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( Wii"!<br />

111 '<br />

J u u u<br />

OHIO'S BEST COLLEGE WEEKLY<br />

ran tipA<br />

Volume 85 Number 29 Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong>, Wednesday, May 28, 1952 Single Copy 10 cents <strong>if</strong> <strong>flf</strong><br />

j s&TA&ust me, 7<br />

i .n n<br />

vs Is <strong>if</strong> 3 1 nn V<br />

Five Professors Retire, Four Take<br />

Leaves Of Absence, Five Leave Staff<br />

LeBijou Makes '52 Bow<br />

In Rust-Colore- d Cover<br />

The 1952 issue of LeBijou (the<br />

jewel), <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s yearbook,<br />

rolled from the presses in time<br />

for distribution last Wednesday.<br />

Edited by Dave Smith, this issue<br />

has a rust colored cover and an<br />

allractive layout. As usual, the<br />

volume contains a pictorial summary<br />

of <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, ils school year<br />

mvd activities.<br />

A Highlight Of The Faculty Show<br />

GOP Delegates<br />

Pick Eisenhower<br />

9<br />

1 t<br />

Packard Motor President's Speech<br />

To Climax Commencement Week<br />

James J. Nance, a <strong>Wesleyan</strong> graduate of '24 and the<br />

newly appointed president of Packard Motor Co., will deliver<br />

the Commencement address on June 9.<br />

Nance has distinguished himself in the field of business,<br />

serving as head of Hotpaint, Inc., a General Electric affiliate,<br />

Dean Ficken announced today the names of the profes<br />

sors who are not returning next year.<br />

A leave of absence will<br />

Carter, associate professor of<br />

doctor's degree at Stanford<br />

George Crowl, associate<br />

visiting professor of geology at<br />

Rangoon <strong>University</strong> in Burma.<br />

Benjamin Spencer, professor of<br />

English, will be on leave for one<br />

year, but his plans are not definite.<br />

Five faculty members are retiring<br />

at Ihe end of this semester.<br />

They are Prof. H. C. Hubbart of<br />

the history department. Prof.<br />

Harold Sheridan of ihe education<br />

dspariment and Prof. Harvey Hewitt<br />

of the music department.<br />

Miss Laura Wagner, associate<br />

professor of Spanish and Mrs.<br />

Ethel Page, instructor in malhe<br />

matics, are also retiring.<br />

Kelly Danford, instructor in<br />

speech and music, is also taking<br />

a leave of absence to join a Gilbert<br />

and Sullivan troupe. James<br />

Rowley, assistant professor of<br />

education, i,3 moving to Miami<br />

Beach, Florida. His plans for<br />

next year are uncertain.<br />

. Miss Helen Wait, resident coun<br />

selor at Austin Hall, will be in<br />

Houston, Texas, next year. Miss<br />

Elizabeth Willis, instructor in<br />

home economics, plains to remain<br />

in Delaware.<br />

Two English instructors will not<br />

return next year. James Morris<br />

de-ore- will be working on a doctor e<br />

at <strong>Ohio</strong> State and Willi.tr.i<br />

Glass has accepted a position,311 ol exam week, including<br />

with ihe sales division of ihe<br />

A'hland Oil Company.<br />

C'ai.d Dunham, professor of humanities<br />

and German will return<br />

next year from a visiting professorship<br />

at <strong>Wesleyan</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

in Connecticut. Phil Cutchin will<br />

rejoin the physical education department<br />

following his tour of<br />

duty with the armed forces<br />

Packing Problems --<br />

Here's the Solution<br />

An end-of-the-ye- ar clothing drive,<br />

sponsored by the Internationl Re-<br />

' lations committee, is now in progress.<br />

The cloth;-- r is being collected<br />

for Ewha college, the Quakers,<br />

Girl's Industrial school, and<br />

needy students of South Dela<br />

ware high schools.<br />

Clothing bins, which have been<br />

placed in the corridors of the dormitories<br />

and fraternity houses, will<br />

help to solve the problem of excess<br />

baggage and will serve a worthy<br />

cause at the same time.<br />

...larty Hibbert, chairman of the<br />

drive, emphasizes that all types of<br />

clothing are needed and that contributions<br />

will be gratefully accepted<br />

till the end of school.<br />

Lafferty Gets<br />

WSLN Managership<br />

Shiriey Latferty is the new WSLN<br />

sii.'on manager. Miss Lafferty<br />

v.-u- s be taken by four men. Roy<br />

journalism, will work on<br />

<strong>University</strong>. '<br />

professor of geology, will be<br />

Student Co op<br />

Book Store To<br />

Open Today<br />

Books Now Available<br />

At Lower Prices As<br />

Project Is<br />

elected president of Alpha<br />

Epsilon Rho, national radio honorary<br />

fraternity, the president of<br />

the honorary automatically becomes<br />

station manager.<br />

She succeeds David Sauer, re-tirii- ig<br />

president of AEP. During the<br />

past year, Miss Lafferty has been<br />

in charge of special events for the<br />

station. As station manager, she<br />

will be in complete charge of all<br />

WSLN operations.<br />

vice-preside-<br />

Will Smith was nt<br />

elected<br />

of the radio honorary<br />

and Lee Allen will serve as secretary.<br />

Dave Shobe is the new<br />

treasurer.<br />

Sunday was the final day of<br />

broadcast operation for WSLN. The<br />

station will return to the air early<br />

in the fall.<br />

Dramatics Honorary<br />

To Initiate Eleven<br />

Theta Alpha Phi, the dramatics<br />

honorary, will initiate eleven new<br />

members on June 6.<br />

The initiates will be William<br />

Ailes, Ruth Carson, Jane Francis,<br />

Darrell Hodge, Janice Hoover,,<br />

Marion Lightloot, Lois Lindsay,<br />

Brenda Olson, Har-riet- John Roberts, e<br />

Thomas, and Marily Wissin-ger- .<br />

Non-Profit<br />

The S t u d e nt Government<br />

book store will open today.<br />

Any student interested in selling<br />

his text books from this<br />

year may do so downstairs in<br />

the Memorial Union building.<br />

The purpose of the book store<br />

is to make books available to<br />

students at a lower price and to'<br />

pay a better price for used books.<br />

This is made possible due to the<br />

fact that the project is on a nonprofit<br />

basis.<br />

The book store will be open<br />

inursaay, June o Hours are<br />

from 9-- i<br />

-<br />

Pictured above is a scene from "The Faculty Follies." Shown here are from left to right. Prof.<br />

Jarvis A. Stewart, Mrs. Roland Bpecklin, and Prof. Boyd E. Macrory. The dramatical farce concerned<br />

a Russian who is brought to <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> and gradually gets acclimated to the college.<br />

Stars, Bars Results<br />

In Faculty's Folly<br />

BY ANN T, SCRIPT<br />

"Stars and Bars" the 1952 Facultys "Folly" in no way<br />

measured up to the standards set by last year's show.<br />

Such a failing could no doubt be explained by the fact<br />

that the participants were 1-4-<br />

11 :30 a. m. engaged in sadistically<br />

and preparing<br />

p. m.<br />

Any change in the hours will be final exams and winding up the school year. But even so,<br />

posted downstair in the Union. <strong>if</strong> 1500 <strong>Wesleyan</strong> students could<br />

Students will be paid by stud- give<br />

ent government<br />

an evening that might other<br />

check when the<br />

book is sold Books will be sold<br />

wise have been used constructive <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Student<br />

the first two weeks of the fall<br />

ly, the faculty should have pro-<br />

semester.<br />

vided a little more worthwhile Debates in Akron<br />

"We think that the book store entertainment.<br />

will succeed because it will be<br />

The show which was wriiien Jack Collins, senior from Cleve<br />

in a convenient location, will be<br />

by a group of Cosmedelphians land Heights, met an <strong>Ohio</strong> State<br />

open enough to accomodate<br />

may<br />

stud-<br />

have been clever, but due university student, Dan Kenny, in<br />

ent needs and payments will be<br />

to what was obviously a techni- a debate before the League of<br />

made promptly," stated Jake cal failing, ihe audience was Women Voters of <strong>Ohio</strong> at the May-<br />

Lewis, manager of the bookstore. quite often unable to hear ihe flower Hotel in Akron on Tuesday.<br />

At present student government punch lines.<br />

The debate was on the topic,<br />

will sell only used books, but in This same technical fault with "Resolved: that <strong>Ohio</strong> should call<br />

the future they may also sell the microphone probably caused a constitutional convention for the<br />

new book.3.<br />

the distortion ofthe voices of purpose of revising the <strong>Ohio</strong> State<br />

participants in some numbers constitution," and was held before<br />

that were otherwise very clever. the Akron chapter of the LWV.<br />

AFROTC Cadels Although the Faculty Follies<br />

non-decisi- on The demonstration<br />

had its faults, there were those debate presented to the League<br />

who did a commendable job. Mr. the pros and cons of an issue<br />

Get Commissions and Mrs. Gordon Almstead dis-<br />

which will go to the polls for a<br />

played real talent and were duly final decision<br />

BY RUTHE ROOTES rewarded with the most enthus-<br />

F<strong>if</strong>ty-on- e <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> ROTC iastic applause received through-<br />

cadets yesterday received their 2nd out the program.<br />

Lt. commissions in the United Prof. Jarvis Stewart' also did s<br />

States Air Force. Nine men<br />

splendid job of<br />

re-<br />

portraying B B.<br />

ceived cert<strong>if</strong>icates of eligibility,<br />

Pravda, ihe visiting Russian. Sue<br />

which will give them their<br />

Strickland and Hall Cary's<br />

com-<br />

num<br />

missions when they graduate.<br />

ber was very cleverly done and<br />

Richard Wengenrolh,<br />

This is the largest group of men<br />

didswell as<br />

ihe shadow.<br />

that have been commissioned from The show depicted democracy<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> since the ROTC until was at <strong>Wesleyan</strong> and began with<br />

activated on this campus. Pravda's arrival in Washington,<br />

During the presentation the proceeding on to Delaware where<br />

corps of cadets presented a re- the visiting Commie was ushered<br />

view in honor of the new officers. through a typical day at Wesley-<br />

Cadets were sworn in by Col. an. Included ins this excursion<br />

Paul C. Ke<strong>if</strong>er and afterwards were such highspots a the Ad<br />

Dean C. E. Ficken addressed the missions office, the gym on Reg-<br />

group.<br />

istration day, Chapel, and a class<br />

The new officers will serve two in Prpnnratinn fnr ATarriaCTa TVio<br />

years active duty after which they show concluded with a faculty<br />

will go on active reserve for six meeting and the grand finale.<br />

years.<br />

Following the follies, Cosmodel- -<br />

Men receiving commissions were phia held a tea honoring the<br />

John Anderson, Chuck Barber,<br />

J Ui LUC VCUOLa I<br />

John Barcley, Frank Benson, Adel-ber- t<br />

Bramley, Carlton Brose, Forrest<br />

Bower, Dale Bruce. Council Proposes<br />

Robert Canright, Donald Clar,<br />

Grover Cooper, Jack Cornett, Bob<br />

Coverdale, Bill Crcviston, Wally Guest Meal Plan<br />

Cross, Kermit Darkey, Edward<br />

Dougherty, Thomas Fenaughty, Student Council in a meeting last<br />

and Jack Frobe".<br />

Saturday proposed a list of re-<br />

Other newly commissioned were commendations concerning the<br />

Ben Graham. Daie Gr<strong>if</strong>fiths, Merle guest meals in the women's dorms.<br />

Grover, Bob Harper, Hewitt Heiser The recommendations will be sent<br />

man. Bill Hoefer, Leroy Hoffman, to treasurer Hornberger for con-<br />

Al Hulse, Bob Johnson, Ed Kiley, sideration.<br />

Bob Kleinman, and Milton Lenc. The first of the three recom-<br />

Neil Markel, Hugh Meilinger, mendations provides that ten<br />

Bob Ogdon. Jack Otto, Wilber guests eat free at each meal. A<br />

Peterson, Sam Rader, Robert list would be placed in the resident<br />

Raine, John Reddaway, Jack counsellor's office for the girls to<br />

Rouhier, Ron Schneider, Tom sign up for their guests twenty<br />

Shank, Ross Shrull, Werner Sitz. four hours in advance, the first ten<br />

Ford Smart, Joe Stavenhagen, Tom on the list being admitted to the<br />

Taylor, Jim T<strong>if</strong>fin, Stan "Van dining room free of charge.<br />

Buren, Bill West and George Wish-nevsk- y The second would allow a break<br />

received new ranks. in policy during freshman and<br />

election-campainin- Men receiving cert<strong>if</strong>icates of campus g per-<br />

eligibility were Duane Anderson, iods. The candidates and their<br />

Rolland Guy, Bob Hilchey, Dave campaign managers would be ad<br />

Howard, Vaughn Mongam, George mitted free, a list of their names<br />

Radicevic, Bill Shellenberge, Joe being submitted to the dietician in<br />

Livoti and Bob Steelier.<br />

advance.<br />

The third recommendation is that<br />

Co-o- p Elects Officers<br />

the price of guest meals be re-<br />

The president of '112" West Win duced in the following manner:<br />

ter. Betty Lou Reid, has announ breakfast, from $.62 to $.35; lunch,<br />

ced that two new officers have from $.83 to $.50; and dinner, from<br />

been elected. They are: Helen $1.24 to $1.00. The cost of student<br />

Widing, vice president, and Doris meals is breakfast, $.57; lunch<br />

Stoudenmire, treasurer.<br />

$.50; and dinner, $1.00.<br />

'<br />

by the people of<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> in November.<br />

Taking the affirmative side, Col<br />

lins said, "the convention is the<br />

best method at present for revising<br />

the state constitution," while<br />

Kenny maintained that "there<br />

isn't any need for calling such a<br />

gathering and that methods are<br />

now available through initiative<br />

referendum and the legislature for<br />

making changes."<br />

Earlier in the year, Collins had<br />

participated along with other Wes<br />

leyan students in a series of debates<br />

on the topic, and during the<br />

last few months, several' debates<br />

were scheduled ' , v-<br />

with other <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

schools.<br />

D . Unl A<br />

' w" cl nn.AAr<br />

D,f- - ln- - ,,pi,;<br />

XM'" ' w' ixuouiiiy<br />

,<br />

rtusning ruies 11'ior<br />

nexi year s<br />

first semester program have been<br />

taken to sororities, voted on and<br />

passed. After the sororities appro-<br />

Pan-Hellen- ic val, council made the<br />

final decision.<br />

Rules as to spending of money<br />

on freshman women, decorations<br />

for rush parties and policies concerning<br />

the wearing of pins and<br />

sorority emblems were set up.<br />

Pan-Hellen- ic committee heads<br />

for next year are: Tad Grimm,<br />

scholarship; Sally Roberts, publi-<br />

Pan-Helleni- city; Joan Randolph, junior c<br />

advisor, and Joyce Sandbo<br />

rush chairman.<br />

Massar Becomes New<br />

Talent Bureau Director<br />

Ken Massar is the new head of<br />

the Talent bureau, according to<br />

Tom Selden, retiring director. Massar,<br />

a junior, has done work on<br />

the Transcript and the Sulphur<br />

Spray.<br />

The Talent bureau is planning<br />

to expand membership in a drive<br />

next lull. This organization furnishes<br />

music, entertainment programs<br />

and speakers for clubs, banquets<br />

and assemblies. The bureau serves<br />

Delaware and communities within<br />

a hundred-mil- e radius.<br />

Massar will continue with Ihe<br />

Dad's Day show which was originated<br />

by Tom Hicldun two years ago.<br />

-<br />

And Flemming<br />

287 Political Science<br />

Students Participate<br />

In Mock Convention<br />

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhomer<br />

and Dr. Arthur S. Flemming,<br />

president of <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

'- university, were chosen as the<br />

-1<br />

Republican candidates for<br />

president and<br />

Faculty Approves<br />

Circle K Club As<br />

Campus Activity<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s faculty has<br />

approved the Circle K Club as<br />

extra-curricul- ar<br />

a regular college<br />

activity.<br />

The Circle K club is a service<br />

organization on the college level<br />

dedicate to do service on the<br />

campus and in the community. It<br />

also provides social contacts such<br />

as those of the community service<br />

clubs.<br />

This Circle K club was organized<br />

locally about a month<br />

ago and has ihe distinction of<br />

being the first .Circle K Club<br />

in ihe slate of <strong>Ohio</strong>.<br />

The idea for the organization<br />

was originated by some former<br />

Willis High Key club members in<br />

cooperation with the Athletic<br />

Director George Gauthier, who<br />

interested the Delaware Kiwanis<br />

club. There are 29 charter members.<br />

The Board of Directors includes<br />

Jim Wright, president,<br />

vice-presiden- Bill Headline, t,<br />

Tom Halliday, secretary, and<br />

Jack McKinnie, treasurer.<br />

Luncheon meetings are held<br />

every Wednesday noon at ihe<br />

Memorial Union building.<br />

For a new campus activity the<br />

Circle K club has wasted no time<br />

in becoming an activly functioning<br />

group. Last week they entertained<br />

25 of Delaware's underprivileged<br />

children with a picnic<br />

at the Columbus zoo.<br />

On May 24th, Circle K sold<br />

concessions at the <strong>Ohio</strong> Conference<br />

track meet; the proceeds<br />

will go to a service project dur<br />

ing the next school year<br />

Last Sunday some of the members<br />

worked on a new Softball<br />

field at Mingo Community park.<br />

Monday evening, a charter<br />

party was heln at Buns in con<br />

junction with the local Kiwanis<br />

Club.<br />

Honorary Elects<br />

Hunter As President<br />

Professor R. C. Hunter has been<br />

elected president of the National<br />

dramatics honorary, Theta Alpha<br />

Phi. The election took place last<br />

week at the national convention of<br />

the honorary in Pittsburgh.<br />

Professor Hunter will take office<br />

in September and will serve until<br />

the convention in Cleveland next<br />

year.<br />

Council Approves<br />

Dorm Raid Action<br />

The President's council last Sat<br />

urday approved the action taken<br />

by the student council on the dorm<br />

raid. The student council and IFC<br />

are now waiting for cooperation<br />

lVoui the fraternities in meeting the<br />

obligations oi $199 which should<br />

be paid this spring <strong>if</strong> a spring<br />

fever day is to be held next year.<br />

The student council also passed<br />

a ruling that individuals participating<br />

in any future dorm raids<br />

shall be subject to the following<br />

penalties: three hours added to<br />

graduation requirements and the<br />

possibility of a $5 to S25 fine at<br />

the discretion of the campus court.<br />

vice-preside- nt at<br />

the 9th mock convention<br />

Thursday in Gray chapel.<br />

Polling a majority vote on the<br />

sixth ballot, the popular general<br />

edged out Senator Robert A. Taft<br />

of <strong>Ohio</strong> and Governor Earl Warren<br />

of Cal<strong>if</strong>ornia for the <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

presidential nomination.<br />

Students faking political<br />

science courses were the delegates<br />

io ihe mock convention,<br />

which was sponsored by ihe<br />

Institute of Practical Politics.<br />

Dr. Ben Arneson, director of<br />

ihe Institute, and Cl<strong>if</strong>f Cooper,<br />

acting as general secretary of<br />

ihe party, were in charge.<br />

As the 287 delegates from 22<br />

states, Puerto Rico, and the District<br />

of Columbia took their assigned<br />

seats in Gray chapel,<br />

strain of "America," "Anchors<br />

Away" an,j "Columbia, the Gem<br />

of the Ocean" provided a patriotic<br />

atmosphere.<br />

At the afternoon session, the<br />

majority and minority reports<br />

were given and the delegates<br />

overwhelmingly downed . the<br />

minority suggestion to form a<br />

new international organization,<br />

Non-Commun-<br />

"The Union of ist<br />

States" to take the place of the<br />

Unites Nations.<br />

The erening session opened<br />

with the nominations of presidential<br />

candidates. George<br />

Radicerie delivered ihe nominating<br />

speech of Gov. Warren;<br />

Kermit Darkey nominate Gen.<br />

Douglas MacArihur; Bill Welp,<br />

General Eisenhower; Jim Hin-lo- n,<br />

Harold Siassen; and Ted<br />

Trost, Senator Tafi.<br />

It was evident that Eisenhower<br />

and Taft would be the favorite<br />

candidates backers marched<br />

around the convention hall after<br />

the nominating speeches carrying<br />

banners and leading cheers of<br />

"We Like Ike" and "We Want<br />

Continued on Page 5<br />

Psi Chi Elects Bonner<br />

Vice-Preside- National nt<br />

Prof. Hubert Bonner of the department<br />

of psychology has been<br />

vice-president<br />

elected of the Midwestern<br />

region of Psi Chi, the national<br />

psychology honorary.<br />

Next fall Professor Bonner will<br />

be installed at the annual meeting<br />

of the American Psychological Association<br />

to be held at Washing<br />

ton, D. C. He will serve as one<br />

vice-presidents<br />

of the four of thei<br />

honorary, each presiding over a<br />

region.<br />

Prof. Ronald R. Greene will serve<br />

as president-elec- t of the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

Psychological Association and will<br />

automatically become president the<br />

following year.<br />

ODK Celebrates 25th<br />

At Annual Breakfast<br />

Tau Circle, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s chapter<br />

of ODK is holding its annual breakfast<br />

on June 7 at 8:30 a. m. in<br />

Bun's.<br />

This year marks the twenty-f<strong>if</strong>t- h<br />

anniversary of ODK on <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

campus. Special efforts are being<br />

made to bring back the charter<br />

members of the organization and<br />

bestow well-earne- Graduation Plans<br />

Friday, June 6<br />

10 a. m. Board of Trustees<br />

meeting, Monnett library-- 6<br />

p. m. Trustee-Alum- ni Dir<br />

ector-Associates-Faculty<br />

dinner,<br />

Stuyvesant<br />

8 p. m. Alumni Directors meet<br />

ing, Stuyvesant second floor study<br />

hall<br />

30 p. m. Theta Alpha Phi<br />

alumni presentation of "Twelfth<br />

Night", Quons-Hu- t<br />

Saturday, June 7<br />

7:30 a. m.<br />

d honors on<br />

them.<br />

The installation of the charter<br />

members of ODK society took<br />

place at the Beta Theta Pi house<br />

on May 15, 1927, with Professor<br />

Schram of the <strong>University</strong> of<br />

Pittsburgh as the installing officer.<br />

The following men were initiat-<br />

Far-ron- ed: John S. Pike, Charles J. ,<br />

Desmond Moody, Arthur S.<br />

Flemming, F. Gerald Ensley,<br />

Chad D. Skinner, Arthur F. Messenger,<br />

Ralph C. Engelhardt, Raymond<br />

H. Brown, Joseph W. Peters,<br />

Kenneth W. Pearce, Wilson Anderson,<br />

Albon P. Davids, Hurst R.<br />

Anderson, William L. Sanders,<br />

Lincoln F. Parker, and William H.<br />

Lamb, Jr.<br />

The officers elected at that lime<br />

were: Wilson Anderson, president;<br />

-- i<br />

11:30 p. m. Memor<br />

ial union open<br />

8 a. m. - 10 p. m. Registration,<br />

Memorial union lobby<br />

8 a. m. Alumni Directors<br />

breakfast, Memorial union<br />

8:30 a. m. Kappa Delta Pi<br />

breakfast, memorial union<br />

8:30 a. m. Omicron Delta Kap<br />

pa breakfast, Bun's<br />

8:30 a. m. Returning senior<br />

advisors breakfast<br />

10 a. m. Phi Beta Kappa meet<br />

ing, Memorial union<br />

11:15 a. m. Annual procession<br />

by classes, East campus<br />

11:45 a. m. Alumni luncheon,<br />

Edwards gymnasium<br />

All-stude- 2 - 5 nt p .m. exhibit,<br />

Lyon art hall<br />

All-Ohi- 2:30 p. m. o Track and<br />

Field meet, Selby field<br />

3 - 5 p. m. Reception in front<br />

of Sturges hall, courtesy of Dela<br />

ware county alumni<br />

6 p. m. Class reunion dinners<br />

8:30 p. m. Theta Alpha Phi<br />

alumni presentation of "Twelfth<br />

Night," Quons-Hu- t<br />

9 p. m. Festival of Lanterns<br />

and concert by <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

band, East campus.<br />

10 p. m. Fraternity reunions<br />

Sunday, June 8<br />

8 a. m. - 10:30 p. m. Memor<br />

ial union open<br />

8:15 a. m. Mortar Board<br />

breakfast, Bun's<br />

10:30 a. m. Baccalaureate,<br />

Gray chapel<br />

AU-stude- 2 - 5 p. nt m. exhibit,<br />

Lyon art hall<br />

3 - 6 p. m. President and Mrs<br />

Flemming at <strong>Home</strong> to seniors and<br />

families, alumni, faculty and fri<br />

ends<br />

8:15 p. m. Commencement<br />

concert, Gray chapel<br />

Monday, June 9<br />

8 a. m. - 1 p. m. Memorial union<br />

open<br />

9:15 a. m. Commencement pre<br />

lude, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> band, Selby<br />

field<br />

45 a. m. Commencement,<br />

Selby field, (Gray chapel in case<br />

of rain)<br />

12:30 p. m. Luncheon for graduates<br />

and their parents and recipients<br />

of honorary degrees, Austin,<br />

Monnett and Stuyvesant<br />

Charles . Farran, vice president ;i<br />

Desmond Moody, secretary.<br />

It is interesting to trace the<br />

careers of these men and note '<br />

since the close of World War II.<br />

Since 1947 he has brought ihe<br />

company from ninth io ihird<br />

place in ihe fisld of electrical<br />

appliances anj boosted ihe sales<br />

from S20,000,000 to S200,000,000.<br />

During the second. World War,<br />

Nance served as a member of the<br />

War Production board's advisory<br />

committee for industry. He began<br />

James Nance<br />

his sales career working for the<br />

National Cash Register Co. and<br />

later spent fourteen years with<br />

the General Motors Frigidaire division.<br />

Commencement will begin on<br />

the morning of June 9 at 9:15 a.<br />

m. with a band concert at Selby<br />

field. At 9:45 the exercises will be<br />

held at Selby, but in case of<br />

rain both the exercises and the<br />

concert will be held at Gray chapel.<br />

Following ihe exercises luncheons<br />

will be held at ihe ihree women's<br />

dormitories for ihe graduates,<br />

iheir parents and recipients<br />

of honorary degrees.<br />

The Baccalaureate Service is<br />

in the afternoon of June 8, after<br />

which President and Mrs. Flemming<br />

will entertain the seniors<br />

at their home at 23 Oak Hill Avenue.<br />

The evening of June 8, a Commencement<br />

concert will be presented<br />

in Gray chapel by the A<br />

Cappella Choir, Men's an, Women's<br />

glee clubs and the symphony'<br />

orchestra.<br />

Commencement week will open<br />

on June 6 with alumni meetings,<br />

Ac-sociaiion-Faculiy<br />

the Trustee-Alum- ni Directors<br />

dinner and ihe<br />

Theia Alpha Phi alumni production<br />

of "Twelfth Night."<br />

The events of June 7 will include<br />

breakfasts of the .various<br />

honoraries, the annual meeting<br />

of Phi Beta Kappa in the Memorial<br />

Union chapel at 10 a. m., the<br />

awarding of commissions to the<br />

graduating AFROTC men, an Alum<br />

ni Procession at 11:15 ann an<br />

Alumni luncheon at 11:45, the<br />

All-Ohi- o track meet at Selby<br />

field, an informal reception spon<br />

sored by1 the Delaware County<br />

Alumnae and Class Reunion dinners.<br />

'<br />

Anniversary<br />

For Alums<br />

itself was founded at Washington<br />

and Lee in 1914. The number of<br />

active chapters, or circles as (hey<br />

their distinguished achievements.<br />

are called, today totals seventy-fiv- e<br />

For instance, Chad Skinner is and the aggregate member-<br />

now an editorial writer for the ship is over 15,000.<br />

Cleveland Plain Dealer.<br />

The stated nurnose of ODK is to<br />

Gerald Ensley is pastor of the recognize and honor men who have<br />

all-roun- North Broadway Methodist church<br />

d leadership in college ana<br />

in Columbus. William L. Sanders, university l<strong>if</strong>e. ODK members ;ve<br />

rpDi-esentativ- who once served as dean of men at<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>, now has his own radio<br />

program. Hurst R. Anderson holds<br />

the position of president of Hamlin<br />

College. John S. Pyke and Wilson<br />

Anderson are prominent lawyers.<br />

Arthur S. Flemming, our own president,<br />

also serves in Washington on<br />

the War Manpower commission.<br />

In the years preceding ODK's<br />

conception at <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, there were<br />

jn its stead several organizations<br />

for outstanding men. However,<br />

their membership was not as exclusive<br />

and had no scholastic requirements.<br />

Largely through the<br />

efforts of William Sanders, then<br />

Dean of Men, ODK was brought to<br />

the campus in M27. Mr. Sanders<br />

was appointed first faculty advisor.<br />

The national society of ODK<br />

e leaders in all phases<br />

of campus activities and cooper<br />

ate in worthwhile endeavor ana<br />

join with faculty members on s<br />

basis of mutual interest and understanding.<br />

Eligibility to ODK is established<br />

on a point system.<br />

At the annual breakfast, Tau<br />

Circle usually initiates air associate<br />

member from the alumni<br />

'group, thereby recognizing a per<br />

son lor leadership who may nut<br />

thave met the requirements while<br />

at <strong>Wesleyan</strong>. The prospective initiate<br />

for this year has liot been announced.<br />

Each year ODK initiates one<br />

faculty member of <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

who has active status in all<br />

activities of the society for a<br />

Continued on fa';;-- : G


Page 2<br />

fo The Seniors<br />

This spring marks the 110th springtime of <strong>Ohio</strong>' Wes-"yan'- s<br />

existence, and once again early in June, the senior<br />

yaduates will walk under the awning to receive their long<br />

Dught after diplomas.<br />

Four years ago when these seniors were attired in<br />

fresh-na- n<br />

cans and first. walked'thrntiph Nirntinp uatp<br />

t o - o thov<br />

'J<br />

worn - -<br />

ust' a little scared and uncertain of what was in front of them<br />

uraauauy, xney Decame accumatea to tne college ana as the<br />

months past, gradually exerted more and more influence,<br />

soon taking their rightful place as students.<br />

Out of their numbers were to come outstanding Student<br />

council leaders, fine athletes, top flight journalists, memorable<br />

dramatic writers and players, and just plain good students.<br />

If they all put their talents to the most use after college,<br />

their class will indeed be remembered in <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

TO<br />

THE EDITOR<br />

Letter Not Given To<br />

Frosh Cheer Leader<br />

Dear Editor:<br />

It appears as <strong>if</strong> we have another<br />

example of "fraternity politics" in<br />

our midst. As far as we're concern<br />

ed, fraternity loyalty is a fine and<br />

desirable trait, but it's quite an<br />

other thing when we must exclude<br />

deserving persons to favor frater<br />

nity brothers.<br />

The awarding of letters to fresh<br />

man cheerleaders may be a minoi<br />

incident, but when we stoop to un-fai- r<br />

tactics to be assured that a<br />

fraternity brother will be the re- -<br />

"f"1'" an award, it s a more<br />

serious matter.<br />

it seems that, although there<br />

were six freshman rheeHoa,Wc<br />

this year, onlv four 1<br />

be awarded. Those whn t , v,<br />

freshman side of the football field<br />

and attended Weslevan Wlhn<br />

games should have no trouble in<br />

naming the cheerleaders who were<br />

most deserving of the awards.<br />

This was also understood Kv<br />

members of the athletic board and<br />

Athletic Booster's committee, but<br />

when the awards were made in<br />

chapel last Friday there was a<br />

slight d<strong>if</strong>ference in the list. The<br />

only possible exDla nation U7 nar,<br />

see for this is the fact that tWo<br />

making the final decision happen j<br />

10 De iraternity brothers of one of<br />

tne cheerleaders.<br />

It's too late to make anv r<br />

iranscnpt a couDle of wool<br />

and the clamours about my unfair<br />

ness have not yet died away.<br />

was unfair it seems. bops.i. T -- o<br />

ported on what I saw and did not<br />

write merely to soothe the nerves<br />

ana nil the egos of the performers.<br />

What qual<strong>if</strong>ies you to be so critical?"<br />

This is a question which I've<br />

heard over and over aeain sin<br />

penning the disputed article. Any<br />

i e view is necessarily personal oDin- -<br />

ilon, and the main r,,,o!<strong>if</strong>,.:<br />

M""-anL- u a<br />

reviewer has is his personal taste<br />

-<br />

h<br />

a<br />

n<br />

c<br />

r<br />

-<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> Wtlyin Transcript Wednesday, May 28, 1952<br />

Adieu<br />

Professor Roy Carter<br />

When the semester ends, Professor Roy E. Carter, Jr.,<br />

mv head of the Journalism Department will leave for Stanford<br />

university for a year's work toward a Ph. D. and also on<br />

a special project sponsored by the Kellogg foundation. When<br />

he returns to <strong>Wesleyan</strong> a year from now, he hopes to build<br />

up the Journalism department even more, so than he has<br />

done this year. We feel that Mr. Carter has done a commendable<br />

job in this respect during the year. Mr. Carter<br />

came to us only last September.<br />

We feel that a strong Journalism department is almost<br />

necessity to our college. As present day Journalism be- -<br />

romes more complex ana as it becomes increasingly neces-lar- y<br />

In order to be fair to all the performers,<br />

a reviewer must "call<br />

'em as he sees 'em."<br />

The level of college theatre is<br />

not amateurish. Many of the<br />

people connected with tho Hrm<br />

department's productions are as<br />

piring to professional careers, and<br />

<strong>if</strong> their histrionic abilities are not<br />

Pleasing to an anHiono tu<br />

should be told. It's the audience<br />

meyre seeking to please, is it<br />

not;<br />

for would be journalists to be specialized, certainly col- As far as I can see, those who<br />

leges will have to present intens<strong>if</strong>ied courses in the<br />

are<br />

news-<br />

defending the cause of mediocritypaper<br />

field. We<br />

in<br />

feel the<br />

that with Mr.<br />

name of<br />

Carter's influence which<br />

tolerance<br />

haven't much to stand on.<br />

will<br />

I<br />

be<br />

hope<br />

with us again after a year, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> will not be that next year's Transcript will<br />

caught sleeping.<br />

continue to review theatre on this<br />

We<br />

campus<br />

wish Mr. Carter with<br />

the best of<br />

an eye<br />

luck at to<br />

Sanf ord. We hope<br />

"separating<br />

the men from the boys,"<br />

that his specialized work in Mass<br />

rather<br />

Communications will give than indulging in recitations of<br />

him an even broader all-ov- er view in the field of journalism to false and meaningless praise for<br />

build an even<br />

every<br />

greater product<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> journalistic and<br />

department.<br />

performer the<br />

drama department thrusts our<br />

way.<br />

Yours Sincerely<br />

J. Smyser<br />

AK INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER Mr. Mussard Lauded<br />

ESTABLISHED IN 1M7<br />

By <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Student<br />

EDITOR<br />

BILL ELBON<br />

' ' Dear<br />

A.NAGING<br />

Sir:<br />

EDITOR DAVE HOWARD<br />

J3INESS MANAGER If you<br />

DOTTIE FREY<br />

have ever whIUpH rW-ciale<br />

Edilor Nancy champion<br />

Makeup Editor<br />

'<br />

Ken Massar. Doug Cherry,<br />

Sue Schwimmer, Virginia Cox<br />

K2ws Edilor Jano Marlin<br />

Assistant News Editor Dan Butler<br />

Senior Writers M. K. Murphy. Bonnie Bradley,<br />

Eleanor Bryenlon, Peg Banlz.<br />

Co-Sports<br />

Editor Duncan While, John Miller<br />

Society Editor Bea Hester<br />

Assistant Society Editor Ann Saville<br />

Adrartising Manager Ralph EIrick<br />

Circulation Manager Bin Cowden<br />

Staff Photographer . J phil piaciar<br />

Pub!:sned weekly. September tnrouen May :cept dunne niversi- -<br />

l.vs and examm.uon periods, jt holi.<br />

the Delaware Gaiette Entered 7s<br />

rla matter, under Act of Maul, second<br />

. 1837 Po5t Olnce . Delaware o"o Sub<br />

TV1 cr.pUon. a i'mitli yr .N'at.onai adveVtrnt<br />

i esentauve Nalional ArtverlKin service. LO Mudi-so- n ave N Y N-- y<br />

D1r.'Sh,!;"il",iJ P O Box ,4. uo,et . 70 South Sandu.k<br />

,<br />

Ivy Tower<br />

BY LEROY HOFFMAN<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> Weslevan is aeain makine<br />

an important contribution to pre<br />

serve our way of l<strong>if</strong>e. Not that its<br />

countless graduates who are now<br />

useful citizens are not doing their<br />

part, but I mean an additional sacr<strong>if</strong>ice<br />

that affects many undergraduates.<br />

This contribution involves<br />

President Flemming, Dr. Spencer<br />

and the student body.<br />

By this time students and fac<br />

Hoffman<br />

State De'partmen<br />

ish students a<br />

the side hallway on the basement<br />

floor of the chapel annex you have<br />

passed the office of Floyd Mass-uar- d.<br />

To be more spec<strong>if</strong>ic, Mus-sard- 's<br />

2-- A. office is in That's the speaking<br />

room right<br />

from personal<br />

next<br />

experience<br />

to the <strong>University</strong> it is<br />

Publicity<br />

an important time nf l<strong>if</strong>e A nH<br />

office.<br />

I am<br />

Though<br />

sure that the <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

Mussard's office may be<br />

in a<br />

second<br />

more<br />

lieutenants will<br />

or 'less<br />

leave theit<br />

obscure nhvsinal<br />

locality, mark upon the<br />

Mussard himself is neither<br />

obscure nor inactive. With<br />

this man rests the authority over<br />

campus parking regulations and<br />

rules. Under his controlling hand<br />

functions the Campus Work Project.<br />

This unique, yet unpublized<br />

program originated from Mussard.<br />

It's his baby, and he along with<br />

Robert Nemeschy, Assistant Dean<br />

of Men, deserves all the credit.<br />

The Campus Work Project is a<br />

program designed by Mussard to<br />

fulfill a dual purpose. Most impor<br />

tant ui me originator s eyes is its<br />

so-call- ed . ,,lt.r l;uA -<br />

4 used to President<br />

4 Flemming's con-.- 1<br />

tinual absence in<br />

9 the interest of the<br />

( defense effort,<br />

realizing its im-- j<br />

portance to us<br />

.1 all. But now that<br />

Dr. Spencer i s<br />

taking a year's<br />

J leave of absence,<br />

sponsored by the<br />

to give . Swed- -<br />

taste and ao- -<br />

preciation for American literature<br />

the sacr<strong>if</strong>ice hits closer to home.<br />

Many undergraduates whn have<br />

been looking forward to his courses<br />

in American literature and<br />

Shakespeare will have to forego<br />

that experience. Although his con<br />

tribution to the defense effort" is<br />

more indirect, it is probably as<br />

important in its way as Dr. Flemming's.<br />

i<br />

There is yet one more contribu<br />

tion to be mentioned. The senior<br />

ROTC graduates will soon be giving<br />

two year's of their l<strong>if</strong>e to mili<br />

tary service. To manv this mav<br />

seem relatively unimportant, but<br />

militarv<br />

mind. To those 'of Us who will soon<br />

be in the "wild blue yonder" as<br />

military missionaries, it is inrleeH<br />

reassuring that we will have such<br />

valuable assistants as Dr. Flem<br />

ming and Dr. Spencer in not mere<br />

ly spreading, but preserving the<br />

democratic and Christian values<br />

for which <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has al<br />

ways stood.<br />

And like General MacArthur we<br />

shall all return-t- o the shadow of<br />

the ivy tower and make sure that<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> continues to produce<br />

men and women who will<br />

ability to aid financially "needy slu-- ' preserve its tra d i Year<br />

In Review<br />

"Hardly seemed that we were a<br />

way," was the typical greeting last<br />

tall when we all returned to Del a<br />

ware after a peaceful, but enjoyable<br />

summer. Sunny fall skies baffled<br />

us who had expected to come back<br />

to a traditionally rainv ramnns<br />

The absence of Delaware drizzle<br />

for more than two weeks marie<br />

freshmen wonder why .they had<br />

Drougnt new raincoats.<br />

Everyone toured the new center<br />

tor campus l<strong>if</strong>e, the Memorial<br />

uiuun Duiiaing, and stopped tor a<br />

coke in the snack bar. The enlarged<br />

ROTC unit moved into the<br />

TUB and more than half of <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

male population, 600 to be<br />

exact, began to learn air science<br />

in earnest.<br />

October's hayrides, <strong>Home</strong>coming<br />

and Halloween seemed too soon<br />

part of the distant past. Lecture<br />

series speakers, Cornelia Otis<br />

Skinner and Robert Vogeler, en<br />

tertained and informed us. Mar<br />

gery Ward was queen-for-a-da- y at<br />

the victorious <strong>Home</strong>coming battle<br />

with Denison. The Ilninn was for<br />

mally dedicated; Shaw's Candida<br />

was staged, and we danced to<br />

Tommy Reed's band,<br />

The first artist in this year's<br />

concert series, Irmgard Seefried,<br />

lyric soprano, was greeted with<br />

echoing applause in Gray Chapel.<br />

Later Kerm Darkey heard not only<br />

clapping but roars of laughter as<br />

he opened the Campus Chest drive<br />

by auctioning off the most unlikely<br />

things on campus including two o'clock<br />

pers.<br />

.The frosh monopolized the first<br />

weeks in November with class<br />

elections, a<br />

tion.<br />

red-ca- p victory in the<br />

tug-of-w- ar traditional with the<br />

sophomores. The ATO's and the<br />

co-winne- Chi O's rs were of the<br />

Campus Chest variety show with<br />

a skit carrying us back to' the<br />

days of John the Baptist and Salome.<br />

'<br />

and we acclaimed him as the voar'c<br />

most valuable player. More laurels<br />

were awarded when seven men<br />

were tapped by ODK, senior men's<br />

honorary.<br />

Christmas celebration at school<br />

was highlighted by the annual<br />

Dawn Dance and a performance<br />

of Handel s Messiah.<br />

We found it hard to grind aeain<br />

with that old busy work, exams, but<br />

we were able to squeeze in a play<br />

going evening to see "SeHnnslv<br />

the delightful senior play, written<br />

by Bob Harper and Towne Ba nnnn<br />

with songs by Bob Kleinman.<br />

Madame de la Brucholerie<br />

.trench pianist, performed Bach<br />

and Beethoven as the second Cnn<br />

cert series artist and Senator Paul<br />

Douglas helped us to adjust our<br />

thinking before exams.<br />

Second semester eot underway<br />

as 247 freshmen women entered<br />

classes sporting new pledge pins.<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> students were anticipating,<br />

the opening of station WSfcN<br />

and Postle's plans for remodeling<br />

the old ROTC building for new<br />

quarters.<br />

Korea-bound- .. Okgill Kim said<br />

good bye to her <strong>Wesleyan</strong> class<br />

mates and left for home takine<br />

with her 5000 pounds of books and<br />

clothing for the students of Ehwa<br />

Women's university in Pusan. She<br />

lett a busy campus with plans for<br />

winter homecoming and the dedi<br />

cation of the MUB chapel.<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> took the political sDnt- -<br />

light when Michael DiSalle open<br />

ed his senatorial campaigning from<br />

the platform of Gray Chapel on<br />

Democratic recruitment day. Senator<br />

Bricker, his opponent, had re<br />

presented the Republicans the pre<br />

vious week.<br />

Dotty Huff reigned as Biiou<br />

queen for the second consecutive<br />

all-camp- us year at the Greek Week<br />

dance. Crossed sabers framed the<br />

ROTC queens the following week<br />

as campus gold braids turned out<br />

full force for the second annual<br />

military .ball.<br />

One hundred sixty-fiv- e students<br />

made the dean's list and then<br />

promptly dropped their studies to<br />

The-Bishop- s<br />

Dad's Day was joyful. campaign for their favorite student<br />

had battled through the snow body candidates. Dave Smith rode<br />

to make us <strong>Ohio</strong> conference foot- in on the bandwagon with Jean<br />

ball champs. Screenland Sketches, Carper winning the position of the<br />

produced the night before, . and vice president.<br />

Greek receptions after the eame The Chinese fantasy "Yellow<br />

rounded out the weekend. Jacket" pleased but puzzled first<br />

Senior men were honored in nighters, non-theat- re while goers<br />

chapel. Wally Cross was present danced at the Jeff duo. Dean Par<br />

ed as captain of the year's foot ker left for Cal<strong>if</strong>ornia to attend a<br />

ball squad: Dula-i- ce was elect- - national rushing worl!5hop, leaving<br />

,dJa-JJ- -- " werica team local coeds to fight out the rush<br />

More Words Of Wisdom<br />

After expounding my views on this page for a' whole<br />

year, I didn't think I'd ever be asked to write a "guest<br />

column." How well I know the situation, though. Someone<br />

is short of copy, so they flatter the has-bee- n into thinking thai<br />

they are just dying to have more of her words of wisdom,<br />

thus filling up an otherwise empty I<br />

space on the page. As you can see,<br />

the system always works.<br />

Thinking that April 19 was my<br />

last chance in print, I used up<br />

about all my farewell phrases, so<br />

I'm almost at a loss for words. Almost,<br />

but not quite.<br />

I could reminisce about the<br />

gloomy rainy day when we stepped<br />

--ywiMMx. , off the .bus from<br />

S Cincinnati and<br />

For instance, I didn't take experimental<br />

or systematic psychology,<br />

or psych of adjustment. In<br />

fact, I didn't even take psych 201,<br />

so I am usually left out of the<br />

conversation when some of mj<br />

friends and fellow smoker inhabi-<br />

tants get off on the<br />

'<br />

annals.<br />

However, as to their dailv existence nn rammis thoir<br />

parting will no doubt affect their fellow underclassmen like<br />

the parting over a hundred years ago of the first graduate,<br />

one William Godman.<br />

Like today's seniors, he was missed. He undoubtedly<br />

aiso missea tne college, tne walks under the big trees, thq<br />

sturdy looking stone Buildings, and the atmosphere that is<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>. And so, like him, these to go and so will the<br />

others go. For like old Mr. Chips: He was gone, and his<br />

school would remember him, but gradually it would begin<br />

to forget him. Then, he would be forgotten for in the end all<br />

things are forgotten and the school goes on.<br />

The Free Day Dilemma<br />

Several comnlaints have come un rerentlv nvr tho fart<br />

that there is no free day between the last day of classes and<br />

the first day of exams.<br />

Such a day of grace has been habitual here for the past<br />

several years, and many students feel that they will be<br />

handicapped by the lack of such a free day.<br />

The chief reason that the faculty has decided against Our purpose is not tn im,o thtr<br />

such a day of grace is because v w of Memorial - dav whirh falls nn<br />

J W cneerleader a guilty<br />

I J t. 11 1 I r-- - v ..<br />

conscience or<br />

rriuay, me tmra aay oi exams, inow, it would<br />

complex.<br />

seriously af-<br />

We do thinkfect<br />

V'esleyan's schedule to have two free days in one week,<br />

therefore, the faculty decided asainst a free dav on Tuesrlav<br />

It wa reasoned that in the first place, most colleges do<br />

- hp rio<br />

a cheerleading award and he cer<br />

tainly nad no part m the affair, i<br />

.There may have been mora en<br />

tne o.ecision. niit yo- -<br />

not have a free dav<br />

gardiesi, the<br />

between classes and exams uie awards<br />

that awaras wer9 were made,e,<br />

Wp-i!- .... "<br />

- I<br />

i "ol Ior attendance at games and<br />

leyan was umque in this respect. This showed, according to 'spirit by the cheerleaders, but be- -<br />

I<br />

fVltl'n Q tnf AlT nf rtvrtnn i c a. nr. 117 1<br />

men. a MIICP cause nf<br />

uajr ui of nrainr)inA.<br />

giaic io uui, as iieueiiy as some wesiey- - prejudices and<br />

Bii iiuaems seem<br />

grudges.<br />

to ininK.<br />

Secondly, the Administration felt that it was bad taste<br />

to hold exams on a day such as Memorial day. After all,<br />

Memorial day is a day set aside to honor America's dead on<br />

the field of battle, and for an American Institution to go about<br />

It's daily business on that day would indeed not be showing<br />

respect. This point about Memorial day, as we said, was the<br />

chief reason the administration decided against the free day<br />

on Tuesday.<br />

There are, of course, arguments on both sides. However,<br />

one thing which might be brought up is that generally<br />

Tuesday afternoon is free for most students. This would<br />

n?an that for a majority of <strong>Wesleyan</strong>ites, Tuesday afternoon<br />

and evening could be utilized for a study period. This would<br />

only leave the morning out as far as studying is concerned.<br />

In the end, it will be interesting to see just how this plan<br />

works out that is, will students get appreciatively lower<br />

grades on the first days of exams because they did not have<br />

this day of grace? That will be the Question. An aHministra.<br />

tion source has said that in future years exam time will be<br />

dropped back a week and this problem will not come up and<br />

the day of grace will be restored.<br />

1<br />

personal .<br />

Uur solution to the nrnhlem<br />

would be to award letters to all<br />

tnose who deserve them. Does the<br />

athletic department spend so mnrh<br />

money on coating the tennis courts<br />

wun tar that it cannotafford to buy<br />

une or two extra cheerleading let<br />

ters?<br />

oc<br />

or to award more letters this year,<br />

but let's hope that<br />

more Iraternity politics" in the<br />

iuture.<br />

Some Concerned Freshmen<br />

J. Smyser Uoholds<br />

Menagerie Review<br />

Dear Editor:<br />

1 wrote a review - -- --- nf - "Ti rti it ujaaa<br />

dent men who are willing to ex<br />

tend themselves in the way of light<br />

work. Additionally, the project has<br />

been widely complimented for the<br />

actual results it has produced.<br />

The men on this program are<br />

assigned to the various buildings<br />

on campus. Each afternoon they do<br />

general sweeping and cleaning.<br />

The d<strong>if</strong>ference made by the efforts<br />

of these crews has been noteI -<br />

praised by many members of 4<br />

rcu:i, stuaeni doct anj ti:..<br />

ni and visitors. Occasionally, other<br />

odd jobs arise, I.) which the crews<br />

mav be assianed. Durine the<br />

month of April the <strong>University</strong> want<br />

ed some evergreens for the area<br />

arliappnt tho tonnis rniirts on Selbv<br />

field. Student help along with Mus- -<br />

ard himself accomplished this<br />

task. Each afternoon the men<br />

would transplant trees. Each<br />

Menagerie" which appeared in the<br />

af-<br />

Goodbye, So Long, Farewell!<br />

I had better get on with this last scriptual endeavor before<br />

it falls into the limbo of perpetual procrastination. I dislike<br />

writing columns about as much as you probably dislike<br />

reading them.<br />

This is to be a farewell not in which I shall try to make<br />

known all the palpitations, pit- -<br />

falls, frustrations and sentimen<br />

talities of the<br />

ternoon Mussard would work right<br />

along side these men. If any fur<br />

ther inHinat.inn nf the rlenth and<br />

character of the man is needed this<br />

is it.<br />

Mussard deserves a lot of cre<br />

dit and praise. He is a wonderful<br />

guy, doing a wonderful job. It was<br />

nnt ton Inn? afo that, he himself<br />

was working his way through <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>. He now helps other men<br />

work their way through.<br />

Mussard also has a brother, Earl<br />

who operates <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

farms. Like his brother, Earl too<br />

willing to pive amhitintis stu<br />

dents a break that may aid them<br />

in getting a college education.<br />

- Sincerely,<br />

James R. Hinton<br />

pre-gra- d alumnus<br />

For sure there are a lot of<br />

thinffS fibotlt this institution<br />

which I feel sincerely and deeply,<br />

but which could never adequately<br />

be put into words. I could sit at<br />

this typewriter for weeks and<br />

still not begin to reveal all that<br />

me proiessors ana tneir- - -f<br />

dragged pur<br />

heavy suitcases,<br />

land<br />

u<br />

the situation.<br />

enough to fully describe Dr.<br />

Hubbart, perhaps then we might<br />

begin to relate the full aesthetic<br />

and cultural value of the course.<br />

The third scholastic pillar of<br />

my college career was Dr. Spen<br />

ser's Shakespeare course. Instruc<br />

tor Andrew Sparks, who left<br />

courses<br />

the<br />

nave done Ior me.<br />

faculty last year to serve a com<br />

have only to pulsory term with .the Navy, of-<br />

"I think<br />

ten of the hu referred to Dr. Ben as a<br />

'<br />

"literary<br />

k manities course<br />

genius."<br />

1 in my<br />

The<br />

sopho<br />

more one partakes of his<br />

, more year.<br />

lectures<br />

This<br />

the more he realizes<br />

the probable<br />

' one course un<br />

validitv anr? truth<br />

' of the statement It is n't.<br />

der Dr.<br />

nfton<br />

Ruth that one has the<br />

Davies did<br />

opportunity<br />

me<br />

of<br />

worKing with two<br />

more<br />

geniuses.<br />

spiritual There are other thi<br />

eood than anv- - which one thinks about ! I want<br />

3 thine I had re- - tor a walk the other night. I<br />

j. ..J ceivea up until walked from the Sigma Chi<br />

Keichard that time. nouse down to campus just as I<br />

I can still vividly remember had done numerous times before<br />

her telling us of Plato's allegory But this was a special walk<br />

of the cave. I picture ner as the one that onlv a senior xhnnt tn<br />

first to make known to me some graduate could take.<br />

glimmerings of the world of light, 1 stopped and t?azer7 at tvo<br />

a debt which can never be re- chapel tower. Ail that hae taker,<br />

paid.<br />

place here in the last four years<br />

Then there was the nersnnali- - ran panoramically through my<br />

zed tour through Florence, Rome mmd. I shant bore you by being<br />

and other culture centers, which mauann or over sentimental t<br />

Dr. Hubbart leads every spring shall merely suggest that who:<br />

semester in his Renaissance his your day comes take a similar<br />

tory course. If there were words walk and just think back.<br />

thoroughly<br />

soaked selves to<br />

v Stuyvesant hall<br />

four years ago,<br />

but that really<br />

no novel an<br />

)glas<br />

-- gles, since it's<br />

Allison been raining ever<br />

since and we're all quite used to<br />

And I could go on at great<br />

length about all the valuable<br />

courses which I have taken here at<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, and all the wonderful<br />

professors I have listened<br />

to. Sitting in the smoker listening<br />

to other, people studying out loud,<br />

however, I have come to the conclusion<br />

that I have missed some<br />

ing issue in Delaware dampness<br />

The faculty astonished all, how<br />

ever, with the coup de'tate of the<br />

Pan-Hellen- year, and a surprised ic<br />

council found itself with power to<br />

decree a first semester encounter<br />

with the Greeks for coeds of the<br />

class of !56.<br />

Elections and appointments<br />

came thick and fast; most campus<br />

organizations were soon operating<br />

under new management. Bill El- -<br />

bon, John Shuster, Lincoln Annas<br />

and Tanya Hudgel took top publi<br />

cations posts, Eleanor Bryenton<br />

and Jean Mehlhope assumed top<br />

AWS duties and Louise LePontius<br />

and Bonnie Bradley received the<br />

gavels of WRA and YMCA.<br />

June Sproule was already pre<br />

siding as Pan-He- l prexy. Dorbie<br />

Allison took some well deserved<br />

honors as she received the 1951-195- and group dynamics dis<br />

cussions.<br />

On a few occasions, after listen<br />

ing to them, I have wondered<br />

whether I should be classed as i<br />

paranoiac or a schizophrenic.<br />

Since I don't know what either of<br />

them are, I really don't have to<br />

worry. "When ignorance is bliss,<br />

'tis folly to be wise," you know.<br />

Seriously, though, I think all sen<br />

iors wiU agree with me that wa<br />

have learned a lot in these four<br />

years. How else would we be able<br />

to play "twenty questions" and<br />

work the New York Times' cross<br />

word puzzles?<br />

College l<strong>if</strong>e is great, and tha<br />

people here at <strong>Wesleyan</strong> are "tha<br />

greatest." My parting words to<br />

Delaware are the fervent hope that<br />

by the time this appears in print it<br />

of the most unique courses offered has stopped raining, and stays sun-her- e.<br />

. . ny through this weekend!<br />

of the Air held their national<br />

broadcast here.<br />

Also in April Dr. Ouillian reroi- -<br />

ved congratulationgs and good<br />

wishes upon his new appointment<br />

as president of Randolph MacoD<br />

Woman's College. Quillian's depar-tur-e<br />

began a mass exodus of <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> professors as seven mora<br />

announced their intended absences<br />

from the campus during 1952-5- 3.<br />

Students lamented the loss of such<br />

beloved faces as Dr. Spencer and<br />

Monnett's Miss Dooley.<br />

ODK tapped eleven new men<br />

bers on the eve of its annual Sut<br />

phur Swing. The theme, "evening<br />

in Paris," was quite . a contrajl<br />

with the Golddigger's Ball "Mai<br />

Hunt," sponsored by Mortar board.<br />

The women deferred their capping<br />

until May 9. when thev went ODK<br />

one better and selected twelvt new<br />

initiates.<br />

2<br />

The first dormitory safe-drivin- $500 g award for<br />

raid in foui<br />

years provided<br />

the Transcript and then was per<br />

the topic of cam.<br />

pus<br />

sonally<br />

conversation for two<br />

honored with the national<br />

weeks,<br />

and gave<br />

Pi Delta Epsilon President Smith<br />

medal.<br />

and tha<br />

new student<br />

In April<br />

council<br />

Dr. Hunter<br />

it's first real<br />

directed the<br />

headache. Coed<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> Players production<br />

"unmentionables"<br />

of the<br />

still draped<br />

Shakespeare<br />

the fraternltT housei<br />

comedy "Twelfth<br />

on Spring<br />

Night", and Gray Chapel<br />

Fever day, which<br />

audiences<br />

wai<br />

held<br />

heard anthropologist Margaret<br />

after all. An open-ai- r Spring<br />

Fever eve dance at the quarry<br />

Mead in the Lecture series,<br />

waj<br />

and<br />

a new feature this year and<br />

violinist<br />

tha<br />

William Primrose in the next day, for once, the sun<br />

concert<br />

smiled<br />

series. The Town Meeting<br />

Continued on Page 5<br />

Something For The Girls<br />

I :<br />

WA<br />

everything<br />

you ever<br />

wanted.,.<br />

1 Si<br />

s$ l , '.V.<br />

smmi rum<br />

O lantiait<br />

5" atZzeJ<br />

Here's Jantzen doing what Nature should have . . .<br />

slimming you to an irreducible minimum, pointing<br />

with pride to your prettiest curves. How? With vertical<br />

shirring for the long, tiny-waiste- d look . . . with<br />

the fabulous Stay-Br- a which molds to suit you, and<br />

slims the diaphragm with its band of power net.<br />

Fabric Jantzen's NYLASTIC ... a sweet blend of<br />

magic Nylon which dries while other fabrics are just<br />

thinking about it, power-moldin- g Laton, and<br />

smooth-bodie- d Acetate. 32-4- 0.<br />

14.05<br />

son's, C.J. of Course<br />

stimulus-respons- e


1<br />

3Te.dnei!Jay. May 21, 1053<br />

(7n 0 j! -<br />

7<br />

Is,<br />

I n L fir<br />

f<br />

9 '<br />

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1<br />

IIS<br />

..A<br />

If 6<br />

These fourteen seniors played a big part last fall in leading the 1951 Battlin' Bishops to the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

Conference football chapionship.<br />

Dr. Bernard Iddings Bell<br />

-- The traditional Merrick Lectures<br />

were again interesting and educational<br />

with Canon Bell the<br />

1952 lecturer. Author, minister<br />

and traveler, Dr. Bell's four day<br />

topic was "Plea for Constructive<br />

Rebels." Jayne Gray in a scene of the ATO and Chi Omega winning<br />

of the Campus Chest Variety show.<br />

Fnrman Riley, George Wishnevskey and Tom Selden drawing a laugh in the original show<br />

1 X<br />

1 i<br />

j f<br />

John fehuster, Tanya Hudgel and Bill Elbon were appointed next years editors of the Bijou, Owl<br />

and Transcript.<br />

--<br />

4arg i-v- Ward. t.<br />

:cood Srow 5.6 aw 1091 <strong>Home</strong>coming queen. Her attendants lelt to right<br />

vr. Jm S'tuak, Jm otAs<strong>if</strong>., Mtanemaan ad G;rry Cone<br />

i<br />

.1<br />

li<br />

-<br />

V' ?<br />

' -<br />

'-<br />

-'<br />

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skit<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> Wslyn Trnser!pt<br />

itHm<br />

Eleanor Bryenton and Jean Mehlhope were elected new Judicial<br />

and Executive presidents of AWS and were crowned Monnett<br />

weekend.<br />

Austrian singer Irmgarl Seefried was one of the many excellent<br />

performers brought to <strong>Wesleyan</strong> during the year.<br />

R. E. Flick, Lumberman's Mutual, hands Dorbie Allison a $500<br />

check for The Transcript's first prize in the safety contest.<br />

, f ' -- Hi<br />

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tl.<br />

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A late breakfast and then to the picnics was the schedule for the<br />

never-to-be-forgott- en Spring Fever Day.<br />

p. 3 v f<br />

ii; v<br />

1<br />

The Dawn Dance, an annual event here for those who can get<br />

up. early enough.<br />

ft:<br />

Frank Stanton<br />

"'-- 4 A<br />

t il 5<br />

I i<br />

1<br />

It<br />

Alumnus Frank Stanton, CBS<br />

President, aided <strong>Wesleyan</strong> in setting<br />

up their radio station.<br />

Dave Smith<br />

Dave Smith stepped out as the<br />

capable editor of the Bijou to become<br />

president of the student<br />

body, succeeding Bill Welp.<br />

v is<br />

i<br />

n<br />

'V '", j<br />

PageS<br />

Dottie Huff, center, was the Brjou queen. Her attendants were Trish Oldfather and Tina Bowie. -<br />

Yep, that's ours. Fraternity men had to do a little close inspection<br />

last winter after someone l<strong>if</strong>ted several fraternity trophies., .<br />

One of the outsanding features on campus this year was the opening of the radio station, WSLN.<br />

Above some of the staff rehearses.<br />

I , ) ' " St ' ' : i<br />

- .<br />

"Deep Are the Roots" was one of the year's best plays put on at --<br />

Willis high school.<br />

, 4<br />

ix M, !"<br />

Watch that hip. brother! A jump at center and the basketball team was off to a flying start. They<br />

took third in the conference this year- -


Page 4<br />

Denison; 2. Huntsberger, Mount<br />

Union; 3. Fletcher, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 4<br />

Louch, Wooster; 5. Kobelt, Wittenberg.<br />

Time :15.2.<br />

Shot Put 1. Hayward, Wooster;<br />

2. Prittie, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 3. Hosket<br />

Wittenberg; 4. DeJong, Denison;<br />

S. Barber, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>. 46 feet 6 1-- 4<br />

inches.<br />

Discus 1. Hayward, Wooster<br />

2. Prittie, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 3. Montague<br />

Muskingum; 4. Albrecht, Oberlin<br />

5. Hosket, Wittenberg. 140 feet 4<br />

7-- 8 inches (a new conference re<br />

cord).<br />

880-Ya- rd Relay<br />

1. <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

(Jack Collins, Bar Fondron, Don<br />

Niswander, Charlie Beckley); 2.<br />

Mount Union; 3. Muskingum; 4.<br />

Denison; 5. Wittenberg. Time 1:31.4<br />

Mile Run 1. Allison, Wooster<br />

2. Sharp, Denison; 3. May, Woos<br />

ter; 4. Staley, Oberlin; 5. Zagary,<br />

Otterbein. Time 4:30.1.<br />

440-Ya- rd Dash 1. "Niswander<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 2. Anderson, Wooster;<br />

3. Beckley, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 4. Damerow<br />

Mount Union; 5. Schultz, Oberlin.<br />

Time :50.8.<br />

880-Ya- rd Run 1. Smith, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>;<br />

2. Ryne, Wittenberg; 3.<br />

Wright, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 4. Oliver, Akron;<br />

5. Wiich, Capital. Time 2:02.4.<br />

220-Ya- rd Dash 1. Petzinger,<br />

Mount<br />

bein;<br />

Union; 2. Barkoff, Otter-<br />

3. Fondron, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 4.<br />

Smith, Mount Union; 5. Beckley,<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>. Time<br />

Broad Jump<br />

:21.8.<br />

1. Ventries, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>;<br />

2. Boggs, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 3. Palmer,<br />

Oberlin; 4. MacDowell, Oberlin;<br />

5. Grimm, Wittenberg. 24 feet<br />

5 3-- IZZS2<br />

4 inches (new conference, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>,<br />

and Selby Field records).<br />

Two-Mil- e Run 1. Allison, Wooster;<br />

2. Foltz, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 3. Lovett,<br />

Akron; 4. May, Wooster; 5. Emery,<br />

Oberlin. Time 10:11.6.<br />

Your Coat of Arms<br />

Applied<br />

To Any Piece of<br />

Jewelry<br />

U. M. CEKECICT<br />

Jeweler<br />

Fort Delaware Bldg.<br />

uw1<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Transcript Wednesday, May 28, 1952<br />

n fr (7 ft<br />

run<br />

Runners Take Meet Vith Unexpected<br />

Ease, Winning 6 Firsts And 73 Points<br />

Wooster And Mount Union Finish Second And<br />

Third; Ventries Sets Record In Broad Jump<br />

George Gauthier's runners didn't have to wait for the<br />

Jiigh jump to give them the conference championship last<br />

Saturday. As was predicted, the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> thinclads easily<br />

defeated eleven other colleges in winning their second<br />

straight <strong>Ohio</strong> Conference Championship at Selby field.<br />

Dan Ventries<br />

Dan Ventries, Bishop senior from<br />

Washington, D. C, who set <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

Conference, Selby field, and<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> records in the broad<br />

jump.<br />

Zadok Dumkopf, our favorite<br />

backyardener, has announced<br />

that this season he positively refuses<br />

to buy any plant food.<br />

Times are tough enough, 6ays he,<br />

without naving to buy groceries<br />

for a flock of dandelions.<br />

FLOYD GREASAMAR<br />

1 1 Spring St.<br />

22432<br />

GOOD LUCK<br />

SENIORS<br />

For Graduation G<strong>if</strong>ts<br />

Books<br />

Type Writters<br />

Pen and Pencil Sets<br />

Stationary<br />

Come in and See Our Supply<br />

LEE'S<br />

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7952 <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

The freshmen all-ye- ar champions<br />

will depenj upon the outcome<br />

of the golf and tennis tournaments.<br />

SAE is leading now<br />

with 1288 points followed by the<br />

Sig Eps with 1283; Sigma Chi is<br />

third with 1100.<br />

Sigma Alpha Epsilon put<br />

themselves out in front by<br />

carrying off the volleyball<br />

crown.<br />

(SH<br />

Conference Gold<br />

. f,T,!!1!tlO. JW:W7 VV! f<strong>if</strong>AyT'<br />

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Good Printing<br />

. 9 East William Street Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

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SUN-MO- N<br />

MARLENE<br />

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Indians, Giants Lead As<br />

One-Quart- er Mark Nears<br />

BY JIM WILKINS<br />

With the major league baseball season almost one<br />

quarter completed, league standings show several<br />

AmwaI rrmn -- i .r 1W luufkv<br />

ttt nomco.<br />

L"f-c'- y personal Jlacemnt aem. j<br />

Trine college uean lor catalog.<br />

KATHARINE GIBBS<br />

tmcG0 li, sit sw.r a. motcii. ii riintu a<br />

pre-seaso- n<br />

Eleven Veterans<br />

Return To Next<br />

Year's Ball Club<br />

place Wooster. <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has<br />

the shot put with<br />

a heave of 46 feet 6 -- The Bishops more than doubled the score on second- -<br />

73 points, Wooster 34, and<br />

Mount, Union was third with 30. Denison, the conference<br />

indoor champs, finished fourth.<br />

'<br />

Two new records were set tim<br />

ing the day. Bishop senior Dan<br />

Ventries cracked three records<br />

in the broad jump with a leap<br />

of 24 feet 5<br />

14 inches.<br />

High individual for the 49th annual<br />

meet was Tom Petzinger of<br />

Mount Union who scored 11 points.<br />

He won the 100, 220, and anchored<br />

the second place team in the 880<br />

relay. Jim Barkoff of Otterbein<br />

had two seconds and a fourth for<br />

ten points, and Dave Allison and<br />

Hayward of Wooster had ten a<br />

piece. Allison breezed to victories<br />

in both the mile and two mile.<br />

Don Niswander flashed to victory<br />

in the 440 edging Bob Anderson<br />

of Wooster and workhorse<br />

Nis-wande-<br />

Charlie Beckley. This was r's<br />

first victory over Beck-le-y.<br />

Sophomore Don Foltz kicked a- -<br />

way from three other good two<br />

milers on the last lap to finish sec<br />

ond behind Allison.<br />

Bill Smith and Jim Wright poured<br />

it on in the stretch to finish<br />

1-- 3 in the 880. It was close to a<br />

dead heat as they were timed in<br />

2:02.4.<br />

Jerry Prittie took second in the<br />

discus and shot put and "Red'<br />

Smith vaulted 12 feet for a third<br />

in that event.<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> captured both relays<br />

as expected. Times for the 880<br />

and mile relays were 1:31.4 and<br />

3:27.3 respectively.<br />

Other <strong>Wesleyan</strong> athletes who<br />

scored points included Bar Fondron<br />

with a second in the 100 and a<br />

third in the 220, Jim Boggs with<br />

a third in the 100 and a second in<br />

the broad jump, and Bill Fletcher<br />

with a third in the low hurdles.<br />

This was <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s eighth<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> Conference Track Champion<br />

ship. The home club took six firsts<br />

in f<strong>if</strong>teen events plus many second<br />

and third place finishes. The Bis<br />

hops were shut out in only the low<br />

hurdles and the mile run.<br />

100-Ya- rd Dash 1. Petzinger<br />

Mount Union; 2. Fondron, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>;<br />

3. Boggs, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 4. Bark<br />

off, Otterbein; 5. Hoch, Wittenberg.<br />

Time :10.1.<br />

120-Ya- rd High Hurdles 1. Ames<br />

1-- 4 inches. He broke<br />

the conference, Selby field, and<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> records. Ventries<br />

bad fouled on two previous trys<br />

during the afternoon.<br />

Earlier in the morning, John<br />

Hayward of Wooster broke the conference<br />

discus record with a toss<br />

of 140 feet 4 7-- n<br />

220-Ya- rd Low Hurdles 1. Hunts<br />

berger, Mount Union; 2. Barkoff,<br />

Otterbein; 3. Louch, Wooster; 4.<br />

Ames, Denison; 5 Hock, Wittenberg.<br />

Time :24.2.<br />

Mile Relay 1. <strong>Wesleyan</strong> (Bar<br />

Fondron, Bill Smith, Don Niswander,<br />

Charlie Beckley); 2. Capital;<br />

3. Mount Union; 4. Oberlin; 5. Wit- Left to right Fred Vickers, Chuck Kaiser, Ed<br />

tenberg. Time 3:27.3.<br />

pictured with the <strong>Ohio</strong> Conference<br />

8 inches. He also Pole Vault 1. Hilberry, Ober-<br />

took a first in<br />

lin; 2. Burgess, Denison; 3. Smith,<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>; 4. (tie) Blair, <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

and Landrud, Denison. 12 feet 8 Golf Record Is<br />

1-- 8. inches.<br />

High Jump 1. (tie) Herrett,<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> and Kaufmann, Oberlin;<br />

3. (tie) Ventries, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, Reid<br />

and DeJong, Denison. 6 feet.<br />

Total Score<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> ... 73<br />

Wooster . 34<br />

Mount Union 30<br />

Denison 24<br />

Oberlin 22V2<br />

Wittenberg 14<br />

Otterbein 11<br />

Muskingum .... 6<br />

Akron 5<br />

Capital 5<br />

8-- 3<br />

Oberlin Wins Final<br />

Coach Strimer's golf team ended<br />

up the season with an 8-- 3 record<br />

after losing to Oberlin 12 7y2<br />

on the Yeomen's home course. The<br />

Bishops were ahead going into the<br />

final nine holes, but four Yeomen<br />

outshot the <strong>Wesleyan</strong>ites to win<br />

the match.<br />

This is the first time this year<br />

that <strong>Wesleyan</strong> was ahead on the<br />

first nine and went on to lose the<br />

match. This also was the first time<br />

the Bishops were ever beaten on<br />

the last hole.<br />

Ronnie Kulp shot a 36 on. the fi<br />

nal nine to end up one under par<br />

on that nine. This is the first time<br />

this year that a <strong>Wesleyan</strong> player<br />

has shot under par on a golf<br />

course.<br />

Kulp's 75 along with that of<br />

Siler's of Oberlin marked the lowest<br />

score a college player has ever<br />

shot on the Oberlin course.<br />

Phi Gams Lead<br />

In l-- '<br />

' M<br />

-- ,'" 1 i<br />

it<br />

it<br />

Thomas, Ronnie Kulp, and Bill Amick. Thev are<br />

Golf trophy which they won for<br />

<strong>OWU</strong>'s Athletic Season<br />

BY DUNCAN WHITE<br />

1952 saw <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> athletes add three conference<br />

trophies to the shelves in Edwards gymnasium. The football<br />

squad started the year off right by winning eight of their<br />

nine scheduled contests including all of their conference<br />

games.<br />

Those of us who inhabited the<br />

stands at Selby field will long re-<br />

hard-nose- member the d football<br />

played by a team which was rated<br />

the underdog in most of its early<br />

games.<br />

Seldom has a small college like<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> seen a left end the caliber<br />

of Dale Bruce. "Daisy" made the<br />

catches which won those close<br />

games against Case and Denison<br />

and it was the same<br />

M Race<br />

The intramural program<br />

comes to its conclusion this<br />

week. Yet to be decided at this<br />

writing are the champions of<br />

upperclass softball and volleyball<br />

and the individual winners<br />

in both the upperclass and<br />

freshman tennis and golf<br />

tournaments.<br />

The upperclass totals without<br />

the results --of those sports are Phi<br />

Gamma Delta first with 1545,<br />

Sigma Chi following with 1381,<br />

Sig Ep third with 1322, Beta next<br />

with 1264 and SAE f<strong>if</strong>th with<br />

1196.<br />

Although SAE is now holding<br />

the f<strong>if</strong>th position, they still may<br />

be the ones to overtake the lead<br />

ers Coming out on top in their<br />

volleyball and softball league, it<br />

remains to be seen <strong>if</strong> they can<br />

take to plaurels in the champion-game- s.<br />

glue-fingere- favorites finding d<strong>if</strong>ficulty in 'Keeping abreast of the leaders,<br />

while several dark horses are in the thick of the pennant<br />

races.<br />

First of all in the American League Cleveland is leading<br />

over the second place Senators, who are doing much better<br />

than they were expected to do. The Indians pitching has<br />

been holding up fine so far with Early Wynn the only starter<br />

to lose his regular turn on the mound.<br />

Bobby Feller has had some bad<br />

luck with the team failing to hit<br />

behind him, but his recent victory<br />

over the St. Louis Browns may<br />

change this situation. Bob Lemon<br />

looks as <strong>if</strong> his bad seasons are<br />

over while Mike Garcia is living<br />

up to his records.<br />

The world champion New York<br />

pre-seaso- Yankees are far behind n<br />

predictions. The loss of Joe DiMag-gi- o<br />

is going to be felt as the sea-<br />

the second year in a row. son progresses, and this along with<br />

some trades which did not pan<br />

out is going to cause the Yanks<br />

some unhappiness. Irv Noren, ac<br />

quired for Jensen and Shea, is not<br />

hitting nor is Gil MacDugald or<br />

Hank Bauer, i<br />

injected in the Yankee<br />

T<br />

cai scores, un paper the game<br />

looked to be a close one with the<br />

winner taking the championship.<br />

The "experts" still had not<br />

found that the underrated Bishops<br />

had something that did not<br />

show on a tally sheet.<br />

With the arrival of winter, the<br />

sports program went indoors. Wes<br />

leyan students must have decided<br />

d<br />

receiver --who lead the routs of Buf- that a team which, for the first<br />

falo and Muskingum. The fact that<br />

time in three years was without<br />

the Associated Press picked him to the services of Jud Millhon, could<br />

All-American<br />

the Little team only<br />

not be worth seeing so they stayed<br />

confirmed what we already knew,<br />

away from the games by the hun<br />

that Daisy was the best.<br />

dreds.<br />

There were other stars, who,<br />

Surprisingly enough to those fair<br />

while not shining as brightly as weather friends, the Bishop bas<br />

Dale, still contributed more than KetDaiiers ended tne season with a<br />

their share to <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s vic- better record than they had com<br />

tories.<br />

piled the year before.<br />

John Vossers kicked a field goal John Bauknecht, Bob Cover-dal- e,<br />

with seconds to go in the Case<br />

Bill Smith, and Jack Allen<br />

game to give the Bishops a three-poi- returned, the last for only until<br />

nt<br />

victory when they expected a February. The players who got<br />

loss and would have settled for a<br />

the headlines, however, were<br />

tie.<br />

newcomers.<br />

Jack Allen played excellent de- Jack McKinnie and Bob Kimble<br />

fensive ball, ran well, passed oc- came up from last year's fresh<br />

casionally and proved himself to man team and played excellent<br />

be a steady and often standout ball. Bob scored 36 points during<br />

player at anything he tried. one two game stretch of the sea<br />

Hayden Buckley's strong right son and was always a defensive<br />

arm led the attack and his punt- standout. McKinnie came into his<br />

ing kept the opposition down at own near the end of the season<br />

their end of the field. Dwight when he began to use his height and<br />

McMahon and Johnny Blair ran speed more effectivly under the<br />

well through the holes opened backboards.<br />

up by the linemen.<br />

uick ourDrooK transferred in<br />

The unhearalder players up front<br />

from Jackson Junior College and<br />

included Wally Cross, Chuck Bar- was immediately placed on the<br />

ber, Chuck Kaiser and Vossers. first ten. Chuck Myers,, a substi<br />

The high spot of the season prob- tute the year before, who seldom<br />

ably was reached, as far as the<br />

saw action, became a "spot play<br />

team itself was concerned, in the er. Myers stepped in for both<br />

rout of Muskingum 69-- 6. Mus-kie- The forwards s and at times even at the<br />

1<br />

were a tough ball club which<br />

guard positions.<br />

had beaten the same teams that Bill Michaels was the big gun<br />

the Bishops had by almost identi- - of the team, his shooting was<br />

line-u- p or<br />

they will be lucky to finish in third<br />

place.<br />

The Boston Red Sox under the<br />

new direction of Lou Boudreau are<br />

playing unpredictable ball. One<br />

day they look good both in the<br />

better than average and his rebounding<br />

was excellent.<br />

Captain Bob Coverdale was a<br />

disappointment to most of the<br />

Bishop followers, however, looking<br />

back at his record we see that Bob<br />

connected on over 40 percent of<br />

his shots. His trouble was that the<br />

spectators were apt to compare<br />

him with Jud, and anyone would<br />

suffer in a comparison with the incomparable<br />

Mr. Millhon.<br />

All-in-all<br />

it was a successful year<br />

for the Strimermen, they played<br />

interesting basketball against some<br />

tough competition. It's too bad that<br />

more members of the student body<br />

didn't see fit to attend the games.<br />

Spring came and you can<br />

easily remember what the headlines<br />

of April and May of 1952<br />

blared out. The golfers took the<br />

conference championship, with<br />

Ron Kulp the tournament's medalist.<br />

The tennis team won more<br />

than they lost over the season.<br />

The baseballers had a little harder<br />

time in winning five of twelve<br />

games. And, of course, the cinder-me- n<br />

once again did what is now<br />

becoming a habit, they won the<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> Conference track meet.<br />

It has been a good year for <strong>Wesleyan</strong>.<br />

in sports as well as other<br />

curricular and extra-curricul- ar field and at bat and the next day<br />

they fall apart. The Red Sox pitching<br />

staff is lacking enough relia<br />

ble starters who have control<br />

New Yorkers with a sizzling<br />

activities.<br />

It has been a year that<br />

we'll like to remember.<br />

Never enough college<br />

I women with Gibbs<br />

secretarial training<br />

J u nicer rne<br />

demand<br />

8-- BY DICK SURBROOK<br />

With the baseball season<br />

completed, Coach Les Michael<br />

is already looking toward next<br />

year, and well he may, as only<br />

two men will be missing from<br />

this year's team through grad<br />

uation.<br />

Hayden Buckley and Joel Ban<br />

co-captai- ner, who were ns elected<br />

of this year's team, will be hard<br />

to replace, for "Buck" lead the<br />

team in batting with a .360 aver<br />

0 age and Bahner, besides his ex<br />

pitching record and the lowest cellent defensive work, picked up<br />

earned run average in the league the most walks on the squad, 10,<br />

Whitey Lockman, Bobby Thomp and finished with a respectable.<br />

son and Al Dark are hitting --win<br />

262 percentage.<br />

Michael is hoping that Bob Rosover<br />

.300 which tends to offset the seland and Frank Fischer will fill<br />

less of Monte Irvin and the forth the gap left by these two men in<br />

coming los sof Willie Mays to the the outfield. Rosseland started the<br />

Army.<br />

season in centerfield and played<br />

The "Dodgers are relying on the excellent ball before falling into<br />

successful pitching of Preacher a batting slump.<br />

Roe, Carl Erskine and rookie <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s infield situation<br />

Billy Loes along with the slugging looks good for the comnig year.<br />

of Duke Snider, Billy Cox and the Third baseman Ed Davis, short-<br />

perennial terror, Jackie Robinson stop Paul Kisseberth, second<br />

The big question marks are wheth baseman Dick Surbrook, and<br />

er the pitching staff can withstand first sacker Chuck Myers will be<br />

the summer drive<br />

back from this year's starting<br />

The Philadelphia Phillies, St lineup.<br />

Louis and the Boston Braves are Kisseberth hit .320, scored 15<br />

bunched together in the second di runs including two<br />

vision. The Cards have the potential<br />

and <strong>if</strong> they pickup their hit<br />

ting which is now .252 they should<br />

replace the Reds in the first di<br />

vision.<br />

In my opinion the Cleveland Ind<br />

ians look like the boys to beat in<br />

the American league. They have<br />

the hitting and probably the best<br />

pitching staff in the majors today<br />

If they can continue to defeat the<br />

Yanks and the Red Sox as they<br />

have so far, the world series will<br />

be played in Lakefront Stadium.<br />

On a long shot, I pick the New<br />

York Giants to squeeze past the<br />

Brooks. Sal Maglie may be headed<br />

for a big year and the support of<br />

Larry Jansen and Jim Hearn will<br />

make his load lighter. Brooklyn on<br />

the other hand may find d<strong>if</strong>ficulty<br />

in the stretch as they did last year<br />

Their pitching is wobbly and un<br />

certain.<br />

home-run- s, and<br />

lead the infielders defensively with<br />

a .923 mark.<br />

Surbrook batted .306, the only<br />

Bishop regular besides Buckley and<br />

Kisseberth to top the .300 mark.<br />

Rightfielder Jim Pumphrey<br />

will be back to cover his section<br />

of the outfield. Jim hit well, his<br />

average was .298, and his tremendous<br />

speed made him a defensive<br />

standout and a good man<br />

to have on the base paths.<br />

The pitching prospects look good<br />

also, Dave Kraft, who was credited<br />

with four of <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s five<br />

victories should be better than ever<br />

as a junior. Freshmen Art Haight<br />

and Wally Bonebrake should improve<br />

with a year's experience behind<br />

them and John Peckinpaugh<br />

may regain the control that enabled<br />

him to win three games<br />

without a loss during the 1950 sea--<br />

Congratulations<br />

TO THE<br />

GRADUATES<br />

keftfatrtt's<br />

Of Delaware<br />

MEET YOUR<br />

24 HOUR SERVICE<br />

AT THE<br />

7<br />

FRIENDS


iVednesday, May 28, 1952<br />

GOP<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

m picknickers from dawn 'till dark<br />

F. D. R. Jr. impressed Demos<br />

md everyone else when he spoke<br />

ii a Monday chapel and forum<br />

Campus l<strong>if</strong>e went high-gea- into r<br />

jn May, as final plans took shape<br />

'or Monnett weekend. With the ar<br />

rival of the mothers, the "Fem<br />

nine Touch" celebration began in<br />

sarnest. Tom Selden's production<br />

of "The Glass Menagerie" made<br />

history and the production of Gil<br />

bert and bullivan s .Patience was<br />

termed professional. The ROTC<br />

entertained moms with a drill<br />

parade before the annual corona<br />

tion procession, and "Powder Puff<br />

Parade" was the theme of the afternoon<br />

style show. Sunday was<br />

highlighted by Mildred Moody Eak-in'- s<br />

convocation address and the<br />

Women's Glee club concert. As<br />

Mothers departed, weary daughters<br />

returned to books with visions oi<br />

fast approaching exams, or, unable<br />

to resist inviting beds, dreamt of<br />

serenades, roses and fraternity<br />

pins.<br />

The republican mock convention<br />

and the second annual Faculty Fol<br />

lies, titled this year "Stars and<br />

Bars," brought the year's activities<br />

to a close. Freshmen held a final<br />

picnic at the quarry, while the rest<br />

Year in Review<br />

(Continued from Page 2)<br />

Taft." Taft backers mounted to<br />

the stage to give a campaign<br />

song, but were, nearly drowned<br />

out by a loud "We Like Ike" from<br />

the floor.<br />

Although it took six ballots to<br />

receive a majority vote. Eisen<br />

hower was in the lead all the<br />

way. The delegates were instructed<br />

how to vote in the first<br />

ballot; thus the votes were well<br />

distributed among the five can<br />

didtaes.<br />

In tha second balloting,<br />

Eisenhower lead with 100<br />

roles; Taft was second with 63;<br />

Warren had 44; Stassen and<br />

MacArihur, each 1.<br />

Eisenhower lacked only one<br />

vote of the necessary majority in<br />

the fourth ballot. It then began<br />

to look as <strong>if</strong> a darkhorse candi<br />

date might be elected, as <strong>Ohio</strong>'s<br />

Taft backers sh<strong>if</strong>ted their votes<br />

to Warren and other states followed<br />

suit.<br />

After the f<strong>if</strong>th ballot found<br />

the vote again at a standstill, the<br />

assembly voted that only a<br />

majority vote of the delegates<br />

then present should be neccessary<br />

to elect a candidate. On the sixth<br />

ballot, Eisenhower received this<br />

majority with 130 votes, compared<br />

to 67 for Warren and one each<br />

to Taft and MacArthur. A motion<br />

was then made and passed<br />

to make the nomination unanimous<br />

Nominations for vice president<br />

were Dr. Arthur S. Flem-min- g<br />

by Alan Geyer and Sen.<br />

Wayne Morris of Oregon by<br />

Jim Hearn. Flemming was<br />

overwhelmingly chosen by acclamation.<br />

A convention atmosphere was<br />

added by disputes on technicalities<br />

and a general confusion of<br />

cheering and shouting. The contesting<br />

of votes began in the afternoon<br />

when Delaware submitted<br />

five votes, was challenged<br />

and found to have only three<br />

delegates present. This continued<br />

until late in the evening when<br />

Cappy Breese challenged New<br />

York's vote and Breese was<br />

found to be an unauthorized<br />

Professor Of<br />

The Week<br />

The professor for last week's col<br />

umn was Prof. Paul Huser of the<br />

French department. Can you guess<br />

from the following clues who the<br />

featured professor is for this week?<br />

After graduation from Westchester<br />

Teacher's college, he taught<br />

two years in a rural school and did<br />

graduate work at Perm State university.<br />

Service in the first World<br />

War interrupted his studies but he<br />

went to the <strong>University</strong> of Mont-pellie- r<br />

after fourteen months duty.<br />

Serving as principal of a vocational<br />

school in Gettysburg, Pa.,<br />

kept him too far away from his<br />

favorite subject, public speaking,<br />

so he accepted <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s offer<br />

to teach in the speech department<br />

in 1925.<br />

Ever since then he has been<br />

kept busy coaching and judging<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> debate teams. Last year<br />

was especially busy, he served as<br />

secretary of the <strong>Ohio</strong> College<br />

Teachers of Speech and arranged<br />

all intercollegiate debating in the<br />

state.<br />

For relaxation, this professor enjoys<br />

hunting in the deer country<br />

of Pennsylvania where he has a<br />

small cabin. While in Delaware he<br />

hunts pheasants and rabbits along i<br />

with other faculty members.<br />

Find out who this professor is by<br />

looking at the Professor of the<br />

Week bulletin board in the ground<br />

floor corridor of the library.<br />

You will win a box of tweet, tweet<br />

bird ieed?? V. t'l E-- w<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> Should Have<br />

Good Teams Next Year<br />

BY JOHN MILLER<br />

After a banner year in athletics, I am predicting an even<br />

greater year for <strong>Wesleyan</strong> teams in 1952-53-. Close examina<br />

tion of the material that is returning is a pretty good reason<br />

for a prediction of this kind.<br />

It would be hard to hope for a football team next fall<br />

that would parallel the 1951 conference champions, however<br />

there is still a good supply of untapped football material in<br />

college.<br />

Although we probably won't<br />

win the conference again, coach<br />

Frazer's men with "the light<br />

touch" should compile another<br />

good record.<br />

All but two men from a good<br />

basketball team return next<br />

year. Coach Strimer's fast-brea- k<br />

ing quintet shouldn't feel the loss<br />

of seniors John Bauknecht and<br />

Bob Coverdale <strong>if</strong> Jack McKinnie<br />

and Dick Surbrook come through<br />

as expected.<br />

The swimming, team loses Don<br />

Hummel but has a flock of sophomores<br />

and juniors back plus<br />

some incoming freshmen of quality.<br />

Harry Newell and Bill Plav-ca- n<br />

will be our top men again<br />

next winter.<br />

The tennis team should be<br />

second to Kenyon nxt spring<br />

with the whole squaj returning<br />

save Pete Hauck. As a matter of<br />

fact, the netmen should be well<br />

HAVE A VERY<br />

jump and Fondron in the dashes.<br />

Jim Wright should finish first or<br />

second consistantly next year.<br />

"Red" Smith anj Jim Harpham<br />

are just as good as Blair in the<br />

pole vault right now. Dick Mc-Clintoc-<br />

k<br />

will be back in the hur<br />

dles, Conceivably, <strong>if</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

picked up some good freshmen<br />

next fall, we could even surpass<br />

this year's record anj take our<br />

third straight conference title.<br />

inis, tor the most part, may<br />

be wishful thinking but it is<br />

nevertheless a good bet. It would<br />

also be a good idea next year to<br />

cut down the huge intramural<br />

program. Such events as foul<br />

shooting, badminton, and ping<br />

pong could be dropped. A sport<br />

like ping pong could be completed<br />

on an individual basis not<br />

involving the all-ye- ar trophy.<br />

I think that next year, the Aih<br />

letic Department might fix their<br />

budget to include modern base<br />

ball un<strong>if</strong>orms for the diamond<br />

men and also buy Louisville Slug<br />

gers instead of Wooiworth bats.<br />

On the basis of the returning<br />

material and the usual good crop<br />

of freshmen, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

of the campus buckled down' to<br />

D-slips.<br />

ward off With fond recol<br />

lections, seniors leafed through the<br />

new Bijou, sold their belongings at fixed for a number of years with<br />

fc-eshmen<br />

the senior auction and ordered<br />

Dick Taylor, "Stud"<br />

their caps and gowns.<br />

Boyle, and Len Treash.<br />

Dan Ventries' new conference George Gauthier will attempt<br />

broad-jum- p record sparked the to fill the gap left by the grad-<br />

track team to win the Conference uation of Dan Ventries, Bill Flet-<br />

championship again.<br />

cher, Bar Fondron, Bill Smith,<br />

And as Pop Hadden hauled down Johnny Blair, and Jack Collins.<br />

the trunks, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> put the<br />

Jim Boggs will do an excellent athletic record shoul continue to<br />

job spelling<br />

110th candle on its birthday<br />

Ventries in the broad shine 1952-5- 3. in<br />

cake.<br />

Tennis Team Ends Season With<br />

4- -3 Victory Over Vilfenberg<br />

Player AB R H RBI Pet<br />

Buckley I 50 15 18 11 .360<br />

Kisseberth 53 15 15 8 .320<br />

Surbrook 49 11 15 3 .306<br />

Pumphrey . 47 10 14 3 .298<br />

Bahner 42 8 11 5 .262<br />

Wehrung 2 111 .500<br />

Fischer . 4 0 1 1 .250<br />

Peckinpaugh 9 2 2 2 .222<br />

Wells ... 31 5 6 1 .190<br />

Davis 32 6 6 10 .190<br />

Weismann 12 3 2 0 .167<br />

Kraft 22 1 3 2 .137<br />

Rosseland 33 5 4 7 .121<br />

Meyers 35 3 6 4 .171<br />

Haight 6 112 .167<br />

Totals . 427 86 107 63 .251<br />

STOP AT THE BROWN JUG<br />

t<br />

for<br />

Pleasant Atmosphere<br />

Good Food<br />

Beverages<br />

Buck Lamrrie, Proprietor<br />

WONDERFUL SUMMER<br />

i<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Transcript Page 5<br />

Outstanding <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Performers<br />

4<br />

--<br />

Five of <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s outstanding performers over the past school year. Feft to right Ron Kulp,<br />

co-medalistAll-American in the golf championship; Dale Bruce, Little end on the football team;<br />

Charlie Beckley, who tier the college 440 record of 49.7; Dave Kraft, who won four of the baseball<br />

team's five victories; and Ned Lockwood, one of the best college skippers in the country who is<br />

getting a tryout for the United States Olympic team in June.<br />

Diamondmen Drop Season<br />

Finale, 8-- 3, To Oberlin<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s baseball team finished its season Friday<br />

by falling before Otterbein, 8-- 5.<br />

Dave Kraft, seeking his f<strong>if</strong>th victory of the season, had<br />

trouble in the first two innings. Otterbein picked up one run<br />

in the first and then jumped on Kraft for five more in the<br />

second. The Otters were then held scoreless until the eighth<br />

when "they picked up their last two tallies.<br />

By defeating Wittenberg in the final match of the year,<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s tennis team ended its regular season with<br />

seven wins and four losses in addition to tying for third place<br />

in the <strong>Ohio</strong> Conference. Only three teams managed to down<br />

the Bishops this season; Kenyon, Oberlin and Denison.<br />

The netmen had depth with 18<br />

boys being listed on the squad<br />

however the play of six lettermen<br />

predominated; Bob Bauman, Dick<br />

Taylor, John Miller, Pete Hauck,<br />

Doug Boyle and Ralph Slenker.<br />

Four players won numerals: Len<br />

Treash, Bill Sherk, John Hubinger<br />

and Dave James.<br />

Bob Bauman playing namber one<br />

slot won half of his matches. Dick<br />

Taylor finished with a<br />

enough to allow <strong>Wesleyan</strong> to sch<br />

9-- 3 won<br />

lost record ana Jonn Miller won<br />

seven out of eleven matches. Num<br />

ber five man, Doug Boyle, playing<br />

his first season won eight while<br />

losing three. Ralph Slenker, number<br />

six, managed to win five as<br />

against one defeat.<br />

Pete Hauck, the squad's only<br />

senior and a two year letterman,<br />

played good tennis throughout the<br />

season in winning six out of eight<br />

plus several doubles victories.<br />

Pete has played with the Bishops<br />

for three years, and won his first<br />

letter in his junior year. He joins<br />

Slenker and Bauman as the only<br />

double letter winners.<br />

During the year, the Bishops<br />

Ot-terbe- scored three shutouts, against in<br />

twice and Muskingum once.<br />

They were not held scoreless by<br />

any opponent, although Kenyon did<br />

down Fraser's boys twice, by 5-- 4<br />

and 7-- edule some bigger schools in the<br />

future.<br />

In the final match of the season,<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> defeated Wittenberg<br />

2 scores.<br />

Bob Bauman and Dick Taylor<br />

collaborated to win five out of<br />

eight in doubles competition.<br />

Hopes for next year lie in the<br />

crop of underclassmen who will<br />

have gained experience this<br />

year, plus several incoming<br />

freshmen.<br />

Five of the six lettermen will<br />

be back to form the nucleus of the<br />

new team.<br />

Coach Fraser believes that <strong>if</strong> the<br />

boys can play some good summer<br />

league tennis, they will improve<br />

4-- Delts Defeat Tekes<br />

Chuck Farrell hit a single,<br />

scoring men from second and<br />

third, to give the Delts a lastinning<br />

victory over the Tekes,<br />

3-- 2. The Tekes lead up until<br />

2-- 1, Farrell came to bat, but<br />

they couldn't hold their mar<br />

gin with but one out to go in<br />

the game .<br />

3 in a close battle which Both team swent into the Sun<br />

was decided when Miller and day afternoon game with records<br />

Boyle won the second doubles<br />

of five<br />

match.<br />

and one. Three Delts lost<br />

a mid-seas- o ngame to<br />

In singles Bauman and Taylor<br />

Phi Gamma<br />

Delta while T.<br />

were defeated in three sets, but<br />

K. E. lost intsinit-ia- l<br />

content to the' Delta Taus.<br />

Miller, Hauck, anl Boyle came Jim Welsh pitched for the<br />

through with victories to give the winners and Bob Skolrood for the<br />

Bishops a one point advantage. The losing team. Welsh was the win<br />

first doubles team lost tying the ner of Delt-Tek- the first e con-<br />

match, but Miller and Boyle blank test by a<br />

6-- ed their opponents 0, 6-- 0 to give<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> its seventh victory of the<br />

year.<br />

Bishop Pitching<br />

Player LP. R H S.O. B.B..W-- L<br />

Kraft 54 31 51 55 13 43<br />

Haight 20 19 16 16 20 11<br />

72-- Shattuck ... 3 12 14 6 4 00<br />

Bonebrake 5 9 10 6 6 00<br />

Peckinpaugh . 20 28 20 13 19 03<br />

Totals 108 99 111 107 62 57<br />

Bishop Batting<br />

3-- 0 score, he has now<br />

pitches four full games in as<br />

many days, whipping the Alpha<br />

Sigs 82, Sig Ep 1-- 0. 3-- 2,<br />

T. K E.<br />

and then starting against the Sig<br />

Alphs Monday.<br />

The outcome of the game between<br />

the Delts and S. A E. will<br />

decide the winner of the school<br />

championship.<br />

Women Defeat State<br />

The Women's tennis team journeyed<br />

down to <strong>Ohio</strong> State last week<br />

and defeated the State 7-- The Bishops started fast as Hay<br />

den Buckley drove in Jim Pumphrey<br />

from second with a single.<br />

"Pump" had reached the keystone<br />

sack on a two- - base error. It was<br />

Buckley's eleventh R. B. I. of the<br />

season.<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> rallied in the final<br />

framer Jed Weismann hit a long<br />

drive which was misjudged by the<br />

Otter centerfielder. Weismann circled<br />

the bases, following Ed Davis,<br />

who had gotten on through and<br />

error. The rally was halted when<br />

Wally Bonebrake flied out and<br />

John Peckinpaugh<br />

2 in a series<br />

or round-robi- n matches. The<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> team consisted of Ann<br />

McKensie, Nancy Cox, Joan Graham.<br />

Nancy Gregg, and Pat<br />

Hayes.<br />

' fanned to end<br />

the game.<br />

The Red and Black played error<br />

less ball in losing their second<br />

game of the season away from<br />

home. They have lost five on Edwards<br />

field, ending the season with<br />

and over-al- l record of five wins<br />

and seven losses.<br />

More than 5,714,000 persons in<br />

the Unites States are employed<br />

in manufacturing, selling servicing<br />

and operating motor trucks<br />

equivalent to one out of every 11<br />

workers.<br />

DELAWARE'S MOST<br />

BEAUTIFUL SPOT<br />

3-86-<br />

71 Call<br />

Reservations<br />

CONGRATULATIONS<br />

To The Class of 1952<br />

HARTER'S CAFETERIA<br />

Now Leisure<br />

Gees Colorful !<br />

Florals, geometries. West<br />

Indian and a host of other<br />

prints are here for your<br />

choosing. Comfort and<br />

color ihe new way to<br />

leisure 1<br />

$3.49<br />

t<br />

H IS l.<br />

XL- - ' - --'fV "<br />

l' !.VM. -'--<br />

V 'r-Vlv- r 1<br />

The Cleveland Indians cancelled<br />

a game though the sun was<br />

shinning. What were they afraid<br />

of a tanning?<br />

Highest point in Africa is<br />

Mount Kilimanjaro 19,320 feet.<br />

Sailing Club Plans Announced:<br />

Commandor Chuck Frame of the<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Sailing Club has<br />

announced the club's schedule for<br />

next fall:<br />

Oct. 11-1- 2 Cincinnati Invitation<br />

Regatta at Cincinnati.<br />

Oct. 18-1- 9 Denison Invitation<br />

Regatta at Buckeye Lake<br />

Oct. 25-2- 6 Area Championships<br />

at Cleveland.<br />

i<br />

Nov. 1--<br />

2 Bowling Green Invitational<br />

Regatta at Bowling Green.<br />

Nov. 1-- 2 Midwest Womens 7,'<br />

Championships at Delaware.<br />

Nov. 15-1- 6 <strong>Ohio</strong> State Invitation<br />

Regatta at Delaware.<br />

Nov. 28-3- 0 Timme Angsten ,<br />

Championships at Chicago.<br />

DELAWARE COMITY<br />

SWIMMING POOL<br />

OPENS<br />

ADULTS 60c<br />

CHILDREN 30c<br />

CONGRATULATIONS<br />

AND SUCCESS TO THE<br />

GRADUATING CLASS OF 1952<br />

FROM<br />

Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests<br />

No. 42...<br />

THE PORCUPINE<br />

H.<br />

tried<br />

to needle me.<br />

k, Ii<br />

WMk <strong>if</strong>f'.""Sli ;JM- -<br />

mm, mJxm<br />

hi<br />

sin i't i<strong>if</strong>a<br />

e's listened to llie weak tliread of so many<br />

shallow claims he's fed-up- ! His poiiit is there's<br />

a tlwrough test of cigarette mildness. Millions<br />

of smokers throughout America concur.<br />

It's the sensible test... the 30-Da- y Camel<br />

Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try<br />

Camels as your steady smoke on a<br />

day-afler-da- y,<br />

pack-after-pac- k basis. No snap judgments!<br />

Once you've tried Camels in your "T-Zone-<br />

Throat, T for Taste) you'll see why ...<br />

" (Tfor<br />

mm<br />

i:<br />

5 VJ&i'<br />

After all the Mildness Tests...<br />

Evw!''5 rI "F-"'r-<br />

T fair<br />

v<br />

fvrfffr


Page 6<br />

Cupid's<br />

Classroom<br />

Dear Brother Dan,<br />

Final exams and the approaching<br />

summer vacation<br />

have set students to cramming<br />

for more than just academic<br />

courses. Some couples have<br />

made a 4. by accelerating in<br />

and "Ring - Shining"<br />

"Pin-Givin- g"<br />

courses.<br />

Jan Shrull, Pi Phi, and Ed Kuehn,<br />

ATO, passed the "Pin - Giving"<br />

exam with flying colors. Jan now<br />

wears Ed's Maltese cross.<br />

Another Pi Phi, Ellie Patterson:<br />

is the proud wearer of the Alpha<br />

Sig pin of Bob Pheil.<br />

Marian Appleman, Pi Phi soph<br />

omore, has accepted a diamond<br />

from Bob Schwinn, Phi Delt.<br />

Susie Ludt of Poland, <strong>Ohio</strong>, start<br />

ed attending Cupid's classes z<br />

couple of weeks ago when Dick<br />

Stone presented her with his Sig<br />

ma Chi cross.<br />

The "Ring - Shining" class has<br />

two new members, Bea Hester,<br />

Theta, and King Brown, SAE.<br />

June "Sproule, new president of<br />

Pan-He- l, wears Ray Paye's Alpha<br />

Sig badge. June is a member of<br />

Alpha Chi.<br />

Shirley Mock, recent Gamma Phi<br />

initiate, has captured the Phi Delt<br />

shield of Bob Corwin.<br />

Dayle Dawson, hailing from<br />

Chevy Chase, Md., is sporting the<br />

Chi Phi pin of Hugh Heiserman.<br />

Jo Goodnow, Chi Omega, received<br />

a 4. from cupid when she accepted<br />

Al Geyer's Beta Sig pin<br />

Thursday night.<br />

Happy hunting this summer!<br />

Prof. Val Cupid.<br />

AWS Takes Action<br />

On Ringing of Bells<br />

The AWS board has taken spec<br />

ial action in regard to closing<br />

hours next year. One bell will ring<br />

at 10:25 p. m. and no bell will ring<br />

at 10:30. The same procedure will<br />

hold for Saturday nights when one<br />

bell will ring at 12:25 p. m.<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> is the only college in<br />

this area that rings any warning<br />

bells of this kind. Rather than have<br />

no signal at all, the board unanimously<br />

voted to continue having<br />

the one bell rung..<br />

Now it is expected that the women<br />

students will be in the dormitory<br />

at. 10:30 rather than beginning<br />

to come in at that time.<br />

This new ruling will also alleviate<br />

the complaint of many women<br />

students that when they hear<br />

a bell they cannot be sure whether<br />

it is 10:25 or 10:30 p. m.<br />

Mortar Board Chooses<br />

Hayes For Presidency<br />

Patti Hayes was elected president<br />

of Mortar Board at a Picnic<br />

meeting of the old and new mem<br />

bers last Thursday at the Pi Phi<br />

house.<br />

Lynn Kemp was chosen vice<br />

president; Dorothy Frey, secretary;<br />

Tanya Hudgel, treasurer;<br />

Shirley Lafferty, editor; and Jean<br />

Carper, song leader.<br />

Mortar Board is' making plans<br />

for their annual breakfast which<br />

will be held for the alumnae of<br />

the organization on June 8.<br />

ODK<br />

Going, Going, Gone!<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

period of three years. This year<br />

David Jennings was selected.<br />

The officers of Tau Circle elect<br />

ed for next year are: George Rad<br />

ecevic, president; Bill Elbon, vice<br />

president; Duane Smith, secretary;<br />

Lloyd Horrochs, treasurer.<br />

The faculty secretary is Prof<br />

Earl E. Warner and the new fac<br />

ulty advisor is Prof. Paul T. Hahn,<br />

who succeeds Prof. Ben Arneson<br />

who has served as faculty advisor<br />

of Tau Circle since 1938.<br />

JUNE GRADUATES OF '52<br />

Because you have spent considerable time and expense<br />

to gain an education, it is important to find a job<br />

which assures an opportunity for advancement and a<br />

secure future in your chosen field. BUCKEYE has<br />

successfully guided gradutes of Case, John Carroll,<br />

Miami, Reserve, Kent, Fenn, Purdue, and many other<br />

colleges. What we have done for them, we can do for<br />

you.<br />

Every college graduate has a problem in securing<br />

the job he fits. BUCKEYE VOCATIONAL SERVICE<br />

makes a sincere effort to place graduates in positions<br />

for which they have trained. We endeavor to provide<br />

you with personalized employment counseling<br />

evaluating your background and education to fit into the<br />

needs of industry today.<br />

Our counseling service places you under no obligation.<br />

We hope we will be instrumental in bringing you<br />

and your new employer together. Our offices are located<br />

in the Citizen's Building at Ninth and Euclid and are<br />

open Monday through Friday. The telephone number<br />

is TOwer 1<br />

-<br />

3<br />

6<br />

-<br />

71.<br />

R. C. Schaefer, Miami <strong>University</strong> '37<br />

P. R. Baker, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> <strong>University</strong> '46<br />

If you are interested in receiving more job information,<br />

please fill in the coupon below and we will forward<br />

necessary registration applications.<br />

BUCKEYE VOCATIONAL SERVICE<br />

914 Citizen's Building<br />

9th & Euclid<br />

Cleveland 14, <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

Nome<br />

Address<br />

Your Major Ay<br />

4 J<br />

Jo Graham auctions off a lamp with a red shade to<br />

and Nancy Fast at the Senior auc tion held last Friday<br />

Coeds Keep House;<br />

Plan Budget, Meals<br />

By JESSIE McGOVRAN<br />

Twenty fortunate women have<br />

avoided the dorm food this semester<br />

along with getting some valuable<br />

experience for the future in<br />

learning how to manage a house.<br />

The women are home economics<br />

students and, the house is the home<br />

V.<br />

Mitzi Jung<br />

at 1:45.<br />

Sororities Bid Farewell To Graduates,<br />

Send Delegates To Nat'l Conventions<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Transcript Wednesday, May 28, 1952<br />

,z<br />

Just Like <strong>Home</strong><br />

The last round-u- p on sorority row for another school<br />

year; picnics, formals, and sad farewells to the seniors are<br />

holding the spot light on the campus social scene.<br />

Seniors of Gamma Phi Beta will give a show for the rest<br />

of the chapter next Monday night after the senior picnic.<br />

Gamma Phi alums here in Delaware gave 'a buffet aupper last<br />

1 V<br />

Fresno J"<br />

r;nivers'(""<br />

r-- i<br />

si<br />

This is one of the many groups of senior girls who got up early<br />

last Sunday morning in order to enjoy the comforts of home by<br />

eating breakfast in their pajamas.' The senior women's graduation<br />

breakfast is an annuall affair.<br />

1 I.<br />

V - V .... . S<br />

V<br />

f v<br />

Vesleyan Students<br />

Plan Various Types<br />

01 Summer Activity<br />

By Ruth Rootes<br />

"Whatcha' doing this summer?"<br />

is a standard question about this<br />

time of the year, with everyone<br />

half dreaming of summer and half i<br />

cringing from the thought of<br />

-- rria--<br />

-<br />

Fraternities Choose<br />

New Social Heads<br />

For Coming Term<br />

With the approach of the<br />

end of the school year, there<br />

are many memories of all the<br />

social activities at the various<br />

fraternity houses throughout<br />

the year. As any social function<br />

must have planning behind it, we<br />

think that this is an appropriate<br />

time to acknowledge the new social<br />

chairmen of those fraternities who<br />

have elected men to take over the<br />

positions for the close of this year<br />

and the coming fall term.<br />

They are: Bill Perrett ad Chuck<br />

McManis, Alpha Sig; Chuck Ran- -<br />

sone, Alpha Tau Omega; Dick<br />

De-Vo- s,<br />

Beta Theta Pi; Werner Gass,<br />

Chi Phi; Steve Kelly, Sigma Chi;<br />

Dave Shobe, Phi Delt; Bill Shep-le- r,<br />

Phi Gam; Carl Brose, Phi<br />

Tau; Norman Noblet, Sig Ep;<br />

Moon Mudarris, TKE; Al Spang- -<br />

enberg, SAE; Don Wagner, Beta<br />

Sig; Jack Denison, Kappa Sig;<br />

Kenny Whetstone, Phi Psi; and<br />

Pete Baum, Delta Tau. .<br />

Harlem, New York.<br />

Another freshman, Bob Balliett,<br />

goes' from work here to more work<br />

with a construction company in<br />

Cleveland.<br />

While some of us have to work<br />

a few lucky (?) fellas are taking<br />

a month's vacation down south<br />

courtesy of Uncle Sam, of course.<br />

Dick Davenport, junior is going to<br />

Alabama for some sunshine and<br />

exercise on the Air Force Base<br />

Dick plans to work as a teller at<br />

ming's home. The first women<br />

moved in on March 24 and stayed<br />

for two weeks, followed by two<br />

more groups with six to eight in<br />

each group.<br />

These senior home ec majors alternate<br />

the duties of hostess, host,<br />

housekeeper, waitress, cook, and<br />

assistant cook. Director of this lab<br />

course is Mrs. Dorothy Godfrey.<br />

Like many homes the kitchen<br />

is the scene of much activity. It<br />

is the most attractive and only<br />

completely furnished room in the<br />

house. The rest of the house is<br />

being furnished, but right now<br />

the living room has the bare<br />

necessities of six chairs.<br />

Not only do the women budget<br />

their money; purchase their food;<br />

plan, prepare, and serve meals;<br />

but they get new insight into the<br />

problems involved in adjusting to<br />

people whose ideas, ideals, and<br />

habits havxe been formed in d<strong>if</strong><br />

ferent environments. The decorating<br />

and furnishing of the house is<br />

planned by the students, and like<br />

most new homes will be carried<br />

out over a three year budget.<br />

The house was Just finished this<br />

semester and it makes <strong>Ohio</strong> Wes-leyan- management house at 35 Oak Hill<br />

Ave. next doc-- f to President Flem- - Sunday night for the seniors and<br />

a Building and Loan Company af-<br />

w initiates. Barbara Schaaf being married this summer to<br />

terwards.<br />

Al Spankenberg, another junior,<br />

was announced model pledge and Dave Kidney, a Sig Ep from the<br />

Tanya Hudgel was given the ac<br />

Since everyone has made all will make the trip to Alabama,<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Toledo.<br />

these plans, we decided to find out too, then plans to work for about<br />

tivities award. Jane Feick, The The Alpha Chi Omega spring what a few were doing just to four weeks before taking a more<br />

new president, is looking for formal was held last Saturday give you an idea of what' <strong>OWU</strong> restful vacation, probably to<br />

ward to a trip to the sorority's night ai the house. The chapter students are doing during vaca New York.<br />

national convention soon after<br />

school is out.<br />

held a come as you are meeting tion.<br />

Some of us can combine work<br />

The convention<br />

will be held at San Diego, Cal. Monday night. '<br />

Flo Murphy, freshman, is just with pleasure and Barbie Betts<br />

hoping she likes Italian food as seems to be one of the lucky ones<br />

Alpha Xis held their senior pic Theta seniors made concentra-<br />

she .is going to work at a camp Barbie is working as head of First<br />

nic last Monday night. The chaption impossible at meeting last<br />

in New Jersey for underprivileg- Aid at the beach in Willmette<br />

ter headed for Butler farm Sat- week with the annual "kick-up- "<br />

urday for a final over-nl- .<br />

night. However, they reinstated<br />

ed Italian children from East Illinois.<br />

Kappa Kappa Gamma mem themselves by treating the chap<br />

bers bid fond goodbye lo their ter to refreshments at theAcon<br />

senior members at the senior pic- elusion of the disrupted meeting MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS<br />

nic Monday night<br />

The Kite , annual newspaper<br />

The seniors of Chi Omeea en of the local chapter, came out<br />

tertained the' chapter with a show last Sunday. Open house for<br />

Saturday night at the American alums will be held the weekend<br />

NOW<br />

Legion hall. Jo Weiner, presi- of commencement. Natalie Orth,<br />

dent and Elaine Wismar, person- Theta prexy, and Joyce Sandbo<br />

nel chairman will attend the na will voyage to Sun Valley in FOR GRADUATION WEEKEND<br />

tional convention in White Sul- June for the sorority's national<br />

phur Springs, W. Va., this sum convention.<br />

mer<br />

Another party in honor of<br />

Pi Phis had something d<strong>if</strong>fer graduating seniors was the Delta MOCK'S MOTEL<br />

ent in the way of a party. In- Gamma senior banquet last Wedstead<br />

of a come as you are party nesday night. The chapter is<br />

they haj a "Let's Pretend Par planning a tea for alums during<br />

U. S. Route 23 5 Miles South of Delaware<br />

ty , with everyone coming as commencement week.<br />

's what they wanted to be. Many The Zetas enjoyed an ice cream<br />

Phone 20196<br />

home ec department com assorted take-off- s on the conclu- social last week. The alumnae<br />

plete. The women living there this sion of finals week were expect chapter made the cakes from<br />

year are enthusiastic aDout it, and ed. Last Wednesday night the some of their favorite recipes,<br />

We invite you to look at our units<br />

feel as one of them recently said, sophomores gave a surprise china and the chapter provided the ice<br />

'<br />

"This home is the place to learn shower for Mary Siegel, who is cream.<br />

taaaaaauaaaut<br />

wfrrir<br />

democracy."<br />

m ',"i,m :' ur,<br />

nrr<br />

JOboU o<br />

In a cigarette, taste<br />

makes the d<strong>if</strong>ference<br />

and Luckies taste better!<br />

The d<strong>if</strong>ference between "just smoking" and<br />

really enjoying your smoke is the taste of a<br />

cigarette. You can fasre the d<strong>if</strong>ference in the<br />

smoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of a<br />

Lucky . . . for two important reasons. First,<br />

L.S.M.F.T. Lucky Strike means fine tobacco<br />

. . . fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second,<br />

Luckies are made to taste better . . . proved<br />

-- -<br />

- - J ;S i i i<br />

,S &Nk<br />

A. T. Cx<br />

best-ma- de<br />

of all five principal brands. So reach for a<br />

Lucky. Enjoy the cigarette that tastes better!<br />

Be Happy Go Lucky! Buy a carton today!<br />

L& M FT-- Ivdcy Strike<br />

Means fine Tobacco<br />

PRODUCT OF iJ'L JvU<br />

AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OP CIGARETTES<br />

Mrs. Flemming Speaks to Seniors,<br />

Newman Serves As Toastmistress<br />

Mrs. Arthur Flemming spoke committee which consisted of: Betat<br />

the senior women's gradua-t- y Bernard- - UotUe Hendricks, Mar- -<br />

tion breakfast in Austin hall<br />

at 8:00 Sunday morning.<br />

Marilyn Newman was toast-mistres- s.<br />

The class will was read by Teddy<br />

Synder and Janice Huffman;<br />

Jean Mehlhope and Virginia Sanders<br />

read the class prophecy.<br />

Dante's Inferno provided the frame<br />

work for the prophecy.<br />

Invitations were in the shape of<br />

small diplomas. The decorations<br />

consisted of a graduation cap in<br />

the center of each table in accordance<br />

with the theme of graduation<br />

carried out by Peggy Porter, dec<br />

oration chairman.<br />

The pajama-cla- d coeds feasted<br />

heartily, on strawberries and<br />

cream, scrambled eggs with Canadian<br />

bacon, butterscotch twists.<br />

and Danish sweet rools while they<br />

listened to their futures being predicted<br />

by their classmates.<br />

Susan Evans, social chairman,<br />

co-ordina- tor was overall for the<br />

breakfast. She was helped by her<br />

jone amun, iaa wimm, Margaret<br />

Porter, Elaine Scheufler, and Gail<br />

Carey.<br />

AWS sponsored this breakfast.<br />

Havighurst to Talk<br />

To Future Teachers<br />

Kappa Delta Pi, education honorary,<br />

will have a breakfast June<br />

7, for present and alumni member<br />

of the local chapter.<br />

Dr. Robert J. Havighurst, professor<br />

of education at the <strong>University</strong><br />

of Chicago, will speak to th<br />

group. His topic will be "Social<br />

Status and moral character."<br />

Dr. Havighurst is 'an outstanding<br />

authority on child and adolescent<br />

development. In recent years<br />

he has devoted much time to a<br />

study of the relationship between<br />

social status and child development.<br />

;<br />

SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO.<br />

SEWING NOTIONS<br />

PATTERNS<br />

FABRICS<br />

COVERED BELTS<br />

BUCKLES AND BUTTONS<br />

THE<br />

STUDENT GOVERNMENT<br />

Su<br />

OPENS MAY 28<br />

IT WILL BE LOCATED IN THE<br />

M. U. B. NEAR THE SNACK BAR<br />

USED BOOKS BOUGHT AND SOLD<br />

f<br />

T I<br />

) l<br />

V :<br />

7<br />

cieialie$eu swimsuits<br />

for sun . . . for swim ... for psychology<br />

"WINGS," swimsuits with wings in<br />

fashion...<br />

V-shaped<br />

bodice<br />

I<br />

high-flyin- j<br />

insert, shirred front<br />

panels, half-ski- rt back and front, inner bra, tuck-awa- y<br />

straps, in favorite summer colors. $17.95'<br />

UHLMANS<br />

Li

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