renwick hoggnamed brainerd president

Transcription

renwick hoggnamed brainerd president
^ufuuta^
N
CIRCULAIION 3,500
FOUNDED IN 1870
EASTON, PA., FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1934
VOL. 60. No. 38.
Price F^ve Centa
RENWICK HOGG NAMED BRAINERD PRESIDENT
KAPPA TAU AND
Slantz Talks in Convocation
DR. W.HALL SPEAKS BRAINERD REVISES POUCY
RISE OF EDUCATION PHIA.S.D.
EFFECT MERGER MARQUIS DEBATERS
On Placing College Qraduate IN PHI BETA KAPPA
SYSTEM DESCRIBED
TO CONTEST BATES
OF SELECTING OFFICERS
INITIATION MEETING
IN TALKBY LEWIS
IN KIRBY SATURDAY
Final Arrangements Have Been
Completed Under Guidance
of M r . R. C. H o r t o n
The movement to reorganize the
local Alpha Omicron c h a p t e r of
April First M a r k s C e n t e n tho national Phi Kappa Tau fniternial of P e n n s y l v a n i a
nily cufminatod
in the
definite
absorption of tho . \ l p h a Sigma
Public Schools
Dolta fratornity.
During tho nast fow months,
CITES H O B A R T PLAN
plans have boon evolved and arrangcment.s
mado to reestablish
Mentions Recent Liberalization
and reaffirm
the
national I'hi
Curriculum; Abolishment
Kappa T a u fratornity a t Lnfayette
*
of B.S. Degree
Collogo.
Tho movement undor
Mr. R. Clayton Horton, of PortDr.
William
Mather
Lewis land, who has been commissioned
spoked u r i n g convoc.ition Wednes- by t h e national organization in
day on oduc.-ition, both in tho pub- this m a t t e r , has boon progressing
lic .schools and in colleges.
until at present
arrangements
On April first, .stated Presidont have boon mado for tho Phi Kappa
l.owis, educators will bo celebrat- Tau lo tako abode in lho house
ing tho beginning of the public formerly occupied by the Alpha
school sy.stem in Pennsylvania, one Sigma Delta Club on i^uUivan's
h u n d r e d years ago. It is .surpri.s- Luno.
Negotiations havo been
ing t h a t in so few years, a .system oompletod by which all mombors
.'Uch as is in operation in Penn.syl- of tho A. K. D. will bo initialed
v:mia could develop with all its Phi Kappa Tau.
intricacies and .specialized branchSpecial a r r a n g e m e n t s havo boon
es.
At present there a r e , continued mado with tho collego authorities
Dr. Lewis, over 1200
public to tho effect that all studonts bewith t h e new
schools ill t h e stato of
Penn.syl- lOming affiliated
will
be
relea.sed
vania, devoted t o tho education of organization,
more than .'>00,000 .students. Thnt .'rom tho dormitories and allowed
thi.s development could tjiko placo to tako abode in the now houso.
Profos.sor Fred W. .Slantz, Director of tho Placement Bureau,
spoke in Convocation today on tho
problems and prospects of placing
tho college g n u l u a t o . Tho text of
his talk is as follows:
The Jamos Lee P a r d e e Placement B u r e a u is organized to form
a point of c o n t n i c t between E m ployers and Lafayotto mon.
F o r satisfactory placement wo
must know tho individual and tho
o p p o r t u n i t y ofTored.
Accurate
records of both aro essential.
• 1. The Individual.
Employers a r e interested i n : 1.
j schol.-istic a c h i e v e m e n t ; 2. .\ctiviU i e s ; 3. Special .abilities a n d on| j^).„j.jj,j.^
i ' , „ .^ ,.„„pp,, ^f t j , ; , .^^^ ,^.p ^^^^^
tho g r e a t a d v a n t a g e of knowing
o u r men. Thoro is an u r g e n t need
for
moro
otToctive
guidance.
[ V o u n g people, ospociiilly students,
wish to know for what c a r e e r thoy
ari' best suited. Ono can no moro
a n s w e r :iccurately than lo advise
the individual whom he .should
marry,
T h e r e is no such thing as "Vo^ cational P r e d e s t i n a t i o n . "
I Changing n.-iture and growth of
individual is tho rejuson for this.
I Thero a r e howovor certain factor.-'.
New
Englanders
Have
a
Most Impressive Forensic Record
STONE
WILL
PRESIDE
which havo lo do with success.
Thoy ;iro ability t o perform which
is directly dependent on t r a i n i n g
and o.\porience.
Interest and e n t h u s i a s m — W o r k
for its own sake gives g r e a t e r sati.-faction, security, .soTf expression,
and pride in cniftsmanship, rewards.
Monetary r e t u r n s .ire very important.
High salaries and bonuses aro
paid heads of banks and corporations, railroad presidents,
insurance oxoculivos, etc.
Largo as
they may bo thoy roproscnt only a
small por cent of total business.
Mr. Ea.stman, coordinator of
Railroads
and
Transportation
persuasively urged imjiropriety of
high executive salaries in
such
times as those.
High salaries a r o said to produce Income T a x . Do t h o y ?
Why not share with lho omplnyoos who aro directly
interested?
Only fair quoslion -ubout .salaries
in choosing an occupation is how
much of what I really want to do
will il c o m m a n d ?
A satisfactory a n s w e r with rospoct to tho investment of cxci'i^(continued on page f o u r )
Eight Formally A d m i t t e d to
H o n o r a r y S o c i e t y in Kirby Hall Tuesday
OUTSTANDING
HONOR
Evangelical League
To Assemble Sunday
.•\ll members of tho League
of Kvangelical Studonts and
anyone else interested in its
work a r e urged to attond
a
mooting to bo held on Sunday
afternoon in t h e Earl Orwig
room, third floor of Brainerd
llall. The mooting will
be
opened a t 2:30 o'clock, with
William Flogo presiding. Important m a t t e r s a i o to bo di.scussed.
Clerk of the Faculty Traces HisLafayette Team of Three Men
tory of Local Chapter:
Will Argue Question of
Welcomes New Men
Radio Control
T'
,
, ,
Tuesday nftornoon in tho Kirhy
Tomorrow evening the LafayCouncil Room the Lafayotto Chapette debating te.im w'H moot
t o r of Phi Beta Kappa held a
prob.nbly ,ts most fonnidable opformal initiation for eight
now
ponent whon Liifayotto and Bates
members, nt which Profe.ssor WilCollogo dobalo tho que.stion, " R e liam .S. Hall, Clork of the Fiiculty,
solved: That tho L'nited
Stjitos
nddrossod tho g r o u p , recalling the
should adopt the essential
feat u r e s of lho British system
of
hi.story of the founding
of
tho
r.'idio control and o p e r a t i o n . " Laschola.stic fratornity,
its ideals
fayette will defend the negative.
and purposes, .ind especially tho
Hates has been recognized for
hi.story of the c h a p t e r h e r e .
yoars a.s developing some of the
F o u r juniors and five seniors
finest dob.'iting loam.^ in the counworo initiated a t the mooting: M.
try and last yoar won the chamW. Bergen, L. 1'. J o h n s o n , Donidil P a t h o l o g i s t o f E a s t o n H o s pionship of tho Eastern Inlorcol
pital Traces History
.MacDougall, and J . K. Riddle of
, . ^ r, , , ,
. . ,,
tho cliLss of l'.»34; and R. E . J o h n li giato Debate League.
At t h e
of Syphillis
present timo Bales stands a t the
.son, L. L. .Martz, W. O. Sassaman,
hoad of tho League, having won
and W. R. Tiiinsuo of tho cla.ss of
Dr. Frederick O. Zillosson, chief
every encounter without tho loss
1!)35. F'ormal initiation was held
of oven ono judges voto. It is
pathologist
of the Easton Hospital,
first,
with Profos.sor Miller D.
with a groat deal of intore.st t h a t i
in ono c e n t u r y is remarkabio.
.Sloovor presiding, after which tho spoke boforo tho Lafayotto Protho coming discussion is viewed, j
Lafayotto Colloge
it.self
was
p r o u p roces.sod for ;i short timo Medical Society on " T h e History
Sinco the subject is vory timely j
established boforo there was any
while coffee a n d cakes were serv- of Syphilis."
and
because
this
is
tho
first
visit
(lublic system in tho .state.
ed. T h e meeting then convened
Dr. Zillosson began his locture
ol
Bates
college
in
several
years
|
Improvement Noted
again lo listen t o Profe.ssor Hall's
with profuse illustrations of tho
i^ is expected that thoro will be
Colleges in tho country a r c , on
Jiersonal reminiscences concorning
case histor>' in the stages of tho
a largo attendance a t this deb:ito. <
the whole, making improvements,
lho Lafayotto c h a p t e r and his disgrowth of the disease. Beginning
Team Selected
.stated President Lewis. Lafayette T w o M e n W i l l B e P l e d g e d
cussion of tho national hi.story of
hi.s historical n a r r a t i v e by s t a t i n g
Daniel Golden, captain of this '
College is among those institutions
Phi Beta Kappa.
at Meeting of Society
t h a t probably the first written reyoars team, Harold Sponcor, and ;
with progressive intentions.
The
Dr. Hall opened his talk with a cord of tho disease is found in a
TomorrowGlon Tischor havo been choson t o F o u r N e w M e n A r e C h o s e n C h a n g e s D e a l W i t h
Intrasystem in opor.ation by which a
discu.ssion of tho "fifty f o u n d e r s " Chinese document dated 1500 B.
represent Lafayotto in this
do.'tudent must petition for cdntinuby Essay Competition to
mural and Cross-Counof t h e society, its stablishment iit C. which describe.; a m e r c u r y cure
According to Donald W . Moyors, bale. Tho decision is to be rened residence in college after the
William and Mary in 177G, its for a soreness which is believed
Complete Team
t
r
y
M
a
n
a
g
e
r
s
dered
hy
the
votes
of
two
Judges
completion of his .second year is IPresident of Kappa Phi Kappa, tho
growth
Ihrough tho efforts of to havo been .syphilis. Tho Bible
one stop in tho advancement of 'iducational organization will hold a r d tho audience. Elton E. .Stone,
Elisha Parmeloe, a n d its rapid b u t also contains roforonces to runELECTIONS ARE
NEAR
its annual banquet on Wednosday, principal of tho Easton High | R E P R E S E N T B U L G A R I A
colloge oducation.
careful expansion to include iit the ning sores iind othor forms
of
School, and David B. Skillman, |
President Lewis also mentioned April eleventh.
present time a b o u t 55,000 living skin lesions which by their dej
c
c
r
e
t
a
r
y
of
tho
Board
of
T
r
u
s
'
Tischer,
H
a
n
d
,
Mechanik,
Butcher,
Hotol
Ka.ston
is
t
h
e
tentative
l.afayctte's new liberalization ol
T h e speaker also de- scription, doctors havo tho belief
Constitution Specifies Spring Elec- members.
Brll, Golden and E d g a r
the curriculum t h a t has aroused location for the yearly festivity t i e s of Lafayetto Colloge, are t o '
scribed the g o v e r n m e n t and ad- was this same disease..
tion
Must
Take
Place
be
tho
two
judges.
Compose
Squad
so much comment as a n o t h e r in- to which both active a n d honorary
ministration
of
tho
fraternity
During April
Dr. Zillosson selected various
Friday ovoning, .March 2.3, the i
- . . . . Ji
cident of the progrossivinos.'? of .Tiembers of the educational group
afl'nirs, and wont on to e n u m e r a t e
i r e invitod.
affirmative team will oppose Yale
^V moans of a competition held
tho college.
some of the renowned mon who historical figures and showed t h a t
Piosidont
William
Swoet
anfrom what has been
recorded
G.
L.
Kappa Phi Kappa has for sever- University a t Yalo, d e b a t i n g the ' d u r i n g the pa.st month,
have belonged to Phi Beta Kappa.
about their lives and habits wc
Yalo al.so stands I Tischor, -.U,, J. .M. C. Hand, '.35, nounced today that tho list of
Hobart Plan
al years functioned as a c e n t e r of 5amo subject.
Personal
Reminiscences
points neces.sary for membership
may conclude t h a t thoy wero vic'ntercst for .students in tho Depart- very high in tho League and this H. K. Mochanik, '3(>, and J . R in K. R. T. has been altered.
Continuing, Dr. Lewis spoke of
selected
to
T u r n i n g to tho m a i n portion of tims of this dreaded malady. He
ment of Education, a n d ha.s boon mooting .-.hould prove of g r o a t in- Butcher, '."{(J, were
Tho chiingos made in tho point his talk. Dr. Hall rehilod his romin- stated t h a t if J u l i u s Caosar had
the Hobart College plan.
Hobart
undor tho faculty advi.sorship of toresl. Daniel (Joidon, Bernard comploto tho dologation whicli isystem are as follows:
proposes to divide the
yoar up
isconcos as a member of the La- not mot his untimely death a t the
Profossor t^arl W. Ziegler, head Hollring, and Glen Tischor will to attond the Model League of NaThe oftico of I n t r a m u r a l .Mana- fayotte Chaplor.
into two equal semesters, in order
make tho j o u r n e y lo Yalo as tho tions to bo hold al Bucknell Uni"There
wero hands of B r u t u s he would havo
of tho d e p a r t m e n t .
thnt tho examinations m a y occur
'earn representing Lafayotto Col- versity, .April thirteenth and four- g e r is a major oflico and shall ro- fivo c h a p t e r m e m b e r s b o r e , " ho died in a short time of syphilis.
Meyers
al.so
stated
t
h
a
t
an
eleccoivo 8 points. The J u n i o r In- continued, "whon on Sept. 5, 1889, H e n r y VIII, Quoon Elizabeth, and
.•it tho end of the term, r a t h e r than
tconth.
logo.
t r a m u r a l Manager shall receive 4 G:imma c h a p t e r of
.•iftor Christmas. The first term tion of officers for n e x t yoar would
Oregon System Not Used
Penn.sylvania Nero a r e some more hi.storical
In o r d e r to gain thoso positions
al.so
bo
held
in
tho
n
e
a
r
future.
would commence right aftor L a b o r
Theso two debates will conclude oach man had t o write iin ossay of points, and the Sophomoro Assist- was founded a t Lafayotte.
T h e y examples of persons afllictod with
Ray
Wachter,
'.'i4,
is
tho
present
Day and continue until Chri.stmas,
tho season in debating insofar as not ovor two Ihousimd words upon a n t 2 points. These points a r e not woro Dr. Francis A. March, Prof. this insidious malady.
vice
presidont,
and
J
a
c
k
Sassacumuhitive.
tho examination.s occurring before
Bringing his discussion up to
tho Eastern Intercollegiate
Do- ono of the following topics:
Addison Ballard, Dr. J a m e s W.
Tho defeated m a n a g e r of t r a c k .Mooro, Prof. Franci.-; A. March, tho present day. Dr. Zilles.sen
tho holidays. Then there would be man, '34, is t r e a s u r e r .
bi.to
League
is
concerned.
By
1.
Bulgaria
and
hor
minority
Tomorrow,
nt
four
o'clock.
J
a
c
k
gets 4 p o i n t s ; if ho becomes Man- J r . , iind Dr. Robert B. Youngman. spoke of tho many sources of ina vacation until near the end of
mutual consent both of theso en.iger of Cross Country, he shall Of the twenty-six members of the fection t h a t are prevalent today
J a n u a r y , and tho second t e r m Kolasky and tho Reverend H. M. • o u n t e r s will be held using the ' claims.
Prentiss
will
be
pledged
lo
the
2. Tho effect of the withdniwal
Indoor t r a c k faculty lit t h a t time, cnly
would la.st until Juno.
In this
formal stylo of debating.
Tho I from tho Loiigue of J a p a n ' s rela- loceivo (j instead.
two and told how t h e y can bo minimizmen shall receive 1 point a year, woro members of Phi Beta Kappa.
way the colloge would avoid hav- ICappa Phi Kappa g r o u p .
Oregon
.System
of
cross-oxaminKolasky is well k n o w n on tho
tions with the League.
and
this
mu.st
be
certified
by
tho
ing the term examinations in that
ilion will not bo employed. Thoro ;
Dr. March belonged to the Am3. Could tho League u.se eco- coiich; in o r d e r to receive his
.^hort space of time between the •ampus, not only a s the proctor ire lo bo two
fifteen
minute '•
h e r s t c h a p t e r and Prof. Ballard
of
the
east
wing
of
South
College,
nomic
.sanction
iigainst
J
a
p
a
n
?
points, a man must bo in fifty por was a m e m b e r at Williams.
Chri.stmas vacations and the bespeeches and ono of ton minutes |
Reverend B e m a r d Bell
4. Should tho League Covenant cont of tho meets p e r year.
Ho
ginning of t h e next term. In a 'lUt as being ono of the depend- with a fivo minute rebuttal.
I
•
ible
g
u
a
r
d
s
on
the
Lafayotte
footbe amended in o r d e r to provide a shall receive 4 points for tho of"
I
n
order
to
gain
.i
sufficient
voto of the students and faculty of
t o P r e a c h in C h a p e l
Two more ilebates aro being armethod for tho revision of t r e a t - fice of Captiiin ( n o othor points n u m b o r to constitute a chapter.
H o b a r t College,
the plan
was lall team.
ranged by the m a n a g e r of t h e
T h e Reverend H. M. Prentiss is
ies?
to c o u n t ) . F o r breaking a record Dr. Moore, Dr. Y o u n g m a n , iind
favored by a 70 p e r cent m.ijority.
Tho Reverend Bornard Iddings
tl am. .-V formal dobalo with Ho- '
an active a n d progressive m e m b e r
5. W h a t would bo
Bulgaria's and t h u s winning a major " L , " ho Dr. March's son wore initialed by Boll, D.D., will preach in Sunday
Vassar College, continued Presibart Collogo on tho problem of •
of t h e Kaston School Board. He
interest
in
t
h
e
revision
of
tho
shall
receive
no
more
than
2
points
tho
Amherst
chapter.
At
the
socchiipel sorvico on March eighteenth
dent Lewis, also has a progrossive
the N. R. A. and its incorporation . _,
, . , .,, .,
has seen activo .-erx'ice a.s chapadditional p e r yoar.
Theso cap- ond meeting the con.stitution and at eleven o'clock.
F o r fourteen
Jilan for the advancement of i.'duinto p e r m a n e n t g o v o m m e n t a l poi-I t r e a t y of Neuilly.'
'ain of the American Expeditiontaincy points a r e not accumulative by-laws were adopted, and all years Dr. Bell was w a r d e n of St.
cation. Vassar proposes lo inic>
is
being
planned
for
somo
time
'
These
essays
were
Judged
by
a
iry Forces in F r a n c e , and is now
if he is elected captain.
members of the faculty who woro Stephen's College, which is contensify t h e work in any subject
the middle of April.
A , committeo of throe compo.sed of
'.he mini.ster of tho Fir.st Presby- toward
g r a d u a t e d with honors wore eloct- nected with Columbia University.
Co-Managers Split Points
radio debate with ii girls'
toam Professor E. P. Chase, Professor
by having fewer but longer pcriodt
terian Church
at
Socond
and from S w a r t h m o r e a t tho end of W. W. E d d y , and R. W. Edgar.
Co-managers of a sport shall I d to membership. At a subseAt the .same timo Dr. Boll was
of study. Instead of having, for
Bushkill S t r e e t s . Heing a n enor- April is also scheduled. T h e sub- •34.
who professor in tho D e p a r t m e n t
split the points of t h e .Manager q u e n t meeting all alumni
of
in.stance, three one-hour
poriod.
retic m a n ho is t a k i n g education ject for this discussion will bo the
and tho Dofoatod
manager
be- g r a d u a t e d with honors were elect- Roligion of Columbia. He is now
Seven Man Team
iluring tho week, they
proposi
oursos a t L a f a y e t t e Collego lo jiroblom of co-education.
The r e m a i n d e r of tho delegation tween them, ( a s in tho case of tho ed to membership.
A Lapreiiching canon of St. J o h n ' s
having ono two-hour period in that
further his working informntion fayotto toam compo.sed of Bo;-- will bo composed of threo of tho present co-managers of footbiill);
" A t t h a t time only those who at- Cathedral, Providence, Rhode Issubject. It is believed t h a t by thi:
m this subject in which he has a r a r d Hellring and Daniel Golden six delegates who a t t e n d e d
the Elected Manager gets 10 p o i n t s — tained honor rank wore eligible, land. F o r several years Dr. Boll
sy.stem, a more intense study ol
,rcat interest, a n d has slated his will endeavor to disprove the ar- last
year's
assembly,
namely, defeated rocoivus four. Each co- tho honor g r a d e being 9(;.5. Thero has been a guest speaker in Colt h e subject can be made, and thut
icceptance of a roquo.st to Join guments which the girls adv.ance Howard J. Boll, '34, Daniel Gol- managor.ship is to count as a ma- was only one rank thon, since ton Momorial Chapol a t t h e regumore work can bo accompli.'^^hod.
iCappa Phi Kappa.
Busi- t h a t w a s before tho adoption of lar S u n d a y m o r n i n g services.
den, '34, a n d Robert W. E d g a r , j o r oflice. Tho Assistant
in favor of co-oducalion.
•34. .Mr. E d g a r also attondod lho ness Manager .shall receive
3
(continued on page f o u r )
Education Slifdents
Le.-iguo in 1931 when it was held points.
a Syracuse University. E d g a r is
In stating tho numbor of colThree elections to K. R. T. are
chairman of tho Minorities Com- held each year. The Fall eleclege students in preparation fot
mittee of which o u r
representa- tions are hold in November, Tho
teaching. Dr. Lewis mioted figures
tives aro Golden, E d g a r , :ind Mid-term elections in
concerning various
Pennsylv?.nia
February
Butcher.
Boll and Mechanik are and tho Spring elections in April.
institutions in this vicinity. Among
I
m
e
m
b
e
r
s
of
the
committee
on
the
these were Lafayetto,
Lohigh,
To bo eligible for election, a
i revision of treaties. On J a p a n ' s
Dickinson, and Muhlenberg. At
Engineering Society
Teammates Select
D i s t a n c e ' Relation to tho League Committeo candidate must have a minimum C o s m o p o l i t a n C l u b P l a n s
B o l h M e n A r e P r o m i n e n t in
Muhlenberg, forty-seven per cont
to Elect N e w
Men
' L a f a y e t t e is represented by Hand of 15 points, and in addition ho
S w i m m e r to Lead T h e m
Various Extra-Curricof the enrollment is studying to
Meeting This Evening
' a n d Tischor. Theso t h r e e groups must havo one of the miijor poe n t e r a teaching profession.
f
o
r
N
e
x
t
Y
e
a
r
ular Interests
sitions
or
activities.
A
candidate'
There will bo a mooting of
, will di.scuss subjects which in t u r n
In regard to preparation
for
Tau Beta Pi this ovening at
A meeting of the Cosmowill be open for discussion in the submitting 15 to IH points must
teaching. Dr. Lewis reminded the
obtain throe fourths of the votes
TWO MAJOR AWARDS
7:15 o'clock in .Markle Hall.
GOLDSMITH
CHOSEN
Model Assembly.
politan Club will bo hold this
students thnt Lafayetto College
of t h e society. Ono submitting IK
All mombors a r e urgently reevoning
iit
.seven-thirty
was t h e first college to install a
Tho country which the delega- to 20 points must huve two thirds
quosted to bo present at this
Captain and Captain-elect
are
Named as Sole Sophomore Manago'clock in tho home of Protion will represent will be Bul- of the votes while candidates havpractice school for student teachmeeting which is to be ono
Honored for Racord Breaker UndeK Athletic Associagaria.
The interest of Bulgaria ing t w e n t y points o r more must
ers.
The present West College
fe.ssor
Paul
B.
E
a
t
o
n
,
710
of tho important ones of the
ing Performances
tion Ruling
i will be indirectly concerned in the have a majority vole of tho membuilding was erected in 1882 for
year. Besides having iis its
Cattell
Street.
Channing
• League solution of
the
vexing bers for election. Points for Captho purposes of t h e s t u d e n t teachpurpose the election of new
Liom, '34, will bo the speakThe results of tho
wrestling
of gino-Japaneso difficulties, because
Jamos J. Quiney, 3,^), .son oi
ers.
Pupils from t h e town came
men, other impoi-tant
busitain.s-oloet, managers elect, offielections held in t h e gymnasium
or
of
the
evening,
his
topic
Dr.
and
.Mrs.
J
.
J
.
Quiney
of
Easj
^
^
^
y
indicate
tho
power
of
tho
t o this school a n d w e r e t a u g h t by
ness will ho discussed a t tho
cers-elect, etc., shall c o u n t ; men
last Tuesday afternoon ushered in
ton. Pa., was elected by tho letter- ; League t o protect its small mom- on an athletic team a t the timo of
being " K o r e a . " P r o m p t
att h e students preparing for work in
gathering.
J a m e s Kirkpatrick, ' 3 5 , as manmen
of
the
past
season
to
captain
1,^^
nations.
Bulgaria,
because
of
educational fields.
tendance is urgently requestan election shall receive tho points
:iger of next year's team whiU
the Lafayette varsity swimming i f^e T r e a t y of P a r i s lost Thrace, for being on t h a t squad.
ed.
In conclusion. Dr. Lewis .stated
Robert Callender, ' 3 5 , was cho.sen
team for the season of HJ34-35. 'which was hor only outlet to the
Points
for
.Major
positions
and
that his address was m a d e
to PROFESSOR YERGER
to lead tho grapplers in action
Quinoy has been a
r e g u l a r j Aegean Seu. Not only this loss Activities a r e :
emphasize the importance of the
Robert Goldsmith, '3r>, was elected
PRESENTS EVENSONG performer for the n a t a t o r s for the | but h e r failure to regain Mace- .Major sport captuin ( n o othor
development of education in Pennas assistant manager.
past two years, swimming in t h o . donia will directly interest Bul- it. the sport to c o u n t ) 1 5 ; Major L e t t e r m e n D e c i d e
sylvania and t h e United States. Program Includes Selections by
Callender, who replaces Captain
to Elect N o Captain
440 yard freestyle evont.
Both ' garia in tho second problem. Like sport m a n a g e r 10; .Minor
sport
Tho rapid rise of Pennsylvania's Back, Nicode, Gounod MendelsT r o u t , veteran p<Tformer of thi.'
la.st yoar and this year he smashed | wise the direct interest of Hul- captain (no other in tho sport to
complete public school sy.stem, and
sohn and Dvorak
the college record for t h a t event, g a r i a will bo focused upon
the count) 8 ; Minor sport miuiuger •>;
At a m e e t i n g of the varsity bas- year's team, excels not alone in
t h e progressive plans offered by
in other
extra
hi.s present record being 5 minutes formation of a p e r m a n e n t Minor- Loiter man in two sports ( m a j o r ktfball letter men hold in t h e gym- wrestling b u t
t h e colleges for
improvement,
c u r r i c u l a r activities as well. AWodne.sday a f t e m o o n Professor 35.4 .seconds. Coming to Lafay- itie» Commission,
nasium
Wednesday,
it
was
voted
sport letter per year per s p o r t ) 3 ;
m a k e t h e one hundredth anniverThomas E. Yerger presented hit ette from Phillips E x e t e r Academy
Each school in the Middle At- Minor sport letter man per y e a r to elect no captain, until the third a freshman, he was chosen as y e a r
sary a day worth noting.
ling representative to the S t u d e n t
weekly E v e n s o n g of organ music hc had already established a fine | li;ntic States will sond six Dele- per 6i>ort 2 ; Editor of the Lafay- game on next year's schedule.
Dr. Lewis is also speaking this in the Colton .Memorial (.'hapel at record in the 2 2 0 yard freestyle. | gates t o t h e assembly and each ette ( n o o t h e r points for LafayThis decision was made because Council, a n d was a m e m b e r of t h e
evening at a meeting of tho New five-thirty
o'clock.
Realizing his capabilities as a di.s- j delegation will represent a
na- ette work) 1 5 ; Managing Editor of the fact t h a t there is no J u n i o r basketball t e a m and track squad
Vork Alumni Association a t the
T h e music was of a reflective tance man Coach Mike Miller at j tion which is the League of Na- of the Liafayotte ( n o other Lafay- on t h e t e a m who is certain of be- He was elected t o Calumet Club,
(continued on page f o u r )
U o t c l McAlpin, in New York City.
ing on the first s t r i n g next season.
(continued o n page four)
i t i o i u a t t i e n e v s , Switzerland.
(continued on gage t h r e e )
( continued on page
tout)
KAPPA PHI KAPPA
BANQUET PLANNED
ZILLESSEN SPEAKS
TO PRE-MED GROUP
iSEVEN STUDENTS REVISION IS MADE
TO BE DEEGATES CONCERNING POINT
AT MODEL LEAGUE AWARDSJOR K.R.T.
QUINEY IS NAMED SWIMMING CAPTAIN;
TEN VETERANS ARE AWARDED LETTERS
CALLENDER TO LEAD WRESTUNG SQUAD;
KIRKPATRICK IS SELECTED AS MANAGER
Student Body Participates in Naming Officers of Society
VOTE ipTcHAPEL'
All
E I i g i ble
Candidatea
Placed on Ballot T a k e n
This Noon
According to the otficial
announcement made at four
o'clock this afternoon, J.
Renwick Hogg, .Jr., of Merion, was elected President
of the Brainerd Society for
the coming year. This was
the result of the ballot taken in chapel this noon
combined with the decision
of the Brainerd Cabinet
members.
At the same time Carl
Meyer, of
Framinghani,
Mass., was selected as vicepresident, and W. C. Harding, of Port Morris, N. .J.,
secretary. Paul Elkin, of
New York City, was cho.sen
as treasurer.
Determined to adhere to
its
policy of not p e r m i t t i n g campus
politics in its ranks, t h e Brainord
Society reversed its u.sual election
policy by allowing the .students to
miiko tho first choice, iind thon
allow tho cabinet
to nniko the
final seloction.
In
chapol
this
m o m i n g t h e students were iisked
t o name their four Iciiding choico.<
for the presidency from a m o n g
tho eligible m e m b e r s
of
thn
cabinet.
In the past it has been
the
policy for the Senior m e m b e r s of
the Brainerd cabinet to discus the
merits and shortcomings of thu
variou.s candidates for tho admini.slrative offices. The field
wa.s
finally narrowed down to include
only the very ablest men.
The
final selection was t h e n up to the
t:tudent body.
This y e a r Brainerd felt it would
a t t e m p t to go evon a stop f u r t h e r
to assure a satisfactory and fair
election. The Seniors on
the
cabinet were of t h e opinion th.it
despite their
strenuous
efforts
to
make t h e
election
a nonpolitical afTair, t h e final voto of
tho student body was in th^; laat
aniilysis too susceptible to political machinations. Although the
Seniors have always proven honest
enough not to reveal t h e n a m e s
of the candidates, Brainerd rould
not prevent tho .idherents of the
most outstanding ciuididats from
banding together in the hope thiit
thoir favorite would in t h e end
find his name on the ballot.
Cabinet lo Give Final Deciaion
Some time ago
Brainerd felt
that the society itself and not the
I'tudent
body should m a k e tha
final election. T h u s a t one time
only one n a m e was placod on the
ballot. This procedure retained
the form of a student election,
though robbed the u n d e r t a k i n g of
its t r u e effect.
Inasmuch as the
student body pays good money into Brainerd, and ina.imuch iia
Brainerd is an organization t h a t is
to function for the benofit of t h e
t u d e n t body as a whole, it was
docidod t h a t such a
procedure
-should be outlawed.
Hence it was decided t h a t tha
students should have a
definite
say in the election, but t h a t t h e
voice of the student body should
not necessarily bo the deciding
factor.
Brainerd felt t h a t
tlie
new method which is to consider
t h e t r e n d and not t h e actual ro•ult of the student body, would
oliminate the usual vote for
a
fraternity brother but would place
-•very voter in a position where he
would really r e n d e r his honest
judgement.
T h e Seniors in B r a i n e r d will
now hold their discussion evaluating carefully the merits of every
-•andidate.
Their choice will be
^ i d e d by this ei.jir"i«sion of student opinion, which although n o t
selecting a definite candidate will
•erve t o indicate tho mon most
'steemed by their fellow students.
F o r the benefit of the students
vho desire to know the exact peronnel of the Senior members of
he Cabinet, a list of the.-.e men
and their fraternity affiliations is
published herebelow.
Melvin H a a s , Phi Delta T h e t a ,
Howard Bell, T b e U Delta Chi}
(continued on page t h r v e )
P a g e Two
TKE
LAFAYETTE
FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1934.
dUa^taMB
Calendar for the Week
Prom lho Oklahoma Daily
wr
learn that a clever public speaki n g i n s t r u c t o r r e c o n t l y flunkcil .t
reticent s t u d e n t with the remark,
" S o y o u w o n ' t talk, e h ? "
Friday, March 16
Devoted to the iDtprcsts uf the Students and Alumnt of I.af.-iyotte College
Tounded tn ISTO.
President
P u b l i s h n l .Si'ml-Wiokly by T h .
COL. E R . N E S T G. S M I T H
L a f n y e t t e P r e s i . Inc.
Wilkcs-Barro, Pa.
n o n E H T S. K t U ' l i N E R
IMiono 2-5141
Bdltor-In-ChlFf
P H I L I P L. C 3 R E E N A W A L T
P h o n o 2-9055
Managing Editor
J. n . A T T O N COOK
P h o n e 2-9S51
• d t t o r l n t A!i9or1ate
IIOIIAC'E E . .1M1TH
P h n n p 2-1692
A n o c l e t e Editor
U L B N L. T I S C H E R
P h o n e 2-«I9t
Newa Bditor
A e a l s t n n t M a n n e l n g E d l t o m S. M. n;ill. It. J. Kosok. I, I,. Mnrtz, D . S c h w l m m e r .
A . II. S a n d t . W. W . T h a y e r , R S. T u l l a r
Sports Editor —
,
-M. L. KoKtonbnum
Alutnnl E d i t o r
»
.
n . S. W i l d s t e i n
Exi'hango Editor
— . — _ .-_-—..—-^
\V. L . n n r t l e l t
Sporte Columniet
_ P . L . Qroenawftlt
Intratnural Bditor
-B. A. H e l l r i n g
Contributing Editor
—
H . L. S h o l l y
0 I.. Mau
W . A. B a y l M t
J O. Berixian
J . L. B r e w a t e r
A. B r u n o
•W. M. C r a i g
A . J. D e R o a s e t
B. W. Forman
O Geiger
J. H a r t m a n
K. J. XVlcssman
J e r o m e L. S c h e c k
KDITORIAL
STAFr
W. A. H a t r h
A. C. H a v e r l r
D. I.. H e l l e r
S. It. Hllla
T. O. H o g c n n n t r
R. K r i e g e r
O. P. U i u r l e
M. L e v e n b r o n
H . J. M e c h a n l i
A.
Light
H. BlefenBtnhl
II. M. Scull
• . L. Rees
I. L. S c h e c k
R. D. S e m p l e
K. S h i p m a n
n . B. Smith
R. H. Stetler, Jr.
J. Street
- . M. S t o n e
E. n. ViinArtadalen
R. a . V o l k m a a
II. O. W a l t o n
U. L. W i l l i a m a
7 : 1 5 — T a u Beia Pi .Meeting in M a r k l e H a l l .
" . • 3 0 — M e e t i n g o f Co.'^mopolilan C l u b at t h e h o m e
P r o f e s s o r P a u l B. E a t o n .
7:00-10:00—Interscholastic Paskclball Tournament
lho Gym.
of
in
" S e x E x p r e s s i o n in S p i n a c h " is
the piquant title of a bulletin rec e n t l y p u b l i s h e d by t h e
agricult u r a l d e p a r t m e n t of t h e U n i v e r s i t y
of C a l i f o r n i a .
How about mashetl p o t a t o e s a n d the r e s t o f
the
vegetables?
Saturday, March 17
3 : 0 0 - 1 0 : 0 0 — I n t i r . - i c h o l a s t i c lia.-^ketball T o u r n a m e n t in
the G y m .
8:00—Intercollegiate Leapue
Debate;
Lafayette
vs.
B a l e s , in K i r b y H a l l .
S u n d a y , M a r c h 18
P r o f e s s o r A l f r e d J o y o f Carnogio Institute, Pittsburgh, found
t h a t t h e w o r l d is w h i r l i n g a b o u t its
s t e l l a r s y s t e m a t tho rate of 9 , 0 0 0
miles per minute.
A sort of Jayto-the-World announcement.
11:00—Chapel; Supply.
2 : 3 0 — M e e t i n g o f t h e E v a n g e l i c a l L e a g u e in B r a i n e r d .
5 : 3 0 — C a n d l e Light V e s p e r service in the Chapel.
MOULDINGS
OF CLAY
h a v o u s b e l i e v e , is j u s t a r o u n d t h e
corner.
H o w e v e r , i f it's n o b e t t o r a t b e n d i n g t h e c u r v e s t h a n „he
much publicized prosperity, ti.en
you might just
as
well
forget
— T h e a t t e m p t b e i n g m a d o b y a b o u t doffing y o u r r e d f l a n n e l s f o r
Bualneas Mnnnger
W I L L I A M R. V A N A K E N
P h o n e 2-9086 s e v e r a l p e r s o n s intere.sted i n t h e a w h i l e y e t .
K a t l o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g Mgr.
B E N . II MAP.TIN
P h o n o J-0B91
* * •
ba.skctball m a n a g e r i a l e l e c t i o n t o
I.ocnl A d v e r t i s i n g M a n a g e r
J A R R E T T W. J E N N i : « G a
P h o n o 2-4691
— T h e Junior Prom, one of the
Ctrcul.ttlon ManaKer
JAMES U. MANN
P h o n o 2-0591 run it u n d e r t h e p r o v i s i o n o f t h e
Aaalstant Busineaa M a n a g e r s : S. G. Cox. E . W. F o r m a n . J. M. C. H a n d
old A . A. c o n s t i t u t i o n i n s t e a d o f finest s o c i a l affairs t h e c o l l e g e h a s
D. C. P a t t e r e o n . a R. H a r t w e l l , J. P . R u d o l p h
u n d e r t h e n e w l y ratified o n e h a s k n o w n in tho p a s t f e w y e a r s , n e t BUSINESS
STAFF
a peculiarly ancient and
fishy l e d a profit o f $ 4 0 0 w h i c h is t o b e
C. V P r a t t
E . O. B u c h a n a n
J. B r a u b e r g e r
smell.
turned over to the college.
R. n . Goebel
E. H . Clapp, t l .
A. II. Crane
C. M c L e n n
D. Gardner
T h i s , it s e e m s t o u s , s h o u l d b e
W. Deutsch
• « *
O. L. N o r r i s
I I . C. H i l l
t>. F o r m a n
— A debating club at the Uni- indicative of the fact that dances,
C. N . E d d y
versity o f N o r t h Carolina recently good ones, can b e run much m o r e
SUBSCRIPTION
argued
the
following
question, cheaply t h a n they have been in the
O n e y e n r (56 laauea) 13.50.
Subscriptions
to S t u d s n t a nnd m e m h e r s of
the
"Resolved:
That
the
standing past.
L a f a y e t t e C o l l e g e A l u m n t A s s o c i a t i o n a r e p a i d for f r o m t h e t u i t i o n
It is, n o d o u b t , a n o b l e i d e a t o
army of the U n i t e d States be proand Alumni Association dues respectively.
present the college with a gift.
vided with chairs."
K n t e r e d a s S e c o n d C l a s s Mntter, October H, 1929. a t t h e P o s t Office a t
A n d w e ' l l w a g e r t h a t w a s o n e B u t in t h e f u t u r e w h y n o t g i v e t h e
B a s t o n , F a . , under t h e A c t of March 3, 1879.
of the m o s t popular debates of student the benefit of a reduction
A d d r e s s all c i r e u l a t i o n c o m p l a i n t s , a d v o r t l s l n g Inqultles or orders to
in t i c k e t p r i c e ?
A f t e r all, t h e
the year.
Ttie L u f a y e t t e , L u f a y e t t e College, E a s t o n , P n .
W e can't holp chuckling to our- m a n w h o buys a ticket for a dance
Communications,
notices and news articles acceptable
a t alt t i m e s .
N e w s s e l v e s w h e n w e t h i n k o f t h e first isn't s u b s c r i b i n g t o a g i f t f u n d .
m a y bo p h o n e d to t h o oflico S u n d a y . M o n d a y . W e d n e s d a y a n d
« * *
s p e a k e r f o r t h e affirmative p r o T h u r a d a y e v e n i n g s a f t e r 7 o'clock.
P h o n o No. 2-1333.
—Dean
Jane
Jonos
of
St.
b a b l y o p e n i n g t h e tilt in t h e r e c o g NATIONAL
ADVBRTISINQ
REPRESENTATIVES:
University
says
that
nized
forensic
manner
with, Lawrence
ColK'Ke Publ'phcrs' R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , Inc., N e w York C i t y
" G e n t l e m e n , I shall
attempt
t o girl g r a d u a t e s o f t o d a y are willing
N a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g Serv.ca, Inc., 11 W e s t ASiid Street. N e w York, N . T.
p r o v e t o y o u t h a t t h o d o r s a l e x - " t o t a k o t h e s t o p o f m a t r i m o n y in
t r e m i t i e s o f o u r n a t i o n a l g u a r d - t h e s e difflcult t i m e s . "
Easton, Pa., Friday, March 16, 1934.
That
taking-the-stcp
stuff
is
ians should n o t r e m a i n vertical t o
but
what
t h e e a r t h ' s s u r f a c e b u t s h o u l d be nil r i p h t . M i s s J o n e s ,
p l a c e d h o r i z o n t a l l y in a s t a t e of w e ' d like t o k n o w is w h e t h e r o r
BRAINERD'S NON-POLITICAL POLICY
keep
on
rest and adequately provided for not they're willing to
the
matrimonial
in a m a n n e r
fitting
the
lumbar stepping when
Some time ago there appeared in these columns
get
a
littlo
region of such distinguished per- h i g h w a y begins to
rough.
sons."
the positive statement t h a t Brainerd was the one or-
ganization at Lafayette which was constantly striving to avoid political affihations.
This morning
Melvin Haas, president of the society, bore out this
statement, by offering to the students a revised
method for electing the officers of the society. We
can not help but admire the desire for honesty t h a t
is again making itself manifest in Brainerd.
Here we have a society which all y e a r long h a s
rendered immeasurable services to the student body,
striving to make an example of itself, which the rest
of the campus would do well to follow. Brainerd
has no wrongs to cover up, nor any unfortunate precedents to avoid, and yet Brainerd is striving to m a k e
even more hone.st and meritorious an organization
which knows nothing but fairness and decency* We
are proud of the fine work Brainerd has done this
year, and proud of the fine example it is setting. Let
us hope t h a t these fine efforts will r e a p a golden
harvest.
A POOR COMPROMISE
The action of the basketball lettermen in deciding to name no captain until after the third game
next year seems to us to be most unfortunate.
This move, the result of a foolish compromise,
can certainly bring about no decision at the time
specified next year. If this year's t e a m was unable
to decide during the course of the full season which
man was most capable of piloting next year's aggregation through the difficult schedule t h a t they will
have to face, how can they decide after the first
three games next year?
Some members put forth the excuse t h a t there
is no junior who is even certain of a varsity berth
on next season's team. If this ia so, then it seems to
us t h a t one of this year's sophomores who is already
a seasoned veteran might have been named. Or if
this is unsatisfactory we can see no reason why it
should be specified that a man must be named after
part of next year's season. Is there any reason why
the system employed by the football team last fall
could not be put into effect in this case also? Surely
the team would be run more efficiently, especially
during those first three games which are so important in that they set the tenor of the squad for the
whole season, if some definite step were taken.
Compromises are always bad.
Materia
Thursday and Friday evenings,
March eighth and ninth, and Wedne.sday e v e n i n g , M a r c h f o u r t e e n t h ,
t h e M a r q u i s P l a y e r s p r e s e n t e d aa
t h e i r third
play of
the season
u n d e r t h e d i r e c t i o n o f Mr. P a u l
Morrison,
Oscar
Wilde's
farce
"The Importance of Being Earnest."
The play presented b y far the
m e e t difficult p r o b l e m t h e L i t t l e
T h e a t e r has faced this season.
N o t o n l y ia t h e p l a y a h i l a r i o u s
satire o n Victorian manners, but
also, after Gilbert and Sullivan
fashion,
pokes
sly f a n at
such
d r a m a t i c c o n v e n t i o n s aa t h e m i s taken identity plot and preposterous document
with
a wholesale
happy ending for the entire cast.
The performance on the whole
wtis c o m m e n d a b l e , but tha c r e a m
of the Wildean jest
was
never,
quite whipped to proper
fluffiness.
E x c e p t f o r a f e w m o n i e n t i in t h e
second
act, t h e
play failed
to
!<parkle a n d a t t j p i f d r a c f c d eicasperatiafly.
*-^
Critica
R i c h a r d M e r c e r p l a y e d t h e role
o f A l g e r n o n Montcrieff
with
a
high s e r i o u s n e s i i t h a t d e p r i v e d his
amusing lines of a certain raciness
so
essential
to
sophisticated
comedy.
Since he seems admirabl y s u i t e d t o t h e p a r t , it is t o be
regretted that
hia d e b u t
in a
m a j o r role c a n n o t
be ' a c c l a i m e d
more favorably.
Simon Greenberg gave a very
c o m m e n d a b l e p e r f o r m a n c e in t h e
rolo o f E a r n e s t W o r t h i n g , t h a t
very earnest young
man
whose
double life is miraculously justified.
In t h e a m u s i n g r o l e o f Dr.
Chasuble,
Robert
Germann
revealed an uneSpected
flair
for
comedy.
His
performance
was
o n e o f t h e b r i g h t s p o t s o f t h e production.
In minor parts Royer
S e m p l e played Montcrieff's butler
to perfection, and Albert Gendebien g a v e a c o n v i n c i n g performa n c e a s a b u t l e r in t h e W o r t h i n g
hou.^ehoId.
The highest honors
must
be
a w a r d e d to t h e w o m e n in t h e cast
•
•
— T h e old o r d e r is r e v e r s e d . W e
heard a s t u d e n t remark tho other
d a y t h a t h e is g o i n g
to
send a
.•stamped e n v e l o p e a n d a p i e c e o f
s t a t i o n a r y h o m e t o his f a m i l y .
•
«
•
ACO
John F. Goidimith
Editor-in-Chief
Expression
of
dissatisfaction
w i t h the e x t r a v a g a n t a n d e x p e n sive plans of
the
Junior
Prom
Committee of the coming Junior
Prom, by several m e m b e r s of the
Student Council a t
the
regular
m e e t i n g o f that organization last
Tuesday evening, brought
about
the passing of a motion instructing
t h e p r i c e c u t t i n g c o m m i t t e e t o investigate the budget
which
has
been arranged, for the dance.
—Mias Mary Louise
Reeder
as
Cecily Cardew,
Mr.
Worthing's
w a r d ; Miss A l m a Scott,
as
Mr.
Worthing's frail, i n c o n s t a n t love,
G w e n d o l y n F a i r f a x ; Miss G w e n d o l y n R e e d e r in t h e r o l e o f Miss
Prism, the admirable
governess,
"remotely connected with educat ' o n ; " and Miss Frances H u m m e r
a s t h e fierce L a d y B r a c k n e l l .
At Springfield,
the
swimming
t e a m inhaled oxygon before
tho
A r m y moot, the g y m n a s t s ate sugar before the Temple meot, and
the b a s k e t b a l l t o a m t r i e d
opium
smoking.
Wo could think of lots of
app r o p r i a t e t h i n p s t o food o u r o w n
basketball team.
SEVENTEEN
YEARS
AGO
H. C. M e m o r y
Editor-in-Chief
Miss Mary Louise R e e d e r gave
the
finest
performance
of
the
e v e n i n g in h e r s c e n e s
with
Mr.
M e r c e r a n d Miss S c o t t in the s e c ond act.
The lines fairly glittered a n d k e p t t h e a u d i e n c e c o n s t a n t l y in l a u g h t e r .
Miss S c o t t i n v e s t e d t h e c h a r acter of G w e n d o l y n Fairfax with
the p r o p e r s o b r i e t y
that
makes
h e r r i d i c u l o u s l i n e s so p l a u s i b l e .
Miss G w e n d o l y n R e e d e r did e x c e l l e n t w o r k in h e r s c e n e w i t h
the
rector but could n o t cope with the
demands upon her voice
in
the
last s c e n e w h e n she sobs out the
story that clears up the mystery
of Earnest's origin.
M i s s H u m m e r p l a y e d h e r part
with great
energy
and
evoked
most of the
evening's
laughter
with her
clever lines,
but
her
d e l i v e r y w a g j e r k y and s o m e t i m e s
irritatingly monotonous.
T o add a w o n ! a b o u t t h e sett i n g s , it s h o u l d b e m e n t i o n e d t h a t
.Mr. M o r r i s o n ' s
clever act
drop
was a minor sensation.
But the
s e t s , if t h i s r e v i e w e r m a y h a z a r d
an opinion, were a
bit
conventional, and not up to the
usual
h i g h M o r r i s o n .<ftandard.
R. K. O. ' 3 8 .
Tn e v e r y s e n s e t h e g r a d e s f o r
t h e fir.st t o a m this y e a r a r e l o w e r
than last yoar.
This
does
not
SIX Y E A R S AGO
p r o v e a n y d e t e r i o r a t i o n o n tho part
of the
students,
however,
but
H e r b e r t C. Y a h r a e s ,
merely shows that
the
requiroEditor-in-Chief
m o n t s aro b e i n g a d v a n c e d .
There
a r e but six m e n w h o h a v o a t t a i n F i r e , d u e t o a n o v e r h e a t e d flue, ed t h e c o v e t e d
"five":
Stocker,
d a m a g e d t h e a p a r t m e n t o f Profe.s- B i x l e r , G r a n t , H u t t e n l o c k e r , Mcsor W. W. E d d y at
321
C a t t e l l V e i g h and O w e n .
.Street a b o u t
nine
o'clock
this
morning.
Most of the loss w a s r W E N T Y - S E V E N Y E A R S A G O
from water which ruined part of
the E d d y a p a r t m e n t a n d t h e o n e
F r a n k L. S h e r r e r
above.
Professor Eddy managed
Editor-in-Chiaf
t o s a v e hi.s i n s u r a n c e p o l i c y a n d
wa.s back t o S o u t h C o l l e g e in t i m e
T h e a n n u a l obson-'ance o f J u n f o r his t e n o ' c l o c k c l a s s .
ior W e e k s t a r t s on M o n d a y e v e n ii.g with t h e S o c k and B u s k i n p l a y
I c e - s k a t i n g o n M a r c h F i e l d will " T h e T e r r i b l e T r u s t e e . "
After
s o o n be a r e a l i t y if t h e
p r e s e n t this c o m e s t h e J u n i o r
Hop
on
weather continues.
Two
m a i n T u e s d a y a n d tho B r o w s e f o l l o w factors have t e n d e d to delay the ing on W e d n e s d a y night.
success of the project; there
is
m u c h r o u g h ice a n d s n o w o n t h e
La.st F r i d a y
night,
February
rink a n d a t w o f o o t s l o p e in t h e
Sth, t h e Fre.shman c l a s s h e l d
its
field.
W h e n a large column of
b u n q u e t at t h e C o n t i n e n t a l , N e w w a t e r is p o u r e d o n t h e
field,
it
m u s t be c o v e r e d w i t h t h i n s h e e t s ark, N . J.
of water.
THIRTY-SEVEN YEARS ACO
SEVEN
YEARS
AGO
Franklin J. McGlynn
Editor-in-Chief
F o r the first t i m e in t h e a n n a l s
oi L a f a y e t t e C o l l e g e , the f r a t e r n ity g r o u p has rated higher than
tht non-fraternity group,
ratinj'
?.H91 o v e r 2 . 8 7 , m a k i n g t h o r a t i n g
of the entire student body 2.88.
Concerts by the combined musical c l u b s will be g i v e n a t P a t e r son a n d E a s t O r a n g e , N . J., o n
F t b r u a r y 2K, a n d 2 7 , r e s p e c t i v e l y .
Six m e n ,
three
Seniors
and
three Juniors,
wore
elected
to
m e m b e r s h i p in Phi B e t a
Kappa,
i i o i o r a r y schol:istic f r a t e r n i t y , last
F r i d a y e v e n i n g . R a l p h R.
Gootshall, G u s t a v e G. K l e i n and D o n ald S. M o r r o w w e r e t h e Senior.^!
o l e c t e d , a n d H o w a r d C. L o i c h t o r
and C h a r i o s W a l t m a n t h e J u n i o r s .
J a m e s C. M c G a r v e y , o f B u f f a l o ,
was elected president of the senior
class at a n e l e c t i o n h e l d last Fridny evening.
O t h e r oflieers c h o s e n w e r e W i l l i a m R. F o u l k e s ,
of
Newark,
vice-president;
H.
K.
Smith of
Honesdale,
secretary;
J o h n O. B o y d , o f B r o o k l y n , m a r shal.
Lafayette:
It is w i t h c o n s i d e r a b l e i n t e r e s t
t h a t w e road t h e c o m m u n i c a t i o n in
t h o s e c o l u m n s in y o u r l a s t i s s u e
b y o n e .Mr. T a y l o r .
In
a
farf e t c h e d a t t o m i i t a t s a r c a s m Mr.
Taylor tried to convince us that
the "hat w e a r i n g
societies"
are
nothing more than
hat
wearing
societies and furthemore that the
hats which t h e y w e a r aro nothing
t o be p r o u d of.
W e are forced to
d i s a g r e e w i t h h i m in t h a t w e f e e l
t h a t in m n n y in.stances t h o h a t s
look vory nice.
Diftinctive
SHOES
for college m e n
BTclusivelv
CE.NTiiE S Q U A R E
L o s s of w e i g h t ? A n e m i a . ' Inability to
A t p r e s e n t t h e r e is a t e n d e n c y
o n tho part o f m a n y t o c u t a g o o d
many recitations.
O u r c l a s s ha-;
a l r e a d y m a d e a r e m a r k a b l e record.
T h e f a c t s h o u l d b e b o r n in m i n d
t h a t f a c h r e c i t a t i o n is a
golden
opportunity, whirh when slighted
c a n n e v e r be f u l l y m a d e u p .
FORTY-SEVEN
YEARS
AGO
J. B. S h a w
Editor-in-Chief
The celebration
of
Washingt o n ' s b i r t h d a y w a s b e g u n with a
cuno rush b e t w e e n ' 8 0 a n d
'90.
A b o u t n i n e o'clock in t h e m o r n i n g
the performance commenced with
1 eight or ten F r e s h m e n c o m i n g out
of
McKeen
Hall,
brandishing
I c a n e s , and
boldly
defying
the
I valorous Sophomores.
Soon
the
: fight w a s o n .
Both sides fought
! well and both claimed the victory,
I though perhaps the true decision
is that it w a s i n d e c i s i v e .
EIGHT
YEARS
AGO
Jot. Graxiar, Editor
Editor-in-Chief
last
out the week?
T h e s e a r e s i g n s of o v e r w o r k .
Y o u can relieve y o u r a l l o w a n c e of o n e bilrd e n . . . y o u r l a u n d r y bill. S e n d y o u r l a u n d r y h o m e — c o l l e c t , if n e e d b e . ' W e ' l l c a l l f o r i t ,
t a k e it h o m e , a n d b r i n g it b a c k a g a i n q u i c k l y ,
and, w h o k n o w s , m a y b e even prepaid.
See
h o w your allowance responds t o this tonic.
take
another one on delivery. R a i l w a y E x p r e s s is
a nation-wide organization that has
STRAND
FrJ.,
Sal.,
rapid, d e p e n d a b l e
16,
service everywhere
for
l a u n d r y , b a g g a g e a n d s h i p m e n t s o f all k i n d s .
Mon.—
March
served
y o u r A l m a Mater for m a n y y e a r s . It p r o v i d e s
17,
Telephone the nearest Railway
19
Express
agent for s e r v i c e o r information.
"THE SIN OF
NORA MORAN"
Tues.,
Wed.,
March
The best there is in transportation
SERVING THE NATION FOR 95 YEARS
Thurs.—
20,
21,
22
RAILWAY
EXPRESS
"THE CROSBY
CASE"
with
W Y N N E GIBSON
ONSLOW STEVENS
AGENCY, Inc.
NATION-WIDE SERVICE
BOYD
52 NORTH THIRD ST.,
Easton, Pa.
./
1 W e e k Beginning
FRIDAY, MARCH 16th
CONSTANCE
BENNEn
n
^ . .
in
"MOUUN ROUGE"
with
FRANCHOT
TONE
RUSS COLUMBO
BOSWELL SISTERS
Hear t h e Latest
Song
Hits
THERE'S OIVE UEST TIIIIE
To Teiephoite
ttomel
YOU'LL
a g r e e , o n r e y o u ' v e t r i e d it. t h a t h a l f
past ei}!;ht is t h e t i m e t o t e l e p h o n e h o m e .
M l-';ist'>n's I.<';uliiii4 TliiMlivs
ST.VKTI.\<; SAT., M . M i r i l ITtli
A t half past eifiht t h e d a y ' s r u s h is o v e r .
Y o u r t i m e is free for a l e i s u r e l y
STATE
telephone
chat.
A t half past eifiht t h e s a m e is t r u e at h o m e .
Ruth Chatterton.
It's t h e hest t i m e t o eati-h t h e f a m i l y all to-
in
W i l l i a m J. W i l l i a m s
Editor-in-Chiaf
at
DOES YOUR ALLOWittiNCE
gether.
"JOURNAL OF
A CRIME"
A t h a l f past e i g h t ( a n d t h i s is m o s t imp o r t a n t ) low JNight R a t e s go i n t o effect
wild
Station to Station calls.
Adolph MenJou
on
Y o u c a n t h e n save
as m u c h as 40"^ f o n v o u r c a l l . F o r e x a m p l e :
D y n a m i c Itniiiia (>r a .IOUIIUIH
\Vif<- and W h a t
She Did lo
llurKolf, H e r lluHhiinU, ami Ihr
If y o u r h o m e is 1 0 0 m i l e s a w a y , a t h r e e - m i n -
Olhir
u t e c o n n e c t i o n will cost o n l y 3 5 c e n t s !
Wiiiiiaii!
EMBASSY
.TO T.IKE .%DV.V:VT.\GK
oj Uie LO«V .M«iiUT K.%TK<S . . .
Fredric March
i..M uftrr 8:311 P.M.. an J lir 9ur« tu make
a Station lu Slalion call.
uiul
Sylvia Sydney
That mi-aiii., u--k Ui<> 0|H>ratur tor your
home tfti'iilioiH-, but nol for uny .peritic
ill
IKT.OII.
If > o i r \ r fixiHl a Uate in aiiiani'e, llie family
will he surt* tu br lliere.
"GOOD DAME"
Chargrs
T h e Storj- of a CIIOMT W l i o \Va»
a l l i m i e R u n Ktiit: W i t h the
Woinoii m i d .\ (iiH \Min Kan
Itini Kacb-tHl!
muy br
rrvn-ted.
4
TIIK KKLL T K U k V U M . M i « U.MI>.%.\V O r rK.<V.'«<«VLV.%.'«|A
A total o f 3 1 3 calls were mado
M-
f
The
W e give a receipt on collection a n d
Speaking of curricula, Purdue
h a s a c o u r s e in c h a r m , in w h i c h
such essentials t o the good life as
h o w t o h a n d l e a n d hold a c i g a r ette and how to
avoid
spilling
cocktails are taught.
From The Lafayette of Days Gone By
FIVE YEARS
T o tho Editor of The
Dear Sir:
inhabitants
of
the
d o r i u i t o i ios
w o u l d bo i m p r a c l i c a b l o , b e c a u s e it
w o u l d n ' t be n i c e .
The Calumets
anil t h o M a r o o n K e y s
and
tho
K n i g h t s o f tho Kouml T a b b w o u l d
I'avo n o h i n g t o m o p r o u d o f if
this s h o u l d t a k o p l a c o .
Wo think
th.it w o u l d bo a s h a m e .
W i t h o u r t o n g u e s in o u r c h e c k s ,
Mr. T a y l o r , w o m u s t s a y w o t h a t
w e h a v e f a i l e d t o soe y o u w e a r i n g
. i n y h a t a t all. It s o o m s t o u s that
it w o u l d be t h e placo of a w e a r e r
o f h a t s t o m a k e .such c r i t i c i s m
as you havo attempted to make.
Thus havinp iliminatoil y o u r remarks wo say "enough of this aimless drivel."
Or h a v o w e road t o o m u c h i n t o
your communication?
Sincerely,
B. A . H e l l r i n g , ' 3 0 ,
R o b e r t S. T u l l a r , ' 3 , j .
A c c o r d i n p to a N e w Y o r k e r a r - b y s t u d e n t s t o t h e d o c t o r ' s office
T h e d o c t o r paid
26
ticle, recently reprinted
in
the l a s t w o o k .
confined
in
their
Readers Dipest, students are bo- visits t o m o n
A groat m.ijority of the
coming frightfully inactive as far rooms.
a« t a k i n g p a r t in s c h o o l p r a n k s is c a s e s a r e t h o s e o f m e n w h o h a v e
concerned.
It g o e s o n t o c i t e i n - c o n l r a c t o d c o l d s , likoly d u e t o t h e
F e w of
s t i . n c e s in t h o d i m p a s t w h e n s t u - .••evore w i n t e r w e a t h e r .
de n t s s l e w y e profe.ssors a s a n e n - t h e c a s e s a r e v e r y s e r i o u s .
j o y a b l e p a s t i m e , a n d Dr. A n d r e w
William F. Betts of Lock Haven,
D Whito, president
of
Cornell,
president
and
eays t h a t w h i l e h e w a s a n undi v- P a . , w a s e l e c t e d
of
g . a d u a t c a t H o b a r t he s a w , m o r e W i l l i a m X. F i l s o n , .secretary
t h a n o n c e , snowbalLs a n d b o t t l e s t h o f r o s h m a n Y. M. C. A . c a b i n e t
thrown at the
highly
r e s p e c t e d in its m o o t i n g last T h u i s d a y afp i o s i d o n t , w h o w a s o n c e l o c k e d ti r n o o n . T h o s e t w o a u t o m a t i c a l l y
ill h i s r o o m a n d f o r c e d t o e s c a p e b o c o m o m o m b o r s o f tho r e g u l a r Y .
M. C. A . c o u n c i l .
f i o m a w i n d o w by a l a d d e r .
* •
—Colonel Lindbergh
has been
named, but declined the appointment, as a m e m b e r of a committee
to i n v e s t i g a t e the a r m y air mail
situation.
Wasn't he the same gentleman
that the administration censured a
W h a t d o y o u h a v o t o d o t o befew w e e k s ago for questioning the
come
ambassador?
Pilfer
a
advisibility of its contract canwatermelon patch?
celling ruling and transference of
• « •
m a i l flying f r o m t h e c o m m e r c i a l
— R i p e n College scientist has
companies to the army?
rerfected
a
psyehogalvanometer
"He w h o laughs lasl. . . "
which, he
says, will
detect
tho
• • *
e m o t i o n s of students.
— W e ' r e waiting for the day
W e ' d l i k e t o s e e t h e t h i n g in
when some
divorced
Hollywood action when some professor has
couple
will part
without
b e i n g j u s t t o l d a s t u d e n t t h a t h e is d o i n g
"good friends."
fine,
h e is r a t i n g
a very, very
•
•
»
h i g h D.
— S p r i n g , the optimists
would
J E A N CLAY.
(Editor's
Note: Ideas and
opinion\
expressed in this column are published
without
regard to their agreement or
disagreement
with the editorial
policies of The Lafauette,
which
assumes
no responsibilitu
for the
slalemenis
herein
contained.)
The Collegian, published by stud e n t s o f M a r y l a n d Collopo
for
Women
is
the
most,
ahomm,
charming
paper
which
comes
W e foel
that the
hats
when
a m o n g the exchanges.
All headw o r n a t t h e c o r r e c t a n g l e h.ive b o lines arc barred, no ads ovor one
inch a r e p e r m i t t e d , and t h e t h i n g c o m o s i p n s o f a n a c c o m p l i s h m e n t
Furthermore wo
has an individual tone of friendly c f some kind.
formality.
It is <iuite a r e l i e f af- c a n n o t h e l p b u t b e l i e v e t h a t h i s
t e r s u c h h e a d s a s , " C o c k s d e f e a t s u p R o s t i o n c o n c e r n i n g h a t s f o r tho
Generals and Spiders."
In C a n a d a , t h e s t u d e n t s o f m a n y
colleges are g r o w i n g beards. Ono
— O u r i d e a o f a g o o d " s i s t e r e n v i o u s c o e d , f u l l o f s c h o o l .spirit,
t r i o " w o u l d b e o n e c o n s i s t i n g o f s u g g e s t e d t h a t tlie f a c i a l flora bo
Kenny Soargont,
C a r m e n L o m - d y e d t h e s c h o o l c o l o r s o f t h e 'nstibardo and Morton D o w n e y .
tution.
On
second
thought,
though,
there would be ono
drawback to
Ill o r d e r t h a t
the
Univor.<;ity
this combination.
They'd have no m a y k n o w t h a t thoy aro girls who
alto.
cun t a k e it, S t a n f o r d c o e d s m u s t
pass a physical oxamination
bo• * *
— H e a d l i n e in U n i o n
C o l l o g e foro b e i n g a l l o w e d p e r m i s s i o n t o
paper, " C o l l e g e S o p h o m o r e Caught s l a y o u t until midnight on w e e k . S w i p i n g A p p l e s B e c o m e s M i n i s t e r d a y n i p h l s , a n d until 1 : 3 0 o n S a t urday nights.
to Russia."
*
•
Communications
Exchangiana
a
THE
FRID.W. M.ARCH 16. 19.'>,4.
TRACK CANDIDATES
CALLED FOR FIRST
PRACTICE OF YEAR
Boettcher Seeks New Ma-1
terial to Bolster Veteran ]
Nucleus of Squad
|
SCHEDULE
ANNOUNCED
Middle Atlantic* to be Held
Easton; Season Begins
April 20
Sporting Sparks
Q U I N T E T A D O P T S COMPROMISE
Tho varsity basketball team u n d e r the guidance of Coach
Lorenz has made what, in our humble opinion, seems to be a
most sensible derision. When they assembleil to elect a captain
recently, t h e seniors put forth a proposal whirh. simply stated,
provided for the possible selection of an honorary captain at the
close of the regular l!»,T4-35 court season.
-After some discussion on the subject the motion was modified slightly so t h a t the captain should not be elected at the close
of the .schedule when he could be of little benefit to the team,
but so that he should be elected after the third gamo of the .season, which falls immediately before the Chiistmas vacation next
winter. This plnn was adopted.
A S A T I S F A C T O R Y SOLUTION
The final decision is a wise one. .As was brought out in the
deliberation preceding the vote, there is no j u n i o r at the present
time who is even reasonably certain of a varsity berth on next
year's five. By the time the season has progressed as fnr as the
third game, however, it .seems logical to expect that the most
worthy man for the position will have demon.strated his fitness
for the honor. Accordingly the possible chance of a non-participating captain will be eliminated.
Coach Boettcher ha< announced
t h a t all caniliilate.s for either the
Freshman or Var.sity track teams
.lihould meet on the main lloor of
the gymnasium on .March l i ' at
4:15 p. m. Reporting candidates
should wear sweat .shirts and
sneakers as a lipht work out will
be held. It is important t h a t all
those v h o plan to come out should
r i g i s t e r in order thnt the proper
equipment may be secured a.s soon
as possible.
It is Coach Boettcher's contention that n u n who have had little
or no experience arc just as important as those seasoned contenders. Many men have latent ability which they do not discover until they have made an attempt to
do so. This is particularly true of
sprinters and jumpers.
The period between now
and
the E a s t e r vacation will be devoted solely to preliminary limbering up exercises and easy running. It is most important that
all men have this work before taking up specific events.
While on the subject of captains it is altogether fitting at
this time to c o n g r a t u l a t e the newly elected leaders of swimming
and wrestling. Bud Quiney, veteran Maroon natator, has .shown
him.self to be one of the most consistent p e r f o r m e r s on the Lafayette squad of mermen. Participating in the gruelling quarter-mile grind, Quiney is distinguished as the Lafayette holder
of the record for that event in the gymnasium pool.
Quiney
swam in the Intercollegiates this year, failing to qualify for the
finals by the narrowest of margins in a fa.s^ heat.
The lettermen of this year's varsity wrestling squad selected Bob Callender, lithe 145-pound grappler, to lead the remnants of the strong Maroon siiuad of this year through the season of 1!>35. Late in reporting this year, Callender's work on
the mat showed marked improvement as the season wore on until
he became one of the most formidable wrestlers a t Coach Miller's call.
•
Indoor T r a c k
GOLD FOOTBALLS FOR SENIOR LETTERMEN
L a s t year's indoor track team
made an enviable record, winning
the Middle Atlantic State Collegiate .athletic Associatiori meet and
setting a new record in the relay.
In the I'enn Relays the team came
in second in the Class B championship of .-Vmerica.
.Mthough three members of t h a t
relay team have graduated, plenty
of good m.iterial still
remains.
F r e d Clark who turned in a fortyeight second run as anchor man,
F r e d Xagle who competed in the
Olympic try-outs and
Bernard
Siegfried
who participated
in
many of last year's relays, form a
fine nucleus on which to build this
year's team.
While realizing t h a t the present time of ^ e a r is a pretty far
cry from the football season, we cannot resist the temptation to
digress for a while on t h a t ever popul.^r subject. Our remarks
are occasioned by the determination of the .senior lettermen of
the 1933 foothall .squad to a t t e m p t to obtain gold footballs in
recognition of their services and achievements on the gridiron.
It seems t h a t it has for a long time been the custom of
the athletic d e p a r t m e n t t o award these trophies to those gradua t i n g members of the eleven who had earned their varsity L in
t h a t sport. Liist year this practice was discontinued. The football men feel, and rightly so, t h a t they have deserved this recognition of their gridiron activity and a r c t a k i n g steps to obtain
the awards, if not t h r o u g h the athletic d e p a i l m e n t , then through
student aid. W h a t e v e r may come of this a t t e m p t , the men are
entirely justified in their endeavor. They participated in a
schedule during the fall that exacted a maximum of work
throughout the year without a single letdown.
The schedule is as follows:
April 2 0 — R u t g e r s a t Easton.
April 27-28—Penn Relays.
.May 4 — S w a r t h m o r e at Swarthmore.
.May 5—Lafayette Interscholastics.
at
May 11—Middle Atlantics
Enston.
.May Hi—Muhlenberg at AUentown—pending.
May 19—Lehigh at Bethlehem.
The Freshmen will meet LeLehigh, Rutgers, Muhlenberg and
1 Easton High School.
IT W O N ' T BE LONG NOW
Coach Bill Coughlin has been eagerly testing the condition of the soil these days. So far he has had his charges holding daily practice sessions of a limited n a t u r e in the gymnasium
with particular attention being paid to the hurling staff and the
receivers. Other candidates for the nine have been tossing the
apple around a n d eagerly anticipating the day when they can begin to use the stadium field.
P. L. G.
FIFTH BRAINERD
DANCE PLANNED
F o u r Fraternities to Sponsor Open
Dance in Brainerd Hall
on March 24
CAPTAINS QUINEY AND CALLENDER
Students to Organize
Schedule for Lacrosse
-As now planned the
lacro.sse team this year will be
a student organization,
organized along the same lines
as the soccer team of last season. Letters have been sent
out to Princeton, Pennsylvania, Stevens, and Lehigh in
an effort to a r r a n g e a suitable schedule for the sport.
On Saturday, March 24, the
Brainerd Society will spon.sor in
Brainerd Hall the first ilancc of its
spring series with the
Towers,
T h e t a Chi, Theta Xi, and Sigma
Nu fraternities acting as hosts.
Chairman W. Carleton Harding,
'3.'), announced today.
i
T h e orchestra and
chaperones
for the affair have not a.s yet been Reynolds to Test Two Sept e c u r e d , b u t it is expected that all
arate Teams in First
(details will be announced within aj
Tilt of Year
week.
As usual all couples will
be admitted free of charge, but
On March 24, the Rugby seastags will be taxed
twenty-five
son will be offlcially opened with
cents apiece.
This is the fifth ilance in the a game again.st Princeton, providseries of social events planned by ing the playing conditions of the
the Brainerd Society for various field a r e satisfactory.
.Another
S a t u r d a y nights throughout
the game with the Tigers is .scheduled
college year.
Two more dances for .April 7. There is also a possia r e scheduled for the r e m a i n d e r
! bility that the Oxford University
of the t e r m : one on either April
21 or 28 and the other on either Rugby team will give a demonstration of the finer points of the
.May 5 or 12.
jgame here, in the near future.
j Coach Reynolds
has
already
RELIGION TEACHERS
taken steps in assembling a teum.
TO HOLD MEETING jAt a meeting in the gymnasium on
! Wedne.sday, ho gave a black board
Professors from Nearby Colleges italk pointing
out the
various
to Hold Second of Series
I methods of attack and defen.se. It
of Dinners
I was also announced at this timf?
]that the first practice will be held
Teachers of Religion from nearby colleges a r e planning to hold this coming Saturday.
RUGBY TEAM LISTS
GAME WITH TIGERS
the second of a series of dinner
Two Squads
meetings Monday evening a t six I
o'clock in College Inn.
i Coach Reynolds has also stated
Invitations for this meeting have t h a t thirty men will be needed
been accepted by professor.' from ' for the game with Princeton. Both
Lohigh,
.Muhlonborg,
.Moravian an .A and B team will be used,
College for Men, Lafayette, Mor- oach playing a separate game.
iivian College for Women
and
The following men and others
Cedar Crest College.
who are interested in the sport
Dr.
William
Mather
Lewis, are requested to t u r n o u t — S t a b president of LafayoUe College will ' ley, F. Jacoub.^, L. Jacoubs, Wachhpeak on "The Objectives of a ter, Dean Meyers, C. Meyers, N.
('ollege Department of Religion." Jones, D. Gile.s, W. Publicover,
The lir.st meeting of this kind was Carty, Deutsch, G. Scott, Erwin,
held in December at Cedar Crest .Adamo, La Vecchia, K. Jones,
Rusk, .'Vliller, Bishop, Fox,
GorCollege.
man, Hass, Kolasky, O'Neil, Pro
vost, Sales, Segal, Bialey, Bialkow-l>i, De Quintero, Aronion, McCaji,
Candle Light Service
.MacMasters, Massey,
.Markarian,
To Be Held Sunday
Schmitt, Uantiny, Elfman,
Fitzwater, Tasker, Sherwood,
SherBiainerd Candle Light Serman, W a r d and Wert.
vice will be condueted a t five
Last spring the Lafayette rugo'clock Sunday afternoon in
t h e chapel. "The leader will
by team played in the first interbe William .McDowell ,'37, ascollegiate game to be played in
.^inte^ hy HaydeH Oliver, 'tiH,
the L'nited States against Prinotgunial.
.;0toD, who won.
I
A
LAFAYETTE
TOUCHSTONE STAFF
I ELECTS FOUR MEN
Bartlett, Light, B e r m a n , a n d
D e R o s s e t C h o s e n for
Editorial Board
F o u r men wore selected to
1 membership on Tho Touchstone
I staff at a meeting of the Editorial
I Board last week. They aro WilI "liam L. Bartlett, '34, Asaph S.
Light, ' 3 5 , J a m e s O. Herman, '3(!,
and Armand J. DeRo.sset, '3().
All of the four mon chosen a r e
participants in campus activities.
j Bartlett is Exch.inge E d i t o r of
[both the Lafayotte and tho L y e ,
I a member of the .Melange staff and
I a member of the track team.
Light is a representative in the
I n t e r f r a t e r n i t y Council, a member of the Molango staff, a twoyear member of thu
Lafayette
Editorial staff, and a steady performer on the swimming
toam.
He is m a n a g e r of the Junioi' Varsity and 150 lb. football.
Berman was center
on
last
year's fit>shman basketball
team.
He is also a m e m b e r of the Lafayette Editorial staff and of Calumot, honorary sophomoro society.
DeRosset belongs to the Clee Club,
choir. Mathematics Club, and the
Lafayette
Editorial staff.
Last
year he won the freshman English
prize, the Phi Beta Kappa Prize,
r n d the .Mpha Chi Sigma Prize.
New Issue Planned
The next issue of the Touchstone will be published on .•\pril
20, Howard J . Bell, J r . , '34, announced today. .Ml stories must
be in the hands of the editor or
of tho Editorial Board by April
12.
Literary contributions in the
form of essays, stories, poems, or
criticisms are acceptable. All students a r e requested to submit their
contributions early in order to allow sufficient
time for
proper
selection of material.
The following men comprise t h e
Touchstone
b o a r d : Howard
J.
Bell, J r . , '34, e d i t o r ; Richard
Hutchison, ' 3 5 , F r a n k
Gardner,
'35, Steve Koji, ' 3 5 , Louis Martz,
'35, David Schwimmer, ' 3 5 , William Bartlett, '34, .\saph Light,
'35, J a m e s Berman, '3(), and Armand DeRo.s.set, '3(1. William R.
Van.Xken, '34, is business manager, and Professor E d w a r d
G.
Brown is faculty adviser.
Pajrf Three
intramural Handball
Tilts to Start Monday
Robert S. F o u g n e r , I n t r a mural
manager
announced
t h a t tho fiivt round
matchos
in i n t r a m u r a l handball will be
po.^toil .Miip.ibiy and .should lio
lilayed olf by Wednesday. Ho
also announced
that
tntramural baseball will begin immediately a f t e r the E a s t e r recess.
Lost
Addresses
iuoorwoT
111 the mad iliisli for appai"el
aftor the Prom, somebody picked
up my cont. Inasmch as tho one
I got was claimed, I should liko
to havo mino back. It is light
weight, black, single
bnastod,
having a J a c o b Mayer soal, and a
white scarf in the inside pocket.
• A. S. Light, Thota Xi.
*
GLEE CLUB GIVES
TONCERTTHURSDAY
<.i:i<i:iNO HIMIS, I'mps.
i,iir.\Ti;ii AT -'I-' r.VTTKi.i. S T I ; F : I : T
ti^SV IIM\O Viiiir SliiK's Kesiileil hy Laiiiiio PriiepsN—
iHU
Ni> Siun of Repair
S ^ M It i; I'lil iii'K .\.\ii,i;i>. .<i:\vi;i>. (ll; N r i . i ' . v . M / i ; ! !
'SO/ We S|MTiiill/e ill Arili I'rpserver SIIIM-H — Sliiip Shine
r..- 1 M;,t.ri.il I'soil .Ml Work I l,ni IMIII . . .1 K.iii- Tii..'
2 1 2 C a t t e l l St.
1 2 2 E. N e s q u e h o n i n g St.
Easton, Pa.
The
'f
-Also, in tho
afore-mentioned
The following L a f a y e t t e men
somebody
was the
arc on the I jst list of the Aluinni congestion
derby
Office.
If you know t h e where- recipient of a Style-Park
abouts of a n y of them, please no- Vvhich no doubt didn't b i l o n g to
him and which was probably too
tify tho .\lunini Secretary.
Any information
] f 0 5 , Joseph T. Cahlwell; 1900, l.'irgo for him.
Waldo Reed H e u s t i s , J 9 HI, J o h n of its whereabouts, providing it
H. Gaffin; 191K, Frod E. R e n n ; is still in good condition, would be
1919,
.Sylvester Van.S. Howell, appreciated.
A. II. Sandt, Thota Xi.
Charles J . D. McVeigh, S. R.
Smith, F r a n k Tamborelle, J r . , P e lor Don W e b s t e r , Fred .M. Whit- P R O F E S S O R
YERGER
n e y ; 1920, Charles A. Cowley,
PRESENTS
EVENSONG
J o h n V. McMahon, Charle.s G.
(continued from page ono)
Schober; 1".I2I, Sheldon Condr.-iy,
n a t u r e , consisting of slow move.Alfred
G. Dreher, Robert T.
ments from the works of cla.ssical
Resinkoff, John W. T e m p l e ; 1922,
and modern composers.
H e n r y P. Cullen,
William A.
The complete jirogram is as folThiol, J r . , H. Bradford
Urey;
lows: " F a n t a s i e in G " by J. b.
1923, J a m e s H. Ballantyne, WalHach; " R o p o n t a n c o "
by Nicode;
t e r H. Bashore, P . A. .Mazza,
".Ave M a r i a " by the French comIJrui'o C. Mollingoi', Konnoth -A.
posi'r Gounod; " A n d a n t e " from
F. P i t t : 1924, Kenneth L. B a r r e t t
Mendel.-sohn's
"Sixth
Sonate";
K. Earlo H a r p e r ; 1925, M. C.
and
"Largo"
from
Dvorak's
Lowonbi'i'g, Douglas Schime.skors;
"World S y m p h o n y . "
192(;, John H. Stubblehine, Alphonso W e s t ; 1927, Kenneth J.
Bush, W. Norville Finloy, Jr., Cat- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a
arino t i a r z a . J a c k L e w , Eihvin
Compliments of
King .Mitchell, W. W." Murray,
Herman J. R. Riediger, W. K. j
S t o u t : 192R, Goorge H. Bone,
Earl H. Davis, Daniel K. Read.
Edward M. T i e r n e y ; 1929, Ferdinanilo Barrenechea, J r . , H e n r y M.
M. A. Filson. ''J8, Prop.
Houtz, Hazard D. Leisonring, J o h n
R. Lippincott, J a m e s L. P o r t e r ;
1930, Leon K. B. B^own, O. G.
CASH P.\IU
Rodrlquez; 1 9 3 1 , J . r t m i a h
A.
Fur Old (Hild, .Silver, Disiardeil
Iti-iilues and (iiild Teelli
Kutzler; 1933, Melville G. ArniiK.siT i'i{ii'i:.s; I'.MI)
•toiii, .Morris G. Isaac.<;on, George
K. LoVeciiuo, J r . ; Lloyn M.Pierce,
A. KREIGER
R. O. Thatcher.
.II:WI;LI;I{
y.i Siiiilli 'I'liiril St., Kaston,
1 9 1 2 — E d w a r d Joseph Rankin.
••••••••••••••••••••••a
1918—Harold B. Hufford.
1 9 2 2 — H a r v e y F'reeman, J a m e s
H. Williams, J r .
1927—William W\ Highberger.
]!i;jO—Charles (J. Flott, John
.M. Highberger,
Harvey
B r i n k e r Honn, J r . , David
Charles MacMurray.
1 9 3 3 — J o h n Davi.- Simpson.
and the .\lma M a t e r concluded the
concert.
The next important engagement HOGG IS SELECTED
of the (ilee Club is the Home ConBRAINERD PRESIDENT
cert, to be presented
in P a r d e e
-Auditorium
on
April
twelfth.
(continued from page one)
Choruses from Gilbert and Sullivan's popular operetta " I I . .M. S. (iu.stav
liach.-irach. Delta
'I'au
Pinafore"
are
in
p r e p a r a t i o n . Delta; Philip (iroenawalt, Kapp.'i
Richard Broa.s has tho solo parts Delta Rho; William Dreher, Sigma
of Sir H a r r y P o r t e r K. C. B., who Chi; J o h n J a m i e s o n ,
Phi
Delta
is " m o n a r c h of the si.'a, ruler of T h e t a ; Lee llill, Phi Kappa T a u ;
the Queen's N a v e e . "
Thomas and Robert F o u g n e r , Sigma Chi.
Spengler will sing the p a r t of the
Captain of the " P i n a f o r e , " and
his delicately nonsensical serenade ner, '35, tenors, Thomas Spengler,
to " d e a r little B u t t e r c u p . "
'34, b a r i t o n e , and E a r n e s t Pulse,
Spengler, Hess, and Broas
Tonight the
musical activities '34, bass, has been prominent in
Are S o l o i s t s in Proof Lafayette College a r e extend- Lafayotto music this
year.
It
ing to New York, !it the Hotel sang a t a meeting of the West
gram at Ocean City
.Mc.Mpin, where a Lafayette quar- Chester Alumni Association last
,
r
L
— _ u . t^t is e n t e r t a i n i n g a meeting of term, and recently gave a program
.•\ g r o u p of seventeen members ., ,.„,„ , . , . ,
. .
. •?.
.t*^ Lafayette
j'^,
J.
rs
11 „ ^ , „ „ ithe New ^ ork Alumni .Association. to t h e combined Civic Clubs of
of the
College
Lafayette
College
, , .
,
, ,,,., Nazareth. Haydon Oliver, '3(1, is
Club traveled
to Ocean
City, Glee
New i,«. .
'
I
1
his
q
u
a
r
t
e
t
is
made
up
of
Wil- :\ccomiianisl for tho gniiip.
Jersey, yesterday
aftemoon
to
liam
Ho.s.s,
'-.Ul,
and
F
r
a
n
k
(iardpresent a program of religious |
and popular numbers at the First |
Methodist Episcopal
Church
of;
Ocean City.
The program included numerous I
solos by William Hess, '30, Harry !
Thomas Spengler, '34, and Richard Broas, '34, as well as two j
violin selfction.s by Hubert Taylor i
'35. Tho (ik'G Club wa.s under tho '
direction of Professor Thoma.s E.
Yerger, college organiiit.
The traditional opening piece of
the Glee Club, ".My Chosen King,"
a Bach chorale, wa.s followed by
Bortnainsky's
" L o , a Voice
to
Heaven S o u n d i n g , " and Tschaikow.sky'.s "I'raise Ye the L o r d . "
William
He.ss sang
a.s
solos
" D u n a , " "Hills of Home," by Fox,
and an encore " W i t h o u t a S o n g , "
l)y Rose.
THE COLLEGE
BOOKSTORE :
•••••••••••••••
THATCHER^S
S E A
FOO
MARKET
MOHICAN MARKET
23-29 S O U T H F O U R T H ST.
LAFAYETTE WE ARE HERE
Let Mohican Service help you to keep within
your budget
(Ea.ston'.s Biggt'.st and Cleanest I'ure Food Market)
EDWARD CLOTHES
Sold
Exclusively
by
518 MAIN STREET
BETHLEHEM
P R E S I D E N T S A N D DE PART ME IVT H E A D S O F
THE LEADING U N I V E R S I T I E S R E C O M M E N D
$$ILI.EdATE
"Jhc hfnt .im'-rifrtii iJtclinnnry thnt hnn yrt
apprnreil
.'nr n , 4*Jtfp.f KitJtlt lit Itt Uffff uit/iin arm'% rratk. tl hat hit
riff- ttiit find ty tiffin IIM rin-rm in relatlurt ttt thr i^eniTttt
II*'- «»/ i€»ir*h it! fpvrrh or tm printnl ;mf|ri trill mtt bn
»<•,*•• «..'rv r.> ti rihrrnt (irl« ilt f:rf*'."—Orlnn l.mif.
Itlrftlay. fV Ir.tcr lasjltulc- .-/ Litcrulurr, Lnivcrtity oJ JUiamt.
Tt.^ (i''it nli'li^ri"'! I'lf'tlonn'v hfraw"^ It I^ liat^i nn thn
•'.'-'-i.rrn, I Aii!;(..vitj"—WtUJtef i New IutPtnitijn»t Ixctloiiiry.
rno.OftO «'«»r'ci itwitiil'nc Ii'.iiulnils it npw worrit, tUili il-'frtitt.,r,< » fli:i " v np.l r i . r . T t iiv< ; .i U u t i n n a r v ,.t BtOflraphy: x
Lurtttar: t u f '^r punetiiitiM; iine tf raplttls. abbreviatltns.
rii*.: r* dIrtlAna'v cf f<irc!3n wwili and phra«««. .Mam otiipr
t.3li:!t:t ot prat'U'Al yAlUM. l,2t;8 ]*«JtCI. 1,7UU lllUflratiimi.
K.'p T' At Vour Ci-!!tje Bookstore or Writ* for iRfcirtiution t j
Co r:.i ;.-,Iicrj.
C. !i:;R?JAM CO.
^--Wr-J--^
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
^^'"W^!^'
THE ARCADE
Centre Square
Phone 7151
Cflen C//Y/;y nw
THE NEW
DENTISTRY
.1 Phase oj Preventive .Medicine
Colleite Men find in it unutual
opportuiiitic!! for a career
THK H;irvard Cnivrr^lty Dental
School (irfei> u conipclciil lour-e
of prcpar.itiim for the ilrnlal
prnfc'.sinn.
A "Ci.A<s .\" Sciiiiiil.
H'rile Ilir iiiliilnoiir
Lcriy M. S. MlniT. D M 0., M.D.. Dtan
U rl 34,1111, Lonowooa A v . Bi.l»n, Ua-i.
THE END OF
The Gloe Club continued
the
progrram with Sullivan'.s semireligious piece, " T h e Long Day
Closes," and an old
German
melody, " Y e Watchers and Ve
Holy O n e s . "
Another series of solos followed. Thomas Spengler sang Schubert's well known " W h o is Sylvia,
What
is S h e ? " and
Hullah'a
'Three Fishers," with " T h e Vagabonds" as an encore. H u b e r t Taylor playod Massenet's "Meditation
from
T h a i s " and
Beethoven's
"Minuet in t J " as violin solos.
The Gloe Club then presented
its popular selections, including
'.wo negro spirituals a r r a n g e d by
Bartholomew, "Swing Low Sweet
Chariot," and " J o s h u a Fit the
Battle of J e r i c h o . " Richard Broa.s
lang tho solo in tho fomier num'jor, and as an encore gave Bond's
•'Just
A-wearyin'
for
You."
" D r u m s " by De Leone and "Roll
.Mong Cowboy" hy Russel were
alFO included.
The program ended with Lafayette
College
songs.
Henry
Loper, ' 3 3 , prominent t e n o r soloist
of last year's Glee Club playod
his own composition
which was
featured at the Centennial Pageant, " S p i r i t of Lafayette," while
the Glee Club sang it under the
direction of J o h n Miller, '34, student leader. "Tho Fighting Marq u i s , " " W a y Down in E a s t o n , "
•/•
COLLEGE HILL SHOE REBUILDER
his
CASA L O M A
ORCHESTRA
PLAYING NIGHTLY AT
iS'COLONNADES*
Where perfect food at mi)Jer.iic prices
is available to disiriniinatiiig people . . .
dinner $2.50 or a la c:irte (cover charge
after 10:}0, $1.00 on \vcckd.i)S, $1.50 on
Saturdays and Holiday Eves.) Drrsi option,//. For reservations call CIrcle7-O3f)0.
* Under Qttn litatij Caiitio .Wauastment
.M. I.. DcZlTTrK
rinVMin DORAN
.*•'>:?: :^
f "WIRVES"
NERVOUS. t »
UPSET
ON CAWELS. THEY
MY NERVES . . • AND, BOY,
HOW GOOD THEY TASTE!
CAMELS
TOBAtaDS
YOU CAN SMOKE THEM STEADI,LY. . . BECAUSE THEY '
NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES . . . NfVER TIRE YOUR TASTE*
««i3Bi<fcite-- «SK
Page Fdu¥
THE
•aa
PI DETA EPSILON Interscholastic
Games
TO SPONSOR TALKS
Four Noted Publishers to
Give
Illustrated
Lectures Next
Friday
Basketball
League
to Resume Tomorrow
Night
The Laf.iyotto .Athletic Departmont bas aniiouncoii a revision of the schedule for the remaining games of tho Intorschola-stic Ba.sketball T o u r n a m e n t . Tho new line-up differs
slightly from t h a t announced in the previous Lafayotto. Tho
new schedule is as follows;
Friday:
.1:00—Hun .School vs. .•Mlentown Prop.
4 : 1 5 — P e n n i n g t o n School vs. Wenonah .Military.
7:00—St. Cecilia v.s. Garfield H. S.
8:1.5—^Wa.shinpton H. S. vs. Lakewood H. S.
Saturday:
n:00—Allontown H. S. v?. Northampttin H. S.
4:15—Phillipsburg Parochial v.s. w i r n c r of St. C^ociliaGarficlil.
7:30—Phillipsburg H. S. vs. winner of WnshingtonLakewood.
S:30—Enston H. S. v.~. Quakoitown H. S.
The finals will bo played on Wodnosday. .March 24th as
.scheduled.
LAFAYETTE
KENNARD TO HOLD |
DEVOTION SERVICE
A p p e l to C o n d u c t
Phonograph Exchange
I
(continued from pago one)
the t h r e e h o n o r degrees. T h e vote I
E v a n g e l i c a l L e a g u e l o C o n - 1 must be unanimou.s in o r d e r to |
d u c t P r o g r a m in t h e
elect.
Easton Hospital
T h r e e Kindc o f M e m b e r s
|
On Frid.iy evening March 2.S,
Tomorrow afternoon, Professor
Pi Delta Epsilon, national honorHarold Kennard of the jlcparta r y journalistic fi-aternity,
will
menl of oiiginoering will conduct
sponsor a meeting open to all who
a n o t h e r ono of his Gospel service.''
a r e interested.
•it the Ea^.-ton Hospital.
F o u r well known men,
repreAssisted by members
of
tho
sentatives of every branch of the
L e a g u e of Evangelical .Students,
publi.shing bu.siness, will speak on
Profossor Konnard conducts each
the subject.'^ of printing, ongravweok a p r o g r a m known as " T h o
iiijr and photogniphy.
Lafayotto Go.spol H o u r " from two
Mr. Charles R. King, of
the
until throo o'clock on
Saturday
Kutztown
Publi.shing
Company,
afternoons.
These services, conwill give Jin illu.strated lecture on
sisting of
hymns,
testimonials,
pi'inting. Mr. King is noted for
and a sermon, aro given to b r i n g
his lectures on this .subject, and
the message of the Bible to tho
ha.s talked before many journalis- K. R. T. REVISES POINT
QUINEY IS ELECTED
sick. It has boon .stated by occutic audiences hoth in colleges and
of tho hospital t h a t
they
ADMISSION SYSTEM
SWIMMING CAPTAIN pants
elsewhere. Following his lecture
look forward to the sorvico each
Mr. E. .\. E.s.ser, president of the
week. Tho p r o g r a m s wore s t a r t (continued from page o n e )
Kutztown Publishing
Company
( c o n t i n u e d from page o n e )
ed late last fall and aro to conwill give a short talk on the .same ette work to c o u n t ) 7 ; Bu.siness
tinue for several months.
-ubject.
M a n a g e r of tho Lafayetto
( n o onco put him into training for tho
440.
The Gospel H o u r originates in a
The third speaker on this occa- o t h e r Lafayotte work to c o u n t ) fi;
studio on the first floor and is
Good Record
sion will be Mr. A. G. S h a r p , of E d i t o r of tho Melange (no othor
During tho past season. Bud did carried to each patient by teletho I'ontiac E n g r a v i n g Company, Melange work to count) S; E d i t o r
Bods are equipped
nf Chicago, who will speak on tho of the Lyro (no othor Lyre stall exception:il work, being defeated phone wires.
subject of engr.hving, presenting points to c o u n t ) 8 ; Business Man- but twice, onco a t tho hands of a with earphones. Tho system is
.samples to illi-strato his points. a g e r of tho Lyre ( n o othor Lyro Swaitbnioiv swimmer, and again operated by John Doremus, ".}<>.
Profossor Kennard, who is facThe last speaker on tho program stair points to count) (!; Bu.siness at the hands of ox-captain Bowwill bo Mr. Charles Johnson of tho M a n a g e r of the Melange ( n o other man whoso own fine porformancos ulty :idvisor for the League of
White Studios in New Y'ork City Melange work to c o u n t ) (>; Prosi- have won him a pliice in the ath- PIvangolical S t u d e n t s , is prominent
in church work in Easton.
who will rcjire.sent tho photogra- dont of .Student Council (Points letic annals of the collcfje.
Ten mon recoivod tho varsity
phy branch, who will havo exam- of J u n i o r Yoar not to oount) 12:
.Anyone wishing to participate
lilos of expert photography
to President of Brainerd (no othor swimming a w a r d for work d u r i n g in one of tho programs should got
-how to these present.
yoars on cabinet to count) 10; tho past season.
Two of t h e m , in touch with
either
Professor
President
of
Intor-fratcrnity ex-captain Bowman and Captain Konnard or Donald
Scott,
'H.'i,
Open Di<cuf*ion
. \ f t e r .Mr. Johnson's t.Tlk tho Council 8 ; President of Non-fra- Quiney recoivod major " L ' s " for Newkirk Hall.
breaking
performinoeting will be open for a gen- ti.rnity .Association <>; Captain ol" thoir ii'cord
eral discussion a t which time tho Debate Team (no other years on ances. Thoso receiving tho reguNorman
speakers will be gl.id to an.swer debate to count) H; President of lar minor a w a r d woro,
a n y questions or explain an>^hing Senior Class (elected J u n i o r y e a r ) Stotllot. ':?fi, J o h n n y Hen.-lor, '.'Jfi,
William L. Van Buskirk, class
t h a t may be of interest to any of <»; Hoad Cheer Le.idor (no othor Aco Light, '.•{;">, Scotty Borrowtho listeners.
'
; points to count for being assist- man, '.'ifi. J a c k E m m e t t , 'Si',. Walt of 1<»27, and a Ph.D. from the
of
Pennsylvania
in
Arnold, ".iC>, .Alex P a p p , ';ifi and University
Tho meeting will bo hold
in | a n t ) fi; Senior I n t r a m u r a l Manali).'!2 is a ProfoFsqr of i sychology
.Manager Van Aken, '^4.
Brainerd Hall a t 7:30.
Rolrosh- j ger 8 (point.s not a c c u m u l a t i v e ) ;
Although tho past record of a t the College of P h a r m a c y and
ments will bo .served. All mem- • Minor Potition< and Activitie*
Prosidcnt of tho .Athletic .Asso- four victories and
one
d e f e a t .Science in Phil.idelphia.
In-r.s of any of the colloge publications are e.specially invited.
; ciation r>; .Minor spoit .squad (por stands as the best in the history
Louis D. Ooodfcllow
of
the
year por sport--cortified by coach) of swimming al Lafayotte, it is
ono and one half; Minor
sport oxpeetod that next year's n a t a t o r s , ch'ss of 1020, and a Ph.D. from
SLANTZ DISCUSSES
squad (i>or yoar per sport—ceiti- undor Cjiptain Quinoy,
will
a t Northwestern University in 19.^2
is an instructor in Psychology in
PLACEMENT SERVICE i fiod by coach) ono half; J u n i o r least o(iual it, if not surpass it.
t h a t university in Evanston, IlliAssistant Manager of
a
major
nois.
sport (defeated J u n i o r ) 4 ; J u n i o r
(continued from puge o n e )
sive salaries .should bo an import- I n t r a m u r a l managei- 4 ; (non ac- j Draniatics, chief stage m a n a g e r —
Charios C. Limburg of the cla.ss
Junior
Assistant jif ho works one yoar I ; Dramatics,
a n t concern of Federal
Govern- c u m u l a t i v e ) ;
nient. It may bo legally right for Manager of a minor sport (de- lolectrician of Freshman play 1-2; of I02!> is .1 psychologist ;it the
;i man to do as ho will with that feated J u n i o r ) 2 ; Sophomore As- Loador of tho Gloe Club por yoar United S t a t e s Industrial Keformawhich i.s his own, provided ho sistant Manager of a major sport | 2 : .Manager q^ the Gloe Club por toi->' in Chillicotho, Ohio.
locognizos his responsibilities to (sophomore defeated) 1-2; Mana- jyoar 2 ; .Member of tho Gloo Club
society.
g e r of a Fre.shman Major sport 2 ; (por year 1; Leader of tho InstruJ u d a L. Ro.sen.stein, 102!>, is an
major ! mental Club per yoar :t; .^lanager assi.stant Profossor of Psychology
2. I'lacement reeonls
should Captain of a Fre.shman
convoy information
concerning sport 2 1-2; Freshman n u m e r a l s O! thi- Instriimontnl Club per year at Butler University in InilianVocational Opportunities.
in a major .sport 1 1-2; Caplain ; 1 - .Monilior of the
Instiiimontal apolis, Indiana.
Choir
In those times whon Industrial of a Froshman minor sport I 1-2; Ciuli per year 1 ; ('ollege
Keprcsentutives outbid each othor Freshman minor sport team 1-2; 1-2; Phi Beta Kappa .'•: Tau Beta
Paul Mchm, iO:!;!, is Vocational
r>;
Intramural
Individual Advisor with tho Dopartmont of
for the services of y o u n g college J u n i o r assistant cheer leaders .1; I i
gi-aduatcs there was u r g e n t nei.'d S t u d e n t Council—other
officers i Champion.ship or mi.'mbor of cham- Labor and Indu.stry, Bureau of
for competent guidance in assist- t h a n presidont 4 ; Student Council pionship t o a m — p e r yoar por sport Rehabilitation, in Wilkes-Rarre^
ing guillable young men in di.s- — p e r yoar, ex-officio officers do 1-2; J-V sport per yoar por spoit
fingui.shing between blind
alloy not count n ; Brainord Cabinet— 1; J-V Captain no othor letter in
jobs and opportunities for follow- por yoar 2 ; Senior Class Officers the sport to count 4 ; J-V and l.">0
ing .satisfactoiy work loading to — o t h e r than president 2 ; J u n i o r I'o. m a n a g e r .3; J-V squad per year
sport—coaches
certificate
;i career. Monographs aro most Class President 2 ; J u n i o r Class por
ndiuble consensus of opinion of Oflicors—other than president 1; necoss.-iry 1-2; l.'iO Ib. l e t t e i m e n
oxporieneed .idvi.serji.
Sophomore Class
Presidont
1; per year per sport 1; l.'iO lb. CapWhat are the problems of Place- Sophomoro Class
Officers—other t a i n — n o othor letter in sport to
ment under present day condi- t h a n president 1-2; Chairman J u n - count 1; 150 Ib. s q u a d — p o r yoar
tion.s?
ior Prom. Committee .'I; Chairman per sport—cerlifiod by coach 1-2;
Noto. — Credit for a combination
J
If we begin with t h e woll known u n i o r Brow.se 1 ; Chairman Soph- of points for J-V and l.'iO lb.
omore
Cotillion
Committeo
2
;
:ipologia of Will R o g e r s —
!squads in the same sport will not
Froshman
Banquet
"All I know is w h a t I read in Chairman
' b(- g r a n t e d .
Committee
I
;
President
Maroon
tho p a p e r s , " we may arrive
at
widely difTerent conclusions.
It Key Club 3 ; President Calumet ! Indoor Track Mon 1—certified
depends on Interpretation.
Arc Club .*?; Tho Lafayetto—Assi.stant by coach; .Soi)homore
Assi.stant
the
professions
overcrowded'.' Managing Editors, News Editor. I n t i n m u r a l M a n a g e r — 2
non-acS p o r t s Editor, .Alumni Editor, Cir- cumulative.
Perhaps!
culation Manager, Local AdvertisModicinc is a " p r o t e c t e d " proAlso, any student of LafayetU'
ing Manager, Nation.'il AdvertiiSf> ssion.
Increasing barriers aro
'who has lierformed
outstanding
ing .Manager—no othor Lafayette
.set up to the young man, mainly
is( rvice to tho college, and yet ha.'votes
to
count.
This
means
this
to maintain " s t a n d a r d s , " but also
J not achieved the minimum of l.'i
to maintain prohibitive prices for credit is given when the highest liOints neces.sary for eligibility to
position
is
a
t
t
a
i
n
e
d
—
4
;
T
h
e
Laservices. The field of prevont;iIU ction, may be elected by unanitivo medicinu, health servico t o the fayetto .Stair per y e a r — c o u n t s I mous vuti' of the members, providonly
if
highe.st
job
reached
1-2;
entire community, to say nothing
,od t h a t not more than one such
of .-ocialized medicine may muko Advertising Manager of tho Lyi-e person be elected p e r year.
a vast difference in the opportun- 2 ; Tho Lyro other officers 1; Lyro
Staff per year 1-2; J u n i o r Assi.itities opon to young men.
a n t Editors and Business Manager
What about E d u c a t i o n ?
Tho
J u n i o r Colleges a r e a r r i v i n g as a of the .Melange 2 ; Debate Team
result of Child Labor laws. How per year, not to count if captain
about educating o u r young people 2 ; Manager of Debate Team 2 ;
by travel'! Teaching geography, Freshman Debate T e a m — m u s t be
history, sociology, government, by certified by coach 1-2; Dramatics
organized transportation, may be 1-2 a play; Dramatics, chief elecl a r moro profitable
than
over- trician—if ho works one year I ;
crowding .schools and "nationali.m" depending on force of a r m s .
What about legal t r a i n i n g as a tions but to set up competent
pre-requisito for politics and the planning bodies to collect accurate
information.
holding of public office'.'
Is this purely vi.sionary or is
W h a t about combining economic
and enginoering in city planning, something being done about it—
inve.:tnient banking, taxation, etc. something t h a t will be of practiBut who can alford.such t n i i n - cal value to o u r g r a d u a t e s and
ii.g? Should theso opportuiiitio> those of you who will soon graduate?
be re.ser\'ed for the rich?
O u r National Vocational boards,
Why not Federal funds for fellowships for the selected
candi- started under CWA local activities
THE PEN THAT WONT
dateii who van demonstrate qual- a r e to be a p e r m a n e n t part of
ities of leadership as a result of o u r Federal employment and reRUN DRY
employment system.
their college experience?
DURING
LECTURES
O u r leading industries are realNutional Planning on a basis of
merit is not so far away if the ly beginning to realize that they
.Vow Deal means a n y t h i n g a t a l l ! must do their p a r t in work disThis will efTect the placement tribution to survivi;.
of college men vitally. One of tho
Labor is beginning to share the
CARRIES DOUBLE
l e w things of which we can be responsibilities as well as the adTHE INK
quite positive is that there is more vantages of organization.
work to be done i nthe
United
O u r citizens a r e taking an inStates t h a n the present n u m b e r of telligent interest in
Government
lieople can do.
and when the people insist upon
T h e whole question is t h a t of placing responsible men in places
of responsibility thoy ;ire likely to
making it pay.
Occupational planning worthy get results.
Indu.stries a r e asking for y o u n g
ol t h e name must see to it that
there is a place for every person mon to bring new enthusiasm and
in the community regardless
of new ideas into their organizations.
pension
systems
the increasing efficiency a t which S e n o r ' t y and
any given industry is carried on. make this advantageous.
Dean Willeta has described our
Does- such planning
destroy
situation,
"President
" F r e e Choice?" It does not. To present
leave people alone does not mean Roosevelt is throwing a long forAmerican
t h a t Uiey are free.
Ninety per ward pass only o u r
oent of all occupations are closed basines.s men are eligible to ret o 90 per cent of o u r people. T h e ceive it."
effort lihould not t>e made to forco
Confidence is needed to hcore.
peoyle into overcrowded
occupa- WUl.we do it?
Alumni
Notes
Dr. Hall thon wont on to oxplain that thero aro three kinds of
members: undergraduates,
gradu a t e , and h o n o r a r y , and
stated
t h a t it has always been the policy
of tho chajitor here to elect very
few g r a d u a t e and honorary members.
It has beon seven ye.iVs
.'inco a g r a d u a t e member was
elected and only ten or twelve
havo beon chosen in the chapter's
lifetime of forty-five years. Thoso
wero only pre-eminent men liko
J u d g e W. S. Kirkpatrick,
'fi.3,
m e m b e r of congress and a t t o r n e y
general
of
tho
s t a t o ; .Simon
Cameron Young, '77, chief engineer of P. R. K.; J o h n William
Griggs, 'fiS, senator, governor of
N. J. and a t t o r n o y general of U.
S.; and two college presidents,
Romsom Bird, 'Ofl, of Occidental
College, and Robert Slaglo, '87, of
tho University of South Dakota.
".A great numbor of g r a d u a t e s , "
tho
spoakor
continued,
"havo
coveted tho honor. Thoro havo
been some who had
friends
to
intercede for thom, since they vory
nearly .secured tho honor g r a d e ,
and some who have claimed thoy
would have secured
it if
their
grades had not boon depressed by
cuts
for
unexcu.sod
absences.
Formerly such unpermitted absence lowered the fin;il gniilo hy
1-10 of I per cent.
M a n y .Appel of 81 Newkirk and Brainerd Hall has
announced that he is s t a r t i n g
a Phonograph Record Exchange which is, to ciuoto .Mr.
.Appel himself, "ju.-t what the
name implies." Sinco this is
r a t h e r a novel idea, it is highly probable the interest of the
students will be won over.
CALLENDER TO LEAD
MAROON WRESTLERS
(continued from page one)
was a notable performer in lh.?
baikiield of thi l.'iO pound football team, and wrestli'd on the
\ar.sity toam in his sophomore
yoar. This year, besides
being
quite a consistent winner of his
matches in the 14.') pound weight
division, ho w.is chosen as a member of tho .Maroon Key Club,
J u n i o r h o n o i a r y society, and also
took his placo in the
fleet-footed
backfield of tho lightweight football toam.
Callender hails from
Racine, Wisconsin.
Kirkpatrick New Manager
J a m e s Kirkpatrick, ';5.'i, of Easton was choson to m a n a g e
tho
matmen of next yoar. Kirkpatrick
as a freshman ran tho low hurdles
on the track toam and continued
in t h a t capacity as a competitor
for thi' varsity team last yoar.
Robeii, (ioldsmith, a m e m b e r of
tho class of ID.'ifi is a member of
tho staff of tho Lyre.
Callender as captain-elect will
lose the valuable services and
oxporioncos of Cann, iliininiitive
representative of the I IX pound
class; Captain T r o u t , marvelous
performer in the i;j.i pound division who h u n g up an u n m a r r e d
record this year with tho exception of his di.'foat by Peck, last
year's Intercollegiate
Champion
from Lehigh; GojTniin, veteran lfi5
pound performer, ('rawford, consistent Maroon winner throughout
the ye;ir; and .Ambrose veteran
heavyweight for three se.isons.
" S i n c e tho c h a p t e r has been instituted only ono .student eligible
for membership has refused tho
I'istinction. There has been but
one resignation, ;ind that alumnus
withdrew the resignation
before
it was acted upon. Formerly the
Phi B e t a Kappa :innual Commencement inoeting was ono of tho
leading features of the Conimencemont .season. It was a t t e n d e d by
faculty, studonts, alumni, ;inil
visitors; an otTort was
usually
made to secure a person of some
prominence to deliver a Phi Beta thoughts of tho groat thinkers and
Kappa oration.
the living t r u t h s evolved
from
human oxporioiices, and to a p p i o Summarizes Aims
Concluding his talk. Dr. Hall ciiito tho creative imagination of
iummarizod
the aims of
the tho most gifted mon with somo ref i a t e r n i t y : "Tho goal of tho Phi finement of discrimination in matBeta Kapp.H scholar is a liberal ters of thought and t a s t e and in
?ducation that is lifted above the the higher realm of faith and tho
practical and niaterial, is on ;i spiritual."
higher jilane than the utilitarian
Dr. .Steever announced th:it the
nnd tho vocational. His objectives annual
point mooting of
tho
aro clearness of thought, facility fraternity with the Lehigh chapter
.md accuracy in expression, mental will be held on Wodno.sday, .April
integrity and capacity
for
the 11, at Bethlehem, with Dr. J o h n
snjoyment of tho bo;iutiful.
He }|. Finley of Now York Times as
.-tudies to understand
the noblo the main speaker.
Not like
others..
Were you
BORN
TIRED?
IIO, H U M . . . another d a y , another dollar. B u t why lot it put
you in a s l a t e of vertical collapse,
when the nearest campus eating
place has t h e host pi<-k-me-up
awaiting your command?
It':-, Shroildeil W h e a t , t h e foofl
lliafs M T A L L Y D I F F E R E N T ,
t h a t put.s the spring in your step.
Some folks oall it "cwrri/// hi/ tlic
bniiljiil." Anil it /.v- for Slireddoil
Wheat is whole wheat, t h e one
cereal grain t h a t ' s paikod with
proteins, oarlioliyilralcs, minerals
anil vitamins. .1/^ the.so vital, lifcsu.staining elements—notliing adil-
VfhtH you see Niagara Path on llie
pactane, you KSOIf yoa bate
Shredded VTkial.
ed, nothing taken .iway—oomo
to you in Shredded Wheat. Willi
ju.st t h e right amount of bran,
nieasiirod for you by N a t u r e .
You'll like the ta.ste. Millions
.s.iy thoy do. H a v e it .served any
way you like—with milk or cream,
fro.sh or preserved fruit. I t will
even put new life in your pockethook . . . il'a (I Inl offnitdfor a lillie!
SHREDDED WHEAT
A p r o d u c t of NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY «*Unooda B a k o r s ' *
t^e// so..
you can saif
Chesterfields are
"not like others
N
o two people in the world look
alike . . . act alike. So it is with
tobacco . . . just like folks.
N o two leaves are the satne.
And it's the same with cigarettes...
no two brands are alike.
Furthermore, not only are the tobaccos difFerent, but the way the tobaccos arc handled is different.
This, you can understand.
You know just as well as we do
that no two manufacturers use the
same kinds of tobaccos, or blend them
or cross-blend them or weld them
together in the same manner.
W e do everything that science
knows and that money can buy to
make C H E S T E R F I E L D as good a
cigarette as can be made.
W e hope you like them. They are
"not like others."
CHILTON PEN
\
FRIDAY, M.\RCH 16. 19r54.
DR. H A L L A D D R E S S E S
PHI BETA K A P P A MEN
esterfi
the cigarette that's MILDER
^ the cigarette that TASTES BETTER
I
iCiioiiiib