University of Central Florida STARS

The Rollins Sandspur Newspapers and Weeklies of Central Florida

2-24-1951

Sandspur, Vol. 55 No. 15, February 24, 1951

Rollins College

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STARS Citation Rollins College, "Sandspur, Vol. 55 No. 15, February 24, 1951" (1951). The Rollins Sandspur. 876. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-sandspur/876 -^^^ R CD L-L- I M S

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VOLUME 55 WINTER PARK, FLORIDA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1951 NUMBER 15 Animated P resses

HONORARY DEGREE Varied Activities At Durocher; Time Chief Founders Week End Headline Magazine The Animated Magazine Sunday, February 25, and Convocation, Number 1, Volume XXXIV, of the Rollins Animated Magazine -will February 26, will highlight the remaining Founder's Week events held be published Sunday afternoon, February 25, at 2:30 p.m. in the Sand- ipur Bowl. in Observance of the 66 Anniversary of the Founding of Rollins Col­ First published in 1928 under the editorship of Dr. Hamilton Holt, lege. The Magazine now submits to the big blue pencil of Dr. Paul A. Wag­ The two student plays, Harvey and Her Husband's Wife will ner. Edwin Osgood Grover has been publisher of the Magazine ever run through Saturday evening with a matinee being held Saturday since its first edition. at 2:30 p.m. The suscribers to the Magazine The Animated magazine will CHICKASAW do not read the articles published feature eighteen people who cer­ i •"" • >tii^™j'«™ilJ.JJIWJIIlH^jipi.w>»yrgi ate the news each week and their in it. Instead they see and hear talks will range from World Prob­ the contributors deliver their lems by Senator Paul H. Douglas Library manuscripts in person. Sft„ Cartoons by the famed Roy President Wagner of Rollins Crane. will deliver the foreword of the Immediately after the Animated Cornerstone Paul Douglas 1951 Animated Magazine and the Magazine the following buildings editorial will be given by Thomas . will be open for inspection by the S. Matthews, editor of Time Maga­ public: Administration Building, School Called zine. Mr. Matthews is also the Alumni House, Annie Russell To Be Laid author ofTo The "Gallows I Must Theatre, Algernon Sydney Sulli­ Go and The Moon's No Fool. No event of the Rollins Found­ van BuUding, Beal-Maltbie Shell ers' Week Program will be of more Off Because Museum, Carnegie Library, Dyer MR. EDITOR interest to Rollins alumni faculty Memorial, French House, Morse and staff and to the people of Cen­ Gallery of Art, Orlando Hall, Rol­ tral Florida than the laying of the lins Student Center, and Woolson Of Convocation cornerstone of the |500,000 MiUs House. Thomas S. Matthews, Sen. Paul Meniorial Library at 2:45 p. m. Douglas, and Rev. John Haynes Sunday evening, February 25, Saturday. Holmes will receive honorary de­ there will be a concert by Central This magnificent building, now Florida Symphony with RoUins grees at the annual Convocation more than half completed, is lo­ service Monday, February 26, in student soloists. Alumni, Students, cated at the south end of tbe cam­ Te Ata Faculty and Staff are invited to Knowles Memorial Chapel, 10 pus horseshoe. When completed, in a.m. the Winter Park High School Au­ time for the fall term, it will fill ditorium. a need that the college has long Classes have,been called off for Fiesta Funds Go At 9:30 on Monday, February felt. all of Monday. Upper division stu­ dents will be members of the acca- 26 the formation of academic As other main college buildings demic procession. procession at Carnegie Hall will it is of Spanish Mediterranean de­ Toward Building begin with Edward F. W. Jones, sign. However, its architects, The academic procession will Marshall of the event. James Gamble Rogers 3rd and begin to form at 9:30 on Holt New Courts Half an hour later, the mid- George H. Spohn, have incorporat­ Avenue at Carnegie Hall. It will Winter Convocation in observance ed in the interior all the function­ take its traditional course across Fiesta earnings will go toward fhe campus arriving at fhe chapel of the founding of the college will al features of modern architec­ building new tennis courts it was in time for the start of the ser­ begin at Knowles Meinorial Chap­ ture. decided during the fifty minute el. vice. The Library is the .gift of Davel­ Student Council meeting Monday The Annual meeting of the Doors of the chapel will open I^ul Wagner la Mills Foundation of Upper night in the Alumni House. Board of Trustees at the Presi­ Montclair, N. Y., which was estab- at 9:30 a.m. Admission will be by "I am all in favor of endorse­ Second on the program is dents Office in the Administration (Continued on page 10) tickets only until 9:50 a.m., when ment of the Fiesta' fund for new Charles H. Percy, President of, the Building -will end the this year's the public will be admitted. Bell and Howell Company, speak­ Founders' Week. BYE DOC Senator Paul H. Douglas, U. S. tennis courts," Ken Horton said at the beginning o fthe discussion. ing on "Human Understanding in' Traditionally in the Spring at Senator from Illinois, and Thomas "Originally it was the dea that American Industry." most college Founders Week at S. Matthews, editor of Time Maga­ the proceeds would go towards a Horace Newman, of the French Rollins has long been scheduled to zine, will deliver the main address. scholarship fund," Brabara Fiedle- Foreign Legion and Sheik of the concide with the highlight of Win­ President Paul A. Wagner will son replied. Sidi-el-Hani tribe in Arabia, -will ter term, the Animated Magazine. preside. follow with his talk, "Allah Be "Nofhing has been said either The Rev. Theodore S. Darrah, With You." Dean of Knowles Memorial Chap­ way as to how the funds would be K.A. QUEEN A Report on "Conditions at el, will award the Sullivan Medal­ spent," Ken said. "If it were used Lackland Airfield" will be given lion. for the common good rather than for one student, I feel it would by Merrill C. Meigs, Vice-Presi­ Mr. Matthews will receive the be much better to use the pro­ dent of the Hearst Corporation. degree of Doctor oX Letters. His ceeds for the tennis courts," Ed Mr. Meigs has also served as Vice- faculty order will be Dr. Nathan Cushing put in. PVesident of the American Weekly Starr. Barbara Fiedleson mentioned and as publisher of the Chicago Senator Douglas of Illinois, that "there might be many resig­ American. whose faculty order is Profeessor nations within the committee One of the most outstanding Paul Fenlor, will also receive a working on the Fiesta if they figures in baseball, Leo Durocher, Doctor of Letters degree. knew that the funds wouldn't be manager of the New York Giants, Dr. Royal W. France will be for the scholarship fund." Barba­ will add a colorful note to the the faculty order for Rev Holmes, ra also felt that the Fiesta Com­ program. who will receive the degree of Doc­ mittee should hold a meeting to A resident of Winter Park, Lieu­ tor of Humanities discuss the sudden change to which tenant General George H. Brett, President Wagner will preside, Ken Horton replied, "If we wait U. S. Air Force, will be sixth on give the responses, and award the another week it will be too late." the table of contents. The holder degrees. "The committee erred in mak­ of many citations, General Brett Whitaker Off To Boston The chapel Choir will sing the ing fhe assumption about the will speak on the "Potentiality of Dr. William Whitaker, profes­ Chapel Song, ^ which was written scholarship fund. I would like to Air Power Related to U. S. MUi­ sor of speech, bids his wife good by Hamilton Holt, Jubilate Deo by see the student body get something tary Policy." bye Saturday as he leaves for Harris, Let Us Now Praise Famous tangible out of what they are put­ The next article in the maga­ Boston and the Navy. Men by Vaughn Williams, and the ting into it." Ken added. zine is "The Magic of the Thea­ A Lieutenant Commander in the Alma Mater. As a result of the heated dis­ tre," by Basil Rathbone, the noted Naval Reserve, Whitaker receiv­ The Rev. William Abbott Con­ cussion the Council members pass­ star of stage, screen, and radio. ed orders to report for active duty stable, Associate Professor of En­ ed the motion that the profits of Mr. Rathbone is especially re­ rh^.v!!*/'^^?"*. is Kappa Alpha's this month, glish and pastor, of the Orlando the Fiesta will go toward the membered for his movie roles in cnoice for Fiesta Queen this year. Mrs^^^. .^TX.;Whitake r will teach his Unitarian Church, will offer the building of two tennis courts be­ "lanne is a Kappa Kappa Gamma David Copperfield, Anna Kareni- and a Junior at Rollins College. classes for the rest of the term. invocation. hind the present ones. (Continued on Page 10)

j*rr< TWO ROLLINS SANDSPUR SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 195

WELL NOW tonals, magazine articles, etc., were read nor felt the titanic melancholy of with a reasonable amount of objectivity thoven. The grammarian does not k now stupid can one get? An obnoxious odor has been wafting its that it is surface tension that kee Published Weekly Pickpocket State way around our halls of Palmetta. Some dragon-fly afloat on the pond, nor T "" By the Students of Rollins BY BOB HARDING emLryonic Huey Long has provided a plank lift his eyes to the stars at night t °*^ *" (or petition, it you please) for one ot tne them as he would old friends, A J*^"' Entered as second class matter, Novem­ local gentry. Rumor has it that a petition ber 14, 1925, at the post office at Winter In the Presidential election of 1948, only Shakespearean scholar who does n "" Park, Florida, under tlie act of March 3, 1879. one voter in every 500 put his "X" along­ ior tne ousting for Dr. France is in cir­ Subscription Price: By mail anywhere in culation and that the origin of the nefar­ ject himself to the shock and roughA^*" the United States $1.60 a term (10 weeks), side the name of Norman Thomas, the of­ $2.60 tor two terms, or $3.50 for the full col­ ious document is this columnist's doorstep of the playing field has missed a vital ""^ lege year. ficial candidate of the Socialist Party. Let's get the record straight. of existence. In proportion that ''*'' Publication Office Does this mean that socialist ideals have We have, many times, vociferously de­ Alumni House, Kollins Campus ization shrivels man's field of cons •"' been making little headway in America? nounced some of the theories and argu­ Telephone 4-6621 ness, so it shrivels his capacity foj i- .*" Hardly. As a matter of fact, no less an ments advanced by Dr. France. We have Ildltorial Board caustically assaUed his position on world life at its fullest. '^l Bditor-in-Chief Derek Dunn-Rankin authority than Norman Thomas said, just altairs but we have yet to assume the Business Manager BiU Frangus Perhaps the most unfortunate aspect News Editor John Vereen after the 1948 election, uniijtelligent, asinine role of a lov/, bigoted Sports Editor Lois Langellier that the program of the petitioner. If such a level is ever reached specialization is that it tends to erect -» ii Feature Editor Tom Pickens Administration had by this party you can be sure that the pe­ between the various fields of human Society Editor Betsey Fletcher tition will be drawn on toilet paper with Circulation Manager Dick Vreeland been profoundly influ­ deavor. We can still communicate betw " Advertising Manager Scotty -Witherell the text formed by cutting block letters Copy Chief .....Kit Graham enced by socialist from a newspaper. The paper and the let­ these fields, we tap out messages to i Photo Editor Joel Hutzler thought, and that it tering would be the true measure of the other, but we seldom achieve understand' Adviser act. Dr. William B. Whitaker conforms closely to for to be outside another's area of kn f platforms proposed by We have devoted a number of colums to edge is generally to be beyond his range of Artists: Larry Bentley, Fred McFalls. the task of selling, pitching and peddling Reporters: Alida Brangs, John O'Keefe, the Socialist Party sympathy. In our insatiable search f Cyrene Palmisano, Jackie Preis, Peter Rob­ DEMOCRACY. We believe that the true inson, Janet Stanaland, Helen Demetralis, \ X''- . -, from time tO time. essence of our system lies in informed knowledge we have at last accumulatcj Don Jones, Linda Falls, Corky Hall, Don "thinking" citizens. It takes more than just more facts than the human mind can Harter. ;.^t ' ' The trend toward so- one element to form a solid foundation and similate, and the result is a kind of Tow Featnre -Writers: Hal Suit, Dallas Wil­ '--•'-- - cialism has been rapid liams, Peter Sturtevant, Dick Parker. no biulder would make his footings of just of Babel, where each group points a dii Harding enough to Call forth sand or just cement. In Dr. France's ef­ Sports -Writers:- Marnee Norris, John De ferent way upward, crying out in its ^-^ Grove, Larry Bentley, Whit Simpson, Henry a word of caution forts to present both faces of the rather Menendez. complex international deck of cards, he .jargon. The economist explains all in term, from solialists themselves. A party state­ Pliotograpliers: Joel Hutzler, Stan Rudd, has contributed immeasurably to your of the almighty dollar, the psychologist ii Ad Warner, Louise Fekany. ment on the bUl to establish a Columbia through process. terms of the glands, the scientist in terms Circulation: Phyllis Harbula, Barbara River Valley Authority recognized the bill So far this insidious petition is only ru­ Coleman, Joanne Mosely, Eleanor Signaigo. of nuclear physics. But specialization as a "socialistic venture," but went on to mor, but if it does exist, let's get it out Society: Jannie Johannes, Dale Travis, which hot only aggravates our problems at Saretta Hill, Jerry Faulkner. condemn certain features saying, "The So­ in the open and see if it can stand sunlight. Advertisiitj^E June Lee, Joe Swicegood, If you want all of your education provid­ the same time makes their solution im. cialist Party is alarmed at the present Dick Vreeland. ed on a "candy and cake" level, that's your possible; for the specialized mind is n. , Founded in 1885, Rollins College is today rapid trend toward collectivization without privilege. If you feel that every policy that a co-educational institution of 650 students capable of grasping a total situation, and and 70 professors. It is located in Winter democratic control." the United States has promulgated and fol­ Park, a town of 10,000 in Florida's lake; re­ lowed in the past few years will stand no problem was ever solved by considerinj gion. The welfare or socialist state is simply unblemished by the pens of coming his­ only a portion of it. a pickpocket, hand-out state as we here are torians, that, too, is your prerogative. beginning to see it as administered in the Taking into' consideration all of the para­ Perhaps someday we will abandon our EDITORIAL U. S. in which politicians "rob Peter to pay phernalia that man has devised to stage mania for fragmented knowledge, our ob- the coming epic, while it lasts, the show session for educating vertically by drillinj Paul" or better, "Tax Peter to buy Peter's should be terrific . . . super colossal. vote." Federal aid is not free. It has to be Here's hoping that the door prize will at narrow shafts deep into the fields of ex­ Pity The Alum paid for by someone and that someone is least be worth the price of admission. perience. ' Perhaps someday we will ap­ We wUl speak of the alumnus. The much you, the taxpayer. proach the problems of learning and teach­ ing horizontally, taking all life into con­ pestered but never forgotten critter who Our President wants to give us a free PROF'S CORNER sideration and letting each man fulfill his doesn't stand a chance to begin with be­ medical program (He calls it Health In­ function as a total organism. With such cause his Latin name is practically never surance now), Brannan plans and others. a liberal education we can begin to balancs Nothing is free. Economics is economics. spelled with the right number or gender Specialist Cyclops the emphasis, to inSprove the man as nrach Weath must come from somewhere. Bu­ in mind. BY STUART JAMES as we have improved the environment. It reaucrats cannot create wealth. It cannot might behoove us to do this before some The word Specialist has a certain au­ C(^Iege presidents and Alumni Secre­ be given birth by legislation or by the untoward experience catches us unawares taries are prone to regard the alumnus stroke of a pen. It comes from work. And thority about it for most of us nowadays; it and dialates our field of consciousness too more and more of our work days are be­ is a symbol of knowledge and a title of as well as the alumna a ready source of late, and like Lear in his flash of insight ing devoted to the support of the federal greatness; the sesame that opens the gates cash for the pet project or emergency that to cry, "O, I have taken too little care of government. The idea that a socialistic on the very mysteries of life itself. The this!" is always hitting the old Alma Mater. government will somehow create wealth \4 highest praise we give a man is to say ridiculous. Someone has to work whether We say all that any alumnus owes his he is a specialist in his college is honesty and fairness. it is under a capitalistic or a socialistic LETTERS system, or our standard of living will fall. own field; and converse- If he is honest and fair to his college he -ly, fame seldom visits The hard truth is that the taxing away need never have a twinge of conscience for the person who hasn't having turned down a request for funds of high incomees will not make the poor Reconsider Vote spent his life burrow­ because of a deficient bank account. He perceptibly richer ,was spoken by that lead­ ing industriously in To The Students: need never feel guilty for having turned ing British Socialist, Sir Stafford Cripps. some small hole of Last Monday night the Student Council down the school for some project dear to At the height of the second postwar crisis knowledge. voted to have all proceeds from the Fiesta his heart. He need never hate himself for in Britain, Sir Stafford acknowledged: just plain wallowing jn luxury and ignor­ "There is not much farther immediate pos­ But lately there has used for building two new tennis courts. ing the pleas of an idignent coUege, if he sibility of the redistribution of national in­ arisen on man's horizon While it is true the courts would be is honest and fair to that college. come by way of taxation in this country . . ." James a small cloud of intel­ very beneficial to the students, the Fiesta Total taxation, local and national, is now lectual dust that marks the to-do at last promotion has been based on a Scholarship But the honesty requires a little work. more than 40 per cent of the national in­ being raised against our propensity to Fund. Even though this was not recorded in The alumni are the walking authorities come. specialize. And it is high time; for man, Council minutes, it was genraUy under-; on Rollins. If a student in California, Left-Wing, CoUectivist propaganda has with his perverse tendency to pursue a thing stood this year's Fiesta funds would ke j Louisiana, or Canada wants to know what been so highly organized and is so heavily beyond the bounds of common sense, has used for .scholarships, as was last year's. | this college is like, what educational ideals financed that compromisers in both poli­ not been content to limit his scholars and It must be remembered the Orlando and it stands for, what caliber of fellow Stu­ tical parties constantly give ground and scientists to some special field, but has Winter Park High Schools are making pos­ dent he will find here; the authority to help enact socialistic legislation. Except for confined them first to a small corner of that ters with the thought in mind that one of which ^e goes is an alumnus. field, then to a corner of that Corner, and a very brief period when the savings and ac­ their classmates may receive a scholarship. so on, until the object of intellectual pur­ It makes little difference wheather the cumulations of the wealthy savers and Jack O'Keefe has been talking to suit has become infinitesimal The tragedy authority is a grad of one, ten or fifty thrifty persons are taxed and spent, every­ businessmen's groups, stressing * of the whole tightening spiral is that the years ago, he is accepted as one who knows. body will suffer from the Impairment of Fiesta as a scholarship drive. Over W specialist's world also becomes infinitesimal, And rightly. But we will ask the alumni can our free enterprise system. letters have Jseen sent telling friends « and the observed object more important than you honestly answer the questions of a the coUege the Fiesta raises money lo' the observer. To the laboratory worker, prespective student today. Before the ques­ scholarships. Radio stations are giving f«« tion of the prospective student are ans­ SO THEY SAY with his face glued to the eye-piece of a microscope, the cries of the outside world time because it is for scholarships. Tne wered in honesty and fairness to your col­ Rollin's Womens Association, Winter Pa' lege you must know the truth about Rollins grow fainter and fainter until they often cease to exist altogether; he becomes a Garden Club, and Rollins' Alumni Associa­ today. No GutS/Or Gumption kind of Cyclops, one-eyed and in giant ig­ tion have all agreed to help raise nwne', This honesty will work two ways; it will By HAL SUIT norance not only of the world beyond his for a scholarship fund. If the Fiesta wm | discourage the prospective student who be­ The gist of our last column centered microscope, but of himself as a living, ex­ mittee must inform these groups that ^ cause of temperament or obpectives won't around the biased and cluttered presenta­ periencing creature. Or take the special­ Fiesta is now for new tennis courts-'* be happy here, and it will encourage the tions, common from Babbit's main stem ized grammarian (God save the mark!) who they still cooperate ? great number of students who can find to Capitol cloakrooms, of the contempor­ ary world situation. devotes his life to the study of the verb Only five weeks are left to inform *«* true knowledge, great fun, and real values fct We contend that the Ship of State, being to be, -without ever pausing to ask, to be various groups of the Council's vote^^ offered by the warm spirit of a small lib­ battered on a turbulnt international sea. What? Who argues endlessly over It is I, tennis courts, which was not ta''^"^^ ^ eral arts coUege that is Rollins. was virtually i-udderless and that none of and It is me; and in the concern for the to the groups to vote on but pa""° The greater the number who seriously the crew had the guts, gumption or com­ words themselves neglects the thoughts be­ an 8 to 6 vote with three councU m^' consider the advantages of a Rollins edu­ mon-sense to even put out a sea anchor. With their preconcerted "Russia is the de­ hind them. absent. cation the finer and undergraduate body linimi!' clared enemy" dogmatic proclamations, the The college has been trying to nH" we will have and the better a coUege -will My quarrel with specialization is not over insiders, outsiders and fringers are simply the "play-school" idea and e'"P'\^ja be RoUins. booting all ballast overboard. At the same what it has brought us, that would be ri­ scholarship. This change of purpose time they are psychologically warming up diculous, but rather over what it has kept If the Rollins Family was a family to you give an undesired effect to the tovm V the John and Mary Doe audience for Mar's from us. For, as specialists, we are in there is a way you can repay the debt quarter-deck entrance. Now any crew mem­ every man owes to his famUy at the same ber that fails to show the right spirit of danger of losing the sense of the totality Pl<^- „uai di- time you can extend its blessings to others. cooperation, or who exhibits reluctance in of life and the deep satisfaction of diverse An alternate plan could be: an eq joining this -willy-nUly operation can be If you know a man or woman who can experience. The man who would live greatly vision of the net proceeds to include ^^^ promptly handled. It's the yard-arm or must experience greatly, and in many fields. arships and tennis courts. Since so^^^ ^^ profitably join us in an education for liv­ the plank for the Lie or Nehru who hesi­ ing, send him to Rollins. tates. The tragedy of the extreme specialist is has been done in promoting the Fie not in what he accomplishes, but in what a scholarship basis, we hope each B The interest of the alumni as informed Of course we assumed, naively, that the average (loose use) Rollinsite could sepa­ he misses. The machinist seldom holds con­ vvUl reconsider their vote. good-will ambassadors is the finest ser­ rate the wheat from the chaff. We further verse with the great minds of art; he has BARBARA FEIDELSON vice they can render their Alma Mater. assumed that the rarified academic air in not phUosophized with Hamlet at Elsinore, DDR. these parts was fairly clear and that edi- SKOOK BAILEY. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1951 ROLLINS SANDSPUR THREE This M/eeh In Pictures HELL WEEK

Pledges of the southern gentlemen of Kappa Alpha lower the stars and bars amid cannon fire while the rest of the pledge corps stand rigidly at attention. The pledges, we are happy to report, are now full- fledged members- GOOD TRANSPORTATION Commander BiU Whitaker doesn't know that he is going to get a gomg away kiss from student Dallas Williams but he is. The picture was taken at the Wagner's Reception for the Rollins speech professor just befor* he left for Boston and Uncle Sam's navy.

DOUBLE KAY DRIVE-IN ROOT BEER SANDWICHES — POOD — ICE CREAM

151 W. Fairbanks Vi Block from Rollins College Hours Winter Park 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. Florida

Watch for the opening of

OUR NEW DRIVE-IN IN COLONIALTOWN

Give her the gas. Bob Yoder gives President and Mrj. vvaener a ride to the Train following the reception for Dr. Whitaker. Bob found room for three fellow students in the snappy convertible.

EDITOR'S DREAM Doubls EdiHen Print Dress and Jacket

Our smash success of the season; this wear­ able creps dress has a braid - bound plunge neckline, tiny sleeves. Fitted - and - flared jacket with rayon braid framing the outline. Navy and white, royal and black. 12 to 20.

\/

pjMtC£4 fb.^

Postal Building San Juan Bldg. 'his is the sort of propaganda Sandspur editors dream about. In the Beanery nearly evrybody reads the WINTER PARK ORLANDO oandspur. By having a photographer handy and giving out the papers hot off the press we managed this shot. FOUR ROLLINS SANDSPUR SATURDAY, FEBRUARY o.

CAMPUS HANGOUT On The Town

In which we dissect various bars and almost anything else that comes into mind.- A trio with oriental overtones caUing themselves The Three Co­ conuts has moved into the Mait­ land Inn week nights and Satur­ day nights and the establishment is usually packed with townspeo­ ple. I haven't figured out what the macabre fascination is that this group works on its beholders un­ less it is the fact that one of them gives the appearance of playing under the stimulation of either hypo-shots or something else. At times they are mildly diverting but nothing to take your mind off Dick Sshweizer and his attractive wile behind the counter of their your date. AU in aU not very es­ popular diner. thetic. On Sunday nights a change is Catering To Campus Characters wrought at the Inn. The Coconuts have departed and so the towns- peaple. In the comparative quiet ^^^^-^A^^^A^V^^TvP^^^^^^ Dick Schweizer Wields Big Knife may be found various Rollinites. Very well Miss Whittier . . . you don't .seem to get the basis of nw sportsmanship . . .That will be quite enough of that. ^^ The smiling man pictured above aged to see most of Italy. After If you can't find your friends on with his wife, Dorothy, is Dick his discharge Dick made his way the sabbath, look for them out Schweizer, talented proprietor of down to the City Beautiful. He there, the closest source of grog. Letter From Hillbilly Boy Schweeizer's Diner. Dick will became assistant manager of the Other Spots wield the knife at customers as Tramor Cafetria where he remain­ Freddies: This establishment on easily as one can yell, "B. L. T. ed for a couple of years. 17-92 is still the belt all round On "Culcher At College" white, do-wn." Two years ago he bought his spot to take your date. The steak From her Hillbilly Son Who's I me a A Yankee by birth, Dick comes diner in Winter Park. "I can't re­ dinners are superb. real nice invitation to joi, Gitting Culcher at College an ornry society. from Avon, New York, a town member what caused me to buy it, Ray Haig's: The best entertain­ Dear Maw: near Rochester. In later years he but I did." Talent is supplied to the ment for miles around, but only Natcherly I was putry puffed „. received his New York State li­ customers in the form of his whist­ after midnight. A good little jazz Funniest durn thing happen to about It, and the inisheashan was cense allowing him to become a ling, singing and friendly insults. outfit composed of a fluctuating me tuther day. I been sorta won­ downright respectuble. They tole funeral director and embalmer. "All I have around is charac­ number of Rollins men. dering about it ever since, cuz I'm me as how I had inte^rety and that it was up to me and tuther Customers are carefully reassur­ ters" laughed Dick when asked if Club Cabana: Unless you are a awful green when it comes to ap- guys they was insheating to sorta ed that the license isn't valid in anything intersting ever happens writer of the Damon Runyan preshiating this college life but lead the pack and stimmulate char­ the State of Florida. to him. Mrs. Schweizer has an stamp and interested in studying don't worry none about me, cuz acter and high intersts. During the war, Dick was as­ equally fine sense of humor. When the lower dregs of the community they sell Hadacol here too, same sociated -with the army for a period asked if any of the boys try to we suggest you leave this spot as at home. But then what do you know,, of five years. He was a truck date her she quipped, "They don't to the local residents. Things I was gonna tell you they tums around and says J9 driver, and while in Europe man­ want to die that young." The Glass Tower: A fairly de­ about was that a bunch of the big please, that's dues, and fer another $6.50 plus tax I kin have a go! cent little bar near Ray Haig's guns decided that I was more orn- key. (Engraved with my name on where, at times, a mournful indi­ ry than the regular herd of stock comes to ten cents a letter ex­ vidual -wavers over a piano and of around the campus, so they sent FOR THE BEST tra.) • WOOLEN YARNS course and sings request numbers. • CASHMERES Robbies: The traditional RoUins Now what do you make of that • ANGORA bar, comparable to Yale's Morys. Maw ? I pays them so's they kin Although it hps liaS its ups and Meet The Press hang a key around my neck I FOR ALL YOUR downs in popularity recently, we finds out later that it don't opt • KNITTING and CROCHET a single Yale lock) so's I kin tell like it evert if they did tear out Among the behind-the-scenes people that they've tole me i • ART NEEDLE WORK the old wooden booths bearing the • INSTRUCTIONS — STYLES workers on the Sandspur, Jon a swell guy.I am. initials of Rollins students from Dunn-Rankin is noted for two THE KNITTING NOOK time immemorial. Charge accounts You kniw the ole yam abont things in particular: a keen and what poining varmints the Ameri­ Orlando's Yam Center available. critical interest in the publication, cans is ? They say that if two of 382 N. Orange Ave. Phone 9667 For a Complete, Change of Tempo and an inexhaustible quantity of em was stranded on a desert is­ Art bow ties. He land, the first thing they'd do was At the Casa Iberia: A balanced elect one of em president and tu­ would add mod­ exhibition of American paintings, ther secretary-treasurer. Well I've You're Always Welcome at varied in subject material and estly, "How about figgured out the second thing quality. Until the 25th. Admis­ m y unpolished that'd happen. A big ship'd com sion free. shoes?" But we a-steaming over the horizon, REEVES JEWELERS At the Center. Street Gallery: are inclined to on board'd be a representative A constantly changing exhibition think them nc from Balfours *ho'd row ashon of recent sculpture and painting, to persuade 'em to go national. WATCH, CLOCK AND JEWELRY REPAIR mostly by unknown artists. In­ serious d e t r i- Your loving son, cludes local students and residents. Dunn-R„„kin "'"'="* t° 1^'s dark- LOOSHUS. Highly erratic in quality depend­ haired, hazel-eyed good looks. ing mostly on which days you see Jonathan commutes from Win­ You must treat a work of art 346 S. PARK AVE. WINTER PARK it. Some material is for sale. ter Park and has managed to like a great man: stand before n Open daily 2-5. Admission free. sweat out straight A's in his first and wait patiently tUl it deigns to At the Morse Art Gallery: speak. — Arthur Schopenhana term at Rollins. A transfer from 1850. An exhibition of Polynesian Art. Columbia University, and a man Opens the 25th. Free. of broad interests, he is not cer­ At the Maitland Research Stu­ tain yet what his major will be, ZOE'S dio: Exhibitions which sometimes but has narrowed it down to busi­ are better than their surroundings ness, and English, history, art TATUM'S GULF SERVICE of feverish, "stimulating" atmos­ necking, philosophy, and climbing NEEDLECRAFT phere, sometimes worse. through the roof of a '35 Plymouth 1 Block North of Gateway The Spectator. coupe. SHOPPE SANDSPUR On the Sandspur Jon has been Yams - Bemat Botanf partially responsible for the sty­ r FOR COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE MAIL-A-WAY ORDERS listic format. His ideas and ener­ Entrances for this gies are now being devoted to * 150 PARK AVENUE, S POUNDERS' WEEK EDTHON work on the accompanying Foun­ 151 CENTRE ST, S. will be taken at the der's Week suppliment, Rollins BOOK STORE View, of which he is editor. WINTER PARK, FLORIDA

For a TASTY QUICK SNACK come to the For COSTUME JEWELRY it's HEAP'UM GOOD TIME NORTH POLE DRIVE-IN at the Largest Sellers of Frozen Custard VERA WILUAMS in Central Florida TEPEE CLUB SOUTH PARK AVENUE 1399 ORANGE AVE. WINTER PARK Opp. Railroad Station 947 N. Orange Ave. Winter Paf* cATTTRPAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1951 ROLLINS SANDSPUR FIVE m_AY REVIEW The Good Life, On Whangpoo River iflarvey" Newest Scavengers Battle For Ships Slop To those pitifully starved, fil­ sampan, is carefully strained and Theatre Smash thy, scavenger-beggars of the the residue spread upon filthy, Whangpoo River the arrival of an greasy decks, to dry in the purify­ Jerry Clark Stars in American ship is an event of such ing rays of the sun. great importance that they wil­ Such a scene represents the Famous Lead Role lingly risk their lives—and not height of achievement, the day of infrequently lose — in the wild supreme accomplishment, for one For their annual Founders' flight to determine which sampan of these families. They are born, Week production the Rollins Play­ is anchored nearest the slop and they live and they die in their ers are presenting .Mary Chases garbage chute of the ship carry­ cramped and mean little floating Pulitzer-prize winning comedy ing those fabulously rich, wonder­ shacks on the teeming water­ "Harvey." It is an extremely ditti- fully wasteful Americans. In the fronts of the Orient. The majori­ culttask for any group of amateur mad scramble for position, oars ty of them, from infancy to old actors to put dn a play as renowned and poling sticks are crashed down age, never once set foot on land. and well-known as this one. Most upon shaven, unprotected heads, They have for food, clothing—all of the audience has already seen and upon skinny brown shoulders the needs of life—only that which the work in one form or another, so rawboned they look like dirty the polluted waters grudgingly A scene from the current Annie Russell presentation, "Harvey". From and comparisons are sure to be left to right are Jerry O'Brien, Ranny Walker, Harvey, Jerry Clark, caijvas pulled tightly over a rough give them. This and no more— made with professional com­ and Karen Steele. Mr. Clark has the title role of Elwood P. Dowd, a pile of wood. In some of the sam­ and with the fierce, frenzied com­ panies. Individual performances character popularized by Frank Fay and James Stewart. pans there are children of all ages petition offered by thousands of will be examined in the light of and everyone, from mother to the their kind the pickings are indeed interpetations created by such lu­ youngest child able to help, adds slim. And yet, in all my years in minaries as Frank Fay, Josephine Diversified American Paintings his weight to the family effort. the Orient, I have never heard of Hull, and others. I am happy to There are wild pandemonium, a single one of these people volun­ report that the Annie Russell Presented At Casa Iberia Show obsene curses that go back several tarily quitting his way of life. rendition of "Harvey" stands on generations of ancestors, until at Neither, I might add, have I ever its own feet quite well. It offers At the Casa Iberia there is a ure studies of which I remember last one family wins the coveted heard of a single one of them hav­ an intriguing evening in the thea­ showing of twenty American Sleepy Workman by Gregorio spot beneath the slop chute. And ing an ulcerated stomach, a neu­ tre. paintings, by a like number of Prestopino, in particular. no matter how long the ship re­ rosis, or the slightest neeed of a The play rises or falls on the artists, old and new. The exhibi­ Moving from the esthetic to the mains in Shanyhai the winning psychoanalyst, or a psychiatrist, success of one character, Elwood tion is varied in age, material, and sentimental there are several land­ sampan never budges from its or a psychologist; no, not ^ven a P. Dowd, a pleasantly alcoholic quality. There is some rather^ in­ scapes done in the style of the last hardwon place of advantage, nor chiropodist! Who really knows gentleman who is the companion teresting modern -work, and some century exhibited here and there do its occupants ever cease their what is the "Good Life?" of the invisible six and one half not so interesting older material. A large landscape by Thomas mournful chant of "chow-chow, foot rabbit "Harvey". Jerry Clark Half the paintings are hung in Cole.' Mount Etna, is technically chow-chow; cum sha, cumsha." gives the best performance of his the little gallery at the left of superb. (In our own times Salva­ After meals the messmen toss SANDSPUR career in this role and it is es­ the entrance where Paul Runyon dor Dali is technically superb). Mr. overboard all the swill and gar­ MAIL-A-WAY ORDERS sentially his show. Mr. Clark suc­ had his stunning exhibition last Cole leaves nothing to the imagi­ bage, tin cans and crates, and for this ceeds in maintaining a sort of out- year, the rest are to be found nation. Hisi mountains, trees, and there stands our Chinese family, FOUNDERS' WEEK EDITION of-this-world goodness, a quality along a covered walk in the back sky, are reproduced with photo­ all with arms up-raise4 as if in will be taken at the .which the playwright obviously garden. graphic accuracy. In the fore­ supplication, wild-eyed and tri­ BOOK STORE hopes wiU rub off on some of the Darrel Austin has what is, to ground he pictures a blissful shep­ umphant, while all this refuse of audience. my mind, the best painting in the herd merrily tootling his pipes a wasteful ships company rains over his wooly charges, a scene down upon them. The cans, bot­ It is no easy job for Mr Clark show, one of his typically lumi­ NANCY'S calculated to send us all back to tles, crates, rags, paper, all are to hold his position in giving the nous, little dream scenes. The the farm. Pay your money and carefully put away. The hard, dry Park Avenue Beauty Shop play's most impressive perfor­ artist's use of coloration recre take your choice. Mr. Dali's ants food is stored away in boxes and Hair Styling mance. H e is under constant pres ates the light of a setting suij in or Mr. Cole's swains. tin cans. The swill, dipped and Phone 4-6331 sure from Dave Estes who, ap­ a vast swamp-land, and his hand sponged from the bottom of the pearing for the first time on any ling of animals, in this case a T. M. 532 Park Ave., S. stage, gives a remarkably polish­ great-eyed tiger, is, as always, im ed performance as he nearly steals peccable. the show from under Clark's nose. I also enjoyed a greenish'grey Mr. Estes as the volatile psychia­ abstraction by Ethel Edwards en trist, Dr. Chumley, is superlative. titled The Green Pool, although a His lines are delivered clearly and second abstraction by Arthur G. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE strongly and his stage gestures Dove unhappUy titled Cow at Play are near perfect. seemed superficial and supercili­ In surprising contrast to Mr. ous. Another abstraction, Jazz in Estes is Ranny Walker, a veteran Heaven also went by me. There ALL IN ONE STOP of the Annie Russell stage. He ap­ were two rather interesting fig- peared to be ill at ease in a role . which set up punch lines for the Players who do well in roles they rest of the cast. Ranny delivered seem to have been type casted his lines with perfection, but he for. Peggy Burnett retains the never seemed to know what to do air of mature charm she had as with his hands, frequently claw­ the congresswoman in "Goodbye ing ineffectively at his trousers in My Fancy." Ed Wells is good as an effort to find some place to put Judge Gaffney, a type of role WASHING them. he has created successfully in two Janet Stanaland, as Veta Louise previous productions. Betty Kep­ repeated the strong performance ler is superior once again in the she gave in the "Madwoman of usual Kepler-type part. Wally DRYING ChaUlot". She is alternately fligh­ Moon does his usual job, this time ty and indignant as the middle in the role of a cabdriver. Tony aged matron who tries to have Perkins has only a walk-on. I Elwood encubicled in the local would like to have seen more of ffiONING booby hatch. Katherine Johnson is him. properly bratty as Veta Louise's I did not particularly care for rather obnoxious daughter, but her some of the effects. The off-stage high pitched voice sometimes rose singing of a society prima donna into supersonic extremities. sounded like a far-away elfin Bet­ DRY-aEANING Karen Steele has the sex inter­ ty Boop. Dick Verigan's opening est of the play in the nurse's part. set was barely adequate. His sec­ f\ No one can do it better than she. ond set was much better. Jerome O'Brien is surprisingly good in the role of Dr. Chumley's Johnson's rugged assistant, Wilson, a person Pay Cash and Bank the Profit well versed in the art of laying BARBER SHOP hands upon violent psychopathies. "We Need Your Head at the The other parts in the produc­ in Our Business" tion are taken by veteran Rollins

THE CYRI LEE • FEMININE APPAREL • Launderette LINGERIE BLOUSES HERB FARM PERFUMES HOSIERY 140 W. Fairbanks Winter Park, Fla. FOUNDATIONS 111 Welbourne Ave. Telephone WINTER PARK 4-1343 SIX ROLLINS SANDSPUR SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 24 TAYLOR'S PHARMACY Inquiring Prescriptions Accurately Filled Photographer WEEKEND RAMBLINGS STRICTLY SOCIAL The Question: How Long Can Lelong, Yardley, Germaine Montiel, Tussey, Lentheric With next Saturday and Sunday Sanlando Springs was the We Stay at Peace With Russia? a "closed weekend" many persons of two Rollins events last w 102 N. PARK AVE. WINTER PARK George Royse — took advantage of the warm wea­ ond, a Lambda Chi party ^ ^^' I think they -will ther and did a little vacationing. urday night, and the water 1 DIAL 4-3701 be ready to move Uesides the many trips to Day­ on Sunday . . . Merle Hodges- f this spring. I tona Beach, made by everyone ance was visiting here last wJv" don't think they who had the opportunity, we find end . . . X-Club sp^nt the w^ " will wait for us Marcia Mattox and "Shorty Ber­ end at the Pelican . . . AfterTv" to get our ar- astegui leaving for Sarasota very Delta Chi's won the crew r«ce u armies together. early Saturday morning. Also, at tween the Sigma Nu's aud then, the west coast, basking in the selves, they threw a party at Roi BRENNER'S DRESSES warmth of the "Sunshine City," bie's. were Mae Wallace and Janey PLEDGED lim Haywood — Johannes. Alpha Phi Lambda's, Dubac Preece, Bill Conklia M Complete Selection Bob Heath and Charles Robinson John Joy, Alpha Phi Lambda ^' 1 think we wUl roared South in the "Hotrod," INITIATED have war with Chuck to watch the boat races in Cotton — Sunbacks — Swim Suits them late in July. Chi Omega: Betty Crowther Miami, and Bob to watch Martha Betty Merrill, Judy Tuttle, Lynj Jane. Bailey, and Flo Clements. Jaj, 136 NO. ORANGE AVE. ORLANDO FRATERNITY DOINGS Tuttle received the recognition o{ "best all around pledge" and Kappa's province president spent Lynn Bailey received the cup for Wally Moon last week- conferring with the best scholarship. Kappa's, and Saturday Alpha Phi's Not for a long| Delta Chi: Jerry Wood aad Tim time yet I think district governor arrived for her ChUton. annual visit. Seems like it's check­ Don't Be a Heel! they'U keep Pi Beta Phi: , Inei up time ... Pi Phi pledges enter­ throwing their Libbey, Sheila Libby, Janke Eld­ tained their sorority "mothers" at Have Your Shoes Repaired at satellites at us to redge, Pat Schloot , Ua Miller fight. Spordone's last Tuesday; Satur­ Dot Campbell, Eleanor Signaigoe THE day the actives entertained their Joanne Mosley, Jeanne Mac­ new initiates at Freddie's . . . Gregor, Lee Sommers and Jean Wednesday night the Alpha Phi's Warren. and their dates held a beer party SERVICE SHOE SHOP Daryl Stamm—I at the Atlantic Brewery; Sunday don't think \we they had a tea for their Alums Whether happiness may come or are .going to . . Chi O's enjoyed Monday night not, one should try and prepare New Postal Building, Winter Park one's self to do without it.— have a war with with a banquet at the Villa Nova. George Eliot. P. F. HENDRICK, Owner FLOYD WHEELER, Manager Russia. Wishful Campus Representative thinking! DAN BRADLEY HANDICRAFT STUDIO will be glad to pick them up Carol Gleason — I don't thnk there -will be a Winter Park's Yarn Center war with Russia in the near fu­ ture. But its go­ Gifts - Wools - Nylons - Straws - Matelics ing to be close going. 211 E. Welbourne Ave. Elizabeth S. Bayles

Marilyn Kliimb — Life at Rol­ lins is so pleas­ ant that the pos­ sibility of war with Russia -eems remote. THE TOGGERY Raffia Deluxe Holmes Will Give Sunday's Sermon MEN'S WEAR The Founders' Week sermon in The Casual Shoe for Florida Knowles Memorial Chapel on Sun­ day, February 25, will be given by HAND WOVEN Dr. John Haynes Holmes, a nation­ in 6 exciting colors ally known theologian, author, and Nationally Advertised Brands lecturer. NATURAL — NATURAL BROWN Dr. Holmes is best known as the former pastor of the Community at Church in New York City. GREEN and YELLOW — BLACK Nationally Advertised Prices WHITE — MULTICOLOR LAKE SHORE Motor Court TAILORING Lovely HANDBAGS to Match Orlando Ave. on Lake Killarney Alterations and Repairs

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PHONE 4-5551 WINTER PARK, FLORIDA 306 PARK AVE., SOUTH SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1951 ROLLINS SANDSPUR SEVEN q)ELTA CHI-THE7A "BALL IS SATURDAY

BEACH PARTY Girls Get 1:00 Permission Whitaker Escorted ~'~^, For Plantation Ball To Boston Train Delta Chi and Kappa Alpha Theta extend a special invitation to In High Style Alumni and Founders' Week guests to the Plantation Ball, Saturday night, at the Orange Court Hotel. Last Saturday was the scene of Formals wUl be in order for the gay dance. Black bow ties and much gayety, yet sad good-byes. long gowns are expected to dominate the scene when faculty, students, President and Mrs. Wagner gave alumni and Founders' Week guests gather for an evening of dancing. an informal farewell party for Old plantation Garden wUl be Dr. and Mrs. WUliam Whitaker the decoration theme for the dance upon Mr. Whitaker's departure which wiU begin at 9:00 o'clock, Gay 90's Tea for the Navy. He will be stationed February 24 and last untU 12:30. At Dr. Mowbray's in Boston. Girls wiU have 1:00 o'clock permis­ Each year on Alumni Day, Dr. The scene was the lovely terrace sion. Ed Cushing's orchestra will Henry B. Mowbray of 440 Chase of the Wagner home. Cookies and play for the dance. • Avenue, Winter Park, holds a Gay fruit punch toasted Professor Chairmen Paul GaUo and Val 90's Tea. This gay affair is at­ Whitaker on his journey. Students Stacy promise refrfeshments in tended by all Alumni of RoUins old and new stayed to the very the form of potato chips, cheese who graduated before 1900. last minute to escort Dr. Whitaker and punch. Gallo said_ he particu­ to his train. Among one of the It does not have apy special larly hopes to see many of the many gay notes of the afternoon, program, and consists of much married students and their spouses was the shower of rice tossed at reminiscing, as Dr. Mowbray ex­ at the dance. the Doctor as he boarded the train. presses it "a talk-fest." The gala social affair wiU be He' left in a vocal outburst of the last big event before the high­ Refreshments will be served, "Anchors Aweigh'* sung by the light of Founders' Week, the Ani­ consisting of fruit punch and well wishers. Much fun was had at X-Club Pelican. Here are George Widden, Dale mated Magazine Sunday after­ cookies. This little gathering will Travis, Punchy Polack, Joe Trigg, and Elaine Sommer, a few of the noon. continue, "as long as two people merry-makers enjoying sand, surf and sun. will come," according to Dr. Mow­ Fuller M.C.'s Alumni bray. THE SANDSPUR ELY Luncheon in Center INSURANCE AGENCY Music Students Makes Good Reading Give Recital The Alumni Luncheon will be General Insurance Special Concert held in the Rollins Center, Feb­ for the Family Phone 3-8441 An informal recital was given ruary 24th from 12:15-1:45 p.m. by the Conservatory students at Central Florida Reservations at $1.25 may be SEND A COPY HOME 108 Park Ave. Winter Park Dyer Memorial last Friday at Symphony Sunday made until Wednesday, February 4:30 p.m. On Sunday, February 25, the 21st through the Alumni Office. Miss Jeannine Romer opened Central Symphony Orchestra will MAKE THIS TERM Dr. Paul A. Wagner wUl ad­ the program with Ibert's "Little present a special concert in the A BRILLIANT SUCCESS dress the Rollins Alumni Associa­ NOW SERVING White Donkey," and two selections Winter Park High School Audi­ tion. George E. FuUer, Jr., class by Griffes—"The Lake at Even­ torium at 8:15. The concert is not of 1939, wUl be master of cere­ STEAKS ing," and "The Fountain of Ac­ of the regular series but part of monies. qua Paola." ' the Founders' Week program. CHICKEN Miss Natalie Miller then thrill­ It is being paid for by anony­ Mr. Fuller was a war corres­ ed her audience by the delicate mous donations presented especil- pondent and has been the popular SHRIMP shading, singing tones, and ma­ ly for the Rollins' Family which master of ceremonies on many as good a^ our ture interpretation in her perfor­ includes students, faculty, and similar occasions here at Rollins. Famous mance of Bruch's "Violin Concer­ alumni. It is a full sized sympho­ Trustees of the coUege and to in G Minor." ny orchestra with Yves Chardon senior class officers -will be speci­ HAMBURGER Next on the program was as conductor. al guests, and the faculty and Chopin's "Sonata in B Flat Mi­ Complimentary tickets may be staff are invited to join the alumni nor," played by Miss Iris Johnson. secured for everyone at Rollins on this annual-event. Several hund­ Open Until red alumni are expected to attend. through Dean Waite's office. If you're a polished, up to the Midnight Every Day minute dancer, every one wants Founders' Week to be your partner. And it's Night Curb Service so easy to be an expert at Ar­ Motor Boat Tour FOR YOUR EASTER HOLIDAY - WHY NOT GO TO thur Murray's. Here talented One of the activities in Foun­ teachers know the best and easi­ THE HAVANA or NASSAU? est way to make you smooth and ders' Week, will be an alumni mo­ conldent in just a few lessons. tor boat tour Friday, February 23 V ' or a "QUICKIE" to Both Places? ARTHUR ORANGE BOX at 2:45. Fourteen or fifteen motor boats will leave the Rollins' docks, SUNNILAND rp D A V F T BUREAU MURRAY "A Block Away" to go to Lake Maitland where, at LANIER 1 li A V El L SERVICE 515 PARK AVE., S. 3:30, the Rollins crew races will PINE ST. corner MAIN be held. The boats will return at Open 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. 30 E. Pine St. Ormond A. McAbee 5:00 to Lake Virginia to be pres­ "Your Travel Agent" ent at the student exhibition of Phone 5301 Water-skiing. IRENE'S Colonialtown's Exclusive WINTER - LAND COMPLETE SPRING UNE- Dress Shoppe THE Featuring Print jacket dresses CAMPUS CLEANERS Luscious colored Toppers Clothes of Distinction for Particular Women 2-Day Service Imported tweed suits BERLOU MOTH PROOFING Beachwear by famous young designers 708 NORTH MILLS STREET Pick up on Mon. and Wed. SATISFACTION Phone 3-0721 GUARANTEED Lohr Lea

THE JADE LANTERN GIFTS OF * Cricket • DISTINCTION * • • SHOP * Est. 1937 * THE SMALL STORE WITH THE BIG SELECTION From Four Corners of the World 208 S. Park Avenue Phone 3-2981 Proctor Centre North of Post Office SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 24 EIGHT ROLLINS SANDSPUR -JUP AN' AT 'EM T>n> YA* WSIOW Limelight BY L.L.

Quite a different basketball squad represented the Rollins stu­ dents at the last home game. After such a poor showing against the Stetson outfit a weeek ago, the Tarmen made a beautiful comeback and gave the favored Tampa team a run for their mon­ ey. The first half of the Tampa- Rollins game was one of the best all round played contests that the boys have displayed this year. They were in there for rebounds, intercepting passes, and foremost of importance was the accurate eye of Ev Williams who hit for his fameed set shots from any­ place on the floor. Everyone is anticipating the starting of the spring sports. Golf begins March 9 with the linkmen shooting against Florida State on the home course, Baseball opens against North Carolina March 17 Marnee Real Athlete on the home diamond. The varsity By JOHN "Coondog" DeGROVE crew squad opens the season with a race against Marietta on Lake Everything from soup to fish with large sized clams thrown in Maitland March 21. Last but not make up the obituary of Marnee Norris, this Week's Athlete of the least the tennis team will be show­ Week. Marnee has no less than ?14? Varsity letters at Rollins. Bas­ ing their stuff on the Rollins ketball, Volleyball, Field Hockey, Softball, Archery and Tennis make courts March 22 with Presbyterian. up a list of her athletic activities. Golfers are giving their best at Frank Barker, high scoring man in the state, adds two points to the When asked to name her favorite sport, Marnee couldn't choose the links Tuesday through Satur­ Tar score. Jim Fay, the middleman takes his place for rebounds. between basketball and tennis. The masketball field has found Marnee day with some of the best golfers as the all-important Center-for- in the nation. Players like Alice post for the past four years. and Marlene Bauer, Patty Berg, Rollins Tumbles To Tampaj Marnee started out on her ten­ X Club Stays Babe Zaharias, Peg Kirk, Louise nis career in her llth summer. Suggs, Tony Penna, Earle Stew­ During the next few years the In Case Lead art, Pete Cooper, Bob Hamilton Ev Williams Stars For Tars; New England area heard a lot and any number of the circuit Tampa swept its 1951 series with Rollins Saturday night by de-j Last week in intramural bas­ from Marnee in the Junior titles players are leading the way in the feating the stubborn Tar. quintet 65 to 55. The victory was a hard.) ketball the X Club continued to International Two BaU Mixed Golf of that area. In 1946, 1947 and earned one for the boys from Ybor City, who went into the game s roll on toward the championship tournament at Dubsdread. 1948, she swept just about every 20 point favorite, due to the outcome of the first fray between the; with victories over Sigma Nu, 42 tournament she entered, including two rivals. Tampa established a record of the most points scored in, the Massachusetts State Tourney to 28; and Delta Chi, 75 to 40. cne basketball game in the State of Florida during the first meeting,, and the New England Jr., cham­ Also last week the KA's defeated of RoUins and Tampa. i pionship in 1947. Also in 1947 Delta Chi, 41 to 28 and Lambda The Tars moved into a first half Marnee came close as semi-fina­ Chi trounced the Independents 52 Gal- axy lead two minutes after the start­ list in the doubles in the National to 35. ing whistle, when forward E« PRAIRIE LAKE Jr., Tennis Tourney. During this The X-Club ran into some stub­ WiUiams dropped a pair of field time Marnee was classed llth in born opposition from the Snakes of Sports goals. Rollins held a two point margin halfway through the first DRIVE-IN singles and 5th in doubles in the [who tried unsuccessfully to keep BY MARNEE NORRIS period with Williams and Pete Nation. Jim Doran and company away from the basket. The X-Club led Fay providing most of the Score. SUN. thru WED. As is often the case, Marnee 15 to 4 at the end of the first CHEERS: The Tar Maids did The lack of Spartan accuracy Double Feature was launched in her versatile ath­ quarter, 29 to 9 at the half, and 35 themselves proud last Saturday from the hardwood and the fact letic career by her Dad, who play­ night. By out-shooting and out that Rollins squad played a re­ JAMES WHITMORE to 21 at the finish of the three NANCY DAVIS ed semi-pro basketball in his day. quarter mark. fighting the semi-pro aggregate markable first half,' accounts, for from St. Pete, they proved they Marnee's brother has been the na-, Jerry Campbell and Bill Gordon the 28-26 edge which the Tars are ready and willing for that big "THE NEXT tional long distance swimming led the Sigma Nu's scoring with tallied by intermission. state tournament next month. champion for the past three years, 12 and 10 points, respectively. Jim Ev Williams, who was a high The forwards couldn't seem to and swam in the Olympics mat- Doran led the X Clubbers with 14 gunner for Rollins, added eight VOICE YOU do anything wrong, breaking and cKes in Japan. markers. field goals and two charity tosses In the "R" Club, Marnee is one passing well and hitting their for the cagers. Ev's set shots were HEAR" The KA's took an early 10 to shots at a phenomenal average. deadly, and the Tampa team found and of the few members that has won 3 first quarter lead from the Del­ The guards had a rough night him hard to hold throughout the her Emblem, signifying that she ta Chi's and fought hard to main­ 'cause those St. Pete forwards contest. ^ has won over 9 letters. tain a 16 11 upper hand at half "BAHLE- weren't missing many, either. In In the second half the Spartans time. They gained a comfortable fact, if they hadn't missed four became alive. All of a sudden shots 27 to 18 edge on the Delta in the more times than we did, it would began to rip the cords, mostly GROUND" third canto and pushed on to a VAN JOHNSON have been their ball game to take due to the fine shooting of George "Gateway to Fine Foods" landslide vict^ory, 41 to 28. JOHN HODIAK home. Montz, who took over the offen­ GEORGE MURPHY John Gray led the "Southern There didn't seem to be much sive. His Tampa teammates could Gentlemen" with 18 points, while that Bobbie Doerr could do about not break through the tight zone Bob Peck racked in 14 for the Del­ that 6' monster, but she sure tried which Rollins used with surpris­ ta Chi's to be their hot shot of hard. Can't call Bobbie "Lead-feet" ing success during the first half the evening. • COLONY ANDERSON'S anymore. The gal she was guard­ minutes after thoy gained the THEATRE The X-Club defeated Delta Chi ing, Anna Giese, swished in a to­ lead which they held until the AIR CONDITIONED GATEWAY GRILL 75 to 40 in the greatest perfor­ tal of 34 big points. No doubt about final gun. DOORS OPEN 12:45 _ mance seen this year in the in­ it, she's the best tall forward any­ George Montz proved to be the SUNDAY - MONDAY tramurals. where around here. No way to most valuable player for the Spar­ JANE POWELL stop most of her shots, just hope tans. During the night perfor­ RICARDO MONTALBAN Air Conditioned that she'll miss both the shot and mance he tallied 22 counters, nine the rebound. field goals and four free shots. "TWO WEEKS For a welcome change, the six Although the Tars made desper­ TOM & JERRY'S gals really looked like a team out ate efforts to get ahead, the Spar­ WITH LOVE" E. A. Anderson there. The forwards concentrated tans kept a six point lead, a gap Color by Technicolor^ on the fast break and only at­ Proprietor which Rollins did not overcome. COCKTAIL LOUNGE tempted crip shots, and it really TUES. thru THURS- Center Frank Barker was pretty Special Limited Engagement' Edwin Anderson paid off. It was a fast, rough well bottled-up by guard Bill Mul­ (ALL SEATS RESERVED) Manager game but everyone enjoyed it. The lens, who restrained the rangy Tar Maids made only 8 fouls to Tar center to a mere 12 points. "CYRANO St. Pete's 13, and they convert­ There is only one game left in OPEN SUNDAYS ed 6 times to their opponent's 3 the Rollins schedule and if Barker times. BE BERGERAC" PHONE 3-9201 is to be the State's high scoring JOSE FERRAR^^.^ Dorie Jensen was out of town Shuffleboard - Dancing man he must hit well above the 20 FRIDAY - SATURDAY for the game but Carolyn Herring point mark in that fray. fUled in more than ably by play­ LUCILLE BALL 1251 S. Orlando Ave. 117 N. Orlando Avenue Rollins was within striking dis­ ing a beautiful game. Ginny Ap­ tance until the closing seconds of WINTER PARK, FLA. gar's faking threw the visiting the ball game when three succes­ "THE FULLER WINTER PARK guards for a loop as she piled in sive field goals by the Spartans, for a lot of important points in plus the fouling out of Pete Fay BRUSH m the second half. took their last remaining hopes. EDDIE ALBER^ i SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1951 ROLLINS SANDSPUR NINE Mound ee I Tilt Justice Key - Bentley Calls Tar Lead Linkmen Golf, Hke baseball, is in the process of being rebuilt here at Workouts Rollins. The Tars, who won the Florida Ijnter-CoUegiate Tourna­ BasebaU practice at Rollins went ment over University of Miami into the second week at Harper- by one stroke at Deland last year, Shepard fiel^ under the watchful enjoyed a highly successful season. eye of coach Joe Justice. Pitchers The only defeats inflicted on the are beginning to unlimber their linkmen were by Miami and Wake arms while catchers are picking up Forest. ; This year, however. Pro. the various styles of the new Clyde Kelly faces the prospect of chunkers. building a new team arOund re­ Rollins most unpredictable squad turning lettermen Billy Key and will take the mound next Monday Larry Bentley. Among the missing in preparation for their first game will be Jimmy Brass, Jupe Arnold, with North Carolina, March 17, and Kelly who turned profession­ reported Joe Justice, Tar Base­ al this summer. baU Dean. Brass, a very promising player, New candidates for the RoHins mound position. First row: Bud Fisher, Henry Menendez, and Bob Lead­ left school last term and Arnold An experiment which will be er; Back row is Bruce Lee, Bobby Jones, and Fred Baldwin. worth watching is Joe Hull's shift­ graduated last June. Both men ing from his outfield position to YOU TOO CAN FLY will be hard to replace. first base. "Big Cat" has all the Kelly hopes that two newcomers requisites needed to make a Gal Varsity Tops Al Peterson and Carl Nessler, wUl good first sacker. His willingness be capable of filing the gap left by to play plus his fighting spirit Brass and Arnold. Both Al and will help him to make the grade. St. Pete Sextet Carl played a prominent role on A few more newcomers report­ the Independents' team which Sparked by Marnee Norris, Tar ed last Monday afternoon. Among captured the golf tournament last them are John DeCarville a catch­ forward who posted 32 points, the fall. er; Delton Helms, Don Anderson, RoUinettes downed the St. Peters­ BUly Key, playing as the num­ infielders and Joe Angeri an out­ burg favorites 64 to 55 last Sat­ ber one golfer in place of KeUy, is the focal point of the team. He fielder, the rest of the team will urday night. For the first time not report till February 26. is a highly regarded amateur from this year the maids met a competi­ Columbus, Georgia, with many ti­ As far as the pitching corps, it tive cage squad with vim and vigor tles to his credit. BiUy plays a is hard to tell the real caliber of equal to their own. consistant and very steady game any of them until they are tested and has had a great deal of tour­ under fire. There is a lot of prom­ Jo Dunn and Bobbie Doerr, ney experience. ise shown in the workouts and Rollins guards, played heads-up Close behind Key wiU be Lar­ Coach Justice believes that once ball, holding the St. Pete gals as ry Bentley. Larry, former Michi­ more Rollins will have a better well as anyone could expect. gan Junior Champion, has steadily than average season. The guest outfit was to be seed­ improved his game since coming The catching burden falls as it ed as the number one squad in the to Rollins and should be one of looks now in the sturdy shoulders state tournament, but this npset the mainstays and a good match of a local boy Albert Chubb, a may change the seeding to an ex­ for any amateur. graduate from Winter Park Hgh tent. This same cage crew reach­ On paper, this year's squad School, who played freshman ball ed the state finals last year and won't be as strong as last year's at Wake Forest and transferred are expected to give everyone a The team's personnel as a whole to Rollins this year. Chubb looks good fight in a repeat perfor­ is young and of unknown quality. very good in handling pitchers and mance. Only Key and Bentley have seen the early sessions have shown that The locals eked a la to 14 lead any collegian tournament experi­ he knows how to use the willow. on St. Pete pacers during the ence. A welcome and yet surprising first quarter and increased their Before the season opens on addition to the team is Frank lead 28 to 21 by half-time. Al Hensen demonstrates just how the winning coxswain is to act. The March 10 against Plbrida State at Barker, currently burning the Delta Chi \ men wasted no time in showing their appreciation to the With only three minutes to go Dubsdread, various members of basketball court for Rollins, who "crew guide." the Tar sextet held a four point the squad wiU participate in the in his short visits to the practice lead since during a fake start the Two-Ball Tournament. Those ex­ field has already made himself forwards managed to tip in two Delta Chi Wins Crew Cup pected to take part are Key, Ness­ a name as a sluggers, a depart­ unexpected bucket shots. ler, and Peterson. ment in which the Tars can use Delta Chi's forged ahead of the Sigma Nu S Snakes February 16 all available help. to wih the 1951 intramural crew program for Rollins. The Delts were THE SANDSPUR the favored shell because of a veteran crew composed of Tim Loftin, SEND A COPY HOME BASEBALL. ROSTER George Johnson, John Thibodeau, Emory Hunter and Al Hanson. Mar. n North Carolina Home World Famed Tennis Alabama (Doubleheader) These oresmen, with their crisp, even strokes, have won the crew for the Family Mar. 19 North Carolina vs. Alabama Hon»e Tour To Appear He'e intramurals for three consecutive years and will retain the cup. North Carolina Mar. 27 American International (Doubleheader) On March 8, The In the Wednesday race the Delts downed the X Club by about - ,^ . Home Mar. 20 Alabama vs. North three links. The Snakes outrowed Apr. 5 yvashing^ton and Lee Home Carolina Home 1950-51 World Tennis Tour will V.\RS1TY CREW SCHEDULE Apr. 12 Dartmouth Home Alabama (Doubleheader) pitch its tent in the Davis Armory, the Indies boat by about the same Mar. 21 Marietta Home Apr. 28 Tampa Home Mar. 23 Clemson Home advantage. Mar. 24 Boston U.-Florida Southern May 12 State Championships Tampa Mar. 24 Clemson Home Orlando. Home May 19 Dad Vail Regatta Mar. 30 Miami Coral Gables Thursday Sigma Nu rowed over Poughkeepsie. Mar. 31 Miami Coral Gablps Featured on this tour is none Apr. 2 Parris Island Marines other than Gorgeous Gussie Mor­ X Club while Delta Chi out pow­ Home ered the Alpha Phi Lambda crew Apr. 3 Parris Island Marines an who has attracted world wide squad. Both winning teams took Home fame for her lace panties. Her Apr. 6 Florida State Home the lead early and were never be­ DOC Apr. 7 Florida State Home opponent is Addie, Apr. 13 Plorida Home hind although both crews caught Apr. 14 Florida Home four times national amateur wo­ Apr. 19 Florida Southern Lakeland a few small crabs. Apr. 21 Florida Southern Home men's single champion. O' Apr. 27 Miami Home Apr. 28 Miami Home Also on the program is a men's B May 1 Tampa Tampa singles match between Jack Kra­ May 4 Tampa Home May 6 Stetson Home mer, former national amateur ten­ R May 11 stetson DeLand May 12 Stetson DeLand nis champion and now world pro­ MEET THE CROWD AT O'BRIENS May 15 Stetson Home May 18 Florida Gainesville fessional touring champion. His May 19 Florida Gainesville opponent will be Pancho Segura. E U. S. professional champion of N 1950. D'Agostino's Kramer went to Rollins for a HARPER'S S tei-m 10 years ago. VILLA NOVA Of interest to the Rollins fami­ TAVERN PHARMACY ly will be the match between Mrs. American & Italian Dishes Addie and Miss Moran as Pauline Rollins Headquarters for Famous for Fine Foods graduated from Rollins in 1942 She has returned to the Rollins and PRESCRIPTIONS — DRUGS For a party of 20 or more courts many times for practice SUNDRIES — FOUNTAIN SERVICE Reserve our while playing in this vicinity. BURGUNDY ROOM Reserved and box seats can be RESTAURANT Free Delivery Service U.S. Hi-way 17-92 obtained at the Rollins College Call 4-6101 Ph. W.P. 4-2684 Athletic office or by calling 3-1861. SATURDAY. FERRUARY TEN ROLLINS SANDSPUR !11951 HEARST MAN Ray McMullin Wins Magazine Animates Crisis And Cartoons Reeve Speech Prize (Continued from page 1> cartoons, too. The one in thi na, and the Sherlock Holmes sc­ sue will be drawn by Roy Q '*" Ray D. McMullin, first Rollins by capturing first place in the ries. resident of Orlando and antt'' freshman ever to win a General Reeves Oratorical Contest held in Like most publications, the of the popular comic strin D ' Charles McCormick Reeves Essay the Knowles Memorial Chapel. Magazine also has an advertising Sawyer. "' «"! Dean Wendell C. Stone presented insert. Publisher Grover will tell award, topped his own record Reverend John Haynes Holm the subscribers where their money Monday afjernoon, February 19, the winner with a $50 first prize Pastor of the (>)mmunity n ^' goes. The proceds from the sale award. of New York City, wiU gpe,"'' of tickets and the collection to be "Nehru, America and the Wa •" • Speaking on "Segregation in a taken at the Magazine will be the East." The author of J '" Democracy — the American Di- used for the Rollins College Schol­ Key Society books and articles on reliu^"' arship Fund. lema," Ray pointed out the apall­ Reverend Holmes is also « "' Most publications have their Initiates Five ing discrepancy between our de­ tributor to the HeraliTtil, " mocratic ideals and the existing BUZ SAWYER and National Biography, "' Tomorrow afternoon, five Upper racial, religious, and political Talking on "The United NstW ' Division students will be initiated discrimination. He emphasized in .the World Crisis," wU] bei ^ into Key Society. They are: Sen­ that "color has nothing to do with MerrUl C. Meigs ry LcSueur veteran CBS corres iors; Walter Roose, Fred Rogers; pendent and news analyst. Din". worth," for in America, "there is Juniors, Helen Demetrelis, Paul ing the war, Mr. LeSueur eoverej only one race—the human race." the fall of France, the battle fej Brinner, and Norbett Mintz. Last year's valedictorian at El New Library Moscow and Stalingrad, and wj, To become eligible for Key So­ Segundo High School of Los An­ (Continued from page 1) official eye witness of the fiiBi ciety, a student must maintain an geles, Ray placed second, in the lished by the late David MiUs, surrender of the German Higli California State Oratorical con­ "A" average for two consecutive who made a fortune manufacturing Command. test and first in his own high years, be In the Upper Division spark plugs in the early days of school. "Civil Aviation for Defense" wJi for at least one term, and be en­ the automotive industry. The foun­ be the topic of Donald W. Nyioj Other Reeves Essay winners rolled at Rollins for at least three dation's name is taken from the Administrator of 'CivU Aeronau! who entered competition were first names of Mr. Mills and his tics Authority. terms. Derek Dun Rankin, Dave Estes, wife; David and Ella. Membership in Key Society is Begum .\ga Khan Raza, Parkij, Jack MacCauslin, Norbett Mintz, The two-story front elevation lestricted to twenty students, of and Walter Roose. fan political leader and wife ot faces North across the horseshoe. the Military Attache at the Wash­ whom no more than five may be Dr. France presided over the oc­ On the South side a five-story, air- ington Embassy, will speak on tht juniors. Initiation will be held casion. Judges for the contest conditioned modular type books again in April at which time the were Clarence M. Day, Frank B. stack area, providing space for HERALD TRIB. Society can initiate eight seniors Temple, and Edward J. Geurney, 160,000' volumes, overlooks Lake and two juniors. Jr., aU of the University Club of Virginia. Further space for books Winter Park. will be available in other reading Roy Crane and reference rooms. Rollinsites Put On Big The East and West perimeters Show At Sanlando Town Council Grants of stack tiers will be lined with 78 Dr. Holmes Heads This cubicles for individual reading. Sunday afternoon found some of Faculty studies and conference Week's Martin Lecture the Rollins family gathered at $250 For W. P. Band rooms will be on the South peri Thursday, February 22, in the Sanlando Springs to exhibit their There was a meeting of the meter. congre.gational Chui-ch of Winter prowess at swimming and canoe­ Winter Park Town Council at the Glass pautitions will separate all Park, Dr. John Haynes Holmes, ing under the direction of Sarah City Hall Monday night, Febru­ reading rooms and work areas. one of the most distinguished Jane Dorsey and Fleet Peeples. ary 19, at 8:00 p. m. An audio-visual aid center and clergymen in the United States, First event of the day was a Contrary to most of the ses­ •Ijroadcasting studio are being built will speak on the "American Chal­ beautifully executed show of pre­ sions, the meeting was rather into the basement. lenger — World Government or cision swimming while a crowd of short, ending at 9:00 p.m. It was To adapt facUities of MUls Me­ Chaos." This is the fifth lecture over 300 spectators applauded attended by Professor King's class morial Library to Florida's sub­ sponsored in the annual John them from the grassy banks. Jo from Rollins. Mr. Heep, city clerk tropical climate, a walled-in Span­ Martin Series. Dunn and Bobbie Doer swam an expressed his disappointment that ish type garden will be provided Dr. Holmes graduated summa exciting duet spiced with diffi­ the meeting could not have been on the south side off the stack cum laude from Harvard in 1902. cult stunts like water-wheels and longer and ijiore interesting for rooms. A loggia and two sun bal­ For many years he has been pas­ flying porpoises. A'finished quar­ the class. conies will overlook the garden. tor of the Community Church of tet of Norma Jean Thaggard, Ann At the meeting a request was Additional features of the new New York City, and he has been Dr. John H. Holmes • Lewis Turley, Saretta HUl and made of the commission to grant building will include newspaper President of All World Gandhi Pat Roberts pleased the audience financial aid to the Winter Park and magazine lounges, conference fellowship since 1929. subject, "Can Communism Bt with a routine including ballet High School Band. The commission rooms, sound-proof typing rooms In 1933, Dr. Holmes won the Stopped in the East." Except lot legs, swirls, and kips. All that is granted $250 to the Chamber of and various other reading and annual Gottheil medal for service a brief tour of the Prime Minis­ "fish-talk" for Fancy swimming. Commerce for the band. work rooms. of Jews. The years 1947 and 48 ter's, she is the first person foi Others of the club joined to par­ he was on the Watumul Founda­ her country to make a tonr of ticipate in an "Octette" while tion Lectureship to India. Dr. speaking engagements in Amen- everyone stroked together in the Holmes has long been connected ca. last formatipn of the afternoon Animated Magazine Program with the National Association for "Hawaii and Our Future in tte using 14 girls. They are those Foreword _ paul Alexander Wagner the advancement of the colored Pacific" will be discussed by J«- named above plus Alida Brangs, President of Rollins College people. seph R. Farrington, delegate to Nancy Huff, Darlene Evilsizor, 1. Leading Editorial Thomas S. Matthews Congress from Hawaii and P"'- Margaret Wag, Pye Mayhue, Ila Editor, Time Magazine MiUer, Jeannie Wislogel, Betty Mowbray Presents BELL AND HOWELL Fleming. 2. Human Understanding in American Industry ..Charles H. Percy President, Bell & Howell Co. Bell Of Founders 1 Point winners of the day were 3. Allah Be With You Horace Newman Friday at 2:00 p.m.. Dr. Henry Pete Robinson and Vickie Braun. French Foreign Legion and Sheik of the Sidi-el-Hani tribe Mowbray presented "t h e first The Taf'pon Club is planning a class bell," to Rollins College on grand exhibition at the Mayfair 4. A Report on Conditions at Lackland Airfield Merrill C. Meigs Vice-President, Hearst Corp. behalf of the Congregational Inn in Sanford early in March. Church. 5 Baseball Is My Business .:.. Leo Durocher The aqua-maids will also represent The bell, weighing 1500 pounds, Manager, New York Giants RoUins at Silver Springs and Cy­ was placed in front of the press ardens this Spring. 6. Potentiality of Air Power Related to Alumni House on Holt Avenue. U. S. Military Policy _ General George H. Brefit President Wagner will accept the U. S. Air Force bell on behalf ot the College and CALENDAR 7. The Magic of the Theatre ..'. Basil Rathbone Dr. Louis Shultz will pronounce .S.lTURnAY. FKBRl'.VRY 24 Noted Star of Radio, Screen, and Stage the benediction. 12:15-1:45 p.m.—Annual Alumni Luncheon Student Center. ADVERTISING INSERT Edwin Osgood Grover A plaque was placed with 2:00 p.m. — Rededieation of Knowles Hall. Publisher and Vice-President of Rollins CoUege the gift, reading: "On April the 2:30 p.m.—Harvey, matinee An­ seventeenth, 1885, this bell rang nie Russell Theatre. The entire proceeds from this "Advertising Insert" will be devoted 2-45 p.m.—Mills Memorial Li­ to the "Rollins CoUege Scholarship Fund." from the steeple of the Congrega­ brary Corner Stone Ceremo­ tional Church in Winter Park to nies. 8. Cartoon Strip "Roy Crane .SLlVnAY, FEBRt ARY M announce the decision of the Gen­ 9:45 a.m.—Chapel, Dr. Holmes Author of popular Cartoon Strip "Buz Sawyer." euest speaker. eral Congregational Association of 2-30 p m.—Animated Magazine. 9 Nehur, America and the War in the East Rev. John Haynes Holmes Florida to found a college in Win­ 8-15 p.m. — Florida Orchestra Pastor, Community Church of New York Symphonv. Winter Park High ter Park. Its voice also caUed to­ Charles H. ?««? School, free tickets to faculty, staff and students. 10. The United Nations in the World Crisis Larry LeSueur gether assemblies and classes in •>IONT).\Y, FEBRV.VRY 20 Columbia Broadcasting- Correspondent and News Analyst the early days of Rollins College. lisher of the Honolulu Star 9:30 a.m.—Convocation. TUESnAY, FEBRUARY 27 11. Civil Aviation for Defense Donald W. Nyrop This Bell was presented to the '•'*'"• -libel' •"•OO a.m.—Rex Beach s .\shes Administrator, Civil Aeronautics Authority College by the members of the Last on the program *" ^^^^,. Burled in front of Alumni House. . _,, , 12. Can Communism be Stopped in the East....T-Begum Aga Khan Raza Congregational Church as a sym­ Ata, an American I"^'^ ght" 7:30 p.m.—Pan-American Club bol of their common interest in Casa Iberia. . Pakistan Political Leader tainer. Miss Ata is the ^,^^, S15 P.m.—O. D. K. Movie 'Mag­ ^ducation and of their mutual 14. Hawaii and Our Future in the Pacific Joseph R. Farrington of the last Council of ttie .^ ic Bow.' friendship and ideals." WEDNESDAY, FEBRtT.\RY 28 Delegate to Congress from Hawaii and Publisher, saw Nation. She has aPP' ^.c-, 6:30-6:50 p.m.—Prayer Service The acceptance of the gift is several Broadway sUge ^^^, Chapel. Honolulu Star Bulletin 7:30 p.m.—Tryouts for Annie one of the highlights of Founders' tions, 'before the King «» ^i, 15. Along the Moccasin Trail : Te Ata Russell. Week which will continue through of England, and at tn 8-00 p.m.—Dress Rehersal for American Indian Enteitainer Bach Chapel. this Monday, the 26th. House.