Medley Relay Marks Set Senate Summarizes Busy Year; Report ...
Medley Relay Marks Set Senate Summarizes Busy Year; Report ...
Medley Relay Marks Set Senate Summarizes Busy Year; Report ...
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ElVTGRME.<br />
OHIO. MARCH 23, 1956 No. .21<br />
New Pole 8-La- Vault, p, <strong>Medley</strong> <strong>Relay</strong> <strong>Marks</strong> <strong>Set</strong><br />
At Third Annual DU Livingston <strong>Relay</strong>s Saturday<br />
By<br />
, . BILL . COURTNEY<br />
T<br />
The third annual Livingston <strong>Relay</strong>s were held Saturday. Three new fieldhouse records were set<br />
J? 6<br />
, herieldhouse standards was tied. A standard-shatterin- g performance was turned<br />
in by Tom Mayville of Central Michigan who vaulted 13 feet nine inches to break his old record of 13-- 6.<br />
Wayne University set a new<br />
mark in the eight-la- p relay with<br />
a time of 2:10.2. In the distance<br />
medley relay Western Michigan<br />
romped home the winner in 10:<br />
40.5 to break the old mark of<br />
10:47.4 Hudson of Western Michi55-yagan,<br />
first in the rd dash<br />
with the time of 5.8 seconds, tied<br />
the old field house record. Repeat<br />
winners in the relays were<br />
55-yard<br />
Burton of Miami in the<br />
low hurdles and Estus Newberry<br />
in the 55-yard<br />
high hurdles.<br />
Other first place winners were<br />
Blackburn of Ohio State in the<br />
mile run, Dave Owen of Michigan<br />
in the shotput, Charlie Gaskon of<br />
Bowling Green in the broad<br />
jump, Western<br />
. Michigan in the<br />
two-mi- le relay, O'Reilly in the<br />
high jump, and<br />
Baldwin-Wallac- e<br />
in the mile relay.<br />
The Denison University trackmen<br />
turned in creditable performances<br />
against this top flight<br />
competition. Dave Carse finished<br />
fourth in the shot put with a put<br />
of 49 feet three inches, which was<br />
a scant six inches away from second<br />
place. High jumper Bill<br />
Grafton was a strong second in<br />
the high jump only one inch off<br />
pace. Denison's strong mile relay<br />
finished fourth in the field in an<br />
event run in heats. Darwin Zahn<br />
finished fifth in the pole valut. In<br />
the relay,<br />
8-l- ap<br />
Dan Shell was<br />
tripped rounding a curve ruining<br />
the Big Red's chances for a place<br />
in that event<br />
Yale Men To Sing<br />
The Baker's Dozen, a singing<br />
rreup from Yale, will entertain<br />
Denisonians at the Kappa<br />
house Tuesday evening at 7<br />
pro. "Grunts from the Runts"<br />
on page 4 contains further information<br />
on the touring<br />
easterners.<br />
Sadosky, Sheldon<br />
Seek Judicial Post<br />
if<br />
- i<br />
Cindy Sheldon Sue Sadosky<br />
Sue Sadosky and Cynthia Sheldon<br />
are candidates for president<br />
of Women's Judicial Council. Besides<br />
presiding over the meetings<br />
of Women's Judicial Council, the<br />
president serves as one of the vice<br />
presidents of Women's Council and<br />
is a member of Student-Facult- y<br />
the<br />
Executive Council. Election<br />
"ill take place Sunday evening in<br />
lie women's dormitories.<br />
Junior advisor Sue is secretary-c- t<br />
of the YWCA, while Cynthia<br />
s chairman of the intercommun-t- y<br />
council, which works with the<br />
exchange program.<br />
Women's Judicial Council is<br />
imposed of the standards chairin-jfependmanent<br />
of each sorority and an<br />
representative. The<br />
5dy handles cases which are in<br />
"wect violation with the D-Bo-<br />
ok<br />
es and appeals from house<br />
Muncil decisions. Although the<br />
council itself cannot suspend a<br />
indent, but it does have power to<br />
Commend suspension. However,<br />
Purpose of the body is not to<br />
Punish, but to take into consideration<br />
all aspects of the case and<br />
render a helpful decision.<br />
John Hudson, running for Western Michigan in the Livingston<br />
<strong>Relay</strong>s Saturday, finishes first ,.in 5.8 seconds to tie the<br />
record. ,<br />
field-hous- e<br />
<strong>Senate</strong> <strong>Summarizes</strong> <strong>Busy</strong> <strong>Year</strong>;<br />
<strong>Report</strong> Reveals Varied Projects<br />
By JON BOSS<br />
In a report to <strong>Senate</strong> this week the executive Committee of<br />
DCGA revealed the vast variety of projects considered and acted<br />
'<br />
SpeOKGr<br />
r<br />
To DisCUSS<br />
UPfin PCl .rmllc<br />
w I I w<br />
"Dead Sea Scrolls" will be the<br />
topic of Dr. James Muillenburg,<br />
professor of Hebrew and Old<br />
Testament at Union Theological<br />
Seminary, New York City, in his<br />
address to Monday's voluntary<br />
convocation at 11 am.<br />
Dr. Muillenburg, who was director<br />
of. the School of Oriental<br />
Research in Jerusalem when work<br />
was being done on the sea scrolls,<br />
will meet with religion majors<br />
and other interested students at<br />
4 pm in Life Science auditorium.<br />
Discovery of sea scrolls in a<br />
cave by an Arab boy in 1.947 led<br />
to an investigation. Experts found<br />
more than 1000 fragments of Hebrew<br />
manuscripts wrapped in<br />
linen cloths. The sea scrolls have<br />
thrown light on the<br />
little-know- n<br />
Essene sect, who lived on the<br />
north shore of the Dead Sea<br />
about 50 AD.<br />
As a result of The Scrolls<br />
From the Sea, written by Edmund<br />
Wilson in 1955, much controversy<br />
has been raised as to<br />
whether the scrolls predated<br />
Christ.<br />
Banquet Climaxes<br />
WRA Appointments<br />
Judy Bruce was installed as<br />
WRA president at the spring banquet<br />
Tuesday evening in Shep-ardso-n.<br />
Assisting Judy are Dottie Jones,<br />
vice president; Sandy Hartshorn,<br />
secretary; Nancy Curtis, treasurer;<br />
and Sue Roberts, sports chairman.<br />
Elections were held a week<br />
ago yesterday in the dorms.<br />
Spring and fall sports, heads<br />
were selected after interviews<br />
with applicants. The following<br />
girls were chosen: Sue Bryson,<br />
golf; Pat Jones, hockey; Mugsy<br />
Williams, riding; Nancy Jo Burns,<br />
tennis; and Sandy Bixler and<br />
Carol Hamilton, volleyball. Hockey<br />
and riding will be offered only<br />
in the spring.<br />
The new and old officers appointed<br />
new committee chairmen<br />
Monday. Gussie Baker is sorority<br />
coordinator; Jan Siegel,<br />
social chairman; Gail Palmer,<br />
membership chairman; and Jan<br />
Armstrong and Donna Cochran,<br />
publicity chairmen.<br />
upon during the past.<br />
The report was broken down<br />
into monthly reviews and began<br />
with April and "May, 1955, shortly<br />
after the installation of the past<br />
Executive Committee. Of major<br />
importance during this period was<br />
the consideration of the budget,<br />
appointment and <strong>Senate</strong> confirmation<br />
of DCGA committees and<br />
chairmen, revamping of auto court<br />
and its program, the first attempt<br />
at instructing the delegates to the<br />
National Student Congress of NSA<br />
as to the feeling of the Denison<br />
student body, and amalgamation<br />
of the reserve funds and their investment<br />
into Pool B of the University.<br />
Fall Activities Named<br />
In August and September came<br />
the new freshman directory,<br />
freshman orientation week activities,<br />
the' NSA Student Body<br />
Conference and National Student<br />
Congress, an attempt at a book exchange,<br />
the Student - Faculty<br />
Planning .Conference, two parties<br />
for the transfer students, and the<br />
beginning of the planning for the<br />
mock political convention which<br />
will take place here this spring<br />
October saw the establishment<br />
of the Freshman Assembly, D-D-<br />
ay,<br />
the DCGA movie program,<br />
the final review and acceptance of<br />
the budget, the establishment of<br />
the quarterly report system for all<br />
groups using DCGA funds, the<br />
White House Conference on Education<br />
meeting held in Columbus,<br />
the review of the student health<br />
situation, and an orientation of<br />
the new <strong>Senate</strong> members as to<br />
their respective duties by the<br />
Executive Committee.<br />
Winter Work Done<br />
With November came the allocation<br />
to WDUB for an improved<br />
system of transmission, discussions<br />
between the DCGA officers and<br />
the various groups on campus such<br />
as ICC, Pan-Helle- nic Council,<br />
IFC<br />
and the student body as a whole,<br />
codification of the by-la- ws of<br />
DCGA by the <strong>Senate</strong> Rules Committee,<br />
and finally the freshman<br />
class elections.<br />
Shortly before Christmas vacation<br />
came the beginning of the<br />
discussion surrounding the science<br />
requirements at Denison, and also<br />
a Christmas party by the Cosmopolitan<br />
Club.<br />
Following vacation <strong>Senate</strong> dealt<br />
with the new by-la- w concerning<br />
the Boards of Control, the exchange<br />
program was widened to<br />
(Continued on Page 4)<br />
'On The Rocks' Opens Tonight;<br />
Bonds Show To Include Auction<br />
The curtain goes up at 8 tonight and tomorrow night at the annual<br />
Bonds of Friendship Show. This year's production "On the<br />
Rocks" offers " an evening of fun with a fine cast and a great show,"<br />
according to Director Bill Heiser.<br />
While the production is a full-dre- ss<br />
musical, Heiser stresses that<br />
it is staged in an informal atmosphere<br />
of fun and urges everyone<br />
to come to the show with or<br />
without dates, single or in groups.<br />
As the result of the production<br />
of a good musical and a thorough<br />
publicity campaign handled by<br />
Dennis Good and Tari Lennon,<br />
Heiser expects over 2,000 people<br />
to see the show. Admission to the<br />
fund-raisin- g show and auction is<br />
$1.25.<br />
Each night between acts an auction<br />
will be held to raise additional<br />
money for charities, with<br />
Robert Seager, assistant professor<br />
of history, offering his services as<br />
auctioneer. Terry Crislip, auction<br />
chairman, declares that "eight<br />
real deals" will be offered each<br />
night, including first and second<br />
room choice for girls; two car<br />
permits for girls; two "on quad"<br />
parking permits for men; two suspensions<br />
of the academic penalty;<br />
party entertainment by "The<br />
Three Blind Mice;" a fraternity<br />
swimming party; a fraternity<br />
house for a weekend party; and<br />
many other services, including<br />
several "surprise package deals."<br />
Crislip stressed that people bidding<br />
in the auction should bring<br />
cash or checks with them.<br />
Why Not Let Frosh<br />
Handle Car Wash<br />
With Granville's proverbial inclement<br />
weather, evidence of mud<br />
bedecked cars can be cited on<br />
the Denison campus.<br />
To alleviate this problem, the<br />
freshman class is sponsoring a<br />
carwash for Bonds of Friendship<br />
at the fieldhouse parking lot today<br />
from 3-- 5 pm and tomorrow from<br />
2-- 4 pm. Cost is $1.00 per car in-<br />
cluding thorough ,<br />
and out.<br />
cleaning inside<br />
Co-chairm- en for this event include<br />
Lynn Dodson and Roger<br />
Coomer, publicity; Carol Rian and<br />
John Evans, equipment; Barb Ford<br />
and Jerry Guyer, today's work<br />
chairmen; and Chuckie Caine and<br />
Barry Porter are tomorrow's work<br />
heads.<br />
Departmental Destinations Include<br />
Washington, New York, Cleveland<br />
During Spring vacation many students will take departmental<br />
trips in order to look deeper into the subjects of their interests.<br />
Some are taking these trips as credit courses and others purely for<br />
pleasure. Economics, government, art and theater departments are all<br />
conducting such excursions.<br />
Government students accompanied<br />
by Fred Wirt, assistant<br />
professor of government, will<br />
leave the first day of vacation<br />
for a week stay In Washington,<br />
D. C. The students have spent<br />
two to three hours a week in<br />
preparation. While in Washington<br />
they will interview men from<br />
all phases of the government<br />
which includes supreme court<br />
justices, cabinet and congress<br />
members, ambassadors and<br />
newspaper men. The previous'<br />
preparation enables the students<br />
to manage these interviews themselves<br />
according to Mr. Wirt.<br />
The result will be a more intimate<br />
sense of the meaning of<br />
government and its actions for<br />
those participating. Those who<br />
will travel to the nation's capital<br />
are: Charles Crampton,<br />
Gualdo Ford, James Holderman,<br />
and Gail Palmer.<br />
Economic interests will be developed<br />
further in Columbus and<br />
Cleveland during the vacation.<br />
Dr. James R. Elliott, assistant professor<br />
--of economics, and his students<br />
will consult various men of<br />
importance there and observe<br />
(Continued on Page 5)<br />
DCGA To Install 7<br />
Recently elected DCGA officers<br />
will be installed during a credit<br />
convocation Monday at 7 pm in<br />
the chapel.<br />
DCGA Co-preside- nts Arm-aqo- st Pete<br />
and Phyl Co-vi- Edwards; ce<br />
presidents Dave Lewis and<br />
Barb Burger; Men's Judicial<br />
Council Chairman Bud Savage;<br />
Women's Council President Sheila<br />
McLean and Vice President Lois<br />
Ladley; and <strong>Senate</strong> officers will<br />
assume official duties after the<br />
installation.<br />
Positions Open<br />
Anyone Interested in being a<br />
member of the advertising staff<br />
of the Denisonian is urged to<br />
see Hunter Hardesty at the PhJ<br />
Gam House.<br />
There will be no issue of the<br />
Denisonian the week following<br />
spring vacation. The next issue<br />
will appear April 20.<br />
Sigs Select Queen<br />
Mary Jo Shaffer, junior member<br />
of Kappa Kappa Gamma,<br />
pinned to Chuck Young, was<br />
choosen the "Sweetheart of<br />
Sigma Chi" at the Sig's annual '<br />
sweetheart dinner - dance at<br />
the Granville Inn last Friday.<br />
Men's Glee Plans<br />
Vacation Itinerary<br />
- The annual spring tour of the<br />
Men's Glee Club will include<br />
stops at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,<br />
Ho-Ho-K- us, New Jersey, and<br />
- Buffalo, Brooklyn and Scarsdale,<br />
New York.<br />
Solo numbers will be given by<br />
seniors Stormy Weathers, bass,<br />
Jan Berlin, tenor, Paul Stroh,<br />
baritone, and juniors Dick Krause,<br />
tenor, and Youngil Lim, tenor.<br />
"Soldier's Song," , a featured<br />
number, will be presented by<br />
Dick Ford, trumpet soloist, and<br />
Tom Cleary, drummer. Tom for<br />
the second season is the student<br />
director of the club.<br />
The itinery for the three-stat-e<br />
singing tour is as follows:<br />
Monday, April 2, at 8 pm,<br />
Thomas Jefferson Elementary<br />
School, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania<br />
Tuesday at 8:30 pm, Delaware<br />
Avenue Baptist Church, Buffalo,<br />
New York.<br />
Wednesday at 8 pm, Eastwood<br />
Baptist Church, Syracuse, New<br />
York.<br />
Thursday at 8:30 pm, Commun-<br />
Ho-Ho-K- us, ity Church, New Jersey.<br />
Friday at 8:15 pm, Women's<br />
Club, Scarsdale, New York.
Page 2<br />
But Not Forgotten ?<br />
(")NE of the most inspiring and meaningful convocation ad- -<br />
dresses of this year came, oddly enough, not from a<br />
famed off --campus speaker propounding abstract profundities<br />
about the "outside world," but from someone within the<br />
local "ivory tower," Nil Mufdur.<br />
Nevertheless, Nil's remarks were more pertinent to the<br />
"world outside" than anything many Denisonians had heard<br />
in some time, and more than a few "ivory towers" were heard<br />
to collapse with a resounding thud.<br />
For the principal speaker of the "Bonds of Friendship"<br />
convocation, she mentioned the program remarkably few<br />
times. Yet her objective was synonymous with the purpose<br />
of "Bonds of Friendship" to overcome the suffocating self-impos- ed<br />
limitations which render us failures as Christians<br />
and as world citizens to reach beyond ourselves, beyond<br />
Denison, beyond middle-clas- s complacency; beyond national<br />
boundaries to the world and some sort of meaning in our lives.<br />
As a citizen of a country far removed from ours in distance<br />
and in culture, Nil was particularly qualified to speak<br />
on this subject. From the spontaneity and sincerity of her<br />
message, it was obvious that the subject was very close to Nil.<br />
Even more important, however, it became increasingly obvious<br />
as the speech progressed just how close how uncomfortably<br />
close the subject was to members of the audience.<br />
What she had to say touched on the problem that singly<br />
evokes more Christian and American thought, fear and speculation<br />
than any other the clash of cultures, with all its fatal<br />
implications, America as seen from within and without, the<br />
meaning and direction Christian and American life must<br />
assume.<br />
Nil concluded her talk with a plea ; she did not ask us to<br />
save the world, but to forget about argyles, hourlies and the<br />
social problem long enough to remember that there is more<br />
than one way of life, that real giving is not intended to insure<br />
allies or converts, and that it is not what you have, but<br />
what you are. CS<br />
On tho Rocks?<br />
"QN THE ROCKS" with its intermission auction will unfold<br />
tonight and tomorrow night to climax a full Bonds of<br />
Friendship week.<br />
The show promises to be a spectacular one. Music, story,<br />
cast, all are hailed as "better than ever." This "better" production<br />
has evolved from the first show of its nature last<br />
year, from selected social group skits the year before, and<br />
all-colle- ge from participation in years past.<br />
Alterations in the auction program have been made this<br />
year through the selection of submitted items to be offered<br />
for sale. As a result of this limitation, some groups wishing<br />
to offer a service for sale are unable to do so. Likewise the<br />
number of individuals or organizations who can withstand<br />
the competitive bidding are few.<br />
Students and guests are sure to see a topnotch production<br />
by Denison's best and be entertained by a humorous auction<br />
sale. That's it, "see" and "be entertained."<br />
Money will be paid for material value received. But unfortunately,<br />
for the large majority, participation won't be a<br />
factor. We know that through participation comes understanding,<br />
a necessity for any basis of friendship. How can<br />
a "bond of friendship" be created without at least an opportunity<br />
for participation being offered? 4<br />
Granted, many will prefer to pay, then sit back. But<br />
individuals shouldn't be forced into this action. Efficiency<br />
and specialization are welcome sometimes but perhaps in the<br />
future, building student indifference to Bond's so worthy<br />
cause by limiting participation in the program can be avoided.<br />
Money and student participation can be raised together. JW<br />
Subscription Rata $3.00 Per <strong>Year</strong><br />
Established in 1857. Entirely student operated. Published waekly during tha<br />
Admitted as a second claw matter April 8. 1921, at Granville, Ohio, under<br />
March 8, 1879, amended under she Act of October 3, 1917.<br />
' Editor<br />
school year.<br />
the Act of<br />
DOUG COLWELl<br />
Sports Editor<br />
Managing Editor<br />
Column Coordinator<br />
Art Editor<br />
News Editor<br />
Co-Rewrite<br />
Editors<br />
Co-Co- py Editors u<br />
Co-Headline<br />
Editors<br />
Co-Feat-ure Editors<br />
Music Editor<br />
Humor Editors<br />
Social EHitnr<br />
Theater Editor<br />
Head Typis- t-<br />
Associate Editors<br />
CAROL SHANESY AND JEAN WILSON<br />
. - - --Jim Wahle<br />
. Allan<br />
Zambia<br />
Dannis Sharp<br />
. . Tad Shaw<br />
David Scott<br />
-- Carol Hendon. Barb Danison<br />
-- Dotty Fischer, barb Ford<br />
Georgianne Gates, Nancy Burnt<br />
-- Bob Marriott, Jr., Girtny Wallace<br />
Joanne Mcmath<br />
Jim Bowman, Tad Shaw<br />
--Sarah Lewis, Sam Spade<br />
- Mary Kerr<br />
Bobbv Neih<br />
STAFF Bill Rogers, Mary Lou Conroy, Mary Kay Schmidt, Ann Dunn, Bob Stewart, Bill<br />
Courtney, Tom Pieratt, Elliott Trumbull, Joan Hazlett, Blaine Matthews, Bill Schmidt,<br />
Dick Shrum, Don Wake man. Bill Hoeft, Sally Campbell, Barb Easterday, Ann Harrington,<br />
Sua Loofbourrow, Kirk Moninger, Dave Opperman, Bill Shornoy, Barbara<br />
Ruts, Wendy Williams, Joyce Optekar, Dee Harger, Sally Bills, John Evans, Alden<br />
Sexton, Bobby Hankamer, Barbara Atkinson, Sally Saunders, Nancy Willoughby.<br />
BUSINESS MANAGER Joe Thomas<br />
Advertising Manager.. Hunter Hardesty<br />
STAFf-B- ud Beard, Jack Snell. ,<br />
Circulation Manager Roger Beglen<br />
STAFF Jim Paull, Ed Heekin, Carol Corbett, Anno Fritz.<br />
1<br />
I<br />
DENISONIAN<br />
Letters to the<br />
Editor<br />
Dear Editors: ;<br />
We are writing to see whether<br />
or not you will assist us in disseminating<br />
some information to<br />
your student body, particularly<br />
to those students who plan on<br />
coming to Fort Lauderdale in the<br />
spring.<br />
Fort Lauderdale considers the<br />
collegiate vacation time, March<br />
and April, an important and<br />
valued part of our over-a-ll winter<br />
season and sincerely hopes<br />
that many of your students will<br />
be able to join us this coming<br />
spring. However, since a small<br />
minority of students commit acts<br />
of delinquency and vandalism, it<br />
has become necessary to deal<br />
more drastically with these offenders<br />
than we have ,in the past<br />
To this end," the City of Fort<br />
Lauderdale has passed an ordinance<br />
this year designed to control<br />
the small minority of college<br />
students who insist on committing<br />
acts of destruction, trespassing<br />
and illegal use of both public<br />
and private property.<br />
The students who refuse to cooperate<br />
and abide by this ordinance<br />
will be referred to local<br />
law enforcement personnel, arrests<br />
will be made, and the press<br />
will be permitted to publish<br />
names of students as well as the<br />
schools they attend and the fraternal<br />
organization to which they<br />
may belong:. We regret that we<br />
are compelled to take such action;<br />
however, we cannot let a<br />
few students ride rough shod over<br />
the personal rights and privileges<br />
of our guests.<br />
We trust that all the students<br />
whom we have enjoyed having<br />
these many years will assist us<br />
in preventing any repetition of<br />
the unpleasant incidents of the<br />
past. Fort Lauderdale Apartment<br />
House Association.<br />
Dear Editors:<br />
One of the major improvements<br />
on the Denison campus<br />
was the installation of the new<br />
campus phone system. Only the<br />
most modern equipment may be<br />
seen on the desks of the campus<br />
residence halls today. But why<br />
do a job half way?<br />
, Last year the telephone system<br />
on this campus was sadly lacking;<br />
in some halls completely absent<br />
The equipment that was in use<br />
was so ancient that it could be<br />
traced back to the original handiwork<br />
of Alexander himself. This<br />
antiquated, over-taxe- d system so<br />
mutilated the conversation that it<br />
sounded as if an over-se- a cable<br />
was fighting a losing battle with<br />
sun spots! However, with the<br />
prospects of a new system being<br />
installed in the near future everyone<br />
made the best of what was<br />
available.<br />
The new system has been installed<br />
and placed in service.<br />
Denison may now boast that it<br />
has a completed modern . . . overtaxed<br />
system! Try to place a call<br />
to any number starting with the<br />
figure "4" between 6:15 and 7 pm.<br />
Unsuccessful? Try again between<br />
10 and 11 pm. If you are lucky<br />
and are placing the call from a<br />
number in the two or three hundred<br />
series (you probably won't<br />
be able to tell the number any<br />
way since they forgot to mark<br />
them) you will hear the dial tone.<br />
If you next dial the figure "4"<br />
chances a-e<br />
22 to 8 that you will<br />
hear the busy signal! If you are<br />
trying to use a phone in the four<br />
hundred series you might just as<br />
well give up! If your luck is<br />
like mine you won't even hear<br />
the dial tone. If you are patient<br />
and have 15 or 20 minutes to<br />
spend waiting, the tone will find<br />
you sooner or later. If you do<br />
have the time to wait, and you<br />
enjoy gloating over the problems<br />
of others just listen to all the<br />
others on the line receiving busy<br />
Ml m 4 ' X &<br />
March 23. 1956<br />
Lenthlel Downs, associate professor of English, submitted the following<br />
article in answer to the defense of Kampus which In This Cobneh<br />
printed two weeks ago.<br />
By LENTHIEL h. downs<br />
This is an unsolicited manuscript. I assume that one of the purposes<br />
of "In This Corner" was to provoke such response, that in the<br />
absence of matter or manner which had achieved this purpose Mr.<br />
Coffin was invited (even assigned) to be provoking. Your choice<br />
was admirable, and the editorial<br />
in defense of Kampus magazine<br />
both incredible and successful.<br />
I should have., said that very<br />
"few students and no faculty member<br />
would ever seriously defend<br />
the publication<br />
r-"- 1 ofsuchamaga--i<br />
x<br />
zine. I now say<br />
( 'that, in my<br />
' 1 opinion, very<br />
. C I few students<br />
- I and no faculty<br />
' ' member except<br />
Mr. Coffin<br />
would ever se--<br />
'<br />
' ' riously under- -<br />
; LiCji take such a defense.<br />
At least<br />
it must not be assumed that the<br />
English Department is in general<br />
agreement.<br />
There's not a leg for Kampus to<br />
stand on. Not only does it serve<br />
absolutely no purpose (printed on<br />
such paper there is not even the<br />
ultimate, potential usefulness of<br />
comic books which also are not<br />
funny and it doesn't lend itself<br />
to the starting of fires). The college<br />
humor magazine itself has<br />
served no purpose since 1929. It<br />
was a colorful phenomenon of the<br />
jazz age, like raccoon coats and<br />
hip flasks. But it takes us so long<br />
to bury our dead. Why are college<br />
humor magazines published?<br />
Because theyi were last year and<br />
the year before, and because, apparently,<br />
they're budgeted.<br />
One Word Suffices<br />
For the Kampus magazines I<br />
have seen, one word suffices:<br />
nausea. I hope they do not have<br />
wide distribution. I am ashamed<br />
to see the name of Denison University,<br />
however hidden, in such<br />
a periodical. We need Kampus as<br />
much as we need 200 more cars to<br />
park in back of Talbot Hall, as<br />
much as we need 20 more activities<br />
for 45 students to register for<br />
(and 12 show up), as much as<br />
Swasey Chapel needs a new hole<br />
in its belfry.<br />
Outlet for the comic? The opportunity<br />
to laugh at each other?<br />
All right to use the classroom<br />
that way, if it happens to adapt<br />
itself to the teacher's technique.<br />
The "Bonds of Friendship" show<br />
(including dining hall skits)? All<br />
right again, for those whose talents<br />
or tastes take them in this<br />
direction. Horseplay on the quad?<br />
A reluctant all right with reservations<br />
(the senior bench business<br />
is getting as boring as hell<br />
week or some Denison parties).<br />
The Whistler Mother cartoon (the<br />
only thing I'd be willing to salvage<br />
from years of Kampus, and I<br />
could easily abandon it) could be<br />
made way for in the Denisonian,<br />
I hope and it, they tell me, is<br />
not a Denison original. And for<br />
serious comic writing (this is not<br />
a mistake) what better outlet<br />
than Exile? If it's a modern Ly-sistra-<br />
ta,<br />
there's the place for it.<br />
Which brings me to a more interesting<br />
subject, praise of Exile.<br />
This extracurricular activity<br />
(closely coordinated with our "in<br />
course" writing major) and the<br />
publication represent the greatest<br />
potential for Denison University<br />
and its reputation of any of our<br />
many activities and needs but a<br />
little more effort and encouragement<br />
and a continuum of effort<br />
to place it with Denison's theater<br />
signals! Also if the system is<br />
jammed enough you can hear the<br />
programs of WDUB.<br />
It will only take a few minutes<br />
to install additional equipment in<br />
the racks of the exchange to relieve<br />
the congestion. I feel that<br />
since the fraternities pay more<br />
for the phones than it costs the<br />
University to operate them, and<br />
since the service rendered by<br />
these phones in no way approximates<br />
the service of the Newark<br />
and the scientific publications favorably<br />
in the public eye. If people<br />
think of the Kenyon Review<br />
when they think of Kenyon (and<br />
vice versa) the same thing can be<br />
true of Exile and Denison.<br />
Stories Under Consideration<br />
How many people on campus<br />
(Kampus) know that two Exile<br />
stories are being seroiusly considered<br />
for inclusion in a nation-<br />
al<br />
book-form- at publication? And<br />
Exile is only in its second year.<br />
I say, subsidize Exile for as long<br />
as Kampus has enjoyed that privilege,<br />
and it will stand on its own<br />
legs. And I know of nothing that<br />
excludes comedy from the pages<br />
of Exile; the requirement is quality,<br />
the best available, and minimal<br />
standards.<br />
Frankly, I am bold enough to<br />
reply that the writing in Exile,<br />
even when inferior, is not trivial.<br />
If you are going to set Exile over<br />
against Kampus (and I should not<br />
have thought of it), you must also<br />
place "professional poets, critics,<br />
and story tellers" over against<br />
"professional humorists." This<br />
juxtaposition ought to be sufficient<br />
Where do we find comedy (Me-garia- n,<br />
that is)? With the first<br />
group obviously. Where do we<br />
find the New Yorker? Certainly<br />
with poets, critics and story tellers.<br />
Where do we find Mark<br />
Twain? With the first group, I<br />
should suppose. Who are the<br />
"professional humorists?" Ar-tem-<br />
us<br />
Ward, Josh Billings, Joe<br />
Miller, and gag writers for radio,<br />
TV and Hollywood. Corn is a<br />
good American product but it<br />
certainly needs high price support<br />
Back to Exile, which is not<br />
trivial. Improvement Possible<br />
That doesn't mean that Exile is<br />
great and could not be better. But<br />
a handful of stories and John<br />
Miller's poetry are good (even by<br />
comparison with what the "professionals"<br />
are doing). However<br />
the good must not be made the<br />
enemy of the best and I should<br />
not like to see critical standards<br />
relaxed. If some Exile contributions<br />
do not meet the qualities of<br />
others or of what we want let's<br />
say so. But not in support of<br />
Kampus. I hope I am as much<br />
opposed to the pretentious as anyone,<br />
including my unsecret office<br />
sharer, but the most pretentious<br />
piece of impertinence at our university<br />
is to call Kampus a "humor"<br />
magazine, and that's saying<br />
a lot.<br />
The Denison students need an<br />
outlet for their bubblihg-ove- r,<br />
non-quali- ty garden variety humor?<br />
You might as well say the<br />
birds need an outlet for their musical<br />
talents; perhaps we should<br />
see what Mr. Arthur Judson can<br />
do for them. I would suggest that<br />
many kinds of humor and some<br />
folk lore are likely to gain by being<br />
left in the oral tradition. And<br />
the winnowing process is much,<br />
much easier.<br />
I must say that to see Kampus<br />
magazine, Comus and Oedipus<br />
Rex in the same editorial,<br />
seems to me inept vulgar, and<br />
impossible. If my remarks, which<br />
are not literature, have seemed<br />
hasty, I can only say that I saw<br />
red and said it, with great restraint<br />
if with not much art<br />
phone that it is only fitting to<br />
offer good service at least!<br />
If the situation is allowed 40<br />
continue I feel that it should also<br />
be pointed out to students that<br />
they should refrain from having<br />
any fires or other emergencies<br />
between the above mentioned<br />
hours since that fire number has<br />
such an ominous appearance .<br />
4 4 4.-J- ack Sauer. P.S. Why<br />
have they removed the campus<br />
phone from the hospital?
March 23. 1956<br />
Presidents, Cabinets Selected<br />
ByTriDelt, Kappa, Alpha Phi, DG<br />
SfcJBrtn S.yH.mhom U. Ifartb. H.nn.h L..,h.rm.n<br />
Four sororities recently elected their new officere for 1956-195- 7.<br />
Those electing were Delta Delta Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha<br />
Phi and Delta Gamma.<br />
The new president of the Tri-De- Ks<br />
Is Sarah Jo Robertson, who<br />
takes over from Ann Delicate.<br />
Replacing Judy Anderson as vice<br />
president is Clover Brodhead.<br />
Other officers include Nancy<br />
Belfield, recording secretary;<br />
llary Lou Conroy, corresponding<br />
secretary; Sandy Yates, treasurer;<br />
Jean McKenzie, rush chairman;<br />
Martha Klipple, social chairman;<br />
and Sally North, senate<br />
representative.<br />
Kappa's new president is Sandy<br />
Hartshorn, who replaces Fran<br />
Smith. Others on the new slate of<br />
officers are Pam Berry, vice president;<br />
Sue Faye Louie, recording<br />
secretary; Ginny Heath, corresponding<br />
secretary; Sue Shomey,<br />
treasurer; Gussie Baker, rush<br />
chairman; Jill Nunn, social chairman;<br />
and Linn Rosene and Pat<br />
Hopper, <strong>Senate</strong> representatives.<br />
Heading, Alpha Phi for the coming<br />
year is Louise Hutchins, replacing<br />
Jane Weisenbarger. Karen<br />
Morris is serving as vice president<br />
in charge of pledges; Pat<br />
Henderson, vice president in<br />
charge of scholarship; Barbara<br />
Rowe, recording secretary; Barbara<br />
Russ, corresponding secretary;<br />
Nancy Witz, treasurer; Phyl<br />
Stanbarger, social chairman; Debbie<br />
Miller, Pan - Hellenic representative;<br />
and Margie Keith, <strong>Senate</strong><br />
representative.<br />
Hannah Leatherman is replacing<br />
Barb Jones as president of<br />
Delta Gamma. Beth Ivins is vice<br />
president; Fran Lyon, treasurer;<br />
Mimi Smith, recorder; Carol<br />
Heit-ma- n,<br />
corresponding secretary;<br />
Nancy Stewart,', business rush<br />
chairman; Sammy Todd, social<br />
rush chairman; Barb Burger, coordinator;<br />
Betsy Phelps, pledge<br />
trainer.<br />
DG, AOPi To Host<br />
Final Major Clinics<br />
Final major clinics for women<br />
this semester will be held tomorrow<br />
at 9 am in the fields of<br />
science and the fine arts.<br />
AOPi house will host the science<br />
meeting. Mr. Clayton<br />
Smucker, assistant manager of<br />
processing and development at<br />
the Owens-Cornin- g Fiberglas<br />
Corporation, will speak. Another<br />
guest speaker will be a Denison<br />
graduate, Miss Rosemary Nisbet,<br />
who is in charge of an analytical<br />
Jab at Proctor and Gamble.<br />
Fine arts group will meet at<br />
the DG house. Because of the .<br />
wide diversification within this<br />
field there will be no outside<br />
speakers. After a short comprehensive<br />
speech, the members will<br />
divide into discussion groups in<br />
art, music and theater.<br />
DENISONI AN<br />
Columbia To Record<br />
13 Knapp Numbers<br />
From Bonds Show<br />
Recordings of the 13 , musical<br />
numbers from "On the Rocks"<br />
will be taped tomorrow, Director<br />
Bill Heiser revealed.<br />
Long-playin- g discs, will be released<br />
by Columbia sometime after<br />
spring vacation. Denisonians<br />
may order the records at the box<br />
office after the show tonight or<br />
tomorrow. ' If 250 orders are<br />
placed, cost per platter will run<br />
$1.25. .<br />
Under supervision of Tom<br />
Lindsey and Jack Sauer, the 40-4- 5<br />
minutes of music will be taped<br />
in Swasey Chapel, because the<br />
acoustics there are almost perfect.<br />
Chuck Knapp, composer of<br />
both music and lyrics for "On, the<br />
Rocks," will conduct the entire<br />
cast and the orchestra for the session.<br />
To be released in a form comparable<br />
to regular album recordings,<br />
the records will have the<br />
standard cardboard jacket with a<br />
cover design by senior Bill Cornell.<br />
By eliminating --royalty fees<br />
and middleman expenses, the cost<br />
of the recordings has been kept<br />
at a minimum.<br />
NUZUM WINS AWARD<br />
Freshman Sara Nuzum has<br />
been announced as winner of the<br />
first semester freshman chemistry<br />
award.<br />
She was awarded a copy of<br />
Handbook of Chemistry and<br />
Physics in recognition of her rank<br />
as freshman with the highest average<br />
in beginning chemistry.<br />
Nylon Hose<br />
Seamless, With Seams'<br />
Morbid with Dark Seams<br />
' and<br />
Seamless No Heels<br />
Northmont Stretch<br />
at<br />
Town & Gown<br />
YOU'LL, DOTH GO FOR THIS CIGARETTE!<br />
j--<br />
D As the most popular new mou" " v,i&v . ..k, b<br />
college smokers something special; It's flavor - the full, rich, tobacco flavor<br />
you want in a cigarette. Along with finer flavor, Winston also brings you<br />
finer filter. It works so well the flavor really gets through. Try Winston!<br />
R. J. REYNOLDS TO BACCO CO..<br />
WINSTON-SALE- M.<br />
.<br />
N. C<br />
i<br />
Page 8<br />
Washington Study Plan Offers<br />
Unique Opportunity to Students<br />
By JAN PIERCE<br />
Sneaking into the inner sanctum of the headquarters of one of<br />
the major political parties on election night, sitting in on congressional<br />
hearings, watching the House of Representatives and <strong>Senate</strong><br />
in action, pinning down an evasive bureaucrat on a controversial<br />
issue or taking in some of the<br />
many cultural events available in<br />
the capital are just a few of the<br />
many and varied activities typical<br />
of over 80 college students from<br />
more than 30 colleges and .<br />
who are turned loose in<br />
Washington, B.C., each semester.<br />
Every year approximately 160<br />
students spend a semester in the<br />
nation's capital through a unique<br />
plan, the Washington Semester<br />
Program, offered by American<br />
University in cooperation with<br />
over 50 American colleges and<br />
'<br />
universities.<br />
Denison, a participant in the<br />
plan, each year offers the opportunity<br />
to enroll in the plan to approximately<br />
four of its students.<br />
Work on the individual research<br />
project is one of the primary<br />
activities of the Washington<br />
Semester students. To cpmplete<br />
the project, which must be on a<br />
topic which can be studied only<br />
in Washington, students , utilize<br />
the resources of government departmental<br />
libraries and the Library<br />
of Congress. Interviews<br />
with officials in the area under<br />
study are a particularly import-- "<br />
ant source of information.<br />
A student may earn up to 15<br />
hours of academic credit on the<br />
plan. Three hours of credit each<br />
are granted for the seminars and<br />
VISIT OUR EXPANDED<br />
DENISON<br />
-<br />
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s<br />
the research project and nine additional<br />
hours of regular classes<br />
may be taken at American University.<br />
Dr. Cephus L. Stephens, chairman<br />
of the Washington Semester<br />
Committee which makes the selection,<br />
recommends that students<br />
interested in the plan attend a<br />
meeting Sunday at 2 pm at the<br />
Sigma Chi house. At the meeting<br />
the Washington Semester Program<br />
will be explained by students<br />
who have participated in<br />
it in the past Students interested<br />
in the plan who are unable to attend<br />
this meeting may apply by<br />
contacting Dr. Stephens before<br />
vacation.<br />
The Evergreens<br />
TAfHr FvImmIb MMf<br />
LUNCHES and<br />
SHORT ORDERS<br />
FOOD PREPARED IN<br />
STAINLESS STEEL<br />
Closed Monday<br />
TRADE BOOK DEPARTMENT<br />
New Fiction and Nonfiction<br />
Reduced Price Remainders<br />
Reference Books<br />
Paper Books<br />
BOOK STORE 1<br />
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Page 4<br />
New Juke Box Appears in Union;<br />
Predecessor Just Too Frustrated!<br />
By GIN'NY WALLACE<br />
Big things are happening in the student union. After agitation,<br />
by campus radicals, a new juke box has been finally installed in the<br />
student union. Original plans had called for a mere change of records<br />
but investigation revealed that the old platters had been a part of<br />
the old juke box for so long that<br />
removal would have given the<br />
old box definite frustration complexes.<br />
Gleaming with blue and silver<br />
splendor, the new machine<br />
crouches in the same spot its<br />
predecessor occupied. A casual<br />
perusal of the tune selection<br />
soon gives rise to an uneasy feeling.<br />
Is this machine the work<br />
of subversive elements on campus,<br />
such as the seemingly extinct<br />
Wingless Angels? Or is<br />
the subtle humor of songs like<br />
"Ivory Tower" and Count Basie's<br />
"Big Red" just a product of the<br />
fertile imagination of the powers<br />
that be?<br />
Combined consultations with<br />
the psychology department yield<br />
this diagnosis: the record selector<br />
is one of the many frustrated<br />
lovers on campus: To wit, we<br />
have first a picture of his girl<br />
friend. She is "Innamorta."<br />
She wears "My First Formal<br />
Gown" of "Baubles, Bangles and<br />
Beads" (she's a kind of clod).<br />
However, our hero is charmed<br />
and believes "Love Is Just Around<br />
the Corner." In fact, after the<br />
"Eleventh Hour Melody" at the<br />
dance he suggested a drive down<br />
"The Old Ox Road."<br />
She thinks "It's Only a Man"<br />
and replies "Never' What, he<br />
demands, do you think "I'm Just<br />
a Dancing Partner?" Through<br />
the strains of the "Donaise in<br />
A-Fl- at, Op. 53, No. 5" we hear<br />
muffled shouts of Stop! Don't!<br />
and then a sign, "Skinned." Well<br />
now, maybe he isn't frustrated.<br />
Fiiis, DU's Initiate<br />
Two Denison fraternities recently<br />
initiated their pledges,<br />
completing fraternity initiations<br />
this year.<br />
On March 11, Phi Gamma Delta<br />
initiated Edmund Boynton, William<br />
Byars, Robert James, Louis<br />
Komjathy, Thomas Menge, James<br />
Munson, David Oppermann, John<br />
Prior, John Reece, Thomas Roehl,<br />
David Savage, Dixon Shrum,<br />
Frederick Turner and William M.I<br />
Tuttle, Jr. Thomas Roehl received<br />
the outstanding pledge<br />
award. y<br />
Activated into Delta Upsilon on<br />
March 18 were Joseph Arnold,<br />
David Arey, Bruce Bailey, Kent<br />
Bradshaw, Jerry Wicke, William<br />
Maxson, Donald Frey, Michael<br />
Kaplan,, Donald Kendziora, Richard<br />
Huffman, Sheridan English,<br />
Gordon Garrett and Daniel ShelL<br />
The outstanding pledge award<br />
was won by William Maxson.<br />
ra-B- Ta<br />
BTB'BTBTnnnrB 8 irraTnna<br />
pLook your best as you start'<br />
Your Spring Vacation<br />
;<br />
HAVE YOUR HAIR DONE AT!<br />
Th e<br />
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ftpOBBBO8IK0P8QllCO<br />
Art Class Exhibits<br />
Projects in Doane<br />
Basic design students are now<br />
showing a series of their work in<br />
the Doane administration building<br />
gallery. These projects , offer<br />
viewers a glimpse at both the experimental<br />
and decorative natures<br />
characteristic of this course.<br />
Photograms, exposures taken of<br />
objects placed on sensitized paper,<br />
reveal the almost unlimited possibilities<br />
of this medium for attaining<br />
unusual patterns, textures<br />
and designs. The typical atmospheric<br />
or dramatic qualities are<br />
exemplified in those done by Cindy<br />
Parsons, Gladys Yates, Jane<br />
Hamill, Cristy Guerrant and Peggy<br />
Banker.<br />
Carol Cordes, Anne Irgens and<br />
Linnae Leithner feature textural<br />
variations in their photo montages;<br />
these composites are made<br />
up of segments of photographs<br />
taken from many sources.<br />
Experimenting with color values,<br />
Michael Jung, Sally Campbell,<br />
Janet Wilkins and others<br />
contribute pictorial-lookin-g charts<br />
in black and white.<br />
Compositions of glass enclosed<br />
in hand-mad- e wooden frames,<br />
multi-lay- er slides and film strip<br />
animations fill out the remainder<br />
of the exhibition.<br />
DCGA Schedules<br />
Cinemascope Film<br />
DCGA will present "Night People"<br />
in cinemascope and technicolor<br />
at 7:30 and 9:30 April 13.<br />
The show will star Gregory Peck,<br />
Broderick Crawford, Anita Bjork<br />
and Rita Gam.<br />
"Night People" is a taut, exciting<br />
melodrama about the intrigue<br />
that goes on almost every day be-- ,<br />
tween East and West Berlin and<br />
the powder keg for danger it represents.<br />
Filmed in Germany, this<br />
cloak-and-dagg- er thriller is the<br />
first cinemascope feature to be<br />
made on the continent. With such<br />
outstanding landmarks as the<br />
Brandenburg Gate, Unter den<br />
Linden, the burned out Reichstag<br />
building and the bunker where<br />
Hitler and Eva Braun met their<br />
deaths, this film has an authenticity<br />
that few pictures of its kind<br />
attain.<br />
DENIS ONI AN<br />
<strong>Senate</strong> Summary<br />
(Continued from Page 1)<br />
include Fiske University, questionnaires<br />
to determine the composition<br />
of the Denison student<br />
body were handed out at registration<br />
for the second semester, and<br />
the work which resulted in the<br />
new ruling concerning the noon<br />
return following vacations was<br />
initiated.<br />
The beginning of the second semester<br />
saw the science requirement<br />
debate again and a resolution<br />
sent to the faculty, the NSA<br />
leadership conference at Capital<br />
University, an investigation into<br />
wages given to dining hall employees,<br />
the 3. ruling in relation to<br />
the academic penalty before and<br />
after vacations, the NSA travel<br />
program, the allocation to KAM-PU- S<br />
for a second edition this<br />
spring, the five - college mock<br />
United Nations Conference, and<br />
finally the election of the new officers<br />
for the 1956-5-7 academic<br />
year.<br />
Under suggestions the report<br />
listed a <strong>Senate</strong> retreat for new<br />
members to be held sometime in<br />
the spring as a leadership training<br />
program, a stepped-u- p public<br />
relations program so that the students<br />
will know what DCGA is<br />
doing, and finally that <strong>Senate</strong> review<br />
carefully the various issues<br />
that will come before them for<br />
consideration in the next year.<br />
Powers To Assume<br />
Kneece's Position<br />
The Reverend W. Clinton Powers<br />
of Red Bank, New Jersey<br />
has been appointed Assistant to<br />
the President for Church Relations,<br />
President A. Blair Knapp has announced.<br />
Powers, successor to<br />
the Reverend Odyss W. Kneece,<br />
who recently took over the pastorate<br />
of the Grace Baptist Church at<br />
Trenton, New Jersey,' will assume<br />
his new duties on May 1.<br />
Powers has the decree of Associate<br />
in Arts from Campbell<br />
Junior College at Busies Creek,<br />
North Carolina, BA with a major<br />
in economics from Wake Forest,<br />
and MA in sociology from University<br />
of Pennsylvania. He took his<br />
ministerial training at C r o z e r<br />
Theological Seminary at Chester,<br />
Pennsylvania, and was ordained<br />
on .September 13, 1941. Since<br />
then, Powers, 39, has held two<br />
pastorates: Calvary Baptist<br />
Church in Westerly, Rhode Island,<br />
and the First Baptist Churuch in<br />
Red Bank, New Jersey. He is a<br />
member of the Board of Managers<br />
of the American Baptist Historical<br />
Society and of the Board of Managers<br />
of the New Jersey Baptist<br />
Convention, among other professional<br />
and civic organizations.<br />
The Reverend Powers and Mrs.<br />
Powers have two children, Cynthia,<br />
12, and Lynne, 8.<br />
A medieval con man, relates Hans<br />
Christian Andersen, sold an emperor<br />
a scrumptious suit of "invisible<br />
clothes,"' which really weren't<br />
any clothes at all. Some folks today<br />
fall for the same gag. They leap at<br />
"unheard of bargains," only to find<br />
later that they didn't buy much of<br />
a suit. Simple way to avoid that pitfall<br />
. . . look for the Hart Schaffner<br />
& Marx label. You don't overpay<br />
. . . you do get clothing you know<br />
is fine quality clothing.<br />
March 23. 1956<br />
ft frosts t ,. fc y 4 && ' , a 1<br />
lu,y ,<br />
" 1<br />
.v' , Vn3 p<br />
,ta tor i.i t 1<br />
11 ' , T.<br />
By SARAH LEWIS and SAM SPADE<br />
"BAKER'S DOZEN" TO ENTERTAIN CAMPUS<br />
Tuck Halbkat, the president or doughnut as he is called of the<br />
Baker's Dozen, a Yale singing group, will arrive here Tuesday night.<br />
Just for the "record," these itinerant musicians are being sponsored<br />
by Kappa Kappa Gamma (no one knows quite why) and will sing<br />
at the aforementioned abode at<br />
7 pm.<br />
Originally labelled the "Noxious<br />
Nine" because of one member<br />
from Harvard, the group has<br />
grown in both size and prestige.<br />
Composed of undergraduates<br />
from different fraternities, the<br />
"Dozen" is reputed to be one of<br />
the best in the East.<br />
Denison is one of numerous engagements<br />
on their agenda which<br />
features Ohio University, Winchester<br />
Country Club and a concert<br />
at Charleston and Parkers-bur- g.<br />
all-scho- This will be an ol<br />
open house and will offer a medley<br />
of seldom-hear- d tunes, so let's<br />
have a good representation and a<br />
cordial ovation for this aggrega-<br />
of-Yalie- s. tion<br />
Domesticity<br />
It seems that a group of boys<br />
living in one of Granville's oldest .<br />
monuments would like to add a<br />
new meaning to the letters DG,<br />
hence, Delicious Grub. Call it<br />
Denison spirit or just plain generosity,<br />
the Delta Gammas have<br />
certainly cemented their Bonds of<br />
Friendship with the Kappa Sigs<br />
and all other groups through<br />
their thoughtfulness in cooking<br />
dinner this past week some call<br />
it madness, we call it a good deal.<br />
When In Rome,<br />
Do As The Phi Delts<br />
The cry of last Friday's Roman<br />
banquet was that the Phi Delts<br />
and their dates spent two hours<br />
consuming grapes and figs. After<br />
much diligent research we find<br />
this is" the procedure for wining<br />
and dining on the Mediterranean<br />
1 Ju. 2-20-<br />
peninsula and that<br />
with the Phi Delts.<br />
all is right<br />
Remember, He's A Man<br />
Congratulations to Mary Jane<br />
Jagger, Kappa, and John Mac-Donal- d,<br />
Phi Delt, who were<br />
pinned last weekend; and to San-<br />
dy Essinger, Chi O, and .<br />
Brandt, a graduate of Miami University,<br />
who have been engaged<br />
for two months.<br />
Bill<br />
WE OFFER: A helpful hint on<br />
tub etiquette to Carol from the<br />
Dirty Five, and to the Handy Six<br />
in the Farmhouse Fix.<br />
Crocker Publishes Speeches<br />
Dr. Lionel G. Crocker, senior<br />
professor and chairman of the department<br />
of speech, is author of<br />
an article, "Speech its Meaning<br />
Is Manifold," published in the<br />
March issue of the NEA Journal,<br />
published monthly by the National<br />
Education Association.<br />
K an<br />
A nyone<br />
M ake<br />
P ictures<br />
U are<br />
S ummoned<br />
There will be a meeting this<br />
Tuesday in Talbot West at<br />
3:00. Anyone vaguely interested,<br />
and possesing tentative<br />
talent please partici- -<br />
pate-CO- ME ONE COME ALL.;<br />
There's No Substitute for<br />
Health<br />
Buy It At Your Drug Store<br />
SCOTT PHARMACY<br />
11<br />
1<br />
For the<br />
a i leen d u n ki n<br />
Wishes to Thank the Column<br />
GRUNTS FROM THE RUNTS<br />
127 East Broadway<br />
Plug-Br- ing in the "NEW ITEMS"<br />
Let's See It!<br />
For Those People Going Abroad We Have Many<br />
Needs to Stick in Your Suitcases<br />
You'll Be Sorry When You Get There and<br />
Don't Have Them<br />
GOING VISITING AT EASTER?<br />
You'll be a welcome guest if you take your<br />
hostess some delicious TIDBITS from<br />
A I LEEN DUNKIN
March 23, 1956<br />
Reynolds Selects<br />
Encourages Campus Participation<br />
Howie Reynolds, president-elec- t of thP nmi rv;rf --p<br />
phflsis Program, has announced his cabinet for the coming year.<br />
Co-chairm- en for the fall Christian Emphasis Days will be John<br />
UcCallister and Marg Svensson and for the winter Christian Emphasis<br />
days, Bob Van Court and Joyce .<br />
Tecklenberg. Bonds of Friendship<br />
menco-chair-<br />
are Gary Gieringer<br />
and<br />
and<br />
Sandy Miskelly. Ann Fisher<br />
co-chairm- en<br />
Birch Carr are<br />
of the vespers committee. Gordie<br />
Harper and Carol Megby will<br />
head deputations, while Deni-servi- ce<br />
co-chairm- en are Tom<br />
Evans and Jane Bodorff.<br />
co-chair- Publicity men are Tom<br />
Borland and Jan Siegel, and John<br />
Kenower will be in charge of conferences.<br />
Reynolds has also revived<br />
Deniscope making John<br />
Chamberlain and Cathy Wolston<br />
co-edit- ors. John Hill and Sally<br />
North will head the discussions<br />
committee.<br />
Students interested in working<br />
on any of the committees of the<br />
Denison Christian Empnasis Program<br />
should contact Mrs. Ruth<br />
Meyers, secretary, in the DCEP<br />
office, Life Science G08. Howie<br />
comments, "Everyone is welcome.<br />
DCEP is a program for all of us,<br />
but it can only be that way when<br />
we work together to accomplish<br />
our common ideals."<br />
Baker Leads Betas;<br />
Colwell Heads Fijis<br />
Doug Colwell Art Baker<br />
Two fraternities, Phi Gamma<br />
Delta and Beta Theta Pi, recently<br />
elected their new slate of officers<br />
for 1956-5- 7.<br />
Doug Colwell replaces Joe<br />
Thomas as president of the Fijis.<br />
Other officers are Bob Carroll,<br />
treasurer; John Brand, recording<br />
secretary; Pete Roehl, corresponding<br />
secretary; and Tom Rodgers,<br />
historian.<br />
New president of the Betas is<br />
Art Baker, who replaces Hal<br />
Whitacre. Other officers include<br />
Chuck Fischer, vice president;<br />
Dick Barbieri, treasurer; Bill<br />
Wagner, recorder. Among others<br />
filling chapter posts are Ken<br />
Rohl, social chairman; Don<br />
Brown, rushing chairman; and<br />
Bus McMillen, steward.<br />
New Pledges<br />
Kappa Siema has recently<br />
pledged five men and Delta<br />
Upsilon one. Junior Scott<br />
Schurz and freshmen Bill Brohm,<br />
Gerry Gerlach, Ernie Nickel and<br />
Tim Schramm are new Kappa Sig<br />
pledges. The newest neophyte of<br />
DU is freshman Dave Swoap.<br />
Wedgewood Plates<br />
Feature 7 Scenes<br />
Seven campus scenes on<br />
Wedge-woo- d<br />
plates from England are<br />
available in the Denison Book<br />
Store and the Town and Gown<br />
Gift Shop.<br />
A later supplement to scenes of<br />
east plaza, fieldhouse, library,<br />
south plaza, Stone Hall, Swasey<br />
Chapel and Talbot Hall is a new<br />
view of the president's home.<br />
This plate is a special 125th anniversary<br />
plate.<br />
Proceeds from the sale of these<br />
Plates help to support the American<br />
Association of University<br />
f Women's scholarship activities.<br />
STUART'S<br />
Will Be Glad To Repair<br />
Your Watch for Yo- u-<br />
We Also Have New<br />
WATCH CRYSTALS<br />
f<br />
-<br />
.<br />
-<br />
'<br />
I<br />
. Washington,<br />
DCEP Cabinet- -<br />
Lindsey Speaks<br />
To NYU Classes<br />
Dr. Arthur W. Lindsey, senior<br />
professor of biological sciences,<br />
spent two days in New York City<br />
last week on the campus of New<br />
York University in his capacity as<br />
consultant for the Association of<br />
American Colleges for Teacher<br />
Education.<br />
He spoke to the evening class<br />
in the School of Education on<br />
Frontiers of Knowledge: Integrating<br />
Concepts in Science, Religion,<br />
Art, Education and Philosophy.<br />
His subject was "Biology and Human<br />
Problems." He also held conferences<br />
with faculty members<br />
and students.<br />
Mrs. Jones Attends<br />
Deans Conventions<br />
Mrs. Leona W. Jones, dean of<br />
women, leaves Cincinnati today<br />
after attending the annual meeting<br />
of the National Association of<br />
Deans of Women. She goes to<br />
D. all-da- C, for an y<br />
sub-committ- meeting ee<br />
tomorrow of the<br />
of the American Council<br />
on Education, of which she is a<br />
sub-committ- ee member. This has<br />
been charged with preparation of<br />
a brochure on administration of<br />
student personnel services.<br />
While in Washington Mrs. Jones<br />
will attend the annual meeting<br />
of the American Personnel and<br />
Guidance Association, Sunday<br />
through Wednesday.<br />
Dr. Hepp Publishes<br />
Textbook On Logic<br />
Dr. Maylon H. Hepp, chairman<br />
of the department of philosophy,<br />
is author of the college textbook<br />
entitled "Thinking Things<br />
Through," which is due from the<br />
presses of Charles Scribner's Sons,<br />
New York, later this month.<br />
The book is an elementary text<br />
dealing with the principles and<br />
problems of the three basic areas<br />
of logical concern, including the<br />
logic of meaning or semantics<br />
and elementary propaganda analysis;<br />
the logic of validity or formal<br />
logic, both traditional and<br />
contemporary; and the logic of<br />
factual inquiry or the scienfific<br />
method and the evaluation of arguments<br />
involving probability.<br />
Democrats Form'<br />
Students for Democratic Action,<br />
a national campus organization<br />
dedicated to an awareness and<br />
understanding of present day po-<br />
litical issues, is re-establis-<br />
hing its<br />
Denison chapter.<br />
Founded in 1947 at a conference<br />
called by leading American lib<br />
erals, SDA today is the largest<br />
political youth organization in the<br />
United States. It has no formal<br />
ties with any political party, but<br />
endorses those candidates of both<br />
major parties whose record meets<br />
SDA's criteria of liberalism.<br />
Students interested in affiliating<br />
with or learning more about<br />
SDA should contact Fran<br />
Cuci-nell- i,<br />
Monomoy; Dave Whitenack,<br />
SAE house, or Gordon Harper,<br />
ACC house.<br />
Serving Denison<br />
Jill<br />
DENISONIAN<br />
sPring TriP p,ans<br />
(Continued from Page 1)<br />
the practices of the leading industries<br />
in order to get a picture<br />
of the actual ground work. The<br />
tour will include: Newton Baker,<br />
Frank Donovan, Tom Lindsey,<br />
Bill Sadd, Ralph Shell, Dennis<br />
Smith, Gordon Smith and Anne<br />
Stone.<br />
The departments of art and<br />
theater will find much activity<br />
occupying their time in New York<br />
City. Edward Wright, professor<br />
of theater arts, and the group<br />
will attend eleven plays as a<br />
minimum. The<br />
thirty-tw- o par-<br />
ticipating students will stay at<br />
the Hotel, Chesterfield. The<br />
group includes: Charlotte Bell,<br />
Sally Campbell, Diane Drury, Bill<br />
Frary, Jerry Friene, Georgianna<br />
Gates,' Susie Gordner, Robert<br />
Hauman, Margaret Huff, Alice<br />
Hull, Sue Hoover, Ernestine Hunt,<br />
Connie Johanson, Jesse Matlack,<br />
Eleanor Nesbit, Robert McClelland,<br />
Jill Nunn, Paul Odebrecht,<br />
Peggy Pipe, Andy Pryor, Lucille<br />
Robertson, George S h o r n e y,<br />
Nancy Sippel, Beverly Trott,<br />
Ginny Wagner and Allan Zambie.<br />
Also on the trip will be Richard<br />
Smith, instructor in theater arts,<br />
and his wife.<br />
The art group will spend its<br />
time touring museums. The specific<br />
aim is to study American<br />
contemporary art, the artist, gallery<br />
and museum relationship,<br />
according to Robert R. Burket,<br />
instructor in art. Accompanying<br />
Mr. Burkert are: Susan Fisher,<br />
Anne Irgens, Marcia Mutschler,<br />
Lois Rowley, Barb Russ, Ted<br />
Shaw, Janet Siegel and Gladys<br />
Yates.<br />
Haupt Places First<br />
Freshman Barbara Haupt won<br />
the first prize for the best Western<br />
Civilization mid-ter- m essay<br />
of last semester, receiving the<br />
book History of Civilization by<br />
Crane Brinton.<br />
Out of 450 students taking the<br />
exam, judges Dean Parker E.<br />
Lichtenstein, Paul L. Bennett, associate<br />
professor of English, and<br />
Dr. G. Wallace Chessman, assistant<br />
professor of history, selected<br />
John Rogers, Dick Mann, Joyce .<br />
Tecklenberg and Elizabeth Wakefield<br />
for honorable mention. Essays<br />
were judged on quality of<br />
writing and historical content.<br />
Barb was presented the prize at<br />
a recent faculty meeting.<br />
A man who has reformed himself<br />
has contributed his full share<br />
towards the reformation of his<br />
neighbor. (Courtesy ol the YWCA)<br />
When Your Plans<br />
Include . . .<br />
PRINTING<br />
Consult<br />
Granville Times<br />
also<br />
PRESS<br />
Paper Supplies<br />
Cardboard Envelopes<br />
Stationery<br />
and Denisonians<br />
Well for <strong>Year</strong>s<br />
Good Used Cars New Cars<br />
Body Work Service Parts<br />
WALKER AND BATTAT MOTORS<br />
AUTHORIZED<br />
PhoneFA6-16- 1 DEALER Newark, Ohio<br />
By MARY KERR<br />
I envy the 30 students who are going on the New York theater<br />
trip during spring vacation. They will be exposed to one of the<br />
brightest of Broadway seasons nicely balanced with two musicals,<br />
meioarama comeay and tarce.<br />
They will be introduced to<br />
Broadway with the Rogers and<br />
Hammerstein musical "Pipe<br />
Dream." This is the story of a<br />
reluctant romance whose main<br />
setting is in the heroine's apartment.<br />
Members of the group will then<br />
see "The Great Sebastians," a<br />
melodramatic comedy starring<br />
Lynn Fontainne and Alfred Lunt<br />
in their 26th joint assignment.<br />
"The Matchmaker" is a play rewritten<br />
by Thornton Wilder from<br />
one of his earlier plays. This<br />
farce, starring Ruth Gordon and<br />
directed by Tyrone Guthrie, takes<br />
on the flavor of "Our Town" in<br />
its more serious moments.<br />
"The Diary of Anne Frank" is a<br />
play adapted from a best seller<br />
book published several years ago.<br />
It presents a grim, episodic situation<br />
about eight Jews who are<br />
hiding in a garret above an Amsterdam<br />
building during the<br />
height of World War n terror.<br />
' Susan Strasberg as Anne is the<br />
outstanding member of the cast<br />
The comedy "No Time For Sergeants-"<br />
brings to its audience a<br />
huge cast and a collection of<br />
jokes set in the well worked plot<br />
"dumb country boy becomes<br />
hero."<br />
"The Lark," an adaptation of<br />
the Parisian success about Joan<br />
of Arc, is the most serious play of<br />
the dozen. Boris Karloff supports<br />
Julie Harris, who adds her name<br />
to the many distinguished stage<br />
Maids of Orleans.<br />
Most publicized hit, "Damn<br />
Yankees," stars the vibrant Gwen<br />
Verdon. This musical with a hint<br />
of a Marlowe plot is about a baseball<br />
fan who sells his soul to the<br />
devil in order to be transformed<br />
"ONCE A GUEST<br />
Open the <strong>Year</strong> Round<br />
2-91- JUno" 01<br />
..OK'ttPWWAr.,<br />
(Sratnrtll<br />
our purpose is to Serve --iou, MDU'LL FIMD IT REALLY PAYS'<br />
TO LET UST CLEAN PAJAMAS.<br />
NIGHTGOWNS AND NEGLIGEE?<br />
Ban<br />
into a star player who can help<br />
his team win the pennant<br />
"The Three Penny Opera,' the<br />
Berthold Brecht play, is the most<br />
outstanding play that will be seen<br />
by the group. It is currently running<br />
at one of the now famous<br />
off-Broadw- ay theaters.<br />
Last play scheduled for the trip,<br />
"Inherit the Wind," is a courtroom<br />
drama starring Melvin<br />
Douglas. The plot is based upon<br />
the famous Scopes "monkey trial"<br />
of 1925 in which a young teacher<br />
is on trial for breaking the state<br />
law against expounding on the<br />
Darwinian theory of evolution.<br />
The New York theater trip includes<br />
the best possible selection<br />
of the Broadway hits of the current<br />
season. It is planned so that<br />
there is a great deal of free time<br />
to see other plays and to enjoy<br />
New York City. The trip is sponsored<br />
by Ed Wright and can be<br />
taken with the contemporary theater<br />
course for academic credit.<br />
Tryouts for the Mother's Day<br />
play will be held before spring<br />
vacation. Check with the bulletin<br />
board on the second floor in<br />
Doane for information.<br />
EASTER CARDS<br />
All New and Different<br />
Including Studio Style<br />
5c Up<br />
EASTER GIFTS-- A Tremendous<br />
Variety, Something Suitable<br />
for Anyone and Priced from<br />
$1.00 Up<br />
Town & Gown<br />
ALWAYS A FRIEND"<br />
3mt<br />
John V.Miller<br />
General Manager<br />
YOU DO IT<br />
or<br />
VE DO IT<br />
No Parking<br />
Worries<br />
Page 5<br />
A . I
Pctco 6<br />
Lacrosse Team Opens Season<br />
Tuesday With Courtland State;<br />
Yard-Me- n Plan Tough Schedule<br />
By TOM PIERATT<br />
On March 10 the Big Red lacrosse squad held a full field scrimmage<br />
for the first time since the sport was introduced at Denison.<br />
They are held Wednesday and Saturday. Rix Yard, Denison's lacrosse<br />
coach, has high hopes for this year's squad and expects them to pro-<br />
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DENISONIAN<br />
Sports In Shorts<br />
By GAIL PALMES<br />
Joan Chappell's name was<br />
added to the WRA plaque for<br />
outstanding seniors Tuesday night<br />
at the annual Spring Banquet.<br />
The award, the highest given by<br />
WRA, was presented to Joan,<br />
president of the organization, for<br />
her four years of participation<br />
and service.<br />
The 2000, 1500, and 1000 point<br />
March 23. 1SSC<br />
Big Red Track Team To Compete<br />
With Nation's Best At Quantico<br />
Having finished its indoor season, the Denison University track<br />
team under Coach Ken Meyer is now getting prepared for the outdoor<br />
season. The first outdoor meet the Big Red will compete In it<br />
the Marine <strong>Relay</strong>s at Quantico, Virginia, on April 6-- 7. This is the<br />
first year for the meet, and many<br />
of the country's top teams, such<br />
as Duke University, Manhattan<br />
College and Villanova University<br />
will be competing.<br />
On April 14, the Denison team<br />
will journey to Crawfordsville,<br />
The first triangular meet for<br />
Denison is on May 1 at Akron.<br />
Competing against the Big Red<br />
will be Akron arid Hiram. Other<br />
triangular meets are on May 9<br />
against Capital and Otterbein, and<br />
vide a much better showing than<br />
last year's team. Although graduation<br />
and academic probation<br />
took seven of the ten starters,<br />
Coach Yard has seven letter winners<br />
in his squad of 22, the largest<br />
turnout for the sport here at<br />
Denison.<br />
A large factor in Denison's final<br />
standing will be Tom Menge, a<br />
transfer student who could boost<br />
Denison's winnings "by 7." Although<br />
Menge won't be able to<br />
play against any conference<br />
teams, he will see quite a bit of<br />
action against Cleveland, Ohio<br />
Wesleyan, Akron and possibly<br />
Courtland State Teachers College.<br />
Squads Named<br />
Letterman Dave Lewis will<br />
open at goalie. "The best defense<br />
ever at Denison" will, have letter-me- n<br />
Bill Hendrickson, Art Trunk-fiel- d<br />
and Bruce Saunders but<br />
they will have to hustle to stay<br />
Mill-iroahead<br />
of Gerry Gerlach, Bill n<br />
and Payton Cramer. The<br />
mid-fiel- d will have three rotating<br />
squads and all nine men will<br />
see a great deal of action. The<br />
first squad has Bill Courtney,<br />
Herb Somers and Bill Mason; the<br />
Bar-ring- er<br />
second, Lynn Dougherty, Bill<br />
and Jim Paul; while the<br />
other squad is composed of Bob<br />
Ja-blon- ski<br />
Taylor, Dick Ford and Dick<br />
Letterman Courtney will<br />
face off this year but all nine<br />
will be used regularly in an attempt<br />
to provide a second quarter<br />
punch that was lacking last<br />
year. Lettermen Larry Raymond<br />
and Bob Kent plus Tom Hayes<br />
will be the starting attack men<br />
with John Maschal as substitute.<br />
Menge will play attack and mid-fiel- d<br />
when he is permitted to<br />
play.<br />
Last year the Big Red got off<br />
to a good start against Ohio State<br />
and improved rapidly with each<br />
game. At the. middle of the season<br />
he squad slacked off and<br />
went downhill for the remainder<br />
of the season. During the first<br />
half of the games the Big Red<br />
held its own, but because of midfielders<br />
with inadequate experience,<br />
the opponents ran wild in<br />
the second half and compiled<br />
some lopsided victories. The team<br />
has 11 freshmen out this year<br />
which will give it added bench<br />
strength this year and probable<br />
letter winners ' Along with Courtland, other new<br />
additions to the league are Ohio awards were given at the Ban-<br />
'<br />
Wesleyan and Akron, called quet. Gail Palmer received the<br />
clubs as this is their first lacrosse 2000 point award, the loving cup.<br />
season. Western Reserve, Case Joan Chappell and Ann Mcand<br />
Ohio University are seriously<br />
considering adding lacrosse to<br />
Laughlin were awarded the cup<br />
their 1956-5- 7 athletic program. after the fall season. Gail Ran-ne- y<br />
Oberlin, last year's champion; earned the 1500 point award,<br />
Kenyon, Ohio State and the the WRA bracelet The following<br />
Cleveland lacrosse club compose girls were given the 1000 point<br />
the remainder of the teams in the award: R. J. Barbier, Betty Borg-ma- n,<br />
'<br />
11-tea- m schedule.<br />
Sandy Hartshorn, Pat Jones,<br />
Lacrosse is rapidly spreading Mary Kay Schmidt, Barb Silliman<br />
from the eastern schools to the and Elly Voss.<br />
mid-we- st and more schools are Theta defeated Tri-D- elt 31-- 5<br />
putting more emphasis on the last Tuesday in the final league<br />
sport every year. Denison has the basketball game of the season. On<br />
man power for a winning season the Theta team Debbie Thompson<br />
for the Big Red. Many of you scored 12 points, Ann McLaugh-<br />
have never seen or ever heard of lin, 10, and Dottie Jones, 7. Nancy<br />
lacrosse and you owe it to your-<br />
Jo Burns, Nancy Byers, Sue Robselves<br />
to become acquainted with erts<br />
the sport Why don't you come<br />
and Sue Steadman alternated<br />
down to the practice field next<br />
for Theta as guards. Cor-bet- Carol t,<br />
Tuesday for the opening of the Diane Eaton and Dot Suther-<br />
1956 lacrosse season against land served as the<br />
Courtland State Teachers College?<br />
Game time is tentatively<br />
set for 1:30.<br />
next year. According<br />
to Coach Yard, every man<br />
has the potential to enable him to<br />
see action this year.<br />
, Lacrosse Spreads<br />
Denison opens its lacrosse season<br />
this coming Tuesday against<br />
Courtland State Teachers College.<br />
Are You GOING TO FLORD1A?<br />
We feel by the lime you read<br />
this we will have our 1956<br />
Complete Line of<br />
Tri-De- lt defense.<br />
Alice Armstrong, Anne<br />
Johnson and Judy Meek were Tri-D- LACROSSE SCHEDULE<br />
March 27 Courtland Stat-e-<br />
April 14 Geveland ...<br />
April 25 Ohio<br />
elt<br />
forwards.<br />
State-Ap-<br />
Indiana, for the Wabash <strong>Relay</strong>s.<br />
Denison will be defending shot-p- ut<br />
champions in this meet Fol- The remainder of the schedule<br />
lowing this meet, the Big Red for Denison is: May 12 at home<br />
will be at home April 17 against against Oberlin, and May 15 at<br />
Central State and will compete Muskingum. The Ohio Confer-<br />
against Ohio Wesleyan at Delaence meet will be held at Wooware<br />
on April 21. Cincinnati's ster on May 26.<br />
all-arou- nd strong track team will<br />
invade Granville on April 28.<br />
Bargees<br />
SINCLAIR<br />
t Horn<br />
at Horn SERVICE<br />
ril at Columbus<br />
29 Oberlin<br />
at Home<br />
May 2 Cleveland<br />
--at Cleveland<br />
TIRES BATTERIES<br />
May 4 Kenyon<br />
at Gambier<br />
May 12 Ohio Stat- e- at Horn<br />
WRECKING SERVICE<br />
May 16 Ohio Wesleyan at Delaware<br />
o<br />
May 19 Akron at Home<br />
May 23 Kenyon<br />
at Home 136 North Prospoct St.<br />
May 26 Oberlin<br />
at Oberhs<br />
2-45-<br />
71<br />
Phone JU<br />
LUCKY DR00DLES! PURR-FEC7L-Y HILARIOUS!<br />
fcX. w..- - ,iWWw.,.......JJW.VWMW.V..vJ, w- -<br />
WHAT'S; THIS? For solution see paragraph below. 1<br />
X,<br />
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WELL-LI- T TUNNEL<br />
XV<br />
Robert Sweyd '<br />
'<br />
XJ. of San Francisco<br />
:<br />
' mmsmmm<br />
..vs.!<br />
better!<br />
YOU'RE ON THE RIGHT TRACK when you light up a Lucky,<br />
because Luckies taste better. Only fine tobacco naturally<br />
good-tastin- g tobacco that's TOASTED to taste better can<br />
give you taste like this. All of which goes to explain the<br />
Droodle above: Light-u- p time in caboose, as seen by halted<br />
motorist. Switch to Luckies yourself. You'll say they're the<br />
best-tastin- g cigarette you ever smoked.<br />
DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price<br />
COLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER LUCKIES!<br />
Luckies lead all other brands, regular or king<br />
size, among 36,075 college students questioned<br />
coast to coast. The number-on- e reason: Luckies<br />
taste better.<br />
1<br />
1<br />
on May 19<br />
and Wooster.<br />
against Mount Unkro<br />
WATCH BAND ON<br />
FRECKLED WRIST<br />
David Hunt<br />
N.Y.U.<br />
b eke : r<br />
HOOFPRINTS OF<br />
ROCKING HORSI<br />
Charles Thornton<br />
Northwestern State (La.)<br />
M5SLTGES "CASTE DGuuEft - Cleaner. Fresher, Smoother!<br />
0A.T.C0. PRODUCT OF AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES
Harch 23. 1956<br />
Golf Squad <strong>Set</strong><br />
To Travel South<br />
For First Meet<br />
Taking a winning streak of 11<br />
consecutive dual match victories<br />
arith them, the Big Red golf team<br />
of Coach Hube Foster will embark<br />
next Thursday on a spring<br />
vacation southern tour that will<br />
see the linksmen meeting Mar-jha- ll<br />
College, Washington and<br />
Lee, Virginia Military Institute,<br />
Colgate and Cornell<br />
Prospects for the coming season<br />
are at a peak as all six members<br />
of last season's squad are returning.<br />
Heading the list are Bob<br />
Stewart and Phil Rouce, both seniors,<br />
who own three letters each<br />
in golf. Mike Griley, Jim Kraus,<br />
Walt Millar and Dix Preston<br />
round out the returning letter-me- n.<br />
Sophomore John McDonald<br />
and freshmen Buzz Baker and.<br />
Tom Rice are also out for the<br />
team.<br />
The swingers-wil- l open the tour<br />
aa Friday, March 30, in Huntington,<br />
West Virginia, meeting Marshall<br />
College. Saturday they will<br />
move to White Sulphur Springs,<br />
West Virginia, where they will<br />
meet Washington and Lee, Cornell<br />
and Colgate on successive<br />
days. On Tuesday, April 3, the<br />
linksmen will conclude the trip in<br />
Lexington, Virginia, where they<br />
will meet the Cadets of Virginia<br />
Military Institute.<br />
The Denison linksmen will open<br />
their Ohio Conference schedule<br />
on Friday, April 13, meeting the<br />
Akron Zips in the Rubber City.<br />
Faculty Vins?<br />
By BILL GILES<br />
The crowd sat tense, sweat ran<br />
down the foreheads of the opposing<br />
coaches, the fieldhouse was<br />
(righteningly still, the scoreboard<br />
read Faculty, 44 Theta Eta Chi,<br />
44, there were two seconds remaining<br />
on the clock, Ken "Saturday<br />
Hero" Meyer had the ball,<br />
he eyed the hoops, he shot, the<br />
ball sailed briskly toward the<br />
basket, the buzzer sounded . . .<br />
There is now a wreath hanging<br />
od the door of the establishment<br />
of John Fox, the trainer of Theta<br />
Eta Chi, now serving only Black<br />
Label, all meetings will now begin<br />
with a prayer, mourning fills<br />
the halls of Denison; Mimi Miller<br />
WATCH REPAIRING<br />
B. L Francis<br />
Photo by Bndfprd Stark<br />
David Owen of Michigan University hurled the shotput 54 feet<br />
1 inch to take first place in the event last Saturday evening at the<br />
third annual Livingston <strong>Relay</strong>s. Michigan took another first place<br />
in the high jump as O'Reilley jumped 6 feet 2Vi inches. Awards<br />
in the meet were given to individuals and not to any special team.<br />
and her cohorts may be seen<br />
floating down Raccoon Creek;<br />
plans are now being formulated<br />
to exterminate a certain Ohio<br />
Conference Champions track<br />
coach; and the little bronze jug<br />
has been returned to the warden's<br />
office on the first floor of Doane.<br />
FOR TASTY<br />
SANDWICHES and<br />
PIZZA<br />
W Th<br />
DUGVAY<br />
FOOD MARKET<br />
1 to 1 Sun. thru Frl.<br />
1 to 12 Saturday<br />
A J r A<br />
A K<br />
i J'if<br />
L'; ' a. --X<br />
U<br />
1<br />
'-<br />
-Oh<br />
lilt1<br />
lift<br />
DENISONI AN<br />
Obviously,<br />
he makes the grade<br />
We don't mean just at exam<br />
time, either. The comfort-conscio- us<br />
guy can tell at a glance<br />
that these smart Arrow gingham<br />
shirts are the light-weigh- ts that<br />
make warm weather a "breeze."<br />
The medium-sprea- d colla'r and<br />
fresh patterns are just right, alone<br />
or with a casual jacket. Arrow<br />
ginghams, in a variety of fine<br />
patterns are only $5.95.<br />
--ARROW-<br />
CASUAL WEAR<br />
first in fashion<br />
THE WHALE BOWL<br />
Page 7<br />
By JIM WAHLE<br />
With basketball, wrestling, hockey and indoor track slowly<br />
fading out of the picture for the present time, interests<br />
will soon be focused on the spring sports season. This spring<br />
the sports section will have complete coverage of all the Big<br />
Red games at home and on the road. In addition to this the<br />
national baseball scene will be followed week by week.<br />
Covering baseball will be Elliott Trumbull, a junior and<br />
an illustrious hockey player. He will attend most of the away<br />
games besides being at home when the Pipermen hit the<br />
diamond.<br />
Bill Courtney and Jim Nelson will take care of the track<br />
scene this season with coverage both before and after the<br />
meets. Courtney is a junior and a member of the lacrosse<br />
team and Nelson is a freshman.<br />
Following the lacrosse team will be Tom Pieratt, who<br />
is a sophomore and former IM editor. Jerry Florez, a junior,<br />
will be keeping Denisonians aware of the progress of the Big<br />
Red tennis team, which is coached by Tris Coffin.<br />
'<br />
A new member of the sports staff is John Skinner. He<br />
will be covering the intramurals this spring as the various<br />
fraternities vie for the IM trophy. It looks like a close race<br />
this year and certainly one that won't be decided until the<br />
last softball game is played in May.<br />
Bob Stewart, a senior and a member of the '55-'5- 6<br />
basketball squad, will keep us in touch with golf as the players<br />
go into the season with a winning streak of 11 straight dual<br />
matches.<br />
Something new has been added this year. Joe Ternavan<br />
will follow the national baseball scene and give us a weekly<br />
report.<br />
The Big Red will be on the move after spring vacation in<br />
five big sports. Let's give whole-heart-ed them our support in<br />
all these events.<br />
the SDirit of Easier<br />
rlj NORCROSS<br />
I I I EASTER. SUNIDA- V- APRIL. I<br />
S0 1<br />
GRANVILLE TIMES PRESS<br />
i d I STATIONERY PRINTING 1<br />
A We Have Flowers for 0<br />
A Every Occasion 0<br />
A t 0 i. 'l<br />
I'd hato<br />
to bo<br />
1.1 without<br />
MY CHECKING ACCOUNT<br />
The customer who made this remark probably<br />
rolced th sentiments of many other customers<br />
who hav enjoytd U Important advantages<br />
dot a checking account brings. It would lndd be<br />
difficult to go back to the old way of paying bills.<br />
We are glad to be the means of bringing<br />
to the people of this community the many<br />
benefits of a checking account.<br />
.The<br />
People's State Bank<br />
MEMBER FDIC<br />
GRANVILLE, OHIO<br />
1<br />
I<br />
1
Pago 8<br />
ii<br />
,<br />
--,<br />
By BILL SHORNEY<br />
- ' Midland<br />
March 23-2- 4 "Kettles in the<br />
Ozarks," Ma and Pa Kettle.<br />
March 25-2- 8 "Never Say<br />
Goodbye," Rock Hudson and Cornell<br />
Borchers; 1:50, 3:45, 5:45,<br />
740 9"39.<br />
March 29-3- 1 "The <strong>Year</strong>ling,"<br />
Jane Wyman, Gregory Peck;<br />
"Northwest Passage," . Spencer<br />
Tracy, Robert Young.<br />
Auditorium<br />
March 23-2- 4 "Mister Roberts,"<br />
Henry Fonda, James Cagney; 1:30,<br />
5:23, 9:27; "Rebel Without a<br />
Cause," James Dean; 3:30, 7:35.<br />
March 25-2- 8 "The Man Who<br />
Never Was," Clifton Webb, Gloria<br />
Graham; 2:55, 6:15, 9:39; plus<br />
"Lover Boy," Gerard Philip, Val<br />
Hobson, 1:30, 4:50, 8:15.<br />
Universal Productions employs<br />
a most common practice in the<br />
movie "Never Say Goodbye." Using<br />
Rock Hudson as the male bait<br />
for the picture, Universal is able<br />
to introduce a lovely and talented<br />
German actress to Hollywood.<br />
This woman, Cornell<br />
Borchers, who treats her first<br />
major role as if she were born for<br />
it, gives the film its quality and<br />
lasting richness. The picture is a<br />
remake of "This Love of Ours"<br />
but the fine cast, the addition of<br />
color and the modernization of<br />
the plot gives this one the qualitative<br />
advantage.<br />
An equally great production<br />
will be shown at the Auditorium<br />
starting Sunday and terminating<br />
Wednesday. "The Man Who Never<br />
Was" is a convincing and ab-- '<br />
sorbing story, based on a real incident<br />
in military intelligence and<br />
wartime spying when London<br />
was under siege. Clifton Webb<br />
heads a large cast with Gloria<br />
co-starr- ed. Graham Clifton is not<br />
in his usual comedy part, but actually<br />
is more convincing in his<br />
role as a lieutenant commander<br />
in the British naval service.<br />
Gloria Graham does a superb<br />
job as an American who is desperately<br />
in love. The rest of the<br />
cast is British who in typical<br />
Anglo-Saxo- n fashion never overplay<br />
their parts. This restraint,<br />
by the way,-- shows great intelligence<br />
in dramatic art. This is<br />
certainly a great production and<br />
well worth seeing.<br />
Your hair is like spun gold<br />
Your eyes like stars,<br />
Your lips like red wine and<br />
Your dress looks like it was<br />
Cleaned by<br />
THE<br />
VALET<br />
SHOP<br />
DENISONI AN<br />
nil i-r- $ MiLmmMk<br />
I'm sick and tired of working my fingers to the bone for youl<br />
.<br />
your TASTE<br />
So Quick on the DRAW!<br />
7 - Wmm :mKim- lllillll<br />
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1. SUPERIOR TASTE<br />
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RELAX WITH<br />
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DCEP EVENTS LISTED<br />
The following events will take<br />
place this week, according to<br />
Howie Reynolds, newly elected<br />
DCEP president:<br />
3:00 pm Today Mad Tea Party<br />
discussion on Communism.<br />
8:00 pm Today Bonds of Friendship<br />
Show.<br />
8:00 pm Saturday Bonds of<br />
Friendship Show.<br />
6 :00 pm Sunday Inauguration of<br />
new DCEP officers, (H<br />
you were active in the<br />
program last year and did<br />
not get an invitation, drop<br />
by the office today.)<br />
An Easter meditation: John 11:<br />
25-2- 6.<br />
"Jesus said unto her, 'I am the<br />
resurrection and the life; he that<br />
believeth in me, though he were<br />
dead, yet shall he live. And whosoever<br />
liveth and believeth in me<br />
shall never die. Believest thou<br />
this?' "<br />
A man's Sunday self and his<br />
weekday self are like two halves<br />
of a round-tri- p ticket: not good<br />
if detached.<br />
SOFT WATER<br />
So Good to<br />
(<br />
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2. SUPERIOR FILTER<br />
So quick on the draw! Yes, the flavor<br />
comes clean through L&M's all ivhite<br />
Miracle Tip. Pure white inside, pure<br />
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! MAKE TODAY<br />
YOUR<br />
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March 23, I&S<br />
Ajfte GolUtje , . .<br />
Monday Proctor & Gamble Company:<br />
interview with junion<br />
and seniors for its summer program<br />
and its new summer<br />
workshop program (two weeki<br />
at the end of August).<br />
Afternoon Wheeling Steel Corporation:<br />
interview with man<br />
interested in the steel industry.<br />
Tuesday Ford Motor Company:<br />
interview with men interested<br />
in its merchandising and product<br />
planning office of the<br />
Special Products Division. They<br />
are looking for men with liberal<br />
arts backgrounds to work In<br />
the marketing research, programming<br />
and price planning<br />
department of the office.<br />
The Lincoln National Life Insurance<br />
Company: interview<br />
with men interested in the insurance<br />
business all phases of<br />
it.<br />
"<br />
Private Room<br />
Avail i i<br />
ame<br />
PARTIES - BANQUETS<br />
ANTLER GRILL<br />
5 South Park<br />
FA 2-96- 01<br />
4<br />
i If<br />
i<br />
iiiiiipiiligiia o<br />
III<br />
--<br />
xtjxm<br />
KlN3 SIZE<br />
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BIG RED LETTER DAY!