~ Review Oct. 23, 1959 Undergraduates Sought a'l p· :, '. Japanese Arts In Minature For. Reserve Officers; tl pl '" l;)ll rl' '. re On Exhibitln Student Center Yeoman Visits Campus h't ·. D. ri· . f ry - Student chairman Gib Smith 1 Ie. announces t~at a ~i~play o~ Jap­ ot· College men enrolled in the freshman, sophomore, and fll 0 I anese Arts ln mtmature ts on junior classes are being sought by the Navy to enter irr Co, I display in the Exhibitioi:l Gallery o: . its Reserve Officer Candidate program. ay, of the Student Center. to Yeoman First Class William K. Fessenbecker will visit m Lasting until Nov. 1, the dis­ the university to explain the ROC program to interested Ids k i. n. play consists of articles, prints students. He will be in the Agnew Room of the Student m and books concerning the Jap­ Center on Oct. 28 from 10 a.m. m. >re. anese Arts. to 2 p.m. k( ENSIGN COM~ISSION EARNED ;tu. 1 ch The collection consists of Ne­ ~ rn. SUMMER TRAINING ta. tsuke and Inro sword guards, The ROC student upon success. try sword furniture, Seppuku knifes, Those selected attend two sum­ fully completing the two sum. Ft and other small oriental objects. mer courses. lasting about eight mer ·training periods and upon cc de. The Netsuke articles are being weeks each at the Navy's Reserve graduation from college is com. ! I are lent by John Mang of Alexan- . . til ·. 0 ·ate. dria, Virginia and are an out. Offtcer Candtdate School-at N~w- missioned as an ensign in the Li r·· will standing addition according to I port, Rhode Island. Instructu:m Naval Reserve. At a later time fi\ r Dr. Ott. in naval customs and history, those interested l'n the Navy as de '•. men ' The prints and books belong seamanship, gunnery, naviga­ a career may apply for transfer tir 1.. ter's to the university. Included are tion, communications, and oth· to the Regular Navy. The ROC thl ·. · · · ica~· the. wall. paintings of the Hor- er seagoing skills is given dur­ student, following commissioning us I ' ngi. as · an ensign, is obligated for yuji Monastery at Nara, Japan, ing these summer-courses. Trans­ Ja 1. I'· . D~ the oldest wooden buildings in portation to and from Newport three years of active duty in an he; the world. plus pay commersurate wi'th the officer status. m; / The exhibition is the first rate held by the student during APPLICANTS' QUALIFICATIONS Pe of a .series to be presented under · s~mmer training is paid -by the Ha the supervision of the Student Navy. The Navy also provides Appli'cants must be citizens of in& Center and the Arts-iproject Sub. housing, food, textbooks, and the United States; ·must be at BJ:t' committee of the Cultural Activ. supplies during .the summer least seventeen· at the time ot iies Commit·tee in the University. training. · application; must be able to com. plete college and the two sum­ mer training periods prior to age twenty-seven and a half; must S J~; Fraternity Rushing Procedure be physically, mentally, and mor. ally qualified; and must .show f] capacity for leadership to re· pe ;: - Is Investigated by Committee_. ceive consideration {or admis· Oc1 sion to. the ROC program. ra] New York, N. Y. (I. P.)-Due to the recent troubles at stb : American Universities caused by rushing practices, a com­ ENLIST FOR SIX YEARS thf ~ "·' . 1 mittee was form·ed at Columbia College in New York to If selected for the ROC pro. investigate these procedures. The decision was that the gram, the student must enlist irl M ~ 1• . present system be retained. the Naval Reserve for a period of MINIATURES - N.cmcy Weir, senior (right) holds the tiny wi'J r Japanese Arts which are on display in the exhibition Gallery This decision was reached af· l -----.------­ of six years and, whiie continu· of the Student Center. ter a study of rushing which the tern by whtch they choose. . fng in college, attend drills one -f. l i , National Interfraternity Council Under the present system, night each week at the Naval Re· al'J.:v ;, conducted at 163 colleges. many students have exercised serve Training Center located on Military sponsors are selected f!'he committee, 'in an '11 page individual deferment, there ex­ the Kirkwood Highway between Cadets to Pick on the basis of personality, ap­ report, stated the foHowing rea- ists a harmon.tus relationship Newark and Wilmington· pearance, and sch'olarship from sons for its conclusion: 'A lower between .fraternities, the fratern­ _Girl Sponsors women in the sophomore, jun. fraternity scholastic average is ity members and the freshmen INELIGIBLE STUDENTS ior, and senior classes. Any not -caused by the present rush- are relieved of their rushing Students who are enrolled in This year, as in years past, woman may he selected Wiho ing system; fraternities are a obligations early in the~ semes- the Advanced ROTC program at the university ROTC will select has maintained at least a 2.0 definite aid, bot h socially and ter, and, finally; the fre~man the university are not eligible, ·sponsors. Fourteen lucky co -eds overall index and who is not on academically to the general ac- feels no undue pressure;:; either aor is any student who belongs .will be selected by unit com­ disciplinary probation . climation of the freshmen or to pledge or to continue pledg- to a reserve component of any ·manders to represent: 1. each of Nov. 24 is the tentative date upper classmen at Columbia ing. other Feedral or State military ·eight companies, 2. each of two on which the sponsors will be College. The committee pointed out service unless first separated -ba.ttlegrou·ps, 3. the entire Bri ­ presented in an annual ROTC The present rushing system that there· had been a system therefrom. Also, students who are ga de, 4. the ROTC Ba·nd, 5. ceremony on Frazier Field. In precludes the · necessity of the of deferred rushing at Columbia, enrolled in such programs ot Scabbard and Blade Honor ~o- the spring one of the sponsors cumbersome rules and regula- which was felt to be detrimental study as pre-medical, pre-dental, . ciety, and 6. 'Delaware Rifles will be selected to reign as tions found in a deferred rush- to a healthy relationship be- or other fields whi'ch could qual· Drill Team. queen over the Military Ball. ing system. The vast majority tween fraternities on campus. ify the person for a cornmissiolt of fraternity members and Furtherm-ore, all interfraternity in the Navy Medical Service pledges are satisfied with their councils failed- under this pro- Corps and pre-theological stu-· Telephone EN 8-8587 _ch_o_i_c_e_o_f_fr_·a_t_e_rn_l:-. t_y_a_· n_d_t_h_e_sy_s_·_c_e_d_u_re_.______dents are not eligible. REAL ESTATE BING'S BAKERY A Cake Grover Surratt For Any Occasion 45 E. Main St. 25'3 Main St. Newark, Del. Ph. EN 8-2226 Have a real cigarette~have a CAMEL

The best tobacco makes the best smoke! B. J. Beynoldt Tobacco Co._, Wlnaton:satem. N. c. Anxious Knock Summons • • • Oct. 23, 1959 The Review ·3 A Residence Hall Director! suddenly, in the middle of t~e night, arl anxious! knock Madrigal ·Singers Organize :rnnounces an emergency. Outside· stands a boy, bent with pain. . There i~ no ~elay, .no' hesit~tion : O'n the' other side of tfiat door 1s on~ of the people m whom the· university has .!tided by Dr. Ivan Trusler placed one of Its gteatest trusts, a di~ector of a men's .Eakin and !Russ Fulton, tenors; resid ence hall. This IS his jdb, I . . (,.'· he knows it well and does it and ,Da'vt~ ~cCan who h andles and Jerry Knotts and Scott Holtz· ·ght not only in this situation, fhe combmed i"?rces of Bonham hauser, basses. ~ t in the multitude which he ~ohnson and Ttffany while do- The quality of the present voi­ f~~ es during the year. Ing graduafe work in physics. ces makes the use of two or three voices on each part po s i­ DIRECTORS COUNSEL MEN DIRE.CTORS ENJOY SUCCESS ble, while high school Madrigal He is one of the people who Delaware is one of the few· groups frequently use five or ,,:. : man th e watchtowers of human unive rsities not having candi­ s ix voices to· a part. kindncss, counsel t r o u b 1 e d dates for doctorates in psychol­ Students must .be in the Uni· mintls, soothe hurt feeli~gs, and ogy. or social .science manning versity Concert Choir to sing make ure · the dormitory is these posts. Yet the success the with the Madrigal Singers, kept in good order. They a~e directors have enjoy~d has been )'. •· which accounts in pa rt for the close to the students, and the1r outstanding as students and ad- high quality of the voices, which task iS enormous. ministration will atte t. m ay be hea rd singil1'g the lyrics FULL TIME DIRECTOR IN Mr. James Robinson, director of Elizabethian England at the .... COLBU RN I of residences for men sums it .C horal Festival on Nov. 4. Delaware employs one full up, "These a re the high-type time res idence director, Beatric.e people who can do well in any Lieb of Colbur'n Hall. The orher job; in this one ·they ~xcell." i• :· . five direc tors are graduate stu- C-adets To Pick I ' ·: : dents actually li st~d as "part­ time" employees, bu.t the job th ey handle would .awe most of Rules Change·d SOFTLY - Ann 'I'atnall, junior music major, directs the Mad­ Git•l Sponsors us. These are Dr. Takeshita of rigal\. Singers during one of thei'r rehearsals. In the back row Japan, a chemistry major who (left fo right) are Scott Holzhauser, Winifred Buzinskis, Russ Years past university ROTC l \ heads Brown Hall; Donald Hoff. On'Conditions' Fulton. Standing in front row (left to right) are Carol Dunai, unit commanders will select man of Harter, a history major; Carl J. Rees, provost and clean Jerry Knotts, Debbie Kieffer, and Li'nda H·augh't. fourteen lucky co-ed command­ Peter Pence, head of Sypherd of school of Graduate studies, ers to sponsor each of ei.ght Hall and a chemical engineer­ Two years ago, a group of companies, each of two battle . has announced a change in a ca. 1 highl•y talented student musi- 1 ers perform, as well as rehears- groups, the entire Brigade, th e ·· · d ing major; Sharp Hall's Terry demic regulatiohs concerning Brown, a graduate matth ma'j'or; . . . . ing and condli'cting all concerts. d 1 d 1. t deficiency grade reports. c1ans who were mterested m 1 Anne is a junior Music Major ROTC Band, Scabbard an · B a e A .Jn the past, students were no­ Ma.drig~l singing,. form~d t'he from Wilmington, who is study- Honor Society and Delaware . \ • dent Center To tifierl if work at mid-semesters Umverstty Madngal Smgers. ing choral conducting. Rifles. Drill Team. . i were unsatisfactqry to the de­ The students secured Dt. Ivan !Anne anticipates the coming ·Military sponsors are selected partment and "conditions" were "Fru~ler,_ director o! Choral Or- season to be a-s busy as the last, on the basis of personality, ap­ ow 'B.ard' Film issued as notification. ·u an F -gamzatwns, as the1t faculty ad- when the Singers performed 20 pearance, and scholarship from or more than one D appeared in visor, who hel•ped select music concerts f or clubs, . interested women in the sophomore, junior Two films on William Shakes. and arrartge concerts. 'Dr. Trus- groups and University history and senior classes. Any woman are will be shown on Friday, the mid-sem~ster _report, p~uents also were notified. lers contri'bution to the Madri- and Literature· c1'asses. They may be selected who has mail'l· 30. The first will be a biog­ gal Singers now consists main- made a record for the purpose tained at least a 2.0 overall in- . i . The second will be the Provost Rees, speaking for the faculty, said, ''We expect upper­ ly of arranging concerts, indic'at- of demonstrat ing the :English dex and wh'o is not on disci'plin- I of t h e Shakespearean inlg that the group is ·now a Madriga•l to such classes, and ary probation. . . ' ter. classmen to be responsible and more mature. For this reason, C?mparat'iovely; independent or- spent the summer as a profes- Tentative date on which the ·.I The showing will take place t-his ye·ar reports will go. to all ganization. sional church chair. · sponsors will be presented in an 8 p. m. in the small cafeteria students, but only to the· parents Director Anne Tatnall, who is The grou.p now consists of annual ROTC ceremony on Fra. · 1 the Student Center. There of fres·hmen." one of the· few remaining origi- Jane Hamell, :Carol ·Dunai and · zer Field is Nov. 24. In the be no charge for admission. ~ll students wno are notified nal' members, selects the Eng- •Winifr-ed Buzinskis, sopranos; spring, one of the sponsors will · l those interested are cordi­ are urged to consult with their !ish and Flemish 16th and 17th iDebbie Kieffer, IT.-inda 'Piaught be selected to reign as queen invited :to attend. course instructors and adv_isors . centu·ry Madri'gals that th~ sing-_ and Ellen Kwik, a'ltos; WiJlbur over the Military Ball. . ~ : GIGANTIC BOOK

\ ·.: I " and- PRINT SALE AT THE

1 1 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE •h ilT t l Cl STUDENT CENTER •a tl

• Brand Ne-w Editions • N ~"' Stock Added Daily I

I'. • Savings Up To • Supply Limited - Come Early

( f

t . ( · l Starts Friday - Oct. 30th - For 2 Weeks ·only t

b \'. THE UNIVERSlTY BOOKSTORE IN THE STUDENT ·cENTER . :• ' I t!tbt 1\tbittu 1\tlatuart Notes By ADDe :rcrtnall . The Undergraduate Weekly of the University of Delaware Tryouts for singing parts in --=~-~..::..:.:.:::.:J~::.:::.::::...:.:..:..;.;,;;J....;;;;.!....:..;,;~;..;.;..;.;..;;.;..;....-s.-.:~-----· I "Carousel" · will be held next _Page 4 . The Review Vol. 83, N 0. 5 wednesday evening, Oct. 28, at 7 p. m. in Wolf Hall Auditorium. You may sing anything; bPin~ your own accompanist if -possi­ ble. The show .will run fqr four tltbt 1\tbietu·6taff nights during the second week in March. If you are circling that date on your calendar, circle the Sheldon Weinsten - J'~r:.:!e::.:;.;;rEdl:,[I~In;fa~-:ny- Managing EdUor following Wednesday, Nov. 4, Ellen Tantum Irvin Hirshfield Susie Ries the date of the annual Festival lfewa Editor National Ada Manager Auoc:le.te EdUor of choral music. One of the most Ed Tomao Louis !Levitt popular concerts of the year, the Gail Thompson Loc:al Ada Manager Choral Festival includes all four llewa Au'ta choral organizations on campus. Dick Bullock Barbar.a ·Liebert Howard.. Isaacs •The Concert Choir will open Photography Editor Head Typlal ·_&porta An't the .program with- the Schubert Bobbi Lafferty Denise Granke "Mass in G", a.cc·ompanied by a "Jest Ravin' A Frennly 'Lil Experiment, Sir'' I :::,\ ... Cll'culatlon Manager CoJ,Iy EdUor string orchestra of Wilmington Newa Staff: George Carlisle, Mike Lewis, Barbara Edwards. Ken Stone· and Philadelphia professional :I• man, \1!> Ellen Lindh, Pat Jeffrey, Bill Kasudev, Brenda Davis, Lee Buckley, musicians. The. Mass, written Em11kJ1sh, Barbara McKie:B Kay Smack, Charles Prettyma~ Stevie Hings. ' . • I ~ • when Schubert was only eight­ il~en. ii~~Y cc'f::?;: ~~gaur?:~ret! ~?sh~~s:i'a~:v'Pos~·ut. pian. Cynthia een, is to me one of t he loveliest 0/fitage "1."":. Cll'culatlon Staff: Harry ·~ogach, 'Barbara Edwards, Elaine O''Connell, and· most Immediately appeal- San~~~';in~f~i: Barry Schlecker, Art Inden, AI Goldman. Pete Gray, Jim ing choral works I have ever By GEORGE SPELVrN went · with that face was Kay I' · ~ ' Pap~~r~!~et::~~a~~~o~a~?~:S~t~~~frce. - heard. :Salvatore. It is seldom that an i-'t ... Secretary to B:!~:!:l!r'fo~r=J!~[:z::i• .l~~~:i'liamg By Virgil Thomson's "Seven Chor. 1E 52 University Theatre open- aspiring freshman actress pre­ uses from the Media of Euriped- ed its 28th ~eason last night sents herself at the doors of National Advertising ·services, Inc. es" will be performed ;by the with an extremely effective pro- Mitchell Hall with so much 420 ~b\~6~b~~-~rM&re,J6~~i~. Y. Women's Chorus. The new, six- duction of Ter-rence .Ra"ttigan's know-how. She Is 'Very capable teen-voice Varsity Chorale will 'llHE. WINSLOW BOY. The dra_· on the stage and added a great Entered as seocnd class matter Dec. 13, 1945 at the -Newark Post Office, IS Newark, Del:aware under the act of March 3, 1879. make its first Choral Festival rna .a w*:ll · constructed one deal of charm in almost every Chicago • Boston San Franclac:o Loa An.,elea Portland s ..tne appearance; the University Ma- to begm With and · includes a s·cene. she appears in. Her charm · . New York- Chicago- Philadelphia drigal Singers will appear for sce~e for. almost every charac- Was almost, but not quite, a det. the second time. The Choir will term wtuch they are the center riment to her. The character of close the concert with the "Geo. of attention. Catherine Winslow, Ronnie's sis. Too Few Glasses graphical Fugue"- a four-part · The story, very simply) "is the ter, is a bit more masculine than · (Conti•nued on Page 7) fight of Arthur Winslow to have she makes it; Her strength ' as a his son, !Ronnie, ' acquitted of character, ·however, helps to ov· · stealing ·a five . shUHng •postal ercome this difficulty. order. 1t would only be fair to Dining Hall Inefficiency L· e tter treat the ·performances indivi- FORD STAffDS OUT ·Ed • dually · bee~ use they were all ba· · Of the rest .of the actors· we . Last week we intended to print an ·addition to the edi- to t h e 1t0r sically well done, ·howeve·r, there must say that they all did know. · torial concerning the university post office. However, we ar space limifations. led-gable jobs in their roles. One found it necessary, for the sake of space, to cut this as Dear Editor, SHELIN PLAYS LEAD did stand out in our mind though · f h rt d th •I feel that it is a shame when The title role was· :played by and that was Violet :played· by ·. wei1 as Iarge portwns 0 t e spo s page an ° er pages. the fans of the Delaware foot- Ken-neth Shelin. The Players :Allison Ford. She handled the-: We had approximately enough copy for a ten or :eleven ball team conduct them.selves as !Were rather lucky in that· they part nicely and we have noticed . page paper but not enough for twelve. Hence, we had the some of them did at the Home. ~ · were a·bie to find someone who quite a . bit of .im.provement since . choice of leaving a page for doodles or-reducing the size coming .Game this past saturday. could physically fit the part. her first stage appearance here · of the paper to eight pages. r am sure that most adults have Mr. Shelin handled h'is part with at the University. . She has one . The omitted editorial piece concerned dining hall inef- been exposed to the rules of almost delicate skill. His mo· characteristic which has annoy. ffdericy. Last spring an editorial was printed defending good sportsmanship at sonie cent came when he ·was being ed us ever ;since · we . first' saw . ~ : University of Delaware dining hall food as better. than phase of their education and .cross • ·examined by Sir !Rabert ·her ·and which she still :hasn't : average .for colleges and univ_ersities. This we still main- should be mature enough to fol- Morton. Seldom have .. we seen gotten rid of, and that is her . low them. such an emotion ·. ·packed scene tendency to lean over toward tain. However, the service often is inadequate. •I realize that the game played carried off with such sensitivity· the .poople she is acting with. 'Since the ope_ni'n~ of classes! ~or example,. there have by the visiting team might to the .part. . . S~e is .tall and this may be the been to~ few glasses ln · ~ent D.I~~~~ Hall. A sign was put not ha~e appeared to · b~ as clea:~ · Willi-am Harpepr acted the. reason for her movemnt, :but it up rea.dmg something hke this. Please take only one- as it should have ·been but this part ·of AtthurWtnslowwlthimag·•" certainly· is disturbing to her glass. of milk. We are tempor~rily short of glasses." . does ·not mean that' th~ p·lay~rs inationand gusto. His was the character.· Violet is an eccentric ;•_: One md'flth has passed. The sign is still posted. Perhaps or the· fans of this university !most complee and d·etailed Char- strong-willed maid, but when · the word 'tempora-rily' should be ehangeq to 'permanent- should at any time find-'it nee- .acterization in the .show. Even she leans aver, .she destroys all Jy'. . . . essary t~ lower their standards though Arthur had arthritis of. the strength she has built up, In the first place, it was known in the summer approx- of behavwr to that of the other ~~t.~?ng~~~ st~=~~~l~f fr~~ PEGG DIRECTS imately how many students would attend the university te~mh. f' N III Harper's character permeated· The play is a typically well . f 11 p · h f th d' · · h 11 h ld h ... ere were 1ve ew amp- thIS a . ersons m c ·arge o ~ mmg a s. ou ave shire players removed from throughout the · show. thought .out prodlU!t of Mr. made sure then that there wo.uld be enough dishes· to ac- the game·, but the continuous JONES PLAYS WIFE Thomas Pegg's direction. AI· commodate the students. jeering, untimely remarks, etc., Grace Winslow, Arthur's wife, though the -set sometimes ap· ' " Secondly, after it was known that there were. too few which came from the Delaware !Was played ·by Phyllis Jones. peared to be too bU'sy we must glasses in Kent no direct action was taken to remedy the fans did nothing to.. help the rep- Miss Jones .knew what she was say. that Mr. Thomas Watson's · situ~tion. It would perhaps have cost a little more to buy utation of this university; -nor ·doing on the ~ta.ge; :but she des1.gn goes a. long way tow:1rd glasses directly from a dealer than to order them whole· did it .show the gratitude !Wihich ·seemed at times to be doing- it se.ttmg the mood of the perwd. sale, but they should have been bought neverthelss. The we should all ·ha'Ve for this uni- as if there was.nobooy· elsethere I TIDBITS-Joan Fontaine open· order, as this was written, had not arrived. . versity; the state government, with her. She had a .good idea ed in :Wilmin.gton la.St week in Thirdly, although Kent is short of glasses, the Student and the Delaware taXipayers . for of what 'her character should be, a not-so-funny comedy--entitled the part they have in making but ·again at times she didn't !HILARY preceding a nation·wide Center Dining Hall is not. Students eating in the Center possible the education which we seem to have the spirit of the 1 tour. can take as many glasses as they want. Kent is across receive here. . . scene in which she was play1ng.l LOOK IJt01\.fEW ARD, ANGEL, the street from the Student Center but rio effort has been When we .visited New Hamp-. Proba·bly if she stopped ,play- is now plpaying at the Wilming· made to transport some glasses from the Center to Kent shire. last year for .the!~ Home- -ing up the tragedy and more or ton 'Playhouse with Miriam Hop· so tbat all students can have the standard two glasses of coming, we received· one C?f tJle less ·balanced this with. the light'· kins. milk. Even two glasses are not enough for many students warmest welcomes they could er moments· in her life, her · · Yours truly h _ athletes in particular _ who require three or four. have offered us- even after they characterization would have fit- George JT In defense of the dining hall crew we will say that we had lost the game. If the well ted in rnore with the rest of the 1! · f h D 1 d k come we receive next year has show. apprec!ate the act t at a e aware stu ent can ta e as changed, we 'can :bl~me It on There was .at:l. -exremely aUrae- Cl much milk as he wa'nts. This is true even now in Kent if oursel.ves. tive new face· -in this production CommUter 'a the student is willing to make refill trips. In many univer- · Sincerly, which we hope to see often in t l sities students are ,limited to one glass of milk, no refills. Denise Granke future shows. The name which Chatter PLACEME'NT OFFICE By DAVE KAPLAN Code: B.;_Bachelor'a The -commuters would like to M-'Maater'a I D--Ph. D. thank Dave De'Riemer for the • -Women only, excellent job he did as chair· #-Men only man for the fl'oat construction CAMPUS INTERVJ·EW CALENDA-R committee and all those wllO .Deadline 'Y::~l;!in~~~~a~.:::.-:.S::~~If!~;::er 4, 1959 helped to make the fl.O a·t a third •CLASSIFICATIONS TO BE INTE•RVIEWED place· winner. This markes the first time in the history of the Date Name ot Company Englneera Art• lk Science competition that the commuters Mon., Nov, 9 Ch ..E. C.E, E.E, M.E. Acct. Blol. Bua. Chem. L.A. Math, Phya. Other t . Acim. Agrl. Home Sec'y Any have ever placed. Texaco, Inc. BMD BM BM MD t· Tuea., Nov. 10 The commuters are still look· Revere Copper ·ac Bra••· Inc. B B B B Bl B ing .into the possibility of haV! Hamilton Srandard D1v. (UnUed Aircraft) ·BM BM ing mailboxes located near the Lever Brother•. Inc. MD D commuter lockers in the base· MD MD , MD h Week ~~~drlch Co. MD MB MB ment of the Student Cen ter. If ConaoUc:Latlon Coal Co. MD MD (Phyalcal' only t>he commuters vote to accept \~ Thup-oe,l'o~!~lnery lc Chemical CorpBMD B B B BMD the proposal of the mailboxes, Ralph Williams, junior, will ap• Note: Unlll Further Notice, Interview• for Bachelor Degree Candidate• are for Ja-nuary Gradu ate• only, proach the administration for 1) WUh aeml-technlcal background, permistion to start planning for BM the construction of the boxes. WeclTr:::.-.:. lnaarance Co. The next meeting ·of the or• D11Pont Company BMD BM BM MB D BMD BMD BMD Thura., K~. 5 ganization wlll be held Oct. 28, Same aa November 4, 1151 . at noon in the Morgan and Val• ~anA~~~y D --~nli Ol Note: Untu Further NoUce, Interviewa for Bachelor Degree ICandla.uae- are for January Gl'&duat.. only. ~andigham Room of the Student -, I . Center. . ' ------~ Oct. 23, 1959 The Review 5 'Neath the Arches By MICHELE Cen~~:.Uer l"•"n~~H+~~]

Laurel Hall, the infirmary; dr~ve t(or fourth if you must Sick or Hurt! The sequence is dnve a sports car) You can rest 'amazingly r·ight on the tip of re.cuperate and reorganize, ali your tonque, iSn't it. Have you w1tnout the pressure of shifting ~~:~:~~: it;efo~~:t~~ ·~~~ · -~:~q::~:=~-H+ me to have to tell you that the ·- ben there No? Then you only between class and _ddrm when see the builaing facing the li­ your mot or run down or the entire weekend was a huge suc­ Dr. Ralph Purcell To Present brary beyond the magnolia cir­ gears are stripped, or even when cess. I want to thank all you cle. Yes? Then you know about your gas line is, c 1 o g g e d . students who participated for helping_to make 1959 Homecom­ th at other world! Thought you'd like to hear that India's.Administrative Pr·ocess To those of you who, don't in_g bigger and better. My per. it's a good human garage and sonal congratula-tions to Queen A study in c.<;>.inparative Bureaucracy will be presented know, Laurel Hall is another not a mystery building you have Barbara Tomlin and all · her by Dr. Ralph J{tircell on Oct. 26, at 4:20p.m. in 220, Hul· world, right here on campus. tl's to wonder about; don't mean to lovely attendants. ,-~. an orderly, peaceful, and most­ drul? up business either, just lihen Hall. . · tJf -all quiet, world geared in ~J ra, lghten a few mytfis - (I Here at the Center, we're According t~. Purcell, the text of his lecture win be, first when the · campus is in Know, I've be~n there.) planning even bigger and better "the successf~~n .d- effective execution of the process of Before lool ~ill son College. Sbake_spearean theater. elusive plans of the govern·:· · · · :< -~f; . the development of cisions of the Supreme Court." Looking ahead, look · for an­ 'l;he Student Center is looking for the development of th ·~-~ · lai~ - Administrative Sys- On Saturday, Oct. 17, three o.ther good pep fest tonight, an­ for a student to work on light- ciety.· The significance is fUJ{t · · . ,,tJ1't-':political stability of members of the university's De­ other post pep fest dance in the ing at dances and o•ther Center enhanced by the political con'(·~ . . ' ilf:!·;i-ts social and pol'iU· bating Team attended a Debate Dov~r Room tonight promising functions. The position is a paid text in which the experience--df._. a ·.·>Ji Workshop in Philadelphia which to be better than ever., and an­ one and if a ny of you students India, as a democratic goverm- -~~ ~~ : ; ':'~. \.. was sponsored by the Pennsyl­ other (we're rooting for one) vic­ are interes ted, ple:ase contact ment, succeeds in compariso-IJ.· '·} ,.f)ff -~- vania State Speech Association. tory tomorrow on our •home either Dr. Ott or Gib Smith. with the efforts of the commuri.:.· -~. - ,-:·::.- , -~ware letter jacket. Tomorrow the Debating Team grounds. Looking around, see As ever, ist ~ystem i_n the People's Re- - -- ~~If2~J.i~Pan Tripodi in Co:;, will . journey to Lehigh for a you "neath the arches." Iyam Stoodn't pubhc of Chn~a. · ; bt;!)t~t ;;~ · Novice Debate Tournament. This .-.·- · ", , · '·: .!.{~ tournament is open only to de­ baters who have not previously ;t- debated in college. It is expected that 25 colleges will attend the , ESSO RESEARC~ ~~.:ks· wonders with' oil :·,_ - j tournament. : • ' • -#< . .. ~: ,.. · 1 Dr. Ray Keesey, debate advis­ ...l . or, extends an invitation to· any -person interested in deba_ting to come to de·bate meetings which H av-a-banana-bu~ny! . are held every Tuesday, 6:\30 p. m. to 7:30 p. m . in the Student Center. Theta Chi Appoints ·Five Sop h. Officers At a recent meeting of the Theta Chi ·Fraternit:r five of the members of the class of 1962 were elected to major offices. · William A. Ha:yden, an Eng­ lish major was elected to fill the post of secretary. Edward A. Tomao, a pre-dental major, was unanimously appoi'nted publicity director, and Jon Stieglitz, eng- . ineering major, was elected alt­ ernate representative to IFC Donald G. Schnetzer, chemistry major, wa\1 appointed scholarship chairman. The posi'tion of chap­ ter representative to the national magazine, w'Rattle", was filled by WaltN N. Carlyle, a history major. Theta Chi. Party To Be A Masquerade -:

A masquerade party will be 1 •held at the Theta Chi house to· morrow night. The brothers and their dates will wear ori-ginal costumes in the Halloween' vein •and music will be furnished by the Hurricanes. !Prizes will ·be awarded for the most original costumes. Enter­ tainment will feature tradition­ al Halloween games. Dance And Magic Spark C. C. M~et There will be a meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club tonig'ht at 8 p.m. The meeting will be held at t he YWCA which is situat­ e_d on South College Avenue nght across the parking lot of the library. A cha-cha lesson will be given b~ Ed Myers and ·later there Good eating ... good fo1' you ... thatsa banana! But a fungus growth that attacks banana plants threatened Will be a magic show. the economy of banana production. Old-fashioned sprays were cumbersome to apply and expensive. T'Aen . Jackson's Hardware Esso Research de"?eloped a special oil m.ist that ends this fungus growth ea~lY. and economically. . s People eat better ... cars run better . .. because ESSO RESEARCH w01ks wonders ·with oil. for ISS0 - SPOBTitfG GOODS . . . . ,_90 E. Malia Jrewark _s __T_h_e _Re_vi_ew_ __o_ ct_.2_3,_19_59 Annual Parents Conference E-52 Presents Second Show Of 'The Winslow Boy' Tonight Expected to Bring Thousand

It was the real-life Archer-Shee case, one of the most Preliminary pla ns have been personnel. plant pathology; Dr. Edmund J. notable chapters in the history of human liberty, . that completed for the Ninth Annual November was selected be­ Cain, associate professor of ed. fired the imagination of playwright Terrence Rattigan, Parents Conference, Saturday, cause parents and instructors uca tion; Miss Mary E. Wines are, . by this time, aware of the and moved him to write the powerful drama call "The November 14, which is e:x,peced associate professor of cl othing: to bring about 1,000 •parents of student.9' progress and prob­ Winslow Boy', which premiered last night in Mitch~ll H~ll school of home economies ; w. as the opening presentatio nof the E-52 Umvers1ty freshmen students to the cam· lems. If adjustments are requir­ pus. ed for the students' eventua l Francis Lindell, a, ssociate pro. lt was the real-life Archer- ty of doing, and getting the case Miss Mar.zaret Black, counsel· success, there is still time be­ fessor of mechanical engi neer. Shee case, one of the most not- into court was even more diffi· or in the dean of students of­ fore the end of the semester for ing; James F. 'Robinson, director able chapters in the history of cult, since the Archer-Shee's and fice, heads the studen ~ -faculty beneficial changes to be made. of residence for m en; and Miss human liberty, that fired the their attorney were blocked in planning committee. Aiding Miss Black in arrang­ imagination of playwright Ter- every conceivable manner by Response to the first parents ing the program for 1959 are Beatrice P. Hartshorn, chairman renee .Rattigan, and moved him a govrnment which refused to conference,. held in January, staff members Dr. Elizabeth E. women's physical education. ' to write the powerful drama allow itself the embarrassment 1952, w as so enthusiastic that Bohning, associate professor of Student members of the com.­ story · in The Winslow Boy, of adm'ittin.g that its lfficiols had modern languages and literatu­ the conference has become an mittee are Leah A. Coverdale which .premiered last night in made a mistake. annual affair. It is designed to res; Dr. Raphael !R. Ronkin, as­ MitC'hell 'Hall as th eopening pre- !But the fight was carried on bring about a closer relation sociate professor of ·biological junior; Richard F. Humphrys: sentation of the E 52 University through the newspapers, the ship and understanding among sciences; Dr. Donald F. Crossan, junior; and Ralph 0. /W illiams,· Theatre's 28th season, and which courts and even Parliament, parents. students and university assistant research professor in junior. continues through tonight and while the elder Archer..Shee tomorrow- night Although Ratti· staked everything he had to see d t' t th m tter h d h f gan has c ange t e names 0 that justice was done, and his or s ipseersontoa•yin.1'1 ves lga e e I a Lockers For Sale the principals in the real drama son's innocence proclaimed. It MRHA W k of Martin Archer-'Shee's fight for ended in a .payment of 7120 · The individual dorms were re- .Justlce, the actual events in this pounds to the boy's father, and 0 C . t•t t• quested· to select Hall Managers :In Student Center Inspiring case have been only with that payment the case n ODS I u 'IOI ·and Scholarship Chairmen im- . · -164•~,· · n1.t1 Y a Itere d i n the play· may be· said o have come to an mediately. The Association plans Commuter 'lockers are being 1n the fan · of 1908, Martin- end. A d B PI to spons<>r a dance in the near sold this week at the main desk Archer-Shee, a bank clerk in1 The Archer-Shee case, howev- fi US an future, to be .directed by the of the student Center. London, ~ived word that the er, was no mere matter of a five- Social .Commi-ttee. A deposit of $2, which will be :Royal Naval College was dis- shilling note, and a youngsteh's The MRHA. met Monday night Dorm residents were reminded refunded upon the return ·of the -missing his thirteen-year-old son reputation. As is clearly evident to lay the foundation of its new that Bermuda shorts are not to lock at the end of the year, and ·~ge, who had been proudly in vivid dramatization of this constitution. A preliminary draft be worn to meals in either Kent the $2 rent will be charged. entered - as a cadet only a few story in THE WINSLOW BOY, had been circulated among the Dining Hall or. the Dover Room. The lockers are located in the months before. George's crime? this one boy's fate is a symbol members, and the method of It was announced that all dorms- basement ·of the Student Center He was accused of having stol- of the entire issue of. the indivi· ratificat ion was discussed in de- will be completely opened to for the convenience of univers­ en, forged and cashed a five- dual's right to question· the ac- tail. Although the ratification parents on Parents' Day, Nov. 14. lty commuters. shilling postal order. W·as the tions of government officials. procedure is still u~der investi~ ·accusation true? The boy denied The Mitchell Hall box-office gation, it was decided to submit lt. What had made them think will ·be open this afternoon from the constitution to the general the ·boy guilty? The bewildered 3:30 to 5:00 P. M. and also this .membership and to require a "It's True, Herbie • •• M&~ Does qet boy had no idea. evening and tomorrow evening two-thi rds majority. for appro- 1 !Realizing' that he was chal- just before the show. Tickets for val. . . . Clothes Cleaner, Brighter & ·Fresher lenging a great bureaucracy to some good seats are still availa- battle when he dared to ques- ble for either night. The plan to run busses to tion the Admiralty's charges .. away" football games was dis- against his son, but knowing in Poii"cy Change On cussed. Although there was in- hi h h bo sufficient participation for the s eart t at 'the Y was in- !_Lafayette game. , great.e.r. .publ _ic- . · nooent, Archer-Shee started . his Reports To Paper relentless two-year court battle ity will he given the trip to R'ut- . by retaining Sir Edward Carson, A change in the policy con- gers, and more people are ex- the attorney, whose ·brilliant and cerning activities reports has pected : to attend . . lnd1viduals, rnereiless ~ross-examination · had been inaugu·rated by the Review instead of cou.ples only, will be been the undoin-g of Oscar Wilde. this year. . invi·ted. · 'I'he prog.ram is being [t was only after he had heard This policy requests that each directe

KCIDL KROSSWORD No~& But .don't take our. word ·for it . ... don't ­ 2 3 9 10 l1 12 ACROSS DOWN even take Herbie's word . . . prove it to 1. Straw hat for 1. French head your.self ·right now.;_ TODAY! Take ALL yacht wear? covers 13 yo.ur clothes* to M & M . and see · why we 7. Jack and his 2. Kind of band call M & M Delaware's most modern, most non-dieting wife 3. Make ·efficient" ~leaners! 18. All harmonious 14. Come down for 4. Old school __ a Kool? 5. Bird of the sea Hi. That which is 6. Flat tire's retained reincarnation 16. To smoke (a 7. They're for •Modesty, ot course, your protection Kool) in Italy will dictate the re­ 17. Bemused bird 8. A little extra 18. Indiana who 9. This is edgy · tention. of at least aound weird 10. Got all your. a :few, garments 20. Place-kick t ool marbles? 21 11. When your_ untU. your. cleaning : ' tells you, switch ~s!!i~rlne to Kools order is returned 28. Small ensign 12. Hardens 24. Ring, not for by M&M. engagement 19. Kind of · purpoaes · collegiate 22. Plaster of Paris 25. Curl the lip at 24. Sounds of (2 words) happy cats 27. What too much 26. Start to rise water does 27. British fly-boys 28. Motorcycle .DRIVE IN CLEANERS appendage . 29. Chemical Engi- neer (abbr.) · 42 . 43 - . 80. It'a Holy in 80. Talented SHIRT LAUNDRY . STORAGE VAULT Worceeter vegetables­ 88. What Koola do Art!_ all day long Sl. What some 17. Heroine's boy guys grow ..-:: friend, beards to do ~4-,~--~--+-~ ~.-4,--~~--~--+-~ Leander'• girl 32. Bird from friend Baltimore 88. Fill up with eats 34. Oppoaite of 89. Eggy prefix harder 41. Kind of Sack 85. Take I(; a t the 42. This haa . tee Wheh your throat tells ) Menthol Magic 36. f:,~~~~ocal 44. Making like ~u its time for a change,· a monkey 40. Sallie Hawkins' real daddy "·Mila Fitz 48. It has a long youn9ed 11 N. Chapel Street Freel S & H Green Stamps -&'7. Song, or a part arm .S. Inebriate 45. I t's easy and .e. Freu.ch pope edible a teal -change ...

s 3 ~3 J.~ Meat Ball Sandwiches 3 :> 13d.ld '0'1 13 O>l -YOU NEED THE Steaks, all kinds of Subs, e N Ld V 10 0 v -~ ·~..=" II AO Home Made Pizza Pies 3 .L vsw-.--· 0~ 3H H s 3H::t3H.S so ~::> Free Delivery After 10 P. M. J{Aeitfttae~ie S .LiSIO130 .LV HIS··· 3 3 N S 1V3d N3.9NV~ Franks Sub · Sh~·p 3 0 I.L. S 3 1 H 3 • n W 3 ~ EN 8·9890 3lt vw'l'i'di.L N 3 .1. a H OFKCJDL . J. IJ. H19 I 1 V 3 l:l I N 3 l 75 E. Main St. S .ll~IH diS l:l3 J. V 09 There is, by the way, a com. Notes pletely new instrumental group Oct. 23, 1959 The Review n (Continued fr om Page 4) on campus this year. The owh­ estra, for the time being a string oken chorus by Er~es.t Toc,?­ orchestra, rehearses at Old . Col. sp d selections from • K1smet . lege on Wednesday evenings Modern Dance Club Selects h' h · b •, anTh e brass chotr· , w lC 1s.. e- under Mr. King's direction. The comi ng something of a ~rad1 t 10_n group could use more string on ca mpu s, is p e rfor~mg th1s players; anyone interested ft ernoon for the openmg meet. should see Mr. King. Twelve Girls for Members ~ f th e Delaware State Edu. 1ng o .. . w·l . Tomorrow the campus will be 10 rs' Associatwn, m 1 mmg. invaded by 400 Delaware High The following girls have been ca The grou p, which plays school students, here for the an. selected for membership in the 1 / ton ~ic from the 16, 17 and 18 nual band day. Each of the Modern !Dance Club: Nancy Jack· mun turi es iS directed by J. Rob. ce ' h U . seven bands will perform sep· son, Del Stover, Lynne Smith, ert Ki ng, di rector of t e mve~s- erately. The bands will join to Bonnie Brannen, Pat Edwards, itY band. I hope the campus w1ll play Romberg's "Your Land and Jean Newsome, Julie Welsh, Ani· have a chance to beco_me mor_e ta Ciconte, Helen-Keith Gould, .r my Land" and the Delaware awa re of th e bra_ss cho1r than ~t Alma Mater. Janet Coate, Sue Ellis, and Su­ has 'been in preV \OUs years. Lets san White. hope that we hear them some Don't forget the Choral Festi. time other than the ~nnual val on Nov. 4. • .. Plan to come These girls were selected on carol sin g after the Chnstmas early; 200 people were turned the basis of their a-bility to away last year. express an emotion and portray 1 Concert. an inanimate obj-ect. No previous da~ce experience was required. 'At a recent meeting Nancy Newsome was elected President; Ginni Staley, Secretary; and Sandy Kimball, Treasurer. Onea.n,..~ . The annual ·_Modern Dance 11 Club Concert will be presented (A1ttJwr of 1 ll a.9 a Teen-age Dwnrj" 11 The Many in Apri1. This year it will 5C Loves of Dobie Gillis", ttc.) - based on an original interpreta. ly t.ion of the musical, "South Pa· GRACEFUL - New members of th·e modern dance· club beg:in el·· .. .; cific." learning the graceful way to express things through dance. a ag :.' STUDYING CAN BE SCREAMS tit Engineers' Ball so:.: If stud ying is bugging you, try mnemonic~;. E-~2 Players John Latimer co Requires Theme co .. .., Mnemonics, as we all know, was invented by tl1e great Greek philosoph er lVInemon in 52() B.C. (Mnemonics, incidentally, ~ast For Play The .Englneering Council. and ar" the Engineers' Ball Dance Com­ Is Subject of. w. ... was only one of the inventions of this fertile Athenian. He also .mittee installed a suggestion invented the staircase which, as you niay /imagine, was of •box in Dti{Pont ·Hall this week. SO · inestimable value to mankind. Before the staircase people By The 'Bard' for an appropriate Hummel Talk tht.. ~uggestions who wished to go from floor to floor were forced to live out dance theme· are requested. tn1 E-52 will present the Shakes· Charles F. Hummel, assistant their lives, willy-n_i lly, on the ground floor, and many of them !A free ticket to the Engineers' no•· pearean play, "Much Ado :About Ball is th~ prize for the winning ·-curator of the Henry Francis du ~ . !Ve grew cross as bears .... Especially Demosthenes who was elected Nothing" at some future date. sug·gestion. In addition, the win· Pont Winterthur Museum, will el? Consul of Athens three times but never served because he was The casting has been parti_ally ner will see his ideas material­ be the second lecturer in the tw unable to get up to the office of Commissioner of Oaths on the completed, and is as follows: ize in the form of decorations 1959-1960 Winterthur Lecture 2. third floor to be sworn in. But after Mnemon's staircase, Cassandra Williams, freshman, for the -<:oming dance. · -Series sponsored by ~he Univer­ Ult has been awarded the role of sity on Oct. 28 in Wolf Hall A u ~:l· Demosthenes got up to the third floor eaRy as pie-to Athens' Sup.Rlying music for every. ~!). Beatrice, and ·her understudy one's dancing enjoyment fo.r the itorium at 8:15 p.m. K sorrow, as it turned out. Demosthenes, his temper-shortened will be Helen Keith Gould, also third straight year wilL be Jack His topic wHl be "John R. La· un by yP-IJ.rs of confinement to the ground floor, soon embroiled· his a freshma~; Dean Caras, is to Garnett's Orchestra, playing timer, China• Trader." Mr. Hum­ pr( countrymen in a series of senseless wars with the Persians, the be Benedick;_Claudio will be por· from 8 p. m. to midnight on No­ mel, who has been associated­ tw Visigoths a.nd .the Ogallala Sioux. He was voted out of office in trayed by Bob Pack; sophomore; vember 7, in the Student Center. with . the Winterthur Museum at lia Hero, JuUe Wlttman, freshman; 517 B.C. and Mnemon, who had made his accession pOSBible, Bob Pritchett, a junior elecrical Greenville since 1955, is. an au·­ i2 Phyllis Jones, senior, will play thority on· the life of John Latl:­ was pelted to death with fruit s:1lad in the -Duomo. This later engineer and chairman of the 119~ Margaret, her understudy being !Dance Committee, said the dance mer. He is currently editing the ah became known as the Missouri Compromise.) ·flernice Magill; Debbie Kieffer, is for a)l undergraduates, not on. China-trade papers of Latime:r SC< senior, will · portray Ursula; the {or publication, and has prev.- tie part of Leonato has been as­ iously written "John R. Latime:r IN signed to Ken Shelin, junior; . Comments Upon . the Amercian . ~ and Jack Erthal will be Don Pe· Class .of '62 Scene" for Delaware ·History. 5m dro. ' A graduate of City College of IPrt !Pete Fisher, sopohomore, will ,... New York, Mr. Hummel . is a te<­ assume the part of :Dogberry; To Nominate member of Phi Beta Kappa. :He th. Jon Wendt will portray Beltha· Nominations for Sophomore received his master's degree in SU< ser; Alex Grant will be the first class members to receive awards Early American Culture from the Co· watch; Jim Marshall, sophomore, will be received at t'he Sopho­ University of Delaware in 1955. '/we the second watch, and Dave De more Steering Committee meet­ He was appointed curatorial as­ an -Riemer, sophomore, will ·be the ing to be held on Oct. 29. The sistant at the· museum in 195S, COl sexton. 'Prompters are to be awards are ·based on class par­ was named assistant director o:f Ha Helen Keith Gould and Bernice ticipation and ·personal achieve­ the index of American cultures fro Magill. ment. in 1956 and was promoted to his Bo There are five more parts yet The application for the World. present po~ ition last January. fro to be cast: Verge~. Don John, Service Program will also be He is a member of the New tn< Borachio, Conrad, and Antonio. presented to the committee for Castle Historic Buildings Com­ ~ The play Will be under the di· approval. The approved applica· mission and numerous profess­ du rection of Dr. Kase. tions will be av ailable later in ional historical· and educationa l off the week for au interested mem· otganizations, including the il>r< bers of the sophomore class. un. American Association of Musu-­ bu But I digress. We were discussing mnemonics, which are nothing Swi~~~: Club App_oints der this program, the class is ems, American Historical Asso­ hY' more than aids to memory-catchwords or jingles that help you planning to send a university ciation and the Association for 1s sophomore to Russia just as Ver­ remember names, dates and places. For example: •d State and Local History. Val 12 New A cquaiDal S non Abbot was sent. to Alaska by Th~ Women's Aquatic Club has - th~~ past summer.. , tea Columbus sailed the ocean bl1le In fourteen hundred ninety-two. chosen thirteen new members for The Class Clanon, a _soph­ Io\ the coming year, Carolyn Joyce, ?more class newsletter, w11l be Extra Chee.rs 1\Va See how Rimple? Make up your own -jingles. What, for in· president of the. club, announced Issued Nov. 10. The_ P~-bllcation tht this week. Selected after exten· will b~ free and d1stn.buted to ~ st:.mce, i~ the important event immediately following Colum· sive tryouts, the following girls all res1dence halls. !hi bus's discovery of America? The Boston Tea Party, of course. For Cheerers V:N will swim with the organization C C l da Try this: · during the 1959-60 season; Paula· ampus U en r Three cheers for the eleven I Samtte' Adams flung the lea Batchelder, Sandy Bixler, Mary Oct . . , 23 30 1959 cheerers for the freshmen foot­ iha' Into the briny Zuyder Zee. Carmody, Nancy Coale, Kris Eh ~ Friday, 9ct. 23 . , ball .team. An extra cheer for Yot lert, Elaine Fairman, Nancy 8 ~~ce- Dover Room, Senior Class "!bel the members of : the newly org­ (~OTE: The Zuyder Zee was located in Boston Harbor·until Haubein, · Lorna Hoehn, Joyce saturday, Oct. 24 anized pep group. col Martella, Mary Dee Parker, Sue ~~'!t~Y. g~~-. i~ · Kfpp Humphries, Sue Bowles, ed 1904 when Salmon P. Chase traded it to Holland for Louisiana and two outfielderi!.) . Smith, and Emlly Spencer ~ 4:15p.m .. Agnew Room. URC Meeting Sandy Williams,· Janet co·ote, Pol Judy Langhamerer, Jackie Smith, But I digress. To get back to mnemonics, you can see how Membership in the club has tl~ - ~~ - · ~~tanffo~~mc!~~r~e~~g sm grown from twenty-five active Meet ing Pat Fowler, Carol Brown, Lynn II' simple and useful they are-not only for history but also for members last year tp thirty-three 7 p.m ., M&V. Room, AAUW. 7 Lovsness;- and Bernie Meade th( everyday living; for instance: members this season. Under the Tu!~:Y. ~~t a2~e Room, APO Meeting recently elected to the freshma n Mrh leadership of Carolyn Joyce and r2 noon. Morgan Room, Commuter cheer. squad. 1'U< I In nineteen hundred fifty-nine Carol Olson, program co-chair· 4 ~~ -~h McLane Room, Sophomore This year t he cheerleaders are 6,3 I 'l'he smoke to look for is Alpine. men, and Mrs. Rothacher, fa· Comm.- SGA. ~Ql ... culty sponsor, the · ~quatic Club 6 : 3~e~ aTe ' s~~~t~ne Room, Delegate organizing a pep group who will tic 11 works to promote . SWimming 7 p.m .. Kir kwood Room, Lut heran nelp to stimulate school spirit. " hy Alpine?" you ask. Taste that fine, fresh fla vor. Enjoy 5 Rita Ventura, r-ran Bankert, ~el that subtle coolness. Try the longest, purest fil ter yet devised. among women at the university, 7 : 1 ~tu:,~~ ~1 ~~~a~onGol d. Newman 195 and to prepare an annual show Club Meeting · Judy O'Hara, Katie Crowe, Mary 195 t ntil Alpine you needed two cigarettes to rea p the benefit s of of aquatic skill. Members meet ~e~n~ada~~lbclf.o~r· Acco unt in ~ Club Carmody, Judy Johnson, Dotty ne, Alpine-one for flavor, one for filtration-and smoking two for practice every Monday night 10 a .m .. Agnew Room, ROC . Program Wilson, Chris Ehlert, Linda 1\Vit cigarettes is never graceful ; in fact, with mittens it is nigh im­ in the Womens' Gymnasium. , 5 P.:_n i ~~~ g~~~· Sophomore Cl ~ss Boone, Nancy Mc Fran are the 0 members of this new organiza­ Ev; possible. Kow you need only one cigarette-Alpines. Get some. 7 p .m .. Blue & Gold WEC Meeting to a Thuraday, Oct. 29 tion. You'll see. ' CUFF LJNKS FOUND 4:30p.m ., McLane Room. Honor Cou r t C 1 9~ 9 :ll aa Rbulwaa 6 p.m ., Blue & Gold, WC5C Meeting This group along with the 7 p.m ., McLane Room , 1962 Steering be8 A pair of men's black onyx Comm ittee new cheerle'aders will sit on the 1\Ye J * * * - cuff links, inscribed with ~ the 7 p .m ., Agn ew & Kirkwood, Inter­ sideline during the varsity home varsit y Christ . Fellowsh ip g tato seal of the University of New 7 :30. p .m .. Blue & G old . Young Re· ames and scream with all their ~a r The sponsors of this column make Alpine, Philip Morris Hampshire, 1923, has been found. publicans might~ Opt Please contaCt Barbara Lamber. Friday, Oct. 30 The permanent varsity squad and Marlboro Cigarettes. Pick what you please. What 1/0U 8 p:tn ., Faculty Lounge , B ridge Ses- Bco ton, 306 Squire Hall, for further sion · will be picke!l from the ten Pick will please you. 8 p m ., Small Caf eteria, ::vtovie - tioJ information. Sha kespeare frosh cheerers later in the year. tio1 tn~ .<8 The Review Oct. 23, 1959 ·n

Hens Trounce Wildcats~ 50-12 •, Turner Leads Foes Yield 30 Attack; Scores Points in Third l.' Two, Converts - Canto;50usted . Jack Turner, Delaware's power­ Hens, Bisons Tie ·packed senior halfback from Philadelphia, has taken over the For M.AC Lead lead in total offense and scoring for the undefeated Blue Hen foot­ 'BY HOWARD ISAACS ball team. Delaware maintained its win. ning ways before an enthusia!!­ :N£E·DS 140 YAB:DS v. .. tic Homecoming crowd last week }l by thoroughly trouncing an ver­ Turner, who needs only 140 0 a· rah~d New Hampshire eleven more yards to break Delaware's 50-12. • r< ·three-season career r~cord of jJ ·.1628, held by Jim Zaiser, had his By virtue of Bucknell's upest D 'best day last Saturday as the victory over Rutgers, defending tt Hens' whipped New Hampshire Middle Atlantic Conference 50-12, holding on to its unani-. champs, the Bisons moved into 5C mous first-place ranking in tl_le a tie with the Blue Hens for the 1y ·4mbert Cup Poll. league lead. Paul Terhes, junior el·' ., ,; signal caller and last season's a .GAINS 121 all-conference choice a t that pos­ ag .. Turner pHed up 121 on the itlon, passed his team to a 15-8 tit ground against the Wildcats to triumph over the Scarlet Knights. s ;,:· ,';bring his total rushing yardage 4·0 RECORD co . to 351, just nine below the mark Sporting a 4-0 overall record co ... ,., and a 2-0 conference slate, the of 360 .held by John Bowman who ar" ,;still leads in that department. Nelsonmen maintained their w,,,. Turner, however, took over the Lambert Cup lead. The Hens 1 lead from Bowman in the total also continued in third position SO .. - ;.offense category, 397 to 384, and in the national small college th<. 1n scoring he passed Tony Sura­ standings. in! ".vitch by tallying two touchdowns New Hampshire, before the disastrous trip to Newark, sp o rt~ no•· '·and a bonus conversion to bring JVe ~ his season total to 28 points. ed a 2-Q.-1 record and were riding elp high in the Ya nkee Conference. HEBERT VS. PELLEGRINI The first h alf proved a -defen· tw sive battle a s The Wildcats held 2. Gary Hebert, the Hens' out-­ Ult standing sophomore halfback the Hens on their own ten in the initial period and prevente.d ~!). from Needha.m, Mass., passed his K · way to within one yard of the further penetration until mid· way through the second quarter. un . ·team leader, quarterbctck Gampy DRIVE STUFFED . . pr< Pellegrini, by throwing for 46 tw yards, a touchdown and a con­ A sustained drive by the vis· itors was stopped on the Blue lia version. Hebert has completed i2 ·four of six aerials for 100 yards, a nd Gold fi ve when the clock ran out to end the half. !19~ ~ while Pe llegrini has racked up Ill ~ · 101 yards with eight completions Del a ware's first score came on a two yard run up the. middle by s& ln 13 tries. Sophomore quarter­ tie . back Barry Fetterman is not far halfback Jack Turner,;· ca pping a 70 yard drive. Min.utes before, IM · behind with 85 yards on five of the second qua!ter. Tony Suravitch and an unihe easily romps to a first down midway through . a 16 attempts. the second quarter. Tony Suravitch an dan u.ydentified Hen are providing blocks. a Turner score was recalled due to an offside penalty. ' ~m ~ 300 YARDS PER GAME prl • • h St d t 1 While New Hampshire played te e. Team-wise, the powerful Blue u consistentlyin thefirst.half,the . znnts . u en ., omen, s ch. bottom dropped out -i:~1 the se· Hen offense has ground-out 1189 7 SUI yards while the defense has held cond. The Hens mounted an of· Co· ·the opposition to 514, giving the ~ '·;Hens a 297.2 per game average i!Expected to Break. Record_s i~iii;d:~in;1 ~~~ompl e t e ly an · against the opponents' 128.5. COl While the Hens have attempted Scoring every time they got special student for one year wltp the pigskin, Coach Dave N e l son' ~ Ha j few passes, they've made them The success of the Blue Hen r Carl is not an ordinary run­ fro ·, account for 356 yards. Delaware cross-count ry team 1:1his fall lies ner, nor an ordinary sturd ent. He the help of a Br-ittingham In- charges rollect to four touch· Bo· ' has completed 21 of 41 attempts, ternational ScholarsMp, sponsor- downs, challd ng up 30 po i nt~ . in the hands of one m a n- Carl- is an exchange student from Fin· ed by Thomas Brittingham, well Helping the local cause were 94 fro · while the opposition has been Olaf Homen. la nd, attending Delaware as a en< held to :2.7 of 74 tries for 300 yards. known Wilmington industrialist. yards given the Hens by the lAs a runner, Carl will proba- Wildcats throngh penalties. il' UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARh I lack Turner ...... 80 397 4.96 ning competitively for aibout the a series of f" e carries. ru ~ ·John Bow:m.an ...... so 384 7.7 1 42 221 5.3 last four years after finding he A trio of p 'l'ony Su:ravltcb 8 81 1 I Jack Turner z 31 tion's capital, Carl was chair- for Turner's ~ ; e cond TD. tato ' Bob Reeder I 84 0 0 Dave Beinner 1 25 Dick Broadbent t 15 1 2 man of the board of his frater· On the n e -- t series of downs ~a r Dave Beinner t 34 0 0 Delaware s 58 nity and chairman of the law Beinner carried to the HamP· opi Mickey Helneckea I II II 1 Opponent• 1 5 ., AI Huey 2 27 0 0 club. shire 13. A bootleg pass to the 8co (Continued on Page 9 CARL·OLAF BOMAN (Contin~ed on Page 9) (Continu ~; d on Page 10) tio1 tio1 ln.e Nelson Is Winningest In Oct. 23, 1959 The Review . 9 Blue Hen Football History SPORTSl Coach Wins so· Marshall Invades UD At Delaware In For First Time; Wing-T Eight Se~sons Offense Used by Green Success is Due to The Delaware football season Sporting a 9.2 record in 1947, will be highlighted this week by the -Big Green m et Catawba ; in Winged-T Offense the invasion of a new opponent the Tangerine Bowl, dropping into Delaware Stadium tomor­ the game 7-0. coach 'David M. Nelson, of the row. The -Blue Hens will meet Marshall's last 'good season wa.q university's undefeated B I u e Marshall College, from Hunting. 1957, when it won six and' lost Hen football team, had added ton, West Virginia, at 2 p. m. three. Last year- the Big Green another distinction to an al- , ·Established in 1837, Marshall were 3-6 and they have won on­ ready colorful career by becom­ is a non-sectarian, state • sup­ ly one contest so far this sea­ ing the winningest coach in ported school with an enroll­ s·on. Marshall's schedule is load. Delaware's 68-year gridiron his- GOALIE BILL ZIEGLER makes a s11ve as Howard Hurray ment of ·over 4,000. · its football ed with tough opposition -Vir· tory. _ stands by to aid the defense. The Washington Sho'men went team, the Big Green, plays in ginia .Military, ~owling Green, With the close of Saturday's on to win a thriller, 8-2. the Mid-American Conference of Western Michigan, Toledo, Kent 50-12 destruction of a previous­ which Bowling Green, another .State, Louisville, 'Ohio Univer· ly unbeaten New Hampshire Blue Hen opponent, is ut most notably by aware's mighty gric!- machine Karl Frantz 1 18 1 0 Iowa and LSU, where. Dela· this year has been Leon Dom- Ken Schroeck . 1 18 0 0 son. He was chosen on the All· Jack Turner 2 18 0 0 1\Vare coaches helped to-Jnstall browski. In . Easton, Pa., this Travis Cosaboom 1 9 0 0 Opponent teams of Rutge:-st the systems that led to· Rose past week end,· there was a ru­ Massachusetts and Connecticut. Delaware 21 366 4 5 !Bowl and national champion- mor that he was in the Lafay- Opp.onents 27 300 2 0 The 5'11", 185 pounder is a Shi·ps. ette backfield so much, he was graduate of Germantown ~Acad­ UNANIMOUS CHOICE invited into the huddle. Punting emy in Philadelphia where he NO: YA!RDS BLO.CKED AVG. attracted scouts of top college) The !Blue IHe·ns this, season Tipping the scale at a hefty Pape Lukk ...... 4 163 0 ihave ea rned the unanimous 205 pounds, the 6' s.enior has Vern Walch ...... 1 36 0 ~~:~ by being selected on post season. Gary Hebert ...... 1 27 0 27.0 All-Star teams in football a n·l Vote for three weeks of the [Lam· been called by his coaches as Tony Suravitch ...... 1 23 0 23 0 ibert Cup !Poll for Eastern small one of the best guards ever to • .basketball. ~e als·o captaine-1 Delaware ...... :...... 7 249 1 31.5 the school baseball nine. college supremacy and are rank- play here; he has lived up to Opponents ...... 20 633 31 5 ed ·in a national ·Wire service this statemel)t more than ade · 1. · · As a freshman, Jack won h i g Poll third among the country's quately. Punt Returns numerals in baseball and fo ot­ 1 NO. YARDS TD small college teams. FOUR LETTERS Jack Turner ...... 3 31 0 ATcr:i ball and earned his varsity let- !Nelson, a 1942 graduate of Leon at ten .de d S~le~ianum Dave Beinner ...... 2. 25 0 12.5 ter in both sports as a sopho- · Gary Hebert ...... 2 12 the University of Michigan, High. School m Wllmmgton, 0 &.o more. He wasn't actually con- Where he led t he Wolverine where he lettered in four sports: Delaware ...... ! ...... • 68 0 20.4 sidered a starter in either spo:t Opponents ...... 102 rushers in his senior year with football, baseball, basketball 0 20.4 until his junior year. 6.31 yards a carry is at 39 the and track. He was picked as Kickoff ·Returns WILL RETURN NO. YARDS TD Ave. 1Although he is an agricult ro ~oun ge s t member of 'the n:man one of the outstanding linemen Bob Reeder...... 2 28 0 !NCAA rules committee. He de· in interscholastic football in Jack Turner ...... 2 2S 0 ~tg business management majm, Wayne Car.mean ...... 1 24 0 24.0 the sportsminded athlete pla m:; Veloped the Wing-T offense in Delaware. Tony Suravltch ...... 2 22 0 1950 while at Mai ne, and in "" attracted many Don Osmun ...... 1 · 11 0 n:g to return to Delaware next y e- a ~ 1957 published a book on the scouts from top football schools K'arl Frantz ...... 1 7 • 0 7.o as a mem'ber of the Athletic ne... Al Huey ...... :...... 1 3 0 3 0 !l'lew system in collaboration of higher education, but he de­ · partment; he will work for a. IWith lona . time friend Forest cided to accept Delaware's of· Delaware ...... 10 120 0 12.0 degree in education, as hco Opponents ...... _...... , ...... '... . 21 479 1 22 8 Evashevski now the su'ccessful fer mainly because of the uni­ • wants to teach and coach at a. Coach a t Io'wa. versity's engineering depart. Scoring high school level. TO £P-Kic:k EP-Run EP.:Paas FG T ~ When asked about this yea r's The current Delaware team, ment. Jack Turner ...... 4 0 2 0 0 2 best since the 1955 edition that THE ATHLETE Tony Suravltch ...... 3 0 0 2. 0 22 team, Turner said it has m or ry John Bowman ...... 3 I 0 0 0 0 !Went 8-1 and won the Refriger· Although he received a let­ 3 0 0 0 0 ~= hustle and is more enthusias i l, .ator Bowl test, has averaged 388 ter in his sophomore year• ••~eon g~c~PJsr::~':i~!n~ ...: ::::::::::::::::::::::::'::: 1 0 0 2 0 10 than any ·he had ever played n. 1 0 0 1 0 :Yards a game while holding its didn't a ctuall.Y become a . fl~St· ~!~~etr~Z:f:e~~~~ .. ::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::: 1 0 0 0 0 : Engaged to a hometown g irl, · opponents to 203. The Hens have stringer" unt1l he was ~ JUniOr. Vernon Walch...... , ...... 1 0 0 0 0 s Jack would like to· settle in D 1. Dave Beinner ...... 1 0 0 0 0 !~or ed 130 points to the opposi- He also was a letter wmner. as Ken Schroeck ...... 1 0 0 0 0 : aware after serving in the Arm y bon's 39. Nelson has the 'tlistinc- a member of the Blue Hen mne Barry Fetterman ...... 0 0 0 0 0 2 where he will ent er as a mem- tion of never having had a los- on which he played the out- 0 3 5 0 130 her of the advaneed ROTC pr'o- ing team at Delaw;uQ. field. g:~":t~~~s ··:·:.:·::::.:·:::::::::.·.::·::.::·.'.::·:::.·.:·:.::·.: 1: 1 0 1 0 39 gram. I Hens Trounce 'Doctor 'Pictures' Girls' Dormitories Oct. 23, 1959 The Review 11· (Conti nued from Page 10) .ars · Modern Red Li{e .Jry : ing hi s first appearance of the Quest Catts Award Scholarship Opens IPoliticaiGroup Dr. Harold Beachell, associate t ' tck eason with the Blue Hen se­ 'Residence halls on South professLr of chemistry, entertain­ F p bl• •t W k •ns ~ond- st ring offensive backfield, Campus are vying for the covet- or u ICI y or ed at a recent meeting of the B . s wo broke loose for a 30-yard touch­ ed A. B. Catts Award which is A Service Scholarship is avail- eg:t.ns eason down run th r o~g h _the mid~l~ Russian Club by showing slides d of Poland and Finland. ·presented annually to the dorm- able in the Department of Dra- .er of the Wildcat hne In the th1ra itory displaying the most en- matic Arts and Speech for a Plans for the first meeting of s quarf'er, giving the Hens a 36-0 The scenes of Warsaw and Prague emphasized the grim­ thusiasm and participation in t d t t s t . th ublicity the Active · Young Republicans h· . lead . Overall, Walch ran the ball campus activities. s u en ° ~ s 1s . 10 e P Club have been announced by ··n· fi ve times for a total of 38 yards. ness of life behind the Iron Cur. tain, for the war-torn cities a re The plaque was donated in . for the umvers1ty theatre pro- Ralph Williams, club president. ·n, . GARY HEBERT, halfback from 1952 by !A nn Barbara Catts, a gram. The meeting will take plade 25 Needh am, M.ass., wo~ ~im se lf comprised of clumsy, ·hastily con­ s tructed buildings. graduate of Delaware, in order in the Blue and Gold Room on ·· -!'S his third stra1ght nom1natwn for to stimulate spirit th.rough inter- The position offers a real Thursday, Oct'Ober 29th, at 7:30 ·21 ECAC sophomore · of · the · week Yearly club dues of $1 per dormitory competition, The A. B. opportunity for valuable prac- p. m. member will ·be collected by " to · honors by hurling a 37 -yard Catts Award is given to the tical experience in the field of ·William V. Roth Vice Chair· ··r- in. touchdown pass . to end Dick Secretary-'Ireasurer Mary Dro­ d · h' h promotion and public:;ity. It in- 'er Broadbent in the fourth quarter. bin. ormltory w lC has accumulat- eludes assistance in the prepara- man of the National Federation He also passed for two conver­ cd the highest number of points tion and distribution of all types of Young Republicans will speak '' Jrd him this season for a toue'*lown base~ on partici.pation in such . t on t·he "Principles of the Repub. er · $ions, and piled up 46 aerial and a two-point conversion. · · · of publicity matena1 : news s or- ·ld yard s. Hebert now ranks second activities as dorm floats and- ies, pictures, fliers, posters, etc. lican Party in Contrast to the MARK HURM, senior center from decorations, pep fests, Women's and in the planning and organi- Democratic Party Principles". .ds among Hen passers .with 100 Newark, Del., was nominated for ith . yards on four completions in six Playbill, and inter-dormitory zation of a publicity program The subject is expected to be .a all-east honors for the fourth sports. appropriate to individual produc- c·ontroversial one in next year's 28 tries. wee}{ as he led the Hen forward .ng The possession of this award tions. elections. JOH N BOWMAN, halfback from wall defensively, holding the op­ has become highly enviable, and 1ce . !York, Pa., held on to his indiv­ ·n. position to 242 yards running each year the •Women's Resi­ The Service Scholarshi•P should idual rushing lead among Hen and passing. dence Halls strive to outdo one 1m be of special interest to -students Yearbook Reveals backs by piling up 69 yards in DICK BROADBENT, junior start­ another in enthusiasm and spirit. planning careers in advertising, 12 carries. ing end from Wilmington, caught The plaque has served as an im­ public relations, or business. For l.lf· MICK EY HEINECKEN, starting a mighty 37-yard, touchdown petus to •great er unity within details, see Mrs. Hoskins, Secre­ New Staff Needs lk· end from Philadelphia, caught pass and the ensuing conversion the dorms and greater pride in tary of the Department of Dra­ the on ly three passes thrown to from Gary Hebert. the university as a whole. matic Arts and Speech, at once. Carol Hoffecker, editor of the !Blue 'Hen, has announced that ·staff positions are Still o.pen to interested students. Those who are interested may stop in the office between 4 p. m. and 5 p. m. during the next two weeks. 1Any students who have not yet had an opportunity to purchase their copy of the 1.959 Blue IHen may do so during the above office hours. In addition, orders ·are now being taken for the 11960 issue for which deposits may be made. Everyone is urged to ta-ke ad· vantage of the hours indicated, · since the staff will have few and what they do at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft • • • opportunities to mainain office hours after this month, said Ca· rol. The field has never been broader The challenge has never been gr·eater Delaware Student (Continued from ~ge 1) Engineers· at Piatt & Whitney Aircraft today are concerned with the development of all forms of flight propulsion insufficient housing -facilities. systems-air breathing, rocket, nuclear and. other advanced 'Dhe girls in the group stayed in types for propulsion in space. Many of these systems are so· the orphanage dormitories and the boys resided in a garage entirely new in concept that their design and c!evelopmenti convertEV} to living quarters. In­ and allied research programs, require techQical personne terestingly enough, the girls did not previously associated with the development of aircraft the same work as the boys, in­ ·engines. Where the company was once primarily interested cluding painting, repairing in graduates with degrees in mechanical and aeronautical buildings, digging postholes, and engineering, it now also requires men with degrees in numerous other jobs ordinarily electrical, chemical~ and nuclear engineering, and in physics, reserved for men. chemistry, and metallurgy. · As for social activities, there · were adequate facilities for boat-" Included in a wide range of engineering activities open to ing, fishing;" swimming, and technically trained g·raduates at aH levels are these four dancing. Musical interests of the :basic fields: teenage crowd were much the same as here. In Vern's words, ANALYTICAL ENGINEERING N,ten engaged in this "All you had to do to make them .activity are concerned with fundamental investigations. in scream was to play a record bY 'the fields of science or engineering related to the conception Ricky Nelson or Elvis Presley.'' :Of new products. They carry out detailed analyses of ad· FISH FOR UVEUHOOD vanced flight and space systems and interpret r_esults ~n Actually, Kodiak is not the terms of practical design applications. They provide basic wild, uncivilized place that one information which is essential in determining the types of Exhaustive testing of full-scale rocket engine might expect it to be. Most of systems that have development potential. thrust chambers is carried on at the Florida the people depend upon fishing l>ESIGN ENGINEERING The prime r'equisite here is an Research and· Development Center. {or their living, and with good active interest in the application. of. aerodynamic~, thern:to• luck, a fishing boat can bring in dynamics, stress analysis, and· pnnciples of machme design about $6000. worth of fish during the three month season. The ·to the creation of new flight propulsion systems. Men en· weather ranges from 50 to 85 · ~ gaged in this activity at P&W A establish the specific per· . degrees in the summer months, .formance and structural requirements of the new product and there are often winters in and design it as acomplete working mechanism. which . there. is no "White EXPERIMENTAL ENGINEERING Here men supervise Christmas." Kodiak has a large, modern school as well as most of and coordinate fabrication, assembly ·and laboratory testing the conveniences found else· of experimental apparatus, system components, and devel· where in the United StatP.s. opment engines. They devise test rigs and laboratory setups, SO'PH CLASS SPONSORS specify instrumentation and direct execution of the actual Vern was fortunate in being test programs. Responsibility in this phase of the develc;>P· the first student ever sponsored .mem program also includes. analysis of test data, reportm~ by a university for any of these of results and recommendations f

Russian _Party ·Visits Campus, Always ·sees Perkins just right! !Soviet Minister of Higher and l3econdary Specialized Education Vyacheslav P. Yelyutin visited the .campus recently to confer ·with President John A. Perkins a nd members of the faculty and ~td ministrative staff. Mr. Yely utin had accompanied l!::> remier Khrushchev during his 'lour of the United States. He w a s accompanied by Gennady 0 . Fursa, attache in the Sovi~t :E mbassy at Washingtun; Rob­ c. t J. Martens, Foreign Affairs Officer, U. S. "State Department; Hnd Cyril M. Uromcew, State De ­ f_J a rt ment interpreter. "We are pleased to oblige the Srate Department by providing a n opportunity for these visit­ i ng educators to better under­ £; nd our system of higher edu­ cation," Dr. Perktns said. "I am ~ > l e ase d , too, that the State De­ You can light either end! v a rtm ent considers the Univer­ Gi ty of Dela ware an exemplary American university." Get sa~sfYing tlavor. .. so friendly~ your taste! · •Frida y e vening a dinner was l1 _ld at Belmont Ha ll, home of lhe preside nt. Guests included P!'esident Court ney H. Smith, See how _Pall Mall's famous length of fine, rich­ (,warthmore College; President tastmg tobacco travels and gentles the smoke­ Millard E. Gladfelter, Temple makes it mild-but does not filter out L' niversity; W. S. Carpenter, Jr., p .. esident of the University of that satisfying flavor .! Delaware board of trustees; .;!'!.tdge G. Burto n Pearson, a hoard m ember; Dr. William A. Jv!os her, chairman, chemistry de· p ::utment ; Dr. Russell G. ~stauf. fer, director, reading - study C'2 nter; and Dr. Edward W. Com­ l;lgs, dean of engineering. Mr. Yely utin holds a doctorate ; n the technical sciences and 'HERE'S WHY SMOKE nTRAVELED" THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BEST J t::t s s trongly endorsed a new • · pol yt e ~ l m i ca l" school reform You get Pall Mall's Pall Mall's famous Travels it over, under, w hich combines study and prac­ Outstanding ... famous length of the length trav.els and around and through t ical work. Both he and Premier 1finest tobaccos gentles the smoke Pall Mall's fine tobaccos .h:lu ushchev have made glowing money can buy . 2 naturally .•• and they are 3 • .• and makes it ~! claims for both the recent and Mild! t:1e anticipated education of Rus- @AT Co Produrt o~ ~ J · ~_g ___ p _ .~ - .. . ""l'~ " • 1an engineers. ." ~V(t~-v~isourmiJdlena!!'e