Commander of `Shenandoah` Discusses `Airship Situation`

Transcription

Commander of `Shenandoah` Discusses `Airship Situation`
Slafau^te
Rosendahl Speaks
Assistants Elected
Glee Club Travels
Z621
VOL. 64.
No. 38
EASTON, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1938
CLEE CLUB LEAVES HAMPSTEAD, '91,
FOR ATLANTIC CITY EX-TTJUSTEE, DIES
SATURDAY A. M. IN INDIANAPOLIS
Instrumental Club
Member of D. U .
on Program in Joint Was President of
Concert at Dennis
New Y o r k Giants
Lafayette'.s glee club
nccompaniod by the In.strumental club
under the direction of Al Gemmill
'38 w-ill leave the campus Saturday morning on their annual trip
to Hotel Dennis in .\tlanlic City,
New Jersey.
Arriving in Atlantic City Saturday afternoon the
combined
clubs will prepare for their evening concert in the main ballroom
of the hotel.
Gemmill, director of the InFtrumental club will feature his
Dorsey arrangement of "Song of
India" w-ith a sweet trombone solo
by Johnny Bechtel, '3!) and an
arrangement of "Toy Trumpet"
with Bob Maue, '38, t.iking the
trumpet solo.
The remainder of his program
will include "Lovo Walkoil In" by
(ieorge Gershwin, "I can Dream,
Can't I?" "Sophisticated Swing"
"Rosalie" and a melody of other
popular tunes.
The Glee club, under the direction of Prof. Erb will feature
solos by Morgan Thomas, '38, and
Gerhard Magnus, '38.
Among
their seleclion.i w-ill be "Rantin'
' Rovin' Robin", an arrangement
of an old Scotch song; "The
Nightingale," Tschaikowsky; 'Land
Sighting',
Greig;
and
a
number of Bach chorales. Profe.ssor Yerger will accompany the
Glee club.
After the concert, the Dennis
hotel will entertain the Glee club
boys and tho orchestra as their
guests-.
MARY BUCK TAKES
LEAD IN MUSICAL
Student Written Revue Under Production for April Show
Miss Mary Buck w-ill have the
leading role in the annual .student
review and will handle mo.st of
the vocal
work, according
to
Frank Liberman, '38.
The authors of
the
various
sketches will, for the mo.st part,
direct their own work. The authors
are Edward Heiwick, '38, Barry
Friedman, '38, Frank Liberman,
'38, Bernard Clark, '38, and Joe
Kernell, '40. This is the fir-rt year
direction and authorship are combined. Separate musical rehearsals are being held by Robert Burdick, director of the Little Theatre.
The revue is in its final stages of
development. Other members of
the cast include Jane Rennie and
Mary Louise Fulmer, of Ea.s-ton.
Tho Phi Delta Theta "pony chorus"
will again be in evidence. The Mar(luis Players will present a new
tiinger this year, Malcolm Ogilvie,
'40. He will assist Miss Buck in
the songs which have been composed by Henry Kowitz, '39, and
Irving Kaufman, '39. The exact
<lale of the review has not been
decided as yet, but will be an-
F o u n d c d i n 1870 _^
Alumni and Student
Circulation - 3,000
Harry Newton Hampstoud, '01,
ex-member of the board of Irustee.s, died in Indianapolis last Friday al the age of seventy.
He w-as born in Philadelphia,
June 25, 1868. At the .ige of 18
he entered Lafayette, where ho
graduated in 1891 a B. S. in chemioLry. While here he was a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity.
From '!)1 to '98 Hampstead w-as
vice-president of the Morris-European and American Export Co., in
New York. After 1898 he .served
as president of the Garfield Gun
Co. Alway.s intorostod in big league baseball, he w-as pre.sident of
the Now- York Giants from '12 to
'19.
Lafayetle was represented at
the
funeral in Indianapolis
by
Grier N. Sholwell, '19.
Hampstead will be remembered here as
a capable and generous member
of the board of trustees, in which
po.sition he served between 1919
and 1936.
K.R.T. TO SPONSOR
SINGING CONTESTS
Fraternities, Marquis
will Enter StepSinging Teams
KRT will have charge of stepsinging this year and will sponsor
an interfratemity contest in.stead
of the interclass contest which was
originally scheduled, according to
an announcement -made by Wall
Williamson, '38.
Teams consisting of a minimum
of fifteen students and a maximum
of forty students, may be entered
by each fralei-nity, and also by the
Marquis association. Each fraternity will probably have one team
and the Marquis association will
probably enter several, according
to Williamson.
The .singing will consist of tw-o
songs from each team, one a collego song of Lafayette and the other a song of any type, to be chosen
by the team itself. A cup, to be
know-n as the Dean's cup, has been
donated by Dean Distler, to be
awarded each yoar perpetually to
the fraternity which wins the singing contest.
A sot of tentative rules has
been drawn up by KRT, to be in\e.stigated and improved upon with
developments by a rules committee. The rules committee members
are Edward Helw-ick, '38; John
Landis, '39; Gordon Rossiter, '38,
and Williamson. The entries must
be in Williamson's box by Wednesday, April 6.
The plan of eliminations has not
been definitely decided upon, but
if a sufficient number of teams
are entered groups of five teams
each will be tested at dilTerent
times and tho winning team of
each group w-ill compete in the
STEP SINGING
(continued on page four)
Four Boilers Labelled
After Torrid Stenog
Price Five Cent*
Governmental Board of Control PicksBRAINERD OFFERS Commander of 'Shenandoah'
Talks Begin Eleven Staff Members PRIZE FOR ESSAY
ON SOCIAL PHASE Discusses 'Airship Situation'
On Monday
Six Assistant ManagMcllwain of Harvard ing Editors Named
Unanimously
will Make Five
Eleven mcmber.s of T H E
Speeches on Law
Dr. Charles How-ard Mcllwain,
Eaton Professor of the Science
of Government al Hai-\-ard Uni
versity and eminent authority on
political science and history, will
deliver a series of five lectures
upon "Our Constitution System
at the Bar of History," the fir.st
at Monday's convocation and the
others in Kirby hall each succeed
ing day.
Mcllwain will appear in chapel
on Monday at 11:30 a. m. to ad
dress the .students on "Our Con
stilutional System Before the Bar
of History." In the main lecture
room of Kirby Hall ho will speak
on "Judicial Review"
Tuesday
evening al 8:00.
At the same
hour on Wednesday he will talk
about "Checks and
Balances,"
while Thur.sday'.s .subject will bo
"Responsibility" also at 8.00 p. m.
He w-ill lecture Friday at 4:15
p. m.
upon "Constitutionalism
Today" in the final address.
MclLWAIN
IS AUTHORITY
Recognized as an authority on
iiue.stions of political .science and
government.
Dr. Mcllwain
has
been
Eaton
professor of the
.science of government al Harvard
since 1926. Previous lo that he
had taught at Princeton and Bowdoin before going to Harvard
where he serv-ed as professor of
history and government
from
1916 to 1926.
He received the
degrees of A. M. and Ph. D. from
Harvard.
Dr. Mcllwain has w-ritten and
edited .several books on political
science and ihistory including "The
Political Works of James I" and
"Waxall's Abridgement
of
the
New York Indian Records 16781751" both of which he edited. In
1923
appeared "The American
Revolution: A constitutional Interpretation" which won him a
Pulitzer Prize.
An
extensive
volume, "The
Growth of Political Thought from
the Greeks to the Middle Ages"
GOVERNMENT
(Continued on page three)
FARCE SELECTED
FOR SPRING PLAY
"Tom Thumb the Gre.at," a farcical play, by Henry Fielding, hai
been selected as tho June wook
dramatic presentation, R. V. Burdick revealed yesterday.
It is a satire on the romantic
plays and will be done in a sjiirit of
burlesque. Although the casting
has not as yet been started, male
studont-s w-ill undoubtedly
lak.;
feminine roles. Outdoor presentation will bo a feature, with the
performance .scheduled for June
8.With the selection now established, plans for the casting are
shaping up and the announcement
of the cast should be made within
a w-eek.
wa.s also written by him as w-as
"The High Couit of Parliament
and its Supremacy." Besides writing these be is a frequent contributor to periodical literature.
LAFAYETTE
staff were
elected unanimoiusly to new
positions at the' elections
held by the Board of Control Monday night.
The six sophomores named as
assistant managing editors were:
John Wolcott, Raymond LeKa.shman, Joseph Paull, Philip Hailly,
Andrew Newman
and William
Gerhard.
Wolcott is a member of Kappa
Delta Rho.
LoKa.shman is a member of the
Brainerd cabinot, candid camera
editor of the ".Melange," member
of tho editorial fto:ird of
the
Toueh.stone, tho Gloc cluh, tho
Liberal club and lh<- Maniuis association.
ONLY TWO
MARQUIS MEN
A member of Towers fraternity,
Paull i.s connected with the Liberal
club, the editorial board of the
Toueh.stone, the .soccer squad, the
Pro-Medical society and the fre.shman and varsity w-re.stling squads.
Bailiy is a member of Zeta Psi,
manager-elect of the cross-country loam, the freshman track loam
and a member of Alpha I'hi Omega.
A member of the debating team,
Newman is also a member of the
board of control of the Liboral
ELECTION
(continued on page three)
TAU BETES ELECT
TWO NEW PLEDGES
Alumnus, Faculty
Member to be Initiated at Banquet
At a recent meeting of Tau
Beta Pi, a prominent
faculty
member, Fred W. Slantz and a
prominent .ilumnus, Harry Lawrence Ramage, '17, were elected
to membership in the honorary
engineering society.
Prof. Slantz graduated from the
University of Pennsylvania
in
1912 with a B. S. in C. E. He
wa.s instructor in Graphics at Lafayette from 1913 to 1915. He
was field engineer of the C and O
railroad from 1915 to 1917. During the World War he served as
a major in the aviation corps.
After serving on the faculty of
Texas A and M college, he returned to Lafayette in 1921 and
received a full professorship in
1924.
He received his C. E. degree in 1923.
Henry T.
Gayley,
newly elected editor of
THE LAFAYETTE, today issued his first call
for new candidates for
the .staff.
All men interested in
trying out for the .staff
should refort at THE
LAFAYETTE office in
South College Monday
evening at 7:00 p. m.
The Brainerd society w-ill aw-a>-d
a prize of $10.00 in cash to the
member of the student body who
presents the best essay on some
social problem.
Book.s from the
Brainerd library must be used for
material, and all the s-tated rules of
the contest mu.st bo obeyed. The
rules follow:
1.
Any member of the .student
body of Lafayetto college is eligible to enter this contest, except
members of the Brainerd cabinet.
2.
Entries are now open and
all essays mu.s-t bo submitted to the
committee on or before 4.00 p.m.
April 25. It will be necessai-y for
all entries to fill out entry blanks
and receive a number which will
bo used thereafter in place of the
entry name. Reference books and
entry blank.s may bo procured ut
tho Brninord office.
te
USTEE OUTLINES
GROWTH OF HOUSES
ON LOCAL CAMPUS
Says Fraternities
were Formerly
Tabooed
T "^
TECHNICAL
RULES MADE
3.
The e.ssay i.s to consist of
not more than twenty-five hundred
words, typewritten, double spaced,
on standard theme paper. Use one
side only. Tho content of the es.say
is to contain both a synopsis and a
CONTEST
(continued on page three)
David Skillman, nlumnu.s
and
.secretary of the board of trustees
outlined in
chapel Wednesday,
March 30, a history of fraternities
at Lafayette.
In the early days of Lafayette,
Skillman pointed out, the campus
wa.s a bare plain on the hill, with
tow lonely buildings. West collego
and the main portion of South
college. These comprised the whole
college.
There w-cro a few societies on
tho campus namely, the Brainerd
Society and n couple of literary
societies, but social organizations
wore as yet not heard of.
BIRTH OF
FRATERNITIES
Skillman said when the college
was about thirty years old, AlexSKILLMAN
(continued or. jiage four)
C. J. C. GIRLS DATED
FOR BRAINERD HOP
Brainerd
society's dance, on
Saturday, April 9, will feature the
appearance of 15 girls from Centenary Junior college, of Hackeltstown, N. J., William Hunter, '3S,
dance chairman, announced lust
night.
The band for the affair has not
yet been named, nor have tho
chaperones been .selected. Refreshments will be furnished by Ernie's
Campus Arms, who also catered at
the Junior Prom refreshments.
The suggestion to invite .students from nearby girls' schools
w-as mado some time ago, but the
He has sei-\-ed as engineer on arrangements wilh C. J. C. w-ere
construction of the Lehigh rail- completed only a fow weeks ago.
road, research engineer for the If this plan of having outside
William Wharton corporation and girls as dates lakes well with the
state highway
department
of student body, the society will conMaine. Slantz is a member of the tinue the policy. Hunter .said.
American society of
university
Hunter and Larry Bresee, '39,
professors, a.ssociate member
of who are in charge of arrangements
the A. S. C. E., Society for the for the danco, are being assisted
liromotion of Engineering edu by Dudley Rapp, '39, newly olectcation, Lehigh valley engineer's od secretary of the Brainerd socieclub and Thoat Xi, social frater- ty and new- head of tho danco comnity.
mittee.
This dance will be tho
Ramage graduated with B. S. in next to the la.st in this year's seC. E. from Lafayette in 1917. He ries and is expected to be one of
TAU BETA PI
the biggest. Dancing will begin al
(continued on page threo)
19.00 p. m.
VARSFTY DEBATERS
MEET W . L TEAM Lafayette
Must be Based on
Book in Brainerd;
Ten Dollar Prize
JOURNAUSTS!
^Hams Beep'
From Pardee All Night
BRAINERD CABINET
WILL BE INDUCTED
Distler will Install
Newly-Elected
Members in Chapel
The recently elected Brainerd
Cabinet for 1938-39 will be inducted at the chapel service on
Wednesday, April 6, with Dean
Theodore A. Di.stler officially installing tho new officers, John Landis, '39, iirosident; Don Hamblin,
"39, vico-prcsidenl; L.
Dudley
Rapp, '39, secretary, and Thomas
Cook, '40, treasurer.
Chaplain Charles W. Harris will
bo in charge of the convocation
and will make a few introductory
remarks on the history of
the
Brainerd society. This will be followed by a review of the past
year's activities by Charles Davis, '38, retiring president.
MID-YEAR GRIND
REDUCES WEIGIfT
boilers, with steam blowers.
By A Staff Reporter
While Miss Keller (or the MisLad.-i who complain about putThe varsity debate team will
ting a scoopful of coal on the ses Keller) was installed in 1907,
hot-water heater wouldn't like the the steam blowers were not add- meet a Washington and Lee team
job of fireman in
Lafayette's ed until about 1932. These gadgets in a debate on the national labor
.steam plant, what with an annual are nothing more than big steam relations board in Pardee Hall on
Gulden brought up his transLafayette college is
"on the
consumption of more than 3000 driven fans that create a forced Thursday, manager William Pazdraft when there is a heavy load icky announced yesterday.
mitter, constructed of junk parts
air."
tons of coal.
Robert Dreher, '39, and David
There is scattered around the and tin cans in the 1920's. It
A bit of research today reveal- on the boilers, as in severe weathUnder normal conditions, the Deutsch, '39, will represent La- college, a number of men who was outdated but reliable.
The
a motley of facts from the name er.
its
of the women after whom the draft formed naturally by the 12C fayette and uphold the affirma- belong to the worldwide brother- Radio club graciously lent
tive of the question, "Resolved; hood of amateur radio, "Hams." brand new receiver, even more
boilers are dubbed, to the average foot stack is suflicient.
That the National Labor Rela- Al the present time, two faculty imposing in appearance than Guihtoarn pressure maintained in the KELLER
BURNS UP
tions Board should be empowered members of the physics depart- don's
trusty "signal .squirter."
four boilei-s.
Between the beginning of OctDEBATES
ment, Vincent Gulden and Dr. Turnbull '38, and Cox '40 who
For the engineer it's simple
(continued on page three)
Chester Page, are the most ac- are licensed operators, and Ro.ss
Ktuff, but when an artisman is told ober and Memorial day from 3000
tively interested in amateur radio. '40, became interested and agreed
that the four boilers total 600 lo 3500 tons of rice coal go up
Keller's stack in
smoke.
What do thoy do? During the to take shifts.
undeveloped horsepower, there is Miss
local
last few weeks, the main floor of
a striking necessity for explana- Bought directly from the
Each American and foreign amtion. It seems that the four boil anthracite mines, the coal is trans
I^rdee's east wing was alight from ateur is assigned a call letter, acers generate enough steam to op ported by railroad, transferred by
nightfall until dawn, harboring cording to his nationality and
erate a COO horsepower engine, motor truck, and stored in a 425
weary operators who sal at a smalj district. Amateurs ojierate in difFreshman
debates
to
be
held
only there's no engine attached. ton bunker in the power plant. By
table, earphones clamped to their inite channels, or
wave bands,
a process of constant re-ordering against Princeton, Lehigh, Penn- heads, pencils in hand, ten.sely
MISS KELLER
reserv-ed exclusively for their use.
sylvania, and Muhlenberg
were
during
the
winter
the
bunker
is
MAKES STEAM
announced yesterday by Prof A. copying faint whistles out of the They communicate by means of
The steam, worth GOO unde- never emptied.
ether.
highly
abbreviated
continental
The -steam is made from water H. (Jilnior.
veloped horsepower, is made by
code signals, and by "phone," or
The fust debate, against Leihigh, DX CONTEST
supplied
from
the
local
water
burtho .Mi.s.ses Edith Keller
Mi
voice. Lafayette ut the present
Pumped by two pumps into will be held Tuesday morning INSPIRES WORK
Edith Keller may not 'have been eau.
time ha.s facilitie.s for low i>ower
Amateurs
the
world
over
were
before
the
Ea.ston
High
School
much more than a stenographer the boilers, it is turned into steam
operation of both type:!.
having
a
conte.st.
Stations
everyas.scmbly
al
8:30
A.
M.
The
subin the office of the company that having a pressure from 60 to 90
- ;
tr>-ing to
contact NEW JUICE
The several where were
manufactured
the
boilers, but pounds, which could go as high ject is Resolved:
IN WIRES
others,
to
amass
points
for
the
states
should
adopt
uni-cameral
as
125
pounds
if
there
were
a
when that company underwent
Interest in ham work at college
reorganization
for
bankruptcy, demand. Miss Keller makes noth- legislature. Bertine Meade, '41, grand prize. Lafayette too, found
has been aroused. The radio club
liomeone decided to use her name. ing but steam, and more steam will present the case and George its little band of "ihama" unRADIO
Schafer, '41, Will question and daunted by Ittck ot lileep and
MISS KELLER
•'Mi.3 f:dith Keller" in today the
, __
rebutt,
^
. equipment.
.(coatiAued uu yagt Uireejl ^
IconliuucU on ^a|;e {our),
lingular iot loux 160 horiie^w«r
Gilmer Annou.ircs
Freshman Debates
New York, N. Y.—Three quarters
of a ton in weight was lost by the
students
of Lafayette
college
from cramming for mid - year
exams, it was announced several
days ago by the Bureau of Education sur\'eys.
This figure was determined by
taking the measurements of a
representative group of students.
Il was estimated that each student lost two pounds. That multiplied by 90 per cent of the
sludonl body gave tho total number of pounds lost by tho entire
student body.
The students ure not entirely
to blame, however.
Professors
and text books are as much to
blame, said the bureau.
Very
often instructors do not provide
thoir classes with a clear view of
their cour.ses, nor do they review the courses in outline fonn.
WEIGHTS
(continued on page four)
CHOIR PREPARES
TO HNISH SEASON
Three
remaining
trips
will
round oul an ambitious season for
the college choir, it was revealed
yesterday
by Prof. Thomas E.
Yerger, director.
The first of these will be on Ea.:ter Sunday, when the choir makes
its yearly visit to Buckhill Falls,
after presenting a musical service
at the 11.00 a.m. convocation. The
organization will give an Easter
vesper service at the Buckhill Falls
inn at 4.30 p.m., for guests, invited
friends and alumni. The members
will remain overnight as guests of
tho inn. This will be the choir's
fourth annual visit to the Pocono
resort.
Visiting the First Presbyterian
church of Wilkes-Barre for the
sixth time, the choir will render
a concert there April 24. In the
pa.st this concert has always been
well attended by alumni of Hazleton, Scranton and Wilke.s-Barre.
CHOIR
r
^
Rosendahl Leading Officer
Of Air Station at Lakehurst
Outstanding man of modern aviation, accepted as the
leading authority in the United States on lighter-than-aircraft. Commander Charles E. Rosendahl of the United.
States Naval Air Station, Lakehur.st, N. J., will be here
April 4, to speak on "The Airship Situation in the W o r l d
T o d a y " in Brainerd Hall at 8:00 p. m.
• An officer in t h e Naval
JUNIORS TO HOLD
FIRST CLASS DAY
AS APRIL AFFAIR
Chairman Scott
Plans Chapel P r o gram, Ivy Planting
Setting a precedent, tho Junior class will initiate a class day
this year, it was announced by
William G. Scott, '39, chairman
of the event.
Although no such day has ever
been .set aside for the Juniors
before, it is hoped to make il a
regular feature. Dean Holm, jiresident of the class, originated the
idoa and aiipointod Scott chairman of it.
"Junior Cla.s.s day" will take
place sometime during the last
week in April. Various events
have been planned and arrangements have been made.
JUNIORS WILL
DIRECT CHAPEL
It has been planned for the
ohapel sei-\'ices to be under th
direction of the class and attempts
are being made lo secure some
prominent speaker.
Also featured will be an ivy or tree planting
ceremony, such as other colleges
have. The day will be climaxed
with the Junior Browse at night.
CLASS DAY
(continued on page four)
^'"•"^'•""-"
^' '"'
Commander Rosendahl has
been the chief officer on
practically all the United
States* large airships and ia
today a strong advocate of
the "establishment of a definite, far-sighted aeronautical policy for the United
States". He was one of the
men who survived the crash
of the Shenandoah, a n d
more recently h e a d e d t h e
inquiry into the causes for
the Von Hindenberg holocaust. At the present t i m e
he is commanding officer of
the U. S. Naval Air Station
at Lakehurst.
Rosendahl i.s- a graduate of the
U. S. Naval Academy, class o f
1914,
and has been in the Naval
Service as a line officer continuously since that time. He has .served in numorou.s routine billets at
sea and ashore including a tour
of duty as instructor at the Naval
Academy. He first went into airship duly in 1923 and has served
as chief on the airships Shenandoah, Los Angles and Akron. He
has also been a.ssocialed with
German airship activities in connection with trips thereon
aa
obsor^-er and with the trans-atlantic flights to the United States.
He has always maintained that
the United State.s should have a
strong aeronautical policy, defending his position in magazine nrtii
AIRSHIPS
(contfnued on page four)'
ALPHA PHI OMEGA
WILL INSTALL 16 LEAGUE PREPARES
Large Delegation of FOR CONFERENCE '
Pledges to Join Service Fraternity
Model League of Nations Assembly, to be held at Rutgers university, in New Brunswick, N. J.,
from April 7 to 9, has been divided
Alpha Phi Omega, national hon- into three commissions, it was anorary sor\-ice fraternity w-ill hold nounced today by Morgan Thomas,
initiations, Sunday, April 3, in '38, chairman of the delegation.
accordance with plans made at a
John Landis, '30, and Kendall
regular meeting of the society in
Pennypacker, '39, have been namBrainerd hall Wednesday.
ed to the Commission on the Far
Sixteen men have been pledged East situation; Morgan Thomas
lo the fraternity since the begin- and Jack Suydam, '39, to the comning of the term. A new group mission on foreign intervention in.
will be pledged after Sunday's internal conflicts,
and
Robei-t
initiation, and will be initiated Rhineheimer, '38, and
Vincent
before the final examinations in Stankavitch, '39, to the commisJune.
sion on international mandates.
Willam Lacy, a representative Harry Dower, '40, and Andrew
of the national headquarters of Newman, '40, will serve as alterthe fraternity who is making a nates.
tour of all the chapters in the
The Lafayette delegation wHt
United States, visited Lafayette represent Canada at the .Assembly
during the week of spring vaca- and will present a program of
tion and was entertained by Prof. "watchful waiting" as in accordDaniel A. Hatch, adviser of the ance with Canada's foreign policy.
fraternity's local chapter.
Dr. Eugene P. Cho.se, of the
Lacy brought with him many government department, will serve
ideas of activities from chapters as technical advisor to the sixth
in other colleges, some of which commission at the League session,
will be tried out by the local Thomas revealed.
chapter. He attended a meeting
The Lafayette delegation ha.i
and luncheon at the faculty club completed plans to hold a meeting
of the advisers, at which he ad- wilh the delegations from other
dressed them informally concern- members of the British Commoning his visits lo other colleges.
wealth of Nations in order to arThe meeting Wednesday night range a united policy. The meeting
was devoted for the most part will bo hold on Thursday evening
on the first day of the League ses'i
ALPHA PHI OMEGA
sion.
(continued on page four)
Pyramid Building By Frosh
Progresses on March Field
By A Staff Reportsr
Jim Tait, '38, and bis Muroon
Key club has taken over the hazing operations of K. R. T. wilh
a vengeance.
Naughty freshmen, and that includes things other than morals,
are taken in "protective custody"
by the big men of Maroon Key,
to save them from reprisals by
sophomores and other vermin. A
combination of a concentration
camp and a chain {rang ha.s been
set up to "protect" those frosh
who can't seem to remember the
rules about grass, dinks, and those
other various prohibitions for the
children of '4 1.
^coutinucd uu iwjje tUreeJj _^ ^ Thv Ucitdi^uartcra and place of
work for the links on the "concentrated chain-gang" is March
field. One of the main pointa of
the Maroon Key guards is tiuit
all work must be both u.seful and
hard. Therefore Warden Tait has
decided, after a conference with
Mr. Lane und members of tha
sports department, that the frodh
must pay for their protection by
building a wall at the lower end
of March field.
This wall will
serve a double purpose of beautifying the sports domain
and
keeping baseballs and the lika
from being knocked olT the bound4
of the field.
^_
MAROON KEY
'*
^
{j^coutiuued ou iia)[« Xsurjjj J |
P a g e Two
THE
rtevuted to t h e i n t e r e s t s of t h e .Stuih-nts a n d .Vlunini of U i f i i y e t t e ColleKe
Published S e m i - W e e k l y b y T h e L a f a y e t t e P r e s s I n c .
C » L . KRNEi.«T a. S M I T H
Wllkea-Barre. P a .
Pounded In 1S70
Pr«aUent
I-\>un.!o<l In ISTO
Publi:OuHl .Somi-Wookly liy Tli.- Lafayetto Press Inc.
I'rosklent
COL. KIt.N'KST Q. SMITH
\Vilko^^.U.lrl.•. ]• i
H B N H Y T O.VYIyEY. J R . — E d i t o r - i n - f h i o f
l"tiono Bib.J
KinVI.N' STRITE—MananinK: Editor
Phono 2-in,S
JOH.N L..\NOI.s'—Sports A l i t o r
l>lion.- i-«JUl
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P h o n e 2-9Z18
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Krid.iy Issue
Tuesday i s s u e :
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flay
J o h n Wolcott . . . . . . P h o n o i-90.-|.-.
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Philip
Ifciilly
Anilrow No^v-iruin . .I'hono .•>-27.'i;»
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.
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P h i l i p L«slie
I'otor So honk
Jof<iT>h SholK-r
a a m u o l Wolf
Sports .Assistants
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R.
It.
F.
A.
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Johnson
Schmitr
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One yoar (55 i s s u e s ) t2.60.
college tuition.
P h o n o 2-61iO
4591
Phono
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.Phono
U^lil
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2-1002
2-1002
2-1002
2-1011
P. O. Hadeer
H. .\rm«tron,v
K. C. Smiili
H. Citron
R
Subseripttons
StudentB' subatrlptions are paid for f r o m t h *
r..ui. i.-i ito .Soionil CiiWs Maitor. OototKr 14. lltiSI, .it Ih' P ' u n i c o a I I'ivRloti. Pa.. uiid«T Uie A. t oi Mar^b 3. 1879^
•Ydlrca"- lii oli-culalion o h i p l i i n t s . .idVLttl.-;:';; iimii-r.o.- or order.^
to T h e I.rfila.veite. i - u i u y e i t e ColloKf. l.^iitoii. I'tt.
1937
Nlcmixr
1938
:.^liNT£.0 FOR I^AflONAL AOVERTISINO •>
Ctssocldod Golle6iato Ptess ?i;ticnaiAdvert'singSemce,lnc.
Distributor ot
Cblleeiale Di6esf
Cfithit f'ut
*' •»liei'iresintativB
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NEW YORK. N . Y.
i "'""' °"'°" ""''"'"'""'""'""
Easton, Pa., Friday, April 1, 1938
CLINIC
I-
I
to handle a project of this sort would be qualified to
handle t h e marital relations course which is so much
in need at Lafayette.
As to t h e requirements of t h e mental hygienist,
he should be familiar with t h e problems of people of
college age. It is completely necessary that a man in
this position be able t o inspire t h e confidence of those
with whom he ha.s to work.
The practical details should be easy to a r r a n g e .
The doctor could be stationed on a pail time basis,
holding a clinic once a week, and t h e marital course
on t h e .same day. It has been .suggested t h a t some
psychologi.st from New York City, Philadelphia, or
Baltimore be called.
Considering the expense of t h e clinic, it is highly
likely t h a t in t h e long run it would save money. T h e
d a m a g e t h a t an affair of t h e recent type can cause t o
the enrollment is hard to estimate, but is, without
doubt, considerable.
Tho establi.shment of a mental hygiene clinic at
Lafayette, then would be a great benefit both morally
and practically.
Mitchell F l a u m
Hud.son T h o m a s
J EIJWI.N H.VHMST.M)—lUisinoMa .Manager
«.' n .\1 \ ( - M . \ K l N —.N:itiiiiial Advi-rti-sinir .Manajjor
G. .N". C P . K E . N E - Ixioiil .\dvi-rtls,ni; .Miina.y^or
T>. J. S.^^'nl-~l'i^outat'(>n .Maniif<or
K, IJ. S l l l l . ' l ' i i — P r o m o t i o n .M;niiinor
.Assistant U u s i n e s s M a m m e r s :
p. E . l-arhf
Phono
W. M.Piatt
Phono
G. H. H;illsbat-k
Phono
M. L.. HainoM
Phono
J. J . O m d n i n
Phono
C K. .\dum.s
1 'bono
2-1874
4ri91
2-ori9t
2-1131
2-9191
2-906;.
-Wii
LAFAYETTE
The disappearance of Carter Dawson is a posi,.. tive proof t h a t a mental hygiene clinic is needed on
t h e Lafayette campus.
Such a clinic, organized to do away with maladjustments, is not needed only on this campus. It ia
needed on every campus, in every factory, in every
city.
A great many cities of a progressive nature have
them. Several colleges and universities have them.
It implies no fault on t h e part of a group to establish
a clinic for the purpo.se of aiding these who have trouble in adapting themselves. A great many of these
people would have the same trouble in adapting
themselves to any surrounding.
The fault is not with t h e surroundings but with
the social system. P e r h a p s it would be most beneficial to change t h e .social order, but t h a t is an almost
impo.s.oible task. In fact, it is almost impossible to get
most people to realize that t h e .status quo is not the
optimum. More enlightened groups have reached
this conclusion, and are earnestly endeavoi'ing to set
in effect all possible curative measures.
Just such a curative measure is t h e mental hygiene clinic. To pit oneself against an organization
of tl'i.s kind is to take a stand similar in ignorance to
t h a t of those who opposed hospitals because they "interfered with t h e work of God."
Hospitals t r e a t the physical ailments, but they
" can make no a t t e m p t at curing t h e psychological
ones. Any student of psychology know.s we all have
the potentialities of some of these ailments of the
brain.
Some people are more susceptible to them than
others, just a s some people catch colds or get hay
fever more easily than others. To apply a stigma to
one who is subject to deep depre.s.sions is just as silly
as to blame a person because he catches cold if his
feet get wet. Regrettably, even thia latter belief is
common. Anyone who wears overshoes is a sissy, according to some people.
It is plain t h a t this sort of criticism is senseless.
The same sort of thing applies t o the mental disorders.
Suicidal tendencies are fairly common. Alcohol will
agitate tVrso tendencies. In the absence of alcohol,
some other stimulus will serve t h e .same purpose.
The solution, then, is to do away with t h e fundamental cau.se, ratlier than t h e immediate cause.
A mental hygiene clinic would certainly do this
. t o a great extent. In many cases, if put in the hands
of an expert, it would do away with the danger of
tragedy altogether. In other cases, it would minimize the trouble. Psychologists achieve this end by getting at the rcot of tht- trouble.
Imagined persecu. tion.s, disappointments of one sort or another, or internal conflicts are the most common cauiies of the suicidal tendencies we are forced so harshly to consider
at this time. A clinic could probably dispel the illusion of persecution.-*, minimize t h e weight of the disappointments, or make some .sort of adjustment to t h e
conflicts so that they would come out into the open,
and become, therefore, le8.<< dangerou.s.
A clinic at Lafayette could be handled with very
little difTiculty. In t h e first place, t h e psychology dep a r t m e n t h a s been promised an additional man for
many years. T h e man could be put in charge of t h e
clinic. In t h e second place, a n y one who is qualified
WHY COLLECTIVE S E C U R I T Y ?
Tha recent gains of th efascist countries of Europe, notably Germany's bloodless annexation of Austria, her growing importance in Czechoslovakian
politics, and t h e assurance t h a t t h e rebel fascists will
eventually dominate all Spain, may well be of concern to all far-seeing people.
The growth in size, power a n d audacity of t h e
fa.scist countries present.s a real d a n g e r to democracy,
and will, in time, become a definite menace to t h e very
existence of democratic countries.
It seem.s almost inevitable, if fa.scism continues
to grow, t h a t w a r will be t h e final in.strument for deciding w h e t h e r t h e totalitarian or t h e democratic
state will hold .sway in t h e world. W a r may come
even before then if t h e powerful democratic countries grow tired ofbei n g literally blackmailed by
Messrs. Hitler, Mussolini a n d their like. Democratic
nations may t r y t o curb t h e power of fascism by
force.
Since its founding, t h e United States h a s always
pursued a policy of neutrality brought about by
staunch adherence to Washington's famous slogan,
"Keep out of foreign e n t a n g l e m e n t s . " Should a general w a r break out in Europe again or even in Asia,
the U. S. will be d r a w n in just as surely a n d as inevitably as she was d r a w n into the World W a r , in spite of
this Washingtonian doctrine. O u r neutrality legislation is generally known as a failure both in operation and in theory, a n d can never be expected to keep
us out of a general war. W e cannoi continue to bury
our heads in t h e sand a n d subscribe t o t h e outmooded
theory t h a t 3000 miles of ocean will keep us out of
war.
The U. S. has always been conspicuous by its a b sence in international affairs a n d politics, preferring,
until now, to follow t h e lead of either England or
France whenever international action h a s been necessary. With t h e uncertainty a n d weakness of their
present governments, it is evident t h a t we can eqpoct
no action by England and France dealing with t h e
present fascist situation.
It is for t h e U. S. to live up to h e r reputation a s
the outstanding democracy of t h e world a n d take t h e
lead in trying to m a k e t h e world safe for democracy.
We should assume t h e initiative which so rightly belongs to us.
The U. S. should actively t r y to enlist t h e aid of
England, France, possibly Russia, a n d other liberal
countries in a long-range program de.signed to remove
the economic a n d political causes of w a r .
These
countries acting together under U. S. leadership
should honestly endaevor to determine t h e validity of
any fascist demands, make equitable a n d reasonable
agreements with them remembering t h e y are t h e
"have n o t " countries, and enforce any of their findings against t h e fascist countries with severe, concerted economic action.
The t h r e a t of boycotts, embargoes a n d sanctions
by three or four world powers, divorced from threats
of w a r would be sufficient, we believe, t o bring t h e
blackmailing g o v e r n m e n t s t o t h e realization t h a t they
will either have to mend their ways or face economic
chaos at home.
We feel t h a t once t h e maladjusted ec(momic territorial and political conditions favorini? fascism,
such a sthose created by t h e Treaty of Versailles, a r e
removed by the intelligent and concerted action of t h e
democracies of t h e world, t h e people of those totalitarian .states will a t t e m p t to regain their rights of selfdetermination and will again achieve democracy just
as they have done in t h e pa.st. The situation is not yet
so bad that w a r is inevitable. Sane, intelligent treatment can provide t h e remedy without a n o t h e r worlddestructive cataclysm.
FRID.AY. .APRII, 1. lO.'.s
JO 0SU.-5S . - j ^ UI ..-jB.i.tS,,) S-.ica
,S3UoXui; 01 SAiou -jra.tS oq pino.w
jt5.«. po.iBi.iop 5cti BJ-tl'-nv 'l'?t;x
a r e a d v a n t a g e s i n mas.s d i s t r i b u - i-cj2;ulate t h e m ( u t i l i l i o . - ) d i r e c t l y ,
tion .ind m a s s p r o d u c t i o n , t h e y I h a v e a l w a y s d o u b t e d e i t h e r t h e
.-Iiould lie pu hod a n d e n c o u r a g e d , necessit.v o f wi.sdom o f t h e a t s a y s 15aruch.
* * *
tempt to regulate them by having
.\s for the f e w malefactors and government compete wilh them."
-pa<n s q |pM
c h i s l e r s , " l e t u s n o t t h r o w a w a y I'ut if it should, e v c i i i u a l l y p r o v e
Xaqi 3J9t|M JO U31(A\ o) t c apvui
the b e n e f i t s o f o u r e c o n o m y o r i t o b e t h e c a s e t h a t t h e g o v e r n i i a l u c j E n S o u )nc| 'X|pe|S p a i d a s A WASTE O F T I M E —
i nionl can operate utilities m o r o
-3« i)L)jiij3 p u e s S u o t Sui)fuij(^
T h e m o r e w e think o f t h e plan burn d o w n o u r hou.-e t o kil
efficiently t h a n p r i v a t e e n t e r p r i s e s
"TR ^"fl "! potldo.ip p u n .t.idBtl }o t o l o d u c e t h e n u m b e r o f c o m p u l - f e w bat.9 in t h e a t t i c . "
dB.l^^•- c un poj^of oq 'ouop j o u.^o^• .sory chiipel meotinK.-, p u t t i n g tlie m
Hut
following
this
e c o n o m i c a n d tliis is y o t t o b e p r o v e d , t h e r e
')Ueoi( 3ABi| ABiu nOiC hpuT pui: ?:ppo o n t h e bn-i.s o f q u a l i t y i-nther t h a n .sense, it is o d d t h a t M r . Haruch is e v e r y e c o n o m i c j u s t i f i c a t i o n f o r
.<t.t! ; B I ( I i:ii!-isanb.i.i j o .ti.ioqn ot(i <|U!iiility, t h o b e t t o r i l .•;ound.s l o s h o u l d o b s e r v e , "ISut s i n c e t h e .-ulioii o f t h i s s o r t by t h e g o v o r n jijvi •-'.'.v aOSf-oonp.ud .ino j o .<i)!Ji3u u.-.
A.side f r o m t h e f a c t t h a t a t - g o v o i i i n i e n l lias a m p l e p o w e r l o mr Mt.—"lirowii & W h i l e "
•J\ pUB i^lNOUnO 'OJUB.IO.VO.-'J.'MI oil) t e n t i o n a n d o r d e r in t h o retiuired
qti.vv p a i j i i l Siiiioq j o x •\i\y. j o j p u d a.-si-mblie.-< a r e n o t all t h o y .'•hould
T h e Itesl .ShowK in 'Inwii are ,'il l-:astiin's Leiuline T h e a t r e s
-dn j^nui o.vv ;iini w-i-V' l | n j .ttou>( bo, t h e r e i;: a n o t h e r p o w e r f u l c o n ,-)M ?nq S n o u q o oq o i s^v.\\ n y\^
.-ideralion
favoring
decrea.^c in
t h e n u m b e r o f nicetinK.'^.
• • •
-<J33U
U n d e r t h e pre.sent .'^y.stem, r e • i 8 u 3 Suiuiy^l JO q^jeap at{) s u i e | d q u i r e d aj.semblie.^, w h i c h
often
-xa )«i)) t d a q j a j - a p i x o u o u i uoq a d m i t t e d l y a c c o m p l i s h v o r y l i t t l e ,
- j a s qiiM a3w|d 3 4 ) <poou p u c '||eM t a k e u p v a l u a b l e t i m e t h a t mitrht
rif] Ul |.iod • o | dn j e s lit] »(3«(] w e l l b e d e v o t e d t o o t h e r , m o r o
Huh Sirnn — l i a l l
IfKlS's lAtw and 1 .aiiubd'i'i)ft«ui seS uiaif) 8 p u a | a u o a u i o g p r o d u c t i v e a c t i v i t i e s .
In t h e fir.st
. \ i i e e l — All WoniMii!
SiH-cial!
-joqunii<.T s-c3 1; pojina 'o[5iJCiv- J o p l a c e , t h e r e a r e s o m e clas.scs li.stjUDUiDsirq 3111 UI u.tto a i o q ; j o dtjji ed in t h e c a t a l o g u e f o r w h i c h
t p r o p s\w\
.<io.\o| T. o.vtjq sj.iouiiJ t h e r e is n o s e t m e e t i n g t i m e . T h e s e
- U 3 SuiuijV 3 i | ; ;riti '•)! JO u o i i i q i q c l a s s e s a r e u s u a l l y ono.s r e q u i r e d
-xa u c aq [[.oaaqt a.iai|.\\ a j n s l o u f o r m a j o r s ( m a t h a n d busine.-s
aa.OyVV ilEna-nun . u o i u jiq v. au!i{t a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
in
are concrete e x Tli<- H.HVm ( i l v . M u s i c II;il! Mil
-.-iiuo.-f 0 0 s o ] qsi.w no.\ pip . I Q »"*! a m p l e s ) , a n d t h e h o u r o f meetinjr I
-jaaxa ^•>»\ 'WW 'I1-"'IM J° juaui is a r r a n g e d t o s u i t t h e c o n v e n - a t a q a q i ui doift q i j i a t a ^ l u a p i e n c e o f t h e .students t a k i n g t h o
- n j g aifi J!«!A l'\-io^ 0UI0^• j o d o q s c o u r s e .
A s there are compulsory
i^,.ii
->(.lo.v\ t; .loj poqsi.w o.\t!q '0|qqt:p a.s.semblie?, e i t h e r m e n o r w o m e n ,
0} ai|!l oq.tt i n q '.-|ooi \w\.\\ paini^' o n t h r e e d a y s o u t o f tl;e w e e k ,
III:NKY I (JNHA
Willi
00') o u o u o.ir oq.w S n j o .<ui!iu .«oj-{ it is e x t r e m e l y difficult t o find a
<;i':(ti{(;i; i t i M - : \ r
^rfUlSia p.vio JO iiRH """in "! '^-ii'iq t i m e t o hold t h e s e c l a s s e s .
Things
WAKUI.N WII.I.IAM
.AIAI{(;AI{|.T I.IND.S.W
-JT -<q-i!M 3111 'luoo.t qj-'!.\B| X|jB|na h a v e c o m e t o s u c h a p a s s t h a t o n e
r . l . N M i : ItAICM-.S
- p j r d i c q i uaas ja.\a a.\Bq !;.i.:)OU!i< clas.s h a s b e e n e s t a b l i s h e d
from
A I . A N DIMCIIAKT
-u^i .tiMuu .ttoq p u v - X j p u n o j aijj five t o s i x o'clock o n Friday.^—a
The «;rc(i(os( .\< (ii'ss on (lie
.\ Sh>|i'll:ioi>y IConiance (hat's
'!*!A 6'i*U!1''*" "-^° J i a q i Jo s p | o u i voi-y u n d e s i r a b l e h o u r f o r t o w n
S c r c d i — In (lie <;reali's| _
the i:iiiiil(iir Itallli- of t h e
o i u i '1! JO s u o ; o.ttj
satuiioiuos students.
Kom.iiirr of t h e S o u t h !
'
Cendii-.v!
';B}atu u o j i o i u j n o d .I3JOJ a q i j o
E v e n if t h o a r r a n g e d clas.^e.''
u a u t a ] i u o 3 a q j u a a s o.\xii\ uaitis-ijy
a r e sati.sfactorily s c h e d u l e d , a n o t h XuKiu MOH -sndiUBO j n c u o jynjs
SUNDAY MOVIES A T 3 - 5 - 7 - 9 P. M.
e r p r o b l e m a r i s e s . Becau.se c h a p e l
Oql JO OUIOS JO ,1.lE.ttC O.IB P.VIO[|OJ a n d t h e a b o v e m e n t i o n e d c l a s s e s
ano JO .<ui!iu .woq jopuo.w o^w
take u p time thot could ordinarily
be u.sed b y c a m p u s o r g a n i z a t i o n s
•||aM
patu«|cl a j a M tssjS f o r m e e t i n g s , t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n s
JO t p s a s 0Ai) ) « q ) )Uauiai«)< a q | a r e v e r y hard p u t t o find a t i m e
p*pp« t l )«i(l O) uat|M ) n q ! u o i ) > u c o n v e n i e n t l o all m e m b e r s .
One
•i8«uii j n o i j 3 | a j ) t ) o u s a o p tiijj^ h o n o r a r y f r a t o r n i t y ha.s a c t u a l l y
-aaiio.i-uiBais
pazis-jinj
v. \{\\.-A b e e n u n a b l e t o find d u r i n g t h e
pa||0.i jnq 'UOIIBOBA S u u d s i J u u n p s c h o o l w e e k a s i n g l e p e r i o d a t
paiio.: X|uo ; o u s8.i\ 0|3uBapBnl> a q j w h i c h all m o m b e i s c a n m e o t .
IBq-t siup.'p o u o a i u o y
'siqi .^JUOA
Il h a s b e e n a b u n d a n t l y d e m o n o j aiqB uaoq ;,uaAGq a.vt 'uojjjBaa s t r a t e d t o s t u d e n t s a n d f a c u l t y
JO ^j'Oii auiou JO s a d o q ui ja.\jjs- t h a t t h e p r e s e n t .system o f c o m - q o ajBUbg j a ^ u a ^ j n o j.o ndoas p u l s o r y c h a p e l i.; n o t a c c o m p l i s h -oiat aq^ u; suoj aq-) Jfuiqsi|od l u ^ i n g its p u r p o s e . A n d w e h a v e
-saad }B «! s n i A n [ j SB inq^ IBuin-iaqj s h o w n a b o v e t h a t c h a p e l t a k e s u p
s n i A n i j UBiu a n o auiABq i n o q i i . w t i m e t h a t c o u l d b e b e t t e r u s e d f o r
•\A0* XuB JO aotuna o ) aauopaaa c l a s s e s a n d o r g a n i z a t i o n m e e t i n g s .
o u OAia 01 p3A|0Sda OABq Oj\\
A r e d u c t i o n in t h e n u m b e r o f
assemblies, then together with an
• • -aAiaM) tfai t|3niu ' a u o ot >{|Jiq i m p r o v e m e n t in t h e i r q u a l i t y , will
aAt8 0 | a|«uj )>jij ai{} a o j o p p|noA\ b r i n g a b o u t a n i n c r e a s e in a l l e n d - " I ' l H t'H'^ S u i a t a n S o u t^ajaif) e i i c e a n d a t t e n t i o n u s w e l l a s g i v e
p u v i i p u n o d uoi[|iui | o o 3 « j o acjjo c l a s s e s a n d o r g a n i z a t i o n s t i m e t o
l l u i p u « | t • fai{ X i a i a o g |«3ipa(^ |« hold m e e t i n g s
•Xo)| 941 |«i|« c u i a a g -.<|ii;aiiiiuiO)nB
-"Richmond Collegian"
p j q s i [ q m s a M\ |)|no.s\ ^IO|^|^0(I p;|j
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uaapiiqo
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no.< ppio.tt uaapijqa .iiitjtu .^voj^,, financier.
T w o o f ^rr. B a i u c h ' s
.state; o aidot iJuijBUUMij a q j u o SB.W
uoissnDsjp a q x -uoijsanb ui acanoa n.i.'nts w e r e e v i d e n t l y a s a r e s u l t
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pBq puB ( V t"2 ojKa .^luiBWaa o.w b y .".dministration p u p p e l ? J a c k s o n
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• ; n o a q ; ui aauid JIOO; [(B siqj^ -O2E
"If there are actual monopolies
^l.iup JO a [ d n o 3 B uoj.isnasip Sn\ t h e y s h o u l d be b r o k e n u p . If t h e r e
On every campus the Arrow Gordon Oxford
-;saao;ui ;soiu B paoaqaaAO o^yV
are abuses they should be punishShirt with button-down collar takes iirst place
ed a n d p r e v e n t e d .
B u t if t h e r e
The U. S. must be t h e torch-bearer in t h e fight for
democracy. A s the home of t h e finest democratic
government of the world, it is our duty to t a k e t h e active lead in t h a t fight. O u r responsibility is clear—
we must undertake t h e task.
S T A T E EMBASSY
«
Chairman Hamblin
Will Distribute Old
Garments to Poor
#
*
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•
*
:Om«' o f h i s o l d ilotiie.i t o t h e •do|t t n %»\ \M\{\ ! • 'uauiaiiuaS pu«
society.
T h e r e id t h e po.ssibility *X|aAi|3adtaj j a p j o ^\9t^\ ui 'ajai(
t l i a t o t h e r s o n c a m p u s a r e in a like noX aat o) pajS pun o l not. aat 0 |
po.oition
a n d w o u l d grladly
g-ive I t)ajS.>){ -ijaAijpaA«|t Mau a i | | j o j
- t j a | i « u i i | t E | Huioliino j n o
a w a y .some o f
their
discarded i o||i(]
clothe;-. T h i s i d e a i.-i n o t t o a.sk f o r I 0 | 'pjOM aqi ' . I ' M ! J! 'uiainisg
donations from the students, but
N V W H S V 5 I 3 1 J O i a AH
to provide f o r an outlet o f old
clothes which have outifrown their
u(te.
T h e s e will
be distributed
Among the poor youth c f Easton. '
T h e B r a i n e r d S o c i e t y hag a newf u n c t i o n , -which is c o l l e c t i n g o l d
D o n H a m b l i n .-ind h i s c o n u n i t t e o {
c l o t h e s f o r t h e n e e d y o f E i t i t o i i . will c o l l e c t a t t h e f r a t e r n i t i e s this '
T h e i d e a o i i ^ i n a t e d * h e n o n e o f coming: T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n a n d j
I the fellovN-a o n c » / i i p u s
d t n a t e i l I' ^ f i " ! , '
Bette Davis
Robt. Montgomery
Virginia Bruce
"JEZEBEL"
"THE FIRST
HUNDRED YEARS"
lor long wear, right style and low price. . . $2
Mitoga
form-fit
May's
Sanforized-Shrunk
4 0 4 Northampton St.
(Jutt above 4th S t . )
* • •
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»
BRAINERD SOCIETY
COLLECTS CLOTHES
WHAT
OTHERS
THINK
BOYD
ft: N. 3rd S t , E u t o n ,
P h o n * 83U2
fa.
Now Playing
M a r k T w a i n ' s Classic
THE ADVENTURES
OF TOM SAWYER'
with
T O N y KELLY
MAY ROBSON
VICTOR JORY
WALTER BRENNAN
Doort Open
2 : 0 0 P . M.
Sing, brother, sing I
In every fraternity the Gordon Oxford shirt
takes hoiwe honors for year 'round endurance,
authentic style and superb tailoring. A campus
celebrity—no less.
$9 each
ARROW SHIRTS
A newr sldrt hee if one ovar sbrinJcs
THE
FRID.W. .-VPRII. 1. ions
LAFAYETTE
Page
Three
Sluggers Will O p e n Season Against Greyhounds
All'Soph Infield Starts
Saturday In Stadium
MORAVIAN TOUGH RIDING ALLOWED
FOR GYM CREDIT
UNDER NEW PLAN
Lafayette's ba.-cball team will
open it.- ?;ca.=on on S a t u r d a y by
playing host to a s t r o n g Moravian
nine.
The Jlaroon c'ub will .=tai-t an
all-sophomoi-e infield with the exception of tli-i-t base. " R u s t y " Rosseter, '3S, the captain and leadiuR
slugRoi-, will hold down the initial
pack. Hud Kuine, a diminutive lail,
will bo at tho keystone bap. F o r
his mate a t shortstop, there is the
niost watched man on the team.
H. \V. Clark and Walter .^L VauJ a c k Sargent.
CompletinR- what derbu.'-h, of the physical education
looms to be a fine defensive quar- department, announced that horset e t will be Harold Belli.s. IJoUis back riding w-ould be accepted for
played
shortstop on last year's gym credit instead of the regular
fre.shman team and ha.s been con- woi-k, if the applicants for exempvcrled by Hill Coughlin to third. tion brought proof from the masThe frardencrs will be well re- t e r of the academy that they had
presented by J u n i o r s . Ed Ricci, completed the required number of
who was getting the range of the hours cif exercise.
right field stands just before he
.\i the same time. Buddy Feinbroke his leg last year, will be in gold, ' 4 1 , representing the Northhis right field post. IJill Lookey, ampton Country Club, said t h a t
one of la.'t yeai-'.-i stai-s, will be in riding classes would start from the
c e n t e r field. Left field present.s a book.store four times a w-eek. The
perplexing problem. Tony Cavallo charge w-ill be one dollar, which
can bat and Joe Becker can field, will cover evei-ything necessary for
b u t neither are adept at both. Fred the ride.
Thon, when not pitching, will also ;
be in line for the left field j'cb.
' L E A V E FROM
BOOKSTORE
PITCHERS
I
Parties w-ill stpvt Tue.=day at
LOOK GOOD
!
."..00 p.m., T h u r s d a y at 2.30 p.m.,
The iiurling corps is the bright ,
.•-Saturday a t 2.00 p.m., and .Sunspot of the club. Although Thon'.s
day.s at 10.00 a.m. Anyone wishing
a r m was troubling him, according
to .sign u p for the riding cour-e
t o laic t rejions, it is coming j
should see Buddy Feingold or d i o p
aiouiid and will be ready for ac- I
a note in box 24'.>, at t h e book
tion . onn. Harold Hageman. a 225 |
•tore.
pound fire-ball throwe'-, will probably s t a r t
against the
Giey- I
hounds. During spring practice he |
shut out the Ingei-soll-lJand team |
in a six inning practice game. Joo |
Strohman, who has developed raj)- j
Arrangements have been made
idly this year, is a n o t h e r pos-iblo
to
.show the new .\merican league
starter. To take care of tho relief |
duties there is D;.n Coughlin and talking picture " R a t t e r U p , " in the
Senccncy. Anyone of t h r e e boy.< Little t h e a t r e , Friday night at
7.30.
may developc 'nto a .starter.
This ba.'^eball film i.s a productHill Farinon, la-t year's p e p p ( r y ion of thi- Philadelphia Athletics.
back.-tcp, will be aided by J o e Tre- The scene is layed in Shibe park
oea. Treooa is a good h i t t e r but and members of tho A's perform.
lacks Farinon's steadiness and ex- Other big league players give adperience in handling packers.
vice and demon.strate t o p notch
The game is scheduled for 3.00 diamond form. The picture also
on Fisher field.
contains .shots of the Yankee-Giant
The Leopard baseball record for series and the " A l l - S t a r " games of
l i i ' j " was as follow-s:
1937.
l.afKyette .'i; Princeton 7 • Lafayette 7 ; Alumni G
Lafayette 4 ; Drexel 4
Lafayette 3 ; Moi-avian 2
Lafayette 12 ; Haverford 2
(continued from page ono)
Lafayette (>; Dickinson 3
Lafayetto 4 ; Gettysburg 3
club, the Model League of Nations
L a f a y i t t e 10; .Muhlenberg 5
and the
editorial staff of
tho
Lafayette ;); Rutgers 1
"Toueh.stone."
L a f a y i t t e fi; Rutgers 2
Gerhard is a member of T h e t a
Lafayette 8 ;Lehigh 3
Chi and a member of the editorial
Lafayette 8 ; Navy 7
stalT of the " M e l a n g e . "
Lafayette 15, Lehigh 7
Three juniors were named asL a f a y e t t e 7 ; Muhlenberg G
sistant sports editors. These men
Lafayette 10; Lehigh 5
are Franklin Clark Smith, Edward
Lafayette 3 ; Temple 4
Kelly and J e r r y T u r t l e t a u b .
Won 1 3 ; lost 2 ; tied 1.
Smith is a member of Phi Gamma Delta. He is also assistant manager of lacros.se, member of the
business ttafT of The
LAFAYE T T E and the " L y r e . "
(continued from page o n e )
has served as structural engineer
Kelly is a member of Phi Kappa
for Bethlehem steel corporation, Psi.
Hallinger and P e r r a t of PhiladelA member of Towers fraternity,
phia, and Union petroleum com- T u r t l e t a u b is a member of the
pany. From 1921 to 1922, he was Lyre and Melange staff, a member
instructor in reinforced concrete of the Pre-Medical .society, a cheer
design and con.struction at the leader and junior m a n a g e r of base
evening engineering
school of ball.
Drexel in.stitute. Since 1922 he
Leo Meyerson, ' 4 1 , was named
has been associated with Tilgh- Exchange editor, while Joseph
m a n Moyer company of Allen- Monaghan, '39, w-as named Inlratown.
At present he is chief niui-al editor. Monaghan is a memengineer and director, specializing ber of Theta Xi fraternity.
in design, construction and equipment of banks. He is a registered
engineer in Pennsylvania, New
Jersey and New York and a member of the American society of
civil engineers.
Classes will Leave
Bookstore Four
Times a Week
Baseball Picture
Plays in Brainerd
ELECTION
TAU BETA PI
Team Takes Sixth
in Third Corps
Area Competition
Plea Made by 'Scotty'
Cuthbertson for
More Men
-Although the varsity rifle squad
lost five straight matches to Drexel, Rutgers, N. Y. U., Lehigh, and
the I'hiladelphia Marines, tho team
membeis staged .-i comeback to
win second place in the Hearst
Trophy match.
1938's soccer team got under
way yesterday for a few weeks of
s p r i n g practice.
With the loss of only tw-o regulars from last season's team, and
with a new conch, " S c o t t y " Cuthbertson, the team should be in a
position to. give considerable opposition to its eight opponents next
fall.
" S c o t t y " replaces F r a n k Fi.sher,
a former instructor in Engli.sh, as
coach. He is an Easton resident,
but has gained considerable knowledge and experience in t h e game
from his playing days in Scotland,
where he w-as considered among
t h e be.st.
He is well known at
Lafayette a m o n g some of the old
timers, for he w-as the original
soccer coach here.
Other teams participating in
tiie match were the University of
.Maryland, Lehigh, University of
Pittsburgh, Valley F o r g e Military
Academy,
Virginia
Polytechnic
Institute, Virginia Military Listitule, Carnegie Tech, Georgetown
University, Penn
State, Drexel,
University of Pennsylvania, J o h n s
Hopkins, Westoin Maryland, Gettysburg and Howard.
The University of
Maryland
took first place with a score of
943,
Lafayette second with 930
and Lehigii third with 927. Lafayette men who fired on t h e
placing team w-ere Capt. J . W.
Reedy, J. R. R. Robb, A. D. Clark
Hugh Day, and Kus.5ell Cornell.
Cornell was high scorer with 189.
Of fii teams firing in the annual Corp.s Area match, Lafayette
took sixth place. Only R. O. T. C.
men were eligible to fire in t h e
matche.^.
BLANK ELECTED
PASSER CAPTAIN
Peter Rlank,Jr.,'37, of Ea.=t Williston N. Y., was elected captain of
the 1939 varsity basketball team
on .Monday, March 14.
He has been a member of the
l;a.-ketball team since his sophomore year, having play(?il on the
freshman club his first year. F o r
the past two years he has been a
member of the t r a c k team and ha.*served on the inter-mural athletic
council. He is an A.U. and belongs
to Delta Tau Delta.
T h e 1937 varsity won 13 out of
Ifi games, tying one. The season's
record follows:
Lafayette 7, Princeton 9
Lafayette 7, .Alumni (i
Lafayette 4, Drexel 4
Lafayette 3, Moravian 2
Lafayette 12, Haverford 2
Lafayette (!, fJickinson 5
Lafayette 4, Gettysburg 3
Lafayette 10, Muhlenberg 5
Lafayette il, Rutgers 1
Lafayette fi, Rutgei-s 2
Lafayette 8, Lehigh 3
Lafayetle 9, Navy 8
Lafayette 15, Lehigh 7
Lafayette 7, .Muhlenberg C
MORE B O O T E R S
NEEDED
Despite the fact that ten men
pre
r e t u r n i n g from
last year's
squad, and a few men from the
freshman team w-ill be moving up
to t h e varsity, there is still a definite need for more men. All those
interested should get in touch with
GeiTy Seely, '39, Phi Delta Theta,
m a n a g e r of the team, for in.^tructions.
As yet no spring games have
been .scheduled, but contacts arc
being made with the hoiM- th.it
several can be arranged. The two
men leaving the stiuad by graduation this year are Captain Jim Tait
and Dick Allen.
T E A M NEARLY
INTACT
Those men r e t u r n i n g w-ill he
captain and goalie, J o h n Landis,
'39, John Allen, '39, Gus Kellogg,
'40,
Jim Fitzpatrick, '40,
Jini
Neighbor, '39, Hob Harkins, '39,
Lou Evans, '40, Bud Fischer, '39,
Charles Murdock, '39, and Hob
Griffith.-, '40.
The member.^ of the freshman
squad w-ho will probably see action
-.vith the varsity are H o h n b a u m
and StHughton, halfbacks; Shephei-<l, fullback ;Citi-on, Livezey apd
Lee, forwards, and Felmly, gcal.
Seven to Four Score Indicates Marked
Improvement Over Last Year's Form
in Spite of Lack of Practice
Handicapped by only tw-o days
of practice in the opening game
of the season, tho lacro.sse t e a m
went down to a 7-4 defeat at the
hands of a stubborn Williams team
on Wednesday afternoon.
Despite the los.s, there was a
marked improvement over la.st
year's team. The next game, with
Sw-arthmore on home grounds, is
two weeks away. W e a t h e r conditions permitting adequate practice, the show-ing a t this time
should be quite noticeably improved over Wednesday's game.
T E E L HIGH
"^
SCORER
Marsh Teel, '38 and Dill Larson, '39, did all the scoring for
the maroon, to star on the offense.
Teel made three goals, and Larson
made the fourth. Jim Tait, '38,
deserves mention for his exceptional defensive woi-k.
CHOIR
MAXWELL TO TALK
BEFORE ENGINEERS
(continued from page one)
Yerger stated. Many alumni are
members of the church w-here the
choir will sing. Rev. Marlyn Keelcr
is the pastor.
An interesting fact t h a t Y e r g e r
brought to light is that this church
w-.-is host to the choir on its first
out-of-town musical service about
twelve years ago.
The final program of the year
will bo given at the Westminister
I're.sbyterian church of Elizabeth,
N. J., .May 8. Dr. O. W. Buschgen,
father of Hevei-ly Buschgen, '38,
student choir leader, is pa.stor of
this church. The progi-am will be
a special ser\-ice in honor of the
35th anniversary of Mr. Thomas
Wilson, organi.st and director of
music, there. F o r an equal n u m b e r
of years Mr. Wilson has been director of music of the Elizabeth
public schools. All the Pre.sbyterian churches of Elizabeth w-ill combine to a t t e n d this .ser\'ico, as will
the musical .students of the public
schools. This date is not expected
to conflict with that of the spring
Inter-fi-aternity ball.
It was a stubborn Willams team
becau.se on Tuesday they 'had
gone dow-n to a 7-2 defeat by
Princeton, and came here w-ith
t h o grouch still left in them, and
the idea to do or die.
The Lafayette s t a r t i n g lineup
w-as as follows: Leetch, Teel, Larson, Stevenson, Mar.'shall, Hogert,
Tait, Ericson, Cohen, Bluestein.
Substitutes included: Ogilvie, .A.u.stin. Link, Avakian, Brown and
Benedict.
DEBATERS TO HOLD BRAINERD CABINET
NATIONAL MEETING TO HOLD RETREAT
University of Okla- Sun Inn Picked as
homa will be Scene
Location for Banof Debate Conclave quet, G e t - t o g e t h e r
T h e ' fir.st national conclave of
the Independent Men's .A..-.^ociations will be held April 22 and 2;!
at Ihe University of Oklahoma.
This meeting is biiiig held to
facilitate the work of the noii-frateniity
groups and to correlate
their activities on a nation-wide
basis. The main speaker of the
convention is Dean T u r n e r , of the
University of Illinois.
Discussion groups and general
meetings are planned to cover the
rest of the two day conclave. Reports on non-fraternity work wili
be made by men fioin the " B i g
T e n " schools, the Rocky Mountain
.-chools, the " B i g Six" schools, and
icpresentatives of smaller schools.
Lodging and meals of all delegates will be furnished by the Independent Men's Association of
the University of Oklahoma, except for a one-dollar registration
fee.
found in the Brainerd library.
8. The decision of the judges
will be final.
Charles Davis, '38, president of
the Brainerd cabinet, disclosed the
fact that few have entered the
contest, as yet. He said that here
Maxwell C. Maxwell will speak was a very splendid opportunity
Monday, .\pril 4, on Loxnlogy be- and expressed the hope that more
would enter.
fore the fir.st meeting of the Engineer.i Club of the Lehigh Valley,
of which Prof. Paul B. Eaton is
president.
L o x o l o g y will be
T o p i c at Lecture of
Lehigh Club
RADIO
(continued from p a g e o n e )
VARSITY GOLFERS
Tile Hrain(id Cabinet will hold
a r e t r e a t in the Sun Inn, at Hethlehem, on April 13, according to
Dudley Rapp, '39, seer, taiy of
Ilrainerd.
This i-etreat differs from the fail
r e t r e a t held by the council in thai,
it is open only to member., of the
cabinet. It will be made up of
members of the old and new organizations. The purpose of the
gathering is to enable the old and
new men to get to know each other
well, so that it will be able to
function smoothly. The retreat w-ill
take the form of a banquet, Rapp
.stated. This is the first year such
an event has taken place.
"Script Writers Guild"
Want IxKinnifs lo join our cli.I>aitmeiit to wriK^ Neript. Nt™< rciitioHK for Itfuliu!
Serton!
.'Sl;i;:c! Shorts for ixrkxl+cal.s.
L;ho.st wrillnp. new- I<1<UH un> in
.1 in-iml (smiill ffe ehur«><i). Itct ii'istniction.-i
frep,
mateiial.i
<ol'.vi i;;litc(l.
foilcLji' i..-oiiIf-—this IH thf first
"Where Education Pays"
(•111 I- of it.i kind e v i r to In- },-'v>'n.
.N'Vtici' wc iiri- not a wrhool. Once
.\oii ac<-<'|ii our orfcr you are list' 'I a.f :i stuff writer. Send lor
detail.').
11)71 Hroadwav, N. Y. <'.
IKpl. .Mr. I{.4lf;
SMOOTHEST SMOKE YOU EVER ENJOYED
Mr. Maxwell >.poke here this
year on the same subject.
His
speech a t this meeting, which will
be held a t Lehigh, will cover the
subject of locks more thoroughly
t h a n his Lafayette speech. It will
be followed by a question period.
.Admi.-sion t o the lecture is by
ticket, di.stributed to members of
the club and their friends. After
those with tickets are seated, the
general public will be admitted.
The m e e t i n g is in charge of
Prof. P. V. L a r k i n , of
Lehigh,
The t r i p to Eliz.abeth will cli- chnirmitn of the joint meeting commax a succe.s.sful year for the mittee.
choir.
Included in an extensive
program t h r o u g h o u t the past season w-as a Christmas t r i p and participation in the Princeton choral
fe.stival with three other college
choirs. A service was given at the
(continued from page one)
St. Paul's Presbyterian chui-ch in
Philadelphia, and t h e r e w-as also critic^il study of the problem from
a t r i p to Centenary J u n i o r Ccllege the constofitant's point of view-.
a t Hackettstown.
4.
The judges for the conte.-t
will be Dr. H e n r y Allen, director
of t h e Brainerd society; Prof. H.
R. Chid.sey, profe.ssor of philosophy, and the student president of
the Brainerd cabinet or a member
(continued from page one)
of the cabinet appointed by him.
Active in many societies. Dr.
5.
In the cise of a senior w-inMcllwain is a Fellow in the Royal ner,
the contest prize w-ill
be
Historical Society and of the Am- awarded at commencement, J u n e
erican Academy of Arts and Sci- 1!<3«. In the case of an uiiderences.
He is a member of the cla.ssman w-inner, the prize will be
American Historical association awarded Prize day, next year.
and of the Massachusetts Historical Society and t h e Colonial So- ESSAY MAY
BE P R I N T E D
ciety of Massachusetts.
The speaker has been obtained
C. The committee reserves the
through the Department of Gov- right t o publish, if thoy so desire,
e r n m e n t and Law- and w-ill a p p e a r the w-inning essay.
here u n d e r the auspices of the
7.
This prize is t o be known as
Fred Morgan Kirby foundation of the Brainard E«»ay C o n t e i t prize
Civil Rights. Since his address in for promotion of interest among
Monday's chapel begins a t 11:30, the students of c u r r e n t social iiroclasses w-ill be somewhat shorten- blcms treated in t h a t type of book
ed t h a t day.
has only Pat'd filter combining moisttjreproof Cellophane exterior and 66 Baffle absorbent mesh screen interior; resulting in
greatest scientific pipe smoking invention
ever known./(eepsju/ce5/o//7ter.oufo/moutA.
a;
A ThinkinR
Fellow Calls a
Yellow
YELLOW CAB
W h y P a y 25c Per H e a d W h e n
F i v e C a n R i d e for t h e P r i c e of O n e
CONTEST
under the auspices of the E E dep a r t m e n t , is building a new t r a n s mitter.
The Physics d e p a r t m e n t
has ordered e<iuipnient to bring
its own station up to t h e standa r d s of the one in the otlier end
of P a r d e e , pei-haps to improve on
it. Thus a healthy spirit of rivalry
exists, beneficial to
both
groups. Right now, although the
Physics d e p a r t m e n t has more an
tiquated and less powerful equipment, it is operating. T h e boy.-:
were on d u r i n g the contest, and
succeeded in contacting stations
The schedule for the varsity in 29 countries. The E E departgolf team has been announced by m e n t ' s station was less f o r t u n a t e
since their new t r a n s m i t t e r is
Manager H a r t n e t t as follows:
still u n d e r construction. Y e t they
April 1 3 — S w a r t h m o r e — a w a y . hope to be on next year, and
April 3 0 — P r i n c e t o n — a w a y .
" b e a t t h a t g a n g all hollow."
May 4 — F . & M.—aw-ay.
An interesting aspect o£ the
entire system is its concrete value
May C—W. & J . — h o m e .
in case of emergency.
At both
May 14—Lehigh—home.
stations emergency equipment is
May 21—Dickinson—away.
either available or u n d e r construction, which will enable two
portable-mobile t r a n s m i t t e r crew-s
to go o u t in case of emergency
0 0
or news coverage. Facilities are
also available for rebroadcasting
this relatively shorthaul work on
worldwide frequencies with large
amounts of power. All transmitters and receivers a r e independent
of city power supply, in case of
an emergency pow-er failure. Ama t e u i e radio at Lafayette is prepared to maintain the high standards of preparedness and public
service which il has established
internationally.
On Other Campi
Slantz and Ramage will be initiated with the
undergraduate
pledges in two weeks time. The
annual Tau Beta Pi banquet will
be held on the evening following
t h e initiation.
At a joint meeting last Wednesday evening of T a u Beta Pi
and the presidents of the various
engineering societies, the
plan
submitted by Tau Betu Pi to form,
a board to a i t as a clearing house I
for meeting dates was accepted.'
The plan provides
for each
m e m b e r society to elect one representative to the board.
The
chairman must be a member of
T a u Beta Pi. A bulletin of future engineering meetings will be
published periodically.
All en- i
gineering meetings w-ill be brought <
to the attention of the planning
g r o u p two weeks before the scheduled date.
A list of all major
canipu.i activities outside of engineering will be kept on 'hand
fur the use of the officers of the
engineering .-ocieties.
After the plan had been accepted, Joseph Yanak, ' 3 9 , was elected
chairman of the planning board.
The following societies were repre.icntcd: A. \. E. E. by Joseph
McLellan; A. S. C. E. by Nils.
A s k m a n ; A. S. M. E. by E d w a r d !
Maxwell; John Markle Mining Society by Del W a d e ; Math Club
by William P l u m e ; and student
bruuch of A. C. i>. by Sam K«,
Lacrosse Team Drops
Opener With Williams
VARSITY RIFLEMEN OUTLOOK BRIGHT
WIN SECOND PLACE AS SOCCER TEAM
IN HEARST MATCH BEGINS PRACTICE
Dial 9141
GOVERNMENT
"i
Presenting for the first lime in a store in this city, tlie famous John \^'aril Men's
DEBATES
Shoes, brought to you straiglit from Fifth Avenue, New York . . . The same superior
(continued from page one)
to a r b i t r a t e all industrial
disputes."
Washington and Lee will be
represented by J a c k J o n e s of
CarroUton, Mo., and David Miller
of Hagerstown, Md.
Miller is considered to be WL's bcot debater.
He is a I'hi
Beta Kappa and a senior in the
academic school, and has lost but
one debate in his eight yearu ofi
high school and college debating.
A junior in the academic school
and a Dean's list student, Jones
was finalist in the National High
School Debate T o u r n a m e n t
in
11)35 und has been a m e m b e r of
the Washington A. Lee debate
squad for the past three years.
He has been debating with the
varsity ifroup for t h e lajit two
years.
leather tannages, the same distinguished designs as arc fa\ored hy John Ward patrons from the leading Eastern universities . . .Your insjiection is curdiaily invited.
yH'C
tUAtllUiUlliluX
KFFICIENCY
Series
ir^i'Ai
iJti^UiJJ
E.\ECUTIVE
Serie*
•roo
eris SKoes
SO
%
FIFTH
AVENUE
NEW . H RK
///
C itjL'ii
3 5 2 N o r l l i a n i p l o n St.,
u r . S. i t h
ill
JTHE
P a g e Four
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 193SJ
LAFXYETTE
NOTED SPEAKER
TO TALK SUNDAY
BARGE CONTEST COLLEGE CATALOG ZIEGLER DISCUSSES I NOTICES!
OPEN TO SENIORS BEING DISTRIBUTED SHEEP-DOG TRIALS
ALPHA PHI OMEGA
INTRAMURAL
BASEBALL
The Euston Hall tennis courts
are reserved for tlie exclusive use
of the Varsity and Frosh tennis
The intramural
hardball and
squads every afternoon during the
softball
games officially
began
week and all day on days of homo
last Tuesday.
The Faculty formatches.
feited to the Phi (Jams. The victors
The courts behind Dorm Row
in the first three days of the tourand those on
March Field annament were:
Hardball: Thet:i
available at all times for .student
Xi, Sigma Nu, Theta Chi, Phi DelThe College Bulletin for l!t37however. Regulation tennis
I'rof. C. W. Ziegler, head of use,
Dr
James
L. McConaughy, ta Theta, Marquis; Softball: K.D.
Opening of the lit3S Barge or- 38, including announcements for
shoes must be worn at all times. president of Wesleyan University, R., Towers, TheUi Xi, Sigma Nu,
the
deiKiitinent
of
education,
ntoiiciil contest for seniors only, l!'3!t, is now ready for distribuAll
mctnbert
of
KRT
who
were
be the D. U.
was announced yesterday by I'rof. tion. Of the various division.s com- speaking before the convocation not present at the last meeting of .Middlebury, Conn., will
INTH.-VMURAL HARDBALL
A. H. Cilnier.
prising the catalogue are: tru.stees. this noon on "Sheep Dog Trials the orfanization will be automati- next Sunday chapel speaker. ArAlpha Chi Rho, 5 ; Theta Xi, S
This contest is to be held com- administrators, faculty, terms of in England," sjiid that the im- cally suspended if they do not at- riving in Ea.ston, Saturday, he will
be entenained overnight in the Sigma .Nu, 7; K. D. R., 2
meiu-cnieiu week at which time admission, curriculum for .A.It and pression we receive from foreign tend the next meeting.
home of Prof. B. W. Kunkle, one
the
Phi Delta Theta, 12; Theta Chi,
six chosen candidates will speak engineering cour.ses, fees and ex- news dispatches describing
Freshmen who are wearing jack- of his friends. Dr. McConaughy, 19
preparations going on in
for a jui'/.e of one hundred dol- penses, scholarships, pri-<ies, socie- war
ets bearing minor "L"'s are re- well known as an educator, took
Phi Delta Thrta, Ki; Delta Tau
ties,
extra-cun-icular
activities, Europe is not entirely true.
lars.
Ziegler noticed in England la.st quested to remove them from the his B.A. at Y'ale, received an M.A. Delta, 1
A li.-t of topics and instruction and a complete list of executive
his
MarquLs, 13; S. A. E., 3
summer that "the proverbial social jackets unless they have earneil at Bowdoin, and completed
sheet may be obtained from Gil- officers, faculty and students.
them. It is a custom at Lafayette work for Doctor of Philosophy at
Towers, 2 ; D. K. E., 1
tea
hour
every
afternoon
between
The cover on this year's catamer. A speech of not less than
K. D. R., 3 ; Chi Phi, 2
five
o'clock, amuse- not to wear a Lafayette "L" un- Columbia. He has received numten and not more than twelve logue is grey with red, more ap- four and
less it has been earned in sports erous honorary degrees from Wil.Mpha Chi Rho, 3 ; Theta Xi, "
.?
minutes is to he selected by each propriate than last year's yellow ments, sports and contest were as
by the wearer.
liams, Middlebury, Amherst and
Sigma Nu, 10; Theta Delta Chi,
contestant and written out. The and brown. In general the print- conspicuous as usual." Up in the
Knox. After receiving his Doctor's 4
manuscript, which must be type- ing is larger and the information lake legion he ob.served hikers
degree, McConaughy was named
D. U., « ; Zeta Psi, 0.
written and double-spaced, must <,n the courses is more .specific and of all ages wandering over the
Jesse Farr, '38, announced that to the chair of education at Dartcountryside made famous by Colbo completed by Wednesday, May technical.
nominations for officers of the mouth. Following this he was aperidge and Wordsworth.
4.
pointed president of Knox College,
While staying at Keswick, Zieg- Marquis Association will be held the post that he held until he was
On this day the contestant will
at
the
next
meeting,
Monday
night
ler had the opportunity to witness
read his manuscript
before a
in the gym. The elections will take called to Wesleyan University to
a very strange contest, a .sheep
gioup of three judges.
On the
McConaughy
place "rhursday, April 14, either serve as president.
(continued from page one)
dog trial. This was held in a large
basis of the manuscript and its
in Brainerd or in the gym. As only has received national recognition
oral delivery five or six contest- cles and in other publications as, meadow outside the town where men who have attended at least as an educator through a series of
44 CATTELL STREET
ants will be selected to participate for instance, the New York "Her- shepherds from all over the re- one meeting of the organization books he has written on the subgion had gathered with their dogs are eligible to vote, those who wish ject. He is a member of Beta Thein the final contest on Thursday ald Tribune."
Fraternity T r a d e Solicited
evening June 9. The final contest
In a letter to the latter news- hoping to sell their animals for
to participate in the elections are ta Pi fraternity.
] urged to attend thi.s meeting.
will be held outdoors in front of paper he recently answered an high price, or to win a prize.
Each shepherd would take his
Kiiby Hall at 8 P. M.
in the editorial entitled "Sabotaging Air
and put the
animal
ca.se of rain it will be held in Progress." In it he stated, "As one dog out
Kirby hall.
who has participated in a ramb- through his paces. The dogs were
Thc Camera Club will hold its
Those seniors interested in en- ling airship program, I can well not the usual collie-.«ihepherds, .so monthly competition Wednesday,
GUARANTEED
(continued from page one)
tering should confer with Gilmer subscribe to the necessity for a common around here, but much .A.pril C. All members are requestPlain Garments
as soon as possible and notify definite far-sighted policy. After smaller and more slender with ed to have .it least tw-o prints enDuring the day members of the
Cash & Carry Only
him of their choice of topic. Not a number of year.s' association black and white markings.
will be distinguished by
tered. The subjects for thi.s con- class
PRESSING 29c
more than two persons will be with airship development in this
A small flock of sheep was sta- test will be .still life, portraits of wearing special arm bands, badges
permitted to speak upon the same country, during which I have tioned about a half mile from the children and animals.
or canes.
These distinguishing
tried to find a basic reason why crowd gaLhered for the event.
subject.
At a future meeting a lecture marks have not been decided upon
DRY CLEANERS
our airship development has not Fir.st the dog would run toward on color photogi-aphy and its de- aa yet.
been more satisfactory, 1 have
velopments
will
be
given
by
a
re3rd
a n d Bushkill Streets
the sheep, and guide them around,
come to the definite and indisdirected by his master's whistling. presentative of the Duflex Co., of CUSTOM
putable conclusion that the respon
IS WIDESPREAD
Many of the dogs seemed to use New York.
(continued from page one)
sibility rests primarily with the
Many other colleges have estab. i'-i..
,
their
own
judgement,
and
these
lack of a United States' airship
lished such a day. The univer
.inder P. Trippe, who later served
were more successful than those
policy.
sity of Pennsylvania Ivy day has
in the Civil w-ir and became a
guided entirely by the shepherd.
been in existence for a long time.
"It is my feeling that the The dogs had different devices to
•.'(•neiul in the United States Army
(continued from page one)
will guide their charges but thoy nevOn this day certain traditions are
visited Yale and brought back American airship question
with him the news of the estab- never be settled fairly or ade- er were allowed to nip a sheep. Becau.se of this the student be- cai-ried out by members of the
lishment on that campus of the quately until a national policy is Sometimes they would advance comes hoplessly involved in a Junior class.
Delta K.-ippa Epsilon fraternity. adopted. I am equally convinced in a crouching position, sometimes ma.ss of fact and ideas, thereby
Scott, who was appointed chairIn IS.''.,';, according to Skillman, that when .such a policy and they would run around the flock resorting to cramming as a last man of the committee, is a memstudents at Lafayette succeeded related programs are adopted, we to keep any from straying off. desperate measure.
ber of Phi Kappa Psi. Other actiin organizing a chapter of the shall see American airships taking Occa-sionally they would trot slowFrequently the texbooks lack vities are, captain-elect of l.'jO
THE ARCADE
a place in the aeronautical world ly along behind the herd.
DKE at the college.
continuity and organization, or pound football, member of the
that which our
Fiateniity matters at that time comparable to
present
tl)e
course's
in
too
ponderMaroon
key
club,
vice-president
There were
several
narrow
were veiled in deep secrecy. Skill- heavier than air has taken."
ous and technical a manner, for of the Junior clats, member of
man said.
The DKE fraternity
Cenfre Square
Commander Rosendahl will np- places through which the sheep the aver:ige student's compreheji- Scabbard and Blade, and Fio.sh
had
to
be
led,
and
the.se
were
a
was not organized on the campus j p^^^^. j^p,.g „^ ^^^ g{ ^j,^ series of
sjon.
'
basketball and baseball.
Phone 7151
but in a hotel room
in I'hillip
"
Tvu.ii.„.. ^.p^^j^gj... brought here by
the real te.st of the dog's skill. Now
burg.
Al one time, they suc- Bifainerd Society throughout the and then one ob.rtinate animal
ceeded ill having a copy of their y e a r The lecture will be free to would refuse to follow the flock
anSaxsi -ii't'--flihiatlli'-1
lii'^l#v^^rfc^^^i%' jii:k^^^-i.^:AitMTiJBtaffer'.a.iiit.
skull and crossbones printed in an .students, cost being taken from and thi.s caused the dog considerobscure corner of the college cat- the fund acquired as part of the able diflScullty.
alog, and so enraged the board of student's fee that goes to the
Even after the herd had been
trustees, who strongly objected to society.
driven all the way back, the test
fraternities, that the entire issue
was not yet over. The dog had
of the catalog was destroyed, acto split the .sheep up, nnd put
cording to Skillman.
each group in a small corral. That
ended the trial.
DEKE HOUSE
(continued from page one)
In the afternoon, teams of
NOT FIRST
.Another fraternity the Phi Kap-' she ha no direct contact with hot sheep dogs were put through their
pa Sigma, was organized before water.
paces, but because they did not
the DKK. Skillman pointed out
Hot water is an inlere.-rting side- co-ordinate them.selves so well, the
that since it died out the Dekes line though; Mi.ss Keller's steam two could not do the job any more
have been recognized us the first goes into steam generators in the succe.ssfully than a single dog.
fraternity on the campus. In thei basements of McKeen, Gates and
early days, meetings were held in | Kaston Hall.^ and South College,
rooms down town and members' There the (.team pa.sses over or
went to meetings one at a time, I through tubes, heating water on
(continued from page one)
in order that they might not be ihe opposite side.
In extremely
ouspected.
Interfratemity raids cold weather, when all the availaWORK IS ON
were common.
ble steam is needed for regular GIGANTIC SCALE
By 1S(;7 there were six frater- heating purposes, the hot water is
After many weeks of consulnities on the campus of 100 stud- made by the additition of the
ents, in spite of the efforts of thei f.„„jiiur jack-stoves to the gen- tation, preparation, and planning,
the real work began Wednesday
board of trustees. The trustees; erators
evening.
A group of about fifthad adopted a system whereby'
een fro.sh were assembled and
every freshman had to sign
a SHE GETS
they began a ta.sk that is calculatpledge not to join a fraternity and A BOOST
Another addition in time of bad ed to rival the royal Egyptian
every senior one that he had not
joined a frateniity before either weather is the boiler in the En- pyramids in extent as well fts
This
is in beauty of design. The frosh
admission or graduation were per- gineering laboratories.
n>itted. But fraternities continu- hooked into the main line, and carried huge logs and stones to
adds a few pounds pressure. Ordi- the site of the wall and began
ed to thrive.
narily, this boiler is used only to building it, under the expert diSTUDENTS
produce steam for the engineers. rection, of course.
BREAK LOSE
Their experiments and demon.straAfter the great wall has been
Shortly before the fourth of tions would be too much of a
July, one year Skillman noted, load for ovei-w-oiked Miss Keller. finLshed, fitting dedication ceremonies are planned. But for the
un outbreak in the college made
That Miss Keller is ovei-worked
the campus a regular bedlam for is obvious. Completely disregard- nonce, the work must be done for
three days. The seats were torn ing Che expansion of the college it mu.st be erected before it is
oul of the chapel.
Professor's since 1907, the tentative plans for dedicated.
Maroon Key intends to 'have
ropms were ransacked. Everything a new steam plan indicate the newas in wild disorder
One pro- cessity for more power. Miss Kel- the building work done every
fessor who kept a cow found her ler can produce altogether (iOO Wednesday at T:!.""). All fro.sh who
one morning on the fourth floor horsepower; the new design would feel a need for "protection" and
of South college. Activities like make twice that in two high pres- those whom Maroon Key decides
this continued until President Cat- sure forced-draft boilers. Miss Kel- need "protection" will be memtel was mobbed, and then it was
ler's successor has been prepared bers of the erection squad. Anydecided to call in the police to
for though, because the steam i ° " ^ el.se who cares to may also
(|uell the rioting.
pipelines were re-laid six years j join in this monumental task
The fraternities won their fight. ago.
The new plant will eventuThe board of trustees finally gave ally hook into the line on Dushkill
in with the stipulation that men drive, where the important lines coal, and a danger exists which
who had the consent of their par- converge.
has caused trouble.
ents might become members of
It seems that in extreme weathThe new plant may be machine er it is necessary to throw on coal
fraternities on the campus. Since
that time fraternities have never stoked, while antiquated Miss Kel very rapidly. Large coal would not
met strong opposition from the Ier requires the services 24 hours j pack tightly but would allow the
faculty or the trustees and have a day of firemen. Hut despite all draft to leak through; on tht
grown until there are now nine- other changes. Miss Keller's suc- other hand, the rice coal someteen fraternities at Lafayette und ces.sor will burn anthracite coal, times forms a blanket over the
houses for all of them, with the for many reason.s. Anthracite coal fire on the grate; and then the
interfratemity council participat- is cheaper thfn oil in this part of | fun begnns. The heat of the fire
ing in the student government.
the country; the original donors naturally causes gas, which ordiwere anthracite men, and there narily is burned; but the blanket
t"
Ls a tradition to be maintained; prevent.H its expansion, and it acanthracite coal burns almost com- cumulates rapidly. Under thene
pletely, leaving little soot and no conditions the steam blowers are
(continued from p a ^ one)
smudge.
operating, and a high pressure is
built up. Then the gas explodes.
final elimination at the step-sing- BOILERS
When it does, the grate doord
ing in late Ajril or early May. Af- CAN BURN
That Miss Keller can behave fly open, despite bolts on them
ter eliminations at the step-singing, the entire group present will like a spiteful woman is all too that make them lock like a vault
join in singing traditional college obvious. Should her boilers run door, and flames shoot out, someAn
dry, the return of the condensed times a^ far as thirty feet.
liongs and other .songs.
Song fe:t.i will be held in chapel steam would cause flash steam in unfortunate firenaan caught in thi^i
from lime to lime, conducted by the boiler, and Misn Keller would blast would never stand a chance.
Prof*. John
Warren Erb and probably land somewhere in I'hil- At the temperature of Miss KelThoma- E. Yerger, to acquaint the ipsburg; but this has never hap- ler's grates, he would never know
students with
popular
college pe.ied, and is not liable to happen, what hit him. Uut so far, nobody
i>ongs of earlier days. These are what with automatic feed-pumps, hau ever been in front of the
:MlteiMi<rd to give teams practice guages and safety devices. On the grate door when Miss Keller got
^
Other hand, Mu« Keller tues rice mood/.
imd idexs for the couteift.
Prize of $100 to be
Awarded to Best
Senior Orator
Cover in Grey, Red; English Dog Contest!
Book Includes 1939 Held in Novel Way,
Says Speaker
Anouncements
Dr. James L*. McConaughy will Addres Students
AIRSHIPS'
(continued from page one)
to discussion of initiation plans.
A few items in the activity list
were also considered, and an application for a new chapter, to
be established at the University
of .Missouri at Columbia was approved.
The initiation will be held at
2:30 Sunday afternoon in Brainerd hall.
The
College Print Shop
Fordham University
SCHOOL OF LAW
NKW YORK
Ca.sc .System
Tliree-Vcar Day Course
Four-Year Kvening CourM
C'o-Kducalional
Member of the A.ssorl.-itlon
of Ani<-rk:in I..-iw Kcliool.t
rollece Degree or Two Years iif
('ulle;;e Work wifh (Joiiil (iradei
I(e<iulred for Knlnince
Transcript of Heconl Must be
Kurnlaheil
H. M. Reichard, Mgr.
Morning. Early Afternoon and
Kvening ('lasses
COMMERCIAL and
BOOKLET PRINTING
For further information aililress
('lf.<%KI.KS I>. DAVIS, RegUtrar
2.'!:t Itmuduuy, New York
High a t Porter St.
Dial 4931
Easton. P a .
F. F. KINSLEY
GROCER
CLASS DAY
DRY CLEANING
39^
INTERSTATE
SKILLMAN
WEIGHTS
THATCHER'S
SEA FOOD
MARKET
MISS KELLER
AIRFLANE MANUFACTURER
NEEDS MEN
The educational divi.sion of the Liiscombe Airplane Corporation of We.st Trenton, New Jersey,
well known manufacturer of all-metal airplane.s, ha»
been requestetl to train a number of mon to fill tho
following po.sition.s created by a definite program of
cxpan.sion.
Production, .sales, and engineering positions at
West Trenton factory.
Sales, service, maintenance, and repair men for
nation-wide dealer and di.stributor organization.
Men to a.s.sumc key position.s in contemplated
foreign a.ssembly plants.
Applicants mu.st be ambitious, hard workers,
with good educational background and willing to
pay a reasonable fee for training received.
Write immediately, stating your qualifications
or call at our factory for a special interview.
TEL TRENTON 3-3422
JMiJdripe tobaccos^.and
pure cigarette paper
MAROON KEY
these Chesterfield
ingredients are the best
a cigarette can have
at youj enjoy in (chesterfields
. . the reason they give so many smokers
more p l e a s u r e . . . is the full flavor and aroma
of mild ripe home-grown and aromatic T u r k ish tobaccos, blended like no other cigarette.
STEP SINGING « V
The Champagne cigarette paper used
in making Chesterfields is pure , . , it
burns without taste or odor,.. it's the
best cigarette paper money can buy.
'\
.,,you*Il find MORE PLEASURE in
Chesterfield's milder better taste
Cim4b iH«. haiin * Mxat iMAtfa Q»
4.*t • t'.^ •M' V^ ^ 4^ i
^^,.,t^.i^.