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:\VERFORD'COLL
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'.iAVERFORD, FA,
HAVERFORD NEWS
VOLUME 26—NUMBER 26
Banquet For Cap
And Bells To Be
Given Tomorrow
Coop Asks Quick
Debt Settlement
With the number and amount
of accounts payable higher
than they have been in some
years, the Cooperative Store announces that a drive will be
made to collect all debts immediately. "Unless the situation
improves," stated R. E, Lewis,
'36, manager of the Store,
"there will be nu more credit
this year."
Seniors are asked to settle
their debts before comprehenelves. Clerks from the store will
go around within the next ten
days to collect outstanding payable account'. Since the store
whams to carry no debts over
the Bummer, it solicits immediate student cooperation in settling accounts.
Club Celebrates 25th
Anniversary After
Active Year
Dr. Snyder To Speak
Winding up a ammessful year
after a performance of "Hay
Fever" et Haddon Hall, Atlantic
City, on Saturday, and a concert by
the Glee Club the same day broadcast over a nation-wide hook-up
from WCA11,' the Cap and Beira
banquet for all members of the club
will be held in the Alumni Room at
7:16 tomorrow night.
Professor Snyder will he the
speaker of the evening, with Alexander Laverty, '17, presiding at the
banquet In celebration of the
twenty-fifth anniversary of the Cap
and Belle Club. About fifty, Inchiding alumni members ka well
se those faculty and undergraduate
members in good standing, are expected to attend.
HAVERFORD (AND ARDMORE), PA., TUESDAY, tlAY 14, 1935
Glee Club Makes
Radio Debut Sat.
Sings Over A National
Hook-up For 15
Minutes
Rear-Admiral Sims
Says That Trade
Led Us Into War
Scouts Possibility Of
Naval Conflict With
Japan In Pacific
Over 300 Attend Talk
Over 300 persons thronged Roberts Hall Tuesday night to hear
Rear Admiral William S. Sims
speak on "How Can We Keep Out
of War?" Admiral Sims, who retired from the Navy in 1922 after
commanding naval operations during the War, spoke under the suepiece of the World Peace Foundation. President W. W. Comfort introduced the speaker.
"We entered the World War to
protect our, commerce, not our
citizens, and in the event of another European War we would
again find it impossible to stay
out"—thia statement was emphasized by the speaker several times
during the course of his talk. "Until profits become less important
than people and the government
can control the commercial interests, there can be no hope for permanent peace."
Admiral Sims scouted the possibility of conflict between the United States and Apart. stating that
6,000 miles of ocean form an impregnable defense for both nations. At the outbreak of wa r
Japan would many seise the Philth
..
izil,47...and Guam, leseetng .er
Hansen's Band To
Play For Cotillion
San Hansen and his eleven.
piece orcheatra have been enaged to play for the Cotillion
lub dance to be held Saturday,
May 18. at the Merton Cricket
Club. Dancing wilt be from 9
to I, and a large crowd is expected by the Committee since
this is to be the last of the 1935
Spring Dances.
Patronesses for the dance will
be Mrs. H. Tetnall Brown, Jr.,
Mrs. John F. Gummere, Mrs.
William H. Harman and Mrs.
Fred R. Wallace. The Committee
who arranged for the dance consists cat M. F. Glessner. J. W.
Pearce, and W. E. Sheppard, all
members of the present Junior
Class.
Tickets for the dance may he
obtained from any of the Committee, and are $1.00 stag, and
MN for a couple.
C
Alumni Donations
Fall Off Sharply
Wills Asks For More
Elections To Be Held
Contributions; Only
New members will be elected to Broadcasting for 15 minutes
$13,000 Given
the Club at the preceding business over a nation-wide hook-up from
meeting, to take place in the Union WCAU Saturday at 12 noon, the
at 0.20 P. M,, when next yearn, Haverford Glee Club sang a van
- following the
On the week-end
officers also will be chosen,
iety of pieces. Five were rendered,
first report luncheon of the Centenranging from Bach to Sigmund
rammed V, P. Morgan, 'Us
ary Campaign Committee there
Spaeth. '05. The broadeart marked
president.
Five performances of "Hey the last appearance of G. Rohrer,
were recorded only sixty-six pledge
Fever" have been given. The sec- '35. as leader of the Glee Club.
cards from alumni for a total of
and was at Ogonts School on April Opening with a selection from
$13,283. Casinpayments amounted
24, and the third was a benefit pm- Johann Sebastian Raclin chorale,
to The
$5,183.
formance sponsored by the Civic 'Sleepers Awake," entitled "Now
drive to relieve the College
and Community Assuciation,at the Let Every Tongue Adore The',"
Lower Merion High School on May the Club nest offered, by way of Japan than Hawaii, from which it of its 8150,000 debt Is now entering
4. On the following Thursday the contrast, a modern arrangement of would be imposeible to operate ef- its fourth week. Of the amounts
play was presented in West Chen- Frederick Knight Logan's "Lift
tow..., Peer I, Ca."" 3 listed above, $10,380, including $3..
ter, Pa. at the New Century Club, Thine Eyes." The singers then
855 in cash, had been received prefor the 'League of Women Voters. sang the 18th century Flemish cornThe Glee Club also has enjoyed poser Areadelt's famous "Ave
vious to tart week.
a successful season, under the lead- Maria."
Professor
Sutton
Will
In an interview William M.
ership of Mr. William P. Bentz and The only humorous song of the
Wills, chairman of the Centenary
C. Rohrer, having given seven per- prevent followed, a modern corn- Give Talk On Radiations Committee,
stated: "If you are
formances, the last over the radio.position by Jacques Wolfe, "Shortwaiting
for personal calls by the
It has chosen J. S. Pugilism,. 36, eine Bread." A short piece entitProfessor Richard M. Sutton sea
Class Representatives, they will
Ss next year's leader.
"The Sleigh" by Richard will speak on the wpm, "From Ree
you Si once and will give you
,,.
Kuntz, supposed to represent the
any Information you desire,
die to Cosmic Rays," before l-ee any
h.rnutelehr Suburban
...anoem,dff ae ...
and Main Line. Radio
Night Owls Prevented ride, tba
is no time to deClubs, pleats of the Phymes DeCollege is asking you for
From Playing OverW1P; of the five was one recently writ- rtment' In "'rah.' gall on help. The
Not for fifteen years hoe
Monday night, May 20, The lecture there been a general appeal ever
ete4cyMay Get Buck LIBII Job tSign mund
.m i ;al
pilYethf,
be accompanied by
most half of the Alumni have never
tire of radio," entitled "Haverford
mental demonstrations of various been called on to contribute. HavHaves-ford's aeven piece dance Hilftnefa:.
phenomena shown by visible and erford needs your support now.
orchestra, the Night Owle, could
invisible radiations from short- Pledges may be made payable until
not play on the WIP radio pro- HISTORY II VISITS MUSEUM wave radio to the highly-penetrat- June, 1936. Fill out yours today.
gram that was scheduled for last
Five students from History H, ing radiations now under investi- Haverford must not fail. You must
night, because its members did not Roman History, visited the Penn- gation in Physics.
see that failure is impossible."
belong to the musicians' union. sylvania Museum on Wednesday to
On the following evening at MD
The progratn was to publicise the see the Mediterranean and Etrus- P. M., the lecture will be repeated
Devon Home Show, which is being can Sections. The trip was under to give any students or alumni who
held for the benefit of the Bryl, the guidance of Dr. Howard Com- may be interested an opportunity $275 To Cover Cost Of
Mawr Hospital.
fort,
to hear it.
Twoweeks ago the orchestra
European Canoe Tours
Played before a representative of
the Buck Hill Falls Inn with a
- opean canoe
All - expenin.Eur
view of pleying there this sumcruises along the Moselle, lower
mer. Three other orchestra., are
Rhine,
and
Weser
Rivers from
competing for the engegement.
June 27 to August 8 have been
The Night Owls, managed by E.
IL Rosenberry, '37 have been precannounced for this summer by the
tieing regularly throughout the After Travelling In Europe And Teaching, European Canoe Cruise AssociaPear, and played this winter at the
tion, 25 Fifth Avenue, New Yark
He Finds Haverford "Best"; Likes
Community Center. Since they are
City. They are endorsed by the
considering changing the name of
Bird Study And Wood Chopping
their organization, they will welAmerican Canoe Association.
come any suggestions.
The price of $275 includes roundLatin literature of the fifteenth lowehip
collect material for his
century has been the interest at doctor'. thesis. "The commonest trip third class passage-a on the S.
Professor Dean P. Lockwood since and cheapest way for students to S. Columbia and S. S. New York,
go
European
transportation, and livhis college days, when he first beabroad in those dam" he said,
Ask Cooperation
came interested in this •subject. "wan to work their way over on ing expenses for the forty-one
He has done extensive research in cattleshipan The crew. consisted days. Also included in the price
In Questionnaire this field and ex-peens to do more. usually of five experienced cattle- ere a folding two-seater kayak,
Dr. Lockwood was born of Ameri- men and about twenty sit-edema who kayak accessories, camping equipIt is requested that the can parents in His de Janeiro, would desert the ship when it ment, canoe costume, and a colhearty cooperation of every Brasil, and came to this country reached Europe- The cattle were lapsible baggage carrier., all of
undergraduate be given In fill- when be was a year old, residing in the hold and a few first clam which becomes, the personal proping out a copy of the annual in St. Lords, Mo. His preparatory passengers occupied the first cab- erty of the person taking the tour.
Farther information can be ob.
News questionnaire, which has education was received from a prep ins.
In describing bis voyage over, twined from the Association.
been distributed with this Issue. school in that vicinity.
Harvard University claimed Dr. Dr. Lockwood said, We worked
The questionnairea will be collected from the mail-boxes Wed- Lockwood as an undergraduate. He three hours a day and loafed the
nesday and Thursday nights by majored in Latin and Greek and rest. We didn't like the food givmembers of the Freshman class. received his A. B. in 1903. He then en to us tio we tipped the first clams TWO FINAL EXAMS CHANCED
Two changes have recently been
The questionnaire has been an did graduate work here, obtaining steward to bring us some first clam,
annual custom at Haverford his master's degree in the following food in a garbage pail. We were made in the Final Examination
since 1948, when the News com- year. Work done among the Latin discovered by officers, however, and schedule. Chemistry 8 has been
piled one containing 60 goes- manuscripts in the Harvard Lib- made to eat out of the potato bin. shifted from Tuesday, June 4, to
pleased one of nee party, Thursday, June 8; Latin 2 which
tiorm modeled on the Senior rary proved to he a stimulus for This
whose favorite dish was re* Pota- was formerly scheduled for Friday,
euestionnsire at Yale Univer- him to go abroad to study in the toes."
sity,
European libraries.
June 7, is to be given on ThursHe went abroad in 1907 on a felCent- P, by 3,ened, 3 day, June O.
Dr. Lockwood Has Specialized In
15th Century Latin Literature
ikikkaaaennesten.ssilikalsraiiPeSa
ne...i
neenninenaene,nas'aona..ans,ense...- .-
$2.00 A YEAR
Sport Teams Gain
Decisive Victories
Over Swarthmore
Locals Top F. And M.,
St. Joseph's In
Track Meet
Finish 6th In MARA A
A decisive 9-4 baseball victory
and an easy
to I ti gulf triumph over Swarthmore featured
Haverford'' "porta activity last
week but the varsity teams were
lay no means idle in other lines.
The local trackinen topped Franklin and Marshall and St. Joseph's
in a triangular meet Wednesday
end compiled 15 1-5 points to finish
sixth in the Middle Atlantics at
Lehigh Friday and Saturday. The
cricket team made it four in a
row M swamping the British Officers Club, 128-20. The tennis
team suffered the only loss of the
week in bowing to Wesleyan, but
by winning from Delaware and
tying Lafayette the nehmen managed to achieve a .500 average,
Besides their victories over the
Garnet the baseball and golf
squads each defeated another opponent. Johns Hopkins bowed to
the teasers 18-13 in an old-fashioned slugging match, and the linksmen downed Bryn Mawr in a
specially handicapped tilt to complete the most sertessfui week to
date in the spring sports programs.
Thediamond victory in the traditional Swarthmore series wan
easily the outstanding athletic
event at the week. With Within
Beers pitching mmterfolly in the
pinches. Captain Tiernan end hie
mates helped themselves to Gam
teen hits and nine rum for a handy
trioniph. The win marked the
fourth time that Randell-coached
teams have topped the Gannet,
with no defeats to mar the records.
The golf triumph was the second
or the year over the Carnet linksmen and was therefore not entirely unexpected.
Sturgis Poorman, sophomore
high-jumper and holder of the
college record in that event. was
one of two record-breakers at the
A. S. C. A. A. meet Saturday.
The lanky Poorman leaped 6 ft.
3-4 ins. to establish a new association mark and record Haverford's only first place in the afternoon's competition. Captain Harrixon ;doubling came home third
in a fast half-mile. and Chuck
Holzer did likewise in the century.
Library Prepares War
On Invading Termites;
Investigator Called In
Termites, the destructive,
wood-eating "white ants" of the
South, have recently appeared in
the Library, where a colony was
discovered to have attacked one
bookcase and part of the floor,
"We do not yet know the extent
of the damage they have caused," stated Professor Dean P.
Lockwood, librarian.
Mr. Eckert, termite expert of
Swarthmore College, will investigate the harm done by the insects, and eteps will be taken immediately to eradicate them.
Several dormitories and other
buildings at Swarthmore were
infected by the termites about
a year ago.
Termites are small, blind social insects resembling ants,
which eat woodwork, by tunneling from within until it is a
mere shell. They are frequently
not discovered until too late. Although termites flourish most in
tropical regions, they have infested the southern states for
seine time, where they have destroyed much property, and during the last ten years they have
worked their way north. This is
their first appearance around
Haverford.
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PAGE TWO
HAVERFORD NEWS
Sophs Win Speech
Award; French Is
Presented Medal
Burst '05, Alsop '29,
And Prof. Watson
Are Judges
Dr. Comfort Presides
'38 Picks Rooms;
Barclay Shunned
With about thirty Rhinim yet
remaining to choose their rooms
for next year, the range of
choice is narrowing down. Old
Lloyd is competely filled, while
both New Lloyd and Founder,
each contain but one vacant
mite for two. In Merlon Hall
there remain only two single
rooms.
The six-man suite in Merion
Annex is vacant along with ten
single acconimodatione. A room
for three and seven double residences are open in Center Barclay, while both North and South
Barclay are still largely unoccupied.
Award of both the Everett Society Medal and the Trophies wan
made to members of the Sophomore Clam, following the annual
content in Public Speaking held
Thursday night in the Union. H.
A. Andrews, R. C. Bone, Jr., and
B. H. French received the trophies,
while French also received the Society Medal, awarded to the best
individual speaker.
Preceding the contest, which beQuoting from the Books of &degan at 8:16, a dinner was held for . Amite, and Revelation Rev. John
T.
the Board of Judges in the Alumni Golding. '31, spoke in Collection
this
Room with President W. W. Corn- morning about two views
on life.
fort and several members of the He opened his talk with
a reading
faculty present. The judges for ; from the former Book illustrating
the contest this year were: Mr. the monotonous point of view on
&ward Burtt, '05, chairman; Mr. life. This outlook le a very comWilliam K. Alsoo, 29. and Profes- mon one," stated Rev.
Golding;
sor Frank D. Watson.
"life is an infinite series of 'permutations and combinations .
Comfort Pralen Speakers
Opposing
and contradicting the
Dr. Comfort, who was the presiding officer of the evening, com- monotonous point of view there is
mented favorably after the con- a second. This viewpoint is summed
up
in
the
quotation
from the Book
test on the performance of the con.'
testants, stating that he believed of Revelation, "Behold, I shall
this year's contest to be a great im. make all things new." Rev. Goldmovement over those of previous ing asserted that this point of view
years. He then presented indi- was to be reached through real,
vidual tokens to the members of, Christian religion. "Religion, when
the winning team, and in Friday real, has the quality of making
Collection presented the Everett; things appear new," Mated Rev.
Trophy to French. captain of the Golding.
Cord. en Pct.. 5. Cot.
I Golding, '31, Speaks On
Attitudes Toward Life
R. WILFRED KELSEY
Lite I
Anamlies
Provident Mutual
12.3 S. BROAD ST.
FhlIndelah0
PENnsgmekor Wino
TOWER
THEATRE
69th
St.
Ring Crosby
29 Quaker Dollars Win
Sweater For J. Brown
At the first Quaker Dollar au.
lion Monday J. A. Brown, '36, won
the first prize, a blue woolen
sweater. He bid twenty-nine
Quaker Dollars for it, representing
one-fourth that amount in purehass from New. advertisers.
The second article, a copy of
Christopher Morley's new book,
"Haste In Vista,' was obtained by
J. W. Von Cleave, '37, who had. run
c.Conil to Brown in the bidding for
the sweater. One more auction will
be held this year. The articles to
be sold will be announced later.
ARDMORE THEATRE
y11/N..T 1 r.r
1,0.—elaa.tene
1,11w. in -1,1'1 IT,: WOR1.01,
Tilt uslot,—nr Penni. f`wtivnt-115 0. or A WIENcAl. L.U.
1EN -
in
" MISSISSIPPI "
PHI..
t — Wallace Iteery In
°ViErT rOUST 01, TI1E
MON.. T1 Es, —
nith Ilia, Cr...1,, Jame Bennelli.
Choose Adkins As
Debating Captain;
Wolf Is Manager
Tuesday, May 14, 1935
Speaks Tonight
Hotson, Melchior, And
Reitzel In Cast
Of Comedy
17 Seek Varsity Posts
Original Music Heard
To re-establish debating as an
important extra-curricular activity
in the campus life at Haverford
Was the intention, as stated by E.
D. Adkins, '36, the newly elected
debating team captain, of the 17
undergraduates who attended a
meeting on Friday.
At that time, .1, A. Brown, '36,
recounted the activities of the varsity debating team this year and '
announced his resignation from the
post of manager. An election for
E- H. McGINLEY. '35
next year's leaders was held, the
Retiring president of the Physcaptaincy going to Adkins and the
ics Club who will speak tonight
managership to R. B. Wolf, both
Juniors who have carried, with
Brown, the debating burden for the
past mason. J. W. YanCleave, '37,
was elected aosistant manager.
Wolf, after exercising regret
that Brown would be unable to continue either his managing of the
team or his actual debating, outlined the plans for next year. These
included participation of from 6
to 12 men in Intercollegiate de.
bates, the season to run roughly
from December to April. He also
mentioned the possibility of administration support in the form of a
his talk "The Micrecognized debating roach.
roscope with projections. Mr. Burzendorf, representative of
Plan Debates Home and Away ton
the Spencer Lens Company of
Regardless of final arrange- New York, lectured Tuesday night,
ments, those present expressed May 7, in Sharp/ess Hall to the
their intention of coming out next combined Field and Physics Clubs.
year. Positions on the team will be
Tracing the microscope's hieavailable in the same way as those tory from its beginnizons in the
on any other varsity team, with one crude lenses made at Nineveh in
team going away and another de- 721 B, C., Mr. Dezendorf showed
bating at home on the same even- how the Jensen brothers, Leeuvrening.
hoek, who laid the foundations of
Besides their alltliationn with the modern medicine, John Delland, indebating team both Adkins and ventor of the achromatic objective,
Wolf are on the News and Class and Charles Spencer had developed
Record boards. The new captain the instrument to its present-day
edits the Student Opinion column. effectiveness.
sings in the Glee Club, and is see.
Both clubs are to meet in Sharpretary of the Junior class. Wolf, ie.. Hal! at 7:16 tonight. At Ito
a Corp. scholar and football let- meeting, the Field Club will elect
terman. heads the Press Bureau its officers for the earning year, and
and Store Committee, while Van members of the club will give reCleave is editor-in-chief of the ports on birds that they have seen
linverfordian and secretary or the about the campus.
English Club.
E, H. McGinley', "35, mill speak
Combined Physics And
Field Clubs Hear
Talk Tuesday
nithanaiss
SEVILLE
THEATRE
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Turndst, tt ednissdas
"11010 TA"
Thursday:
Frank Morgan in
"BY YOUR LEAVE"
Prides, Saturday:
Fred %McMurray In
"CAR 99"
ANTHONY WAYNE
THEATRE
Wayne, Pa.
Errairly Afulteshm, ape
Tuesday:
"BERKELEY SQUARE"
Wednesday:
"ONE NIGHT OF LOVE"
Thursday:
"Primm Life of Henry
Friday: “THIN MAN"
Saturday:
"CAVALCADE"
Tro.R.
LIGHT Aida -DATiKlaiiieflr Iuwahash I
n fund rent eat ~i
75a
WdrirFtggr,:i.P2Vm
1.1 o: m ode, LLa Juan
Ilia sad ire. tiltnalre.
RELIGIOUS POEMS OF JOHN G. WHITTIER
r""-`h". °".
$1.00
Nur-
Friends' Book Store, 302 Arch Street, Philadelphia
RADIO
in
EVERY
ROOM
A ROOM
with
BATH
for
$2.50
COLLEGE CALENDAR
May 11.-111
TUESDAT—Stertitar of
Viral
Club to Sharyless Hall at 7:11
for election of otheern.
Chibtacem hi Sharpie.. at
7:15. Meetlim or antler Sews
Minn! In the News Reborn at
7:11.
It EDS EISDAY — Jarree gob
match with /1111 Schati.. Sway.
Varsity tertslewith Swarthmore, al home. linactmll came
with Delaware. holm, Freshman track meet with Fallacy.
pat. home. Cap and Rolls Dinner in the Alumni Rom
V RIOIA V--./nyeee tennis with
Vinwr Derby. away, rm. and
Hells Dinner In Alumni the in
Doreen im 11 Lloyd et 12:13.
Appreciation
Ilona. In Cahn, as 7:35.
SATURD.VV—Classs end for
Seniors at 17:3n. Varsity himball anise with Stevens Menrine, away, Varsity traek steel
with Lafayette. home. VarnItY
tennis with Steven:. Institute.
away. Cricket with Cr...cent
C. lt.. hot..
M. 34.23
TTRAI■Ali — Profeseur Button
etwalis
"Front Walla to
Coen,' ices," in shorn's
,
'
Hull nt 7.30. Sleeting of News
onteers M the. News Doom at
7:11
WEDNESDAY—Freshinati track
melt with 11corm.B.-hool. bloom.
Tilt 11.0A 1(-121asses end at
3:20.
retaav
FRIDAY—V.-n(1.y golf 10000
with Venn State. home.
SATURDAY—Cricket come with
States Inland C. C., home.
EUROPA
hfawk. Above 15th Street
MO Rows Each With lath
UNLIMITED ?ASKING
14th and CHESTNUT STREETS
Scenes from the first and second
acts of Moliere's comedy, "Le
Bourgeois Gentilhomme," were preseated in French at the Faculty.
Student May Party given Sunday
in the Orchard at 3.00 P. M. Before
the play two seventeenth century
madrigals were sung by a ,mail
campus chorea, and an orchestra
played a minuet by Lully at an introduction.
The six faculty members and students who participated in the art.
ing were: Professor J. Leslie Hotson, as M.Jourdain, the "bourgmisr;
Professor Montfort V. Melchior,
maitre de philosophie"; Profeeeor William A. Reitzel, "maitre a
denser"; R. Blanc-Roan, '35, "mat.
tre d'armes"; K. S. Roberts, '25,
"maitre de muaique"; and W. IL
Hay, 2nd, '38, a lackey. ?dm Frank
W. Fetter had the only female part,
singing one of Moliere's choruses.
Pres. Comfort Explains Play
The members of the orchestra
which played Lully's "Mascarade
de Versailles" are as follows: Professor Frederic Palmer, Jr.; A. D.
Hunt, Jr„ '37; J. T. Rivera, '37;
R. M. Bird, Jr., '38; H. T. Darling.
ton, Jr.. '38; W. R. Myer. '38; and
Miss Elizabeth Reed, of Bryn
Mawr, '37.
President W. Comfort explained
before the presentation that the
excerpts illustrated the attempts
of a nouveau riche, M. Jourdahs, to
attain the rulture and accomplishments of a seventeenth century
"gentleman.' For this purpose he
employs four nuaLars of music,
dancing, fencing, and philosophy.
The scenes of the comedy which
were produced in the Orchard dealt
with their attempts to educate and I
Ratter M. Jourdain and a free-forall among them over the relative
importance of their fields.
Dezendorf Speaks
On 'Microscopes'
FOR IMPROVING BITS OF LEISURE TIME'
[ISO
HOTEL
SIN PLO
WITH BATH PENNSYLVANIA
"Gentilhomme" Is
Produced At May
Party In Orchard
VanCleave, '37, Elected
Assistant; Brown
Resigns
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF SHERWOOD EDDY
$2.50
Jumoosetho
01 STITH CLOD. Tells of the twasrhall
Ham el the Hotel P
leen1a, eau have china nl Be. I
11wIng aernblnad with dancio. toed.
laat datioat—,11 minaret le
bud.. ,earn.--.ear
Iwo
and no
I
04.00
DOUBLE
WITH BATH
PHILADELPHIA
ALLENTOWN, PA.
MODERN - FIRE - PROOF
AIR CONDITIONED DINING ROOMS
'HOTEL TRAYLOR
HAMILTON AT FIFTEENTH STREET
NOW PLAYING
All Academy Award Program
GRACE MOORE
In
"One Night of Love"
with Tullio Carminsti
and in addition "LA CUCARACHA"
"3 LITTLE PIGS"
"A CITY OF WAR"
PAGE THREE
HAVERFORD NEWS
Tuesday, May 14, 1935
Final Changes In
Curriculum Made
Latin Scholar
In New York Comedy I 1
PROF. DEAN I'. LOCKWOOD
Librarian and head of the
Latin Department, whose life
is reviewed in this imam.
ALUMNI NOTES
1895
J. Henry Scattergood has recently been elected President of the
Board of Trustees of Hampton Institute, Hampton. Virginia. He
has been on the board since 1922
and Vice-president since 1930.
Alfred Lowry, '09, of Moorestown. New Jersey, died on May 7.
While at College he was Editorin-Chief of the Haverfordien,
member of Founders Club. and was
on the Record hoard.
During the War. Mr. Lowry was
in the War Prisoners' Aid of the
Y. M. C. A. After this he took
rap religious work in Central
Europe.
From 1920 to 1926 he sees a
Contributing Editor to The Friend.
Recently he spent several years
in Europe as a representative of
the American Friends' Service Committee,
physics 4a Offered;
Complete Changes
Listed
In correction of changes made in
fleet year's curriculum, it has been
enneunced that Physics 4a, intermediate radio course, stated last
week so not offered in 1986-36. will
be given next year by Professor
Richard H. Sutton. The following
s. a recapitulation of the more im
portant changes in the curriculum
for next year:
Biology 1 Laboratory periods
will be Wednesday and Friday afternoons, instead of Monday and
Friday. A new course, Entomology, will be given by Mr. Henry.
Chemistry 2 laboratory periods
will be Wednesday and Friday or
Tuesday and Thursday. Chemistry
3s lectures will be on Tuesday,
Thursday, and Saturday at 10:30,
and occasionally Thursday at
10:30. Chemistry 6 lectures
will be on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday at 10:30.
Advanced Physical Chemistry will
be given as 7a, during the first
half-year. Chemistry 813 lectures
will be on Tuesday. Thursday, and
occasionally Saturday at 8:30; laboratory period will be on Wednesday.
Economics 6. and Economics 10b
will be given Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at 10:30. Economic!
7b will be given again next year.
English la, lb will be given Monday at 1:30 and Wednesday at 8:30.
English 16a, 166 will be given
Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday
at 10:30.
Mathematics 1 will be given
Monday and Friday at 11:30 and
Tuesday and Thursday at 8:30.
Philosophy lb will be given Monday and Friday at 1:30 and Wednesday at 11:80 or 1:30. Howe for
Philosophy ila, fib are yet to be announeed.
Courses announced In the eats!ogee for next year which will not
be given are: English 36, French
2 (election 2), Mathematics 4a, Music la, and Physics lb. Courses
not announced in the catalogue
which will be given next year are
Biology 6, Economies 7b, Physics
is, and Mathematics 3a.
Alfred Lowry, '09, Dies
After Life Devoted To
Religious Work Abroad
1906
Replied Johnson Shortlidge has
resigned from the headmastership
of Tome School, Port Deposit.
to become head of Pawling School,
Pawling. N. Y. For nineteen years
Mr. Shortlidge was at Choate
School. Wallingford, Conn. He is
also director of Camp Marienfeld,
Chesham, N. H., one of the pioneer
camps for boys.
1926
Edmund P. Hannum has been
picked to succeed Philip C. Garrett
as Clan Representative fur the
Class of 1926. Mr. Hannum may
be reached at 1318 Real Estate
Trust Building, Philadelphia..
Rear-Admiral Sims Says
Trade Led Us Into War
PHILIP E. TRUER, '13.
1931
Who has a role. along with hie
Cost. frees Pile 1, Cal. 3
Herbert W. Reisner has replaced
father, Ernest Trues, in "The
as Class RepreMaier
M.
William
Heck-ep," which opened reficiently. Japan would find it even
sentative for the Class of 1931. He
cently on Proadway.
more difficult to stage any attacks
239 S. 13th St.,
at
Dr. Lockwood Has
reached
be
may
•
of
outside
coast
on the Pacific
Philadelphia.
as Japan
Specialised In Latin few swift raids. An longinvasion
of P. E. Truex, '33, With
continues her economic
A. M. 1932
Asia in a moderately tactful manCost, frtml Per 1. Col. 5
Wilson Bennett, B. D. (formedy
ner, the speaker declared, no forFather In New Comedy
known as Wilson B. Reed/ will be
Dr. Lockwood collected material eign power will attempt to check
ordained and installed as Minister
from the fifteenth century Latin her.
Billed as "a radio comedy with of the Weetminister Presbyterian
authors from several European libmusk," "The Hook-up" which Church at Elizabeth, New Jersey,
Calls Embargo Impossible
raries. The countries visited by
stars Erneet Trues and his son.
him were England, France, GerThe munitions maker.. said Ad- Philip E. Truex, '33, opened at the on May 14th.
many, and Italy. He returned to miral Sims, undoubtedly reap large
Harvard where he remained as an profits from war, but the removal Court Theatre at 48th Street and
instructor until he went abroad of these profits would do little to Broadway, New York City, on
PlushM. Fermat.
Wednesday. May 8.
again in 1907.
M. C. McKinley. lee I
check future wars, since munitions
Philip Trues plays the Sound
This time he went to the Ameri- constitute only Es. of the goods a
WHOLESALE DISCOUNTS
can School of Classical Studies in fighting nation requires. Merchants Man and his father has the leading
far Heweeferellm
Rome. remaining here for two who supply cotton, copper, rubber, role. The son was prominent in
SIT. 4t111
years. Returning to Haverford he and food [deo make fortunes out dramatic activities at Haverford,
Caneeneeltr Racers. aerslae
was instructor there for a year. He of war. To cheek such exportations filling the. leading role in several
CommorawseitaDelltdler
402
then went to Columbia University would call for a general embargo. Cap and Bells productions.
anal Chestnut IL
Chew sr write ler Dlonwet Vat
as assistant professor of Latin and and no President, declared Admiral
Greek. He was also acting lib- Sims, would dare to declare such
rarian for a year and a half. He an embargo, as it would be a polireceived the latter position because tical impossibility.
A. C. Wood, Jr. & Co.
HAVERFORD CLUB
of his interest and experience in
Brokers
Admiral Sims' program for
Join gem •I sip • ye.. its lei.European libraries.
Sit Cheeneut •
keeping America out of future
lee.
Nen
.11.rIghla
at Um Tenerife
Zee was etiet
wars is to have the government
Came to Haverford in 1918
Pew sacetWe reod.re awes: Wane.
that -it will not protect
In 1918 Professor Lockwood declare
travand
goods
force
armed
with
relTsalrhifs
1007 Moravian Stwat
came to Haverford as associate elers going abroad. The belliger- Ore Tyra Cora Etc ..... 1..aeelatas
Philadelphia
professor of Latin. He was made
are sure to interfere with neufull professor and Librarian in ents
trade, whether it is carried on
1923. While on sabbatical leave in tral
government
with
or
risk
own
its
at
First Report Luncheon 1927.28 he traveled to Italy as protection.
head of the School of Classical
Admitting that such a procedure
Held; Representatives Studies in Rome. He spent another would
be a radical departure from
sabbatical leave in 1932-33 travel- past policies,
Admiral Sims said in
Pledges
New
Announce
ing in Spain and Germany.
"Peace is priceless and
Birds and wood-chopping are Dr. conclusion,
at least of
Twenty-seven members of the Lockwood'! hobbies. He is fre- is worth a sacrifice,
A decent regard of huCampaign Committee and the quently seen about the campus products.
must be put ahead of gold."
Class Representatives met for the with a pair of binoculars, spying manity
Following hie talk the speaker
first Report Luncheon at the Hay- upon the birds. "When Dr. Rich- anewered
questions relating to the
erford Club on Wednesday. The ard M. Gummere lived here," Pro- munitions makers, zeppelins in war,
group was addressed by Henry S. feasor Lockwood maid, "he and
the League of Nations, and the polDrinker, '00, before the luncheon were the campus wood-choppers. icy of a big American navy.
Mr. Johnson gave us the old trees
was served.
The total number of pledges that he couldn't sell and we cut
and their amount was announced. them up for fire-wood."
The American Philological AssoIn calling the roll of classes, only
Since the first announcement of the Provident Provider
three of the representatives had ciation, the Medieval Academy of
DO YOU KNOW?
we have had many thousands of reehests for information
any addition to report. Emphasis America, and Phi Beta Kappa are
was then laid upon the necessity some of the societies of which Dr. How much income at retirement
aboutehis comprehensive retirement plan. We do not
Lockwood is a member. He is marof making personal contacts.
guarnee
.....
I
present
year
want anyone to be disappointed. The Provident Provider
The second Report Luncheon will ried and has one son. When asked
is not offered to men over 55 or to women. We have
be held at the Haverford Club on about life at Haverford, Dr. Lock- antees?
I
here.
'm
I
glad
"I'm
said,
wood
W ednesday, May 22, at 12:45.
other policies or annuity contracts more suitable to their
your
Class Representatives are urged to like living at Haverford better 1 shall be glad to rn
needs. Nor is the Provider available to men in poor health
present tat-up.
be present by William AL Wills, than any place I've been."
or hazardous occupations. It is distinctly a selective
presiding officer at the luncheons.
Recent changes in the list of Pusey, McMahon Given
contract, and those who obtain it get the full advantage
Delaplaine McDaniel
elass representatives are as folof this selection.
Chartered Life CndeenAlrr
lows: Ralph Mellor, '99, in place of Fellowships In German
IFIrevIdent Monad Ufa Inancancy
Alfred C. Manle; Edmund P. HanCanner
Provident Providor Offers:
The
num, '26, for Philip C. Garrett;
William W. Pusey, '32, and John
2 Ike* Mad Newt
Herbert W. Reisner, '31, for Wil- F. McMahon, '33, have been awardPhgadetahla
$200 A MONTH foe life beginning The Provides may be obtained in units
liam M. Maier; and Louis W. Flee- ed Teaching Fellowships in Gerof from $50 to $1,000 • month. For
st 55, 60, or 55.
ces, Jr., '34, ter Robert C. Alimore. man at Columbia University.
more information mail coupon today.
Pusey is at present
resent studying in
*50,000 to your family in case of
Student
Germany as p
SUTTON TO EDIT BOOK
SECURITY
age.
that
before
death
your
from Hammed University to the
Professor Richard H. Sutton University of Bonn. He received
Every dollar of this income is guar540,000 it death is doe loaccidental anteed by Provident Mutual. a wellhas been appointed editor of the Highest
Building
Quaker
Honore in German upon
book "Demonstration Experiments graduation from Haverford. Mcestablished, conservatively managed
in Physics," by the American As- Mahon is a graduate student and
ALSO, •n Interesting Diaability company--with nearly • billion dollars
sociation of Physka Teachers. He Assistant in German at the Univerand
of Insurance in force.
Nature.
will work on the book this sum- sity of Pennsylvania.
mer.
...DON'T
clip the coupon
. - . if you are over 55!
The
Loan Association
PROVIDENT MUTUAL
lit ismen of see. who don
not grieve lor what he hat not,
but retakes in what he has."
—Epietetur.
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA
Founded 1865
Levee's To... be e4.bio
"How aides, street wandmagnates
ear..
Like *WOW mettle to
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nights weave roman"
Sprat/Alme and moonlit
of youth and a preemie token becomes
in the heartsthe
of
hundreds
formed
were
Gems
day.
the order of
the earth.
of
thousands of years ago In the bosom
so
Theca finest particles of nature are now waiting
love.
eternal
of
pledges
ea
maidens
and
youths
nerve
You can choose a Dlamond—the King of Gems or an
Berri.
RUbe. Sapphire. or maybe a Zircom,.:.,/g
Emerald.
Amethyst or TOP. MRI.betlirrerred. Therhizr
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our
10
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t
YOUr
"
BALIR
tone. Belot
we can
We are sure that
private consultatiOn rchm.
You desire
end a ring ewe win easee with the price
to spend.
Waster
FRED J. COOPER
PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO..Phil.<10.1..P.
Gentlemen . Please tens without obligation booldeldeverilefee
Wee at my preaent age.
The Prov1dcn1 P,arla at r.Ith.
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49 N. Eighth St.
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111 1101:1TH TWELFTH 11111111T. eaxeangernee
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---.E.,-,
PAGE FOUR
H AVERFORD NEWS
Tuesday, May
14, 1935
Haverford News
Pounded Rebroary 16, 1)011.
Salter, Hebert E., Le*
Smetana H
William A. Masan. 1.1.
3lommehts Sall., Jonathan A. Smarr., '31. '8 8
Oporto Editor: Harry T. Piston, '86.
EDITORIAL STAFF
lL
THE CROW'S NEST
R. M. Zucker% 36
Every Liberal a King
According to an article
Iasi week',
regarding the Liberal Club, "Profits remainingNew.
from
the Peace Conference will be net aside to form a
working budget for next year." termite from the
Peace Conference forsooth) Oh, so that's why they
want the Profits Taken Out Of War, eh? All, we
imagine, part of the new movement for redistribution of wealth.
IN THE MAIL
Defends Cricket
been play-ed, with considerable no
To the Editor of the Newa:
cess. These teams have In some
It Is hard for a lover of cricket cases furnished far more skillfu
to remain silent when the game is and experienced opPoatioa than
mentioned. After refusing the de- would be likely even if the college
sire to write you for a week or 1111, should take up the sport again.
But all this Is aside from the
I have finally yielded to it, shim
the Sparta Jester of the News still main tissue. What does a varsity
SPORTS STAFF
does not think that a cricketer de- "R" represent? Either faithful
A ..... eat Searle Itatterst Stephen G. Carr, .17, Metserve, a 'vanity "K." So may I practice and participation in var.
win A. AVearbtmen, "07. Am.,gates, Ben T Cowles, '35,
Epitaph
city game. or real athletic ability.
make a few observations?
Kober. S. Casetbrep. Jr.. 'It, Aubrey C.
Ayno4 P. Leib. '38; WI111.111 B. Slum, '30.Mclean, Sr.. 'as;
A perapicatioas lady broiled with the other
A vest majority of thine who On either of these bases, a cricket.
rooters on the stands at last Saturday's track-meet have won letters in cricket during er is as deserving of the award as
BUSINESS STAFF
(technical)y, indeed, termed a hall-game)
the pant decade have been active a football player. You would not
with
A...Meat thlelbrs■ nine..., Francis
K. Nebien. '37, Baltimore Idedicoes. When their second pitcher the in other sports and by no means un- deny scholastic honors to a major
CLrealelkta
had
' Robert W. Shied, Jr., '36. Eerneeel..
gone the way of their first and a third came to the athletic (as some manager. of the in Latin or Greek merely berates
Pee Steamer., Bernard h1. Hollander,
'37,
Seer.ery:
William W. Allen, '31. Aeseelate,. Thom..
mound, she awaited results. Finally, upon seeing various sports who have received those subjects are not very popuIx
Jr.. 'ET: Maitre H. Hal, '35, John A. Evert, Shannon.
Jr. 'SS; the ball ,till mewing out into the field unmoleste lettere in the past.) I can think lar just now. Ability in sports,
Cheater R. Hale. Jr 'at: S. Knox Harper, .38; Siebert
d
J by Hopkina' bands, she looked at the
Morahan, Jr.. '38
new pitcher and off-hand of a dozen soccer or foot- as in :study, can be judged by corn.
murmured: "Well, I declare, that lad mems to be ball lettermen who received letters petent persons on accepted standPHOTOGRAPHY STAFF
Just a boy throwing them up.'
in cricket. Though lobe of "Klieg" ards of merit aside from the presand weak sisters go out for the ence of competition: age 12 feet
Deere
Sieber1,A V" DUrn‘.7' j'-.Iesn
'"ea L. Mai '011.
sport, since there is ant very in the pole vault would be good at
strong competition, the best crick- Haverford whether no one else
I. ',Siam.] awake im Me male. year amain der.
Ceachly Comment
tee tatatesit
volisteetton perleile. et
eters have never been in this class, reached 11 ft. or whether the meet
Ardmre,
• Tokelau. .11rere SIM le Alttenbotier Nam.
Shortly before this incident the baseball teem Cricket is not, as many people were with Yale. If .everyone who
alimesetlan.
reale is airs...
foals
tar.
may rig: at
played an the XI received a letter
time, Lured
eme.e. was conducting one of its daily practices. The coach think, a sport for weaklings.
finer matiet
the pram!
Semi
elembers of the laiesellortate seaman.
It is a team sport and therefore the Sports Jester's eritMism would
Newel:maw embetaem at am sat on the bench. far from contented with life. Finadtlantse Met.. besmear et tbe
Tema Oellere
ally, to his obvious dim/amt., he saw en eminent mem- has qualities not found in golf, be well justified. An it is, I feel an
ber of his pitching staff lying contentedly
on the singles-termie, wreathing, track, excess of "Ws" go to mediocre
EDITORIAL POLICY
ground, somewhere near second base. "Jones!" he !timing, and other sports recog- football players merely because
ErtfiurkIla in Ole SE lit do ant rtrrrunvag reprevr. 11, shouted (We'll rail him Jones).
"Dash it, Jones, get nized by letters at Haverford and there is no one better to beat them
epaiSta et any Friss ruati,-,ieJ esti, lhr Cetera, esalr,
si- up there. You give me a charley-ho
el.. to Mr lx•fAr...idoi1
rse just looking eleewhere. It is a competitive out
Th...b'
at you!"
mnrd, hot
sport and therefore has qualities
Donald Baker, '26.
mn,
tc05.15. ,1 From puldfreef ,.
rarer dexerec
not found in golf where the opponP. S. I would he willing to up.
memete
ent is not the chief object of comhold
before
any
Haverford group
!Paisetitisa titollts'irat metes
petition, but the course.
When asked (not very ardently) for his opinion
If the foregoing statements are the aeirmative of the question,
401
11,
.41
of the President's statement in Collection the other
"Resolved: That cricket is the heat
true,
the
objection
to the game athletic
day that the Newn ought to get thirty or forty edisport now played at Hay.
•
TF.LrrtIONE19
torials and, easing wear and tear on the imagina- must be based on something elm erford."
than the inherent qualities
Misr
.. Ardmore-S:095-J tion, just rotate them continually,
the editor said: game—perhaps the lack of of the
0.1110,IN Manager
Ardmore-3686.W "My goodness,
matches
that's what we've been doing for the with the
other colleges and the leek
last twenty-five years"
of competition for places on the
team.
Put The Horse Before The Cart
COLLEGE WORLD
You would not any, I suppose,
Comprehensives are given at the wrong time.
that the members of a track team 11
COLLEGE FAME DEPARTMENT
They should he given after the final examinations
which met the N. Y. Athletic Club,
(Eros, on ankle. In the Sunday Ingalrer1
instead of before them. Under the present System
Smart: Dodge Hard Courses
or a soccer team playing Philadel• • Sturge Poorrnisn, of Swarthmore, sealed
classes are disrupted in the middle of May while
The "Pennsylvania Study" of the
to a •new record when he jamped 6 feet, 1% inches." phia Cricket, Crescent and Germanthe Seniors hurry through the most important set
Americans, were not deserving of Carnegie Institute revealed
that
of exams they are called upon to take.
varsity awards. Ab one time Hav- engineering students
are superior
It seem, logical to allow all classes to end at
erford played the leading colleges in intelligence to
the liberal arts
the same time for all student.. Then let the final
WOULDN'T YOU JUST KNOW IT DEPARTMENT in cricket. Harvard was beaten the students.
examinations be given as usual. After the finals
The examination in Ec. 1 is on the last possible last time the two teams met I
the Seniors would then have a clear drive for their
remember when the U. of P. was
Tall, Nosey, Aged. Rich
day.
comprehensives. As it is, while Seniors put an the
.vowed under in its last appearComposite picture of the college
finishing touches in preparation for these exams,
ance on Cope Field. As long as
man:
A Minnesota professor says
their work is weakened by their having to keep up
college competition lasted Haverthey
to the mark in their non-major courses,
FOOLISH QUESTION DEPARTMENT
ford was at the top. Since then ver are taller than others, a DenU. professor ways they have
Why not allow the Seniors to dispose of the less
the etrongest teams available have
Where
will
you
NOT
bigger
be
fear
noses an insurance comweeks
important finals before tackling the all-important
from today
pany claims they live longer, and
comprehensive.? There in no logical roman why
a national survey eterets they make
this !should not he the case, even if it necessitates
more money.
the postponement of Commencement to a later date
MUSIC
in dune. While the News recognizes that the
li
STUDENT OPINION
Dimon Gets The A
' ir
ettaimen necessary do not make it feasible to undertake the plan this year, there is no reason why it 11
A series of radio plays is now beAmong the musical events this
should not be tried in the future. Let the Admining presented by students of
coming
week
there
will
he
Patronage a la New Deal
an ex. George Washingto
istration consider this plan. It will be backed by
n University.
the students in addition to n large number of the
Whatever faults may be laid on the door of the ' celleig concert presented by the One of the latest was the life of
professors.
administration there is one score on which its slate Delaware County Bach Society this Roger Bacon, medieval scientist,
the script being historically accuris entirely clean. It can never be accused of desert- evening at eight-fifteen in Chriet ate,
and the dramatic and technical
Keep H Up!
ing deserving and, in many cases undeserving, Demo- Lutheran Church, Upper Darby. presentation carefully done.
The
program
consists
of
three
canThe performance of "Le Bourgeois
crate. Heaven forbid! With his honor James AloyBitter Chemical Retort
tatas, "A Stronghold Sure Our
Inane" un Sunday afternoon in the Orchard and slue Farley at
the helm such an accusation would
the events which follewed Sena to ne to he the
"What U the chemical in this seCod Remains,' "Deck Thyself, My
latione" asked a chemistry- inkind of thing that ought to be encouraged here nt be sacrilege. Never in the history of this country Soul, with
Gladriess,"
and
"Ode
of
hue
the Federal payroll been increased to the exHaverford. A perfect day, an ideal Setting, a fairly
etructor at the University of Mary.
Mourning." Those who heard the /and.
Urge and enthusiastic audience and excellent work
tent thet it has under the New Deal. The peak
The hesitating student rein
on the part of the Coat all combined to provide an
government employment was probably reached dur- toe work done by the Society at plied that the answer was right on
enjoyable afternoon's entertainment.
tip
their concert here last spring will the L
nl hitegee.
:
o:
the
ing
month
of
March
last. The statisticians in-I
These faculty student parties, directed by the
it" retorted the
form am that for every hour during this month 5.7 nut want to miss hearing them professor. "It's arsenic."
Faculty Women's Club, go a long way in establishagain, considering that this will he
i::5 Inure intimate contacts, between faculty and stu- person were added to the already tophelivy
Federal one of the major concerts
dents. May we urge the next year's committee to payroll.
Rock-headed
of the
year and that their work has been
continue these informal parties and the students
For two weeks a University of
A business of some 659,000 jobs our government steadily improving.
to take advantage of them. Good luck. Keep it up!
Kentucky student attended a class
Meet's opera "Carmen" will be
hoe been turned into. And each of these jobs means
Saturday night at eights in German. Then he discovered
a vote for the administration. We may go' further.
Congratelations Debaters!
forty
forty at the Academy of Wain by he was in the wrong place: he had
It is not unreasonable to say that each of these
em- the Dell 'Orefice Grand Opera thought it was a class in geology.
Speaking and debating have given a very good
ployees is able to influence at least three votes. Company. The cast will include
Broke Barber Barters
account of themselves this year. The high commenThat then gives the administration almost 2,000,000 several members of the cast which
dation of President Comfort in regard to the perIn accordance with a trade agreeformance of the lower classes at the Everett Speak- votes at any election in which its fate is involved, sang the opera earlier in the sea- meet with a neighboring barber
son
with
the
Philadelph
ia
Orchesing Cnratest Thursday. and the unusually large turnshop, the 1235 "Poiywog" of Brookbefore the disinterested voters begin to cast their tra. The chorus
will be made up lyn Polytechnic Institute offers
out of (bode interceded in debating sent year offer
to
sufficient evidence that this art will again become ballots. These votes are more definitely secure due of members of the Philadelphia Or- accept baircuta in payment for the
to the fact that the majority of these jobs
chestra
Opera
Cbcams,
and
ad.
the
rn imporant campus activity.
or.
are enchestra
in
recruited
from the PhilaCongratulations are due to those few whose tirely at the mercy of that master politician, General
delphia Orchestri. Brune CanProf. Tells All
enthusiasm resurrected the art of debating, and to Jim. And the Republica
ns, poor devils, think they tagna will sing the title role.
the Freshmen and Sophomores whose performance
This
The Temple Now reports a prohave
a
chance.
opera
be
will
the
first
in a series fessor
Thursday recalled the pristine glory of oratory.
who
remarked "in the course
of
popular
operas,_ including al
Nor is that all, For if support can not he seTheir efforts have their own reward. However, the
of a lecture the
support of the administration and the student body cured In one way to an administration as politically Pagliacci," "Cavallena Rusticana" "I'm not, white other day" that,
I'm talking to you
and "Aida," which Maestro Imprese
next year for such an earnest and important actiagile as the present one, there are several alternaexpressing any ideas. I
eerie Dell Greece, known for his here,
vity would be highly in order. Let those who feel
haven't any ideas. I'm going
tives. Not the least of these is the way in which training of Caruso, will be present.
they know enough about speaking already at least
through
a
performan
ce.'
Bruce Carey will take up the
attend the debates next winter. To the modern the relief funds are handled. To play politics with
Calk-giant
orators, we say "Good work! Carry on!"
such a thing as relief is, to say the least, a thing baton this week -to direct the Bach
Choir in the St Matthew Passion
not to be desired. The administration naturally and the
"The
tired-out
student
is temB minor Mass, at Bethledenies that anything of this sort is being dorm. hem. The performances wilt he at eorarily Mame," declares an Ohio
Garnets Gain Victory!
State U. professor
Ursine
coland
five
Perhaps
nine
o'clock
this
is true, but if so it is because the PresiD. S. T. on
The Hicks:Um outsmarted Haverford supporters
Friday, and at two-thirty and five umnist protests at treatment his
Wednesday when they annexed a financial victory to dent has steadfastly refused On let his right
college got en Fred Waring 's prohand o'clock Saturday. The
the tune of forty cents per spectator unless the
performknow what his left hand is doing. The instauce of ances are
in commemoration of the gram. Your sinus gives you a
rooter super-foxed the Garnet guardsman and went
headache," they had cracked.-...And
to the right field bleachers which were apparently Robert Maims in the state of New York furnishes two hundred and fiftieth anniver- strikes are
becoming popular; sevan excellent case in point. It was only through the sary of the birth of Ranh. The sogratis.
eral western universitom
Whether those few who paid the levy will help
persistent opposition of Mayor La Guardia that loists will be Louise, Lerch, so- ing to get the Oxford are striksystem of
prano; Rose Bampton, alto; Dan education
reimburse Swarthmore for the cost of erecting Moses finally was
, while at Appalachian
able to hold his job. To further Gridley. tenor;
the fence, the principle remains the same. If
and Julius Kuehn, State Teacher's College,
Boone,
Swarthmore charge. for her Haverford contests and such practices as this the administration is to have bane. T. Edgar Shields will be or- N. C., a strike was
declared when
ganist, and the orchestra consists
we don't demand payment for her supporters at- put at its disposal some 5 billion dollars.
The 'Republicans, poor devils, think they have of members of the Philadelphia the president refuted to allow men
tending here, even non-quake Rhinies can see that
and
women
students
a chance.
to
sit- toOrchestra.
it doesn't quite add up.
gether at athletic contests.
E. D. Adkins, Jr., '36.
P. If. Page, 'se.
W. D. &Hebei, '38
News PsIlteret Ittehara H. Clayton, '37: James D.
Reeves, '17; Carl E. Wilbur. '37. Alumni Editor:
Then,.
tterimaY, 3rd.. 'It &amebae. E. Pale Adkins.
'36:
Peter K Page, '30; Robert B. Weir. '36:
Retort H. Zeckrt. '37. Robert
AneelL .38; Cherie. H, Memel,
S arry 11. Del% '011; Louie
Kuper, 11, '00: William B. Er Isbet. em: George H. Poole. '30, Lindley. B. Ic%exan
'30:
Trinstaill L. Sininema '79; Charles 11.
.In
Parte eeereweendeatr [Moro B. Bookman. '36.
e
Tuesday, May 14,
Ism
HAVERFORD NEWO
Final Music Hour
To Be Held Friday
program Will Feature
Popular Pieces Of
Last 50 Years
By P. K. Page, '36.
On Friday evening, the last perj„,1 of the Series of Music Appreciation Hours will be presented in
the Music Room in the Union. A
pouting program has been chosen
from the works of composers of the
last fifty yearn, consisting of "The
Sorcerer's Apprentice' by Dukast
Spanish Dance from "La Vida
Breve" by Falls, and "Nights in
the Gardens of Spain" by FaIla;
scherzo and March from "The Love
of the Three Oranges" by Proko•
fieff, the "Classical Symphony" by
Brokofie ff ; and the "Pines of
Horne" by Respighi. A short commentary will be made on the composers and their works, with spec
al reference to the bearing these
composers have on music of today.
In looking back over the work
done M music during the year, it
may well be said that the members
of the student body have been very
much more musically conscious
than in preceding years. The attendance in the regular music
courses was good, and the special
lectures by Dr. Swan on the Music
of Russia in the Nineteenth Century have proved even more valuable than was hoped for, and the
attendance was larger than expected. Members of the student
body interested in music have made
crest deal of use of the new mucoal equipment, and have, by their
upereciation, justified the gift by
do Carnegie Foundation.
There have been ten Mimic Appreciation Hous durin
g the year.
Two of these were held in the fall,
one on Wagner's "Tristan and ItioIde" mainly for the purpose of prorogation for the presentation of the
work by the Philadelphia Orchestra. The other was on the music
of Cesar Franck, and was in line
with the eight periods held this
Ignester on the modern and contemporary composers. A definite
amount of Interest has been shown
in these hours, and an attitude of
Reeve reception has made itself
fait to such a degree that further
periods next year seem justifiable.
MAJORS RECAPITULATION
In connection with the choice of major fields of concentration
by the present Sophomore clam, a recapitulation by departments
of fields selected since 1931 is printed below.
DEPARTMENT
1931 1932 1933 1934 1996 1938 1937 Total
Astronomy
2
0
I
0
0
1
0
0
Biblical Literature -- 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Biology
3 30
4
0
4
4
Chemistry .. .......... ...---- 7
12
4
1'7
2
53
4
7
Economics - ......................I0
9
63
9
7
12
8
9
Engineering ........... ......... 2
6
49
10
8
8
7
English
8
49
3
8
7
9
7
French
1
4 • 17
3
3
3
2
German
6
3
4
2
5 22
2
Government
4 2 2 4
9 27
0 0 1
0 3
History
10
3
12 6 9 1 5 56
0 1 0
0 5
a
Mathematics
2 3 4
1
4
5 20
Philosophy
2 3 4
4 30
7
3
Physic.
3 2 1
1 15
2
3
3
Premedical
8
422
1
6
Sociology
1
8 - 2
e
Total No. In clue
04 16
78 ...
es 71 62 60
Sophs Win Award;
Dr. Wilson Tells About
French Given Medal Campus Club Activities
In Collection On Friday
COM
from Pot 2. Ca. I
Sophomore team. These awards,
as well as the best speakers
medal, are made posaible through
the kindness of Alfred P. Smith,
'84, donor of the Union.
The program was opened by Andrews, whose theme was "I am a
Pacifist" He discussed and outlined his own change of feeling
from a war-favoring spirit to one
of complete pacifism, and closed his
talk by stating that a revolution of
a man's inner-self is necessary to
reach the pacifist viewpoint The
subject of the next speech by R.
A. Clement, '38, was "Is There Any
Bottom?", In which he stressed the
need for a young man today to
have a foundation within himself.
and a communion with the spiritual
things of life if he is to make his
own life earnest and purposeful.
Bone was the next speaker and
spoke on the subject, "Democracy
Triumphant." In his talk he showed how a truly democratic govern.
ment is the most beneficial for the
people of a nation, and stated his
belief that democracy would always triumph over Internal dia.
orders and communistic instigations. He was followed by C. K.
Greer, '38, who presented an "Appreciation of Francois Villon," in
Local Linkhmen Defeat which
he outlined the true historilife of the famous French poet,
Bryn Mawr Maids, 9-0, cal
villein and hero, and then briefly
In Intersexional Contest discussed his character in the light
of recent novels and old legends
On Friday afternoon the golfing which have dealt with his life.
maids from Bryn Mawr ventured
Government Interest Urged
forth on the Merton course to meet
The fifth speaker of the evening
the local linkmen, only to lose the
match by e 9-0 count. A stroke-it- was French, whose topic was "Our
hole handicap given to the fair sex Government's Call." He emphasismade the match closer than the ed the need for active and selfsacrificing interest in the affairs of
Score indicates.
The high-flying Fords evidently our government today on the part
lad quite some difficulty in keeping of the youth of America, and elated
their minds on their games, for that such an interest was vital If
some of them were unable to make a seriously threatened democracy
tietory certain until the last hole is to be preserved. T. K. Saylor,
17 two. Alex Williams had prob- '3B, who closed the program with a
ably the greatest trouble in this talk on "Youth—The Hope of the
respect, for it was not until he and World," also emphasized the need
Ries Ruth Woodward had complet- for an interest by young people in
ed the eighteenth hole that he was world affairs, stating that the hope
of the world in the future lies in
able to win, one up.
The Haverford lineup was modi- the hands of the youth today, who
fied slightly from the usual order. must take advantage of their educational
and social opportunities in
Jock Allen played number one opposed to Miss B. A. Staten. Bert making careful preparation.
While the judges retired to deCanton and Miss Betty Hubbard
completed the first foursome. Mill cide the awards, Dr. Comfort gave
Duff with Miss Lolly Musser joined a short talk in which he commented
with Williams and Miss Woodward upon the depth of feeling and into make the second foursome. terest which was shown by the six
Henry TompkInson, one of the sputters in choosing subjects for
betoee of last fall's 0-0 hockey their speeches, and the serious
Caine with Bryn Mawr, played quality and elevated tone of their
tirsinst Miss Doreen Canaday, and talks. He also spoke of the techlhut couple with Bob Boyle and nical excellence of all the speakbliss Alex Granger completed the ers, stating that in his opinion the
last foursome.
contest this year showed great improvement in every respect over
those of previous years.
Whitman's and
Schrafft's
CHOCOLATES
Waterman and Parker Pens
Milk Shake.
lk
Freels — lie
Ice Cream Sodas.-16e
THE HAVERFORD
PHARMACY
After commenting on the activ•
Hies of the Campus Club in collection Friday, Professor Albert H.
Wilson invited the members of the
student body, especially the outgoing seniors, to join. Memberchip in this organization requires
the yearly payment of a dollar.
In speaking of the changes and
improvements that the club has
made on the campus, Dr. Wilson
mentioned the aereen of trees
along Lancaster Pike and Raliroed
Avenue, the founding of a tree
nursery, and the beginning of a
bird sanctuary. He said that it
was through the efforts of the
club that the pond was transformed from a mud hole to its present
condition with a permanent supply of water.
Dr. Wilson repeatedly referred
to the editorial on our beautiful
campus which appeared in a March
issue of the News.
Lacrosse Team Routed
By Swarthmore Outfit
Receiving their first taste of
real competition, the newly-formed
Haverford lacrosse team was nosed
out 3-2 In a scrimmage with the
Penn Fresh on Thursday and lost
their first tilt to the Swarthmore
Jayvees. 13-1, on Saturday. With
at least half of the local players
under fire for the fleet time, the
Strobar-coached team did very well
on River Field when Bernie Hollander and Henry Tcankinson net.
ted the two local tallies.
In the fracas with the Garnet
on foreign soil, the Fords were the
victims of superior stickwork and
a lack of subetitutes. The more
experienced victors were able to
send in fresh men to oppose the
Ford outfit, which boasted a single
substitute. However, the first
quarter was closely contested
with Rhinle Norsworthy -racking
up the single local tally to knot the
HAVERFORD COURT
IDEALLY
RESIDENTIAL
Spacious Ground — Old Shade
Restful Porches
PAGE FIVE
Tennismen Split
Three Encounters
AMUSEMENT CALENDAR
Local Prodeettleas
ARDMORE—Tu.., Wed.. Claudette Colbert In "Private
Worlds"; Thur.., Gary Cooper
In 'The Lives or a Bengal
Lancer"; Fri., Sat., Wallace
Beery in -W.L Point of the
Ale."
EGYPYLVN—Tu... 'Wed.. -The
Man of Aran": Thor., Frt..
Wallace Beery in "Went Point
of the AD"; oat.. Will Rogers
In "LID Begins at 40.7
TOWrig--Tues., Wed..
Bing Croakyand W. C. Field.
In -Missleallnd."
stlin.L.D—Toes., Wed.. Fred
Amalre in -Roberte: Thur..
Frank Morgan In By Your
Leave"; Fri.. sat,, Fred MaoMurray In -Car 90..
WAYNE—Tues.. Leslie Howard
-Berkley Square" ; Wed.. Grace
Moore In •Vne Night of LoveThur.. Charles [Aught. In
'Private Life of Henry
VIII'. Fri., William Powell to
-The Thin Man"; Sat., Core
Brook In -Cavalcade."
Top Delaware But Bow
To Wesleyan; Tie
Lafayette
With Captain Al Memhard winning his sixth consecutive match,
the varsity netmen broke even in
their clashes for the second week
in a row. An easy 7-2 victory over
Delaware at Newark Wednesday
was followed by a tie with Lafayette Friday and an 8-1 lacing from
Wesleyan Saturday on the home
courts. The Lafayette snatch,
played under threatening skies,
was cut short in the waning moments with the score deadlocked at
four apiece and the second doubles
clash unplayed.
MemhariPti streak, which began
last week, gained impetus in the
Delaware and Lafayette tilts, but
almost hit a snag against .Wesleyan. Barker, playing No. 1 for the
New Englanders, was expected to
take the local leader without difficulty. Menthard's speed, coupled
with his newly acquired accuracy
on placements, proved more than
the frail Barker could handle. however. Weightman, at No. 2 for the
Main Liners, lost only four games
in the first two matches but slumped
badly against Wesleyan's Tuttle to
bow 6-1, 6-2. Judge Parry and Bob
Braucher, at Nos. 5 and 6 respectively, also turned in outstanding
performances, each winning two
out of three.
Philadelphia Product's.,
ALVIN E--Prede tic Marchand
Charles Leaughton In ''Les Min.
erables-: Coming
Richard Arlen in -Let 'gm Have
AIIICADIA—Nelaon Eddy
in
-Naughty Marlette: Coming
neat: Lilian Harvey in "Let's
Live Tonight"
BOYD—William Powers and Ginger Roger. In "star of MM.
night Coining neat: Ann
Harding In -The Flame Wok..
In"
EARLS—Jean Arthur In "Party
Wire." Beginning Friday:
Charlie Ruggles and Mary Bolan d in 'peddle Will Talk."
IOUROPA—All Academy Award
ltragramt Grace lion. In -One
Night of Love": abut "La Cu,
FOS—Shirley Temple In "Our
Little Girl': Coming nest:
Jam. Dunn In -The Daring
Young Man.STAXLEY—/Joria garloff In
-rho Bride of Frankenatein.'•
Comia1 mat: 31. West in
"Oslo' to Town.IITANTON—Jarn. Cairney In
-0-Men," Beginning letterdee: VIgtor MeLadten In "The
Informer..
JONES AT MOORESTOWN
Profeseor Rufus M. Jones, emeritus, spoke Friday at Moorestown Friends' School, Moorestown,
New Jersey. His topic was "Agencies of Life Making." Friday was
the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the founding of that Institution.
stare ernlactles.
BRoAD—Cecli Leannd
Cleo
a
MaYliwid In "The Bishop Aliababe..."
CHESTNUT—Bert Lytell and
pupportlim cast In "The First
Legion."
POSZIENT — garl Carroll's
"Sketch Book."
ACADEMY or ssrete—Preeenlotion of •Pannen- by the Dell
'Orel. Grand Opera Company.
et 8:40 on Saturday.
POST AT MEETING IN N. Y.
Professor L. Arnold Post attended a meeting on Saturday, et the
American School of Classical Studies in Athena, which was held at
Columbia University in New York.
Mr. Post is a member of the Managing Committee of this organization.
Office Supplies, Mimeographing,
Public S teas grapher—Notery
score at one-al!. Sid Hollander
played a fine game in the Ford
goal while Kite Sharpies. was a
valuable asset on the defense.
The Card Mart
ALICE M. CAFFREY
10.9 W. Lencester Ave.
GP/mintr d UTOCA
Pas., Am 4571
Autumn. Pa.
AUTHORIZED BONDED
REPRESENTATIVE
After the Show—
SINGER
Sewing Machines
DROP IN AT
AND SINGER
Vacuum Cleaners
Call for Free Demonstration
FISHER'S
Rittenhouse
Ardmore 256
Pleating—Buttons and Buckles
Covered—Hemstitching
32 E. LANCASTER PIKE
Place - Ardmore
Typewriters Sold, Rented, Repaired
Typewriter Company
Supplies • Suburban
Phone Ardmore 1378
EXCELLENT MEALS
41
minutes from the College
On Montgomery Aye. Ard.-947
THE LONDON Suer
55 W. Lancaster Ave., Ardmore
haberdashers and clothiers
F. W. LAFRENTZ & COMPANY
CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
1500 Walnut &woes
Proiladelpltia, Pa.
Offices in Principe/ Cities of
The Visited States
Special Sale
of ,
Gabardine Suits Made to Measure
$30.00
BRUCE FRENCH : : : Campus Representative
PAGE SIX
HAVERFORD NEWS
Tuesday, May 14, 1935
Tracksters Take Three- Way Brush; Poorman Sets Mark
HADDLETON CINDERMEN 9
COP TRIANGULAR MEET
Sponaugle's Three Firsts Aid F. And 3/. In
Second Place As St. Joseph's
Trails In Third
BOW DITCH TALLIES DOUBLE WIN
INDIVIDUAL
TRACK SCORING
Record Breaker
Ilelrer
SlerisUnt
Bow ditch
Marian
Pottnnan
Lester
Kra's*
anal
Lelbbld
Kelly
deB rrrrr et
Hutchins...
Bodeen.
Hoeksteve
40
53
xJ
en 8-13
TO
IS 5-3
ts
Poorman Shatters
High Jump Record
In Middle Atlantics
Haverford Places Sixth
In Annual Contests
At Lehigh
3-11
115-511
Forging to the front with decisive margins in the last four events,
the Haverford trackmen defeated
worsen. tt. n.
darlt-Iten by Hefter,
Franklin and Marshall and St JosBrow., C.
Perry
eph's in a triangle meet held on the Haverterd, tweeted, Pale, W. and M.,
rd. Istarlb,
titled, Merle, H
soggy cinders of Walton Field on Hese?
With three men garnering 15 Mi.
F. and M. Tine-10.I see.
Vistnt.
Tuesday. Coach Pop Iladdleton'e
Mile--Wen by Meehliat.
and
Hnwerford:
Reagan
lies and a fifth of a point picked
third. Maize.
proteges piled up a total of 70 11- second, trey.
up in the high jump, Haverford
12 points against 54% tallies for E. and 31., (snob. ?Amine. Haverfne51.
placed sixth in the Middle Atlantic
rime-41 nabs. 31.4 eve.
the visitors from Lancaster, while
States Collegiate track and field
xhol ent,-..Won
neeneeele, 0. sad
St. Joe's scored 28 541 counters for 11., 45 Mt nerved, Hulse, Haserford. 220-yard low hurdles with an efcompetition held on the cinders of
04 1.,•. fottrib, Welearb. P. fortless stride to cop the race and
HI ft
third position.
Lehigh University on Friday and
3L. us M. 5 In.
also surprised everyone by winWoody Sponaugle, F. and M. all- sad
Saturday. A powerful Rutgers' ag440-yard dash-Wan by
F.
around athlete, stole the spotlight and H., ...end. Kauffman. St. Jen- ning the broad jump with a leap of
gregation rolled a total of 54 points
by winning three events and col- tie*, third, Cary. Hererrordl fasted. 20 feet 1% inches. Sturge Poorto run away with the crown while
STURGE POORMAN
Tlase■.55.5 ear%
man excelled In the high jump se
lecting fifteen tallies for the sec- Hunt, 11•• error
Lehigh rated second with 32 7.10
Alen herce...-We. by Coe- usual while
111.-yeed
John Lester and Bill
Sophomore high-jumper, who
ond place outfit when his strong risgten, P. and 31.: amend. Farley,
points.
at. Myer nabbed
second and third reset a new M.A.S.C,A.A. standright arm carried him to victory in
-ltd
Hided. heat. 5t. Je«.104,
Sturge Poorman put Haverford
ard in that event Saturday by
the shot put, javelin throw, and .earth. Krum. Hit...anr& Thee-IRA spectively.
on the map and performed one of
clearing the bar at 6 ft-. 19:
discus. Topping Haverford's Chuck wand&
the outstanding feats of the meet
Mechling Wins Mile
Toressile-We• 13, tier, P. mad M.:
indica
Holzer for the letter's first defeat neentd, Lelbald, liarettord, titled.
by breaking the association high
Accounting for one of his team'.
this season with a heave of 42 feet Konen, 01. atateplis, feefth. Keegan,
jump mark with a brilliant leap el
six victories, Captain Harrison
in the shot put, the F. and M. star 11•Torford. Tim.-15 sian 51.5 see.
6 feet 1% inches. The lanky Scar.
g
ran
lamella
Mechlin
a
great
race
in
the
Wes
by
SINt.••115.,
F. cad
threw the javelin 159 feet 6 inches M.. III M. 7 In.,
let
and Black Sophomore eclipsed
seemed; Dtaerh,
mile
and
broke
the tape fifty yards
and tossed the disc. 126 feet 3% Jeseph'n. 1611 ft., In
the former record of 6 feet 11.8
In., third, ahead of bin nearest opponent
in
inches to take firsts in both.
Myer, Ilneerfore. 154 n. I in.; (emelt,
inches established by Lehigh's Milt
4
minutes
39.4
seconds,
which
is
his
Hefter,
31••erfired.
15e
ft.
5
Ia.
In spite of Sponaugle's HercuMeissner last year. Poorman reg.
-won be Oaten. Y. and fastest time of the year. In the
lean efforts and his team's seven HqRalt.aelle
iatered Haverford's lone victory of
stteand, Kastrnat.
half mile Idechling also led the
first places, a well-balanced local (bled, 31•0111..• I rrrrr St.
the day and netted 5 counters fee
ford: Nerds, pack until, coming into the
home
squad overcame a seven point ad- Redo..., Harerferd.
min, 5.1
Coach Pop Hsddieton. John Lesstretch
neck
and
neck
with
Frsinkneeende.
vantage gained in the earlier
ter
copped a fifth of a piont in the
Illth
Jump
lin
- Woe by rooratan.
and Marshall's Quinn, he was
stages of the meet and went on to Ileyr-rfurd. 3 n.
same event when he tied for last
•14 In., third. Slyer. thrown off his stride, stumbled and
By WALTON FIELD, '88
win. The Scarlet and Black placed H rrrrr ord. 5 rt. 5% 1.., 'earth.
place.
Me almost fell, but recovered only to
among
delft
men in every event while the Lan1. Havarti:4.d, Nash,
be nosed out by Kauffman for secHolzer Excels For Shot
314
caster cindermen failed to tally in St. Joseph's, McGarry, St. reseth's,
WelaHek.
cam e.
and 31., 5 ft.,
In. ond place.
Chuck Holzer, local powerhouse,
the pole vault and only notched 44 and
The millenlum is at hand. ScarPole
for Or. piece beAfter running second in the mile. et and Black athletes rose
of a point in the high jump when ineen Nnth, fit. Joseph's. and nemup in placed in two events to lead the
Charles
Frey
of
the
Lancaster
II ft - 3 Ia., third.
the locals almost swept the event ler. St. Joseph
heir might on all fields and smote our Haverford point-getters with
with 10% points. St. Joseph's %meet Lester, Haverford, dearth rrrrr squad attempted the iron man the foe hip and thigh. When the seven tallies. Placing second to
II•werford, .ad Mettarey, ht. Jeseyh's. stunt and got away with it when
scored its single victory in the pole
H
, 11 ft
rotten!. Ile he breezed around the two mile in dust had cleared away Haverford F. and M.'s Sponaugle in the shot
vault, Nash and Fleming tying at 10 IL. I tn.
was in possession of six varsity vic- put with a heave of 42 feet tits
1811.yard ins hardir•--Wes by Bon- 10 minutes and 21.8 seconds and tories and a tie, marred by but one inches, the best of his career, the
11 feet 3 inches to outstrip all
di...1, Haverferd,
. Evans. 11••- lapped half the field. Bob Leibold lows Add to this a splendid show- Sophomore speedster also followed
comers.
rased, third Carrington. P. and M., crossed the line second for Coach
ing in the Middle Atlantic track Allen and Reidy across the line in
fourth. Farley. St. Joseph's.
Holzer Leads Locals
Haddleton while Rhinie Lindley and field meet and a Rhinie
•
Second..
score the century to clinch third after ■
Holzer as usual topped the Ford 45.?
500.yaril dtteh--Won by Marla& Reagan nabbed a fourth.
in a triangular affray, and you have poor start. Captain ifechling'si
scoring with eleven counters and Hererfore: enema. Pale, Y. and set
Clarke Henan, Froth sprinter. the best spring sports week in
a best was not quite enough in the
placed in four events, getting a (bled. H•1.1. H
rrrr; (earth. Beet& turned in a brilliant performance long, long
half mile distance and he was pasIlat•■•24 seamen.
first, second, third, and fourth. In Haverford.
sed in the home stretch by Smith
Dinette-Wen by Opeasingle. F. and in the 220-yard dash when he burnthe opening race of the afternoon, Si.. 125 ft.. 3 1-3 la.; emend. Byer. ed up the cinder, in the last ten
of Rutgers and Quinn of F. and N.
Pop Haddleton's •
cindermen
the Sophomore speedster flashed Hare rrr rd, Ito ft 7 In., (bled, Hal- yards and nipped Pole, F. and M.,
A group of Swarthmore repremade
their
best
showing in the
8% hat (earth. Weinrich, at the tape by a hair'e breadth to
across the line in the century to see, 108
sentatives trailed Lehigh in third
Middle Atlantic, since 1931,
wad M., 1514 ft., a 1-3 M.
beat out Pole, F. and M., by a P. Broad
place with 22 1-5 points while
Jemp-lrea
15
when they placed fifth with
by Bondlleh. take first. Andy Hunt and Chap
step. Chuck's time of 10.1 seconds IIN•erfenl.
f5
tae ler *emir& Brown followed Pole over the chalk
Franklin and Marshall nabbed
18t4 points. Poorman, Holzer.
P. and 3.1.. 19 ft., 11% In., line to make it a Haverford race.
on the water-soaked track was ex- W l
fourth position with 18 counters.
Lester, and Mechling rang up
Sided. Helarlmn, Ha e r r IC 11„
Getting off to a fine start Hunt
A highly touted Alfred team, which
mere markers than the com▪ 1-4 la., remit,McGarry.at. Josled the field in the quarter until he
placed 11 men in the qualifying
tab's, 11 IL. I 1-5 la.
bined total for the years 1932was passed by Jones, F. and H.,
41,,h1HCL
IF...
nCilliG
erraLUCt
tests, surprised by barely nosing
24
inclusive. Sturge put Harcsx iato
and Kauffman, St. Joe's, in the last
SCHOOL
out Haverford for fifth place with
erford on the map with his recellent and even bettered his pre- thirty yards. Steve Cary, trailing
TS Gradate Entered 12 Colleget
16 points.
cord-breaking leap in the high
Irani Galen] Germ HI SA. Lift In.
vious time for winning the event. the leaders by about fifteen yards,
summary'
jump... At that, it w..ps one
ort Berl Ham Merits Ha
e1.
Holzer's remaining tallies were put on a magnificent burst of speed
100-Yard Dash-Wen by Allen. not.
quarter inch shy of his own
trarli
"Verriber. 11.111?...:.%'■(
10.2 second, Reidy, Lehigh; third,
chalked up in the shot put, discus, and came up fast to beat out Hunt
college record. There was a
Guthd.
twat
Halter,
Ilarerfeed, tenet', Sierra.
and javelin.
for third place.
Efternnt, 217.5art Cur. 23 son
day when the Scarlet and
Oetlyabura, fifth, Lambert. LW..
Howl Bowditch, Rhinie flash,
Although not up to his best
mare. Time-o: le,
G.1111141r8.Mrihrr4.71Wirg.%04
Black was always up with the
Beg 37?
scored the only double win for Hav- form. Bill Myer tallied seven mark55111.Tord
Ilash-Wee by Aare, hot.
George School, Pa.
leaders. Considering that this
tern, neeend. Held, Lehigh: t hi rd.
erford when he breezed over the ers in the field events to boost the
year's Freshmen did not parClark. Lafayette; fenrtk, Mona,
Ford total, Registering a second
Getrysbart t Ofth, Sephten. Allred.
ticipate. those days may come
in the discus with a toss of 115
The e-e 5/.0 re eels mere reel. el
back again.
set hl Boattek. centyaborg. Is Ibis
feet 7 inches, he also chalked up
. .
nod tied by 11..,011f, Lafayette. In
thirds in the javelin and high
Despite
s
the
fact
that
the
vicl
null.
THE COLLEGE USES
jump. Timber-topper Evans scor- tims of the tossers sported
none too 440..nrd Ran-Won by Jerk..., t e
hi.h t second, tine,. L•f•yehr.
ed a valuable second in the low impressive records, the brace of
thlrd. Perkl•s, Heine-are, font...
hurdles when he eclipsed the two triumphs was more than welcome.
Worth. nelarthemem 111111. I[esti,.
Lehigh. Time
S.
rival stars, Carrington and Farley. The Randall speil over the Garnet
remains unbroken. The balance of 1160-lined Aue-lree by D. an
Our
t ern, seeend. Orden, F. a M., third.
power has definitely shifted to BarMechlin& Ilarreterti, !earth. Mire
erford in the series with the anmire. Alfred, drib, anti.. Lnforcitc.
db. rivals. As evidence, four vicTirse-r :03.5.
tories and a tie in varsity engage- One-Mile Hen-Wea by D. smith Rae
Ask your nearest coal merchant or phone
set, seeped, nudearase. Lehigh,
ments this campaign may be ofTailor for "Suite Premed"
third, Minnick. Alfred, Inert ,.
The Philadelphia and Reading
fered.
Agency
Klein, Drexel, Ofth, Jere, Alfred.
• • •
le
Ther-tit54.1.
Coal and Iron Company
Teo - Mlle
If scholastic duties permit,
For Service Call
by Trey, F. not
Si., second, Jar., Alfred, 1111rd. 71.
Philadelphia, Panne.
Poorman will seek further honWALnut 5200
Steith. lilw•rtbrnorr,
Ardmore 4574
Merin.
ors in the 10-4A games at
Braga, Hatters, fifth, Ifehete.
John. Hopkina
Cambridge May 31 and June 1.
laartdo-ia-n10,03.2.
The Summaries I
.alt.terd
Holzer Tallies 7 Points
The Sport
Jester
Virs
Famous Reading Anthracite
WHY NOT YOU ?
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▪
•
- PAGE SEVEN
HAVERFORD NEWS
Tuesday, May 14, 1935
Nine Breaks Loose With Base-Hit Barrage To Win Pair
TOSSERS TAKE GARNET
9-4; HAMMER HOPKINS
Locals Collect .16 Hits Against Baltimore
Team In 18-13 Slugfest; Childs,
Foerster, Fraser Star
BASEBALL STATISTICS
RATTISII
Baler
F
•
✓oe rrrrr . .
11.. I'A'.
24 i ..500
25 11 .lee
P
alo
5 43
Rhinieoi Nab Track Win
Over Friends' Central,
Germantown Academy
Haverford's Rhinie trarkmen
carne through again Thursday
with a victory over Friends' Central and Germantown Academy in
a triangular track meet to give
them their second win in two starts.
BEERS CREDITED WITH BOTH WINS
The Freshmen piled up 62 points
li147112.17
to 44 for the Academy boys and 26
Onwahtoll
for the Centraliten.
After being stopped for a week
13.0ral
Two
Beers
Out of twelve events, the locals
by adverse weather conditions, the
1 1000
copped seven firsts. Heel BowScarlet and Black baseball team
MWARTII.34010:
Tram
ditch, varsity star, led the field by
finally maw into action and regAPI, R. II, ty. A. et,
EA31
FIELDING
turning
in firsts in the hurdle
istered a pair of triumphs durioW
Harlow. et.
events and broadjump and second
n.
A.
the .past week. Swarthmore's Ne00, 25.
:Ile
in
the
century
to furnish 18 points.
tackiest nine was the major vie- Belden, 0.
1 3 I
D enblr 13401....efereete 40 FereBill Myer won a variety of places
1 5 it 0
ign, going down on their home field Tapley. lb.
aloe, ressee. Tirfene In KIN•0.,
Leverlae. Ir.
••0110
with firsts In the high jump and
Wedesnday by a 9-4 count, while Terser.
55.
1 2 1 1
discus, second in the pole vault,
Johns Hopkins succumbed Satur- Mercer. e
13 2 0
third in the shot, and fourth in the
day after nine blistering rounds 1.70..
o 0 e
broad jump, giving him 18 points.
O 9 0 0
fend the Fords on the long end Rarchma •
O 000
Other firsts were annexed by
of an 18-13 decision. Beers was stebroedee.•
Local Cricketeers Trim Clarke
Morton in the hundred and
the winning heaver in both tilts.
2 4 5 11 a s
10.1.
British Officers Club Lin Reagan in the mile. Marian
BASER YORLI
In the Garnet tilt, with Don
also won second in the 220. Sant
AD,
R.
11.
0.A.
E.
Childs and Chick Fraser contribut- Parris. as.
By Score Of 126 To 20 Evans was another leading pointI 1 1 1
4 1 1 I a
ing sparkling field work behind C00, cf.
getter with seconds in the two hur"
I
bin. Stew Been limited the Little T1 rrrr e, 2b.
,
a
6
Continuing its winning ways, dles and fourth in the 220.
Free.,
en.
•
Quaker artillery to 8 Innen, while Childs, sr,
• 5125
the
Cricket
team
racked
up
its
his matins collected 14 off the of- B ement, Ir.
Ien.
fourth straight victory on Satur- Poorman Breaks Record
tering' of Lyon. Foerster led the B eer. th,
4 2 2 tu u
day at the expense al the British
5
3 5 5
Ford stack with three solid smash- oester. r.
B
eef,
IL
Officer's Cricket Club of Phila. The High In Middle Attitudes
es, and Tiernan. Purvis, and Kane
- - - - - - score was 120-20, the Britisher&
each collected two.
Twat.
IO 0 Is 27 11
010210131-• evincing lack of practice. Many of
Tiernan's Texas Leaguer went Fl rrrrrrrrr
rlbrearr
0 0 0 / 0 2 4 0 fla-4 them had not played for several Cost, Pool Peer 6, Col. I
for nought in the opening canto, liwea
Rase betted In-Tapley 3, TIrreas, years. So far this year. only the Freshmen Medley Brier-. on br
but in the second the Randailmen S aar 2. 1,004 Beer, Forester.
11 rr
trnedka. Settee,
Alumni has conquered the local
em.0.01
manufactured a run on two hits efillely. Fraser. T
gcritter HU
aded•
re art hma re fourth. Lehigh : 114.1.1,
end two walks. The uprising was •-•Reers. Reach onl-by Ly on. 15. Ea- teem. General Electric, Ardmore,
1102el. Thee-5111.1.
Ina beer hits-ramos, ten ea haam- Princeton and the British Officer's
checked, and the final out found Be•erford IL 1133531.113033.0 4. Wile have all bowed in order.
Broad Innon-Wes 5, Chemeler. Ref.
runs number two and three strand- altr1,-.4.yrre• 1111, 50 rirchm--by Ly✓emel free II% lashes; scrawl. IT.
"Thornien Brown, a first year
N.A. John. Flaoklaa. 21 ler! 1 1.4
ed on the sacks. After a fruitless on tlitrete). 01010 lee Clarke. In man, was the here of Saturday's
Weber. /hied. lIrldirm, Ursieus. 21
third inning, Foerster landed on eln410 .. .balled for Leeerbse in .labor. engagement. Besides playing a
reel
l.ebi berth, D. Carry,
YOHNA 1101.1412414
first to open the fourth, went to
10,40; 0015, vrIneee.
AB. IL R. IL A. E. careful inning to account for 26
Pole
1.35.--•13-33 hy Heller, Lehlet,
third an Purvis' single, and both Rumness. 4143. 11
runs, he took five of the opposing
lioaned,
tie burr ere 111035.1133.
11 feet;
an FRO
ruiners scored on Tiernan's nue- Ileldnerle. le
one run scored
SeerlItmore, end ..4peeldles. rin•Mh3 1 8 a wickets with only
ihg double over third which sent /41
mute, El feet 0 Inehrs, 1,015, ter
against him. Howard Comfort
11.
Airflow, cr.
the Main Liners' lead soaring to 3 Henke. no
between Nash, 51. Joseph's. mid
52411
was the high scorer of the day batBarris. Swarthmore, II feel.
3111151
Toon.
1101101. r.
ting in 55 runs among which were stint
rat-Wes 11..■ Ssera•nale. F. end
5 2 1 2 I
O'Connell. 3b.
five boundary four's.
IL. On 101 e• 1-4 Inches: ..1211•11. Rat5001
Mornaaralh. ff.
Garnet Scoreless Till Fourth
Meanwhile Been net the Garnet
batsmen down in order for the
Ant three sessions but in the
fourth Tapley's single scored Peter
from second and the count steed at
3-1. Beers promptly retired the
side to protect his lead, and Iris
mates made it 4-1 in their half of
the fifth round, but the Swarthmore
liatpile flared up in the sixth with
a rally which chilled the large local delegation into silence and
brought the figures to 4-4.
Two rune were already in with
one away when Fraser contributed the field gem of the day. With
the 'Ford infield playing in to cut
off the tying run, Turner bounced
a hard grounder between third
and short, which Fraser speared
in deep chart and retired the hither et first as the tying run crossed the plate.
In the last three innings Beers
billed the Garnet to two scattered singles, but he needed the help
of Don Childs' brilliant catch of
Lynn's long fly in the seventh.
The Rhinie right fielder snagged
the hall on the dead run going
away in deep renter. Beers himself drove home the winning run
in the Main Liners hell of the seventh, but the locals really put the
raise on Ice in the eighth with
three markers, and added another
in the ninth for good measure to
assure Coach Randall of his
fourth straight victory over the
Garnet.
Saturday's fracas with Hopkins
was a great day for deflated batling averages. Fraser stopped
tiling at the wide ones and hauled
hi, average up with four singles
and a double on six trips, while
Carson wielded an almost equally'
potent stick to club out four safeties in six tries.
Kase started on the mound for
the home team and pitched Maw',
ball until the third inning, when
the Baltimoreans solved his delit,
/whit, p.
.
citenesa•
todmairer••
Totals
O 2
0
O 0
1 0
0 1
1 0
0
0 •
0 13 IS to
11AVERF13101
Farris, 25
Corson. of
TIrrnas. 1b.
3 15 a 2
Childs. el.
Barmen, II.
Rene, te,
Forret., r.
Kase. p
111.131
0151
3 1 0 :1
a t 0
4 d 0 14
n
1004
O 0-1hrop. cf.
B141.0, Sh,
I 0 0 1
n 0 0 1
Frraer.
P•
II IA 15 01 10 4
Totals
..
n e,erford
i
e a a 3 1 -In
Jonas llnealne 5
D 0
o a0 0•
Rens helerd In-Corsea, Ileethe
Flarnma. Tiernan. Fencer, Yo sneer.
1,01, Merle., 50,0%1. annumerrsky, Deldstela. B.Cen•ell, Carper. Aarflare.
1. Two he e
h11.-C
. I fl
I
110010.4 A. Boobies 5. 20111...-Arktlf.
Winning plsehts---.1trers. loodna ollrher-ltahrager. Rouble later---Enoser.
Verna. It Kane.
cry for seven wallops and as many
runs, to overhaul a four run Hayerford lead built up in the first
two cantos. When Kase ran into
further trouble in the fourth,
Deere relieved hint, but it looked
like a Hopkins field day, when
Stevens greeted the sear Rhinie
hurler with a rousing single Which
sent two runs over the plate and
put the visiting total into two figures at 10-4.
TirraRD
0,1r31.
Mu.,
11,11d•
H one
ers
3 to 5 .153
3 13 I .131
I 4 I .130
4 10 2 10
3 111'
A
.1511
a 0 1 .154
5 17
I .533
4 7 e am.
2 I 0 .one
1 I 0 .1.00
0 las in .250
The Itandaltmea ate into the gap
in their part of the fourth, however, as Purvis,. Tiernan, Carson,
and Fraser singled to' drree home
three runs and make it 10-7.
Neither team scored in the fifth,
but the home aide came to life in
the sixth with a vengeance, and
hung up 7 markers to take the lead
again at 14-10.
From then on it was a walk. The
Scarlet and Black increased its total to 17 in the seventh and added
another in the eighth while Beers
applied the brush to the Hopkins
batters in both these innings, and
halted a last ditch rally in the
ninth after two markers had crossed the plate to make the lined count
19-13.
Haverford Turns Out
Good Men
Wherever both co, veer
They andety, be
Friendly Collaborate,.
-nnnatoonar Morley,
CPRIDstenun en Wheels.)
These special school and Cagey roil
titheb,Wilh their liberal extended reilmilLarefinnenselypapuloredth
gnat Seeing ho students and
and
leachers. When you're ready to come
bark neat Fan, buy one and save a
third of She regular Iwo-way fors
Haverford
N
1 0 1.000
1 0 1,00
1 2 .50
.24.0
0 4 .400
Thin 41,014', Schedule
- Lloyd 0. thoeth Beee10.
Wedeeesdeo-North Barclay 0.
Reelee-Inmearre.
All nom
,will be played 0 3:0
P. NI. on .1114 field,
21.7112.1
TENNIS TOVRNAMENT
Lisl. Wrea's Rronhe
Moeda., 1.
1,10oe. a; worth
ffionrfordeeniel •
This Week, Schedule
Banday-41111 Lloyd es. reeler
104,10.
Toesday-Sowlit Rarcley 4a.
Dey aladreas.
nem1-00,1 kneadWednesday-New 1.10531 s.
la Inner of Old Lloyd-Crater
Berrie, snatch.
An metchee will runelal of Iwo
.10010 matcher Red enr dabble., metre. verb ef Erre eat of
three
Mdllehes
lue Wayea at 5.00 4.
; 10bes:
33rfAninds.
030.5. 132 13,1 114 lornoni 0001,
T
listor11331.33, fat feet 3 0.;
third. Semeenale,
& IL, 114 feet
7 lerhen, fanelh, Edelson, .
•
F/ner. Leblah.
Binh.Jump-Wee by Ireeensms, leas• clerd. C Cr.' 11- 1 mchee tees.
mewl 04-04. obi meek are tee. I I-a
lecher ale 113 33.10nee. Lehleh, le
11311; errand. Ile her wren Heller.
1,505, end Geneerr. 1'1,1mm 0 R.:
eastern, Dory. Romer, ens, Ile
emote L ..... , ilaverford,
01, tlemetheturer Swearer.. 3.ralah;
A.30.3035. Lalayelle, end Mete.
weclor. Dresel. 0 Feel In lochs,
Friends' Select School
remiessiplea
Day Salon] for Pool and Girls
from ED ndordarleo oar tbra0/0
Nish &boo/. Centrally located. Ate.
pie play tedlltiee. Puglia admitted
at any time. Cerelosues on reenest.
Walter W. Maui, livadwator
The Porkw0 Lad itmentmath. ft-
PYLE & INNES
College and Prep School
Tailors
1115 Walnut St.
Philadelphia, Pa.
a call for action
consider, then, the advantages of a telephone call.
it's short, snappy, inexpenSiVe and certainly bound
to please.
Itreerverseett
and humour ands hip. at eon
by night-thereat heaven and
earth In a book, a real beak...
2,2111
Merion-Foneders
Ham. Rambo
u reter Warelas
loyd
orth Rare/0
... when your fond aunt
sends it check (or, even
more so, when she doesn't)
something must be done
about it.
E. S. McCawley & Co.
And glue-you sell rim a whole
new Bfe. MVO and frlendablP
BASEBALL
Las1 Wcoley Reeetr•
%oath Barrie, 131 North Seerimy. a
Crete. Daring, 111 Lloyd, a.
Flooding of leo Te1.71.
Autocar Manufactures
Good Trucks
•
“loardi When you sell a man
book you dual Bell biro jolt
twelve ounces of owner and Ink
arr. 11000ord. re feel •S'a inches,
third. Verey. Del..., 0 fr. 4ty
lashes; !earth. Didhs. kulacrs, RI
feel lye Inebeffic Meth, seem., Rot.
arm. 40 feel 3 2-4 mei,.
Oaselle Throw-Wee 113 MUNI, Rule r.. lel fret t 3.3 flat., ..rued.
r. 139 1'1,3 10 3, In.,
11051. nnonor. Lehigh. 100 feet,
fourth. Fennol.1. Ilelonere, 104 hell
fifth. Alftilnein. 4.ellysheen. 01 fret
41.-4 Inehro,
Mee.. Throw-Iron by %Amhara. Rol.
INTRAMURAL SPORTS
ASSOCIATED
When Chrialmos Dollelom Donne, you
con ma the reins, coupon to trawl
home a oak,.
The !idol. open, in your awn Iowa,
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ss
reprosenialies con give you f411 details
regarding return Ilmlh, elope:ear
prioilorjet, prices, etc.
EAS TERN RAILROADS
• Call WO miles for 60 cents by
Day Rate; for 50 cent. byEeening Rale; for .05 canto by
Night Rate. (Station to Station
3-nelnuto connections.)
The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania
PAGE EIGHT
HAVERFORD NEWS
Tuesday, May 14,1935
On the Campus
On the Golf Links
At the Club—
you will find them wherever the welldressed University Men get together
Townsman
SUITS: 25
1°1. Z4
/
Al
Something like athletic teamwork is this
making of fine Suits—a special aptitude
for ensemble work required of all its
members. You find it in these Townsman Suits. Every cutter, every tailor,
every fitter born to a part, trained by
years of working in unison. Suits as fine
as can be found at this price, up-to-theminute in style and backed by a tradition
as fine as any college rivalry.
Strawbridge & Clothier—.Seeond Floor
Also at Our Main Line Men's Shop, Ardmore
STIRAWBRIDGE
& CLOTHIER
MARKET and FILBERT at EIGHTH STREET
STORE HOURS 9 to
5:30