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Plan Formal<br />

Union Dedication<br />

FcrHomsccming<br />

Students, Alums To Use<br />

Building Facilities<br />

For Activities<br />

The Memorirl Union Building,<br />

which is now open to the<br />

public, will be formally dedicated<br />

at Horn coming. Oct. 20,<br />

at 10:30 a. m. Harvey 0. Yoder,<br />

president of the alumni association,<br />

will take part in the ceremonies<br />

and Allan Newcomb will<br />

be the guest speaker.<br />

The building was erected as a<br />

memorial to those <strong>Wesleyan</strong> stu<br />

dents wno lave tneir lives in<br />

World War I, World War II and<br />

the Korean war. Funds for the<br />

Union were provided by alumni<br />

and mends of the <strong>University</strong> on<br />

the basis of certain representa<br />

tions which were made as to the<br />

manner in which the building<br />

would be utilized.<br />

In a report from President Arthur<br />

S. Fleming, the statements<br />

made by the donors, relative to<br />

the use of the building, make it<br />

clear that the facilities of the<br />

building are to be available for<br />

recreation and dining, and for<br />

extra-curricula- r, religious and social<br />

activities, and as a center for<br />

alumni activities."<br />

The report goes on to say that<br />

for the first year the use of the<br />

building will be restricted to<br />

1hose purposes for which the<br />

funds were obtained, but that ifl<br />

such restriction does not offer<br />

full utilization ot all facilities, the<br />

matter will be reviewed to deter--!<br />

mine the necessary changes.<br />

Herman M. Shipps director of<br />

university relations, said that although<br />

the building is being used<br />

regularly by students, faculty and<br />

alumni offices, there are some<br />

problems of adjustment which are<br />

not settled as yet. "It will be at<br />

least 2 or 3 months before anyone<br />

can judge the advantages and<br />

shortcomings with any accuracy,"<br />

he said. "We hope everyone will<br />

cooperate in these experimental<br />

weks so that we can determine<br />

the best use of all available space<br />

in the Union."<br />

The interior of the building is<br />

not completely finished, but those<br />

looms which are finished are<br />

open for use. The ground floor<br />

has a cafeteria, the main kitchen,<br />

private dining rooms and space<br />

for the bowling alleys which have<br />

not been installed. At present the<br />

men living in Selby and Wilfiams<br />

Dorm are using the cafeteria for<br />

their meals. When the elevator is<br />

completed, the dining hall on the<br />

second floor will be used to accomodate<br />

these men for their regular<br />

meals. According to construction<br />

plans, the elevator will<br />

be installed by Nov. 15.<br />

The lobbby, two lounges, a recreation<br />

room, alumni offices, the<br />

student affairs office and a reception<br />

desk are located on the<br />

main floor. On the second floor,<br />

there is a large dining hall, which<br />

can be used for dances and meetings,<br />

the faculty lounge, the Memorial<br />

room and the Memorial<br />

Chapel.<br />

Seniors To Present<br />

Original Musical<br />

The Senior Show, "Two Gentle<br />

men from Verona," by William<br />

Shakespeare, will be presented in<br />

the form of a musical comedy No<br />

vember 15, 16 and 17 in Willis<br />

High School auditorium.<br />

inis production, which is an<br />

original adaptation, is an entirely<br />

new type of drama to be tried on<br />

the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> campus.<br />

The book and lyric for the show<br />

completed this summer after three<br />

years of work, were written by<br />

Bob Harper and Towne Bannau.<br />

Bob Kleinmann composed the music.<br />

Producer for the show, Tom<br />

selcton, said People who are<br />

working on the show are extreme<br />

ly enthusiastic. We think we have<br />

a wonderful show which will be<br />

a leal treat fur <strong>Wesleyan</strong>."<br />

Tryouts for parts in the musical<br />

will begin tomorrow or Friday<br />

una all stuuenta desiring to par<br />

ticipate shuuld contact Tom Sel-ilui- i.<br />

Among the numerous po-iliu-<br />

available will be costume<br />

workers, stage ana property crews<br />

.Mid chorus singers. After the roles<br />

Jjrcn eloigned the show will<br />

V) into rehearsal on October 1. ,<br />

Volume 85 Number 1<br />

n<br />

n<br />

Iiroiruurtn)<br />

ROTC Enrolls 600,<br />

Unit's Staff Doubled<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> university's Air<br />

Force ROTC unit, which was installed<br />

in 1949 with only 35 cadets,<br />

has expanded to nearly 600<br />

members, Air Force officials announced<br />

here recently.<br />

To cope with this increased enrollment<br />

the unit has doubled its<br />

teaching staff which now includes<br />

a lieutenant colonel, two majors,<br />

three captains, three master sergeants<br />

and four technical sergeants.<br />

The <strong>University</strong> has also moved<br />

the AFROTC unit to the TUB. For<br />

the past four years the TUB has<br />

served as a temporary recreation<br />

and social center for students. Col<br />

Kiefer the new head of the de<br />

partment of Air Science and Tac<br />

tics is a native of Upper San<br />

dusky. He came to Delaware from<br />

USAF headquarters in the Penta<br />

gon Building, Washington, D. C<br />

Col. Kiefer received both his<br />

B. S. and M.'A. degrees at <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

State university. He taught for<br />

five years at Canfield high school<br />

and seven years at Columbus Cen<br />

OVUHasSeven<br />

t'evFull-an- d<br />

Part-Ti- me Profs<br />

Professors Hired In Six<br />

Departments; Phys<br />

Ed Has Two<br />

tral He was recalled into active<br />

service by the Air Force in 1947<br />

At that time he was principal of<br />

the Columbus Evening high<br />

school.<br />

The other officers to join the<br />

staff this year are: Major James<br />

L. Peyton Jr., of Hurricane, W.<br />

Va., Major Peyton earned his B.<br />

S. and M. S. degrees at Marshall<br />

college and took graduate study<br />

at Pennsylvania State college. He<br />

has served as an instructor in<br />

chemistry at Marshall Waynes<br />

burg, and Pennsylvania State col<br />

leges.<br />

Major Alfred S. Ransel of Ir<br />

win, Pa., has also spent several<br />

years as an instructor in Pennsylvania.<br />

When he was recaled into<br />

active service he was supervising<br />

rjrincioal of the North Irwin<br />

Borough School District, Westmoreland<br />

County, Irwin, Pa.<br />

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

Presents Candida<br />

As Opening Play<br />

Students Interested In<br />

Dramatics Or Radio<br />

Arrange Meeting<br />

AN INDEPENDENT<br />

Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong>, Wednesday, September 26, 1951<br />

ITD"<br />

Flemming Urges<br />

Freedom Drive<br />

Asks People Of <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

To Support Radio<br />

Free Europe<br />

Dr. Arthur S. Flemming<br />

spoke as guest commentator<br />

on the "Crusade for Freedom"<br />

radio program Sunday, over<br />

WRFD in Worthington.<br />

crusade lor freedom is a<br />

series of documentary programs<br />

created to enlist the people of<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> to support Radio Free Eu<br />

rope, one of the West's most potent<br />

weapons against communism<br />

in the cold war.<br />

New instructors in Air Science Flemming told the <strong>Ohio</strong>ans<br />

T-S- gt. are Keith Duggan of Min-<br />

T-S- gt. neapolis, Minn.; William<br />

E. Krutsch of Defiance, <strong>Ohio</strong>; and<br />

T-Ss-<br />

?t. Bvnum W. Mooney, of<br />

New York city.<br />

tPUM ratiscript i O<br />

that Gov. Frank J. Lausche has<br />

proclaimed September "Crusade<br />

for Freedom" month. All contri<br />

butions received through this<br />

program will go toward building<br />

another station for RFE.<br />

Radio Free Europe began programs<br />

to Poland, Czechoslovakia<br />

Hungary, Rumania and Bulgaria<br />

July 4, 1950. Since that time it<br />

has expanded its activities and<br />

has caused the Soviet govern<br />

ment much unbappiness.<br />

Radio Free Europe is indepen<br />

dent of any political body. It is<br />

more powerful than the Voice<br />

of America". "The Voice of<br />

America" represents the State department<br />

and sticks to policy<br />

while RFE doesn't.<br />

The four msjor aims of T.T7.'<br />

STUDENT NEWSPAPER<br />

208788<br />

hi MS<br />

Looking<br />

C<br />

Concert Series<br />

To Open Oct. 29<br />

Cincinnati Orchestra<br />

Heads Program<br />

tics show that white men living next year's classes are advised to<br />

in Alaska will have a longer liicilake either the November or 1he<br />

expectancy then the natives. j February test<br />

S3<br />

Over The Memorial<br />

n<br />

n<br />

t!<br />

College Gives $9,000<br />

Fori ,000 Gallon<br />

Pumper Fire Truck<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> contributed $9,- -<br />

000 for the new<br />

Seven new full time and part<br />

time professors have joined the<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> faculty this<br />

year.<br />

Roy E. Carter, Jr., of Minn<br />

eapolis, Minn., former city editor<br />

of the Boise, Idaho, Statesman,<br />

has been named associate professor<br />

of journalism.<br />

Dr. Myron G. Berry, of Tilton,<br />

N. H.', has been appointed in<br />

structor in physical chemistry,<br />

and Gordon Almstead, of Norris-tow- n,<br />

Pa., is the new instructor<br />

in voice.<br />

Robert L. Michael, of Mech- -<br />

aniosburg, will assume some<br />

coaching responsibilities as instructor<br />

in physical education,<br />

and Gertrude E. Phillips, of Fair-por- t,<br />

N. Y., has been named associate<br />

director of religious activi<br />

ties.<br />

The two<br />

ns<br />

part-tim- e appointees<br />

are Kichard Wengenroth, of<br />

Brooklyn, N. Y., fellow in fine<br />

arts, and Cherry O'Brien, of Gal- -<br />

lipolis, assistant in physical education.<br />

Carter succeeds Paul L. Evans,<br />

who left the <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> faculty<br />

to become assistant director<br />

of public information for the<br />

Tennessee Valley Authority.<br />

A member of the Idaho Statesman<br />

staff from 1944 to 1948, Car<br />

ter served first as telegraph editor,<br />

later became city editor and<br />

wrote editorials. During the past<br />

year he has been an editorial<br />

writer for the Minneapolis Star.<br />

Dr. Berry was a teaching fellow<br />

in chemistry at Harvard university<br />

from 1941-4- 6. He taught general<br />

chemistry at Urbana Junior<br />

college from 1946 to 1949. This<br />

year he received his Ph. D. from<br />

Syracuse university, where he<br />

held a research assistantship under<br />

an Atomic Energy commission<br />

grant. He is a graduate of<br />

Colby college.<br />

Almstead is coming to <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

from the voice faculty of the<br />

Philadelphia Academy of Music.<br />

He is a graduate of the Curtis Institute<br />

of Music where he studied<br />

under Gian-Carl- o Mienotti, Marion<br />

Szekely Fresohl, and Richard<br />

Bonelli.<br />

The new associate director of<br />

religious activities, Miss Phillips,<br />

is a graduate of Oberlin college<br />

and received her M. A. degree at<br />

Union Theological seminary and<br />

Columbia university.<br />

For the past two years she has<br />

served as Y-Te- All students interested in<br />

dramatics or radio will meet in<br />

the Chapel Annex at 4:10 on<br />

Wednesday, Sept, 26th. This<br />

will open the new year of fine<br />

dramatic entertainment planned<br />

for <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> audiences.<br />

The first play of the year will<br />

be George Bernard Shaw's "Can<br />

dida", the <strong>Home</strong>coming play.<br />

"Candida" is a comedy about a<br />

young poet who falls in love with<br />

the wife of a pompous clergyman.<br />

It will be presented Oct. 20, 22,<br />

23, 24, 25, 26, and 27 in an arena<br />

style production at the workshop.<br />

The next <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Players<br />

presentation will be "Deep Are<br />

the Roots" by D Ussean and Gow<br />

on Dec. 6, 7, and 8. This absorb<br />

ing play gives an incite into the<br />

problem of a returning negro<br />

serviceman in his encounter of<br />

the predjudice of the deep South.<br />

It involves three negro characters<br />

which may be played by either<br />

negro or white students. Tryouts<br />

will be announced soon.<br />

On Mar. 13, 14, and 15 the<br />

beautiful Chinese fantasy, "The<br />

Yellow Jacket" by Hazelton and<br />

Beurimo, will be ''given. This<br />

highly imaginative play is a<br />

classic of the modern Chinese<br />

theater.<br />

Shakespeare's comedy "Twelfth<br />

Night" will conclude the year<br />

in an<br />

en director at the<br />

YWCA in Patterson, N. J.<br />

Michael, a graduate of <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> '40, is returning to the<br />

physical education faculty. He<br />

served here in 1946-4- 7.<br />

Wegenroth received his undergraduate<br />

education in fine arts at<br />

Wittenberg college. Miss O'Brien<br />

has studied physical education<br />

st Lake Erie college and at <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

State university.<br />

arena-styl- e !<br />

are:<br />

1. Fighting the big lies of com-'- .<br />

I<br />

munism with the truth;<br />

2. Undermining soviet and na-- l<br />

tive communist influence m the<br />

production in<br />

April.<br />

i<br />

. ... , , ,<br />

0m0 <strong>Wesleyan</strong> s annual Con- -<br />

satelite countries by every avail- cert Artists series, which in the<br />

able means and securing the al past 2 years has rated an arti-<br />

legiance of the captive peoples<br />

of these countries;<br />

cle in a leading musical maga-<br />

3. Fostering among the prison zine, will feature first Irmgard<br />

er peoples the desire for freedom Seefried. Miss Seefried, leading<br />

and kindling an active spirit of<br />

soprano of the Vienna State<br />

liberation; and<br />

4. Telling the captive peoples Opera, will be making one of her<br />

of our earnest desire for their lib first recitals in America when<br />

eration and for the establishment she appears here on October 29th.<br />

of free governments of their own She has recently been engaged<br />

choice.<br />

to appear<br />

Gen. Lucius D. Clay formed<br />

at<br />

and<br />

the Metropolitan<br />

Opera<br />

headed the "Crusade" last year.<br />

this winter.<br />

On<br />

After a seven-wee- k campaign<br />

January 8th, Monique de la<br />

one and a third million dollars Bruchollerie, will entertain in<br />

had been contributed to RFE.<br />

Gray Chapel with her piano artis<br />

Since that time such speakers as<br />

try. Considered the leading<br />

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower have French pianist, she will also be<br />

appeared on the program and making one of her first perform-<br />

five million dollars has been ances in America here at Dela-<br />

raised.<br />

ware.<br />

The third attraction will be a<br />

Dr. Olive I. Reddick concert by the Cincinnati Orchestra<br />

on February<br />

Given Position In India<br />

Dr. Olive I. Reddick, a native<br />

of Findlay and graduate of <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> '19, has been appoint<br />

ed executive director of the United<br />

States Education Foundation<br />

in India.<br />

She has been granted a year's<br />

leave of absence by Hood college<br />

where she is at present head of<br />

the department of economics and<br />

sociology. She left for New Delhi<br />

in June and will serve at her new<br />

post for one year.<br />

Prof. Berg Spends Summer In Alaska,<br />

Served as Mosquito Control Consultant<br />

Prof. Clifford Berg of the zoology<br />

department has returned dense in some areas of Alaska<br />

from Alaska where he was em- than on the Solomon Islands<br />

ployed for three months as con- where malaria once threatened<br />

sultant on mosquito control prob- the lives of American soldiers.<br />

lems aboard the Yukon health Berg had been stationed on<br />

boat. The Yukon, one of three Guadalcanal during the war to<br />

floating clinics operated by the help find a means to combat that<br />

Alaska Department of Health, disease by destroying the<br />

serves the health needs of Alas- mosquito carriers.<br />

kan natives. Prof. Berg's work The insect problem is much dif<br />

was among the Indians and ferent in Alaska. There is not<br />

Eskimos, who still live under enough DDT in the world to<br />

primitive conditions, maintainng cover Alaska, because of the vast<br />

themselves by fishing, hunting expanses which lend themselves<br />

and trapping.<br />

readily to breeding mosquitoes<br />

"Much time was spent check- and flies. All those areas cannot<br />

ing the ravages of tuberculosis be covered with DDT, as was<br />

there, although facilities are far done on many of the Pacific<br />

from being adequate to take care islands. It is necessary to kill the<br />

of all those afflicted." Berg said. insect larvae, once it has been<br />

"In the tuberculosis sanitarium at determined when and where they<br />

Juneau, for example, patients breed, thus accomplishing as<br />

must often wait for a year until much as possible with the avail-<br />

they can be admitted, and by able insecticides.<br />

that time it is tuu late in many Epidemics of the white men<br />

uases."<br />

have taken a heavy toll among<br />

Prof. Berg was employed in hi the natives, but the insects affect<br />

capacity as an entomologist in a the newcomers far more than the<br />

region where little is known Indians and the Eskimos. Statis- -<br />

about the numerous mosquitoes<br />

and black flies. He stated that<br />

the insect population is more<br />

1 1th. The Orchestra,<br />

one of the oldest major symphony<br />

orchestras in ' 1,000-gallo- n<br />

pumper-typ- e fire truck, now in<br />

operation in the Delaware fire de<br />

partment. The <strong>University</strong>'s dona<br />

tion which was presented this<br />

summer by D. J. Hornberger, uni<br />

vice-president<br />

versity and treas<br />

urer, covered 50 percent of the<br />

cost of the new pumper.<br />

With the addition of the new<br />

fire truck the pumping capacity<br />

of the fire department will be<br />

doubled. The truck was put<br />

through a three-hou- r test at Blue<br />

Limestone lake this summer. It<br />

pumped 1,000 gallons a minute<br />

continuously for two hours, was<br />

cut to 700 gallons a minute for<br />

one-ha- lf hour, and then reduced<br />

!acain tn nnlv 500 pallnnK a min<br />

ute for the final<br />

the United<br />

States, is conducted by American-<br />

-born Thor Johnson.<br />

The Virtuosi di Roma, an in<br />

strumental ensemble of .14 Italian<br />

musicians, will appear here<br />

on Marcht 19th. Their program<br />

will include several concertos<br />

featuring different solo instruments.<br />

Our last artist in the concert<br />

series will be William Primrose,<br />

a virtuoso on the viola, who performed<br />

in Gray Chapel three<br />

years ago. The enthusiasm of the<br />

audience is responsible for his return<br />

engagement.<br />

Tickets are now on sale at $5.75<br />

for the series. Representatives<br />

will be at all the dormitories and<br />

fraternity houses.<br />

Three Dates Set For Law<br />

School Admission Tests<br />

Law school admission tests re-- 1 very<br />

quired of applicants for admis-ith- e<br />

sion to a number of leading<br />

American law schools will be given<br />

on the mornings of Nov. 17,<br />

1951, Feb. 23, April 26, and Aug.<br />

9, 1952.<br />

A candidate must make separate<br />

application for admission to<br />

each law school of his choice and<br />

should inquire of each school<br />

whether it wishes him to take<br />

the law school admission test.<br />

These tests, prepared and administered<br />

by Educational Testing<br />

Service cannot be "crammed"<br />

fur. Sample questions and information<br />

regarding registration for<br />

and administration of the test may<br />

be acquired four to six weeks in<br />

advance of the testing date from<br />

Educational Testing Service, P.<br />

O. Box 592, Princton, N. J.<br />

Candidates for admission to<br />

half-ho- ur period.<br />

204 Freshmen Attend<br />

Camp For Three Days<br />

Two hundred and four <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> freshmen the largest<br />

group ever to attend the YMCA<br />

freshman camp, pulled into Camp<br />

Mary Orton Sept. 13 for a three<br />

get-acquai- nt<br />

day orientation and<br />

ed period.<br />

A program of mixers, speakers,<br />

movies, panel discussions and<br />

athletic contests was arranged<br />

by Bill West, camp director; Dr.<br />

Richard Gay, faculty advisor, and<br />

their 40 upperclass assistants.<br />

During the camping period, the<br />

freshman saw football movies and<br />

heard lectures on "Why Are We<br />

Here at College?" and were told<br />

what to expect when they returned<br />

to <strong>Wesleyan</strong> to start the<br />

college year.<br />

169 Alums Placed by<br />

By PETE KAUFMANM<br />

While roaming around campus<br />

the other day, I dropped in on<br />

the Placement bureau to see<br />

what their plans were for the<br />

coming year. Mrs. Boecklin, a<br />

cordial person to meet, is<br />

director of the bureau. The<br />

mechanics of it, as explained to<br />

me, are very simple and very<br />

thorough. Seniors - are asked to<br />

fill out a form containing information<br />

about campus activities,<br />

courses taken here, personal references,<br />

and what type of position<br />

is desired.<br />

The actual placement service<br />

is open only to seniors, but Mrs.<br />

Boecklin has built a complete, up<br />

to date vocational library which<br />

is open to all students.<br />

In a letter sent out to all<br />

seniors this year, Mrs. Boecklin<br />

stiessed the value of registering<br />

with the Placement bureau. The<br />

positions obtained by graduates<br />

and their entliusiusni about the<br />

service proves the value of the<br />

bureau. Here are a few of the<br />

students who were placed recently.<br />

Murray Franklin, for instance,<br />

was placed as an economist in the<br />

Union<br />

Single Copy 10 cents<br />

1<br />

i<br />

Letter Stresses Bureau's Advantages<br />

4<br />

Donn Miller Gets<br />

Sigma Chi Honor<br />

Outstanding Undergrad<br />

Receives Cup<br />

Donn Miller, June graduate<br />

of <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> now attend<br />

ing Michigan Law school, was<br />

voted the most outstanding un<br />

dergraduate in the Sigma Chi<br />

national fraternity, Merrill E,<br />

Pritchard, editor of the Magazine<br />

of Sigma Chi announced recently-<br />

The award which is an annual<br />

presentation of L. G. Balfour, is<br />

given for fraternity service,<br />

scholarship, athletics and personality.<br />

He will receive a two foot<br />

high ornate trophy.<br />

Here at <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, Miller was<br />

Chief Justice of the Campus<br />

Court, member of Omicron Delta<br />

Kappa, W Clan, Delta Sigma<br />

Rho, national speech honorary,<br />

and Pi Sigma Alpha, national political<br />

science honorary.<br />

A member of Phi Beta Kappa,<br />

Miller majored in political<br />

science and history accumulating<br />

a point average of 3.72.<br />

He was a three letterman in<br />

financial analysis division of the<br />

Ford motor company at a yearly<br />

salary of five thousand dollars.<br />

Richard Heidkamp is head<br />

basketball coach at Phillipsburg<br />

high school.<br />

Virginia Haber develops new<br />

cake mixes at the Quaker Oats<br />

Laboratory in Chicago.<br />

Louise Still is private secretary<br />

to the general manager of the<br />

Chester Hoist division of the Na<br />

tional Screw and Manufacturing<br />

company of Lisbon, <strong>Ohio</strong>.<br />

Alan Joslyn is being trained for<br />

the office managership of the<br />

Proctor and Gamble company in<br />

Cincinnati.<br />

Joan Bruckheimer is an assistant<br />

securities analyst for the Investment<br />

Department of the General<br />

Electric company, New York.<br />

David Carter is the producer<br />

of the radio program ''Melody<br />

Showcase" over WIAV'T in Cincinnati.<br />

This last year of 171 alumni<br />

who applied for help from the<br />

Placement Bureau, all but two<br />

were plac?d. I think the record<br />

speaks lor itself.<br />

.Li' ',<br />

i 1<br />

V.fti<br />

n p<br />

mm<br />

Student Census<br />

Remains Around<br />

The2,rk<br />

Total Enrollment Drop<br />

Less Then National<br />

10 Average<br />

With the help of the largest<br />

Freshman class in the history<br />

of the school, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

will once again have a students<br />

body enrollment of 2,000. A<br />

total number of 623 Freshman ar<br />

enrolled, 326 women, and 29T<br />

men.<br />

The total enrollment at regis<br />

tration this year was 1,983, and<br />

enough registrations are expected<br />

during the semester to increase<br />

the enrollment to at least 2.00t).<br />

At registration day last year, th<br />

enrollment was 2,031, and<br />

j total<br />

the highest number of 6tudents<br />

at any time during the semester<br />

was 2,061. This represents only a<br />

three per cent drop in students<br />

this year, while the national ave<br />

rage drop is expected to be ten<br />

,per cent, with a fifteen per cent<br />

drop among men.<br />

Not only will the enrollment<br />

remain good, but the ratio of<br />

men to women students is again<br />

practically the same. Of the 1983<br />

students 989 men and 994 are<br />

women. Thus, while other 6chools<br />

are falling in total male enrollment,<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> shows an increase.<br />

All of these things have<br />

come about due to the farsightedness<br />

of President Arthur<br />

Flemming and the hard work of<br />

the admissions office, said Regis<br />

trar Allan C. Conger.<br />

Breaking down the total figures<br />

showed that in addition ta<br />

623 freshman there are 384 sen<br />

iors, 425 juniors, 506 sophomorei<br />

and post graduates.<br />

Of the aoDroximatelv 320 men<br />

freshman and transfers, eligible<br />

for enrollment in A.R.O.T.C., over<br />

294 have signed up for basi<br />

courses.<br />

Facility Resolutions<br />

For Union Passed<br />

Four resolutions regarding the<br />

use of facilities in the Memorial<br />

Union were passed by the university<br />

facilities policy committee, a<br />

student-facult- y committee of student<br />

government, at a meeting<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 20.<br />

The motions are as follows:<br />

"<br />

1. That the women's and<br />

both football and track and made<br />

all-Oh- io second team end in his<br />

junior year and ran in the third<br />

slot on <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s all-Oh- io 880<br />

yard relay team.<br />

Miller served as president of<br />

the Sigma Chi fraternity here<br />

during the fall semester of his<br />

junior year and was active in<br />

varsity debate being elected<br />

speaker at the Delta Sigma Rho<br />

national convention held in Chi<br />

cago last spring.<br />

Placement Bureau,<br />

m-- t<br />

lounges on the main floor b<br />

opened for combined use by misted<br />

groups.<br />

2. That pending installation o<br />

the elevator, the terrazza portion<br />

of 'the bowling alleys be mad<br />

self-servi- ce available for lunch-eon- s<br />

and set aside for a reserved<br />

meeting place.<br />

3. That all recommendations ol<br />

the facilities committee are subject<br />

to approval by Student council<br />

and President's council.<br />

4. That until the installation oi<br />

the elevator, the private dinirfg<br />

rooms be opened for student use<br />

during the hours when it will<br />

not be utilized by the men boarders<br />

eating in the Union.<br />

5. That the snack bar be left<br />

open on a trial basis until 10:00<br />

p. m. each evening, excluding<br />

Sunday, until November 1.<br />

These recommendations must<br />

be approved by both Student<br />

council and the President's council.<br />

The receptionist at the desk on<br />

the main floor is responsible for<br />

scheduling reservations of all<br />

rooms in the Union for special<br />

meetings and organizations, and<br />

will keep records of how exterv<br />

sively the facilities of the build<br />

ing are used in order to determine<br />

what changes or adjustments<br />

should be made in policy.<br />

There will be no director of the<br />

Union. It will function under the<br />

supervision of the administration<br />

and the student-facult- y committees<br />

in charge of recreation and<br />

facilities in order to make it an effective<br />

and integral part of the<br />

university program.<br />

TRANSCRIPT APPLICATION<br />

There will be a meeting Mon<br />

day at 5 d. m. in the Transcriot of<br />

fices of all students interested in<br />

working on the Transcript this<br />

year. Positions arc open for reporters,<br />

typists and advertising<br />

solicitors.


Page 2<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Transcript<br />

Wednesday, September 26, 1951<br />

AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER<br />

ESTABLISHED IN 1867<br />

EDITOR NORMA JEAN ALLISON<br />

MANAGING EDITOR CLIFF REICHARD<br />

BUSINESS MANAGER<br />

. Assistant Ediior<br />

'Associate Editor<br />

News Editor<br />

Issue Editors Nancy<br />

CHARLOU RIPSCH<br />

Pete Mason<br />

Joy Edwards<br />

Jack Collins<br />

Champion, Bill Elbon,<br />

Jane Litiick. Dave Howard<br />

Co-Sports<br />

Editors<br />

Joe Somma, Bob Drake<br />

Society Ediior Ros Seabury<br />

Copy Editor Eleanor Bryenton<br />

Picture Editor Mary Margaret Speers<br />

Feature Editor Bill Klann<br />

Advertising Mgr. Bill Creviston, Dave Carlo<br />

Circulation Mgr. Gary Castle<br />

Published weekly. September through Mav except during <strong>University</strong><br />

holidays and examination periods, at the Delaware Gazette.<br />

Entered as second class matter, under Act of March 8 1897<br />

Post Oftjce, Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong>. Subscription rate S3 a year- - maii<br />

subscriptions. S3.50 a year. National advertising representative<br />

National Advertising service, 420 Madison ave., N. Y., N Y<br />

Editorial and business offices, P. O. Box 364, Quonset 5, 70 South<br />

Sandusky, Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong>.<br />

Your Opinion Counts<br />

The Memorial Union building is no longer the<br />

scene of steel beams, bricks and blueprints. It is<br />

a reality and a functioning part of the university.<br />

For the freshmen, of course, there is no adjustment<br />

to make. They have never known any other<br />

.locations for th places now assigned to the Union.<br />

It is the sophomores, juniors and seniors, th faculty<br />

and Administration who must look around and<br />

note the changes which have been made.<br />

As with any new thing, the Union cannot become<br />

an integral part of the total university in a<br />

few days. It is still a novelty, subject to lengthy<br />

discussion and criticism. Everyone is still comparing<br />

the actual building with the ideas he had and<br />

the mental picture he formed while it was still incomplete.<br />

This situation can develop into one of two things<br />

it can either result in much harmful criticism,<br />

making the adjustment period longer and more difficult,<br />

or it can bring forth good constructive suggestions<br />

for improving the planning and the use<br />

of space to solve the problems which face the people<br />

who are in charge of administering the Union.<br />

The outstanding comments from the students<br />

have been that the snack bar is too small and the<br />

first floor is too large to be used much. The Tub<br />

was often filled to overflowing, and the students<br />

thought that the new snack bar would, in view of<br />

this fact, be larger. The general sentiment is that<br />

the students do not want expansive lounges, but a<br />

place to relax for that hour between classes over<br />

a coke or coffee and a cigarette. There have already<br />

been numerous occasions when the capacity of the<br />

snack bar was inadequate to acommodate all the<br />

people who wanted to find a chair.<br />

"" This situation cannot be remedied immediately,<br />

and several suggestions have already been made<br />

about expanding the capacity. The private dining<br />

"rooms will be open all the time as soon as the elevator<br />

is installed and the dining hall on the second<br />

floor is in operation. Some think that the need<br />

for more table space exceeds the need for the<br />

bowling alleys which are to be placed adjoining<br />

the grill.<br />

" The administration has asked that everyone<br />

concerned with the use and operation of the Union<br />

he patient until the many problems have been ironed<br />

out. This does not mean to "suffer in silence,"<br />

but to give serious thought to the present shortcomings.<br />

Make your opinions known to the people<br />

w ho are in a position to act on suggestions.<br />

Red Cap Welcome<br />

You who wear the little red caps are going to<br />

; like <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> . . . most everyone does. As time<br />

goes on, you are going to like it more and more;<br />

and every part of your college life will have a material<br />

and emotional significance.<br />

Life here at <strong>Wesleyan</strong> is centered around three<br />

things; scholastic endeavor, social life and co-curri-cu-<br />

activities. If you participate in all three, you<br />

will lead a more full and well rounded college life.<br />

JToo much emphasis on the scholastic leads to<br />

staleness; too much emphasis on the social detracts<br />

from and sometimes defeats the obvious<br />

reason for coming to college; too much emphasis<br />

on the co-curricu-<br />

lar may<br />

lar<br />

have somewhat the same<br />

effect.<br />

Consequently, it is necessary for you as fresh- -<br />

men, to make proper time allotments for each, remembering<br />

that too much weight on any one of<br />

these phases may lead to an unhappy life here at<br />

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

One of the first things you will be confronted<br />

with, here at <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, is a compulsory chapel at<br />

1 1 a. m. every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. At<br />

first, you will resent the fact that you have to go<br />

to chapel, especially when there are bluebooks and<br />

quizzes that afternoon.<br />

There have been movements started on campus<br />

to do away with compulsory attendance at chapel,<br />

but as Registrar Conger and others have pointed<br />

out, ths is one of the things which makes <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

different from other colleges.<br />

For this is the time of the day when the school<br />

as a whole can corne together and be together as a<br />

unit. This is one of the things which attributes to<br />

the obvious fact that <strong>Wesleyan</strong> is a friendly school.<br />

With the hope in mind thai you will budget<br />

your time and take part in all phases of <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

life and that you learn to appreciate some of the<br />

things which the university requires of you, the<br />

Transcript also says, "Welcome Freshmen."<br />

Students, Dogs<br />

And Professors<br />

BY LEROY HOFFMAN<br />

According to the senior bench<br />

sociologists, the constituency of<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong>, <strong>Wesleyan</strong> can be conveniently<br />

divided into three classes:<br />

students, professors and dogs. In<br />

the case of the students and professors,<br />

the origin of the species<br />

is easily traced. The students come<br />

mainly from formerly wealthy<br />

families. (That is, they were<br />

well-to-d- o<br />

until they sent their offspring<br />

here.)<br />

The professors come from the<br />

well-sprin- gs of<br />

intellectual en-<br />

deavor, other colleges and universities.<br />

In this respect they are<br />

self-perpetuati- ng and constitute<br />

a vicious circle. Following this<br />

line of reasoning you arrive at<br />

that age old dilemma, "Who came<br />

first, the professor or the university?"<br />

The ancestry of the dogs is less<br />

clear, as any campus observer can<br />

testify. As to the comparative ratio<br />

of these three classes, the students<br />

seem to be declining in<br />

number due to a phenomenon<br />

known as selective service.<br />

Just how selective the service<br />

is, however, is a matter of violent<br />

controversy. Professors are increasing<br />

in direct proportion to<br />

baby carriage sales and dogs seem<br />

to be holding their own, too.<br />

Although the classes may appear<br />

to be plainly distinguishable,<br />

this is not always the case. Students<br />

can usually be identified by<br />

their white bucks and saddle<br />

shoes and professors by one of<br />

their two suits. Dogs, on the other<br />

hand, may overlap the other classifications.<br />

You have perhaps heard the<br />

following comments made about a<br />

professor: "He leads a dog's life."<br />

It is particularly difficult in the<br />

case of professor Postle to separate<br />

the man from the dog. Or<br />

maybe you remember hearing this<br />

about a student: "Isn't he a dog?"<br />

Or "You dog!"<br />

The author does not pretend to<br />

present an exhaustive picture in<br />

this brief column, but merely<br />

wishes to introduce the topic for<br />

further philosophical discussion<br />

and speculation. Anyone wishing<br />

to pursue the subject may find<br />

him in the Memorial Union most<br />

any afternoon surrounded by<br />

beautiful women.<br />

Roving<br />

Reporter<br />

BY ANK'T. SCRIPT<br />

During lhe . Jew days before<br />

classes started when the campus<br />

was filled with students catching<br />

up on the news of the summer and<br />

generally enjoying the sights<br />

without worrying about neglected<br />

studies, the main topic of conversation<br />

was the Memorial<br />

Union building. Sinoe-th- e union<br />

will play a large' part in student<br />

activity this year and in all the<br />

years to come, it seems only natural<br />

that one of the first questions<br />

asked among groups of students<br />

was, "What do you think of<br />

the Union?"<br />

The answers to this question are<br />

very interesting, not only because<br />

they express student opinion, but<br />

because they show that the students<br />

really observed, the new<br />

surroundings carefully and are<br />

very concerned over appearance<br />

and use of the Union.<br />

Bill Kuhner.The outside architecture<br />

is good, and so is the furniture,<br />

but the color schemes in<br />

some places are not attractive.<br />

The snack bar is too small to handle<br />

the crowds, but maybe it<br />

could be expanded some if they<br />

could put in some more tables.<br />

Marilyn Newman: We really<br />

need more room in the snack bar<br />

to have enough tables and chairs<br />

to accommodate the "rush hour"<br />

crowds.<br />

Jim Lipperfc There aren't<br />

enough women in here and no<br />

room to sit with them, so there's<br />

no use coming in.<br />

Hank Anderson: It looks very<br />

nice, but there's too much space<br />

upstairs and not enough downstairs.<br />

Joanne Plank: The decorations<br />

apparently have no continuity. I<br />

think the snack bar is too small.<br />

More chairs would help.<br />

Tom Seldon: The cafeteria is a<br />

little small, but the rest is spacious.<br />

It would help distribute the<br />

crowd if we could have an upstairs<br />

refreshment bar.<br />

Shirley Culp: It's the most wonderful<br />

place I ever saw.<br />

Helen Simester: The entire<br />

building seems to have been very<br />

poorly planned for effective use<br />

of the Union.<br />

Dale Renner: From my point<br />

of view as an alu:m, it's terrific.<br />

The general layout is good, and<br />

the impression is wonderful.<br />

Tom Gerslacker: I was surprised<br />

that the snack bar is so<br />

small. I think it will be inadequate<br />

for crowds.<br />

Eleanor Gammill: It couldn't<br />

be better.<br />

Dick Davenporl: I like everything<br />

but the colors of the furnishings.<br />

Voiiy Bun.U.k.: The snack<br />

bar is too small.<br />

On the basis of these first impressions<br />

of incoming and returning<br />

students, the major comment<br />

centered on the size of the snack<br />

bar. That is the place which will<br />

be used most by students and<br />

they have evidently thought about<br />

what they want. It will be interesting<br />

to see whether these will<br />

be lasting impressions.<br />

Editorial<br />

P<br />

I<br />

Kelly Danford Star<br />

In Broadway Debut<br />

Playing With Gilbert<br />

, And Sullivan Troupe<br />

Kelly Danford made his debut<br />

on Broadway this summer by<br />

playing principal roles with New<br />

York's Gilbert and Sullivan<br />

troupe, the Masque and Lyre<br />

Light Opera company.<br />

In preface to his Broadway debut,<br />

Danford put in three seasons<br />

of new England summer<br />

stock. Along with dancing<br />

and singing he swept out the<br />

chickens and cobwebs from the<br />

barns in which he performed in<br />

such productions as "The Man<br />

Who Came to Dinner," "Arsenic<br />

and Old Lace," and "The Little<br />

Foxes."<br />

As a youngster, Danford's interest<br />

in the theater was stimulated<br />

when his father took him to<br />

all the traveling shows which<br />

came to McConnelsville. After<br />

graduating from high school he<br />

studied dramatics at <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

and received a master's degree.<br />

Recalling the days he performed<br />

in Gilbert and Sullivan musicals<br />

in McConnelsville district,<br />

Danford commented, "I'll never<br />

forget the night I was scalped,"<br />

"We were doing the 'Mikado'<br />

and there was a part where two<br />

coolies carried me on- - the stae<br />

in a sedan chair.<br />

"They set the chair down, and<br />

when the fellow in back of rue<br />

straightened up, his hat caught<br />

the wig I was wearing and lifted<br />

it off my head.<br />

"The audience started to laugh.<br />

Then the poor guy tried to put it<br />

back on me and got it on backwards.<br />

"By this time the whole cast.<br />

y i<br />

An Iron Curtain Around Education!<br />

In the past few weeks, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has been the subject<br />

of much criticism in letters to the Columbus Citizen written<br />

by a "Delaware Resident." These letters said that <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

in general, and President Flemming in particular, made a<br />

grave mistake by allowing such speakers as Lillian Smith, Nor-<br />

man Thomas and Dr. Walter Van<br />

Kirk to appear before the students<br />

on the lecture series and .<br />

other programs during the year.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has been criticized<br />

in the past and probably<br />

will be in the future for many<br />

things by people who do not a-gr-<br />

with the policies of the administration<br />

of this university.<br />

Some criticism can be ignored<br />

and some can be taken as "all in<br />

a day's work." But the sentiments<br />

expressed by the "Delaware<br />

Resident" cannot be passed over<br />

lightly. They touch on the funda- - '<br />

mental principles of education<br />

and intellectual freedom.<br />

"Delaware Resident" objected'<br />

to the speakers mentioned because<br />

of their political views on<br />

the grounds that such views<br />

should not be recognized and<br />

presented to university students.<br />

Such an attitude implies thit<br />

this individual has retreated intellectually<br />

behind the barriers<br />

of righteous indignation against<br />

all whose ideas conflict with his<br />

own. This results in the narrow<br />

minded intolerance which works<br />

against the basic ideas on which<br />

the educational system in a democracy<br />

is founded.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has always<br />

stood for freedom of thought and<br />

speech, and has tried at all times<br />

to make the students aware of<br />

various opposing views on all<br />

topics. This is especially necessary<br />

when the question involved<br />

is concerned with politics, government<br />

and philosophy.<br />

It is impossible to judge anyone's<br />

ideas fairly if all the facts<br />

are not presented and if there is<br />

no opportunity to know how and<br />

why other opinions arise. A person<br />

cannot call one philosophy<br />

ee<br />

his own until he has found out<br />

what beliefs other people have<br />

and has studied them. He must<br />

draw his conclusions on the basis<br />

of all available material, selecting<br />

the ideas which coincide with<br />

his standards of intellectual,<br />

moral and spiritual values.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has confidence<br />

in the ability of her students to<br />

weigh all facts presented to<br />

them, to discuss and compare<br />

these facts, and to arrive at conclusions<br />

by the process of investigation<br />

and selection.<br />

We cannot deny the existence<br />

of political theories which are in<br />

conflict with those of our government.<br />

We should not, therefore,<br />

pretend that they have no<br />

place in our lives. If there are<br />

people who do not believe in cur<br />

government, but prefer another,<br />

they must have reasons. Before<br />

we can defend our own beliefs,<br />

we must know what opposition<br />

we face and what standards and<br />

values are used to formulate such<br />

opinions.<br />

Only by listening to what<br />

others have to say, regardless of<br />

their views, can we strengthen<br />

our own faith in the guiding<br />

principles of democracy and<br />

Christianity. <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has<br />

faith in these principles and in<br />

the ability of her students to use<br />

them as a basis for judging conflicting<br />

policies.<br />

Other universities have been<br />

criticised in the manner used by<br />

"Delaware Resident" and have<br />

let themselves be weakened by<br />

limiting outside speakers to<br />

people whose views cannot be<br />

criticized. This situation presents<br />

a challenge to the educational<br />

system in our democracy.<br />

was in an uproar. In order to sing<br />

I lifted up the long curls and<br />

when I did, the conductor just<br />

collapsed in chagrin over his<br />

stand."<br />

When asked which end of show<br />

business he preferred, teaching<br />

or singing, he replied, "I like to<br />

sing, but teaching's the best insurance<br />

of eating regularly!"<br />

I STRICTLY<br />

FRESH<br />

i'T'HE New York author of "How<br />

I to Commit Murder and Get<br />

Away With It" got a life sentence<br />

for his fourth felony--- a robbery.<br />

Such is the fate of modern man<br />

over-specializati- on.<br />

and his<br />

i<br />

Fashion headline: Elbows Tell<br />

Tales About Your Age. Sometimes<br />

they reveal your manners, too.<br />

i<br />

i The coal business has a new mechanical<br />

coal digger, but gold digging<br />

will probably still be done in<br />

the same old way.<br />

Now that the election's over, we<br />

wonder what Henry Wallace will<br />

do with the peace and abundance<br />

he was going to give the American<br />

people.<br />

Lake Superior is larger than the<br />

state of South Carolina, one newspaper<br />

notes. V'pltpr. too!<br />

Are the educators of today going<br />

to revert to intellectual isolationism<br />

by presenting only one<br />

side of questions about politics,<br />

morality, spiritual values and<br />

principles; or are they going to<br />

meet the challenge with the faith<br />

and courage necessary to listen<br />

to and present to the students the<br />

widest available variety of opinions<br />

on these controversial questions?<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has followed<br />

the latter course without fear, because<br />

she is secure in the knowledge<br />

that each time other forms<br />

of government are compared<br />

with our own, the case for democracy<br />

is strengthened. It is the<br />

mysterious and unknown which<br />

attracts people to follow blindly.<br />

People can be taken in by high<br />

sounding1 ideals and theories, but<br />

once the theory is reduced to practice,<br />

they have a chance to judge<br />

more wisely.<br />

Educational institutions have<br />

an obligation to the students of<br />

our country to provide them with<br />

a background which will enable<br />

them to make decisions on their<br />

own in later life. No one is<br />

go-.in- g<br />

to shelter them when they<br />

leave college. No one will say<br />

"You must not listen to that<br />

man his ideas are not good."<br />

There is no screening of speakers<br />

for mature adults in a democracy.<br />

Why, then, during the<br />

time when students are forming<br />

4heir ideas about the fundamental<br />

problems in the world today,<br />

should their sources of information<br />

and education be limited by<br />

narrow-minde- d persons who are<br />

afraid to examine the other side<br />

of a question?<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has always upheld<br />

the principles of academic<br />

freedom, and we hope that in the<br />

future she will never forsake the<br />

ideals of education, democracy<br />

and Christianity which guarantee<br />

the rights of free speech and<br />

intellectual freedom.<br />

1 jaywalkers?<br />

STRICTLY FRESH<br />

THE secret of ya successful flli-- L<br />

buster is to exhaust your audience<br />

before you do your subject<br />

and yourself.<br />

Who can say how very many<br />

winged angels started out as mere<br />

'<br />

It's not altogether surprising<br />

that feminine fashion's plunging<br />

neckline finds some of its most<br />

enthusiastic advocates among gentlemen<br />

with plunging waistlines.<br />

Move yourself; save half, a van-renti- ng<br />

company advertises. . . .<br />

But most movers hope to salvage<br />

a little more than half.<br />

We are not yet geared for peace,<br />

a farm leader says. If that's true,<br />

let's hope we may soon get that<br />

way without stripping too many<br />

gears.<br />

ForYour<br />

FRATERNITY SUPPLIES<br />

Stop At The<br />

0. K. HARDWARE<br />

'<br />

Norma Allison<br />

That Old September Spirit<br />

Well, we're back.<br />

Classes have started, some people are studying, chairmen<br />

are calling committee meetings, and the Tub crew has shifted<br />

headquarters to the snack bar in the Union with no apparent<br />

decrease in numbers. The freshmen are oriented, transfers are<br />

still explaining why they left<br />

other schools and the traditional<br />

chapels are in full swing as of today.<br />

Class cutting will probably<br />

start soon, followed by quizzes<br />

and bluebooks. It doesn't take<br />

long to fall back in the old routine.<br />

With the usual September enthusiasm,<br />

everyone is saying,<br />

"This is going to be a great year."<br />

Filled with visions of 4 averages<br />

and big projects lor every organization<br />

on campus, the student<br />

body sounds as if it's ready to<br />

tackle anything.<br />

Obviously, we aren't all Phi<br />

Beta Kappas and the year isn't<br />

long enough to take in all the<br />

ideas that have come from a summer<br />

away from campus, but<br />

that's no reason to let the spirit<br />

slide, as it usually does after a<br />

few weeks.<br />

Last Friday night a group of<br />

men representing several fraternities<br />

got together and serenaded<br />

Austin Hall women. It was a nice<br />

gesture on their parts, since the<br />

upperclass women usually suffer<br />

Dave Howard<br />

Right vs. Fright<br />

from neglect during the first couple<br />

of weeks while the men congregate<br />

at Stuy. The most outstanding<br />

feature of the incident,<br />

however, was the spirit displayed<br />

by the men arching in to the<br />

tune of a <strong>Wesleyan</strong> song. They<br />

really impressed the listeners. In<br />

fact they radiated so much pep<br />

and energy that one corridor had<br />

to be quieted by the dorm president<br />

when it took up the singing<br />

with more quantity than quality.<br />

That kind of enthusiasm has a<br />

definite place in campus life.<br />

There will be pep rallies, football,<br />

basketball and baseball<br />

games, and countless drives and<br />

projects throughout the year<br />

which will need student support.<br />

It is these all-camp-<br />

us affairs<br />

which stand or fall according to<br />

the response of each and every<br />

one of us.<br />

This really can be a great year<br />

for us as individuals and as a<br />

group if we retain the September<br />

spirit and carry it right on<br />

through until next June.<br />

It must have been distressing to many here when a "Delaware<br />

resident" who prefers to remain anonymous wrote two<br />

letters recently to the Columbus Citizen verbally chastising<br />

President Flemming for allowing such individuals as Norman<br />

Thomas, Walter Reuther and Lillian Smith to peak in Gray<br />

chapel.<br />

The anonymous writer accused<br />

these people of being subversive<br />

and intimated in the fashion of<br />

McCarthyism that <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

might have some red elements.<br />

Dr. Flemming immediately re-<br />

plied that this writer was --<br />

confused<br />

in his thinking. He also<br />

said that whenever he had a<br />

highly controversal speaker here,<br />

he would always have someone<br />

with an opposite position speak,<br />

thus assuring a rebuttal.<br />

Now since its founding 109<br />

years ago, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

has stood for what is popularly<br />

known as academic freedom.<br />

Although in the past college<br />

officials have not always held<br />

this .objective .as high as they<br />

might have, they have repeatedly<br />

permitted controversial individuals<br />

on campus men like Norman<br />

Thomas and long ago Eugene<br />

V. Debs.<br />

This policy has been especially<br />

evident since the arrival of Arthur<br />

S. Flemming, as president.<br />

Unlike officials from many small<br />

privately endowed colleges who<br />

are governed by stolid Boards of<br />

Trustees and who shake timidly<br />

at the word controversy, the ad- -<br />

Ted Trost<br />

ministration here has brought a<br />

variety of ideas before the student<br />

body by having a variety of<br />

speakers. This has included ultra<br />

conservatives and ultra liberals;<br />

and because of this many students<br />

have left this university<br />

more enlightened and certainly<br />

much more capable of analyzing<br />

the world for themselves 6ince<br />

they were acquainted with so<br />

many from opposite camps.<br />

It is through' such shoddy<br />

thinking as this Delaware resi<br />

dent proved himself capable that<br />

academic freedom in its fullest<br />

sense could come to an end at<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>. This is possible<br />

through the auspices of pressure<br />

groups whose influence has already<br />

been felt at State where<br />

academic freedom is now limited<br />

with a regulation which provides<br />

screening of all campus speakers.<br />

'<br />

At least, let us hope that the<br />

fear which often accompanies<br />

6uch frenzied accusations does<br />

not motivate our own administration<br />

into limiting the speakers<br />

with liberal ideas. If this should<br />

ever happen, then the words on<br />

the cornerstone of Slocum library<br />

will have become a mockery to<br />

the college.<br />

Specialization In Education!<br />

This week <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> officially begins its 109th school<br />

year. Like every American university, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> faces the<br />

gigantic task of educating young men and young women in a<br />

critical period of world history.<br />

In this present century the educational emphasis is placed<br />

on the need for specialization. So- -<br />

ciety seems to look for specialists",<br />

in the hope that a concentrated<br />

effort in one particular<br />

field will produce greater results<br />

in bettering the world in which<br />

we live.<br />

Consequently, the student is<br />

faced with the problem of choosing<br />

a "major" and then subordinating<br />

all other interests to his<br />

chief objective. Even in sports,<br />

particularly football, coaches look<br />

for outstanding individual skills<br />

in each boy, believing that one<br />

player may be of more value to<br />

the team if he becomes exclusively<br />

proficient at extra point kicking<br />

or defensive play, for example.<br />

It is not my purpose to discuss<br />

the pros and cons of specialization.<br />

Neither am I advocating<br />

that everyone should become a<br />

"jack of all trades and master of<br />

none." It is sufficient to say that<br />

specialization seems to be necessary<br />

in order to meet the challenge<br />

of the times. But I do think<br />

we all should be aware of the<br />

dangers that concentrated specialization<br />

can produce.<br />

For example, a humanist, who<br />

advocates a complete intellectual<br />

approach to man's problems seem<br />

ingly becomes arrogant presumptuous<br />

and ' somewhat egotistical,<br />

when he claims that all the answers<br />

to our problems are seeded<br />

in the intellectual advancement<br />

of society. Likewise, the individual<br />

who specializes in physical<br />

skills believing that "to be in<br />

shape" at all times and that to<br />

"enjoy life always," is the only<br />

way to find happiness, is in<br />

danger of becoming sensual and<br />

even materialistic in his philosophy<br />

of life.<br />

And what about the person<br />

who claims that every answer to<br />

man's "quandry" can be found in<br />

the "things of the spirit" offered<br />

by religion? Is it not true that<br />

complete adherence to religion<br />

as the "saving power" can produce<br />

nothing but fanaticism and<br />

bigotry?<br />

Here at <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, each<br />

student has the opportunity t<br />

secure a "well rounded" education.<br />

During our academic years,<br />

each student will be aided in his<br />

quest to develop a sound philosophy<br />

of life. But let us not become<br />

swayed to the erroneous belief<br />

that by concentrated specialization<br />

in one phase of living, we<br />

can find an absolute formula for<br />

building that "better world."<br />

Neither should we become convinced<br />

that the problem solutions<br />

lay entirely in one particular<br />

academic subject or department.<br />

When any university department<br />

claims to have the absolute solutions<br />

for the betterment of mankind,<br />

then we run into a situation<br />

which might well be called "departmental<br />

imperialism".<br />

Speaking positively, let us all<br />

look for an integration of ideas<br />

in our academic experience. Let<br />

us gain knowledge from every<br />

aspect of human endeavor, for<br />

af-tera- ll,<br />

is this not the paramount<br />

objective of a university?<br />

Flowers by Gibson<br />

j


Wednesday, September 26, 1951<br />

Displaced Persons<br />

Enroll For Courses<br />

20 Foreign Students<br />

To Study Here<br />

Five displaced persons from<br />

countries behind the "Iron Cur<br />

tain" are among the new crop of<br />

20 foreign students who will be<br />

educated at <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> this<br />

year.<br />

They are Paulis Anstrats and<br />

Velta Livens, both from Latvia;<br />

Ewhen Komarnyckyj from Po<br />

land; George Krugovoy from<br />

Yugoslavia, and Raisa Zurkin<br />

from Russia.<br />

European students who are new<br />

arrivals on the <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

campus are Thomas Chrjrherr<br />

from Vienna, Austria; Gertraute<br />

Furstenau from Meunlheim,<br />

& Leonore Lenne from Frankfort<br />

Germany, and David Senehi from<br />

Teheran, Iran.<br />

New students from the Orient<br />

are Miss Ai Lan Quek from Sing<br />

apore; Srissala Ruengvisesh from<br />

Siam; Miss Chung-A- i Youn and<br />

Miss Young Koo Yun from Seoul,<br />

Korea; and Chiye Hayaski, Mas- -<br />

aru Miura and H. Oginome of<br />

Kumanoto, Tokyo, and Kobe,<br />

Japan, respectively.<br />

One student, Manouchehr<br />

Bahmanian, comes from Isfahan,<br />

Iran. South America has three<br />

representatives in the group:<br />

Farfan Rafael Su Nobrega from<br />

Lima, Peru; Nelida Carmen<br />

Rodriguez from Buenos Aires,<br />

Argentina; and Antonio Tong<br />

from Callao, Peru.<br />

WELCOME BACK<br />

STUDENTS<br />

STAR THEATER<br />

SCHOOL SUPPLIES<br />

PARTY SUPPLIES<br />

At<br />

STATIONERY STORE<br />

T0jJjJj'<br />

u e t nn n n e - a in o<br />

A HEARTY WELCOME TO<br />

OHIO WESLEYAN<br />

STUDENTS<br />

A?.'D DOTT FCIiCET ! !<br />

FCJl Kl<br />

.CEST K3YIES<br />

in oi;i3 - it's the shio<br />

Last Times Today<br />

Two Startling, Revealing, Hits !<br />

TEEN-AG- E" and "YOUTH AFLAME"<br />

THURS.-FRI.-SA- T.<br />

Ricardo Montalban 'and<br />

Cyd Charisse in<br />

"MARK OF THE RENEGADE"<br />

Adventure Hits!!<br />

Jeff Chandler and<br />

Evelyn Keyes in<br />

"IRON MAN"<br />

HERE IT C0:.:ES, BOYS!<br />

Sunday & Monday<br />

TITTLE<br />

il<br />

FAR.'! HOUSE<br />

On Old Route 23<br />

J. Paul Sheedy Switched lo WiWroot Cream-O- il<br />

and Made Big Saving on 2-in-<br />

-l Sale<br />

HIY-er-Shedy,w- is<br />

ba-a-adshapc<br />

in everybody lamb-baste- d h'm about<br />

his messy hair! "You'll get no sheepskin," the Dean said. "Somebody's<br />

pulled the wool over your eyes. Better comb it ba-a-ac- k with Wildroot<br />

Cream-Oil!- " Then Paul herd about a special Wildroot 2-in- -l bargain: 2<br />

regular 2SV bottles, a 58j( value, for only 39f the sheepeit price ever!<br />

(Non-alcoholi- c Wildroot contains Lanolin.<br />

Relieves dryness. Removes loose dandrun'.<br />

Helps you pass the finger-na- il test.) Now<br />

Sheedy has more girls than the Sheep of Araby!<br />

ba-a-arga- Get this in at any drug or toilet goods<br />

counter today! You won't get fleeced.<br />

of 327 Burroughs Dr., Snyder, N, Y.<br />

Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 1 1. N. Y.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Transcript Page 3<br />

Fraternities Pledge 207 freshmen<br />

29 ver Last Year; ams 1st<br />

Flemming Opens '51-5- Approximately 287 freshmen<br />

donned fraternity pledge pins this<br />

past rush week. Twenty-nin- e<br />

more freshman became Greeks<br />

this year than last.<br />

The record crop of incoming<br />

freshmen this year increased the<br />

overall fraternity roster. Phi<br />

Gamma Delta enlisted the great-<br />

2<br />

est nurriber with an enrollment of<br />

Red Cross Program<br />

29 new pledges, with Phi Delta<br />

President Flemming will open Theta recruiting 27 & Beta Theta<br />

K-psll- on<br />

the 1951-5- 2 Red Cross program Pi and Sigma Alpha pled<br />

for Chillicothe Hospital with an ging 26 new men respectively. The<br />

address at 4:00 p. m. today in the present roster of those pledged<br />

chapel annex. He will emphasize reads as follows:<br />

it's educational value to the stu Alpha Sigma Phi<br />

dent.<br />

Tom Bauer, Howard Blind, Rich<br />

As in past years, the program ard Brautigam, David Comstock,<br />

for Chillicothe will include stu Edward Corlett, Thomas Cunning-<br />

dent participation in Friday evenham, Norman Hadsell, Elmer<br />

ing smokers, Chaplin's groups. Hayes, Gordon Leppert, John<br />

classes in swimming instruction Merrill, Thomas Mosure, Thomas<br />

and dances.<br />

Nason, Joel Peterson, Holland<br />

Ritts, Robert Young, Randall<br />

Leiby, John Davids, Larry Wood-wort- h,<br />

Melvin McClellan, Anthony<br />

Ranck, William Davies,<br />

Walley Wells,<br />

Alpha Tau Omega<br />

John Baker, Arthur Bumler,<br />

George Brintlinger, John<br />

GET YOUR<br />

And<br />

Cart-righ- tingill, Dave Perkins, Ah Yong Kachel, Tom McConnell, Norm<br />

Foong.<br />

Middleton, Townsend Middleton,<br />

Beia Theta Pi<br />

Harvey Michalson, Robert Bill<br />

Milton Irvin, Ronald Van Bur- - Brian Wade .<br />

en, Lary Linderer, John Ham- Delta Tau Delta<br />

mond, John Staley, Jim Watson. Bill Henderson, Jim Boggs, Bill<br />

Jack Hahn, Dave Boyle, Bill Plav- - Riggs, Dave Hunt, Carver Hen<br />

can, Dick Davies, Jim Brown, drix, Nick White, Jim Welsh,<br />

Larry James, John Wedge, Doug Herb Manton, Al Edwards, Jack<br />

Boyle, Paul Nobis, Bill Kestle Benson, Dick Surbrook, Dave<br />

Dan Rich, Art Haight, <strong>Home</strong>r King, Bob Hall, Harry Conrath<br />

Clark, Dick Eitzel, John Funder-berg- , Art Caleondro, Bruno Caleondro,<br />

Milton Druin, Tom Halliday, Eddie Houck, Bruce Honfeldt,<br />

Dick Brown, Rubert Doan, Fred Dave Cecil.<br />

Smith.<br />

Phi Gamma Delia<br />

Chi Ph-i-<br />

William Brown, Robert Decker,<br />

Robert Mulholland, James Cald Douglas Dittrick, Raymond Dykes,<br />

well, Don Glaser, John Brown, Roger Fromm, Edward Graham,<br />

Ray Thweatt, Barron Buchanan Gilbert Duscott, Robert Hammer,<br />

Sam Harvey, Jim Matz, John Geb- - Don Ingram, W. Philip Kraft,-Ro- y<br />

by, Don Jefferys, Jim Alderton Miller, Bill Myers, Charles Phi<br />

Ray Fischer, Earl Bitters, Ralph fer, Stuart Reuter, William. Rog<br />

Schlag, John Ward, Al Grauliek, ers, George Ross, William Sager-<br />

Dick Plotts, Bob Durigg, Bruce<br />

Benedict, Mai White, Jim Mairs,<br />

Tom Timmons.<br />

Phi Delta Theta<br />

Dale Eishen, Jim Wyatt, Jerry<br />

Krick, Dave Basinger, Bill Davis,<br />

Dean Andrews, Ward Bishop,<br />

Kenneth Creasy, Doug Haymond,<br />

t, Dave Hunt, Warren Kahle, Stan<br />

Ronald Cattlett, Don Clark, Lawson, Edward Lee, Edwin Lee,<br />

Charles Hardaway, Ronald Hol-li- s, Allen McMahn, Victor Milla,<br />

Richard Lowery, Richard Pol- Lawrence Miller, Charles Moore,<br />

lock, Nick Rini, Gary Roberts, Richard Newell, Leon Rickey<br />

Robert Saltsman, James Schmidt, Tom Roos, Jack Short, John<br />

John Scheiwi, Vertal Scott, Byron Thomas, Blair Webster, Gregg<br />

Sperow, Sobert Studley, William Wharry, Lee Williams, Franklin<br />

Titmas, David Upp.<br />

Worchester.<br />

Beta Sigma Tau<br />

Kappa Sigma<br />

Jan Marfyak, Norm Syler, John James Becker, Bob Breese, Al-<br />

Warhol, Srisola Ruenguisesh, Leobert DeMartin, Robert Ellis,<br />

nard Bud, George Goodwin; Dick James Gerard, Joseph Goetz, Joe<br />

Moses, Irwin Moses, Roger Pet- - Hibbits, Richard Hoffman, Walter<br />

SINGER SEVIIIG MACHINE CO.<br />

SEWING NOTIONS<br />

PATTERNIS<br />

FABRICS<br />

COVERED BELTS<br />

BUCKLES AND BUTTONS<br />

49 North Sandusky Street Phone 2483<br />

-<br />

Reiser, Dave Maurer, Harry Willi<br />

ford, John Kistler, Ted Hilliard,<br />

William Libby.<br />

Tau Kappa Epsilon<br />

Paul Sharar, Marshall Phomas,<br />

George Pommert, Willard Hill,<br />

Ben Schwartz, Allan Whipple.<br />

600 Frosh Attend<br />

Opening Mixer<br />

Six hundred freshman men and<br />

women met socially for the first<br />

time Sept. 18 at the annual freshman<br />

mixer.<br />

Big fluffy bows of pastel colors<br />

decorated the walls of Edwards<br />

gym emphasizing the birthday<br />

party theme. Twelve booths rep<br />

resented the months of the year<br />

Richard Shattuck, John Smart,<br />

where the students congregated<br />

to<br />

Don Strong, Don Valtz, Robert<br />

plan skits. The freshmen displayed<br />

school spirit by<br />

VanHorne, James Wilkins,<br />

singing<br />

Bill<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> songs led by<br />

Young, John Gano, Robert Chase<br />

Chuck<br />

LaVon Gurwell, Dick Taylor,<br />

Smith and Dick Roelofs. The eve<br />

ning was climaxed by a grand<br />

Charles Eichhorn.<br />

march.<br />

Phi Kappa Psi<br />

The YWCA<br />

Bill Breslin, John Geer, Walter<br />

and YMCA were<br />

sponsors<br />

Olson, Tom Baker, Bob Yeck,<br />

and members of the<br />

faculty chaperoned.<br />

Frank Mildovich, Bill McEwen<br />

Marilyn Blass<br />

co-cha-<br />

Phil Unger, Herb Schmugler, Sam<br />

and Pete Brower were ir<br />

Morgan, John Davis, Phil. Sandoz,<br />

men in charge of planning the<br />

John Brower, Dbnald Gerhardt,<br />

affair.<br />

Taylor Obold, David James, Hal isoo bianeu ana the campus<br />

Hendricks, Bob Bradley, Ralph<br />

band furnished the music.<br />

Herms, Tom Zoph, Jim Patterson,<br />

Bob Hayerman, Dave Kals.<br />

Phi Kappa Tau<br />

2 Women Painters<br />

Carlos Bernath, Charles Carl-<br />

Ord-wa- y.<br />

son, Alan Foster, Richard Attend Workshops<br />

Sigma Alpha Epsilon<br />

Miss Sallie T. Humphreys, for<br />

Norm Hollis, Jerry Shisler, Dick mer head of the <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

O'Brien, Larry Kimsal, George Fine Arts department, and Mrs<br />

Daniels, Dick Blaney, Ralph Gun-te- r, Rosa Babcock of the <strong>Ohio</strong> Wes<br />

leyan art staff attended painting<br />

workshops at <strong>Ohio</strong> university<br />

this summer.<br />

Seven states, including <strong>Ohio</strong>:<br />

were represented by the 70 mem<br />

bers enrolled in the university<br />

group.<br />

Two eminent American artists,<br />

John Carroll and Yasuo Kuniyo-sh-i<br />

from New York were instruc<br />

tors. Mr. Carroll is a noted portrait<br />

painter from East Chatham<br />

and M. Kuniyoshi has been a<br />

leading painter in America for<br />

over 30 vears.<br />

We At The<br />

SMART SHOP WELCOME<br />

The<br />

Old and New <strong>Wesleyan</strong>ites<br />

GIFTS LADIES READY-TO-WEA- R NOVELTIES<br />

FOR A FINE, WELL PREPARED MEAL<br />

TRY OUR RESTAURANT SERVICE!!<br />

Complete Grill<br />

Beverages & Fountain<br />

Steaks & Pickerel<br />

Each Day, CHICKEN in the BASKET<br />

Each Sun., HOME STYLE FRIED CHICKEN<br />

Jim Mason, John Byrum,<br />

George DeLong, Bob Hanson, Bill<br />

Worstell, Dick Brandts, Dick<br />

Kreimendahl, Bob Closen, Doug<br />

Nichols, Ralph Elrick, Huey Long,<br />

Wally ReeWe, Bill Turley, Ted<br />

Pollard, Bill Rich, Dave Sagel,<br />

Jack Henderson, Al Doan, Jay<br />

Smyser.<br />

Sigma Chi<br />

John Wolfe, Lincoln Anas,<br />

James Bing, William Bonebrake,<br />

John Dimlick, James Gest, Ronald<br />

Glosser, Warren Hegg, Arthur<br />

Miller, James Owen, William<br />

Philips, George Pond, Thomas E.<br />

Thomas, Bruce Thompson, Ed<br />

Watson, Alfred Davies, Philip<br />

Placier, Charles Stone, Leonard<br />

Tresh, Tom DaVis, Philip Johnson,<br />

Robert Balliett, Ron Dickson,<br />

Jim Wismar.<br />

Sigma Phi Epsilon<br />

Gordon Amendt, Ken Bixler,<br />

Robert Campbell, Douglas Caul-kin- s,<br />

William Johnson, David<br />

Jones, Barnet Miller, James Pral-l- e,<br />

David Suppes, Clyde Webber,<br />

Jack Geiger, Dick Erickson, Fred<br />

NOW PLAYING<br />

"SEVEN DAYS<br />

TO NOON"<br />

FRI.-SA- T.<br />

SUN.-MO- N.<br />

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AROUND THE<br />

DOIIUT HOLE<br />

AT DO<br />

By ROY-WMSlt- F<br />

Dear Hopes of the World:<br />

Assuming that the facts of life are old stM to yt ni<br />

that your arrival in Delaware constitutes a declaration of independence<br />

from all parental and home town inhibitionc, let<br />

us consider the immediate business at hand Delaware and<br />

its environs. Delaware was founded in the early part of tb<br />

nineteenth century by Moses Byxbe. Moses was on his way<br />

to found Columbus, but his ox cart blew a spoke, and hearing<br />

that someone had already founded Columbus, he stayed<br />

here on the banks of Dishwater Run. Moses is chiefly remembered<br />

for being the father of the Delaware Grape. This w<br />

not to be confused with the Delaware Gripe, the latter bifig<br />

a term which students have given the weather here, particularly<br />

when it rains, most students having come hew frofti<br />

places, where it never rains.<br />

Delaware was noted as a watering place in its early days.<br />

Elliott Hall was then known as the Mansion House and genteel<br />

people came here from miles around to imbibe the curative<br />

sulphur water. Later the freshmen were immersed bodtiy<br />

in the Sulphur Spring, the sophomores reasoning that anything<br />

tasting that bad should be used externally only. This<br />

custom has died out in recent years and watering. place<br />

have given away to the jug habit.<br />

One of the oldest businesses in Delaware is Bun's restaurant.<br />

It was founded on the basis that students cannot<br />

live on Blue Books alone, so along came Bun with the Bun<br />

Book which enabled the students to survive the onslaughts<br />

of the effect of higher culture. Later, when <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

co-education- al, became it became quite a lark to take your<br />

best girl to Bun's for a sundae, even though the rules pre-hibit- ed<br />

such outrageous conduct. Coeds never appeared on<br />

the streets unchaperoned in those days. Now the chaperons<br />

have been replaced by the Delaware Police Department,<br />

which explains why the coeds have so much more fun than<br />

they used to.<br />

Delaware is full of historic spots which has made<br />

it a dry cleaning bonanza. One of these historic spotg<br />

is our walls. At first glance they look like a rogue's gallery,<br />

but closer observation tells the tale of past <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

athletic greatness. Each year the likenesses of four additional<br />

outstanding athletes are added to our Hall of Fame. So while<br />

you munch a sandwich or quaff a soup, you are being looked<br />

down at by Joe Doakes, who ran one hundred yard againft<br />

Wittenberg in 1916. '<br />

Social life at <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> is varied. Signv<br />

Chi, of which we are a member, i the oldest and best fraternity<br />

of the campus (the only exceptions we make to thii<br />

for business reasons are: Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega,<br />

Beta Sigma Tau, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Kaf<br />

pa Sigma, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi,<br />

Phi Kappa Tau, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Tan<br />

Kappa Epsilon). Many of these fraternities are some of<br />

best customers and are very fond of serving our baked goods,<br />

as it makes their tables look better. Also some have banquets<br />

here in our banquet rooms, a very commendable praet-ic- e and<br />

one which we encourage greatly. Sororities are important here<br />

too, being composed chiefly of members of the opposite se<br />

from the fraternities. When the members of the sororities get<br />

together with the members of the fraternities things sort of<br />

pep up and there is more social life. I will not endeavor to pick<br />

the best sorority as I have never belonged to one and it is all<br />

hearsay as far as I am concerned. Besides, they are all building<br />

new houses so fast that I haven't had time to go up to the<br />

Court House and see which one has the biggest mortgage. The<br />

sororities are very good customers of ours too, and it is nothing<br />

to see eighty girls seated around the floor all eating spaghetti<br />

Middle East style out of a caserok furnished by or<br />

catering department.<br />

During the year many students have birthdays. This is<br />

usually a time of celebration and girls especially like to buy<br />

their roommates birthday cakes at Bun's bakery so that they<br />

can point out how old they are, the girls, that is, not the cake.<br />

As you know, to a woman, another woman's age k a source of<br />

grim satisfaction.<br />

Your grandfather ate here. Your father ate here and<br />

you'll eat here. Very pleasant monotony and a old 0vi<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> custom.<br />

i'our for good eating at Bws<br />

Royhimself<br />

o-- r


: As<br />

Page 4<br />

r<br />

.<br />

II I nJilY<br />

we begin another year of<br />

covering the sports picture here<br />

at <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, may we first welcome<br />

back our old readers and<br />

give our first welcome to our new<br />

ones. We hope to give each of<br />

you a comprehensive view of<br />

your favorite sport along with a<br />

iood overall look at sports in<br />

general. We would like to say at<br />

'.he outset that we would welcome<br />

any and all criticisms from<br />

you, the reader, and to further<br />

-- ita-te that we would be more than<br />

lappy to print any worthwhile<br />

letters to the editor in this col-Jm- n.<br />

Now thai fall is here, of<br />

course, comes the football season.<br />

Bishop fans however, won't<br />

have too much opportunity to<br />

see their team in action unless<br />

' t'ney are prepared to do a little<br />

traveling. Of the nine games<br />

scheduled this year, only four<br />

will be played here in Delaware.<br />

This is regrettable for the<br />

aforementioned fans, but una<br />

. i<br />

,<br />

si<br />

SPORT'S<br />

GOODS<br />

By BOB DRAKE<br />

IF YOU'RE A<br />

S N ACK-- S NATCH Eft, TRY<br />

2<br />

VaVV WITH MILK<br />

.11 (jr tiMLL.<br />

years to play contests with another<br />

school or schools, it has io<br />

agree to split about even with<br />

its opponents as io whose home<br />

ground the games are to be<br />

played upon .For the past few<br />

years, Wosleyan has played a<br />

great majority of its games at<br />

home. Now the Bishops are<br />

coming onto the other end of<br />

the cycle. Without having had a<br />

look at any future schedules,<br />

we would nevertheless hazard<br />

a guess that the majority of<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> games will be played<br />

away from Selby Field for a<br />

while.<br />

After spending the summer as<br />

sports readers rather than sports<br />

writers, we felt pretty good about<br />

being able to cover <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

sports again. Our teams may not<br />

be as world shaking as others in<br />

the nations but at least we don't<br />

have to write about how much of<br />

our basketball team has been indicted<br />

for taking bribes from<br />

gamblers or how the football<br />

squad has been expelled for mass<br />

voidable. When a school sets Icheating on examinations. Yeah,<br />

up a schedule over a period of lyeah, it's good to be back!<br />

SPUDHUT SHOP<br />

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Good Food<br />

Beverages<br />

Buck Lamme, Proprietor<br />

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custc;. n&cz dhapehies<br />

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<strong>Ohio</strong> Wesleyati Transcript Wednesday, September 26, 1951<br />

Opening<br />

Eile<br />

Classical and Popular<br />

O. W. U.<br />

REQUIREMENTS FOR<br />

SHEET MUSIC.<br />

MUSICAL<br />

INSTRUMENT<br />

ACCESSORIES<br />

Contest<br />

ven, 23-1- 3<br />

ITS EASIER THAN EVER !<br />

A. II<br />

SPORTS WRITERS WANTED.<br />

Men interested in positions with<br />

the Transcript sports staff may<br />

find applications on the sports<br />

desk in the Transcript office. Applicants<br />

will contact Joe Somma<br />

or Bob Drake at the Delt house<br />

or leave applications at the sport<br />

desk.<br />

Smoothly Powerful Falcon Attack Keeps Bishops<br />

In Defensive Position Most Of Afternoon<br />

Bowling Green defeated <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 23-1- 3 Saturday<br />

as the Bishops attempted to win their initial contest of the<br />

1951 season.<br />

out-manned<br />

Throughout the game, the Falcons outplayed and<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> with a smoothly operating machine that<br />

kept the Bishops on the defensive<br />

all afternoon.<br />

In dropping their opening<br />

game, <strong>Wesleyan</strong> suffered injuries<br />

which will hamper their attack<br />

lor Saturday's Otterbein tilt.<br />

Chuck Beckley, sophomore back<br />

received a concussion early in the<br />

Bowling Green contest and will<br />

probably be sidelined for the next<br />

few games.<br />

Led by the rushing of full-<br />

B-G- 's<br />

back, Fred Durig, the<br />

roamed the Bisho pdefense al-<br />

Green took over on their own<br />

29.<br />

The Falcons moved to a first<br />

down on their own 40, but were<br />

forced to punt after failing on<br />

the ground. The Bishops took<br />

over on their own 30, but lost<br />

possession of the ball as Jack<br />

Allen's jump pass was intercepted<br />

by Larry Schreck. Schreck car<br />

ried to the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 25 before he<br />

was nailed down.<br />

Rex Simonds passed to Jim<br />

Ladd who took the ball behind<br />

most at will. The first Falcon two Bishop defenders for the<br />

touchdown came as result of score. Glass converted io make<br />

an intercepted forward pans in the score<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> territory. Later, a<br />

Bishop fumble on the 30 yard<br />

line was converted into the second<br />

Bowling Green touchdown.<br />

Durig added a third score as he<br />

drove through the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> line<br />

for a 36 yard run.<br />

B-- G Ollie Glass, center, com<br />

pleted the scoring for the Falcons<br />

as he dropkicked a field goal<br />

from the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 22 yard line.<br />

Glass quickly converted the play<br />

as the pass from center was<br />

fumbled and he was forced to<br />

dropkick from a difficult angle.<br />

As the game opened, the Bis<br />

hops received the opening kick-of- f,<br />

but made no headway against<br />

the big Falcon forward wall.<br />

After exchanging punts, <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

launched an offensive from<br />

the Bowling Green 43 yajd line,<br />

where Jack Allen was tripped<br />

after a 10 yard punt return. The<br />

Bishops moved 17 yards on runs<br />

by Atma and Buckley.<br />

The <strong>Wesleyan</strong> attack bogged<br />

down after that point. With<br />

four tries, the Bishops failed to<br />

gain a first down and Bowling<br />

7-- 0.<br />

Bowling Green held the lead<br />

for a brief period only. John Blair<br />

returned the Falcon kick-of- f to<br />

the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 36 yardline. Then<br />

in the first play from scrimmage<br />

Dwight McMann dashed through<br />

a hole in right tackle and raced- -<br />

64 yards to score. Johnny Vossers<br />

converted to knot the score 7-- <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 12 yard line where they<br />

were stopped cold. The Bishops<br />

took over possession, but were<br />

forced to punt after failing to<br />

gain a tirst down.<br />

The Falcons returned the ball<br />

io their own 48, and in three<br />

plays scored their final touchdown.<br />

Durig plunged for eight<br />

yards. Benny Pate scampered<br />

for a first down on the Bishop<br />

36. From there, Durig took the<br />

ball io paydirf as he circled the<br />

end. Glass kicked the extra<br />

point. Score: 20-- 7.<br />

The score remained the same<br />

until midway in the final period<br />

when <strong>Wesleyan</strong>-<br />

7.<br />

On the following kickof f<br />

Bowling Green marched down<br />

the field from their own 35 to<br />

the Bishop 14 yard stripe. The<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> defense held the Falcons<br />

on the seven yard line.<br />

Again the Red and Black of<br />

fense made no headway whatso<br />

ever, and Vossers punted. Blair<br />

intercepted a pass from Simonds<br />

on the Bishop 41, but Bowling<br />

Green gained possession of the<br />

ball as a shovel pass was fumbled<br />

in the Bihop backfield. The Fal<br />

cons scored on a fourth down<br />

pass Irom bimonds to Ladd.<br />

Blair broke up the conversion<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> received the second<br />

half kickoff and was forced to<br />

B-G- punt. The 's drove to the<br />

- first downs against four for<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>. Durig was the big TENUIS RACKETS- - RESTRUIIG<br />

man for Bowling Green as he<br />

picked up 171 yards in 27 tries.<br />

The Falcons picked up a total<br />

24 HOUR SERVICE<br />

of 286 yardti rushing, while the<br />

Bishops were held to 73 yards<br />

net rushing.<br />

HIST'S SHELL STATION<br />

Passing was generally poor as<br />

only four of the Falcon's 15<br />

passes found their marks. The<br />

Corner of Washington and William<br />

Bishops passing was betted $trt<br />

as<br />

seven out of 25 <strong>Wesleyan</strong> passes<br />

were completed.<br />

marched down<br />

the field 71 yards for a final TD. Welcome Back Students<br />

Boggs carried a Bishop pass to<br />

the 46 for first down. Successive<br />

passes brought the ball down<br />

deep into Bowling Green terri-<br />

THE NECTAR<br />

tory. After the Falcons suffered<br />

an offsides penalty, Buckley<br />

passed to Bruce for the touchdown.<br />

After this point the Bis-<br />

RESTAURANT<br />

hop attack died.<br />

The Falcons outclassed <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> in every department<br />

except passing. They netted 13<br />

Weldome Students<br />

FACULTY AND STUDfNTS<br />

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Ve Are Happy to Velcoma You<br />

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Back fo 0. 7. U. and Delavcre.<br />

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HEADQUARTERS<br />

We will try to help make your school years as ptaisemt<br />

FOR<br />

as possible, by giving you the best in Dry Cleaning ami laundry<br />

PHONOGRAPH RECORDS. service. Bring all your cleaning and laundry pro W em to ui.<br />

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No tricks! No gimmicks! Takes no time-- no special talent! You can mk $25.<br />

Just write a simple four-lin- e jingle based on the fact that<br />

UiaciES TASTE BETTER THAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE 1<br />

(or ornr qualities of Luckhs such as those helow.)<br />

Write a Lucky Strike jingle, like those Sr-- F<br />

R aA7unC JmOM<br />

. . .. i.. ..i-- i ant'" .liub .<br />

you see on this page, Dasea on tne V """ " VT,,ct . utV--H i 31 !<br />

fact that Luckies taste better than any f ( mmtmik 9<br />

other cigarette, or other qualities ot<br />

Luckies such as those listed below. If<br />

your jingle is selected for possible use<br />

in Lucky Strike advertising, we will<br />

pay you $25for the right to use it and<br />

your name in our advertising. Lucky<br />

Strike jingles will soon be 'running in<br />

your paper. Start today send in as<br />

many jingles as you like. Be the first<br />

to write a jingle in your school!<br />

and<br />

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i<br />

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MAD TH ESI SIMPLI INSTRUCTIONS<br />

1. Write your Lucky Strike<br />

on a plain piece of paper or postcard and send<br />

it to Happy-Go-Luck- y, P. O. Box 67, New<br />

York 46, N. Y. Be sure that your name,<br />

address, college and class are included and<br />

that they are legible.<br />

four-lin- e jingle<br />

2. Base your jingle on the fact that Luckies<br />

taste better than any other cigarette or<br />

on any of the alternate themes below.<br />

3. Every student of any college, university or<br />

te post-gradua- school may submit jingles.<br />

like<br />

w<br />

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To make money writing jingle, it is not<br />

essential to base your jingle on "Luckies taste<br />

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L.SA1 FT-- lucky Strike Means Fine lobacco


Wednesday, September 26, 1951<br />

Strength In Depth Is Characteristic Of<br />

New Edition Of Bishop Football Team<br />

Phone 2642<br />

24 HOUR SERVICE<br />

Office 23 East William Street, Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

Terra<br />

.<br />

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You Save Money On Our<br />

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CC"?LETE CCLLECS SUPPLIES<br />

WELCOME WESLEYAI1ITES<br />

From<br />

CAMERA SHOP<br />

i<br />

7 WEST WINTER STREET PHONE 5495<br />

Robert "Les" Michaels and<br />

James Bailey have been added to<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s physical education department<br />

this year to fill the<br />

posts vacated by Bob Strimer and<br />

Bill Daugherty, both of whom are<br />

working for their Master's degrees<br />

at <strong>Ohio</strong> State.<br />

Les Michaels is an <strong>OWU</strong> grad<br />

uate, class of 1940. While taking<br />

his undergraduate course here he<br />

played football, where he excelled<br />

as a passer, and baseball.<br />

where he roamed the outfield and<br />

accumulated .345 batting average<br />

during his senior year.<br />

Following his graduation from<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>, Les coached at Urbana<br />

High for a year before going in<br />

to the army. In the service he at<br />

tained the rank of Captain in the<br />

medical corps, and at present is<br />

a major in the marine reserve.<br />

After his discharge, Les returned<br />

to his Alma Mater for two years.<br />

left to coach at Mentor High for<br />

three seasons, and has now re<br />

turned to take over the reins of<br />

the j. v. gridders and the varsity<br />

diamond squad.<br />

Jim Bailey is a graduate of the<br />

the mini's national championship<br />

U. of Illinois. He was a member of<br />

gymnastic squads during his un<br />

dergraduate years.<br />

Jim is married and has two<br />

children, was a staff sergeant in<br />

the Army, and has had coaching<br />

experience at Duke <strong>University</strong><br />

and at Slippery Rock State Teachers.<br />

Here at <strong>Wesleyan</strong> he will<br />

teach the football, volleyball, and<br />

handball service classes.<br />

Cap's Darker Shcp<br />

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Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

DELAWARE'S MOST<br />

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sunnEY lou:::e<br />

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<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Transcript Page 5<br />

Interesting Contests Feature This Week's Grid Action<br />

has several All-America-<br />

ns and<br />

potential All - Americans. The<br />

team eeems to be well fortified<br />

every position. Since Califor<br />

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Ensemble, gift-boxe- d, $8.75<br />

LEE'S BOOK STORE<br />

C<br />

Varsity-Tow- n Suits<br />

$55.00 to $72.50<br />

Varsity-Tow- n Toppers<br />

$49.50 to $67.50<br />

Varsity-Tow- n Jackets<br />

$35.00 to $45.00<br />

Varsity-Tow- n Slacks<br />

$16.50 to $22.50<br />

Varsity-Tow- n Fennals<br />

$65.00 to $72.50<br />

A satin shawl eollar<br />

single breasted tux<br />

opens the way to the<br />

wearing of a colorful<br />

cumberbund.<br />

handling, and poise to overcome<br />

his handicap. Even though Miss<br />

issippi State beat Tennessee last<br />

year in an upset, they still have<br />

to be rated an underdog in this<br />

year's game.<br />

T-Formation<br />

Fraser Shifts From Single Wing To<br />

Due To Abundance Of Powerful Line Crashers<br />

While most of us have been sitting home waiting for<br />

school to start, there has been activity at <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

Selby Stadium. Since September first, some 60 boys have<br />

been living and eating and working together to mold the 1951<br />

edition of the Battling Bishops football team.<br />

Of interest to Bishop followers<br />

L the fact that the single wing<br />

has been forsaken by Coach<br />

Glenn Fraser and the "T" formation<br />

inserted in its place. An<br />

abundance of powerful straight<br />

ahead runners dictated the shift.<br />

With the change-ove- r, By CHUCK HESS ,<br />

Once again the football season is getting under way all<br />

bets to play. The first four are over the country. This weekend is the first, and in some<br />

letterwinners. Pritiie, Beiz, and cases, the second of competition for the colleges. This year<br />

Bauer will probably all play de<br />

fense.<br />

another fine season is in prospect, depending on what the<br />

Although there is not a single draft does to the teams around<br />

letterwinner among the guards, the country. Some of the great<br />

they seem to be fairly well man players to be on the lookout for<br />

ned by Marion Light'foot, Chuck this season are Babe Parilli, Ken-<br />

Higgins, Ron Evilsizor, Bill' Shep tucky, quarterback; Bobby Rey-<br />

ler, George Doore, and John Fish<br />

nolds, Nebraska halfback; Bob<br />

er. Fisher won a letter last year<br />

Smith, Texas A&M fullback; and<br />

on defense and that is<br />

Vic<br />

where he<br />

Janowicz, <strong>Ohio</strong> State half<br />

Stan Alma, Jim Bogos, and Joe will be again<br />

Slone on the right side. Slone,<br />

this year.<br />

back. Princeton, Baylor, Alabama<br />

The<br />

Allen, and Atma are letiermen,<br />

center spot is well fortified<br />

and Washington will be among<br />

by letterman John Vossers,<br />

the top teams in the nation this<br />

and<br />

hile Boaos is a freshman and<br />

season<br />

the fastest man on the team,<br />

senior Chuck Kaiser. They both<br />

while McMann captained<br />

have a lot of savvey.<br />

With these facts in mind let us<br />

the<br />

get down to the business at hand,<br />

The<br />

it is likely<br />

over all picture shows a lot<br />

frosh team of two years ago.<br />

namely that of picking the top<br />

of talent on the team. This will<br />

that the Bishops will take two or The fullback slot is particular-<br />

five games in the nation each<br />

lead to good depth in most places.<br />

three games to adjust to it. It ly will manned by lettermen<br />

week and predicting their out-<br />

The team is probably a<br />

mid-seaso- may be n before the<br />

little<br />

"Yogi" Blair and Vern Fraser,<br />

comes as nearly correctly as poss-<br />

slower than last year's, but it is<br />

Battling Bishops reach peak form. and junior speedster Jim Pump-hre- y.<br />

ible. This week we find that the<br />

also heavier.<br />

The key man in any<br />

With a few game's<br />

T forma- Blair and Fraser will also<br />

games are distriDutea tnrougn<br />

experience under their belts,<br />

tion offensive is the quarterback.<br />

they<br />

see plenty of action as line back-<br />

the country as follows: two in the<br />

may really go. The<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> has several good prosers on defense while Pumphrey<br />

extremely Midwest, two in the East, and one<br />

high team<br />

pects for that all important post. may be number one safety man.<br />

morale will make the in the Southeast.<br />

1951<br />

Hayden Buckley, Berlin Heights<br />

edition of the Battling Bis<br />

Only two starters are back from<br />

In the Midwest we Mich-ga- find n<br />

hops tough to beat.<br />

senior, has the inside track for last year's offensive line. They<br />

hosting Michigan State and<br />

the job. He is a fine passer and are John Vossers and Dale Bruce, Here is the<br />

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

schedule for the<br />

State doing the same to<br />

has won two monograms at Wes a center and an end respectively. rest of the season:<br />

Southern Methodist. Let us take<br />

leyan as a tailback in Coach Teaming with Bruce at end will<br />

a look at the Michigan-Michiga- n<br />

Fraser's single wing. Behind him be Bob Huchey, a letterman and Sept. 29 Otterbein <strong>Home</strong> State battle first. Michigan has<br />

are two freshmen, Bob Davies<br />

ex-Mari- ne an from Manchester,<br />

been weakened very much by<br />

Oct. 5 Buffalo At Buffalo<br />

from Troy, and Tom Mosure from New Hampshire. There is a<br />

graduation, loosing their best<br />

1<br />

Youngstown. quartet of ends right behind them Oct. 13 Case<br />

backs<br />

Tech<br />

and a few of the top line<br />

<strong>Home</strong><br />

There are six halfbacks who who will also see plenty of ac<br />

men. Also the class of 1954 does<br />

appear to be about erenly match tion. They are Baker Smith, Paul Oct. 20 Denison <strong>Home</strong> not have too much to offer in the<br />

d and all ihould play<br />

way<br />

their<br />

of good<br />

share Monroe, Dick Brubaker, and<br />

players. Michigan<br />

Oct. 27 Oberlin At Oberlin<br />

of football. They are Dwight Mc Ronnie Culp.<br />

State is minus. Sonny Grandelius<br />

All-Americ- an<br />

Mann, Chuck Bexley, and Jack There eeems to be an abun Nov. 3 Mt Union At<br />

their great back of<br />

Alliance<br />

Allen at the left halfback; and dance of tackles this year, most<br />

last year; however their backfield<br />

of them converted from other<br />

Nov. 10 Muskingum At New is still better than average. Their<br />

RECORDS positions. Chuck Barber and<br />

Concord defensive situation is such that<br />

Michigan State will possibly be<br />

Wally Cross seem to be a little<br />

Sheet Music<br />

Nor. 17 Wittenburg <strong>Home</strong><br />

ahead of the rest<br />

the top defensive team in the<br />

now. Chuck was<br />

country<br />

Music Accessories an end last year<br />

this season. Taking all of<br />

while Wally<br />

this into consideration we pick<br />

was a quarterback. Jerry Prii<br />

KEVS SHOP<br />

Michigan State over Michigan.<br />

tie, Hal Beii, and Tom Bauer, a<br />

250 pound freshmen, all are Hew good Coaches Take The other game in the Midwest<br />

is the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

Posts Al <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

velc::.:h dacx students<br />

HUT'S<br />

SHELL STATION<br />

90 West William Street<br />

TAXI SERVICE<br />

Modern Dependable Safe<br />

7ARE CAB CO.<br />

Siale-SMU- . two teams, this game should go<br />

o California.<br />

The other game is the Cornellgame.<br />

S<br />

MU lost "killer" Kyle Rote via<br />

the graduation route last June<br />

but since most of last year's varsity<br />

will be back and the line is<br />

in good shape, SMU should have<br />

a pretty fair team. <strong>Ohio</strong> Stale has<br />

essentially the same team that it<br />

had last year. Something new has<br />

been added to the Buckeye's at<br />

tack though this year. We are<br />

speaking of the Michigan style<br />

single wing being used along with<br />

the T this season. Since Vic Janowicz<br />

is the greatest triple threat<br />

player running from the single<br />

wing. This should mean that <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

State will have a better team this<br />

year. In this game we will have<br />

to pick <strong>Ohio</strong> to lake SMU.<br />

In the East, the two games are<br />

the California vs. Pennsylvania<br />

and Cornell vs. Syracuse. Pennsylvania<br />

has its usual pretty good<br />

team and should be tough this<br />

season even though Red Bags- -<br />

nell is no longer with them. California<br />

also has a pretty fair team<br />

this year. It was not hit hard by<br />

either the draft or graduation. It<br />

-<br />

five is the Tennessee vs. Mississ<br />

ippi State game in the Southeast.<br />

Tennessee has a lot of power a<br />

gain this year. The Southeastern<br />

Conference champions have much<br />

of last year's power back plus al<br />

sophomore crop. Mississippi State<br />

has twenty-thre- e returning lettermen<br />

which is a help to any<br />

BETTER MEAT<br />

team. The surprising thing about<br />

them is their 126 lb. quarter back,<br />

Syracuse tussle. Cornell has an Franch Branch, the smallest in<br />

1 2 West Winter Street Phone 2272<br />

excellent offensive team and a the country. Branch, however,<br />

very good defensive line. The uses superior headwork, ball- -<br />

trouble this year is in the defen<br />

sive backfield, particularly in the<br />

linebacker department. However,<br />

they will be very much in the<br />

running for the Ivy League<br />

WELCOME<br />

championship, byracuse ha3 ex<br />

cellent depth and poise this year<br />

according to coach Ben Schwartz<br />

TO A GOOD START AND SUCCESS FOR ALL<br />

walder. Several of the varsity<br />

squad members quit school to en<br />

list in the armed forces, but Syra<br />

AL BACHMAtl SHOE SERVICE<br />

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anyway. This game should be<br />

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OF COURSE


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S<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Transcript Wednesday, September 26, 1951<br />

files. Will tell you more of this The<br />

later.<br />

Transcript Goes To A Party<br />

Cupid's Bill Kuhne, SAE, has given<br />

his pin to Tad Grimm, Pi Phi;<br />

Bobby House, SAE, has present- MIDNIGHT SONG SPREE AT DORMS, GAME,<br />

ed Jane Hillsdale with his pin;<br />

Classroom while Elva Pickwick, Chi O, is<br />

wearing an engagement ring REGISTRATION DANCE SPARK WEEKEND<br />

Dear Brother Dan.<br />

from Bill Dunham, former Wes- By ROS SEABURY<br />

Guess you'd never be a prof if leyan SAE.<br />

you ever had to go through what Betty Terrill, Tri Delt, has "Salmon cards. Yellow cards. They're Officially In<br />

Tve been doing this past week John Vossers Alpha Sig pin; Sign here please and pay your<br />

registering these new students Gloria Holmes, Tri Delt, has bills at the next counter."<br />

Pin-Planti- for my ng<br />

courses in John "Yogi" Blair's SAE pin;<br />

and Ring-Bearin- g. Seems as if while Sally Kay Atkinson, KKG, After scrambling over the<br />

some have been taking summer is proud possessor of Phi Psi, Art maze of trunks in the dorm cor<br />

work at other universities. Hudnut's engagement ring. ndors, filling out schedules for<br />

H<br />

Banner news of the day is Peg Stiles is wearing Phil the new fraternity pledges, and<br />

Nancy Champion, Kappa Alpha Dietrich's Beta Sig pin; Pat Boyd greeting everyone with profuse<br />

i<br />

Theta, whose journalistice skill Alpha Gam is wearing a diamond smiles, these were the words en<br />

DtAN<br />

T-script<br />

on the has landed her from Tom Gerstacker, Sig Ep; countered once more by Wesley<br />

the Phi Gamma Gar-ber- Delta pin from Barb Burket, DG, has Don 's anites returning from an unhar<br />

j<br />

Bill Headline.<br />

pin; Kent Eckhart, Sigma ried summer vacation on Friday,<br />

Jo Corrine Murray, Tri Delt, Chi has presented his cross to Registration day.<br />

is sporting a ring Ma-ge- from Alex e, Pat Brown from Covington, Ky; As usual, fraternity men v't. filled<br />

4<br />

SAE; Ginger Perry, Kappa Pat Roseberry, Gamma Phi is in for the frosh pledgee in the<br />

i. ,<br />

Kappa Gamma, has one from engaged to Ken Schmidt, a grad- afternoon while honest freshmen<br />

John Bricker, SAE at Dartuate of Yale.<br />

women waited patiently in every<br />

mouth; Fran Anderson, KKG, a Billy Moody, Kappa Alpha line. One frustrated coed remark-<br />

ring from Bob Woolley, Beta. Theta, is now Mrs. Dale A. Bitt- - ed "You know, I don't think this<br />

Student body president, Bill inger. The couple are living at line for Jennings is moving. I've<br />

Welp will tie the matrimonial Orlando Air Force Base in Flor been standing here for an hour<br />

knots this Saturday to a non-<strong>Wesleyan</strong>i- te, ida where Dale, former SAE at and a half."<br />

but I can't seem to <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, is a second lieutenant.<br />

locate her<br />

After a day battling<br />

registration<br />

the mass<br />

card in my Prof. Val Cupid.<br />

U" AT es, the students relaxed, as the<br />

'<br />

dance which had, until the past<br />

year been scheduled for the same<br />

night, was postponed until Sat<br />

t<br />

urday so that the football team<br />

WELCOME<br />

might attend. To relieve the ten<br />

sion, fraternity men marched up<br />

to Austin, Monnett and Stuy at<br />

1:30 a. m. singing "So here's to "PLEASE LET ME into your course" was the cry of frosh and<br />

dear old <strong>Wesleyan</strong>" and causing upperclassmen bucking registration lines in Edwards gym<br />

a mild panic in the dorms as girls Friday in preparation for the fall semester term. To some it<br />

Sudanis and Faculty<br />

bolted rooms in expectation of a was old stuff, but to others it was worth all the shoe leather<br />

dorm raid.<br />

spent in getting out of those eight o'clock classes.<br />

At Austin, the songsters were<br />

greeted with cheers and ap-<br />

AND WE PARTICULARLY WELCOME THE plause<br />

go<br />

from the rooftops, dorm Up (in the wrong direction;. Edward's gym rocked that night<br />

heads watching nervously, and Other spotlights of the game were as the reconverted Campus Band<br />

FRESKMEN TO DELAWARE AND TO<br />

flicking lights indicating a gen- the huge dog which barked loud- under the direction of Bob<br />

tle hint to please leave. er than the BG kids could yell,<br />

Migration to Bowling Green for the boy scouts dropping dry ice<br />

the first game of the year took into puddles to see the smoke,<br />

nlace Saturdav as Weslevan- - and the church-lik- e bells which<br />

MORRISON'S<br />

stickered "cars wound up through called Bowling Green students<br />

the northlands to watch the score to classes.<br />

SHOP WITH US FOR<br />

V. WATER f POSTE<br />

- VV COIOBS I 2 COLORS<br />

Women s Fall Apparel<br />

yor "V<br />

ARTISTS '' v it I '<br />

and Accessories.<br />

ART TEACHERS ys II '<br />

ART STUDENTS V LTj;<br />

Sid-ne- YW Big And Little New<br />

Sisters Picnic<br />

Tonight In Glen<br />

This evening dungarees will<br />

replace skirts as the conventional<br />

women's garb when 360 transfer<br />

and freshmen women attend the<br />

YWCA picnic along with their<br />

"big-sister- s" in Stuyvesant glen.<br />

The purpose of this annual affair<br />

is to acquaint the new students<br />

with the program of the YWCA.<br />

During the supper, the chairmen<br />

of the committees will pre<br />

sent skits depicting the type of<br />

work done at their weekly meet<br />

ings. At dusk the entire cabinet<br />

will participate in a closing<br />

pageant.<br />

The fall membership drive will<br />

be held on Sept. 27 and 28. Between<br />

11:00 a. m. and closing<br />

hours, girls may sign up in the<br />

front corridors of the three dormitories<br />

and co-o- p houses for<br />

work on the various committees.<br />

OWEN ( JEWELRY<br />

Tsff"<br />

m SfiUn.<br />

ll SHEAFFER3<br />

provided the music to the<br />

"Prisoner of Books" theme for CRAFTSMAN PEN<br />

the dance. The band had return- -<br />

ied to school a<br />

lowet price ever offered for<br />

week earlier to<br />

a pen of this qualityl Haj 1 4K<br />

practice for the dance, as those<br />

gold point, Touchdown filler<br />

who passed through the gym dur-<br />

and other exclusive features<br />

ing the week could tell by the af-<br />

found only in Sheaffer't Pens.<br />

ternoon concerto.<br />

The black and white streamers only .<br />

s-added<br />

the Alcatraz look, and a<br />

menacing Battling Bishop poised 3" J<br />

threateningly over the bandstand.<br />

Outstanding in the numbers SM<br />

was the Charleston music which Li<br />

provided the only breather for t oi. tiie rsvxtii<br />

the crowded dance floor, choice 15<br />

couples entertaining the masses.<br />

Sunday was filled with open<br />

houses at the fraternity houses,<br />

Semi-Cooperative<br />

House Opens This Term<br />

Ten coeds have set up housesemi-cooperativekeeping<br />

in a<br />

housing unit at 112 West Winter<br />

St.<br />

The women do all house-cleanin- the g<br />

and cook breakfast. They<br />

eat lunch and dinner at Monnett.<br />

Two sitting rooms, a lunch<br />

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CRAFTSMAN S H.Wlu<br />

OWEN JEWELRY<br />

streamered cars zig-zaggi-<br />

ng to<br />

the dorms to kidnap the women.<br />

Monday morning bells broke up<br />

the weekend fiesta with the call<br />

to eight o'clock classes.<br />

COMMITTEE OPENINGS<br />

Applications are being accepted<br />

fur Student Government committee<br />

members this week. There<br />

are openings on all committees<br />

and special places are reserved<br />

for freshmen. Application blanks<br />

may be obtained in the Student<br />

Affairs office, located on the main<br />

floor of the Memorial Union.<br />

STAFFERS JX4<br />

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OWEN JtWcLRY<br />

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DELAWARE'S NEWEST SAYS WELCOME<br />

TO ONE AND ALL OF THE<br />

WESLEYAN STUDENTS.<br />

GOOD LUCK IN THE YEAR TO COME.<br />

For Good Food and Courteous Service<br />

REMEMBER<br />

MORNING OR EVENING,<br />

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Mary Alice Wagner is resident<br />

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Marie Frate, Doris Stoudenmire,<br />

Joann Strickling, Jane Mapp,<br />

Maxine Hyde, Pauline Cassler,<br />

and Ruth Carson.<br />

for the Girls"<br />

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J. OF COURSE

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