10.01.2013 Views

m aH vasfi&Oh'z - OWU DRC Home - Ohio Wesleyan University

m aH vasfi&Oh'z - OWU DRC Home - Ohio Wesleyan University

m aH vasfi&Oh'z - OWU DRC Home - Ohio Wesleyan University

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

B OUR<br />

An Editorial ...<br />

Our Sororities Should Be<br />

Selective But Mot Restrictive<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> is known to be a fraternity stronghold. We<br />

are proud that a high percentage of our students are members of<br />

such groups. However, the sororities on campus are faltering in<br />

their responsibility to the <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Of the inco'ming female students, who enrolled for the<br />

rushing program this fall, 21 percent failed to receive bids.<br />

These girls wanted to become members, but the sorority system<br />

failed to make a place for them.<br />

If those girls who wish to become affiliated with a sorority<br />

cannot do so, then the sorority system is defeating its very purpose.<br />

In contrast, <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s fraternity system, for the most<br />

part, has a place for all of those men desiring to become members.<br />

Until the sororities reach the same level, their very existence<br />

would appear to be somewhat unjustified.<br />

By the same token, if the fraternities ever fall to the level<br />

where they become restrictive, then their very foundations are<br />

crumbling.<br />

78 Places Open Now<br />

An individual group of this type has the right to be selective,<br />

but the sorority system as a whole can not afford to become<br />

restrictive. A rushee might not be able to join that group which<br />

is her. first choice, but the chances of joining another group<br />

should be all in her favor. It might be compared to a group of<br />

boys chosing sides for a game of football. Everybody plays!<br />

Accordingly, The Transcript offers the following recommendations<br />

to the Pan-Hellen- ic council:<br />

1 ) As a temporary solution, the maximum of 75 women<br />

in each sorority should be filled by dropping the restriction of<br />

only 21 freshman girls in each pledge class. Only 672 women or<br />

68 per cent are sorority members. If filled to full strength, there<br />

i ...<br />

IMMEDIATE AIM OUTSTANDING OHIO COLLEGE WEEKLY, OUR EVENTUAL AIM OUTSTANDING NATIONAL COLLEGE WEEKLY. it' (<br />

' I )<br />

, Si' H i<br />

I I '<br />

Volume 81 - Number 6 Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong>, Wednesday, November 3, 1948 Single Copy 10 cents<br />

that each fraternity send all of<br />

its pledges to the Rollins torchlight<br />

parade Friday evening.<br />

The Council took action in regard<br />

to contributions to the United<br />

Negro C611ege fund. It was<br />

agreed that each fraternity contribute<br />

five dollars from its<br />

treasury.<br />

The November meeting-o- f the<br />

council will be held at the Alpha<br />

Sigma Phi house.<br />

WDW(BQm)!jDma<br />

BKf<br />

Red Cross Unit<br />

Celebrates 4ih<br />

Anniversary<br />

Veterans Thank<br />

Students; Flemming<br />

Lauds Local Group<br />

i ffh frf<br />

n<br />

a<br />

ffi<br />

<strong>Home</strong>coming Queen ,<br />

3<br />

in 2) 1 j, j3<br />

Mm<br />

1<br />

WUlHi<br />

i rvrvr s? ii .r<br />

Hi m <strong>aH</strong> vasfi&<strong>Oh'z</strong><br />

Soph Honorary<br />

Members Feted<br />

In Chapel<br />

Rod Heine, Lou<br />

Ficken Are<br />

New Officers<br />

Branch Rickey Talks<br />

M Saturday Chapel<br />

Cards Trainer Due At Pep Rally;<br />

No Classes Scheduled For Day<br />

would be 750 affiliated women. This leaves 78 openings at pre-(Continu- ed<br />

on Page 2)<br />

nil Me Mister",<br />

Ssy Poll desalts<br />

By BOB CONNORS<br />

"Call me 'Mister'," asks 81.3 percent of the faculty polled<br />

.in a recent survey (fur. detailed<br />

other hand, 6.9 per cent stamped a firm "No" on the idea of<br />

calling all taculty members "Mister rather than "Professor"<br />

(or 'Doctor ). Some of the faculty ( 1 1.6 per cent) were either<br />

undecided or indifferent. .<br />

The idea for the survey started<br />

several weeks ago at an Independ- - '<br />

ent Men's association forum. An<br />

irate student politely explained<br />

he was sick and tired of thinking<br />

and thinking, finally calling<br />

the approaching faculty-memb- er<br />

"Professor" only to discover later<br />

that he should have said "Doctor."<br />

His argument: How confused can<br />

a student get?<br />

Several days dragged past. One<br />

bright (?) Delaware afternoon,<br />

some of the faculty found themselves<br />

swamped with survey-blank- s.<br />

An itemized tabulation of<br />

the questions and answers is<br />

printed below:<br />

1 Would you prefer to be addressed<br />

as "Mister" rather than<br />

"Professor" (or "Doctor").<br />

a. In the class room?<br />

Yes 35<br />

No L 3<br />

Undecided or indifferent 5<br />

b. Informally on the campus?<br />

Yes 33<br />

No 3<br />

No comment 1<br />

Undecided or indifferent G<br />

c. In the columns of the Transcript?<br />

! Yes 27<br />

No 6<br />

' No comment '<br />

jnalvsis, see, below). On .the<br />

ity of the faculty perfers to be<br />

addressed as "Mister," would you<br />

support this new movement in<br />

your classes?<br />

Yes 32<br />

'<br />

No 2<br />

No comment 1 3<br />

Undecided or indifferent 6<br />

During the administration of<br />

President John Hoffman, a motion<br />

was made by Edward Loranus<br />

Rice, now professor emeritus of<br />

zoology, that all faculty members<br />

be addressed as "Mister." The<br />

motion carried.<br />

The survey invited remarks,<br />

and here is but a smidgin of the<br />

Contributions:<br />

"Call me 'Mister' ": " 'Mister'<br />

any time, any place." (Prof. Paul<br />

Hahn)<br />

"Addressing a person by the<br />

title 'Doctor' or 'Professor' is not<br />

only snobbish and undemocratic<br />

but definitely 'invidious. A genuine<br />

scholar neither needs nor desires<br />

this dubious distinction."<br />

(Prof. Hubert Bonner)<br />

"When a student (in my class<br />

or in conversation on the campus)<br />

addresses me as 'Mister,' I don't<br />

suspect him of 'pulling my leg.'<br />

Otherwise, I'm not sure!" (Prof.<br />

Tilden Wells)<br />

4 "I insist . . . that my students<br />

Undecided or indifferent 6 call me 'Mr.' rather than 'Pro-<br />

2. Do you think the custom of fessor.'<br />

calling all gentlemen 'of the<br />

faculty "Mister" should be encouraged<br />

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

campus?<br />

Yes 34<br />

No 4<br />

No comment 1<br />

Undecided or indifferent 4<br />

.3. If it is found that the major- -<br />

Inferfrafernify Council Adds<br />

Fire And Safety Prevention Group<br />

Plans for a safety and fire prevention committee for fraternity<br />

houses were passed by Interfraternity council in a meeting<br />

last Wednesday night at the Sigma Chi house. The motion<br />

was submitted to the group by 'President Jack' Smith, 'who pointed<br />

out that such a program would provide for a safety check<br />

of all fraternities on campus.<br />

Those members appointed to<br />

the committee are: Bob Melville,<br />

Howie Strauch, Jim Chaney, and<br />

Donn Miller.<br />

A further motion was made by<br />

Smith to encourage interfraternity<br />

dinners and smokers. It was<br />

suggested that such a plan would<br />

create, more friendliness among<br />

the fraternities.<br />

Bill England, of the Athletic<br />

Booster committee, recommended<br />

" -<br />

Celebrating- the anniversarv<br />

of its fourth year of consecutive<br />

service at cnnncothe, the Red<br />

Cross college unit travelled to<br />

the veteran's hosnita! Snnriav<br />

President Arthur Flemming and<br />

uean t lcken represented the<br />

college in a meeting with Dr. C.<br />

B. Shrout, manager and Carle B.<br />

raine, executive officer, of the VA<br />

hospital.<br />

Congratulations and thanks for<br />

the efforts and accomnlishmpntc<br />

of the students were received by<br />

ur. a lemming who gave his<br />

wholehearted support of the program<br />

to hospital officials.<br />

Job Well Done<br />

Speaking of the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> program<br />

Dr. Flemming stated, 'I am<br />

very much impressed with<br />

this work and consider it a fine<br />

thing for the college, the students<br />

and the veterans. It is a kind of<br />

a program that ought to be<br />

spread to other universities and<br />

hospitals. I feel that a splendid<br />

job has been done in developing<br />

.....<br />

leaders through the Red Cross<br />

1 trsirirvj program, aud; am very<br />

much impressed by the way in<br />

which students carry on their Beauty Galore . . ,<br />

work. They are to be congratulated<br />

for the way they have wholeheartedly<br />

thrown themselves in- Marion Parson And Court<br />

to the program."<br />

Others of the faculty who attended<br />

the ward parties and drove Will Reign At <strong>Home</strong>coming<br />

30 co-e- ds the round trip of 140<br />

miles were Prof. Russel Bayliff, Reigning over <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s annual autumn gridiron pageant<br />

college unit faculty advisor; Dr.<br />

Roy Bossert,<br />

on Saturday afternoon will be five of the Bishops' most effective<br />

Prof. Hubbert Bonner,<br />

Prof. Roy Deim, Dr. rooters a quintet of campus beauties selected by members of<br />

T. C.<br />

uunham, Dr. Ralph Sinnett and the football squad to comprise the traditional <strong>Home</strong>coming<br />

.<br />

wife, Mrs. C. O. Mathews. royalty.<br />

Chi O's Head Entertainment Heir apparent to the crown and<br />

The ward program of round sceptre of the <strong>Home</strong>coming<br />

and square dancing, group sing- throne is Manon Parson, from<br />

ing, and other entertainment Chicago, 111., a member of Kap-<br />

was sponsored this week by the pa Alpha Theta. Active in many<br />

Chi Omega sorority. Miss Abbie campus groups, golden haired<br />

Brent, Director of Eastern Area 'Parsie" is a member of the Tran- -<br />

Red Cross college units obser- script and Le Bijou staffs, the<br />

ved the program and the stud- Red Cross and YWCA. Art and<br />

ent's work for the National Red fashion illustration rank high in<br />

Cross.<br />

her<br />

President Flemming stated that<br />

"the Red Cross total program is<br />

very important to the College. It<br />

provides us with a very unusual<br />

opportunity to relate ourselves to<br />

broad community life." He continued<br />

that "the only way in<br />

which anyone is going to enjoy<br />

the satisfaction that comes from<br />

helping others is by actually<br />

helping others, and Red Cross at<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> provides that opportunity."<br />

(Name withheld) Le "An excellent idea." (Dr. Bijou Will- Beauty<br />

iam Stull)<br />

"... A general use of the term, Presentation Near<br />

'Mister,' . . . gets away from any<br />

suggestion of 'levels.' " Candidates<br />

(Dr.<br />

for<br />

Will-<br />

the Le Bijou<br />

beauty queen<br />

iam Quillian)<br />

will be presented<br />

". . . 'Mister' is a good<br />

in a<br />

enough<br />

chapel program Nov. 12, ac-<br />

title for anyone. But I object to<br />

cording to Starr Schobohm, Bi- -<br />

j<br />

(Continued on Page 3)<br />

jou editor.<br />

Each sorority and the independent<br />

women nominate two<br />

candidates, making a total of 22<br />

candidates. From these 22, finalists<br />

will be chosen by all the<br />

students and faculty who have<br />

ordered their 1949 issues of Le- -<br />

Bijou by Nov. 12. Only those who<br />

have subscribed to the yearbook<br />

will be able to vote. Voting will<br />

take place from 11:30 to 5 p. m.<br />

on Friday, Nov. 12.<br />

As yet the judge for the finalists<br />

has not been selected The<br />

queen he selects will not be announced<br />

until the 1949 Bijou is<br />

distributed.<br />

BUSINESS CLUB MEETS<br />

"Personnel Administration at<br />

the Executive Level" was the<br />

topic of a speech given by Norman<br />

G. Asbury to the Business<br />

club Thursday evening.<br />

post-colleg- e plans.<br />

Junior attendant to the aueen<br />

is Theta Nancy Allen of Bay Vil- -<br />

lage. Swimming is one of her fa<br />

vorite extra-curricul- ar activities.<br />

Carolyn Ward, from Bryan,<br />

completes fhe junior trio. Aside<br />

from her supervising of archery<br />

activities on campus, she is on the<br />

Le Bijou staff, WRA board, and<br />

a member of Delta Gamma.<br />

Jane Tewalt, senior, is a Newark,<br />

N.Y., miss and social chairman<br />

of Alpha Xi Delta. Red<br />

Cross, YWCA, and Alpha Xi sextet<br />

participation occupy most of<br />

her spare time.<br />

lady-in-waitin- g, Senior Mary<br />

Ann Wright, is vice-preside-<br />

Dramatics -- Land 01<br />

Many Opportunities<br />

(Fourth in a series on extracurricular<br />

activities)<br />

Dramatics on <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

campus is an extensive and power<br />

ful institution. Those students<br />

'who are especially. endowed with<br />

a mixture ot interest ana taient<br />

-- in the field of acting find their<br />

opportunity for expression and<br />

advancement in the organization<br />

of the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> players and the<br />

Freshman players.<br />

Members of this organization<br />

are afforded varied experience in<br />

acting, designing sets and costumes,<br />

and in managing lights,<br />

curtains and other stage effects.<br />

The players maintain high standards<br />

in their selections from old<br />

and new dramatic literature. Sev-e- al<br />

modern plays are given each<br />

nt of year, and the presentation of one<br />

I<br />

' Alpha Gamma Delta and a mem- Shakesperean drama, for which<br />

ber of the YWCA. Poetry, dra- j the department of speech has<br />

I<br />

matics and speech are major in- established a reputation for. exterests<br />

of Mary Ann, a native of cellence, is an annual custom.<br />

Massillon.<br />

Freshman players gives one play<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> salutes Her each year and during the second<br />

Highness and her royal court semester may work on stage<br />

the thirty-secon- d sovereign fam- crews' in the major productions<br />

ily in the college's ,<br />

<strong>Home</strong>coming of the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> players.<br />

history.<br />

The course in theater appreciation<br />

is offered to those students<br />

Frosh Election<br />

who are perhaps fascinated by the<br />

glamour and bright lights of the<br />

Rules Announced stage, but who do not have any<br />

Freshmen interested in running<br />

particular interest to act. They<br />

spend long hours each week carv-<br />

for class offices were informed of<br />

ing out doors, sewing drapes,<br />

regulations relative to pre-electi- on<br />

painting tables, and experiment-<br />

day procedure by Bill Glass, ing with lights, curtains, and<br />

student body secretary, Friday makeup. These students are train-<br />

morning after chapel.<br />

ed to look at each object which<br />

A certificate of candidacy must they see during the day with a<br />

be filed with the secretary by critical eye. Many seemingly in-<br />

midnight of November 6, includsignificant materials, with a little<br />

ing signatures of 10 sponsors. conversion, change into beautiful<br />

All individuals meeting qual- md effective stage properties.<br />

by-la- ws,<br />

ifications outlined in the The department of speech also<br />

will be entered on the primary offers facilitiesballot<br />

Glass said and elections will<br />

be held' Nov. 9. The three highest<br />

primary contenders will compete<br />

in final elections Nov. 11.<br />

- Newly-electe- d Phi Society<br />

members were honored last Friday<br />

at a chapel program sponsored<br />

by Phi Beta Kappa. Dr.<br />

D. Luther Evans, professor of<br />

philosophy at <strong>Ohio</strong> State university<br />

delivered an address on<br />

"The Essentials of Studentship."<br />

Formal initiation of the members<br />

was held that night at the<br />

Perkins observatory. After the<br />

intiation Dr. Allen Hynek, professor<br />

of astronomy at <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

and <strong>Ohio</strong> State, spoke on<br />

"Extended Horizons." Newly<br />

elected officers are Rodman<br />

Heine, president, and Louise Ficken,<br />

secretary-treasure- r.<br />

The Phi Society group picture<br />

for the 1949 Bijou will be<br />

taken Friday at 11 a.m. Members<br />

please report to Gray chapel.<br />

Phi Society members are sophomores<br />

who have maintained<br />

a 3.3 (B plus) average during<br />

their freshman year. This scholastic<br />

honor was achieved by the<br />

following 62 sophomores:<br />

George Ellsworth Amick, Stephen<br />

Pifer Austin, David Poland<br />

Barnhill, Cheryl Ann Bastian, Dorothy<br />

Ann Beck, Kathryn Ann<br />

Blayney, Charles Archie Carmi-chae- l,<br />

Joan Louise Daugherty,<br />

Martha Sue Ebenhack, Carol Jean<br />

Erickson, Donna Maria Eyssen<br />

Elma Louise Ficken, Rosemary<br />

Ruth Carn, Richard Charles<br />

Glosh, Margarita Helvecia Gras'si<br />

Mary Jean Hall, Robert Paul<br />

Hardman, Shirley L. Harrington,<br />

Earl Rodman Heine, Dorothy<br />

Jean Hinton, Gretta G. Holder,<br />

and<br />

Ruth Christine Ice, Barbara<br />

Anne Israel, Miriam Jean Kirk,<br />

Howard Arthur Lamey, Judith<br />

Frances LeBosquet, Thomas Ross<br />

Long, Robert William Lukens,<br />

(Continued on Page 5)<br />

Coeds Enjoy<br />

shift,<br />

while waiting tables and washing<br />

the dishes are the work of two<br />

more groups. The remaining girls<br />

finish in a very short time, with<br />

many free moments for conversation<br />

and fun.<br />

The purpose of Perkins hall is<br />

to provide a residence for women<br />

with a low room and board fee,<br />

without losing the spirit of dorm<br />

for students who life. There's nothing like work-<br />

are interested in studying radio ing together to give a feeling of<br />

technique. The radio workshop is unity and friendliness. Ask any<br />

equipped with a soundproof radio of the girls at Perkins they<br />

(Continued on Page 5) wouldn't trade it for the world.<br />

Co-o- By GARY WILKINSON<br />

<strong>Home</strong>coming, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> style, is exected to bring<br />

nearly one thousand former students and guests to the campus,<br />

according to Cornelia Draves, student body special davs chairman.<br />

No Saturday classes are scheduled.<br />

Spotlighting the coming weekend will be the Rollins col-- j<br />

Z, '. I lege-Wesley- an football game Sat- -<br />

rrosn, jopnomores<br />

Battle Nov. 13<br />

Fate Of Frosh Caps<br />

Is Major Issue<br />

1<br />

Attention, Freshmen and Sop -<br />

I<br />

homores, Nov. 13 is your day! '<br />

The events of that afternoon<br />

will decide the important ques -<br />

tion, "How soon will the fresh -<br />

1<br />

men be able to burn their little<br />

I<br />

red caps?"<br />

I<br />

The best two out of three<br />

j<br />

crucial contests will decide the<br />

i<br />

freshmen's fate, If the freshmen<br />

!<br />

win, they may take off their<br />

I<br />

dinks at Thanksgiving. Should<br />

the sophomores win, however,<br />

caps will remain atop freshmen<br />

domes until Christmas.<br />

Handicapped by Oil<br />

Festivities will begin with a<br />

fceshi.im-scpnhmor- e tug.- - o' - ;ar i<br />

across the Olentangy river. Tugg-- 1<br />

ing for each team will be 75 men,<br />

p<br />

Living In Perkins<br />

The late Professor Perkins is<br />

widely know for his work in astronomy.<br />

His contributions of the<br />

undergraduate Observatory and<br />

money used in constructing Perkins<br />

Observatory have made possible<br />

much education and research<br />

in this field. .<br />

Another contribution was his<br />

home on west William street. His<br />

residence until his death, it now<br />

provides a home for a group of<br />

college coeds.<br />

The building itself is an old<br />

one, outwardly' displaying the<br />

charm of the past. Inside, it is<br />

excellent example of modern<br />

living. With a capacity for housing<br />

24 girls, the mansion offers<br />

an opportunity for fun and fellowship<br />

which may not come with<br />

regular dorm life.<br />

This year 21 girls share the<br />

work of running Perkins hall under<br />

the able guidance of Mrs.<br />

Townsend and the house officers,<br />

who are elected by the girls. The<br />

residents of the hall divide the<br />

house duties into four parts and<br />

work in shifts. Planning the<br />

menus and cooking the meals<br />

make up the jobs of one<br />

I<br />

each with one objective toi<br />

pull his opponents across the wide<br />

and chilly expanses of the Olen- - urday afternoon; presentation of?<br />

the <strong>Home</strong>coming queen, Marion<br />

Parson, and her court at half'<br />

time; a <strong>Home</strong>coming dance Saturday<br />

evening; and a special<br />

S<br />

1<br />

l<br />

1<br />

!:<br />

;<br />

;<br />

?<br />

.<br />

. .<br />

Cornelia Draves<br />

.<br />

chapel program with Branch<br />

j Rickey '04 president of trie<br />

tangy.<br />

Brooklyn Dodgers baseball club<br />

Because last year's freshmen as featured speaker Saturday<br />

were slightly handicapped by the morning.<br />

mysterious appearance of oil on<br />

Meet Rollins Train<br />

their side, ODK, sponsor of the A pep rally by torch bearing<br />

events, has announced that sides students will begin the pregamt<br />

will not be chosen until imme-<br />

festivities Friday evening. Specdiately<br />

before the contest.<br />

ial guest of honor will be Dr.<br />

Female Battle<br />

me men will nave a cnance toi q the gt Louis Cardinals and a<br />

dry off during the second event , well.known orts personality,<br />

which will be a battle between, The RolUns tea wm fae mefc<br />

the freshmen and sophomore; .<br />

momWc f tu Tn,<br />

women. There will 50 8,.BV fr dent Women's association and of<br />

gals on each team, What kind of<br />

a contest will this be? Your guess<br />

each sorority on Thursday morning.<br />

The feminine escort will<br />

as good as anyones because ODK<br />

present the team with bags of<br />

is keeping it a temporary secret.<br />

apples in return for oranges<br />

Only time will tell.<br />

If necessary, a third contest<br />

which were given to the Bishops<br />

at the last <strong>Wesleyan</strong>-Ta- r contest.<br />

will be fought, this one between<br />

the men again. The sophmores will<br />

The Rollins players will be enter<br />

defend their flag against the<br />

tained at Bun's restaurant after<br />

freshmen in a 1 minute battle. The<br />

the game.<br />

object of the frosh will be to try Cross Country Meet<br />

Entering the game as under-<br />

to break through the sophomore<br />

dogs,<br />

defenses and capture the flag.<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> will be out to even<br />

Last "year's freshmen defeated<br />

the series standings between tho<br />

the sophomores thereby ditching<br />

two teams. Rollins has won two<br />

nt rnp rnrpp nrpv is primps, n -<br />

their caps at Thanksgiving. These<br />

fellows are the sophomores this<br />

time ceremonies will include the<br />

Green-Wes-leyayears;<br />

thus observers predict that<br />

finish of the Bowling n<br />

cross-countr- y<br />

the freshmen will be in for a real<br />

meet. Tho<br />

Bishop Thincluds are undefeated<br />

battle.<br />

in two years of<br />

OWGrad Is New<br />

Dean's Secretary<br />

June Waitman '48 has been appointed<br />

as secretary to Dean of<br />

Men, J. J. Somerville.<br />

Miss Waitman fills the vacancy<br />

left by Miss Marjorie Fowdon,<br />

who is now secretary to Pres.<br />

Arthur Flemming.<br />

"Battling Bishop's<br />

cross-countr- y running<br />

with <strong>Ohio</strong> colleges, and have<br />

been beaten only once during<br />

that period by an out of state<br />

tearii, Michigan Normal. This defeat<br />

was avenged earlier this year<br />

when the Bishops downed Michigan<br />

in a tri-angul- ar meet.<br />

At the beginning of the game<br />

sta-(Continu- ed<br />

the queen will enter Selby<br />

on Page 3)<br />

Cruise" Will<br />

Add To <strong>Home</strong>coming Festivities<br />

'<br />

That good ship, "Battling Bishops", red sails and all, will<br />

sail down Sandusky street Friday night in the torch light par-<br />

12-fo- ot ade. The boat, ;i dinghy, will be on a decorated float.<br />

This unique idea is part of the sailing club's advertising plan.<br />

for <strong>Home</strong>coming.<br />

Saturday morning the sailors and also to show the alums and<br />

will anchor the boat outside the parents what they have done and<br />

libe so the alums, parents, and are doing. The club has planned<br />

students can see the beginning of<br />

a spring sailing class, starting<br />

<strong>OWU</strong>'s nautical career. It will be<br />

land tactics in Feb. and actual<br />

, moved to Sulphur Spring during<br />

the game. Inspection is encour- sailing in March. Several regattas<br />

aged and there will be a willing have been planned by the group<br />

sailor near by to answer any including an excursion to North-<br />

questions.<br />

western over Thanksgiving to<br />

The club hopes to arouse more compete in the twenty-colleg- e re- -<br />

interest among the student body<br />

gatta there.


.<br />

. ...<br />

' -<br />

- HI.<br />

u m<br />

MMt In<br />

ODK President<br />

AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER<br />

SENIOR EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF<br />

EDITOR-IN-CHIE- F , NORM CORNISH nII.IMr.R MANAGER BOB non pit<br />

- Managing Editor Ed DeHart SINESS PALMER Mm<br />

Associate Editor John Weitthofr John Auble<br />

Treasurer<br />

-<br />

N., Frfitnr Jark rialp Advertising Manager Jay Rlcnens<br />

?eaturedEditor::::::::::::::::::::-D- .<br />

C Circulation Manager John Beavan<br />

Co-Co- py Editors . Bob Connors, Carol Troescher MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE<br />

Art Editor Alex Cook PRESS, OHIO COLLEGE NEWSPAPER AS- -<br />

Sports Editor Bill Gunn SOCIATION.<br />

Published weekly, September through May except <strong>University</strong> hollcays and examination periods<br />

at the Delaware Gazette, by the Transcript staff of <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> university. Entered as second-clas- s<br />

matter, under Act of March 8, 1897, Post office, Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong>. Subscription rate for faculty<br />

and students, $3 a year; mail subscriptions, S3. 50 a year. National advertising representative<br />

National Advertising service, 420 Madison ave., N.Y.C. Editorial and Business Offices, P. O. Box<br />

364, 70 South Sandusky street, Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

SERVING OHIO WESLEYAN STUDENTS SINCE 1867, EIGHTY-ON- E YEARS<br />

"Miniature West Points" Welcome Back . . .<br />

President Arthur Flemming made a significant<br />

announcement last week. <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

has filed applications with the three<br />

branches of the armed services for the establishment<br />

of an ROTC unit on campus next<br />

fall. Because of the size of our university, it<br />

is unlikely that more than one branch of the<br />

armed forces would agree to establishment.<br />

Sororities...<br />

(Continued From Page 1)<br />

fellow-newcomer- sometimes s.<br />

heartbroken<br />

Open Rushing?<br />

To replace the present rushing system,<br />

two major ideas have been proposed: first,<br />

that delayed or second semester rushing system<br />

be set up. This would give newcomers a<br />

chance to get oriented and to decide without<br />

undue pressure which group, if any, they<br />

would like to join. Secondly, it has been suggested<br />

that the sororities follow the open<br />

rushing system used by the fraternities. This<br />

system, as compared with the system used<br />

by the sororities, has one major disadvantage:<br />

rushees do not, as a rule, look at all of<br />

the fraternities. The sorority method insures<br />

rushees visiting all of the houses for at least<br />

a' short period.<br />

The advantages of the fraternity rushing<br />

system lie in the fact that it allows rushees to<br />

become acquainted with representatives of<br />

th Greek-lette- Hello, Alums. Again we extend to you the<br />

warmest of welcomes as you return to your<br />

university campus.<br />

We wish Glenn Fraser and his boys the<br />

best of luck in the <strong>Home</strong>coming game with<br />

Rollins college which can further augment<br />

the<br />

r groups in their own way,<br />

without being told to be at such a house at<br />

a certain time. The fraternity system, in other<br />

words, relies on the mature judgment of college<br />

people, and their ability to single out<br />

those persons with whom they would like to<br />

live during their college careers..<br />

Pan-Hellen-<br />

The time for action is ic now!<br />

council must decide upon the course to be<br />

taken and then follow that course to its conclusion.<br />

- <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> cannot afford to relax its<br />

attitude toward this problem which affects<br />

all ot us.<br />

event-fille- d weekend.<br />

Some of the customs of your day have<br />

probably changed, but in essence college life<br />

c.ir-.-.-<br />

tu:,<br />

is quite similar. Life rolls'along in a fairly<br />

11113 auiiuuncilltll l 13 - aieiimcuwi uuwauo . , . , U,.<br />

. . , , ,, , normal rfashion here; we still complain about<br />

the university is recognizing the fact that the amount of workj stiu wonder where the<br />

military training is here to stay for an inde- - excess of rain and dogs come from, and still<br />

finite period. Men students planning to enter wonder at times if we're going in the right<br />

colleges naturally tak,e into account as to direction with our education,<br />

whether they will be able to complete their Dr. Arthur Flemming our president, has<br />

. , , j if<br />

lbecome acquainted rapidly with the duties of<br />

If .did a; a<br />

education un.nterrupted. <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

a coHege q ben ong<br />

not have a military unit, freshman men<br />

of us or a ,ong tjme We have found in nim<br />

would have to leave the campus for military a president whom we can approach, one<br />

service after their first year. Gradually, Wes- - who is fair but firm. <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has a presi- -<br />

leyan would once more become a coed dom- - dent who typifies the ideals of our Univer- -<br />

inated college as it was during the war. sity and of whom we are proud.<br />

"<br />

The Transcript is happy to see that ef- - Our paper has also taken on a New Look,<br />

forts are being made to stabilize the campus The Transcript is quickly becoming the fop<br />

population and that <strong>Wesleyan</strong> will do its college weekly in the state with the eventual<br />

part in training young officers if a war should aim of being best in the country,<br />

come. Although we are rather skeptical about So, welcome home, Alumni. We hope you<br />

colleges being turned into "miniature West have an enjoyable <strong>Wesleyan</strong> <strong>Home</strong>coming<br />

Points", we can see that there must be men weekend.<br />

trained in order to maintain an adequate .<br />

army in tnis topsy-turve- y :<br />

- --<br />

T Vl. , I<br />

m -- j tr 1, ;'. Tf M t J J.<br />

mm<br />

imI<br />

TJ ,<br />

P T n<br />

Besuden Named Director<br />

01 NSA Public Relations<br />

worm 01 ours.<br />

TO<br />

William E. Besuden has been named Public<br />

However, if and when the world emergency<br />

picture changes to a more peaceful pros- United We Stand... THE EDITOR<br />

Relations director for the <strong>Ohio</strong> region of the<br />

National Student association. The appointment<br />

pective, we believe that <strong>Wesleyan</strong> should<br />

was made by Nancy Yerges, president of the<br />

vice-preside-<br />

once more bid a fond farewell to military Halloween is a time for all sorts of pranks<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> region and nt of the <strong>Ohio</strong> State<br />

units.<br />

and tricks played by youngsters and by some Dear Fellows:<br />

university Student senate.<br />

who are not in the youthful stage, according; 1 am enclosing my check for one year's sub Besuden will work in conjunction with <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

to their age brackets. <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> and its scription. The school is growing so fast and the <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s local NSA committee headed by<br />

units annually come in for a large share of Transcript is so superior that letters from Charles Barner. Dick Peters, student body pres- -<br />

these pranks Created in the spirit of the day friends fail to keep me fully informed. Your ident, stated that the office facilities of the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

by local youths. copies of the Transcript are not only well edit- - <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Student government will be available<br />

1 .<br />

j n :n i i rri i<br />

..<br />

However, the damage and occasional loss ea' weu wrln out osl "ewsyhave<br />

been demonstrated.<br />

Vandalism has no place on this campus!<br />

Those students who had a part in either raid<br />

should be severely reprimanded for their<br />

childish action.<br />

- styie ana tor regional pumicity<br />

sent for the 111 who enrolled for rushing of life brought about by what started out to<br />

makeup impressed me very much. You are to<br />

but were not given bids.<br />

be a<br />

be<br />

harmless prank far outweighs the merits<br />

congratulated on a publication that repre- -<br />

of a few navinS a ood t,me- sents the university in a way that will command cooperation, but now I am wondering if you<br />

-<br />

2i As a more permanent solution, no<br />

a widif support from all the friends of <strong>Ohio</strong> Wes- - may not be<br />

less than three and preferably four national The<br />

simplifying<br />

Transcript realizes<br />

the problem by sending<br />

that Halloween Wan<br />

out<br />

tfi-UU-it-<br />

pyansjstauld to establish chapters pranks will never be<br />

such a questionnaire.<br />

completely eliminated," ed :If Avere 8S conceited as SQme coiWi<br />

campus: Tim sTiomd 'not be difficult, but thoughtless defacing of fraternity and,<br />

dents ohZvy StZ<br />

n anV u is"ly Saftnat<br />

since there were 19 national sororities on the sorority property by a few. over-zealo-<br />

Very Sincerely,<br />

JOHN W. HOFFMAN<br />

President-Emeritu- s<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> university<br />

Dear Editor:<br />

What material contribution to "life on Ohjo<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s campus" justifies a month of incon- -<br />

us<br />

na<br />

has one of my boys aa ident Arthur dSerent<br />

--.u: c- - : inn f A mpmneri; nf tnn itiidenf hnnv ran anH shnu H ... . . . uiiiereni irom ine lest 01 ine woila. we called<br />

vinu vcaicyau iiiiipuj m n --r c.u.,- - j .<br />

Flemming and that would not be true. He is<br />

ties were added, making a total of 14, with be eliminated. the product of all of us facuUy and stUdents<br />

a maximum membership of 65 each, 910 wo- - Splattering paint on a fraternity or soror- - and he should be a mighty good man. We felt<br />

men, or approximately 90 per cent of those ity house might appear to be harmless to we were a very decent lot. Some of the faculty<br />

enrolled could be affiliated. those who do not have to pay the bills, but of those days when Art was a student are still<br />

N fyt ,tf Rl v it must be remembered that these houses are with you and, so far as I<br />

no setter, ixoro.<br />

know, have not been<br />

maintained by the members themselves, under discipline.<br />

A question asked in last week's letters col- - Most of these members cannot afford to I am sure you will find the new president a<br />

umn invited discussion on the present sorority spend the extra money necessary to repair ad-rushi- Christian gentleman, ng<br />

capable, competent in<br />

so-call- ed system. The use of the such damage. ministration always fair minded, friendly, ap-"blin- d"<br />

rushing system has come in for much n addition to creating additional cost for proachable, unassuming in all his relations with<br />

comment,' pro and con. This system, accord- - the houses in question, the first "paint raid" the faculty and students, but firm in his coning<br />

to its opponents, does not give either the came too close to defeating: a student-admin- - victions as to what is right and necessary, and<br />

rushee or the rusher ample opportunity to istration arrangement which was made for<br />

get accquamted. It is also claimed that unless more congeniality.<br />

a rushee is preceded or accompanied by a The immediate reaction of many fratern-lette- our high school teachers Mr. or Miss as the case<br />

demanded, but very few of them had attained<br />

the doctors degree, and those that had were<br />

fearful that their colleagues would think that<br />

they were a bit blown up if the title "Doctor"<br />

were used.: In college faculties the condition is<br />

reversed. In them a relatively large percentage<br />

of the teachers have the advanced degree,. In<br />

comparing college faculties frequently the number<br />

of people having the Ph. D. degree is taken<br />

as a criterion of standing: In small colleges<br />

where there is but a handful of the faculty having<br />

the degree, the same condition prevails as<br />

intelligently deliberate in his decisions. If I in 'the high school. "Mister" is a fair title in<br />

omitted any characteristic, the enthusiasm of such cases.<br />

r those who know him will supply it. We all<br />

We all want to be<br />

of recommendation, consisting largely ity men, when confronted with the damage, wish him every<br />

democratic<br />

success<br />

in our thinking<br />

in preserving the fin-<br />

and acting. In such a case, however, we may<br />

of family background, financial situation, was a retaliative "dorm raid." They decided est traditions of the school, in maintaining its<br />

lean over<br />

and former achievements, she is not rushed against such a raid and painted the sororitv splendid<br />

backwards. In some countries every-<br />

record, and in interpreting our noblest<br />

one is "Comrade." In a free country<br />

with much enthusiasm, if at<br />

it would<br />

all. houses instead. However, this move must ideals to a world that needs badly the ideals<br />

seem that a sense of fairness would indicate<br />

The system of srivine- - SPLINTERINGS<br />

By CHARLES I. YODER<br />

More men of letters have gone to a glorious<br />

(but hungry) death after having written an esall-purposesay<br />

or two, than after having perfected an<br />

hybrid water buffalo, for instance.<br />

Since these essayists have managed to go to<br />

sleep on empty stomachs, and since I can't get<br />

to sleep regardless of my stomach's condition<br />

or position, I might be able to snatch a few<br />

winks by writing another essay. (By "another"<br />

I am implying that that verbiage of two weeks<br />

ago was an essay, despite what my landlady<br />

called it.)<br />

An exploited food, 1 should state at the beginning,<br />

is any<br />

out bids has also also be condemned. There was actually no that <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has stood for for over a hundred ... . , .<br />

-- ttainpH th Hnrtnr.s ripPrpp<br />

oeen attacked, i nis systm involves an soror- - guuu icasun iur sulu acuuu. be-give- n ine iraiermues<br />

should the<br />

kp-ir-<br />

Hies turnintr in hid lisk. Those whose should have brousrht the matter of the first With every<br />

distinction of having it ap<br />

god wish, I am<br />

plied to them by students. People who have at-<br />

choices correspond with the sorority lists are paint raid to the attention of VVSGA. The or- -<br />

tained the advanced degree usually have some-<br />

invited to join by having bids slipped under jginal offenders could have then been pun- -<br />

where along the line gained a humbleness of<br />

their doors during the dinner hour. This is ished.<br />

spirit that will prevent their being overly in-<br />

all done at a set time, so that those girls who Dorm raids were supposedly eliminated<br />

flated by such a practice.<br />

are not bid can weep together. Just to add last spring by the inauguration of an annual<br />

So, why not call those people who have the<br />

fuel to the fire, the girls who have been ac- - Spring Fever day. Had a dorm raid taken<br />

degree, "Doctor," and those that have not, why<br />

cepted all parade to their "new homes" in place, it is fairly certain that Spring Fever<br />

not call them "Professor"? In case a woman has<br />

white dresses, in front of their distressed and day would have been omited from college<br />

the advanced degree, why not call her "Doctor,"<br />

plans, lire inability Of the Student body tO aim ncgugence oi siuaies:<br />

too? She had to work for the' degree the same<br />

keep faith with the Administration would What contribution, if any, vindica ndicates the heart as a man. People who do not have the degree<br />

DreaK ana anguisn sintered by incoming wo-<br />

should not feel belittled or unfairly treated, if<br />

men students as illustrated last October 11 and someone who has made the effort to secure the<br />

12?<br />

degree should be addressed with it.<br />

Such are questions raised when sororities and<br />

Truly yours,<br />

their associated rushing systems are discussed.<br />

XYZ<br />

Facts and figures have heretofore been printed<br />

concerning the number of women rushed and<br />

the number pledged. This data in itself should<br />

The Joke Exchange be sufficient to convince the average college student<br />

that our current sorority rushing system is<br />

If she looks old, she's young; if she looks totally inadequate and certainly the epitome of<br />

young, she's old; if she looks around, follow undemocratic action.<br />

aest iTffeW MiKm<br />

Here one point should be emphasized; this<br />

Uncle Mat's Letter does not constitute a criticism of the sorority<br />

idea. Their national benefaction to campuses<br />

throughout the United States does not require<br />

All the gir'.s tote Utile cases<br />

qualification. However, a reprehend is<br />

Designed<br />

leveled at<br />

for making up their faces. the system of "rushing" and at<br />

I<br />

the idea of quota<br />

wish they had some other kinds<br />

as manifested at <strong>Wesleyan</strong>.<br />

Designed for making up their minds. Comment of this nature has been aroused<br />

The Bee Gee News year after year, although perhaps not publicized.<br />

.<br />

,<br />

At this point when administration, alumni, and<br />

If yuz wanta<br />

student government are endeavoring to estab-<br />

keep the kampus neat,<br />

lish this campus among the best in coeducation,<br />

Stay off the grass<br />

young women who consider themselves as un-<br />

with them big flat feet.<br />

dergraduates should accept this proble.'m as a<br />

The Bee Gee<br />

challenge to<br />

News<br />

this capacity and proceed to rectify<br />

the situation before another year elapses.<br />

JOHN M. BUCKLEY<br />

Have pity on sad college boys<br />

Whose girls have done them dirt. Dear Editor:<br />

There's nothing can dry their eyes<br />

Yes, I have filled out the blank requesting<br />

Except another skirt.<br />

my preference for a title for students to use<br />

The Bee Gee News when addressing me. I did this in a spirit 'of Let's Seer <strong>Ohio</strong> State Over Michigan - - .<br />

food-stu- ff which has been deprived<br />

of its natural goodness for commercial<br />

purposes. The examples I shall use are the<br />

candied apple, the peanut, and the cauliflower.<br />

I intend to show the relation of these foods to<br />

the five senses; for by my so doing, the next<br />

time you smell or feel a food, you may be able<br />

to tell if it has been exploited.<br />

ulcer-producin- g<br />

Consider first the candied apple. This<br />

bit of county fair cuisine was a perfectly<br />

good half-rotte- d Northern Spy before it<br />

succumbed to a concrete-lik- e casing of last<br />

year's carmel. The sense of taste is affected in<br />

a slightly retarded way. You have to gnaw so<br />

hard to get through the crust that you can't appreciate<br />

the flavor until you find it cloying the<br />

air in your mouth the next morning. The sense<br />

of touch is affected much more directly. Not<br />

only do you feel the sticky confection itself,<br />

but also anything else you handle up until you<br />

wash your hands in a mild solution of lye. The<br />

sense of sight may be disregarded. You can<br />

spot candied apples and try to ignore them by<br />

shuting your eyes, but the eager vendor rushes<br />

out and forces one into your hand thinking<br />

that he is doing a good deed to a person who<br />

didn't wash his face that morning. The sense<br />

of smell is brought into play when at last you<br />

succeed in breaking through the candy, and<br />

allow the fruity aroma of sour apple to . waft<br />

upward. The sense of hearing is employed objectively.<br />

Everywhere you can hear hapless<br />

victims of the vendor's verbosity mumbling<br />

through teeth sealed with carmel for from 7<br />

to 10 days.<br />

And now, the poor peanut. Exploiters couldn't<br />

leave it in the ground where less inhibited<br />

humans could root for It at their leisure. No,<br />

they had to dig it up, scorch it, salt it, and sell<br />

it. As a result, the human race has become<br />

nothing but a big herd of elephants. You go to<br />

a baseball game. Do you see Lemon? No! Peanuts!<br />

During the best double play all you can<br />

see is the back of a 1 uckster's dirty shirt,<br />

whereon is information to the effect that<br />

"Nussbaum's Nuts Are Good To Eat." You hear<br />

the guy bohind you munching on the things<br />

all through the "Star Spangled Banner." And<br />

when he gets excited and ' L<br />

Lists Changes In S<br />

Point System<br />

Bob Huffman, president of<br />

Omicron Delta Kappa, senior<br />

men's honorary fraternity, has 3n-nounc- ed<br />

a revised point system<br />

of eligibility for ODK initiation.<br />

"A more equitable distribution,<br />

of points" is the result of the new<br />

point system according to Huffman.<br />

"In past years many activities<br />

were awarded points out<br />

of proportion to their relative importance,"<br />

he added.<br />

ODK recognizes men who have<br />

attained a high standard of leadership<br />

in collegiate activities.<br />

These men are selected because<br />

of their outstanding participation<br />

in five fields of endeavor: scholastics;<br />

athletics; speech, music<br />

and dramatic arts; journalism;<br />

and organizational activities.<br />

A. General Requirements<br />

Minimum general point averages<br />

Upper 35 of men students<br />

Minimum points in any one division<br />

ior O.D.K. major 24<br />

Maximum poinls counlled in any<br />

one division 28<br />

Minimum poinls counted in any<br />

one division 5<br />

Minimum total points required for<br />

O.D.K. eligibility 40<br />

O.D.K. MAJORS<br />

I. ATHLETICS<br />

Letters, major sports, each 12<br />

Letters, minor sports, each 8<br />

Numerals (maximum) 2<br />

Satisfactory squad participation<br />

without letter award 2<br />

II DEBATE AND ORATORY<br />

Inlercollegiate varsity debate ,<br />

speakerships, each ! 2<br />

(No practice debates counted)<br />

Freshman debate (satisfactory)<br />

participation 4<br />

Tournament debates, each 1<br />

(Max. of 4 for any tournament)<br />

Irtercollegiate oratorships, ea. 6<br />

Maximum debate points in one yr. 12<br />

III DRAMATICS<br />

Leads in major plays, each 8<br />

Major parts in play, each 6<br />

Minor speaking part, each 2<br />

Stage managers, each 3<br />

Technical director, each 3<br />

Stage mgr.<br />

begins to breathe<br />

down your collar, you not only smell, but also<br />

feel, peanuts. The worst of it is, you can't<br />

leave peanuts when you leave the baseball<br />

park. You get home and reach into your pocket<br />

for the door key; but come up, not with the<br />

door key,' but with somebody else's peanut<br />

shucks.<br />

Lastly there is the cauliflower. The cauliflower<br />

is nothing more than a cabbage that<br />

cringed. It didn't have enough nerve to demand<br />

a good green color, but was satisfied<br />

with an anemic shade of sour milk white. The<br />

exploiters could just as well have left the<br />

cauliflower in the Garden of Eden, where it<br />

would have been content to place after the<br />

snake won. Oh, no! Trot it out, they said! Put<br />

the stuff on every housewife's grocery list!<br />

Break up every home in America! So the<br />

housewife prices the cauliflower. She finds it<br />

the cheapest thing she ever saw, but how it<br />

does hurt' to look one squarely in its sickly<br />

face. She picks one up, and finds it similar to a<br />

large sponge basted in cement. Not satisfied,<br />

she takes a cauliflower home, begins to cook<br />

it, and answers the telephone. It's a neighbor<br />

three houses down who wants to know for why<br />

the sewer gas should get so bad so sudden.<br />

Undaunted, the housewife serves up the casserole<br />

containing what hubby, who has a cold,<br />

thinks is lumpy vanilla custard. He's all right;<br />

but mother, upon tasting her own concoction,<br />

is not. She excuses herself hastily, and is later<br />

found in the act of eating three packages of<br />

Sen-Se- n all at once. How is the sense of hearing<br />

affected by califlower? When the old man<br />

uj-o-<br />

found out what he had eaten, never heard<br />

such heartfelt cussin'.<br />

Chapel Committeeman<br />

Announces Schedule<br />

Dr. William Quillian, chairman of the faculty<br />

chapel committee, has announced the<br />

following chapel program:<br />

Nov. 3 Russell E. Bayliff, assistant professor<br />

of sociology.<br />

Nov. 5 No chapel program.<br />

Nov. 6 Special <strong>Home</strong>coming chapel with<br />

Branch Rickey presiding (10 a. m.).<br />

Nov. 8 Speaker.<br />

Nov. 10 Worship service by the <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

A Capella choir.<br />

Dr. Charles Goff Is<br />

First Luncheon Speaker<br />

"What's Wrong With the World" was the topic<br />

of Dr. Charles R. Goff's speech in chapel last<br />

Wednesday.<br />

Following the program, an informal luncheon<br />

and discussion was held at the TUB where students<br />

could meet Dr. Goff. This was the first of<br />

a series of '"Meet the Speaker" luncheons sponsored<br />

by the <strong>University</strong> Christian council,<br />

-- Tech dir., each 6 .<br />

Ciew heads, each 3<br />

Freshman play lead 4<br />

Fieshman play, major part 2<br />

Freshman play, minor part 1<br />

Freshman play stage manager 3<br />

Maximum points in one year 16<br />

Maximum points in one<br />

play<br />

8<br />

Radio plays (max 8 per yr.), ea 1<br />

Siudio plavs, each 2<br />

Operas, operettas, etc., count the<br />

same as maior plays and are applicable<br />

to either a dramatics or<br />

music major.<br />

IV. JOURNALISM<br />

a. Transcript<br />

Editor-in-chie- f 16<br />

Managing editor 12<br />

Assistant Editor<br />

8<br />

Senior staff 6<br />

Issue editor, per issue 2<br />

(Maximum 8 per year<br />

Sophomore staff 4<br />

Freshman reporter 2<br />

Sports editor 10<br />

Sports issue editor, per issue 1<br />

(Maximum 4 per year)<br />

b. Bijou ..<br />

Liitor-m-chi- ef - 16<br />

Managing editor 12<br />

'(<br />

Associate editor 8<br />

Literarv editor<br />

8<br />

F'icture editor 3<br />

Publicity manager 6<br />

Art Editor<br />

6<br />

SDorts Editor<br />

6<br />

Fraternity editor 6<br />

Activities editor<br />

6<br />

Index editor 6<br />

Senior editor 6<br />

Sophomore staff 4<br />

Freshman staff 2<br />

c. Owl<br />

Eriitor-in-chi- ef 8<br />

Literary editor<br />

6<br />

Staff<br />

3<br />

d. Freshman handbook<br />

Editor<br />

5<br />

Stsff<br />

3<br />

V. MUSIC<br />

b. Band<br />

Award, per year 3<br />

Soloist each performance 3<br />

Student director<br />

6<br />

Council<br />

1<br />

President of band 2<br />

h. Orchestra<br />

Award, per year 3<br />

Soloist, each performance 3<br />

Student dir., per performance 2<br />

President of orchestra<br />

1<br />

c. Singing groups<br />

Men's Glee Club, per year 2<br />

A Capella choir, per year 3<br />

Soloist, each performance 3<br />

Council<br />

1<br />

d Special<br />

Ensemble, per performance 2<br />

Marching band, : award 2<br />

VI. ORGANIZATION ACTIVITIES<br />

a. Student government<br />

- President of student body 24<br />

Vice-preside- nt of stud, body 15<br />

Secretary of student body 15<br />

Tifcasurer of student body 15<br />

Rep.-at-la'rg- e to Council 10<br />

Athletic Rep. per year 5<br />

Pres. of Senior Clas 10<br />

Sec -- Treas. of Sr. Class 7<br />

Pres. of Junior Class 8<br />

fcec.-Trea- s. of Jr. Class 5<br />

Pies, of Sophomore Class 6<br />

Sdo.-Tre- as of Soph. Class 3<br />

Pres. of Freshman Class 4<br />

Sec.-Trea- s. of Fresh. Class 2<br />

Chief Justice 8<br />

Cther Justices<br />

3<br />

Chairman of standing comm. 6<br />

Member of standing comm i 2<br />

Chairman of temporary comm. 2<br />

Member of temporary comm. 1<br />

Head cheerleader 6<br />

Member, cheerleading squad 2<br />

b. Religious and Service Org.<br />

President of YMCA<br />

10<br />

Vice-Preside- nt of YMCA 5<br />

Secretary of YMCA -- ' 5<br />

Treasurer of YMCA<br />

5<br />

Other YMCA cabinet 3<br />

President of Friar's Club<br />

3<br />

Friars' Club cabinet . 1<br />

President of student Red Cross<br />

chapter<br />

3<br />

Red Cross officers and comm.<br />

chairman<br />

1<br />

President of Wesley Fellowship 5<br />

Vvtslev Fellowship cabinet 2<br />

President of other denominational<br />

church groups<br />

2<br />

Comm. chairmen and officers of<br />

same groups 1<br />

c Social and Miscellaneous Org.<br />

Pres. of social fraternity per half<br />

vear term j<br />

Per full year term<br />

10<br />

President of 1FC, per sem 3<br />

President of IMA, per sem.<br />

3<br />

Pres. of honorary fraternity 1<br />

Treas. of honorary fraternity 1<br />

President of departmental club<br />

2<br />

d. Business Management<br />

Transcript Business manager 10<br />

Transcript Advertising mgr. 6<br />

Transcript Circulation mgr 6<br />

Transcript Advertising staff<br />

2<br />

Transcript Circulation staff<br />

2<br />

Transcript treasurer<br />

4<br />

Bijou Business Manager 10<br />

Biiou Advertising Manager 6<br />

B:iou Circulation Manager 6<br />

Bijou soph, business staff 4<br />

Owl Business Manager 6<br />

Owl Circulation Manager 6<br />

Owl Advertising Manager<br />

4<br />

Owl business staff 2<br />

Senior sports mgr., per award 8<br />

Junior sports mgr., per award 4<br />

Soph, sports mgr., per award 2<br />

Eusiness mgr., band, per yr. 4<br />

Mgr.. glee club and choir 4<br />

VII. SCHOLARSHIP<br />

:.75 General Point Average 24<br />

3.60 General Point Average 16<br />

3.50 General Point Average 13<br />

3.40 General Point Average 10<br />

3.30 General Point Average '<br />

4


YVCA, Red Cross Hold Halloween<br />

V<br />

- lilSiuvl<br />

' vYvft<br />

CIGARETTES<br />

SI<br />

,:r<br />

y<br />

Pre-me- d Students<br />

Hear Dr. Caughey<br />

'V " '" :<br />

More independent experts smoke Lucky Strike regularly<br />

than the next 2 leading brands combined 3<br />

An Impartial poll covering all the Southern tobacco markets reveals<br />

ffce smoking preference of the men who really know tobacco auctioneers,<br />

buyers and warehousemen. Mors of these independent<br />

experts smoke Lucky Strike regularly than the next two<br />

leading brands combined.<br />

' 7<br />

COP., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COWAlrf<br />

LUCKY 5TRIKC MEAUS FITiE TOHACCO<br />

$9 royridx$Q firmf so fyJlypocked so free and easy on the dreri<br />

I (Continued<br />

Call Me.. .<br />

from Page 1)<br />

For that "little get-to-gethe-<br />

II E W ?<br />

(Willem Ingelse, Dutch Student<br />

Finds Living In U. S. Like Heaven<br />

r" why not<br />

enjoy our delicious hamburgers or hot dogs.<br />

Take out orders given proud attention.<br />

THE SHACK BAR<br />

ALWAYS OPEN FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE<br />

Yes! That NEW Transcript<br />

ALUMS<br />

You, too, can subscribe. Fill out the blank be-<br />

low and keep in touch with th news at <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

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

Name<br />

Street<br />

City ...<br />

(<br />

'<br />

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

P. 0. Box 364<br />

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

Zone State ......<br />

$3 :50 Per Year<br />

) Cash ( ) Money Order<br />

HOMECOMING<br />

SCHEDULE<br />

Friday<br />

10:00 a. m. Trustees meeting<br />

Stuyvesant hall<br />

2:00 p. m. Alumni Directors<br />

meeting TUB<br />

6:00 p. m. Alumni Congress.<br />

dinner Stuyvesant hall<br />

, 8:00 p. m. Pep Rally<br />

Edwards Field<br />

8:15 p. m. "Importance of<br />

Being Earnest" <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

Players Willis High auditorium<br />

Saturday<br />

8:15 a. m. Alumni Fund<br />

council breakfast TUB<br />

10:00 a. m. Associated<br />

Monnett clubs Room 30,<br />

Slocum library Secretaries,<br />

of Reunion classes Alumni<br />

office<br />

11:00 a. m. - Chapel service<br />

Gray chapel<br />

12:00 noon W association<br />

luncneon 3uns Odevene<br />

luncheon TUB Associated<br />

Monnett Clubs luncheon<br />

Monnett hall<br />

2:15 p. m. <strong>OWU</strong> vs. Rollins<br />

football game Selby field<br />

<strong>OWU</strong> vs. Bowling Green crosscountry<br />

meet.<br />

4:30 p. m. Open House<br />

TUB<br />

8:15 p. m. "Importance of<br />

Being Earnest" <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

Players Willis High audi-<br />

torium<br />

8:30 p. m. <strong>Home</strong>coming<br />

dance Edwards gym.<br />

0$k' 111<br />

,i0 INFLATION<br />

in this price<br />

26.95<br />

Prices ore going up, yei ajT 5&<br />

hut here's one that hasn'tdffi&j<br />

High quality lowest G-- E nSS<br />

price in seven years! Handsome<br />

rosewood plastic cabinet. Rich,<br />

natural color tone. Improved speaker<br />

extra sensitive, powerful.<br />

Needs no aerial or ground. Four<br />

rubes plus rectifier. AC-D- C. See<br />

it hear it today I Model' 107. .<br />

wf A<br />

f I m 1<br />

tells you there's (-- GOlfl SEAL j<br />

no better buy n,vri<br />

DELAWARE<br />

HARDWARE<br />

"SIEGFRIEDS"<br />

The General Electric Store<br />

i<br />

<strong>Home</strong>coming ...<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

Page 3<br />

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

Wednesday, November 3, 1948<br />

Parly For Foreign Students<br />

Bill St. Church Provides Locale<br />

For First Of Typical U. S. Parties<br />

"Oh look! What is that?" cried Niels Halbertsnia, Wes-leya- n<br />

foreign student from Amsterdam, as re gazed for the<br />

-- first time upon a pompous jack-o'-lante- rn<br />

at Cross-YYVC- the Red A<br />

Foreign Student Halloween party Friday night. "And<br />

why are those apples hanging from a string in the middle of<br />

the room?" asked a girl lrom<br />

China. For many of <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s With lights low and pumpkins<br />

guest students from abroad, this<br />

was the first introduction<br />

glowing, popular<br />

to<br />

American folk<br />

a<br />

truly American traditional party songs were sung, and, climaxed<br />

based around the customs of by the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> victory song.<br />

Halloween.<br />

A dramatic presentation of Edsar<br />

Over forty students square; ,,.. r !.tu m.,i. -<br />

J j j i j r i mien lueo jiic jumtft vdL was<br />

i<br />

danced and bobbed for apples<br />

from 7:30 till 10 p. m. in the 6iven in an atmosphere symbolic<br />

basement of William Street of its theme. The party concluded<br />

i<br />

church under the direction of the with another square dance, as<br />

I International Affairs committees . . v.<br />

students, worn out but i. happy,<br />

off the rRedj - j<br />

:<br />

Cross and the YWCA.<br />

Numerous jack - o - lanterns and were escorted home,<br />

candles blended in a setting of; Phil Grifie, director of the<br />

corn husks and crepe paper dec- -<br />

i<br />

the others and dived for his. Ud<br />

enaded around the room in a<br />

grand march. Led by Red Cross<br />

trained Chillicothe entertainers,<br />

foreign students were taught<br />

American square and folk dancing<br />

were joined by the college<br />

unit faculty advisor, Prof. Russell<br />

Bayliff.<br />

i<br />

YWCA, Abbie Seamans, execu- -<br />

orations.<br />

tivc secretary of the Delaware<br />

After each student had tried<br />

his skill at producing<br />

county<br />

a ripe, red<br />

chapter of the Red Cross<br />

apple from the tub of water, the Abbie Brent, Eastern Area Red<br />

Reverend Sheridan Bell could Cross college unit director; the<br />

not let himself be outdone by<br />

I Reverend Sheridan Bell, of Wil- -<br />

he came with an apple in his iam Street church, and Prof, and<br />

i<br />

a campaign to persuade everyone<br />

dium on a float and will be atten-<br />

Dr. John L. Caughey, associate to j use that title." (Prof. Rufus<br />

ded by the <strong>Home</strong>coming court Reserved seals may be obtained<br />

dean of Western Reserve Medical j Crane) '<br />

Jane Tewalt, , Mary Ann Wright,<br />

school, spoke at<br />

from<br />

a luncheon for<br />

Surprised By<br />

Professor R. C. Hunter at<br />

Many American's<br />

premedical students at Buns<br />

Although 13.9 per cent of the<br />

Carolyn Ward, and 'Nancy Allen. 80 cents each.<br />

Thursday.<br />

persons polled agreed to support Lack Of Geographical Knowledge<br />

They will be escorted by Omicron Publication Members Invited<br />

Delta Kappa men Bob Huffman,<br />

Dr. Caughey divided the quali<br />

"Mistcr"-campaig- n the in their Willem (Bill) Ingelse was<br />

Fraternity<br />

a young<br />

and sorority houses<br />

Dutchman working John Shover, George Raup, Phil<br />

fications for medical school into classes and informally on the cam in the<br />

will be open to alumni the en-<br />

American consulate in Rotterdam as an interpreter. Since McDevitt, and Harry Kane.<br />

three parts: 1) personality and pus, they feel the Transcript<br />

tire weekend, and all former<br />

he knew English, French, German, and some Spanish, besides Miss Parson, a junior from<br />

the ability to inspire confidence, should continue to use "Professor"<br />

Transcript and Bijou staff mem-<br />

his native Dutch, he worked with the visas going through the Chicago, will be crowned queen<br />

2) good grades and 3) scores on and "Doctor" in its columns. Said<br />

bers arc invited to visit the new<br />

consul.<br />

at halftime, after which she and<br />

the medical aptitude test and Dr. Roland Boeeklin: ". . . Only<br />

publication quarters in Quonset<br />

graduate examination.<br />

the title 'Mister' should<br />

Luckily,<br />

be the day em-<br />

Niels Halbertsma came into the office the court will be serenaded by the huts 5 and<br />

In a brief summary of the ployed in addressing the male wilh his visa, Bill was not very<br />

men's Glee club.<br />

military draft and its import- population of the campus (on a busy and had time to chat with a '<br />

scholarship,<br />

ance, Doctor Caughey mentioned social basis) . . . On the other hand him about his trip to America,<br />

Bill gave up. Following tne game, openj<br />

j<br />

a<br />

the possibility of deferment for mention of official character in As Niels unfolded the story of<br />

Late in August,<br />

house will be held at the Student<br />

Bill received a<br />

union and at Sturges hall, with<br />

i<br />

premedical students. It; would the Transcript . . . should give ail his own opportunity for an ed- -' letter telling him that another local alumni assisting the home<br />

work on the basis of tenative<br />

informative data pertaining to ucation at <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>, Bill foreign student had been unable economics department.<br />

acceptance<br />

by a medical<br />

such a<br />

school.<br />

reference and those would<br />

to come and had left a scholar- Suprise at Dance<br />

However, a medical<br />

include professional<br />

school<br />

titles."<br />

ship free for him if he could get Bob Kutscher ana his campus<br />

(EDITOR'S NOTE:<br />

may cancel a tenative<br />

Since some of<br />

ac-<br />

to <strong>Wesleyan</strong> to use it. The Amer- band will provide the music for<br />

ceptance at any time, which<br />

the faculty wish to have the<br />

ican consul helped Bill with mon-<br />

Transcript<br />

the gala <strong>Home</strong>coming "Frolic" at<br />

would make the student eligible<br />

continue its policy of<br />

ey and passage and he .arrived<br />

using full professional<br />

Edwards gym Saturday evening.<br />

for the draft.<br />

titles and<br />

in New York, Sept. 20.<br />

since the paper is sent to<br />

Miss<br />

alumni<br />

Parson and her court will<br />

and other colleges<br />

Don<br />

and<br />

Fagg<br />

universi-<br />

met Bill in New York be the guest of honor. John. Buck"<br />

Message Board ties throughout the country, the<br />

"fortunately, or I'd still be ley, <strong>University</strong> social chairman,<br />

staff will continue its "Professor"<br />

there!" and took him sightseeing has announced that there will be<br />

Now In Library<br />

and "Doctor" policy.)<br />

for a day. "After an hour in New a big surprise in store for those<br />

York," Bill says, "my head was who attend the dance; it will be<br />

"Call me 'Doctor' ": A student<br />

Howard F. McGaw,<br />

aching<br />

librarian,<br />

and I wished I were back announced ..at intermission. The<br />

should use the title 'Professor' or<br />

in<br />

announced that there is now<br />

Rotterdam."<br />

'Doctor'<br />

admission price,, orginally $1.75,<br />

because it teaches him<br />

available at the loan desk a mes- respect for the faculty and indir-<br />

Despite the fact that living has been lowered to $1.50 per<br />

sage board for the students to ectly for his own' university of<br />

in America is "like heaven" in couple.<br />

use in leaving messages for their which he is a part. In return the<br />

comparison to the suffering of No Sorority Decorations<br />

friends. This plan, according to student will himself receive re-<br />

the four years' occupation and <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s traditional <strong>Home</strong>-<br />

Mr. McGaw, will facilitate the spect for his achievements in<br />

the post war period, the first coming decorations will be on<br />

I<br />

mouth and a dripping head. Mrs. Russell Bayliff were chaper-Afte-r delivery of messages and relieve earning a diploma from that un-<br />

"V:<br />

few weeks in America were hard display in front of each frater-<br />

various other games had ones<br />

the library staff of the necessity iversity. Professors should address<br />

for Bill. He was amazed and somenity house, First and second<br />

gone tne rounds, students prom<br />

of carrying messages for people. their students with respect. To<br />

V what embittered by the ignorance prizes will be awarded to the two<br />

This is the first in a series The library also has a new establish a rule in the use of titles<br />

and lack of concern of the aver- best displays. The houses will<br />

of typically American parties for system of checking out books. would be a mistake because it<br />

i t<br />

age American about present day be judged by a group of faculty<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s foreign students. All books are now due on Thurs- savors too much of regimenta-<br />

conditions in Holland.<br />

members. The sororities will dis-<br />

Others will be held later in the day. In the case of two week tion." (Dr. Hastings Eells)<br />

Willem (Bill) Ingelse Bill's scholastic standing is play no decorations this year.<br />

year to acquaint the Europeans<br />

books the date due will be two "There is already virtually no<br />

yet to be determined, but he ex- <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Players will give<br />

weeks from the Thursday of the distinction rendered at this Un-<br />

with the habits, customs, and week in which they were checked iversity between individuals<br />

expressed a<br />

on<br />

desire to go to Amerpects<br />

to be classed as a junior, three performance of Oscar<br />

recreations of American students. out.<br />

the basis of their having<br />

ica, too.<br />

earned<br />

Niels eagerly gave him<br />

because the last two years in a Wilde's "The Importance of Being<br />

or not earned the Ph. D. degree; all the information he could.<br />

Dutch high school are equivalent Earnest" at 8:15 on Friday, Sat-<br />

surely it will not cost the admin- Bill wrote to <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

to<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>, the first two in an American urday and Monday night at the<br />

istration or the students one extra but the letters he received in<br />

college.<br />

Willis High School auditorium.<br />

penny to pay lip service to those return were disappointing. It was Bill is living at the Chi Phi<br />

who have put in the time and too late in the year for the uni- house and works in the library.<br />

money in order to advance themversity to provide a scholarship He enjoys the freedom of our Have You<br />

selves professionally by earning for another foreign student. Not college life, particularly the fact<br />

the Ph. D. degree! . . ." knowing how to contact any that we have parties all the<br />

other universities that would give time. Also he has developed a<br />

particular fondness for the coke<br />

machine at the Chi Phi house.<br />

G behind Edwards<br />

gym.<br />

The Rollins alumni will rnet<br />

at the Evangelical church late<br />

Saturday morning. They will be<br />

welcomed by Dick Peters and<br />

Cornelia Draves, with entertainment<br />

by a Delta Tau Delta<br />

quartet.<br />

President Flemming will preside<br />

at the chapel service Saturday<br />

at 11 a. m., while alumni<br />

president A. W. Morrison will<br />

speak in addition to Mr. Rickey.<br />

A short pep rally will follow the<br />

chapel program.<br />

The alumni commitee meetings<br />

will begin at 10 a. m. Friday<br />

wilh the trustees' meeting at<br />

Stuyvesant hall; this will be followed<br />

by the Alumni directors'<br />

meeting at the Tub at 2 p. m.<br />

and the Alumni Congress dinner<br />

meeting at Stuyvesant at 6 p. m.<br />

Friday.<br />

Odevene To Meet<br />

. While the students are enjoying<br />

their vacation from Saturday<br />

classes, the annual meeting and<br />

election of officers of the alumni<br />

Fund council will be held at the<br />

Student union at 8:15 a m) President<br />

Flemming will explain the<br />

relation of the alumni fund to<br />

the education program at <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>. The meeting will be<br />

in charge of Gardner Townsley<br />

'20, president of the council.<br />

"BUtlBURYED"<br />

See Page 6<br />

'His" Date For "His" Formal<br />

A Lovely Girl<br />

Wearing "His" Flowers -<br />

'<br />

''. M.' ; of. Course<br />

Flowers By Gibson<br />

Christmas Gift Subscriptions<br />

SPECIAL STUDENT RATES<br />

( ) TIME ( ) LIFE ( ) FORTUNE<br />

Student Rate<br />

Regular<br />

Newsstand . .<br />

Name<br />

.$ 5.00<br />

6.50<br />

10.40<br />

$4.75<br />

6.00<br />

7.80<br />

Year<br />

Address<br />

City . . State<br />

$ 7.50<br />

12.50<br />

15.00<br />

( ) MoneyOrder Enclosed ( ) Check Enclosed<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> Magazine Agency<br />

Jay Richens 2507<br />

THE INDEPENDENT PRINT SHOP<br />

Company, Inc.<br />

9 EAST WILLIAM STREET<br />

DELAWARE OHIO<br />

Our stocks are full and complete in every color, style or<br />

selection that you may need in SKIRTS - SWEATERS --<br />

T-SHIR-<br />

BLOUSES - TS DUN-GAREE- S.<br />

(All the new styles) and<br />

Dresses - Formals - Evening Blouses and Skirts<br />

(All new styles and colors. You may make your selections<br />

now and use our Lay-a-Wa- y plan, if necessary)<br />

Coats - Suits - Rain-coat- s and Jackets<br />

N. Sandusky<br />

Phone<br />

2431<br />

'


I "? tTTT-tTt- tt "T 1<br />

in Th8 HOT CORNER<br />

With Bill Gunn, Transcript Sports Editor<br />

r d m c mm OfO J 0<br />

o .j o C 3 q<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> was hampered by injuries for the first time Saturday,<br />

when thev defeated Mt. Union 17-1- 4 in Alliance. Ray<br />

Leech, who injured his leg in the Bishops' 34-- 0 drubbing of<br />

De-Pau- w,<br />

was out of uniform, and the rugged guard's absence was<br />

strongly felt as the Red and Black gridders were held to 105<br />

yards through the line. Ken Woodward also missed the game.<br />

He was taking a national medical school examination, which<br />

was offered on Saturday afternoon only. In the fourth quarter<br />

of the contest with the" Mounts, Tom l.otrecchiano, who had<br />

gained 46 'yards in the two times he carried the ball, aggravated<br />

an old head injury and had to be carried from the field.<br />

The win over the Purple Raiders brought <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s grid record<br />

up to a very respectable .SOO for the season. Under Coach Glenn<br />

Fr'aser, theBishops have now won 10, lost 3, and tied 1, but the<br />

toughest part of the l'48 schedule is ahead. After meeting Rollins<br />

Saturday, the Bishops will travel East twice, playing Lafayette's<br />

powerful Maroons, who tackle Rutgers this week, on<br />

Nov. 13 and closing their schedule against Washington and Jefferson<br />

the following week.<br />

Dave Puddington and Tom Wenzlau, varsity basketball standouts,<br />

received much personal satisfaction from Saturday's victory.<br />

Dave, who is the Bishops' No. l center, and Tom, starting<br />

end, remeher the defeat handed them by the Mount cagers<br />

last season which shook the <strong>Ohio</strong> Conference title from their<br />

hands. Closing their <strong>Ohio</strong> conference season at Mt. Union last<br />

Season totals to date show that the Bishops have amassed 1 1 1<br />

points this year while holding their opponents to 47. In averaging<br />

22.2 points .per game, the Red and Black gridders have<br />

held the opposition to an average of 9.4 markers. Mt. Union is<br />

the only team to hold an edge in the statistics over the Battling J<br />

Bishops this year.<br />

u<br />

H<br />

tt<br />

U<br />

u uw<br />

H<br />

u uft<br />

uauam<br />

m<br />

H<br />

M<br />

tin<br />

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

Michigan<br />

Notre Dame<br />

Northwestern<br />

& Pittsburgh .<br />

& Navy ....<br />

& Indiana . . .<br />

& Wisconsin<br />

MY GUESS FOR COMBINED TOTAL IS<br />

Name<br />

Address ,<br />

Drop Your Ballot in the Box At<br />

WILSON'S<br />

C. J. OF COURSE<br />

l<strong>aH</strong>iBiBisaaBBiiiBiiaiaiiiaiiiiiiiiii<br />

1<br />

M<br />

a<br />

Bishop Harriers<br />

Defeat Mf. Union<br />

1<br />

Mount Union's cross country<br />

team became the 19th consecutive.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> college to fall before the<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> harriers last Saturday,<br />

as the Bishops won 17 to<br />

38.<br />

Coming within two points of a<br />

perfect score,<br />

squad placed<br />

the Ked<br />

men in<br />

and Black<br />

positions. Jim Swomley, Bill<br />

-<br />

2<br />

-<br />

3<br />

-<br />

-<br />

5<br />

-<br />

6<br />

-<br />

7<br />

Wol-fende- n<br />

and George Blakslee finished<br />

in a tie for first place in the<br />

time of 24:49 over the 4.6 miles<br />

course.<br />

Bill Thorne, Mount Union, who<br />

had been highly touted this season,<br />

finished fourth in 25:58, over<br />

a minute after the winners broke<br />

the tape.<br />

Bob Darkey and Paul Dietterich<br />

came in together in 26:15 for fifth<br />

and sixth place. Bob Reimenseh-niede- r<br />

was seventh for <strong>OWU</strong> with<br />

a time of 26:36.<br />

Mount Union placed Jim Leslie<br />

in eighth position and Bill Jones<br />

scored ninth for the Bishops. Af<br />

ter the race Jones had to be carried<br />

from the field because of<br />

severe pains in his right foot. .<br />

Balch, Logan and Craney finished<br />

10-1- 1 and 12 for the Purple<br />

.<br />

spring, the Bishops dropped a close battle to the Purple Raiders, Raiders to complete the scoring.<br />

j<br />

I<br />

'<br />

allowing the Oberlin Yeomen, whom the <strong>OWU</strong> five had defeated On November 6 the Bishops<br />

in tlieir season opener, to win the conference championship. will play host to the Bowling<br />

Green harriers on the Selby<br />

course.<br />

Improved Tankmen<br />

Face Eleven Meets<br />

Welcome Back Alums<br />

WATSON BROS.<br />

Delaware's Oldest and Largest Dealer<br />

CIGARS-PIPES-TOBACC-<br />

OS<br />

Magazines, Newspapers, Candies<br />

ALLEN HOTEL<br />

Her Majesty and Her Court<br />

I . r-- t ' i' 1<br />

i i:' V : V V r --<br />

I . w<br />

v<br />

A<br />

-<br />

'! 1<br />

- t 1<br />

" - t . , , j . i i<br />

L' i - : (i.y<br />

HJ ''. ' ' i- - - I<br />

f . 1 ' , I<br />

4<br />

- ft- - ' '<br />

I<br />

1<br />

- f<br />

I 1<br />

- r i j<br />

i<br />

I .<br />

V. V ' -<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s <strong>Home</strong>coming Queen<br />

Carolyn Ward, Marion Parson,<br />

Intramural<br />

and her court are pictured above left to right: Mary Ann Wright,<br />

the queen, Jane Tewalt, and Nancy Allen.<br />

Highlights<br />

V<br />

Athletic Boosters<br />

Sponsor Pep Rally<br />

Fall Special<br />

TOPCOATS<br />

' With or Without Zip In Linings<br />

BLACKBURN'S MEN'S STORE<br />

n<br />

I --I<br />

Rated 7th "m Nation<br />

Of Smaller Colleges<br />

<strong>OWU</strong> Seeks To Even Series With Floridans<br />

Who Played In Cigar Bowl Game Last Year<br />

By JIM POPE<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> football tans will have their last opportunity<br />

to watch the Batling Bishops in action at home this<br />

season when they meet the Tars of Rollins college in the<br />

<strong>Home</strong>coming game at Selby field, Saturday afternoon.<br />

The Bishops will be gunning for their fifth straight triumph of<br />

the season, and their second consecutive homecoming victory.<br />

It took eight years for the Bis<br />

hops to register a homecoming<br />

victory, and this was accomplished<br />

last season at the expense of<br />

a hard-fightin- g Case eleven. The<br />

Bishops scored after ten minutes<br />

had lapsed in the game when<br />

Kenny Woodward grabbed a short<br />

aerial from Frank Jacobs, and<br />

streaked into the end zone from<br />

the five yard line. Most of that<br />

game was played in the shadows<br />

of the Case goal, but the Rough<br />

Riders forced the game into a<br />

"battle of lines." <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

threatened on several occasions,<br />

but they failed to muster the<br />

power necessary to push through<br />

the tight Case defense.<br />

Rollins, besides possessing the<br />

distinction of being the oldest institution<br />

of higher learning in<br />

Florida, has gained national recognition<br />

for the quality of teams<br />

representing the school. The Blue<br />

and Gold, under the coaching of<br />

Jack McDowall, have amassed an<br />

impressive record of 83 victories,<br />

33 losses, and 6 ties in the past<br />

ten years.<br />

Hancock Stars<br />

an-nu- al<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Delaware eleven,<br />

Delaware winning by a narrow<br />

margin.<br />

The Tars are short on quantity,<br />

but long on quality, with the<br />

greatest weakiness being at the<br />

tackle position, and the most potency<br />

in the backfield. In the line,<br />

Harry Hancock is the standout,<br />

offensively and defensively, and<br />

last year was rated as the most<br />

outstanding pivot man in the<br />

state.<br />

Lanky Ed Sirmons, a back who<br />

does everything with a football,<br />

leads the team in versatility from<br />

his halfback slot. Cal Peacock,<br />

stocky fullback, specializes in the<br />

tricky Rollins' spinner play series.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> fans will also<br />

get a good look at Seet Justice,<br />

a triple threat stylist, who is a<br />

brother of the great all-Americ-<br />

an<br />

halfback from the <strong>University</strong> of<br />

North Carolina, Charlie "Choo-Choo- "<br />

Justice. Justice spearheads<br />

the double-win- g back offense<br />

from his left halfback position.<br />

Work On Defense<br />

At the start of the season,<br />

Coach McDowall stated, "If injuries<br />

are kept to a minimum and<br />

several 1947 promising freshman<br />

produce as expected, we'll give<br />

most opponents plenty of trouble."<br />

The sophomore laden squad<br />

has lived up to advance notices,<br />

and reports from the Everglade<br />

school predict that the Tars will<br />

lose only three games this season,<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> not being included<br />

included in the list of expected<br />

conquerors. In the national<br />

lineup of minor teams, Rollins<br />

rate seventh this season.<br />

In its last outing, the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> line was outcharged byv<br />

the heavier Mount Union forward<br />

wall, and the Bishops were forced<br />

to take to the air to gain yardage.<br />

In the closing minutes of<br />

the game, the Raiders struck desperately<br />

only to have a pass interception<br />

halt their bid for victory.<br />

The highly heralded Mount<br />

Union passing attack was stopped<br />

by the Bishop secondary, and this<br />

week the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> board of<br />

strategy is busy devising an adequate<br />

defense.<br />

Rollins Rales High<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> and Rollins<br />

have met on the gridiron three<br />

times, their first contest being in<br />

1937. Rollins enjoys a two to one<br />

victory edge in the series. Last<br />

year's postponement gained nationwide<br />

attention when Weslayan<br />

officials decided to cancel the<br />

game, rather than leave a <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

player behind.<br />

Bob MeFarland and Frank Jacobs each scored one touchdown<br />

to remain in a deadlock for Bishop scoring honors. Both of the<br />

boys have now scored six touchdowns, tut MeFarland has been<br />

on the throwing end of four others. Having scored 12 of Wes- -<br />

leyan's 16 touchdowns this season, they both have tied the 36<br />

point total with which Tom Lbtrecchiano led the Fraser-me- n in<br />

scoring last fall.<br />

Vince Schlicht, who won a<br />

has become conspicuous by his<br />

nau practice mis year, a tricKy<br />

to many thrills last season by<br />

in the back of his head." With three openings left on the<br />

starting five by the June graduating class, the Bishop quintet will<br />

feel the absence of a Ictterjijiii'ho has adapted his talents to in-<br />

..-- !<br />

tramural play.<br />

Bill Lestcck, who grabbed a pass from Bob Brown in the end<br />

zone last week to give Delta Tan Delta a 6 to 0 victory over Phi<br />

Kappa Psi in the intramural touch football competition, leads<br />

both<br />

A<br />

are.<br />

inter-fraternit- y letter in basketball last season,<br />

absence pre-seaso- from n basket- -<br />

passer, vince treated me tans<br />

apparently seeing with . "the eyes<br />

leagues in scoring with 43 points for three<br />

games. Bill scored 12 points in the Delts 12-- 0 defeat of the Phi<br />

Gams, 25 points in the 28-- 6 rout of ATO, and six points last<br />

,<br />

week.<br />

CORDUROY SLAX<br />

Gray - Tan - Straw<br />

$5.95<br />

THE PEOPLES STORE<br />

15 W. William<br />

'in<br />

11<br />

T<br />

m<br />

H<br />

M<br />

H<br />

M<br />

M<br />

B<br />

M<br />

H<br />

'<br />

"The Battling Bishops should<br />

have a pretty fair squad this year,<br />

led by Tom Ring, Paul Hummel<br />

and Bob Latour," said Phil Cut- -<br />

chin, coach of the <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

varsity swimming team. He is<br />

certain that <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s chances<br />

for a winning team this year are<br />

strong.<br />

Ring, captain of last year's<br />

natators, has won the 220 yard<br />

anH 44n vjrH frppQtvip PvPnk mn<br />

sistently for the past two years<br />

If he can repeat his performances<br />

this season, then the Red and<br />

Black will be sure of .ten-<br />

STOP<br />

At<br />

HARTER'S<br />

CAFETERIA<br />

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

Weekend<br />

5!<br />

OFFICIAL BALLOT<br />

? ?<br />

Nearest Guess To Combined Total<br />

Scores of Next Weeks<br />

V<br />

Game Will Win<br />

An Arrow Shirt, Tie, Handkerchief<br />

I<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> & Rollins ...<br />

.<br />

- points<br />

in the long distance 'department'<br />

for most of the individual meets..<br />

In the 50 and 100 yard dash<br />

(<br />

La-tou- events r,<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> will have<br />

another returning letter-ma- n.<br />

co-capta- in Bob who is of<br />

the squad will also be the low<br />

diving specialist for the Red and<br />

Black.<br />

" Another outstanding member<br />

of the '47-'4- Going into the last half of the<br />

fall intramural season two teams<br />

remain undefeated in touch football.<br />

In league I, Sigma Alpha<br />

Epsilon nosed out Sigma Chi to<br />

take undisputed possession of first<br />

place. This position gives the Sig<br />

Alphs a definite chance to enter<br />

the<br />

3 squad returning to<br />

compete for the Bishops is Hummel<br />

in the 150 yard backstroke<br />

co-capta- in<br />

event. Hummel is the other<br />

of the swimmers.<br />

Cutchin, who opened varsity<br />

practice on Oct. 25, is still looking<br />

for a few. good men to give<br />

his squad depth in scoring<br />

strength. He could use a point<br />

winner in the long distance events<br />

in addition to Ring.<br />

The coach also stated that he<br />

thought <strong>Wesleyan</strong> suffers a definite<br />

disadvantage, whenever it<br />

goes to- - another college for a<br />

meet, because the Bishop pool is<br />

much smaller and has poorer diving<br />

facilities in comparison with<br />

most of the other pools used by<br />

the. competitive squads.<br />

Schedule For The Season:<br />

Dec. 4 Kenyon, away<br />

Dec. 10 Oberlin, here<br />

Dec. 18 U. of Buffalo, away<br />

Jan. 22 Kenyon, here<br />

Jan. 29 B-- W, here<br />

Feb. 12 Oberlin, away<br />

Feb. 19 Wittenberg, here<br />

Feb. 22 Wooster, away<br />

Feb. 25 Case, away<br />

Feb. 26 B-- W, away<br />

Mar. 5 <strong>Ohio</strong> Conf., away<br />

Weeks ScoreX<br />

O. W. U. 17, MT. UNION 14<br />

. Washington of St. Louis 33,<br />

OBERLIN 20<br />

LAFAYETTE 33, Geo. Washington<br />

14<br />

WASH. & JEFF. 19, Carnegia<br />

Tech 7<br />

CASE 13, John Carroll 33<br />

DEPAUW 7, Lake Forest 0<br />

B. WALLACE 20, Toledo 14<br />

ROLLINS Open date<br />

inter-leagu- e playoff for the<br />

touch football championship.<br />

In league II Delta Tau Delta<br />

held onto first place honors by<br />

defeating Phi Kappa Psi and<br />

stand as much of a chance as the<br />

Sig Alphs to compete in the<br />

championship game.<br />

"<br />

, ,On the volleyball courts the<br />

big Alphe pe.v undeleated in<br />

League I and are holding on to<br />

undisputed first place. In league<br />

II The Delts and Sig Eps, tied for<br />

top honors, are scheduled to meet<br />

this weekend in what will be the<br />

deciding game irv the first place<br />

competition.<br />

Friday, the annual, intramural<br />

cross country race will be held at<br />

4:15 p. m. The course is 2.2 miles<br />

long with the finish line on the<br />

selby track. In order to qualify<br />

in the run, a fraternity must have<br />

five men cross the finish line. No<br />

more then ten men may participate<br />

for each fraternity.<br />

The scoring is made by counting<br />

the position in which a man<br />

finishes, and the team with the<br />

lowest score wins.<br />

League I<br />

Sig Alpha's vs Sigma Chi<br />

Jim Lincoln scored, the first<br />

touchdown for the Sig Alpha<br />

. . .. , ,<br />

but it j t u nr i u<br />

took Johnny Meyers touch- -<br />

, , . . .,<br />

down and conversion to give them<br />

a 10 lu win over me iig ini s <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s Athletic Boosters<br />

committee, under the chairmanship<br />

of Herm<br />

the Delt's held the Phi Psis within<br />

the five yard line twice, Bob<br />

Brown tossed a long pass to Bill<br />

Lestock in the end zone. The<br />

tough defenses of both teams accounted<br />

for the minimum scoring.<br />

Ray Herman, outstanding<br />

lineman for the Delts, helped<br />

stop the two Phi Psi's drives.<br />

Phi Gam's vs Sig Ep's<br />

The Phi Gams dropped the Sig<br />

Eps Wednesday 13 to 7. Runs by<br />

Rusty Bare and Hank Harrington<br />

scored the Fijis two tallies as the<br />

teams played on even terms.<br />

Rusty Bare also made the conversion<br />

for the Phi Gams to end the<br />

"ii scoring.<br />

Beta's vs ATO's<br />

The Betas, using the aerial<br />

route, downed the ATO's 20 to 6<br />

Wednesday. Chuck Corey passed<br />

twice to Vern Thomas in the end<br />

zone for two markers, then Norm<br />

Slinker tossed to Chuck Gates-ma- n<br />

for the other Beta tally.<br />

Vern Thomas made the two Beta<br />

conversions.<br />

Upperclass Volleyball<br />

League I<br />

. The Sig Alphs remained undefeated<br />

in edging out the Sig Chis<br />

16 to 14, 10 to 15, and 15 to 12.<br />

Chi Phi swamped the Phi Taus<br />

15 to 3 and 15 to 4.<br />

The Alpha Sigs had little trouble<br />

beating the Phi Delts 15 to 5<br />

and 11 to 0.<br />

The Kappa Sigs battled out a<br />

win over the Beta Taus 15 to 13<br />

and 15 to 12.<br />

League II<br />

,<br />

t-- ,. ,<br />

1 riday, 15 to 10 andjm, 15 to 7.<br />

V, . , . . --, , .<br />

The Betas beat the ATO s 15r to<br />

4 d 15 t 9<br />

1<br />

Friday. Chuck<br />

The Delts<br />

Buttermore<br />

took two games<br />

and<br />

from<br />

Phil Marr both<br />

the Phi Psis by<br />

scored for the<br />

identical scores<br />

of 15 to 2<br />

Sig's, but could not get across<br />

and 15 to 2.<br />

that Upper Class League Standings<br />

important extra point. The big<br />

Alpha's victory put<br />

League I Foot- - Volley- -<br />

them in the 1<br />

top spot in league I.<br />

ball ball<br />

Alpha Sig's<br />

Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1.000 1.000<br />

vs Phi! Delt's I Kappa Sigma .00 .750<br />

Jack Allen tossed three touchdown<br />

passes, and then<br />

'Phi Delta Theta '.750 .250<br />

scored once Chi<br />

himself to lead the Alpha Sig's<br />

Phi .333 .500<br />

to 1 Sigma Chi .750 .500<br />

a 26 to 7 victory over the Phi I<br />

Delts. Larry<br />

Phi Kappa<br />

Henize,<br />

Tau .000 .000<br />

who was on<br />

.500 .500<br />

ine receiving ena ot Allen s pas- - , R c .500<br />

League II<br />

Fowler scored the only Phi Delt Sigma<br />

tally, and Jim Kirk brought<br />

Phi Epsilon .333 1.000<br />

home<br />

the extra point.<br />

Tau Kappa Epsilon .333 Ooo<br />

Alpha<br />

Chi Phi's vs Phi Tau's<br />

Tau Omega - .000 .250<br />

Delta<br />

Paul Rendery<br />

Tau<br />

scored twice<br />

Delta 1.000 1.000<br />

in<br />

the first half as the<br />

Phi<br />

Chi Phi's<br />

Gamma Delta .500 500<br />

defeated<br />

the Phi Tau's 19 to 12. In<br />

Phi Kappa Psi .666 V,oo<br />

'.he second half, Ed Seigle<br />

Beta<br />

made<br />

Theta Pi -- .750<br />

Independents .000<br />

a touchdown and then the conversion<br />

to complete the scoring.<br />

Bill March and Bob Sauer accounted<br />

for the Phi Tau's two Fesler Worried<br />

touchdowns.<br />

League II<br />

Over Pitt Foes<br />

Phi Psi's vs Deli's<br />

COLUMBUS Coach Wes<br />

Delt's took sole possession of Fesler warned the <strong>Ohio</strong> State<br />

first place Wednesday as they eleven today about the powerful<br />

beat the Phi Psi's 6 to 0. After Pittsburgh Panthers with whom<br />

' Williams, has<br />

planned a torch light parade and<br />

pep rally Friday evening preceding<br />

the <strong>Home</strong>coming game with<br />

Rollins college.<br />

The formation for the parade<br />

will be organized in front of Mon-ne- tt<br />

hall at 8 p. m. From there<br />

the group will march down William<br />

street to Sandusky street and<br />

then up to Edwards field for the<br />

rally. Torches for the marching<br />

students will be provided by<br />

pledges of several of the fraternities<br />

and sororities. Free cider will<br />

be served at the rally.<br />

. In, addition to the torches, a<br />

float constructed by the Sailing<br />

club will brighten the parade<br />

' ' "<br />

'<br />

a-b- out<br />

Rollins has an enrollment of<br />

600, but the five wins and<br />

two losses recorded last season<br />

gives indication that the size of<br />

the college has little effect on the<br />

strength of the football team. In<br />

1947 Rollins participated in ftie<br />

Cigar bowl game against a strong<br />

Official Practice<br />

Begins For Cagers<br />

Basketball practice for the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> 1948-4- 9 season began<br />

Monday, Nov. 1 under the dir-<br />

festivity'. y<br />

This will be the last home game<br />

ection of Coach Bob Strimer.<br />

Since the first week in October<br />

for seniors, so Williams has urged<br />

several returning lettermen and<br />

that the student body "get behind<br />

the team and support<br />

members of last year's undefeat-<br />

the Friday<br />

night program<br />

ed freshman squad have been<br />

with a lot of working out unofficially in Ed-<br />

spirit."<br />

wards gym. These preliminary<br />

workouts have been held under<br />

the supervision of Chuck Butter- -<br />

<strong>OWU</strong> Sailing Club more and Jack Moore, varsity lettermen.'<br />

Finishes Sixth<br />

Returning lettermen who have<br />

reported to date are Johnny<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s sailors placed Meyer, Jack Smith, Buttermore<br />

sixth in the annual regatta spon- and Moore. Men who earned their<br />

Mid-Weste- rn sored by the Sailing freshman numerals last year and<br />

association at Michigan State un- have been participating in the<br />

iversity in Ann Arbor, Michigan, workouts are Jud Milhon, Bill<br />

Oct. 23 and 24.<br />

Milhon, Dave Wiedie, Dick Row-<br />

Taking first, second, and third land, Jim Williams, Russ Ramsey,<br />

place honors in the competition Don Purke, and Vern Thomas.<br />

were the <strong>University</strong> of Michigan, After the end of the football<br />

Notre Dame and <strong>Ohio</strong> State, res- season, Dave Puddington and Pitts Smith, a leading football<br />

pectively." Twelve colleges and un- Tom Wenzlau are expected to forecaster in pre-seaso- his n power<br />

iversities competed in the regatta. join the varsity cagers.<br />

ratings, gives Rollins a power rat-<br />

Ned Lockwood, the sailing Strimer urged that anyone ining of 56 and <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> a<br />

club's commodore, highlighted terested in trying' out for the var- rating of 49, which means that<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s achievements by winsity should report immediately to Rollins is an even seven points<br />

ning five races. During the two the practice sessions held daily at favorite on paper over <strong>Wesleyan</strong>.'<br />

days 20 races were sailed, 10 in 4 p. m. in Edwards gym. He also However, this is <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s home<br />

the "A" division, 10 in the "B" stated that any man interested in coming game, and the added in-<br />

division. Lockwood was the <strong>OWU</strong> trying out for manager of this centive for victory, will cause<br />

"A" division skipper and John year's freshman squad should re statistics and, ratings to have a<br />

Kreuhn, the "B" division skipper. port at the practice sessions. minor role in the final outcome.<br />

Doris Rusby and Beth Dickerson<br />

were the crew.<br />

Denison nosed out <strong>Ohio</strong> Wes-<br />

For "Your" Formal<br />

leyan for fifth place by an average<br />

of 6.700 per race against Wes-<br />

It's Only Natural For A Lovely<br />

leyan's 6.625.<br />

Girl to Want and to Wear Flowers<br />

Last Sunday <strong>Wesleyan</strong> compet-<br />

So<br />

ed against <strong>Ohio</strong> State, <strong>Ohio</strong> un- - We make special prices on grouprates. Only the Best.<br />

J iversity, and Denison on the<br />

Flowers By Gibson<br />

i Scioto river. This was the first<br />

I f a number of small regattas to<br />

take place this year on the local<br />

waterway.'<br />

The <strong>OWU</strong> Sailing What's Dis?<br />

club will par-.50- 0<br />

i ticipate in Northwestern's Thanks<br />

I giving regatta tor its final event<br />

I of the season.<br />

the Buckeyestangle Saturday.<br />

4..<br />

Fesler, former Panther coach,<br />

said he was worried about the<br />

Panthers' strength. He pointed out<br />

that Pitt had won four straight<br />

this season because it had enough<br />

cserve strength to play two<br />

teams.<br />

- M<br />

Don't Just Monkey Around<br />

1 .<br />

Stop in at the Midway This Weekend<br />

'<br />

-- '<br />

TTiiiT i' 1 IT"""1" ""fi<br />

laiiMwIifclHi ' 1


Booth's Place-Kicldn- g<br />

Protects Win Streak<br />

Don Boots A Field Goal, Two Extra Points<br />

As Mount Union Outplays Fraser-Me- n<br />

Playing before :i Dad's Oily crowd of 3,800, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

Battling Bishops erased an early opponent lead to over<br />

- 14, at Alliance last Saturday.<br />

tor the Bishops<br />

come powerful Mount Union, 17<br />

It was the fourth straight victory<br />

Don Boothe's field goal in 'the<br />

third period proved to be the<br />

winning factor of the game as<br />

each team scored two touchdowns.<br />

Bob McFarland matched<br />

Mount Union's first score in the<br />

second period and Frank Jacobs j<br />

scored the other <strong>Wesleyan</strong> tally<br />

in the fourth quarter, but Mount<br />

Union's Randy Pope scored late<br />

in the last period to threaten<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s lead.<br />

Mount Union started the scoring<br />

in the first quarter, after End<br />

Gene Barret intercepted a Wes- - j<br />

leyan pass and ran it back to the j<br />

Bishop's 7 yard line with a few i<br />

I<br />

minutes remaining in the period.<br />

Fullback Howard Hood went ov- - j<br />

er right tacklo for the touchdown.<br />

ci,ni-m.,- n A<br />

r.m-imn- i n ,-- 1<br />

JJU1 unci limn nnivci it.u tu jia t<br />

7--<br />

0.<br />

Mount Union led,<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s first score came in ,<br />

j<br />

the second period when Bob Mc- -<br />

Farland's pass to Wayne McFar- - j<br />

j<br />

land took the Bishops down to<br />

;<br />

the Mount Union 10 yd. line where<br />

:<br />

Frank Jacobs carried the Pall to<br />

the 1 12<br />

lilng 7 ids 207<br />

Forward sdpasses attempted 13 15<br />

!<br />

Forward .passes completed 3 2<br />

ards gained ford passes 95 22 ;<br />

F.vd passes inter'd uv 5<br />

ubles "i::" V<br />

Mi-Fa- r<br />

yard line and Bob<br />

land circled left end for the score.<br />

Boothe's kick was good and the<br />

7--<br />

7, score was tied, at the end of<br />

the first half.<br />

Led by backs' Hood, Napoleon,<br />

Bell, and Red Artino, the Mounts<br />

threatened late in the second period<br />

when they pushed the ball<br />

down to the Bishop M yard line.<br />

Tackle Bill Sherman came into<br />

the game to try a field goal, but<br />

the kick was wide and the Bish<br />

n<br />

ops took the ball over on then-ow-<br />

20.<br />

Boothe's field goal was set up<br />

in the third quarter after Tom<br />

Lotrecchiano had carried the ball<br />

to the Mount's 11 yard line on a<br />

lateral from Bob McFarland. Ted<br />

35.2<br />

0<br />

Number penalties 5<br />

Yards penalized 28<br />

took it oyer his shoulder on the<br />

cieacl run on Mount Union's 25 I<br />

anc) ran it over 'for the touchdown<br />

Boothe's placement again was<br />

17-- 7. j<br />

good, and <strong>Wesleyan</strong> led,<br />

'with five minutes remaining in<br />

the last quarter, the Mounts were<br />

still fighting hard as they took<br />

the ball over on their own 45.<br />

Dick McCall's pass took the ball<br />

down to the 33. On the next play<br />

McFall dropped back to pass, but<br />

broke loose to the 11 yard line<br />

before being stopped by <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

tacklers. Pope went inside left<br />

end for the score, and Sherman's<br />

kick was good.<br />

Mount Union fought desperate.<br />

y in the closing minutes of the<br />

game, but wesleyan s line neia<br />

fast, and the Mounts could get no<br />

farther than their own 35 yard<br />

line. McFall heaved a long pass<br />

before the final gun, butt Bob<br />

McFarland intercepted as the<br />

game ended with <strong>Wesleyan</strong> the<br />

17-1- 0. victor,<br />

3<br />

u<br />

I<br />

Hi<br />

I<br />

Get Your<br />

I Personalized Christmas Cards<br />

At<br />

s<br />

1 I i I<br />

1<br />

NOW<br />

Uibanowicz plunged through<br />

center to the nine, and after two<br />

passes fell incomplete, Boothe<br />

kicked the field goal from the 9<br />

yard stripe. The score at the end j<br />

of the third quarter was Wesle- -<br />

yan 10, Mount Union 7.<br />

Early in the fourth quarter Bob<br />

McFarland received Geltz' punt<br />

on his own 19 and returned the<br />

ball to the 37. Gaining no yardage<br />

through center, Mac unleashed a<br />

long spiraled pass to Jacobs who<br />

a V ft<br />

i<br />

sat., ,<br />

I I I 11 I 19 .i B<br />

pv';'. J i<br />

Smoke Camels for 30<br />

J days. If, at any time<br />

during these 30 days, you are not convinced that Camels are<br />

the mildest cigarette you ever smoked, return the packaj;e<br />

with the unused Camels and we will refund your full purchase<br />

price, plus postage. This offer good for yo days from this date.<br />

. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,<br />

winston-balem- . North C,<br />

'3<br />

4<br />

I<br />

Shown above are the four men<br />

in the Bishop starting lineup, who<br />

will be playing their final home<br />

Rickey, Weaver<br />

Well Known Here<br />

Among the outstanding features<br />

homecoming weekend will<br />

be the belated appearance of two<br />

of <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s most noted graduates,<br />

Branch Rickey, president<br />

of the Brooklyn Dodger's baseball<br />

team and Dr. H. G. "Buck"<br />

Weaver, '08 trainer for the St.<br />

Louis Cardinals baseball team.<br />

Rickey, '04, was one of the<br />

Bishops athletes in his day, excelling<br />

as a catcher for the nine.<br />

After a brief career as a professional<br />

baseball player, which<br />

was cut short by an injury, He<br />

returned to <strong>Wesleyan</strong> to coach<br />

football and baseball.<br />

Formerly general manager of<br />

the Cardinals, Rickey was noted<br />

as the orginator of the<br />

farm system, and for his uncanny<br />

ability to sell, for fabulous<br />

sums, players who had outlived<br />

their usefulness.<br />

Weaver, although a graduate of<br />

this college, is known far and<br />

wide for his "triple whapmy,<br />

which supposedly puts the jinx<br />

on Cardinal opponents. He was<br />

an excellent football player here<br />

and coached the freshman team<br />

in his senior year, while Rickey<br />

was coaching varsity football.<br />

It's Not Too Soon<br />

To Make Arrangements<br />

For<br />

Your Christmas Pictures<br />

Fleshman-Wai- n<br />

AL BACHMAII SHOE SERVICE<br />

21 W. WINTER ST.<br />

BEST WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIALS<br />

1<br />

Restaurant<br />

nn<br />

LiU<br />

" BISHOP SENIORS STARTING<br />

game for the Red and Black Sat- -<br />

urday. From left to right Frank<br />

Jacobs, acting captain for the<br />

Freshmen. Beat Vitfenberg, 9-- 6,<br />

To Even Season's Record<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s freshman football team scored its first<br />

victory of the current season by defeating the Wittenberg<br />

frosh, 9 to 6, at Springfield, Friday. The Baby Bishops rolled<br />

up 295 yards on the ground to gain 15 first downs, while the<br />

Springfield men gained 43 yards by rushing and only four-firs- t<br />

downs.<br />

<strong>Wesleyan</strong> struck first, midway<br />

in the first quarter, when Dave<br />

Bruck skirted end for 61 yards to<br />

Mthe Wittenberg 1U yard line. Three<br />

line plunges by Bruck and Johnny<br />

Blair placed the ball on the opponent's<br />

4. Then 'Bruck plunged<br />

over his own left tackle to score<br />

for the Red and Black. Wally<br />

Cross kicked the extra point to<br />

make the score <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 7, Wittenberg<br />

0.<br />

In the second period Wittenberg<br />

went on the offensive to score.<br />

Standing on his own 48, Dick<br />

Ferrer of the Green and White<br />

fired a "pass to Keith Miller on a<br />

sleeper play, and the speedy end<br />

raced unhindered clown the sidelines<br />

to make the score Wittenberg<br />

6, <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 7. Ferrer's kick<br />

for the extra point was good, but<br />

Wittenberg was charged for holding.<br />

An attempted pass from the<br />

17 yard line was incomplete, and<br />

7-- the score remained 0 in <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s<br />

favor.<br />

Wittenberg Line Holds .<br />

The Red ' and Blacks' final<br />

score was set up in the third<br />

period, when John Vossers in<br />

tercepted a Wittenberg pass on<br />

the <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 41 yard line. Then<br />

Welcome Alumni<br />

THE NECTAR<br />

Known For High Quality <strong>Home</strong> Made<br />

3-m- i i<br />

f<br />

"w<br />

wv5<br />

"'J f<br />

!<br />

IN FINAL HOME GAME<br />

Bishops this weekend, Bruce<br />

Heisler, Ray Leech, and Packy<br />

McFarland. It is not known as<br />

a <strong>Wesleyan</strong> drive carried the ball<br />

to the Wittenberg one-fo- ot line,<br />

where the Springfield forward<br />

wall held the Bishops for downs.<br />

On the first play after <strong>OWU</strong> lost<br />

the ball Mike Skuban of Wittenberg<br />

bobbled a low pass from<br />

center and was swamped in the<br />

end zone by the entire center of<br />

the Bishop forward line. The safety<br />

made the score <strong>Wesleyan</strong> 9,<br />

Wittenberg 6.<br />

Again <strong>Wesleyan</strong> threatened in<br />

the final quarter but the advance<br />

was stalled on the Wittenberg 2,<br />

where the Green and White took<br />

over on downs. Wittenberg kicked<br />

from its own end zone, as the<br />

final whistle blew.<br />

The win evened the <strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />

frosh record at one win and one<br />

loss for the season. On Friday<br />

Nov. 19, the squad will play host<br />

to Bowling Green in its final<br />

game of the season.<br />

BishoPs' Schedule<br />

Nov. 6 football Rollins, here<br />

Nov. 6 cross country B-- G,<br />

here<br />

Candy<br />

Sound System<br />

FOR RENT<br />

Phone 8258<br />

Confectionery<br />

nnnnnnnnnTOfn<br />

For 30 consecutive days in a recent test, hundreds of mea and<br />

women all across the country smoked Camels-a- nd only Camels uii the<br />

average of one to two packages a day.<br />

Every week, their throats were carefully examined by noted throat<br />

specialists a total of 2470 examinations from coast to coast.<br />

And these famous throat specialists reported that they found noc one<br />

single case of throat irritation due to smoking Camels!<br />

"T-Zone"-- But prove T it yourself! In your for Taste and T for<br />

Throat. Smoke Camels for 30 days. Let YOUR OWN TASTE tell you<br />

about that full, rich Camel flavor. Let YOUR OWN THROAT tell you<br />

how mild a cigarette can fie! Yes, prove for yourself that there's<br />

WWmATRIfflfflOV<br />

yet, whether Leech who suffered<br />

a knee injury in the DePauw<br />

game will be able to play in the<br />

Rollins game.<br />

Dramatics . . .<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

rehearsal studio and control room.<br />

Students electing courses in radio<br />

speech write and transcribe over<br />

station WSLN their own dramatic<br />

productions.<br />

Grads Climb Ladder<br />

After graduation many dramatics<br />

majors, with their years of<br />

experience in acting at <strong>Wesleyan</strong>,<br />

have traveled up the ladder of<br />

success in the outside world. Rolf<br />

Ingelhardt, Kirk Willis, and<br />

Jeanne Driver are working on the<br />

permanant staff of The Cleveland<br />

Play House. Kathrine Squire,<br />

who graduated in the middle<br />

twenties, has been acting on<br />

Broadway for some time.<br />

The <strong>University</strong> is a- - member of<br />

one of the oldest debate teams in<br />

the United States, including Ober-lin- ,<br />

Western Reserve, Woosterj<br />

and Allegheny colleges and has<br />

debate relations with a number of<br />

sister colleges. Effort is being<br />

I<br />

i made to afford the experience of<br />

actual participation in debate to<br />

as many interested students as<br />

possible. For this reason it offers<br />

a program of debate to freshmen,<br />

as well as upperclass men and<br />

women.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> is represented<br />

by membership in four oratorical<br />

associations: The <strong>Ohio</strong> Intercollegiate,<br />

Interstate Civic, The National<br />

Peace, and The <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

Women's.<br />

Soph Honorary . . .<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

David John McFeegan. Rachel<br />

Bess Martin, Maurie Ann Mead,<br />

Judson Severin Millhon, and<br />

Margaret Jane Murphy, Mary<br />

Ellen Oliver, Joanna May Orland,<br />

. JoAnne , Kathryn Peters, Jack<br />

William Powell, Marcus Eugene<br />

Powers, Phyllis Joy Rogers, Mark<br />

William Rubright, Corinne Blackburn<br />

Ruby, and Alice Gibson<br />

Saar.<br />

Donald Howard Schneider,<br />

Shirley Jeanne Schroeder, Nancy<br />

Ann Schultz, Virginia Jeanne<br />

Seeman, Donald Jay Shoemaker,<br />

Nancy Alva Simons, Marilyn<br />

Ruth Slade, Roberta Sloatman,<br />

Margaret C. Stanforth, Shirley<br />

Ann Stevens, and John Martin<br />

Strecker. .<br />

Jay Carlisle Tabar, Marian<br />

Bertha Troxell, Evelyn jane Tur- -<br />

ner, Charles August Wagner,<br />

Winifred Wildman, Peter Nord<br />

Wolfe, Charles Ivan Yoder, Jo-An- ne<br />

Young, and Mary Wilda<br />

Zimmerman.<br />

Student Spends<br />

Eve In Local Jail<br />

i An <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> freshmen,<br />

I one<br />

of a reported 10 to 12 stu<br />

dents involved in setting fire to<br />

leav6 and tree granches on<br />

Griswold st., was held Thursday<br />

night in Delaware city jail and<br />

reprimanded in Mayor Ansel<br />

Lockhart's court the following<br />

morning.<br />

An affidavit filed in the case<br />

was withdrawn after the youth,<br />

the only one of the group to<br />

remain at the scene of the blazes<br />

until police appeared, had been<br />

reproached by Mayor Lockhart.<br />

He was released after the court<br />

session.<br />

Both city police and fire departments<br />

had responded to caffx<br />

from neighborhood residents af-tr- e<br />

the men had ignited piles of<br />

leaves along the street late Thursday<br />

.<br />

5f its p. weltt "Tor Marvj<br />

Or a. pw for Awl Uwj<br />

Awri&wikh for (arij<br />

cm. sei-- cur disp&iy<br />

Owen Jewelry<br />

25 NORTH SANDUSKY<br />

Page 5<br />

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

Wednesday, November 3, 1948<br />

McFarland Leads Conference<br />

In Total Offense Statistics<br />

Bishop Scatback Has Gained 565<br />

Yards To Move Ahead of Ed Rupp<br />

Bob McFarland, speedy Bishop left halfback, grained 134<br />

yards against DePauw to raise his season's total offensive yardage<br />

to 565 and vault into the <strong>Ohio</strong> conference lead for total<br />

yards rushing and passing. ,.<br />

:<br />

In the statisticse which do not)<br />

include last Saturday's games, second place.<br />

Bob is credited with 382 yards Litle of Kent State and Milet-ti- ,<br />

gained on the ground and 174 by Heidelberg are tied for third,<br />

passes to give him an average of position in the conference scor-<br />

six yards gained each time he ing with 36 points, and Frank<br />

has carried the ball.<br />

Jacobs and Bob McFarland, the<br />

Close on McFarland's heels is Bishops one-tw- o scoring punch,<br />

Ed Rupp. Denison back, who has are deadlocked in a<br />

amassed 556 yards for an average<br />

of 10.4 yards in the 51 times he<br />

has carried the ball. Rupp has<br />

played in one more game than<br />

the Bishops' left halfback.<br />

Carl Taseff, John Carroll's fullback,<br />

ranks third in the Conference<br />

statistics, having netted<br />

548 yards in 84 tries for an average<br />

of 6.4 yards per try.<br />

Taseff is second<br />

Bill Fleitz, of Denison's Big<br />

Red continues to lead the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />

conference in scoring. Fleitz has<br />

scored 11 touchdowns prior to the<br />

fijg Red's game with Muskingum<br />

18-poi- nt<br />

Saturday to give, him an<br />

lead over Taseff. The John Carroll<br />

fullback scored 4 touch<br />

downs in the Yellow Streak's<br />

victory over Nigara to move into<br />

four-wa- y tie<br />

with Cipriano of Heidelberg and<br />

Baugh of Wilmington for fourth<br />

place with 30 points.<br />

Both Jacobs and McFarland<br />

tallied against Mt. Union to raise<br />

their season's total to 36 markers<br />

Saturday.<br />

With their victory over Mt.<br />

Union Saturday the Bishops<br />

closed their <strong>Ohio</strong> Conference<br />

Baldwin-Wallac- e,<br />

schedule undefeated,<br />

the sole conquer of the<br />

Red and Black gridders, having<br />

dropped out of the conference<br />

this year.<br />

Leading the conference this<br />

season are Denison's Big Red,<br />

who have marched to six straight<br />

victories. Dehnison is favored to<br />

repeat as <strong>Ohio</strong> conference champions<br />

again 4his year.<br />

Its Ho Secret!<br />

We Serve<br />

Good<br />

Plate Lunches<br />

NICHOLS<br />

RESTAURANT<br />

Across From Edwards Gym<br />

in vj)<br />

AMRICA'S FIRST NAME<br />

(N FORMAL V.EAR<br />

accenting<br />

comfort<br />

and<br />

smartness<br />

0 BY RUD3FKER V<br />

Perfect for either June or January and all seasons fn<br />

between, this handsome Midnite-Blu- e Tropical Worsted<br />

tux features the very popular shawl collar, with satin<br />

facing by Skinner. The choice, featherweight woolens are<br />

cleverly styled to provide freedom of movement such as<br />

you've never known before in formal wear! You'll appear<br />

inches taller, slimmer at the waist, and completely 'at<br />

ease'. It's America's most wanted tuxedo . . . (also available<br />

with peak lapels) ...<br />

TUXEDOS from $44.50<br />

Other single and double breasted tuxedos, full dress suit<br />

WILSON'S, C.J., of COURSE


Vesleyan Players To Present<br />

Oscar Wilde Play This Weekend<br />

"Importance Of Being Earnest"<br />

Opens 1948-4- 9 Dramatic Season<br />

If<br />

Bunburying is<br />

perfectly delightful"<br />

J<br />

In<br />

"The Importance Of Being Earnest'<br />

I<br />

114 tit - Hit<br />

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NOV. 5-- 6<br />

Merle Oberon<br />

Johnny Weismuller<br />

Robert Ryan "Tarzan and<br />

"Bcr'in Express" The Mermaids"<br />

SUNDAY AND MONDAY NOV. 7-- 8<br />

A Smash Stage And Screen<br />

Shew! Wonderful Entertainment!<br />

Direct From The Biggest Theatres<br />

In The Country! You'll Love It ! !<br />

I<br />

' n - v- l<br />

n - t i i<br />

; is', .<br />

:<br />

Earnest" for the<br />

homecoming alumni.<br />

The play will be staged at Willis auditorium three nights,<br />

inov. l), b, and IS Sophisticated satire will be presented in its best Oscar<br />

Wilde manner when <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>'s 1948-4- 9 dramatic season<br />

opens Friday with "The Importance of Being<br />

at K:lt p.m. Re<br />

served seats went on sale this <strong>Home</strong>-E- c Honorary<br />

morning at the cages in Gray<br />

chapel. Ticket sales will continue Initiates New Members<br />

through Friday afternoon.<br />

Alpha Alpha Kappa, home ec-<br />

Adopt English Accent<br />

onomics honorary initiated 15 new<br />

After a month of nightly prac- members at a banquet on Oct. 20.<br />

tices from 7 to 10:00. dress re- The initiates were: Helen Barhearsals<br />

and a final "speed test," bour, assistant professor of home<br />

the cast is ready to turn in a top-notc- h economics; Carolyn Bennett, Hel-<br />

performance. A speed pracen Collier, Ann Inman, Ruth Kam<br />

Mc-Dougatice<br />

is a rehearsal done as fast as meyer, ll,<br />

Emile LaBarre, Joan<br />

the actors can possibly do it. Prof.<br />

Nancy Newcomb, Mar-<br />

Donald Eyssen, director, heckles tha Tuttle, and Twila Wigton,<br />

the actors in order to prepare seniors; and Donna McFarland,<br />

them for any unexpected audi- Mary Jo Fraser, Sally Kreidler,<br />

ence distraction.<br />

and Marilyn Mangun, juniors.<br />

Several dress rehearsals were Guests of honor at the ban-<br />

necessary to accustom the actors quet were Mrs. Flemming, C. E.<br />

to their ninteenth century garb. Ficken, George Gauthier, H. E<br />

The last hurdle towards their hop Bigone, G. E. Wright, and Miss<br />

o'd for perfection was the acquir- Marjorie Smith, and Miss New this picture is filled with action Along with this number, the<br />

ing of a polished "high class," En-<br />

.<br />

glish accent.<br />

house , Jf and suspense, a rather obvious Strand is presenting a stage show<br />

I<br />

suspense, to<br />

of<br />

be dancers. Well,<br />

sure, like the split uJf<br />

we've seen<br />

ust about everything now!<br />

second before the steam shovel<br />

hits you as you are gazing ad- - Tuesday. Wednesday; Nov. 9. 10:<br />

i mirinclv at its work. What the If there is one thing that nau- -<br />

nrTT" J --<br />

I W-.T- V<br />

. .<br />

Pictuied above are 5<br />

will appear on the stage<br />

and Monday.<br />

of<br />

of<br />

thel7 lucious Hawaiian beauties who<br />

theSchinc's Strand theater Sunday<br />

Picldn' The Flicks...<br />

By COSMO CASEY<br />

Friday, Saturday; Nov. 5, 6: The main feature, a thing called<br />

Berlin Express is. another hang-ove- r from the "Them Damn<br />

Nazis" school of film production, not I thai ever thought that<br />

the Nazis were anything but damned; but since the war has been<br />

over for almost four years now, it seems to me that Hollywood<br />

could get away from this rather<br />

tiresome subject, my own mother . . . well, that's<br />

Of course, I must admit that another story,<br />

story amounts to is that such cele- - seates me it's a<br />

brities as Merle Oberon, Robert<br />

Ryan, and Charles Korvin made a<br />

desperate, somewhat fumbling at-<br />

tempt to save the life of a<br />

big-sh- ot<br />

German mediator, played by Paul<br />

Lukas. Naturally, for the sake of<br />

our future peace relations with<br />

sundry, tempestuous, fine-spirite- d<br />

countries, all ends well. The<br />

Gorman mediator is saved from a<br />

rather breathless death; the international<br />

criminal is put out of<br />

the way; there is enough<br />

flag-wavin- g<br />

for those who like- - that<br />

sort of thing; the Berlin blockade<br />

is lifted; Wallace is elected president<br />

(or are you still being misled<br />

by the capitalist press?); and<br />

so we all go home happy. My advice:<br />

For God's sake get some<br />

studying done!<br />

ALSO SHOWING: Tarzan and<br />

the Mermaids, starring a rather<br />

flabby looking Tarzan, who looks<br />

as though he's been sipping some<br />

thing a bit stronger than qqcoanut<br />

milk.<br />

Sunday, Monday; Nov. G, 7:<br />

Texas. Brooklyn and Heaven with<br />

Guy Madison and Diana Lynn<br />

sounds like a great deal of fun,<br />

if considerably inane. The most<br />

fascinating player in the picture,<br />

I think, though, is neither Miss<br />

Lynn nor Mr. Madison, but Florence<br />

Bates who plays a very<br />

motherly sort of pick-pockg- t. This<br />

would be close to my heart since<br />

I W i n7 I DOGHOUSE? J<br />

N WitGCt' F ROW TH6 PALW STUDDSO isies I<br />

ViV you' OP rHl NIATtv Hawaii t, I<br />

Y'il w" sj(S J Americas Best-love-<br />

v<br />

w<br />

d Greeting Cords<br />

151 lW 1 rTSL f BOOKSTORE<br />

i pi f lS y :<br />

"<br />

Ray Milland Ann Todd<br />

V i la Brooklyn<br />

Kijj JV sl,' AS THRILLING AS -- y''ji<br />

TUESDAY-WEDNESDA- Y. ..<br />

SO EVIL MY LOVE"<br />

Diana Lynn Ji 44 S. Sandusky St.<br />

NOV. 9-1- 0<br />

: nilswau<br />

Plus!<br />

Done Clark - in - "Embraceable You"<br />

weak-wille- d wo<br />

man. We have a prime sampling<br />

of her in So Evil My Love, starring<br />

Ray Milland, Ann Todd, and<br />

G'eraldine Fitzgerald. Throughout<br />

this exciting, very entertaining<br />

picture Miss Todd insists upon allowing<br />

herself to be dominated<br />

by the charms of Milland, who<br />

uses the unfortunate creature for<br />

his own evil ends. This, as the<br />

press-blur- b states, is the story of<br />

a woman's degeneration.<br />

The acting in this one is certainly<br />

better than average. Special<br />

mention ought to go to Gerald-in- e<br />

Fitzgerald who has never yet<br />

received a role equal to her talents,<br />

but always manages to turn<br />

in a first class performance. I<br />

swear, that woman fascinates me.<br />

Miss Todd, who made such a hit<br />

in The Seventh Veil but not since,<br />

is good, just good; and Milland is<br />

still very much Milland. (I'll be<br />

glad when we get, some more<br />

fresh faces on the screen; I mean<br />

faces that can act, not just faces.)<br />

Anyway, this is a pretty good<br />

picture, and you all have my permission<br />

to see it.<br />

ALSO SHOWING: Embraceable<br />

You, featuring Dane Clark and<br />

Geraldine Brooks. Another of the<br />

$5 REWARD<br />

Gold Tie Clasp.<br />

Beer Initials DIH:<br />

"April 2G, 1941" engraved on<br />

back. If found contact David<br />

Heyman, 40 <strong>University</strong> or<br />

Phone 4120. l,ost in or near<br />

Gray Chapel Dad's Day.<br />

Where Good Food<br />

And Good Friends Meet'<br />

Bob Cruik,hnk, Prop.<br />

;<br />

1 1 N. Sandusky<br />

r, GOOD FOOD<br />

esTo<br />

Velcome Alumni<br />

A great big "hello" will be extended<br />

to returning alums and<br />

parents of students this weekend.<br />

Welcome mats will be put out at<br />

all of the local Greek abodes,<br />

with an invitation to come on in<br />

and renew old acquaintances.<br />

Sigs Put on Spread<br />

About one hundred alums are<br />

expected at the Sig house this<br />

weekend. They will be given a<br />

buffet luncheon Saturday noon<br />

and dinner that night. A banquet<br />

on Sunday will conclude the fes<br />

tivities.<br />

Kay Sig Kavoris<br />

Last sight the Kappa Sig pledges<br />

entertained the Alpha Chi<br />

Omega pledges at a dinner. Next<br />

Tuesday, the Alpha Gamma Delta<br />

pledges are invited to the Kay<br />

Sig house for a dinner.<br />

The Kay Sigs and their dates<br />

had a Halloween hayride Oct. 30<br />

at Butler farm.<br />

Phi Taus Celebrate<br />

Twentieth Anniversary<br />

An open house celebrating the<br />

Phi Tau's twentieth anniversary<br />

will be held Saturday afternoon<br />

and evening. Many returning Phi<br />

Tau alumni will be present.<br />

Beta Fun House<br />

Beta's and their dates had fun<br />

last Saturday night at a Beta Fun<br />

house party. The Beta abode,<br />

under the supervision of social<br />

chairman Dan Ransom, was trans<br />

ferred into a fun house.<br />

Chinese Halloween<br />

ATO came up with a unique<br />

idea for a Halloween party last<br />

Saturday night. Complete with<br />

Chinese food and decoration, the<br />

ATOs and their dates enjoyed a<br />

Chinese Halloween.<br />

Chi Phi Party<br />

Chi Phi guys and their gals had<br />

lots of fun last Saturday night at<br />

a Halloween party at the Chi<br />

Phi house. Refreshments and<br />

dancing highlighted the evening's<br />

entertainment.<br />

Fiji Masqueraders<br />

Saturday nigbt the Phi Gams<br />

and their dates enjoyed a masquerade<br />

party at the house. There<br />

was dancing and refreshments<br />

The actives and pledges will<br />

entertain the alumni during the<br />

homecoming weekend.<br />

On Oct. 23 the Fijis held a serenade<br />

at the womens dorms. They<br />

also serenaded brother Ed Popoc-z- y<br />

who is a patient at the student<br />

hospital.<br />

Teke Talk<br />

Last Saturday the Tekes opened<br />

their social season with an autumn<br />

hay ride.<br />

Saturday night the Tekes will<br />

dine on turkey at a banquet given<br />

to welcome the returning<br />

alumni for <strong>Home</strong>coming. It will<br />

For<br />

In Todays Fashion<br />

, "A Lady Is Every Inch A Lady"<br />

Flowers Are One of The Most Important<br />

Means-o- f Furthering<br />

That Impression.<br />

Flowers By Gibson<br />

THE BLAIR-KELLE- Y CO.<br />

<strong>Home</strong> Furnishers and Decorators<br />

SURPLUS<br />

PORTABLE MICROSCOPES<br />

We offer a limited quantity of surplus portable microscopes<br />

for sale. These are all new, in original cartons and<br />

are offered at a fraction of original cost.<br />

Specifications: Overall height 8 inches, turret with<br />

three different powers. ,Will accept auxiliary eye-piec- e for<br />

higher powers desired. Fully adjustable lenses.<br />

These portable microscopes are offered subject to prior<br />

sale on the following terms: Price $9.00, includes shipping<br />

and packing charges. Check or money order should be sent<br />

with your order of S2.50 deposit, the microscope to be sent<br />

C.O.D. for balance. Any check received after quantity has<br />

been sold will be returned promptly.<br />

GIBSON PAGE CO. INC.<br />

Dealers in War Surplus<br />

BOX 1130, ROCHESTER, 2, N. Y.<br />

1 Seven<br />

ii Children<br />

Thanh Fraternities<br />

Seven Fraternities Have Adopted<br />

European Children Aid Plan<br />

"Thank you for your help and loving me so much,"<br />

writes (lie small French boy to his new American friends.<br />

Letters, such as this, postmarked from different parts of<br />

Europe, are coming to many of our fraternities. They overflow<br />

with words of thanks, and appreciation for the help and<br />

hope given by these fraternities<br />

to disillusioned war children in<br />

Europe.<br />

These children receive aid in<br />

the form of food, clothing, and<br />

medical care through the foster<br />

parent plan which in return receives<br />

money from different<br />

groups, such as our fraternities,<br />

who each adopt a child and pay<br />

for his care. The group gets the<br />

personal history of the child and<br />

begins a correspondence with<br />

him. All aid is given individual<br />

attention.<br />

Writes in French<br />

fraternities on our cam-- i<br />

pus have adopted this project.<br />

An eight-year-o- ld Italian boy, I<br />

Renzo Marino, is the ATO's fos-- !<br />

ter child. Renzo is a victim of po-li- o.<br />

The ATO's contributions enable<br />

him and his mother to live<br />

'underground and was killed in a<br />

Nazi camp during the war. Her<br />

mother works to support the fam<br />

ily. The Delt's contributions help i<br />

greatly to keep the small family<br />

going.<br />

"Aw, gee, the poor guy; he's a big-tim- e<br />

crook, but one swell Joe<br />

just the same see what I mean<br />

Bub?" brand of picture, designed<br />

to make you anti-capit- The Phi Psis are the foster par12-ycaroldents<br />

of a French boy,<br />

Michel Behuet. Michel's father<br />

was also in the underground, and<br />

was killed by the Gestapo. Michel<br />

is now living in a foster parent<br />

colony in Giel through the Phi<br />

Psi's aid.<br />

14-yearold<br />

Pierre Delmotte, a<br />

French lad will always remember<br />

the SAEs who have helped him<br />

see a brighter side of the world.<br />

The <strong>University</strong> of Wisconsin's<br />

SAE's have done the same for<br />

his brother. Pierre also lost his<br />

father in the war.<br />

The Sima Chi's little friend,<br />

be held at William<br />

Jacaue Pichon, calls them his<br />

St. church.<br />

I<br />

Phi Delts Open<br />

godfathers and writes often of<br />

Doors<br />

I<br />

his great appreciation. He now<br />

Sunday Oct. 31 the Phi Delts lives in an orphanage in France<br />

held their annual fall open house because his mother is unable to<br />

in honor of their new pledge care for him. His father, an un-<br />

class. Phi Delta Theta is looking derground leader, was killed in<br />

forward to . this <strong>Home</strong>coming the war.<br />

weekend festivities. They are op- The Sig Eps have just renewed<br />

al punishening their doors in welcome to their subscription for contribument.<br />

Fast entertainment, though. their returning alums and<br />

nine-yea- tions to r- help their old<br />

friends.<br />

Dutch friend, Johannes Pfen-<br />

IMA Weiner Roast<br />

nings. Johannes' mother works,<br />

Night Raids Bring<br />

The Independent Men's association<br />

sponsored a hayride which<br />

House Paint Jobs<br />

was followed by a weiner roast their dates for the evening. This<br />

Saturday night.<br />

climaxed a busy week-en- d for<br />

Paint Splattered fraternity and<br />

- --<br />

Alpha Sig Pledges Reign the Alpha Sigs.sorority<br />

houses were the result of The Alpha Sig pledge formal, SAEs Hold Buffet Supper<br />

a two-nig- ht exchange of paint by which was held last Saturday <strong>Home</strong>coming weekend will find<br />

college students last weekend. night was the first formal held at the Sig Alph house open to all<br />

Numerous fraternity 4 houses the house this semester and was alums and friends for the annual<br />

were painted Thursday night by restricted to pledges only. The get together. There will be a buf-<br />

a group ot college women, re- formal was highlighted by the fet .supper served and the fall<br />

portedly residents of Austin hall. fine music.<br />

meeting of alums and actives will<br />

Fraternity victims retaliated Fri An impromptu Halloween par- take place Saturday night.<br />

day night in brush-wieldin- a g ty was also held the following Last Saturday night the SAE's<br />

raid on six sorority houses. night. Ghos'ts and goblins were held a hayride and a moonlight,<br />

present with all the trimmings, picnic at brother Floyd Griffiths'<br />

such as masks, broomsticks, and farm north of Delaware.<br />

and through the help of the Sig<br />

Eps is able to support him and<br />

his little sister. His father was<br />

killed in the war.<br />

Send Christmas Packages<br />

The Alpha Sigs want to adopt<br />

a girl around 12, either French or<br />

German.<br />

These fraternities send packages<br />

for Christmas and other occasions<br />

in addition to their regular<br />

contributions. Each fraternity<br />

subscribes $180 which takes care<br />

of one child for a year. This expense<br />

is divided among the<br />

'<br />

Buckley Announces<br />

Price Reduction<br />

at the seashore where he can take<br />

! sun treatments for his malformed<br />

"Tickets for the <strong>Home</strong>coming<br />

I arm. . His mother writes the in- "Frolic" will be $1.50 per couple,"<br />

-'<br />

teresting letters the ATO's re John Buckley, student body so-<br />

ceive from him.<br />

cial chairman, announced last<br />

The Betas are glad they have week.<br />

some French experts, for their This represents a reduction of<br />

little European friend, John Woz-nia- n, $.25 from the price charged at<br />

expresses himself entirely the Registration varsity and is<br />

in. French. His, letters tell of his $.50 lower than the average<br />

eagerness to learn American ide-<br />

all-camp- us<br />

price charged for<br />

as and his ambition to come to dances last year.<br />

America some day.<br />

Father In Underground<br />

Ticket prices this year have<br />

A pretty little Dutch girl, Greet<br />

been reduced in accordance with<br />

ie Wijnands, is the Delt's charge, i "le P"1' OI lne Peni nuuem<br />

tro-- f,tv,r ,a n momhpr nf the government administration to<br />

keep all-campus<br />

functions<br />

within<br />

the range of every student.<br />

'<br />

.<br />

F.Oth A ALL-NE- W and<br />

Edition 1?:-- . -<br />

1<br />

ALL-VVOMDERF-<br />

UL!<br />

You<br />

Dan<br />

Order<br />

Tickets<br />

By<br />

MAIL<br />

Page 6 " '<br />

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

Wednesday, November 3, 1948<br />

Halloween Party<br />

HeldAiVeivilie<br />

A gala Halloween party was<br />

held in the recreation hall at<br />

Vetville Friday evening. One of<br />

the main events was the obstacle<br />

leading to the "rec" hall.<br />

Games, music & dancing formed<br />

the evening's entertainment. The<br />

couple" of the evening<br />

another feature attraction<br />

, course<br />

'<br />

j "sweetest<br />

i was<br />

J<br />

j chosen by the group. The winners<br />

were the son of Donna & Ray<br />

Etyner and the daughter of Mike<br />

' and Don Kiels. The babies both<br />

i<br />

'<br />

15 months old, made a charming<br />

. couple dressed in their "sleepers".<br />

Hillbilly music was furnished<br />

! by Lou Ruf, John Nixon, John<br />

' Brown, "Bugi" Beugger, and John<br />

I<br />

Woods.<br />

To wind up the Halloween<br />

' party, prizes were awa-de- d for<br />

j the.<br />

j costumes.<br />

most orginal and the funniest<br />

The cost of the costum-- j<br />

es was not to exceed 50 cents.<br />

Time Saved<br />

Trouble Saved<br />

Money Saved<br />

With Supplies From<br />

O K HARDWARE<br />

15 N. Sandusky Si.<br />

DONUT DEPOT<br />

Always Fresh -- Always Good<br />

Across From Campus<br />

TUESDAY NOVEMBER ih<br />

7 P.M. 9:30 P.M.<br />

WILLIS HIGH AUDITORIUM<br />

. 1r.7T 7""" TTCTTT<br />

AAV v ''F.fr r a- -<br />

r<br />

Th<br />

np<br />

LlJl?.<br />

ENTERTAINMENT CC K V- -<br />

puduc Y<br />

BY TH! A . V<br />

&<br />

.1 1<br />

Everywhere<br />

?o s<br />

pirpNAME BANDS A cS lV<br />

II Lit EACH MONTH' HiL<br />

NEW TICKET PRICES<br />

Advance Sale , $1.25<br />

Student Tickets (16 yrs. & under) 60c<br />

Tickets At The Door $2.00<br />

Tickets O" Sale At<br />

Tub - Midway - Hamburger Inn


RODNEY DOW<br />

1 1 i tt mn min 'ti'irrrr'f mfinn lifin it mttti inn irum<br />

NOW, REMEMBER YOUR<br />

fvNirsEE.R.'S, BOYS.' JA<br />

urn<br />

Lucicn DeLong has a new lipstick called WHIS- -<br />

TLE STOP. The case is actually a whistle and very<br />

useful in making noise at the home football games.<br />

Another different idia in lipsticks is KEYS TO<br />

BEAUTY which is put out by Arlene Rubinstein. This<br />

consists of four lipsticks and a mirror all held together<br />

on a chain.<br />

Also among this week's specials are Yardley's<br />

NEW LOTUS perfume and Max Factor's PAN<br />

STICK. Won't you stop in and look over these items<br />

today?<br />

Xtftt-Aw-- W wffww--<br />

Your courteous shopper<br />

'Something For The Girls<br />

- wym iptwwwiwi'w<br />

Look for<br />

the Magic Inset<br />

Your Coat of Arms<br />

Applied<br />

To Any Piece Of<br />

Jewelry<br />

if. n. mmm<br />

Jeweler<br />

Allen Hotel Bid".<br />

The famous insets nt the. base of the lira rup? in eal<br />

'Terma-lift- " Bra genrfy support your bust from helow<br />

never loss that support<br />

and wear.<br />

through countless nsv.-aslii-<br />

"Perma lift" Panties anri Bras e;<br />

Fa'-oril- America's<br />

Are available in our Corset Department now. Buy yuur<br />

today. Pric! $1.50 to $3.50<br />

Vinson's e. j, of mse<br />

--<br />

By Alex Cook<br />

i LOOK AT DAT PURDY ) S SAW 'Ef? fOIStT, ?6CH banners me CRew has'<br />

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

Wednesday, November 3, 1948<br />

Stylist Will Lecture<br />

On Clothing Careers<br />

Question Of The Week<br />

By JOYCE DRIVEH<br />

fas<br />

Along Sorority Row<br />

When we were walking down<br />

sorority row this week, our eyes thp hnmPrnminff finat th tnnno<br />

C?UAg,htuthuneAVly"aCqUired home . formal and Monnett 'day dinner<br />

of Alpha Chi Omega. will be the really outstanding<br />

You may have noticed that the sPGcial events for 1948-4- 9.<br />

,<br />

I<br />

bittersweet vines veiling the. re-por- Perhaps Alpha Chi's good ch<br />

were accented by Hawai-- ! r,,.t<strong>aH</strong>nn nn ,. io tn it<br />

ian palm trees; but then that was aWe ieadershiD. Martha Bine<br />

the week ot intormal parties, a serves as president this year,<br />

time when anything may happen. Jane Shanks and Joyce Ziegler,<br />

This rushing season was climax- secretaries; Ruth Sinnet, Treasured<br />

by pledging an outstanding er; and Peggy Lou Egan, pledge<br />

freshman group.<br />

trainer.<br />

A formal banquet for their new I As you may have noticed, ev-<br />

pledges and an open-hous- e for ery sorority is bragging about its<br />

Dad's day started their social pledges, so it was not surprising<br />

calendar off with much zest this , when they all reported cozies in<br />

year. Cozies, an open house for theiu honor were held this week,<br />

pledges, a fall dance and a Christ<br />

get-togethe- rs<br />

i These were held by<br />

'<br />

mas party will constitute this Alpha Xi Delta, Kappa Alpha The<br />

year's expected traditions. ta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Gam- -<br />

The<br />

41<br />

well-know- n rummage sale ma Phi Beta, Pi Beta Phi, Delta<br />

will also be held by the Alpha ' Delta Delta, Alpha Gamma'Delta,<br />

Chis with all proceeds going to j Chi Omega and Alpha Chi Ome-foreig- n<br />

i students. ga. Pledge banquets also kept<br />

Plans are already underway for j the freshmen in the limelight.<br />

One Just Cannot Think<br />

Of A Formal Without<br />

"A Lovely Girl"<br />

"Wearing "His" Flowers"<br />

Flowers By Gibson<br />

SHOPPING tlOTES- -<br />

I was wandering through the mammouth cosmetic<br />

department at the WINTER ST. DRUG store the<br />

other day and noted several terrific buys. Here is a<br />

--<br />

rug store that really has quality siippl tor the<br />

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

The first thing that caught my eye was a w'm-derf-<br />

Education Honorary<br />

Picks Now Members<br />

Alpha Alpha chapter of Kappa<br />

Delta Fi education honorary,<br />

voted on prospective members of<br />

the chapter at its opening meeting<br />

of the vear on Tuesday evn- -<br />

Those girls pledged during open<br />

rushing will also be honored.<br />

They are Carolyn lihoads, Alpha<br />

Gamma Delta; Mary Louise<br />

Gould, Alpha Xi Delta; Joan Fads come and go. but bangs<br />

Webb and Sally Townes, Delta never quite leave the scene. Their<br />

Gamma.<br />

femininity is bound to appeal to<br />

This year the sororities went<br />

all out for Dad's day. The girls'<br />

the male imagination. Although<br />

dads were greeted with open "College Joes" usually advocate<br />

houses after the game by the long bobs, they are beginning to<br />

Kappas, Tri Delts, Alpha Chis, resign themselves to the coeds<br />

and DGs.<br />

In the field of social service we<br />

and their scissor-ma- d sprees.<br />

find once again that many groups A brush of hair to shade her<br />

are rising to the occasion. Sever- forehead, or a feathery sweep on<br />

al sororities are acting as foster<br />

parents of war orphans. The girls her brow, tapering back with<br />

sponsoring these children are soft<br />

Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha<br />

Theta, Pi Beta Phi, and Delta<br />

Gamma. The Pi Phi's are going<br />

to entertain at Chillicothe Sunday.<br />

An Alpha Garnma Delta open<br />

house to introduce the new pledges<br />

to the campus and a tea held<br />

at the Kappa house where new<br />

pledges and Delaware alums met,<br />

were given during the week. A<br />

Halloween party for Alpha Gams<br />

and their dates on Oct. 29, an all<br />

campus Gamma Phi open house<br />

Oct. 29, and an open house to introduce<br />

the DGs pledge class Oct.<br />

31 will be featured this weekend<br />

along sorority row.<br />

Who said,' "When rushing business<br />

is over there will be no worries,<br />

fun or work for the<br />

ul<br />

new idea for deodorants. It's called STOP-ETT- E<br />

2nd it is a deodorant spray in an amaiing<br />

squeezable bottle. This anti perspirant works effec- Grapevine Tea Room<br />

tively and economically and it lasts for months.<br />

Open<br />

lltol&5to7<br />

15 N. Sandusky<br />

turn-ove- iffl<br />

You can get a pretty definite will he carry it out after election,<br />

fsftSil 'm<br />

answer from a woman on pract- if elected? Dewey is a more power<br />

Olive Berry, stylist from the ically any question except on the ful leader and thus would not be<br />

Simplicity Pattern company, will question, "Why do you think as much of a puppet of party pol-<br />

arrive on Campus Wednesday to Dewey (or Truman) should be our itics."<br />

conduct a full day of lectures and next president?" Dewey support- Along the same line Peggy Lou<br />

demonstrations.<br />

ers were a dime a dozen, but, Eagen, "Truman seems like a tool,<br />

I<br />

Miss Berry will discuss pattern when asked "Why should he in the way he gives speeches,<br />

'<br />

making with home economics<br />

win?", answers ranged vaguely makes blunders, and changes his<br />

i<br />

students in the morning; careers<br />

from "It's time for a change." To mind. Dewey has nothing to lose<br />

"I<br />

in clothing<br />

don't know what the<br />

with the home<br />

issues are, because, if his political career<br />

ec-<br />

but he's better<br />

onomics seminar group<br />

than Truman." were ended, he could still be a<br />

from 3 to<br />

To find Trumanites, a general leading attorney, therefore I be-<br />

4 p. m.; a style show, open to all paging throughout the dorms had lieve Dewey will do what he be-<br />

students, at the Tuh from 4:30 to to be resorted to. It seemed those lieves is right and disregard<br />

5:15 p. m.; and a talk before the backing Truman were merely anti machine pressure."<br />

<strong>University</strong> Women's club at 8 Dewey or pro-Rooseve- lt.<br />

Molly Morris favored Truman<br />

p. m.<br />

"Democrats have pledged them- because he tried to follow Roos-<br />

As director of the Simplicity selves to, and demonstrated a evelt's ideas and he's the father<br />

I rail Hairstyle Twin W New Senior company's education program for couageous liberalism to which the of Margaret.<br />

colleges, Miss I Features "Bangs" Women's Honorary<br />

Berry has traveled Republicans have occasionlly .<br />

to many universities, speaking given lip service. For instance,<br />

Ina Gorham, Charlotte Rouda-bus- h,<br />

vvnat is Twin w That is a and conducting demonstrations. the Democratic housing plan and<br />

and Ginny Votaw favor<br />

Have you considered a' Bang-up- " question asked of its members. So She also has complied a pamphlet, Marshall plan have been crippled<br />

Dewey because "He has done a<br />

party for this fall season? If for those of you who haven't "Fall Fashions and Futures," for by the 80th Congress ... To<br />

good<br />

date,<br />

job in New York, is a man<br />

so, here are a few hints. Philo- -<br />

heard of our organization, here clothing and textile students.<br />

Republicans have offered no<br />

of integrity, is tactful, and has<br />

anti-inflati- on cphy, as well as psychology are I ing, Oct. 26. Initiation of these<br />

the facts in a<br />

sound answers."<br />

the good sense to surround him-<br />

Yiutshell.<br />

majors all know that every cause<br />

claim Vivian Taylor and Ruth<br />

self with brilliant men that can<br />

newly-electe- d members will be must have an effect. Thus, since Twin W is an honorary for Foreign Language Krist.<br />

advise him<br />

held at Bun's on Tuesday evening Helena Rubinstein suggests that<br />

senior girls who have participated<br />

(Econ. 202 says Marshall plan is<br />

Nov. 23. . men love bangs, and we all know<br />

in WRA activities. The present Subject of Lecture inflationary . . .)<br />

members who were chosen at the Eugene K. Dawson will give<br />

that coeds are inclined to favor<br />

Marge Kibler, although a Dem-<br />

annual banquet last spring are the first alumni lecture of the ocrat, supports Dewey "because<br />

men, the specific effect is a soft Sue Basquin, Maxine Gammarn, year Friday at 4:10 p. m., in room he is a more capable administra-<br />

version of short hair.<br />

Betty Hagemeyer, Lucy Herrett, 30 of Slocum library. His subtor as has been demonstrated by<br />

Hil-lie- r,<br />

Betty Hil.emon, Mary Anne ject will deal with foreign lan his success in New York. I favor<br />

Mc-Carro- ll,<br />

Helen Krumm, Mary guages.<br />

Dewey's foreign policy. Truman's<br />

Marilyn Sager, Char<br />

Spacht, Jane Waring, and Claire<br />

Woehling. Dorothy Hadden is the<br />

faculty advisor.<br />

r curls has made her<br />

THE<br />

number one attraction in the<br />

male hearts.<br />

CS1ESTE<br />

BECAUSE ALL OVER AMERICA MORE 'MILLIONS<br />

!<br />

OF SMOKERS ARE ASKING FOR<br />

rn-a- ll fields which is<br />

so necessary in such an important<br />

position."<br />

COED GIRL SCOUT DELEGATE<br />

Martha Jane Thomas, will attend<br />

the annual conference of the<br />

Kenowva region of the Girl<br />

Scouts of America to be held at<br />

Dr. Dawson was graduated from j civil rights idea sounds; fine, but j Deshler-Wallic- Columbus k hotel<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> in 1930 and now<br />

teaches French and German at<br />

John Adams high school in Cle-- 1<br />

veland.<br />

FOR YOU AND YOUR DATE<br />

The Best<br />

HEW PLAID DRESSES<br />

In<br />

In<br />

Steaks and Chops<br />

Woolens and Cottons<br />

CENTRAL RESTAURANT<br />

THE SMART SHOPPE<br />

29 N. Sandusky<br />

EiFIELD IS DUILDiU<br />

A 0 FACTORY<br />

x<br />

4 4AAA-J- V<br />

oon our newest factory will be '<br />

!<br />

p-!w-<br />

-J- TZl?Z -"<br />

A<br />

( H<br />

taking its place in the Chesterfield t ' " ? "i'lf1 " ' v<br />

sky line in Durham, N. C, where the ZL2 j<br />

Chesterfield factory group is already t 'Vv?'<br />

"A city within a city."<br />

j<br />

A I<br />

I A<br />

With the addition of this modern<br />

factor', efficient in every way, Chest- - I<br />

- y s<br />

v v<br />

" Li I Afi . ? erfield will continue to keep smokers i I<br />

$<br />

wff AH illill i &<br />

from coast to coast well supplied with ; s<br />

-- J he cigarette that i- s- i If<br />

Aj k j faf l J<br />

SO MILD THEY SATISFY MILLIONS jfiU, liyV- -<br />

SO MILD THEY'LL SATISFY YO- U- J (F f J I i<br />

4L tmt<br />

h!--- ;,;,." 'If<br />

'Jfi:t . 1<br />

l,ggett & myers<br />

tobacco co.<br />

L'V 'J<br />

. - -J- -r 1 luAKt 1 TF 3<br />

V W "<br />

illpfllliif? BBMBSM.<br />

mm 7mmi F:mMm& mm .i<br />

Copyripltf T trjr.r'<br />

MAKE V(2 ULcfe THE LCcLIMEL CIOAf?ETTC.<br />

, 4JLJk4i4 AJt J. A I A & A JK t , 4l tlUltiMtitt.MlttlUUltllltll<br />

tk4t t 4A t44 1144444A444 44 t 14<br />

H<br />

!<br />

II<br />

j)


Page 8<br />

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

Wednesday, November 3, 1948<br />

Summing Up<br />

The World News<br />

Delaware. O. Nov. 3 . . . Moscow<br />

. . . Soviet Premier Josef Stalin<br />

accused the United States and<br />

Britain of seeking a new war,<br />

but said their efforts were doomed<br />

to "ignominious failure." He<br />

named Winston Churchill as<br />

main instigator" of a new war.<br />

Churchill's "pupils in agression,"<br />

whom he did not name, will be<br />

rejected by their people just as<br />

has been Churchill, Stalin said.<br />

Could he have been speaking of<br />

Harry Truman?<br />

Lima . . . Radio Arequipa reported<br />

that five regiments of army<br />

troops have revolted in southern<br />

Peru, seized the country's<br />

second city of Arequipa, and proclaimed<br />

a provisional government.<br />

The radio said the revolt<br />

was designed to overthrow the<br />

government of President Jose'<br />

Luis Bustamente Rivero because<br />

it permits unhampered activities<br />

by the leftist Aprista party. Government<br />

troops are in movement.<br />

Berlin . . '. The official Soviet<br />

army newspaper indicated Russia<br />

will reject the Western offer<br />

to settle the Berlin blockade crisis<br />

outside the United Nations on<br />

the basis of the same formula vetoed<br />

by the Soviets in the security<br />

council. The paper said the for- -<br />

mula was dictated by the United<br />

States and was "completely unacceptable"<br />

to Russia.<br />

United Nations . . . Britain and<br />

China asked the Security council<br />

to consider imposing economic<br />

and diplomatic sanctions against<br />

Israel unless she gives up<br />

(0 cm pp tio<br />

EKE 1? ft M;<br />

Beer-sheb- a<br />

newly-captvire- and other d<br />

territory in Southern Palestine.<br />

Paris . . . Representatives of the<br />

five-natio- n Western European<br />

union announced they have<br />

agreed on the principle of an "Atlantic<br />

defense pact" linking trje<br />

Continent with the United States<br />

and Canada. An issued communique<br />

said Britain, France, Belgium,<br />

Holland, and Luxembourg are in<br />

"complete unity" concerning the<br />

pact. A force of 2,000 soldiers and<br />

police forced 100 Communist-le- d<br />

strikers to surrender the Alouette<br />

mine at Montoeau-les-Mine- s in<br />

central France after a night long<br />

siege. Officials described the action<br />

as the biggest military operation<br />

in the month-ol- d coal strike.<br />

At-tle- London . . . Prime Minister e<br />

announced the Labor government's<br />

determination to nationalize<br />

Britain's steel industry when<br />

he introduced a bill in Commons<br />

Thursday.<br />

Washington . . . U.S. Attorney<br />

McGohey filed a six-cou- nt criminal<br />

information charging the Ultramar<br />

Skyway Service, Inc., of<br />

New York, and its treasurer,<br />

Humberto Tormos, with advertis-<br />

York-Puert- ing and selling New o<br />

Rico plane tickets below rates<br />

approved by the Civil Aeronautics<br />

board. The Navy disclosed it<br />

plans a fleet of 28 high-spee- d<br />

aircraft carriers capable of laun-<br />

long-rang- ching the heavy and faster e<br />

attack planes now being developed.<br />

The program could be<br />

brought to completion rapidly in<br />

an emergency.<br />

Newark, N. J. . . . The sensation<br />

packed murder trial of red-haire- d<br />

Mrs. Anna Seamans Powers<br />

came to a dramatic end when the<br />

39-year-okl<br />

waitress suddenly<br />

lost her iron composure and<br />

pleaded guilty of manslaughter in<br />

the killing of Newark Police Cap-ta- m<br />

Thomas J. Rowe.<br />

Pol. Adv.<br />

x<br />

j<br />

French Troops<br />

, "<br />

- k V<br />

,&<br />

1<br />

3 ,i ft ! 5 Si<br />

if s<br />

Helmeted guards patrol a bridge that runs over a number of mine<br />

pits in the St. Etienne sector o France. The idle mines, guarded<br />

by troops, symbolize the genera) situation throughout French coal<br />

fields, as government troops and guards took over mines from<br />

Communist-le- d strikers. Some 350,000 miners are involved.<br />

'<br />

''"' 1<br />

.<br />

I r<br />

Flying Camel Gives Berlin Youngsters a Lift<br />

vm<br />

.<br />

1<br />

1<br />

. n<br />

n "t j" r<br />

. ,<br />

a r t H .<br />

- ' "<br />

- '<br />

i-<br />

- ... V.<br />

- I'll . .<br />

' ,'-- -<br />

--'j n i -<br />

i , : .<br />

5-year-old<br />

At Tempelhof Airport in Berlin, Clarence, the flying camel, takes Susanne Moritz,<br />

German girl, for a ride. Lt. Donald Butterfield o Montgomery, W. Va., who owns and operates<br />

Clarence as a diversion from his Berlin airlift d uties, gives the little lady an assist. Five thousand<br />

ragged children all but mobbed Clarence as he arrived by C-- 54 with<br />

.<br />

1<br />

'<br />

-- - ,-<br />

New Look for<br />

-<br />

Wftfl<br />

4<br />

-tir-if<br />

in" -<br />

Three volunteers advance on a flaming pit fired by 200 gallons of<br />

gasoline Wright-Patterso- at the n Air Force Base at Daylon, O., to<br />

fire-fighti- ng test various types of clotl.ing. The new lightweight<br />

aluminum foil suit at left was found to give the most comfort and<br />

protection. Designed by Aero-Med'- the Air Materiel Command's al<br />

Laboratory, it reflects the heat and helps the wearer retaiu a<br />

relatively low body temperature.<br />

FRESHMEN!<br />

X Vote For<br />

AL TUCKER<br />

Guard Mines<br />

-- a Christmas present for them.<br />

Fire Fighters<br />

'<br />

7<br />

' "<br />

For President of the Freshman Class<br />

Next Tues. Nov. 9th<br />

f J'<br />

-<br />

if-<br />

--<br />

I<br />

"<br />

After<br />

--....-<br />

7000 pounds of food and candy<br />

1<br />

j<br />

. . f - -<br />

New Stamp Honors Poppy Founder<br />

: V<br />

i<br />

.<br />

I<br />

This new three-ce- nt stamp honors Moina Michael, who founded<br />

the memorial poppy tradition in America. First day issue sals<br />

will be in Athens, Ga., Nov. 9. The color of the stamp will be<br />

announced later.<br />

Suss xU<br />

The Brawl<br />

Hot Ziggety!<br />

if<br />

All these happy faces peering<br />

through the door of the Kemble<br />

school m Utica, N. Y., could<br />

mean but one thing the<br />

school-hou- se<br />

caught fire. It didn't burn<br />

down, but fire damaged a big<br />

part of the roof, and so school<br />

was out temporarily. What<br />

could be nicer!<br />

I V<br />

thiee-gallo-<br />

The ground crew, speeding at 75 miles per hour, sends up a n<br />

can of yas lo endurance flyers Dick Ricdel and Bill Harris<br />

over the Palm Springs, Calif., airport. Ricdel is seen in the doorway<br />

of the plane. The flyers weie forced down by engine trouble in<br />

their first effort to break ihe world's endurance mark, but hope<br />

now ta remain aloft for 42 days.<br />

"Nil,<br />

If " 14 .<br />

Y. l:i t .<br />

Mr<br />

n<br />

3 M<br />

'iJ3 aUii .,it<br />

Human<br />

These ill and undernourished German children are being evacuated<br />

from Berlin to rest homes in the British and American zones. First<br />

group of some 8000 children, aged an in.'.rm to be moved, they<br />

will bJ assured better' medical care and special diet during the<br />

winter months. Here, a British air lift pilot straps the safety belts<br />

of his young charges' inside a Dakota cargo- - plane before takeoff<br />

Meet the Grand Champ<br />

1 1<br />

This glamorous bovine, Col. Raleigh Goldust, is a two-tim- e winner.<br />

She was picked grand champion of the<br />

All-Ameri- can Junior<br />

Jersey<br />

Show in Columbus, O., and also was awarded a first-pri- ze blue<br />

ribbon in the 5-year-old<br />

class<br />

competition. Posing with the colonel<br />

V. is Peggy Mae Sample, 13, of Rutherford, Tenn,<br />

7<br />

All Over Now<br />

r -<br />

Well, It was fun while it lasted,<br />

hut it's nil river now. and these<br />

charming politicos from Cypress<br />

Gardens. Bla., can put away<br />

their campaign hats for another<br />

four years. Marjorie Teller wore<br />

. the Democratic donkey, while<br />

Willa Worthington sported the<br />

GOP elephant<br />

Pol. Adv.<br />

Cargo<br />

Legion Chief<br />

1<br />

56-yearold<br />

S. Perry 3rown,<br />

Beaumont, Tex., building contractor<br />

and veteran of both<br />

World Wars, is the new national<br />

commander of the. American<br />

Legion. He was elected as<br />

the candidate of the Legion's<br />

"old guard" at the 30th annual<br />

convention in Miami, Fla.<br />

FOR GREENER PASTURES<br />

VOTE FOR<br />

LARRY GREEN<br />

FRESHMAN CLASS PRES.<br />

4 A.<br />

Truman Holds<br />

Early Lead<br />

Led by a surprising Harry Tru<br />

man, the Democratic party wa<br />

well on its way to victory in tht<br />

congressional elections and held t<br />

substantial lead in the presidential<br />

cont st at 7:10 a.m. on bas.<br />

of incomplete returns.<br />

The Democratics had already<br />

won control of the house and the<br />

trend appeared to be much th<br />

same in the senate. With 17 senators<br />

already elected, the Demo<br />

' crats will hold 54 seats in the up<br />

per house if they can hold then<br />

early morning strength.<br />

Truman, after going right ou<br />

in front, held a lead of more thai<br />

a million popular votes through<br />

out the night, and at 7:10 a.m<br />

was leading by approximated<br />

that amount.<br />

The election of the next presi<br />

dent would go to the House o;<br />

Representatives, if either candi I<br />

date failed to receive the neces j<br />

sary 266 lectoral vots. In this casr<br />

Gov. .Strom Thurmond, the Dixie -<br />

crat candidate might hold the ke<br />

to a candidates victory. He poss !<br />

esses the remainder of the elector<br />

dl votes.<br />

At 7 a.m., the Democrats hat1<br />

already won the house with a ma<br />

jority of 218 seats. They were<br />

leading Republican opponents- - J<br />

I<br />

43 other districts.<br />

With 32 Senate seats at stake j<br />

three Republicans had been elec j<br />

ted with seven leading their op<br />

ponents. On the other hand, lh<br />

Democrats were elected and eighV<br />

were leading. The senate' has Zl<br />

GOP and 30 Dmocratic holdovers<br />

National Chairmen<br />

Admit Party Errors<br />

Both Democratic and Republi J<br />

can national chairmen admitted ii<br />

final election statements thai<br />

their parties made campaign mis j<br />

takes but each insisted his sid '<br />

would win anyway.<br />

Democratic Chairman J. How<br />

ard McGrath said his team's wors<br />

mistake was "the effort within thi-part-<br />

y<br />

to tear down the Presided<br />

months ago." He referred to the<br />

ditch-Truma- n movements befort-th- e<br />

national convention.<br />

GOP Chairman Hugh Scott said<br />

the Republicans made ?rrjZt'1s<br />

in "not carrying home to it- -<br />

'<br />

people the tremendous padding-- ,<br />

the government payroll durinj-th- e<br />

pre-electi- on months."<br />

He saki<br />

the administration in this penor<br />

added "some 529 people a day t.<br />

the government's civilian payroll."<br />

Delegates Here For<br />

Red Cross Meeting<br />

Over sixty delegates from <strong>Ohio</strong>'<br />

State, <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Witen-- j<br />

berg, Dayton, Cincinnati, and<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> met here Saturday I<br />

at the first quarterly meeting ol ,<br />

the <strong>Ohio</strong> Council of Red Cros :<br />

I<br />

Sollege Units.<br />

j President Flemming delivered<br />

, the opening address to the coun '<br />

I cil stating, "I am not only faci<br />

1<br />

nated but thrilled at the wark<br />

going on among the colleges of<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> active in Red Cross work.<br />

The <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> administration<br />

is in favor and enthuastic<br />

about the work being done by the<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> Council. We will do every- -<br />

thing we can to help in this very<br />

worthwhile program."<br />

The Rev. Sheridan H. Bell of<br />

William Street Methodist church<br />

was elected Chapter Advisor to<br />

the <strong>Ohio</strong> Council. Bell serves<br />

Chapter College Units advisor to<br />

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

The Council international panel<br />

project will be completed by February.<br />

It will receive widespread<br />

circulation throughout Europe<br />

this year to various universities,<br />

depicting college life in America.<br />

<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> is not working on<br />

the fourth section which will feature<br />

campus-communit- y relations<br />

and activities with Red Cross<br />

1<br />

1

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!