The Swarthmorean, 1953-03 | TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections (2024)

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'". ":; ...... 1· , ", • HELP • COLLE'3;'; . LI1JKAitY -­, MEET NEED' THE SWARTHMOREAN I HUMAN CROSS • VOLUME 25--NUMBER10 SWARTHMORE, FRIDAY, FRIDAY MARCH 6, 1953 1S.50 PER YEAR I • Bond Issue Requested Exchanges ~t Bloom Mothers Club to Hear Panel of Neighbor SPecialists Sets Red For School Addition :e ~:p?':;' !:~ E:: Foreign Student Panel Cross Off. on Local Campaign for $10,155 . $300,000 for Extension, SSpwrainrtgh mMouretu Walo mExanch'sa Cnlg1e,t b oMf atrhche N omil,1at·l ng CommiHee to Eighty of the. 168 local workers in the current Red Cross $100,000 for Old Debt 18, 19, and 20 has set mothers of Present 19~3-54 drive were welcomed at the Kick-off Rally Monday night in Sought small daughters and indeed the Slate' the Woman's Clubhouse by Drive Chairman George Plow-small daughters themselves off on man. Mr. Plowman introduced Al Carney chairman of the With three tiIites as many lay- a frantic weeding out of ward- Jnve foreign students at Swarth- Business District Solicitation.' Five captains working with men as Board members present at robes. more College who will appear in Mr. Carney are Charles Grier, Donald H~nd, Frank McFad- 1 a. m. last Friday the Swarth- Ah! spring bonnets! Sunday den, John .Rumsey, and William Shirley. Borough business more' School Board passed a mo- School shoes shining and intact their ~aijve costumes, will tell ho~ses WhICh h~ve been exhibit~ng Red Cross displays appro-tion to ask'a $40D,000 bond issue all but the squeak (any mother members of the Swarthmore prlate to the Dnve were tha~ed by the Chairman. . of Bo~ugh voters in the May 19 who has tried to clothe a tribe of Mother's Club about family life Mrs. Paul D. Williams, -?chairman of the Swarthmore primary election. $300,000 of the girls or a tribe of active little boys in for~gn lands at the club's . Branch, Anierican Red Cross, Jo-money will be used for an exten:::' or both will understaIid about that March meeting to be held Thurs- Counct-I Abandons seph B. Shane, vice-president sion to the Rutgera avenue ele- ~ueak), pin -the _ tail- on _. the _ Swarthmore College, Dr. J. Al-tary ch l $25 will men s day evening at 8, at the Woman's b . ht J B 00 ,000·.be donkey dresses and eton suits, I - .' rIg ones, orough Health om-used. in connection with land pur- thes~. fill a~ aching need felt Club. . neilirator- Plan cer~ Rev. Law~ence Whittemore, chase for the new building. The suddenly in the Spring, a~ need- • Students who will appear on Rector of Trimty Church, Harry other $75,000 will retire indebted- fu1 as the robins. No other hats or the panel include: Wies Morta- G P I- C Grady, Southea·stem Chapter Am- In _._;a' arage, 0 Ice ar, Paving i R n'7'B \a.u..u:", by replac;ing the shoes will be handled for ex- dirdja of Indonesia; Annette er can ed Cross, Marvel Wilson, high school beatin.g plant, building change, according to the an- Danker of Rotterdam, Holland; Bids. Awarded drive director for the past two the music wing to the shop build- nouncement of the Exchange Tamiyo Shuematso of Tokyo, Ja- Monday years and Lt. Col. Air Corps Re-ing and converting two high school Chal!'mari Mrs. Birney K. Morse. pan; LiJy Lai of Mlanila, Phni- ser-... e, Retired Admiral John V. basem*nt rooms to classrooms last' H 0 use furnishings! Family ppine Islands; and RosaUnde Eron- President H. Lindley Peel open- McElduft, head of Delaware Coun- . year. The lafter is sought in order fumltnre, like the garden, needs ini of Lagos, Nigeria, South Africa. ed Monday evening's session of ty's Civil Defense composed an in­that the Borough might avail it- only a little· care to sweep win..; Moderator of the panel wUl be Borough Council by announcing a formal, informative panel which self of the most economical iong .ters tag end into oblivion. This is Mrs. Edward N. Hay. Also particl- decision to abandon last month'J; ansWer.ed· audience questions and range financing.. the annual Spring Swap. Let's be pating in the program will be Mrs. proposal to build an incinerator plied each other with queries. Following. the d~Won, which practical about the whole thing. Richard Farrington and Mrs. I.e- on the Borough lot at Dartmouth Admiral McEldut!' introduced grew out of anaJnes of chartS pre- Loqk .over the house finnly until Roy Peterson. Mrs. Helen Hall, and Oberlin. avenues. Residents of by Mr. Wilson stated that he (Continued on Page 4) the sore' thumb stands out. Brush foreign student advisor of Swarth- surrounding streets h ad sent found the Red Cro,ss "always it briskly. Lug it down to the more College has arranged the letters and petition opposing the willing, always able, always with 1 A ~PI Sched ' . led . . c ay U Woman's Club on Tuesday. program. . step. A~o Council discovered it the 'know-how' oj in the '31 plus (Here's a fiung gauntlet-nobody's Th will d' h could hIre a trash collector to years he had seen it at work dur- .. F'. .T ues Meet_i ng yet tried a piano and .they can be . e group ISCUSS t e care cart its was~ paper from Bor- Ing his naval service, and that the Usted.)· In between your own and rai:nng of children in. their ough HaU offices ·and street comer fact that many Navy ships con- _, ;. _ pUJ:chasing' skirmishes Wednesday nati~e lands, choosing a mate and cans for less than $100 annually, tribute blood at a 100 per cent The . ~~a department of the watch i~ with a carefully casual :::::.~: c~~::sih:~~a~~e ta°::~ when ho~ses ~re built at its pres- personnel ratio showed what the Woman's Club of Swarthmore eye ~dr ~hursday, Ah, Thursday! I . f~ 'ily U. • their . ent .burmng sIte on Cresson lane. Navy thinks of the Red Cross. He . " ak • th f l~:- fit It' P ace m am UJ.e m . coun- It IS estimated the incinerator s' ""d ..... -t· m' - hi ti will present a one-act \ play, r e 'W .. e 0 Ul.l.!g pro. s as 'tries dUring the at. io' 'ears' . '.' . . c:u 111- any s ps evacua ng "Sally's Hat Shop"Tuesd. ""t r_simple.aslthat~d the most popu- '. . \. pa y • . ~oula have cost at least five war wounded in the Pacific dur- . in'th cl bh' . a.l,~ ~ .. ~<' Jar' sport--ot. the~~Jl •.. :!11e .. rppln The -n°lllinating committee 'will times t,ba~ figure!., ... ":).'. -. big the war ran out of blQOd, ~oon . .. e . u p~" ./.... .......,. ~~\ ~ ..... '1': . nresent a-elate of oMcers fnT' ·"e .. '. ...... . .' rI:-"" wNim~ th . ._ .• ,~ ".Those ~• . '.p~~~~~PJij: ~\l~:.~;~.~:~~~~~Oll: 4Q8-#il_i&i:~ Me~c;r~: ·~ :-~~,;~~~• .:.~ . ,.'~. ~~,L~~;_~~!t.~~~~:o ~d .. \ will be Mrs. William Pugh . Jr~, knOW.;. .' >~;.~~;;iltiiiw.~:~n.;·· . . Authority, havlntC .... reeeived r&- . . .' unneeessirilY: He admit"': Mrs .. Henry . I. Hoot, Mni. R~bert the ~change as in, the. ~.~den It'a nODl1nat~ committee an'!. Mrs.. qu~ from Ridley Park and ted. also that in case of an atomic· B. Clothier, Mrs. JamesP. Daugh- the early one that wiM. Charles W~~er, Mrs •. Robert Hall, Prospeet Park, regardin~ a joint attack-the Civil Defense program erty Mrs Howard Wilhoyte Mrs Speaking Of earlY Mh. Morse Mrs. C. llliam_ Ramsay and Mrs. g8l'bage and trash incinerator to would faU back on the Red Cross , . , •. .' James Clifford . nft..Ju. tly George B •. Heckman and Mrs. is. and, her committee, like the first • servIce tt~ towns, asked if co U~n '. Burriss West. Mrs. Robert M. daffodils wm W. on deck early. Hostesll for the evening will be Swarthmore might be interested . Dr. Jones remarked that work- Grogan will assist with the stage Tuesday from .10 a. m. until 4 Mrs. Mary Scl)uekers, while Mrs. and~f the borough might have ers ha? the best selling point this arrangements. Mrs. David· Bing- ·Marcb ~., Jhey will receive the Jolm Scott and Mrs. Heinz IIeine- any SIte available tor the purpose. year In the ·blood procurement ham, chairman of the department, . Boi'~ug!1's items for swap. mann will preside at the tea table. Council foresaw 11~ need for program in which the Red Cross is directing the-' play. ,. M~. Peter E. Coste, president, will Swarthmore to participate in such will coUect 1,000,000 doses of The stated meeting will follow Ao o --', y' to Present preside at the meeting. a . project but decided to reply ganlma globulin for' Public Health the program. On the agenda are a II' . that it would be interest~ in any distri.bution to contact pollo cases discussion of changes in the bl- Rota"; Speakers p~ogr~ss that was made in that ('ConuDued on Page 10) laws and nominations for oftl~rs. L,-beral' VI-e'w Sun Dr. Willi~ T. Lineberry. Phil- dU"ectIon. With no space to cre- A large atttendaIice is desired.· .. • adelphia regional directqr of the mate i.ts own om~ial scrap paper, Hostesses for the day will be ,'"'The Christian Faith In Rela- national Red Cross Blood program, Counctl obvlous~ could. olrer DOChas. Seym. our Directs Mrs. w. L. Dethloft', Mrs. WnuaD;l tion of the SecQIar Mind" i~ the. will speak at the luncheon meet- local site to assist neighbdrs. Craeme1;' and Ml"s. james· E. title of a lectu~e' to be' liven by ing of Ithe Swarthmore Rotary Low of 12 bidders on building Players Club Mystery Davis. Mrs. C. Rtisseli Phillips .Edwin E. Aubrey at 8:15 p.m. Club on Friday; March 13. a one-story, concrete block, truck a~d Mrs. A. William B~ss, Jr., willSqnd,ay, March 8 in the Meeting W. Marlt Bittle, former presi- garage on. the Dartm~uth avenue pour. Mrs. Heston D. McCray an~ House at Swarthmore College. Dr. dent pf the club, will introduce lot was J. F. Blackm~ at $3,­Mrs. S. L. Althouse of th~ hos~ A~rey, professor of religion at Dr. Lineberry, who will describe 622.30. Shaw Land~ Pa~g Com­pitaUty committee wlll ass~. the,: UniverSity. of Pennsylvania, the . Red Cross blOOd procurement pany, Cynwyd outbid ~hree oUter will' discuss .the liberal· movement program and the need for blood contractors for curbing and pav- College' FacUlty Will. in ~roteStant thought. His tant is on the home and battle fronts. (Continued 01\ Page 10)· , fourth in a series on Contempor- cavort' in Auden .Play ary .TJendS ih Theological Thougbt . Nobody can say that the forth- presented ·by the WilUam J. Coop­coming joint faculty-student pro- er Foundation in cool)eration with duction of "The Dog B~neath the the deparbn~nt· of religion and Skin" at. Swarthmore College philosophy at Swarthmore. hasn't got a leg' to stand on. As Dr. Aubrey, one of the most not­a m~tter of .fact, the pl~ which ed theologians in America today, was written by W. H. Auden, a graduated from Bucknell Univer­f6nner member of the SwlU"thmore .sity in,1919 and received·his,PhD facultY; . "and: Christopher . Isher- at the University of Chicago in wood, has exactly 14 legs to stand 1921. He becam~ professor of on, and what's ~ore four. of them christian theology and ethics' at ~long to femininE! profeSsors, and this school in 1929 and in 1935 took eight to faculty wives. up duties as president of Crozer Although the drama is npt a mu- Theological Seminary. He was sieal, The Little Tb-.tre· Club .t Cole leoturer at VanderbUt Uni­Swartmnore College. hu written versity in· 1940 and IngersaU lec­original parodies on Wagner and turer at Harvard in 1949. Dr. Au­GerShwin especially for the acea- bre)' has been ac~ve in the work sIon. This will provide the back- of the Federal C~c~ of Churches ground music for the 13 scenes, as and was a consultant for the first lunatics, surgeons, professors, aSsembly of ~e' '!Vortd C9uncil of Boy Scout Troop Two's 'Swarthmore .scout' .: ... II f:cJwina.· .. ~Jack" Opens Mon •. Night; Features \ 4-Member Cast "Edwina Black," an unusual and inq-iguing mystery by William' pinner ~nd William Morum, is the March se)ecUon at the Players Club. CharlQl F. Seymour directs the play and has ~hosen a cast of four talented troupers to transPQrt audiences back to a nineteenth century staid and proper English country village-;-in a not so staid' and proper English household. . Comedy, tragedy. and love are mln8led with the basic ingredient· of suspense as Isabel Briggs Myers, Marian. Brill Cham~lin, David C. Elkinton and John A. Jefferson entangle themselves in the net of suspicion sUrrounding \he death of Ed~a'BlaclL . Jerry Jordan is the assistant di­rectOr; MIriam, Me :Bauer acts as .... r(\"tpter ~ilid ·wimiun D. Jones is stage Dian .... : Malle" is bandled by Carl J eglum;. lq)eCial effects by .o\ncire W~ 'Polb)t$; mak~up by, 8eOut-masters, aud an oCcasional 'Churches at Amsterdam. Betty ~. . ,·Katrina Ives aad dog parade across the stage of Clothier Memorial MUch 12":14. . SALVATION ARMY· The :';;1.ht fig(j!"r plane pictured above was designed by Boy ~. ·MJeWt z;'Les1ie E1Us. Seouts of 'rr:lDp 2, S",,?rthmore. in a course in aviation fundamentals .toIm.Mmn ........ Charlotte Mau • The production, which is cer- CHAIRMEN NaMED' tainly the most ambitious' colleg... Mrs. Harold Ogram and Mrs~ iate undertald1)g of recent years, Robert R. Hopkins will share ~ includes a cast of 146,' all' strlv- monsibmti~s for SWarthmme's ibc ~ demonstrate one of the cen- ·SalVation· Army FUnd 'Drive. The traI them.ea--thllt all men are "n~~ ,..,-.,... .. ~- ...... " l\'! launched given ·by Pias,cki Helicopter Corporation. are t.he-elu ...... ·ns, and . the prop-. . ~e craft, caned the S\1III8rtbmore 'Scout, w~uld be powered by crty· eoc" altlU,: Waded by ~ two yye~lin~IJ0Il!:(> .1-47 engines, accordin8 to. the boy experts' plans. Gt:orge Hi Jarden, includes Jfr& . The nose ~-ctioh. \vnu'd be ft11ed with elaborate radar equipment to t.. '1. Servais,' Mrs. R.' Wiaftelcf - carry o.u t. i:s njght missi~ns at 675 miles AD hour. The bovs were 'Ba;h and Mrs:..·J. Burris W.es'l. - ~. ' , . ": ...... . ~ ,'. . , able to teU. ~·ltether their new plane ~d tIy if one we"'e t'~r buil~ ""l~rt.alri tbii& is 8: 20, 'Monda1 .,.. ... at 1" ,beaeatlt· the akin. ~" ... , fl,,;t· .': The f':l!!"u;, ~:rI\- J:'?s: aud atllearJy JODIe apeedS; . ~ ". , t'. ~ .K arcb""14. .' ~:' '. I ... i .. ,j",' • > - .. . ,. .. ..

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.. ,D . v' m ' Co·lle"'t.t:' r-r~:Dl"rlr·y , • HELP • CO!.U:'i ;,; L 1 .n :~ }. L'. Y ;"'vn\rthmo re J Pa • MEET THE SWARTHMOREAN RED CROSS IHUMAN NEED' • VOLUME 25--NUMBER10 SW ARTHMOim, FRIDAY, FRIDAY MARCH 6, 1953 ,3.50 PE~ YEAR Bond Issue Requested Exchanges ~hat Bloom Mothers Club to Hear Panel of Neighbor Specialists Sets Red For School Addition ~et~:p~:=;' !~~:':: Foreign Student Panel Cross Off on Local Campaign for $10,155 $300,000 for Extension, $100,000 for Old Debt Sought With three times as many lay­men as Board members present at 1 a. m. last Friday the Swarth­more' School Board passed a mo­tion to ask a $40D,000 bond issue of Borough voters in the May 19 primary election. $300,000 of the money will be used for an exten':' sion to the Rutgers avenue ele­mentary school. $25,000 will be used in connection with land pur­chase for the new building. The other $75,000 will retire indebted­ness incurred by replacing the high school heating plant, building the music wing to the shop build­ing and converting two high school basem*nt rooms to Classrooms last year. The latter is sought in order that the Borough might avail it­self of the most economical long range financing. Following the decision, which grew out of analyses of charts pre­( Continued on Page 4) l-Act Play Scheduled For Tues. Meeting The drama department of the Woman's Club of Swarthmore will present a one-act, play, "Sally's Hat Shop" Tuesday after­noon in the clubhouse. Those taking part in the play will be Mrs. William Pugh, Jr., Mrs. 'Henry I. Hoot, Mrs. Robert B. Clothier, Mrs. James P. Daugh­erty, Mrs. Howard Wilhoyte, Mrs. George B. Heckman and Mrs. 'J. Burriss West. Mrs. Robert M. Grogan will assist with the stage arrangements. Mrs. David Bing­ham, chairman of the department, is directing the play. • The state(! meeting will follow the program. On the agenda are a discussion of changes in the b,v­laws and nominations for officers. A large attendance is desired. Hostesses for the day will be Mrs. W. L. Dethloff, Mrs. William Craemer and Mrs. james E. Davis. Mrs. C. RusseLl Phillips and Mrs. A. William Bass, Jr., will pour. Mrs. Heston D. McCray and Mrs. S. L. Althouse of the hos­pitality committee will assj!it. College Faculty Will cavort in Auden Play Nobody can say that the forth­coming joint faculty-student pro­duction of "The Dog Beneath the Skin" a,t Swarthmore College hasn't got a leg to stand on. As a matter of fact, the pl~ which was written by W. H. Auden, a former member of the Swarthmore faculty, and' Christopher Isher­wood , has exact.ly 14 legs to stand on, and what's more four of them belong to feminine professors, and eight to faculty wives. Although the drama is not a mu­sical, The Little Theatre Club at Swarthmore College has written original parodies on Wagner and GerShwin especially for the occa­sion. This will provide the back­ground music for the 13 scel!es, as lunatics, surgeons, professors, scout-masters, and an occasional dog parade across the stage of Clothier Memorial March 12-14. The production, which is (!er­tainly the most ambttious colleg­iate undertaking of recent years, includes a cast of 146, all striv­ing to demonstrate one of the cen­tral themes-that all men are beasts, at IeJSt beneat1t the skin. . Spring Mutual Exchange of the Swarthmore Woman's Ch,lb March 18, 19, and 20 has set mothers of small daughters and indeed the small daughters themselves off on a frantic weeding out of ward­robes. Ah! Spring bonnets! Sunday School shoes shining and intact all but the' squeak (any mother who has tried to clothe a tribe of Nominating Committee to Present 19 ~3-54 Slate Five foreign students at Swarth-more College who will appear in their native costumes, will tell members of the Swarthmore Mother's Club about family life Eighty of the 158 local workers in the current Red Cross drive were welcomed at the Kick-off Rally Monday night in the Woman's Clubhouse by Drive Chairman George Plow­man. Mr. Plowman introduced Al Carney chairman of the Business District Solicitation.' Five captains working with Mr. Carney are Charles Grier, Donald Hand, Frank McFad­den, John Rumsey, and William Shirley. Borough business houses which have been exhibiting Red Cross displays appro­priate to the Drive were thanked by the Chairman. Mrs. Paul D. Williams, chairman of the Swarthmore girls or a tribe of active little boys in foreign lands at the club's or both will understand about that March meeting to be held Thurs­squeak), pin - the - tail- on - the - day evening at 8, at the Woman's donkey dresses and eton suits, Club. -----,---------- Branch, American Red Cross, Jo- Council Abandons Incinerator Plan seph B. Shane, vice-president Swarthmore College, Dr. J. Al­bright Jones, Borough Health Offi­cer; Rev. Lawrence Whittemore, Rector of Trinity Church, Harry Grady, Southeastern Chapter Am­erican Red Cross, Marvel Wilson, drive director for the past two years and Lt. Col. Air Corps Re­serve, Retired Admiral John V. McElduff, head of Delaware Coun­ty's Civil Defense composed an in­formal, informative panel which answerEd audience questions and plied each other with queries. these fill an aching need felt suddenly in the Spring, as need­ful as the robins. No other hats or shoes will be handled for ex­change, according to the an­nouncement of the Exchange Chairman Mrs. Birney K. Morse. H 0 use furnishings! Family furniture, like the garden, needs only a little care to sweep win­ter's tag end into oblivion. This is the annual Spring Swap. Let's be practical about the whole thing. Look over the house firmly until the sore thumb stands out. Brush it briskly. Lug it down to the Woman's Club on Tuesday. (Here's a flung gauntlet-nobody's yet tried a piano and they can be listed.) In between your own purchasing skirmishes Wednesday watch it with a carefully casual eye and Thursday, Ah, Thursday! rake in the folding profit. It's as simple as ,that and the most popu­lar sport, of the season. The ~obin has b~Il' mentJpned - .. ,atl<L you know what the robin fftmts. In the Exchange as in the garden it's the early one that wins. Speaking of early, Mrs. Morse and her committee, like the first daffodils will be on deck early. Tuesday from 10 a. m. until 4 March 18, they will receive the Borough's items for swap. Aubrey to Present . Liberal View Sun. "The Christian Faith in Rela­tion of the Secular Mind" is the title of a lecture to be given by Edwin E. Aubrey at 8: 15 p.m. Sunday, March 8 in the Meeting House at Swartlunore College. Dr. Aubrey, professor of religion at the University of Pennsylvania, will discuss the liberal movement in protestant thought. His talk is fourth in a series on Contempor- 2ry Trends in Theological Thought presented by the William J. Coop­er Foundation in cooperation with the department of religion and philosophy at Swarthmore. Dr. Aubrey, one of the most not­ed theologians in America today, graduated from Bucknell Univer­sity in 1919 and received his PhD at the University of Chicago in 1921. He became professor of christian theology and ethics at this school in 1929 and in 1935 took up duties as president of Crozer Theological Seminary. He was Cole leoturer at Vanderbilt Uni­versity in 1940 and Ingersoll lec­turer at Harvard in 1949. Dr. Au­brey has been active in the work of the Federal Council of Churches and was a consultani for the flrst assembly of the World Council of Churches at AmSterdam. SALVATION ARMY CHAIRMEN NAMED Mrs. Harold Ogram and Mrs. Robert R. Hopkins will share re­snonsibiliU.~ s for Swarthmore's SalVation Army Fund Drive. The 10O:o:t ,. ........ .,., .. ;....... ..';'1 ..,~ launched 1\"'1'0 ~~ , Students who will appear on the panel include: Wies Morta-' Garage, Police Car, Paving dirdja of Indonesia; Annette Bids Awarded Danker of Rotterdam, Holland; Tamiyo Shuematso of Tokyo, Ja- Monday pan; Lily Lai of MJan~la, Phili- President H. Lindley Peel open- ~~ine Islands; and .Rosalinde Er?n- I ed Monday evening's session of 1m of Lagos, NigerIa, South ~frica. Borough Council by announcing a Moderator of the panel wIll be decision to abandon last month'.:; Mrs. Edward N. Hay. Also partici-pating in the program will be Mrs. Richard Farrington and Mrs. Le­Roy Peterson. Mrs. Helen Hall, foreign student advisor of Swarth­more College has arranged the proposal to build an incinerator on the Borough lot at Dartmouth and Oberlin avenues. Residents of surrounding streets h ad sent letters and petition opposing the step. Also Council discovered it program. could hire a trash collector to The group will discuss the care cart its waste paper from Bor­and raising of children in their ough Hall offices and street corner native lands, choosing a mate and cans for less than $100 annually, marriage customs, and the out- when houses are built at its pres­standing changes that have taken ent burning site on Cresson lane. place in fhmily life in their coun- It is estimated the incinerator tries during the past 10 years. would have cost at least five \ The nominating committee will times that figure. , present a slate ~f officers ~or ,t!te. ~ _ The Ce~t.r~l, Delaware County 1953-54 seasdn. Members of the Authority, having received re­nominating committee are: Mrs., quests from Ridley Park and Charles Gerner, Mrs. Robert Hall, Prospect Park, regarding a joint Mrs. C. William, Ramsay and Mrs. gal'bage and trash incinerator to James Clifford. service !ieir towns, asked if Hostess for the evening will be Swarthmore might be interested Mrs. Mary Scl)uckers, while Mrs. and if the borough might have John Scott and Mrs. Heinz Heine- any site available for the purpose. mann will preside at the tea table. Council foresaw no need for Mrs. Peter E. Coste, president, wiIJ Swarthmore to participate in such preside at the meeting. a project but decided to reply Rotary Speakers Dr. William T. Lineberry, Phil­adelphia regional directqr of the national Red Cross Blood program, will speak at the luncheon meet­ing of ,the Swarthmore Rotary Club on Friday, March 13. W. Marlt Bittle, former presi­dent of the club, will introduce Dr. Lineberry, who will describe the Red Cross blood procurement program and the need for blood on the home and battle fronts. that it would be interested in any progress that was made in that direction. With no space to cre­mate its own official scrap paper, Council obviously could offer no local site to assist neighbdrs. Low of 12 bidders on building a one-story, concrete block, truck garage on the Dartmouth avenue lot was J. F. Blackman at $3,- 622.30. Shaw Landis Pav.ing Com­pany, Cynwyd outbid three other contractors for curbing and pav- (Continued on Page 10) Boy Scout Troop Two's 'Swarthmore Scout' Admiral McElduff introduced by Mr. Wilson stated that he found the Red Cross "always willing, always able, always with the 'know-how'" in the 31 plus years he had seen it at work dur­ing his naval service, and that the fact that many Navy ships con­tribute blood at a 100 per cent personnel ratio showed what the Navy thinks of the Red. Cross. He said that many ships evacuating war wounded in the Pacific dur­ing the war ran out of blood, which meant that men. died and s";frered unnecessarily. He admit­ted also that in case of an atomic attack -the Civil Defense program would fall back on the Red Cross confidently. Dr. Jones remarked that work­ers had the best selling point this year in the blood procurement program in which the Red Cross will collect 1,000,000 doses of gamma globulin for Public Health distribution to contact polio cases (Continued on Page 10) Chas. Seymour Directs Players Club Mystery &I Edwina Black" Opens M~n. Night; Features 4-Member Cast "Edwina Black," an unusual and intriguing mystery by William' Dinner and William Morum, is the March selection at the Players Club. CharlQB F. Seymour directs the play and has chosen a cast of four talented troupers to transport audiences back to a nineteenth century staid and proper English country village-in a not so staid and proper English household. Comedy, tragedy and love are mingled with the basic ingredient of suspense as Isabel Briggs Myers, Marian Brill Chamberlin, David C. Elkinton and John A. Jefferson entangle themselves in the net of suspicion surrounding the death of Edwina Black. Jerry Jordan is the assistant di­rector; Miriam M. Bauer acts as ""'t""Yl1pter and William D. Jones is stage manager. Music is handled by Carl Jeglum; special effects by "ndre W. Pollack; make-up by Betty BenUey, Katrina Ives and 'l'he , ",~ ::~:- .':' p!ane pietured above was designed by Boy Edyth~ Michell. J. Leslie Ellis, S~outs r:f":' l' ~ S''"~r'hm(lre. in a course in aviation fundamentals John MaDDio~ ~d Charlotte Maas given by Pi3~ rki Helicopter Corporation. are the e1ectrtclIms, and the prop- Th~ crl'l~t. ('alkd the Swarthmore Scout, w(:mld be powered by arty committee., hea.ded by Mrs. two W(!<>'>:': , I~(' ,~':7 engines, according to the boy experts' plans. George H. ~arden, mclud~ Mrs. The nlJs~ " ~":'\ ','''11'0 be filled with elaborate radar equipMent to L. ,J. ServBlS, . Mrs. R: Wmfleld carry (m' " ~-~~,! '"issi .. ns at 675 miles an hour. The bnvs w~re Ba'~~ and Mrs. J: B~S West. able to 'ten ,-':hpthf'r fheir new plane would fly if one we"e ~,r:er built. ,r"rtain time IS 8.20, Monday The f=-"". ",' and at nearly sonic speeds. I through Saturday, March 9-14. • \ \ 'j 'I I , \ '" / .

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Pap 2 Personals " THE SWUTBMOREAN Mrs. C. H. Jeglum of Hillborn Church. The Rev. Joseph P. Bish- Mueb 6. 1953· avenue resident and a grad~ate of I tant professor of History at Ellza~ avenue. returped home Saturday oj> will officiate. , following a two-month visit with Mrs. Thomas Chew, also of Park Dr. Arthur J. Jones of North her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George avenue: wlll be matron of honor Swarthmore avenue will be the B. Perklns of Sac City, Iowa:. for ber sister. guest of his granddaughter Louisa where she was called by the Illness The bride-to-be was guest of Jones for the father-daughter of her mother. honor at a surprise miscellaneous week-end at Skldmore· College. Shirley Smith of Media, a soph- shower given Monday evening by Louisa is the daughter of Dr. and omore at Connecticut College. Mrs. David McCahan of Sirath Mrs. Burto? Jones of Boulder, New London, was in charge of cos- Haven avenue, and Mrs. Frank G. Colo. I twnes for the inter-class competi- Keenen of Harvard aVenue, at Miss Ruth Carr, Mrs. George tive play ''The Pt"Oposal" held Mrs. McCahan's home. Smith and Mrs. Henry D. Bevan February 27. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll P. Streeter, of Swarthmore will attend a din- Mrs. John R. Bates of North Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Van Alen, and ner given by the Simmons College Chester road will spend several Mr. and Mrs. Peter E. Told will Club of Philadelphia on March 11 days of next week in New York entertain at the rehearsal dinner at the Germantown Cricket Club City attending the. New York this eVening at the home of Mr. where Dr. Bancroft Beatley, pres- Flower Sbow. and Mrs. streete~ of Columbia Ident of the college, will. speak. Mrs. Hugh Wagnon of Guernsey avenue. Mr. and Mrs. John Sprout of road and Mrs. Thomas A. Brad- -------- Hightstown, N. J. will spent the week-end with the A. H. Van Alens of Park avenue and tomor­row will attend the wedding of Miss Harriet Gilbert and Mr. Earl Doualas Knox. shaw of Benjamin West avenue, entertained Informally at Mrs. Bradshaw's home Thursday after­noon in honor of Madame Fer­nande Augeard of Metz and Nice, France who is visitiug her broth­er Mr. Raymond C. Lassiat and family of North Swarthmore ave­nue for several- weeks. REUNING-RICE The marriage of MisS Florence E: Rice, daughter of Mrs. Sophia Rice of Rockville, Md., to Mr. Ernest G. Heuning, son of Dr. and Mrs. Karl Reuning of Swa~ore avenue, took place Saturday, Feb­ruary 21 In the Presbyterian Church, Rockville, in the presence of the immediate families. Swarthmore High School, is ~ I bethlown College. We have ~n outstanding opportunity for a young sele$man or lilies trainee to sell heating, ·ventilatlng, air conditioning and industrial processing equipment. Write to Robert Arnold giving full information regarding education, experience, ,xpactations, etc. ROBERT ARNOLD COMPANY . . 11Z SO.tII 16t11S ...... Pldladel.,hla 2, Penna. ~,~~~~~~~~,~~~~~---,~~~~~,~~--~,---,,~,'-----~, ~-------=- ------~--- ---- The Bouquet BEAUTY SALON IEAUTY HAS A SPRING ALL HEiI OW!, 9 Chester Road Call Swarthmore 6-0476 I Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Locket! of RIverview road entertained as their week-end guests their son­In- law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Clifford W. Henderson an.d small Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hanna of .Maple avenue entertained at a daughter Carol of Lancaster. dinner party Wednesday evening Dr. and Mrs. Reuning attended I ~~~;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;' ~;;;;;~;;;;;~~ the ceremony. I~"""""""""""""""""'''''''''''''~''~''''''· Mr. and Mrs. Herman M. Bloom in honor of Mada,me Augeard. of Columbia avenue r.eturned Mr. and Mrs. Johan Natvig of home Monday evening following Harvard avenue have returned af­a two .. week business and pleasure' tet'vacationing for a week in At­trip to Kansas City and Daytona lantic City. Beach, Fla. Mrs. Frederick R. Lang of BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs; Joseph Paul of Yale avenue, announce the birth of a daughter, Laura Elizabeth, on February 14 in Delaware County Mr. and Mrs. Harry F~ Brown. Maple avenue entertained a group Hospital. Jr., and baby daughter have mOVe of friends at a luncheon~bridge at ed from Glen Mills to their newly. he'r home on both' .Monday and F purchased . home In Pine Ridge, Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. ry of Media. Tuesday of this week. Vassar avenue are ~eiving con­Dr. and Mrs. Frank G. Keenen . Mr. and Mrs' .W . Edward Med- gratulations on the birth of their SPECIAL for MARCH OVERHAUL MOTOR VALVE JOB ROBERTJ. ATZ~ Owner RUSSELL'S SERVICE OPPOSITE ·BOI\OUOH PARKING LOT . ' ford of South Chester road spent second child aDd. first son. James SW 6-0440 I)artmouth a. "afoyette Aves. of Harvard avenue will ha .... as their week-en4 guests their son- ~o:n~:=::: th~r S~:~d::r~~n~ ~ta~~ ~~t~~b~ary. 28 in Bryn ~,,~,~,~,~,,~,~,~,~,,~,~,~,~,~'~"~'~'~'~'~'~.~"~.~'~'~'.~..~ .. ~ .. ~.. . ~. .~ . .~ '.~. ~.. ~ .. . ~. .~ . .~ "~. ~.. ~ . ,~.. ~. . ~ ,,~.~ .. ~ .. .~ . . ~ ..~ ,~,,~.~ . In-law and daughter):,t .. (jg) WU- sophom*ore at Yale University. Ed~ The maternal. grandparents of plllllllnlllQlIIllHllJIllllJIlRI1RlIlIIllIlHllUll!lUllIIllIllIlIlIlIlIIlIlIIlIUllllIIDIIHllll1UIlIInllUllnnHumulUl~ !iam DeForest Fetzer and ~. =. '. .. = Fetzer of Springfield, Mass., and ward lias recently been pledged the baby are Mr. and Mrs. James 5 BEA' T THE HrA'T iii th~ir son En~ign Charles B. to Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. H. Hornaday of Dickinson avenue. I - '_ ~ , . ;; Keenen, U.s.N.R.· Ensign Keenen Mrs. Carlos F. Noyes of Parrish 5 . § has . been sent to take a seven- road was hostess to members of Mr. and Mrs. John Criley Bair § with a 5: week course in Military Justice at the Thimble Group at a regular of Atlanta, Ga., announce the ;: :; the U. S. Naval School Newport, meeting Monday. birth of a son, Wallace Criley i GE, RCA or 'Carrier AIR CONDITIONER i· R. I. He has been servIn.' g aboard Mr. and Mrs. George C, Willetts Bair, on February 14. = = the U.S.S. Henry ·W. Tucker at held open house from 4 to 6 SUI\- The baby is a gr""dson of I_i! Window 'Models Installed Free. =5 Mare Island, CaUt., and will rec da~ afternoon at their ne. wly com- forn;>er Swarthmoreans Mr. and i!! If Purchased before Hot Weather Rush =: join his ship f<illowlng completion pleted home at 124 Guernsey road. Mrs. 'Robert ;T. Bair of :Jensen ;: § of the c0llr!!'. .. ';i~ .';.' !lir. apd M~"..;wm.ettS' hadbeen.(3e~cli, Fla.:, ...~.. W·.I L' CO'· VI. '.' AP.P.'IA· N·CES ~"'_' Mrs .. Frederlck Child and Mrs. living' sinCEf:their marriage 1 on .. I I '" A I,;, _ Edith Cuskaden of ,..SEarlImWre September 6 with MrS. Willetts' " .Mr. :~d Mr~ Allen C. E~d~rs ;;; a left Sunday by ·.ui~i1e for a parents Mr and Mrs Allen L· Put:· of Cam .. ge, ass., are rece.vmg ~ Lonsdowne and Baltimore Avenues, Lansdowne ~ month's stay in Miami, Fla. Mrs. f Laf tt' . congratulations upon the birth of - 0 E • MAdi 3 0767 nam a aye e avenue. a son, Robert Hay Ende. rs, on.;: pen venlngs ., son 0 ~ Cuskaden will visit Mrs. Sidney H I J H '" - Mr. ar an R. esSIIP of av- February 20. ;: L h H' 'do d FIR fr sh d d Rid IE Zinn of Miami, formerly of erford avenue entertained at a The bab. y is the grandson of Dr. _---=~ ower 1 al uml Ity an ee e e e an e axe _---=~ Swarthmore. Mrs. Child will later go to O,hio to visit members of her buffet suppeir and get-tog. ethheri and Mrs. Robert K.'Enders of Elm '" flnonce·d ·for Your Convenlen~• e Sunday even ng for 35 Chi P avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. George .. . . .".'. 5: . fj1mily before going to her sum- fraternity members of various A: Hay of Harvard avenue~ !.iIllIIlIlIllIlIlIllIllIIlHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIUliIIIPliiU1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIIHIllIlIIlli1 mer home in Martha's Vineyard. chapters from different colleges. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Johnson of South Chester road returned Mr. Jessup, a f;Taduate of M.l.T., home Thursday after a week's. is a member of Beta Chapter. sojourn in AtI",ntic City. Dr. and Mrs. Clifford Banta of Mr. and Mrs.. Edward E. Parrish road are entertaining as Thomas' - and small daughters their house guests for seyeral days Kathie and Bethie. who have Mrs. Banta's brother-in-law and iT,ade their home with Mrs. sister Mr. and Mrs. H. F. 'Fudge Thomas' mother Mrs. Roland G. of Crawfordsville, Ind., who are E. Ullman of uApplebrook", Park enroute to Miami, Fla. avenue, will move. to~orrow to Priscilla Brobeck. seven year­Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelm Reuning of Elizabethtown announce the birth of a daughter, Winifred May, on January 21. . Mr. Reuning, a former College SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR~L MAGAZINES their newly purcbl\ll~li>me at old daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John ·313 Damnouih Avenue 321 West Providence road, ·Aldan. R. Brobenk of Vassar avenue, en- Swarll.more 6-2080 Second Lt. C. Brinton-Medford tertained 14 guests including. First '""'~~~~~~~~~~~~~ MRS. LLOYD E. KAtTFFMAN of South Chester road, who is stac Graders at a birthday party. in " tioned at Elgin Field, Fla., has honor of her anniversary on Feb­returned there following a 10- ruary 25. day training course at Biloxi Miss. ________ _ He also attended the M;ardi Gras in New Orleans and there met and had dinner with a former Swarth­more High School classmate, Miss Joan Streeter of Columbia avenue, and friends who were also attending the gala event. Pvt. Robert Croco, who Is sta­tioned with the Quartermasters Board In StatisUcal Work at Ft. Lee, Va., spent the week-end at his home on Hillbom avenue. . I Dr. and Mrs. John R. Brobeck of Vassar avenue entertained as their week-end guest Miss Evelyn Hayden .of New Haven, Conn., a Wheaton College frlel)d. MARGIi and DOT Casaerole Cat~rlng Serviee SPECIALIZING IN , Io1l!iCBBOM8 BOHEI SOPPB1t8 co*ckTAIl. PARTIES CAU. . Marp Hurd • SWL WI38 CP wwe ...... TO WED TOMORROW The marriage of Miss Harriet Gray Gilbert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Percy G. Gilbert of Park avenue, to Mr. Earl Douglas Knox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Knox of Altus, Okla., will take; place tomorrow at 2 o'clock in, the Swarthmqre Presbyterian THE PLAYERS CLUB of Swarthmore presents "Edwina Black" BF Wm. Dbmer I1Ild Wm. MoI'1ll1l Charles Seymour DJreetor . I Monday Throup Saturday Mareh 9-14 Cai1abl. TIme ~ .:It'l'.11. COLLEGE THEATRE Sworthmore, Pa. • Fri •• Sat. Esther WlIllams . Victor Mature Walter Pidgeon "Million Dollar Mermaid" (Technlcolor) See 4azz1.pl' water ballet t I Special Riddles Show Sat. 1 P. M. JOHN WAYNE In "THE n.YlNG TIGERS" plua cartoons. shorts, comedy. serlal Sat. night only feature tImeS 6, 8. 10 Sunday Only STEWART GRANGER. "THE 'WILD NORTH" (TeCbDico1Qr) You've never seen such a, spectatIet Mon.' & Tues. Alexander Korda poeaenta DA V1D NIVBN aa1lhe 'Rebel PrInce' 'BONNIE PRIN~E CHARLIE' Bootland'a histoI'Y In magnl1\cent TeCbDiCO!or .. Wed. OBly G ...... Garson . wal'te!- PIdgeon "THE MINIVER STORr A heert--=tDg drama IIImed _ In 'Cngland . Starts TInII's. OLIVIA de ·HAVlUoAND Da~. DuJI&UrIer'a __ "MY COUSIN RACHEL" NOW YOU CAN WRlrE. YOUI OWN CHECKS •••. WitboutG Banle Ace,ulI' f All .... p,.,ti •• con".nl.nce of ,ovr "fIOn •• check SWARTHMORE IATIOIAL BAil AID TRUST CONPAI! '. . , '-' ,- --,' eon and meeting of the "oman', There will be a celebration Auxlliary. William Hordern,· of the Holy <;Ommunlon at 8 o'cioc:k! Swarthmore College, will speak SundaY morning. All departments on Comparative RelIgIons In of the ChUrch Schoql will meet at Africa.· God. "The NUi"aerY for cblldren Is open during this semce with Mrs. TOMcIore L. Purnell and Mrs. 1_ II. CoDnor In charge. 9:30 a.m. At'll o'clock the serve 'On Friday a service of Evening ice of Morning Prayer will be Prayer will be held at 5130 p.m. The ushers for the day are aeoige Sb~bert. ·!:dward H. Als­ton, Wnuam C. Collenberg, Theo­dol1i' Haddad and Peter Murray. PRESlnERIAN NOT!!S held. The Junior Confirmation Class will meei at 7 p.rn. follow~ by the Aault Conltrmatlon ClaSs at. 8 o'clQck. The ushers for the services will be as follows: W. L. Cleaves, F. R. Gray. E. M. Hillary, W. F. ioug, Jr., E. C. Page, Jr., C. W. Randall, Jr., W. H. Randall, Wednesday" evening at 8 p. m. and C. C. Wallin. David Dippt"e Is Dr. ChW;les T. Leber, executive when Mr. Bisbop will COlOtiloUl.! scheduled to serve as acolyte at secretary of the Board of Foreign his sermona 011 the "Lord's Pray- the 8 o'clock service, and Barry Missions will be the preachel' at er;~ During this service the church Wright iit U: During the U the 9:80 and the 11 o'clock serV- choir will present the Faure o'clock service Leigh Hollis and Ices Sunday mqming. HIs sermon "Requiem" with Carolyn Stam- Mary Anne Thompson will be in will be entitled' ''Processiolll or lord as Soprano soloist, and Henry charge of the nursery. Penetration?" Faust, Director, 'as bass soloist. The Boys' Choir will rehearse The Church School will meet at Vernon Wolcott, will be the guest on Monday and Wednesday at 4 9:30 and U. The Men's and Wom- organist. There will be a disctis- p.m. and full choir rehearsal will en's Bible Classes will meet at sian pertod following the service be beld on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. 9:30. The Church Hour Nursery in the Senior High Room in the The Girls' Choir rehearsal will be will be held during the U o'clock basem*nt of the Parish· House. held on Monday at 5 p.m. At 8 service. Coffee will, be served. p.rn. Monday there will be the . The Sentor High Choir will re- There .will be a dessert meeting regular monthly meeting of the hearse .at 5:45. The Senior Hieh of the Zone Leaders of the church Vestry. Fellowship ",IUmeet for supper at 7:30 on Monday, March 9, in. There w1l1 be a serVtee or Eve­at 8:30 followed by a meeting at McCahan Hall. William Barrows ning Prayer at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. 7:15 at which Mr. Bishop will con- of the First Presbyterian Church Holy Communion w1l1 be cel­tinue to lead the young people In of Germantown, will speak oli the ebrated at 7:15 a.m. Wednesday. a series of discussions on the zoning plan In his church. There At 10 o'clock the Women's Sew­meaning of the AposUes' Creed. will be a long dis c u s sian ing Group will meet in the The article of talth which will be period to talk over the function Cleaves Room. The Children's discUssed is the Divinity of. Christ. of the zone plan and to seek way' Lenten Service will be held at The JUBior High. Fellowship making It inore effective in 3:45 p.m. At 8 'o'clock the Parish will meet at6 In McCahan Hall.· life of the church. . DiscussIon Group will meet to The program wlll have as Its The Board of Trustees will consider Holy Matrimony as an theme: ''What Does a· Churcll meet on Tuesday. March 10, at event in the life of the Parish dexton DoY" The church sexton, 7:30 in the Woman's Association Family. METHODIST NOTES The Senior Fellowship for High School and CoUege students will The Annual meeting of the con- meet at 6 o'clock for supper. The gregation will be held this even- regular meeting will follow. ing at 8:15, to receive reports The monthly meeting and social from the heads and treasurers of of the Young Adults will be on the various church organizations, evening at 8 In the elect three trustees and five dele- chapel. Mrs. Ruth Cresson will gates to the Annual Meeting of show colored slides of her recent the Layman's Association. trip to El Paso, Texas • The Sunday School meets at The Woman's Society meets for 9:45. Classes are provided for all devotions and study on Wednesc ages. The Young Adults meet at day at 10:30· a.m. Luncheon at 10 o'clock in. the Ladles' Parlor. 12:30 will be followed by month- At the 11 o'clock service Dr. ly meeting. . Keiser . will preach the fourth The Lenten service In the sermon of a series on The Lolrd',,·1 chapel on Wednesday evening Prayer. The topic is "The Will of will begin at 8 o'clock. , ADVANTAGES of localion, incomparable facill. tie., and 75 years of experience ... ofFered by • THE OLIVER H. BAIR CO. ....CTOU 0' PUNIUU 1820 CHISTNUT STREIT OlIVa H. IAII, '-do< MM:1 A. JAIl, ..... d .. Maurice IiIoore, will be the guest Room. The Session also meeting There will be a celebration of Telephone Ri 6-1581 speaker. Tuesday at 8 p.m., will convene in the Holy Communion at 11:30 a. The Young Adults will meet for the Pastor's Study. l~m~.~Th~~u~rs~d~a~y~,~t~oll~OW~ed~b~y~·I~u~n~ch~-~J:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~.~.~~~!_ supper at 8:30. The program for· . On Wednesday, March 11, there the evening will be .a talk and will be the regular monthly meet­discusslbn led by Dr. 'Charles ing of the board of directors of Anderson, director of the depart- the Woman's Association at 10:30 ment of history of the Presby- a.m. At 12 there will be a Wore terian. Church on "The History ship Service led by Mrs. Casper and Development of the Bible." Garrett. This will be followed by The Lenten service will be held the Woman's Association'Lunch­eon at 12:30 which will be served CHURCH SERVICES by Circle 8, Mrs. Richmond D. Fetherolf, chaIrman. The program PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH is sPonsored by the social educa- Joseph P. Bishop, Minister tion and action ·committee. The John Stettner. Assistant guest speaker will be Mrs. F. J. SUIlday, March 8 9.' 30A.M. -Chu l'C h S Ch 0I0M, e n' s Ft'o rrelFl oIIf theh ' New. comNe rs CYh riks ­- lW-d _W9J1:1EP1'S B:ible ~ Ian e ows IP In ew or. lO:"45 A:M.;:.::serilor· Hf"Il'Cllllli;: . TIt!P'Qhrlst1an .Ed~<iiIlIpn .Com- 9:30aM U:OO A.M;-Dr. Charles mitte'e' wlll·· meet ·00 ·Thursday, T. Leber will preach.. March 12, at 8 in the Church 4:30 P.M.-Conflrmation Class. 1.0 g . WednesdaF. March 11 un e.. ..' . ~: 00 P. M.-Lenten Sarvlc". . Anyone desirmg to place 11l1es ~METHODIST CHURCU-. - or other white flowers in Jthe Roy N. Keiser. D.D .. Mliilster ohurch fflr the Easter sel'Vlces S.~, M',II.reh 8 April 5, may make arrangements 0: 45 A.M.-Church School. to dp so by caUl1llJ tile ChJll"cl) \0:00 A.M.'-Young Adults. Office,· SWarthmore 6c4712. 11:00 A.M ...... The Minister wl11 There will be a covered-dish 11p:0r0e aAch..M .-Cnf urch Nursery. supper.. meet ing f th "Mr d 0 e . ~n Wednr:llla.", March 11 Mrs. Club" on Sunday evenlngt 8: 00 P. M.-Lenten Service. March 15, at 7 p.m. In McCahan TRINITY CHURCH Hall. The supper wl11 be followed H. Lawrence Whittemore, Rector by a talk 'by Mrs. Charles He.!'der- Sl;1Jlday, March 8 pon, Jr., of the Marriage Cqunselc • 8:00 A:M.-Holy .Communion. fing Service. Anyone interested is 9: 30 A.M.-Churcn School. . asked to call Mrs. G<>nrge W. Pat- 11:30 A.M.~Moming Prayer. ,- TuesdaY March 10. terson, 312 Dartmouth avenue. 5:30 P.M.-Ev;nlng Prayer. . On Tuesday evening, March 17; Wednesday, March 11 church will bring Dr. James 7: 15 A.M.-Holy Communion. H. Robinson to Swarthmore. This 3: 45 P .M.-Children's 1. e n ten church will sponsor a commuc 8~J'i':~ _ Parish Discussion nity meeting to be held in Clothier Group. , Memorial. Dr. R.o binson h Isu t_h_e Thursday, Mareh 12 pastor of the Church of t e "'~- 11:30 A.M.-HOly Communion. ter in New York City and Is FrIday. March· 13 recognized to Ile one of the most 5: 30 P.M.-Evening Prayer. outstanding Negro Christian lead- THE RELIGIOUS-SOCIETY 'ers In the United States. All OF FRIENDS members of the community are SUIldaF, March 8 • cordially invited. . • FIUEtIlDS MEETING NOTES 9:45 A.M.-First Day School. 9:45 A.M.-Adult Forum. "Job" Barbara Lange and others. 11:00 A.M.-Meeting for i1d~r:~1 The Adult Forum Series on the Children cared for In '\'I Bible will continue this Sunday, House. All are welcome. March 8; with Barbara Lange and 7:00 P. M.-Senlor HIgh Fellow- others reading .from the story of ship. Mo_y, Mareh t Job. All day sewing for A.F.S.C. . Wednesday, March 11 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NOTES All sewing for ~';;':;;inJrI Under the sUbject ''Man,'' the 7i:~ - Mf4-week Bible Lesson to be read In all ",;;-~-I ChristIan Science churches Sunday dIstInsuIsh between the Idea of lIIan and concept. The Lesson-Sennon cQl1talns 11:00 A. M.~ay School.. ''3ible reference· from the P.salrnsi 11:00 A. M.-.The Lesson Sumonl' wlll be ''Man.'' of the poet KIng David (PlI. 1'1: Wednesday evening meelblltI15): "As loJ: me, I wl11 behold thy each week, 8 P.M. Reading room face in righteousness: I shall llpen dally except SlIildBY 12 to I _.-". sfI.·ed. when I awake, with thy P.M. 'Wednesday evenlno '1 to .... ' . ";50 P.II. aDd lI'to 11:30 P.II. . lJkeness It " • 1953 Chevrolet . . T:"lIIalii•lla • :.; the .. Two-T ..... Club Coupe The "Two-Ten" Handyman ". . The "Tw .. Ten" TowMlltGft / SCfuare. South C ........ Road , - ,. ,', ,~- , -:, - :. Swartllnt ...... Pa. •

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, . , . , Gives Short College Visitor Will Also Ledure at Meeting House Mar_ 16 tioo of stars into two pol~Iili.- tions with dllferent characteristics. (Continued from Page 1) Dr. Baade is meeting classes pared by Jones, Carpenter Meeting at C~ub 11 a.m. on Monday, Wednesday, Supervising Principal Frank and Friday of the weeks ofMar~h Morey estimating income and ex- WIL, Woman's Club Hear 2 and March 9, and agaln the fol- penses for the next seven years, db h _ I lowing Monday. There will also be Dr. Carpenter was authorized to Ca ury on Tec nlea a period for questions and discus- instruct the archi!A!ct to plan an Assistance sian held in the afternoons of the adequate 2400 square foot all Dur-I al Dr. Walter Baade, astronomer scheduled Mondays at 2 p.m. The , pose room as well as seven new . The United Nations technic Mount Wilson and Palomar Obser- Public is cordially invited to at- classrooms, a health room, and 'an assistance to under _ developed ,J.ti!.. J~aIIon R. HOover, Jr., of Wallingford and, ·Dr: MIldred Dunn ot Media, "ttended a smtiI dinner at the Merion Cricket Club laat Thursday in honor of Mr •• Francis H. Evans of AUanta, Ga., the new prealdent of the Alumnae Association of Wellesley College. The dinner was given by a grOUP at former classmates. vatories, is giving a short course iend allY of eit. her theh im ho rwniinllg boer administration office. . xIm countries is recognized thb y me.m - atternoon sessIons, w c Pressed to provide rna wn ber nations as one of e maJor at Swarthmore College on "Galac- held at the Sproul Observatory on practical ecdnomles and secure the and most constructive activities tic and Extragalactic St,rue,tures", I the campus. Dr. Baade will also most building possible under the • G' ' A Ph.D. graduate from the UnI- give a lecture on "Galaxies" scho~l district's borrowing calpa··1 h . Mrs. Wayne H. Randall at RIverview road wlll be hostess to her club at a luncheon-bridge at her home Monday. of the world organization; eorge versity of Gollingen in 1919, Dr. the Meeting House on F n'da y, city, Architect Howell Lewis Cadbury, director of UN, ttehcm DI-Baade spent 12 years at tbe Uni- March 13, at 8: 15 p.m. Shay is said to have reached cal operations, told t SWw adr nesdoarye verslty of Hamburg, and 'in 1931 a plan which could realize these 'wniogmhte nin gtahteh eWreodm laans' s Cleu bhouse. be became associated with the Bob Clothier, Jr., of Columbia facilities at a cost close to $300,- 'Mount Wilson and Palomar Obser- avenue, class president ot the 11th ODD. In the p I a n the 1100 Mr. Cadbury was presented vatories. He has spent a great deal Grade High, will entertain at an square foot multipurpose room in jointly by the Swarthmore branch of time since then in pioneer work open house f or h '·5 cI ass mates fol - the old building would be used as of the Women's International Phyllis' Kieizien of South Ches- . ter road, is one of a ,,"oup of 40 students at Mt. Holyoke College which does Gray Lady work at ihe Leeds' Veterans Hospital in Northampton, Mass. The groUP makes the trip to assist with rec­reation parties. In investigating the grouping of lowing the Junior Prom this eve- an art room, freeing a basem*nt League and the Swarthmore Wo-stars into associations, the struc- ning. room to house electric service for Mr. and' Mrs. D. W. R. Morgan of Strath Haven avenue returned home Wednesday morning from a three-week trip to the West Thom Seremba UPHOLSTERY & Coast. CUSTOM SLIP COVERS CHAIR SEATS rebuilt-new webbing,' springs .retied -$10.00 to $17.50 SEAT CUSHIONS remade-new springs, new padding , -$5.00 to $8.50 Fumiiure completely re-upholstered it! reasonable pri~es Over 25 years experience-Many satosfied customers on Swarthmore and vicinity 21 S Felton Ave., Collingdale, Pa. man's Club in a meeting which the new' building. Certain im- began at 8 p.m. Mrs. Mar-ris Fus- Provements to heating and light- sell, international relations chair-man for the Woman's Club, and ing of the old building would be Mrs: Roy J. McCorkel of WlL included. ts t cooperated in arrangemen 0 Volers Have Say bring the UN specialist here from Board President Carroll P. Lake Success. He was introduced Streeter, Finance Officer Jones and by Mrs. Philip Jacob. From Our Gounnet Shelf We Bring You ilIe South Arnaud's Shrimp Sauce (Famous New Orleans :Restaurant) John F. Spencer favored th~ ,bond Mr, Cadbury told of the com­issue over authority financing be- bined efforts of United. Nations cause, ·with strict ~onomies in the agencies such as World Health, next year or 50, they. believe the Food and Agricultilre which in school can construct and operate the first year of operation had the addition within Its present tax made available fund~ of $3Tmll­~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Irate, and a bond·issue would be lien. The technical assistance pro­=- the least expensive In the long gram used $32 millions,' he said. run. They also felt asking the elec- Deploring the fact that this year torate for a bond Issue is the more there will be only $20 millions democratic method and that local available for this specialized use, problems should be handled on he said that requests have -piled the local level whenever possible. up from needy governments in Phone Sharon Hill 0734 Southern Beaten Biscuit (MontlOJDery, Alabama) Thin.Sllced Smithfield Ham ,LUXURY CARPET $10 SQ.'vD. (Smlthlleld. Vlrpnla) This is a new kind of carpet, and 11 mD,8( he seen to' be eppreciated. Thick. resili<;nt, 10ng-weari?8' soil.resislant - looks and feels like carpet costmg dollars more. 100 lIer cent spunvis rayon, 14 colors. 110. sq. yd. Olher luxury carpet from $8. (eotton) to sao. Rugs and carpet "'!JIlples displayed in the home. d'AU'Sc)t\ & CD",g~n)'-. Mohawk Carpeting • Complete Size Range • Oriental RoIlS 100 Park Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. SWarthmore 6-6000 - Clearbrook 9-4646 Paulson KNOWS Carpei Mr. Jones figures by curtailing excess of $40 millions. Mr. Cad­maintenance and operating costs as bury based his report on figures far as practical, a substantial sur- available December 31. plus can be carried from 1953-4 He urged a greater support of to underwrite .a deficit due in the aims and scope of the pro- 1954-5. Borrowing capacity will be gram at the community base and building up again each year to suggested that this might be one meet any emergencies. of the most creative contributions Benne 'WaferS-co*cktail Bits (Old Slaye Mart, Cbarleston. S. C.) Orange Blossom Honey ~Ith Comb ' (Galliesvme. Flo<lda) Antiques & Gounnet Shop PROVIDENCB ROAD In this way the immediate in- citizens interested in the UN :WALLINGFqRD, PA. ' Acruetahsoe riItny wtaoxu ldm bilrliangge, iws ahvicohid eadn, iC~O~U~ld~tn~ak~e~';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~!:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;9i' Several years hence, when would appear operation expenses INTRODUCINGr will not be covered by the present 5 . Y 35 mlJl tax limit, Mr. Jones teels Wyco Sock 'N' weater arn the Sta~ Legislature will grant ,Shrink-Proof, Moth-Proof, Wash,Fast ~olors extra millage levy· through redls- R,g. 60c Skein (boJ)-lntroductory Pnce, 49c districting or liardshlp clasSifica" Mare:h 6-14 Inclusl,;e tion. The Board renewed its de- ~i§§§§§§l5§l5j§!ji§§§§l5§l5i§i§§§§l5§l5j§!ji§i§§l5§l5i§~$§l5~n tennination to keep pressing for Ut-I-ty Sh' Op •• _A"!r' such relief. An income tax'" would I I , . _ remain open as a last resort. S rth Mid-Winter Prices .' -. ~.,' Reduced! ON • Sport Coats , '''., ." ~'.' • ,Jackets • • Winter, Slacks "P'-;' • Wool Shirts • Sweaters, etc. 5, Int. AI Carney, Mgr. 8 Park Ave. Hope that maintainance cuts 19 South Chester Road, wa more would not result in unsafe condi- CHARLES H. GRIER tions, and that educational stand-I~~==~=~~======~~=;~~~~~~~::;=~ ards wouldn't suffer in budget paring was expressed by two visi­tors when President Streeter ·ask­ed for sentiments of c.itizens pres­ent. Assurance was given that was no intent to allow un-safe buildings or to stint in the instructional area. Visitors voiced confidence in the Board's ability to arrive at a proper decision after its exhaustive studies;' one or two said use 0'1 an AuthOrity would provide greater leeway 'and they felt the community would be glad io pay for it; others definitely pre­ferred the bond issue. Mr. Morey predicted a consid­erable increase in revenue from high school tuition pupils for the next three or four years if high school basem*nt rooms now occu­pied · by elementary grades can be vacated by September 1954. It was ~ Specializing i!1 sho~ run j~bs . for those who prefer perfection PRI1TTIIIG" H~RRY BEWLEY 11 11.,. . III West Baker Street I MEDIA PA. REAR OF" MEDIA F1RS~ NATIONAL BANK . MEoIA-6-04B6 Harvard Inn Dining Room Open To PubUo PERM:AN'ENT and TRANSIENT GUESTS Harva~ and Rutgers Avennes Phooe Swarthmore 6-9728 estimated about $70,000 a year would result from this source alone until about 1957-58 when the recent merger of seven nearby districts would have its own fa-cSiwlitairetsh rmeoardey waonudl dth lee aevxeo drouosm fr ofomr ~======~=======================: the Borough's own increased resi-dent enrollment. It was the con­sensus of the Board that a pos~fble excess of 600 pupils in the high school could and' should be car­ried for these interim years. Tops Class David J. Cox, son of Professor and' Mrs, Reavis Cox. of Walnut lane, has been awarded the Ayres Pri2II> at Wesleyan University Mid~et"wn, Conn., for the fl'I!Sh-1 mati. With the highest average the first semester. Cox is a gradu­ate of Swarthmore High School. , J. E. LIMEBURNER CO. Guild Opticians Experts in the Making and Fitting of SpeCtacles and Eye Glasse.· 827. LANCASTER AVENUE 6915 LUDLOW STREET _ BRYIII.MAWR, PA.· UPPER DARBY, PA. 1923 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA 3, PENNA. • .' wn·."e n, ~. "." Museum Highlights Dr. Alfred Kidder 2nd SJ>?ke on "Highlighta ot Our University at Pennsylvania Museum" at the meeting of the Woman's Club Tuesday afternoon. Dr. Kidder is assistant director of the museum "" I D YOU, KNOW? In case at a War Emergency imywhere in the Metropolitan Philadelphia Area, Swarthmore would need approximately 100 'trained auxiliary pollce. Molly Huse, eight year-old daught~ of Mr. and M.s. H. W. HUse of Vassar.8venue,'8 member of the Quaker City Figure Skat­ing Club, on Februiu-y 26 pasSed a preliminary figure skating t~ givm by the club at Lansdowne. ' IIfiss Charlotte Hobbs of Orange, N. J., will spend the week-end at her home on Park avenue. , , the largest of Univetslty museums. Without training, confUsion would result. Let's be prepared. Call SW 6-0122, the Swarthmore Pollee Headquarters, and volunteer as an auxiliary pollcem8n. Women,lfor daytime duty, are needed aa well as men. oniy 24 hours of trliining are required. So call SW 6-0122 now. Police are on duty 24 hours each day. Give your name, address and phone number. SWARTHMORE CIVIL DEFENSE COUNCIL • The speaker gave an account of the educatiolial work Which m­cludes trips for children or Phila_ delphia and suburbs, Sunday afternoon 'movles, Satur.day morn-ing ,programs for children, TV I!.--------..,...-------__ -:-___ ..J... __ ~ programs and concerts. "The' main High School St'!dents Barbara Dunn EJected. function' of the museum" how- _ ever", said Dr. Kidder, "is one of Begm- Ch.arities Drive '54 Basketball CaptaIn- .' research and publication. Jt Each One of the staff teaches in some department of the University, and thus '-the ·ipusE!Um. serves as a lilboratory for the various de­pa~ tmenb. Swarthmore junior, and senior ,Pat Blake, captain of the Girls' high schools will open their an- 1953 basketball team, entertained nual two week fund drive for 14 the Varsity coaches and squad at different charities Monday, March a buffet supper last Thursday "The UniverSity Museum,o1 con­9. Each student is asked to contri_ night at her home on Amherst tinued Dr. ~dder, "has done a great deal in archeology, and to a lesser extent, has been concerned with living primitive peoples!' A very. interesting piece of research is now being conducted in Tur­key. Dr. Kidder showed many beautiful slides made during their study by various, members otllie stan in Alaska, British Honduras, Peru, Iran, and MghanIstan. The meeting was opened. with a short musical program by John Ellis. a graduate of Chapel HllJ and 'the Julllard School at Music. He is at' present an instruCtor at JuilJard and Westtown. He played two compositions by BrahmS and three by modem American and French composers; 'all of which were greatly enjoyed. BOROUGH OF 8W"RTHMORE Ordinance No. .55Z bute a notn.iJ.tal sum of money to avenue. aid the work of these charities. The Varsity team missed an Donated money '!fill be collected undefeated record by one game-In the homerooms as directed by the last one with Upper Darby, but the season was an entirely suc-the home rOOm representative. cessful all.!' Jrom the standpoint Aft" March 20, when the drive of Coach Mrs. George Willets, ends, the United Charities Com- who considered it the best' one mittee headed by Liz Forsy;tbe and in the last five years. She com­Comella McKernan will allot the mented particularly on the ex­appropriations 'to each charity. cellent teamwork and the fine ball The selected list to receive aid handling. "They deserved an un-includes: defeated season," she said. The American Cancer Society, The inexhaustible' six. who the American Friends Service played every game. include Cap­COmmittee, the Association for·tlre tain Blake.. Barbara Dunn and Blind, the Community Chest, Marilyn Gree .. forwa~ds; Eliza_ C.A.R.E. and UNESCO, the Fost- beth Forsythe, Jane Leavitt and er Parent Plan, the Heart Founda- Delores Zensen, guards. Pat was tion, the Junior Red Cross. the high scorer for the team, mak­March of plmes, Medical and ing over 3D points In every game Dental 'Servle"" for Needy Stu- but the tatal last one. dents, the Save the Children Teams played and the final Foundation, Salvation Army, the scores follow: Lansdow~e, 52-35; An Ordinance to pro~lde for the Societ:r for Crippled Children and Haverford 40-40; Media 52-35; . Improvement of Rutgers Avenue I AduIts, and the Tuberculosis Fu!ld. Glen-Nor 56'-12; Chester 47-30; between Marte_ and Juniata Although the drive is planned Riilley Park 56-33; ,and Upper Avenues in' the Borough or and carried through by high Darby, 23-27. SVWIsIaornt hmtoorr e.a ssBensdsJ ngm' atkhien g enptrior.e. school stud?nts, inquiries are re .. ' Barbara Dunn" junior, was cost thereof against the abutting ceived, each year from interested elected next- year's captain. Properties. suhJect to exlatlng residents as to whether they may The graduation of Pat, Marilyn, contract 'With 8wartliini>re Gar- contribute to the fund. Money may Liz and Delores will end the dens. Inc. ' . , .. "".," ." 6e donated to tho fIiild by sending, PQ.Werful combination thai lias • T~e Swarthmore College LlnLE. THEATRE CLUB Presents the Student-Faculty Production THE DOG BENEATH THE SKIN By w. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood March 12, 13, 14 8:15 P.M. IN 'CLOTHIER MEMORIAL PRICES faEt;:: • pring • Ion Views! . . ~ , 15 South Chester Road .-. '.- I TUB COUNCIL OF' THE BC~RC.ucm I it to the Sehool or leaving It at worked. together for the OF' 8WARTED(ORE DOES ORDAIN: th~e~S~~~h~O~O~I~O~ffi~ce.~. ,: .-'~~~~----~t~h~ree~~y~e~a~rs~.-_______________~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Section 1. Rutgers Avenue-shall . • • improved by the setting of curbs, Installation of driveway 'entraDee$, and the paving of the cartway there­of. 'In aCcordance With Borough specI_ fications. from apprOJUmately Statton o + 0 SOUthw .... <!ly to approx1niately Station 4 + 80. as more 1fart1CUlarly shown on the plan and profile of Rut­gers Avenue. Swarthmore BorOUgh, I' Delaware County, Pennsylvania. "-~pre­P .... d byG. D. Houl1jlan. iJor!>ugh'. Engineel". dated January 31. 1963. All of the work IncUcated and referred to by said plaD :Is hereby a.uthorlzed. Section· 2. Th.e proper Borough. om. eers are hereby authorized ,after due advertising In accordance With law, to enter Into the necessary contract Of contracts with the SUccessful bId­, der for the' performance of said wark.1 Section 3. UPQD the OOnlPletlon the said work, the abutting properties shall be ·assessed by the toot-front rule In accordance wIth Jaw, ConDcil reserving the rlglit to mate such ad­Justments and, sald·- assessments may be necessary for the equitable pl1catlon of such assessments. amounts so BSBMsec!, shall• •~ be!~'fy-:i3~j to the Borough within _' days after the completion and any such unpald at such time shall est at 6% per anritim from comple,!;!on. and If not P~;~:;~~~ I ftve (5)' months of SUCh. C the Borough SoliCitor Shall liens to be tlled against the respective par­ties, . with accrued Intel'€!$t from the­date "of completion, In addition costs, fees aDd penaltes, as authorized by ,law~ The Bcirough reserveS the right to coUect ~Ia assessment by ac­tion In B8SUIllpslt. or other lawtul Qleans. In accordance·~th ,law: Section 4. The- obUgatlon or SWarth­more GarcJens, Inc.. and any trail$­feree or asstgnee of said corporation. shall be determined In BCCOn!aDCe With the" agreement between the Bor­ough of Swarthmore and that corpo_ ration, dated October 14, 19.5 1. ' . ,'PABSJrn this 2nd day of March, A.D, 1953. , ..: ' Here is Chrysler Quality -' at, :SURPRISINGLY LOW COST!' • It you're "budget-minded", this may aa!nnj .... you ; ; ~ • •.•• this ahmning new Chrysler Windsor can be bad for little more than a low-priced car with llll ita eztmsl • !!ere's Cbrys,Jer quality &lid prestige at modest cost. Plus Cbr.YaIer size, eonifort, and safety too! • Famous sPitfire engine is a joy to mrnmaM • __ in "very driving situation! , • Full·time Power Steering, if yOU wish jt, leta yOU turn and park with the gentlest of guidance No wheelfightever! The beautiful .': \ • Immediate respflnse, too .•• you don't have to turn the steering wheel so much to turn the front wheelS. It's safer all ways! , • Revolutionary Oriftow shock abeorlKira waft yOu over rongbet roads as gently as a breeze. • ChryaIer engiDeermg has added maze new improve­ments first to cars than all othera combined. • If your next new car means a "big decision" on your part, better investigete the 1IWSt that's to he had! :; -llIIJl&rially when it's priced below all expectations! • BOROUGH OF' SWARTmorORl!:, 'By H ~ PIIB[, Pm!ldent Of OolUlCU • CH,RYSLE.R WIND~OR-one of Americo~ first faniilyof fine corsI ' . At_: ELLIOTT n.i,rnu~ISOi!'l1 IIonJugh SeCretary ,(SIIIAL)' '. ~VBD tllIc! 2n~ day of ~. A.L\;". CJIARLB8 R. 1WS,9n,y. ~ - R-AN,NUM &WA-ITE ., " , • CHESTER ROAD AND YALE AVENUE • I SWARTHMORE 6-1250 ,

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.' .,' P~~aill~e 6; ~~;~~~~~~~~~~:~~::~~;1L~e~hm;a~n~n's~ B~a'rt h Talk He must accept cr reject pod. M~ h. Is fO~ ~ a d~on, -- Se' ". , finds bimae1f under the judgmen "II I i . 36 Years Auo in Swa, rt,hrrwre Continues Sunday nes,of God., , •. . ~ I In the second place, Barth It ap- . From the Swarthmorean Files The third lecture In the curre~t proach led him w a dIlIerent con- ~. of oame at the ..:'.!e ~ Cooper Foundation series was gi ~ cept of God. Since we know yod ~BotoUgh In conformance with . Wednesday. This organ- en last Sunday night by Dr. P.a only through God's rev4!lBtion in JIIIlgIneer·. PlaD. "'l'heSwarthmore Garage has I Dolman f the oldest in Lebmahll of princeton Theolorc: Christ, the Ideas of ,God which TH1I OOtINCJL OP THBE~~~ purchased two new glass enclosed lzation, one :hosename stands Seminary. His topic was 'T e man achieves through his own OP BWARTlDtOBB DO ..... of the . mf rt of their Swarthmore, d of a Corrective .. _ us! be re- 1Iecd ... 1. At the acIe _ town cars for the co o. ed for sOCiability, Phi\aDthropy,. an Changing Course ill Ith the thinking or philosop .... m Jy B<>roush of s_re. certa!l!.:tr-;; patrons. Only ten cents IS ~!its Music Is planning a busY wmter Theology", and de t w an- jected. Man can think proper ..,. street 'lmpIO_n: of SoUth for trips within the Borough d making surgical dressings and work of Karl Barth, the Germ about God onl,Y after hia re~? mad.:.,:~.::;' .!:'~ Menue. In between the hOlm! of 7 a.m. an Iliows for hospital trains w be Swiss theologian. has heen illuminated by Christ S ~nfotman ... with the topography p~ 7 p.m. Sundays and holidays In- ~trlbuted through the Emergency In 1919 Barth caused a revol~~ revelation. This lead\; Barth to an tOl' s~ore _ J~.!:!1>OCi cluded. , gut Aid Committtee to the war hos- tion In the theological world wh on Impasse. If God. as revealed. hearS ~:;:tn:':a'2~ COnfonnitY wi: The S. P. M. held its re ar broad he published his. commentary ;::';v- no relationship to what man thinks _In plana and, ",::I~v~ meeting at !he home of Mrs. John pltals a • the book of Romans. He was . he apart from .revelation, ~ow c.an lIle wth the ~ of the JIoroup • en to this work by the problem to man understand revelation?' At ..r.'::~:·e~lDg Into the __ • Building #eHl Pumping Capacity. , For Tomorrow Another Springfield Water Improvement Project As Philadelphia Suburban W ater C ~m pany.' s mne_not riks onefe pdipeedl inwe continually expands, more pu:pm~e q~~ intricate sy.tem. deliver Pure Springfield h Water f :eu c';:::pany'S continUQUS Im­This is one of many p ases 0 tho c;onstanlly increasing water­provement Program w meet 'tating requirements of Suburban Philadelphia; a pro~ ;""7"W' orlll the expenditure of $19,~,OOO between the en 0 •. War II and the end of thIS year. . tallations are under con- Currently, more than 20 pump-f. . 1953 There then 8tmction and schedul~ for c~mp CliO.!' ~ 'fury stations will be 5 main pumpmg statiOns an.. awu . . in service. d'l . g population Building for tomorrow to serve a:tea I r gro:~le-delivered . an ample supply ofhthe bnel stpow:~le ~~~umber One Job as dependably as uma y. . which is composed of a vanety of JObs. . ~~ SPRINGFIELD Y'~~~ PliHADELPHIA' SUBURBAN WATiOR COMPANY SerVIng 49 ""lL.lflrC'Darrll{,1 ,n Dr 1aware, M 0 rot 9 om!"',. ond (I1('-S't- \'OV"',E'C . , . faced, as a paswr, of having this point Barth's position has With 8> G. 'MItchell fOJ" the dotng" of each a sermon each Sunday. He hanged. He seems to be takinll. a this work Is hereb, ratlfted and, P-pr . __ " hat he could c H IY Spirit proVed.. asked how ...... w Barth greater interest In the o. . PASIIBD this 311d day of _. preach to a CODil'8gation. he as God's revelation w aU men AD 19118. tried to correct the trends of T - which enables them w understand . BOROUGH OP SWAl\THMOBB hi d HIs thought came Christ . B H 1.INDLKY PI!lBL ology of, • ay., orthodoxy" the revelation In· 'President of Oouncn to be known as 'Neo- ThIrdly this approach changes • ELLIOTT RICIlAlUlI!ON because it tried to keep the v;:: the natu':" of theology. Theology A~gh BeCretary of historical or orthodox has w do justice to paradox. Truth (BEALl while reinterpreting It, for the does not come In neat logical for- APPROVh~~1IJ.9:d clay modem wori d. that mulae.. Opposing concep ts cl ash oCfH AMIIo.I&rc&. R. R. USS. -.J, Dr. Lehmann pointed out arid yet both must be held for the Burgeoo Barth started all of his t~~ sake of truth. An example of par- ~_~I~~'=---------- from the point of :'Chrlstology, adox is that God is just and yet BOROUGH GF BWARTHMOBB that Is he .began with the doctrine also merciful. The problem is how Ordinance No. ISM about fue Divinity of Jesus. Mak- to express theologx so that socl:ty An Ordinance to provld~r .:!~ Ing this start, Barth found ~t can understand It without losing cO~I:~ ~ ~ cD. BOI'­fr. ree consequences followed. d the paradoxical truth Itself. ::gh proPerty. Nont' I::'~~ the relations between man r:. Dr. Lehmann poin~ out that . =:~hA~=n"Avenue. God are the relations of c . Barth'. theology has been contln- . OP TBB BOROUGH When ",an is confronted by Jesus ually' changing as Batth IJ'lnks rJ?ls~~oRZ DOE olU)AlJf: through the problems Involved. section 1. Pur8WU>t 10 due ad_­The critics may scorn It for change, tlslng. a contract lib,:!: ::~= but the great minds which ponder ~':. bJ..th:U::o;:r bIdder. for the most deeply cannot remaln In one oonotructlon of '. one-otory. ~ DiLuzio and Sons Florist Form~r CARNS 650 Baltimore Pike Sprln9fi• ld, Del. Co .. Po. SWarthmore 6-0450 • op •• ' A.M. t. 6 ';M. block truck garage. meaaur~ 80 position. proslinatel:r thirty by thirty-ii." ( • So 95) feet. on pJopel"tJ ~ the BOr- NEWS 'NOTES ough. situate on the NOrthlner!~~Io~ Da.l'tmoutb Avenue at ita loV.l ........... Mrs. Howell Lewis Shay, Jr.,?f :r~~venU6 In the :/IorOUgh Walnut lane Is recuperating m Beotlon 2. The .. Id contract IIhaIl Crozer Hospital following a major he _pared by ~:en :t:::I:;; operation on FebruarY 28. ~:.t~ =oatloDa for satd "",rlt Mr Samuel Hanna of Maple ~at are now on 1I1e In the 0lIl06 of aven~ is Improving following a the 1IOrOU8h sa::.u-r; .. ~n: '!: Mr d Mrs. the contractor of' _.. _ ~~~~~~S~S~~~S~~~~"~II rfi!Cent operation. • an _ with the terms _ con j 5 $ $ S Hanna will leave today for a traot. , . month'. vacatl, on In Bel AIr, Fla. Seotion S 'fl 'htheme ~b~,:~~ CO~ED BEAUTY SALON Open Thor_flY Nigh ... PARK and DARTMO'iJTII An. .' • I Mrs. Thoma. W. H opper 0 f Dog- pthrlea tDeodl 'OoUugth 0 an amount IJUIIIC \ en•• .t,;A;, wood lane spent thEl week-end at pay all ooeta . Incurred In ClCIIIII8CtI Cornell University and atten~ea WI:'~ w: 2nd 4&:r of Katch. the annual luncheon and meetinll AD 1968. of Federation of Corneli'. Women's .. BOROUGH oP SWARTHMORE ., By H LINDLEY PI!lBL ClUbs. '11 snli ' PrealdOnt . of council . Mrs. George E. S. oway . Attest: BLJ.IO'lT RICHARDSON daughter Mr •• Henrietta Fricke of Bo<OUgh secretary . North Chester road, will leave w~ (BEALl, day by automobile for a t"(o" AP=~~ ~:: 4&y week vacation at Sanibel Island, ~,:;.~l' Fla. r---~~'::"'-----:--:- • • • So ... ~y •• " •• , •••• at you ............. ' .... . ••• when y_'.e .13J.Q.~~ ~I WIIIIII'S ,hest friend :egillar pay increases Pleasant, comfortable surroundings Vacations with pay • Continuing opportunity for advancement. Regular employmeht • There just isn't room In this ad, girls, w talk about all the advaittages ~f being a Bell Teleph?ne o!"'rawr. But you can get the full swry in a personal mterVIew •• Yon can ask questions you may have in mind, ""d got a~-and1:: answer. '11>ere are open1ngB right now, ~,~ the start. No experience ii needed. ll!Sl.drop m at 0110 of the addresses below. .. A ~r place I() fIJOTTI" 6919·LutliowSh.,.., Upper Daby, Pa. 1631 Ardt S ••• ut, Phnad.lphla, Pa. , ®. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPAfiY OFPENNSVLVAN~ . , .- • , • '. • on washday ------- aD AutomcatieGas Water Heaterl C10thus wash clean I" hOi _hit and you can . depend QI'I an automatic vas watur h~ for a plentiful supply. No matter when you wash or how lara. the Wash. the,. Is a constan. supply of Irwb""'" hot watur _liable automatlcal.,. Select the Qulomatlc gas watur heatu~ that . flUs y_ hoc. hold needt at your !""m ........ · clealer's or any IIhlladeJplila Ekctak: suburban sto're. • PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPAI' . '~. • . ' • " ..-.. I • Jones Expla".ns Bond eleventh !l"ade to assist the student in realizing hia abilities and fur­. .'. ,thering vocational interests. If Issue atiHomeSchooI work Is ~tisfactory,' confer- . . , ences sometimes . ~veal a· too • heavy schedule Jor ,the pupil's Teacher Panel Gives Local' pbyStclll and menial capacity. If School Aims, . a 16~year~0Id hits&. scholastic ,Methods ' slump he'iS .alded .In ...... v~luatlng Donald ,P .. Jones, vice.presldent of the Scho~l Board, expWned to the Home and School Association TUl;!,lnillY 'light hQW inCl'<!as~ es­timates of tuition income ove, the next.-~lfVeraLyears,a.d enabled the Board to see the building and op­eration I)f additional ,elementary facilities through a ,bond Issue, which had not seemed 'possible when ,it analyzed the .problem at last ,fall's m~itng of ,the Associa­tion. Mr. Jones also reassured any parents I"'homig"t . have feared quality .I)f .i~tructI9n, safe1;y' .. a!1d efficienqy . qt bujl,dlngs, lack of a multi-purPose roo"', o;>r delay of the expansion project might re­sult fro)J1: the Board's. deCision to ask ~he I!,ectorate f'lr a ·bon.d issue instead of· resorti~ w an Author-the goal. H<tnry Hofmann, :twelfth grade spon,sor and guidance counselor, told of the Msistance given seniors in selecting ·.the path of later life. Conferences Ion child and parent desireS, ability and llkuhood of sUccess as well as v\3tts with col­lege representativ"ll .ilre provided the 80 to 90 per cent who plap to matriculate. ,For the remainder abiUty and "ptlt~de ·tests and job interviews are arranged. A work program ·has been hoped ,for -b\lt se&IjlS dlfticult';n ,view !If ilIradua­! ion r"!lnirements. DeveIPpments in ~tary demands ,are brought to 'llle . PI!P~, ''The ,guidance pro­gram", conclud~ ¥r. Hof~_~nn, "Is geared for the i!reatest· help to the pupil. Anl( failure Is not due .to the lack of '1nf()II)1atiori on the pupil or laek of effort." ity. ,He' ... further expressed th~ 'Miss McKie p' aid ''''bule to .her Boal'li's 'Iltent w ch.an/le to an ,.',. " . AuthOrity if 1'01' any" reason it 'fonner .melltpr ~)1om ,he ,r~~og­should appear the bond Issue;. ·,~.·..~.e.d. .i n ,th.e, ,a u-di,e nce, Dr. ·Arthur though. te,:!, Id not be ad- Jones, father qf Donald.,fo!1"11, and Mrs. J. H. Ward Hinkson. mem­bers of the .Senlor Garden Club were guests. gram Chairman John Seybold ad- Foundation. was guest of honor at journed the meeting at the close a luncheon given Wednesday by of the pauel talks. One genUeman the Junior Providence . Garden who evidently had an in,quiry was Club at the home of Mrs. Francis heard to remark, "Oh, well I'll Plowman of North Swarthmore send It to the newspllper". av~nue. Mrs. Charles Leedom and Early In the meeting tile Asso- liIiiiiii_iiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iliiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjjjjjiiiiiijjjjjjiiiiiiiii Mrs. Dantel S. Morse of Parrish rOlld entertained at a bridge­luncheo;> n at her ·home Tuesday. elation voted $35 wward expenses l! ot the dental health clinic and President Ford Robinson announc-ed a dec,lsion to establish a general purpose fund on which elementary teachers and students could draw for ext~a curric~lar expenses which the School Board can not meet. The Home and School will pre­sent human rel:ations movies In·tn'e I high school audiwrium at 8 p. m. Thursda,., ~prll 9. Its April 21 session will be devoted to a School Board presentation of the school expansion program. Named Co-Ordinator. Mrs. Irvin R. Ma~Elwee of Mt. HOlYoke place is co-ordinawr a school of politics held at Hannah. Penn House, Philadelphia, which is conducting' a series of lect.p,es to infonn Republican' wo­men (in poUjics. JohnM. Cumming. qf the Phila­delp) 1ia .Inquirer, will speak on "Prol?le~ Facing the· state mini,#ration" op March 11 • Comfo .... ble Roams Day or .Week Elevator STRATH HAVEN INN Swarthmore. 'Pac WALTER E. '''II OTT, Mgr. Telephone Swarthmore 6-0680 FREE 'ARKIN~ .t"s to Your Advantage ,(;O-OP . 'i griID .,.}VI>U . quoted' hi., teaching while a rr,em-equ", e. ., 'ber 01 the Unlverslty,of Pennsyl- Mrs. Samuql Crothers. Jr .• of , : The everuns s scheduled pro-, ¥ania faculty "free the student to "Rowin ~rae", WalUngford. who gram a panel. of .seven ·teachers; ak his d lsi " moder,!~ed, by IDgh --Scho.ol Princl- me. own ec ons. is leaving soon for ,WiUlamsburg, pal Williapl B~ imp1'8S$ed upon QueSllons pa"""ts'lI!'IY,have had Va., wbere she has accepted a Dartmouth Avenue (Ac:rossfl'om Borough HallJ parents the "chool's determination ~w~e:n~t:,'h~o~m~e~W~It~h~th~e~m~,y.r~he~n~Pr~o-:!,~P~O~Si~tI~o~n'-.:W~lth~~th~e~W~iUl~·a~ms~b~u~r:g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ w give aniJIdlvlPualized educa-tion to every chll!! .imm kinder~ garten'through twelfth grade. Mrs. Ruth Wright read an ac­count o( mean. of discovering needs of the Individual, and of value . of parent-teacher confer­ences prepared 'by Mrs. Grace Wit­ter, ,third grade College avenue teacher whose illness prevented her taking her scheduled. place on the panel. .Throughout this and later speeches the' development of the. "whole child" physically, emo­tionally. socially and intellectually was given as the aim. Democratic methods of learning Democracy was another theme. In conneotion with conferences it ,was st'lt¢.,t!1!!~ in preparing children for adult life It is necessary to realize there has been, a shift in the concept of the kind of life desired and hOi it should be attained. . Elizabeth Etrls. teacher of the combined second and third grade at Rutgers avenue, described edu­cation as '''not, pJ;ellaring for life, but.livl,n. g and, learning at increas-ed ml'!!tal and .... ""iallevels which lets eachchlld proceed at his own point ,.Of readiness. rate of speed and .- level of "chievement". Miss Etrls said. all records on an ele-mentary child are kept in a tolder and travel with him to junior hlgh school. Moderawr BUsh said separation of. th'c pupil'~ activities comes with Junior high schQOl where grade guidance counsellors adapt pro­gram to indivl,dual, \lnd Il\dividual to, program. Elizabeth McKie said the tra­dition jump to juniop high Is a hard one' oniy as an 'anticipatory: fear of the ,unknown. Here' resi~ dent and out-of-town pupils arl! mixed and there must be, added pro~sion for irtcreased abilities and skills. Adeline Strouse saw ninth grade difrering because the group must assimilate the addition of 30 per cent more pupils. Diversity of sub .. jects, 'greater n.umber of teachers, more formality. new ~ciplines and skilled subjects also are en~ countered. Diagnostic tests help in planning tenth grade rosters, at least five teachers consulting in the recommendations for each child. , Presenting , , the New 1953'Studebaker • ~ ketl/-r1~ eat ~ tie ~ ~/ It's almost unbelievably lowl It's impressively'long and widel Ii has the sleek-lined smartness of a c;ostly foreign ca•r and it's right down to earth in price I It's _ than .... leet hIP I .. 8Ia......" .... Starllu .... baJd-tup ...... ftHlble I , TrulJ • n_ flight Into tM ~fu.biie I ·The complefely new, sensationally different 1953 Studebaker unquestion­ably is the moat daring 8tep forWard of our times in auwmobile design. He .. , first by fclr in an American car, is the continental charm oj Europe'. moat distinguished cars-an impressively long new Studebaker that is 80 very low most t·~IOPiIe·flail _ over its topl Coirrie'ln and find out u,c;nt the excit­ing new 1953 Studebaker-dramatic in verVe Bad·i1fir-breath-uking in beauty iru!ide 88 w<il·.as outside. Find out how doWn to·~ in price itrea1ly ~ • A brand new type of Pow. St •• ,.ng A Stuciobaker.exdu.lYe-avoiloble In CoMmander V..a at moderate extra cost Huge new *e x~n ••• of safety glass all around All model.-Champions and Commander V-8t-bave one-pioce.ntar window. a. well al wlndshiekls. 'A new a*n d ...,., .ow <en .... of orCnrliy ~ gl ••• tho CCI' .road.llght slabll", on lharp tum. a. well al CVrvll Eilzabeth Barten described tenth grade as -a critical point. educa­tionallY, biologicallY and emotion­ally: Here _illc skills, acl1demic ·an!! social, essential In satlsfac­wrY adjUstment of the pupil to life take place, eIrectIve learning habits for senior high school are estabUshed, ability to think crit- ,icaUi "I'd a balanced cultural, Fusco Motor .Com.pany perspective are· developed. . Mary Annstro!Ig pointed out the value ot continued guidance Iii. Cltesterand F::.irview, .Roads Swart .... ore.Pa. '". " 'l • I 1

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P ..... 8 Letters to the Editor The oplnlOllB exprnsell beloW .. th_ Gl the Indlol4aal _ton. All letters 10 The 8~ m_ be sr,pO<L PBeud_ ma;- .... used It t .... Idenlll7 of tile mtee 18 known b)' the BdItor. ~ will lie pabJls_ ODIJ' at tile dls­cretion Gl tile B41tGr •. qUESTION GRADED REPORTS Dear Edilor: We agree in general with the goals of education set forth l;y Mrs. Bodley in her communica­tion, printed in your issue of Feb­ruary 20. We think, however, that the method advocated for· reach­ing them Is questionable. We object to the use of grades or marks in the elementary school for the following reasons: Grades are misleading; they confuse the issue; they are not needed to motivate good work; they tend to further competition rather than cooperation; they may leave hurts and scars. " worth" Is perhaps our top goal tor every elementary school child. Without such a feeling of worth accompanied by a belief in him­self and in his ability to cope with his world, the child's interest and e.flort cannot be fully mobilized. . We believe that this feeling of personal worth in a child is often threatened and sometimes de­stroyed by the use of marks. We haven't yet learned how to tell a child that he ranks below his playmate or his brother without running the risk of causing ,fears. resentments or feelings of in­feriority. Children can. and must be, helped to use their strengths and to overcome their weak­nesses (if possible) but help~d in ways that boost morale and pre­serve self respect. tional, growth. emotional or character Grades, as such, are never ob­jective. Three different teachers could well rate the ll!Pl1e piece of work on three different levels. Or -one teacher qlight well do like­wi. e on identiclll pieces of work . I know of two stude.nts 'who col­laborated on an assignment, one doing the diag~ams for' IIoth, tbe other doing summaries. The "A" pupil recdved "A's" on both items; tbe liB" pupil received "B's".\ Therefore, it seems to me, a graded report has no validity. As for competition-tbe pupils do ·compete among themselves on their dally assignments, and if a parent has not experienced this. it would seem to be ,,0 indication that his child is not interested in Reports Without Grades competition as such. True, written reports are nee- I feel that Mrs. Bodley finally essary for a chil~'s best develop- defeats her own case when she ment. But what kind is the ques- says, "The receiving of grades tion. There is one kind that seems need not frustrate the child if to us particularly useful, one that school and parents help him to goes into and comes out of the accept his place in the classroom," conference. To develop the kindl She. admits that. grades may be Grades A~e ".Misleadlng we have in mind, each Ifconferee" frustrating; ~nd she imposes a very Many studies have been made - father, mother, teacher, child large IF. My own experience has which show that marks are more (after _the 4th grade) - comes to been that, while children will ac­dependent on the values held by the coriferertc'e bearll'Jg u .• malllsb, cept their nniitatl0ll8, few parents the marker than on the quality of loo~e-leaf notebook. Each, in his have the vision and uO(lerstanding the work. We quote from a' own notebook, has listed . the to accept these limitations without pamphlet called, "School Marks child's specil\l interests, needs, putting pressure for impossible im­And Promotions", publiShed by strengths and weaknesses, and prowment upon the children. -By the National Education Associa- any other information, ideas or removing 1he grades, we remove tion. ''Rlnsiand conducted an ex- suggestions ·that he thinks may the need for pressure .. periment in grading a sample bear on the child's best de.velop- For these reasons, I say we arc arithmetic paper. 111 persons who ment. These notes constitute, for well rid of grades on the elemen­had taught arithmetic gave it each, the "ftrst half of the report." tary level, and I hope we will con-marks ranging from a low of 21 During the conference, discus- tinue to do without, them. to· a high score of 88. In another sion based on the notes of each, Sincerely, experiment he gave a hlMory will take place. Out of this dis- Lois G. Peterson paper to nearly 100 history teach- cussions plans will emerge for ers. They ratl!d it from 37 to 91." helping· the child go forward to IN APPRECIATION Marks Confuse the Issue. the best of his ability. Each of the We would all agree that In the participants will summarize the Dear Editor: education of a child it is highly discussion in his notebook and list The official closing of the important to preserve his lIinterest the plans made. These items con- Christmas Seal sale takes place at 1. n Ie arm.n"g and h"I S "pleasure in stitute the "second half of the re- the end of our fiscal year, and as learning!' It is our opinion that port." it approaches, if gives us great when marks are introduced into Ever after, each time a confer- pleasure to tell you that thi~ year's a learning situation they tend to ence takes place, all the note-· sale now totals $91,000 which is take the. attention of the learner books go along. Old plans are an increase of $8,500 over last away from the interest in the checked, new ones made, . and an- year, thing to be learned and away other useful report emerges. Such This success Is possible only tro~ .the ~ in learning it, .and self-made, constructive, coopera- through the cooperation of all. direct it to the reward or the tive· reports, ·made three or four The Swarthmorean has aided punishment, in· the form of a times each year, can inform with- greatly through the splendid mark, that follows the learning out comparing, can guide without .publicity given to our appeal fo~ or lack of It. hurting. support, as well as to the TB For instance, a boy we know Workshop - Trends in problem and our program of work has always been fascinated by Elementary Education throughout the year. We are numbers. He likes to play with Bess B. Lane - chair- sincerely grateful for this. co-thern, solve problems with them, man, Barbara aQ,d Charles Bo- operation and for the interest explore the world with them. Re- vard, Alice and Robert Brodhead, shown in our work! cently go~d stars were introduced Tom and Gretchen Casey, Tink We antiCipate a more Intensive into his classroom as a kind of and Katherine Church, Jane and program in the current year du~ marking device. These have taken ·Edward Cratsley, Ruth Enion, to the splendid response of Dela­his attention away from arith- William and Virginia McDermott, ware Countians to the 1952 metic and focused It on stars. George and Marian Patterson, Christmas Seal Sale, and we are Marks Are Not Needed to Eleanor Robinson, and Dorothy humbly grateful for the endorse- Insure Proper IIIotivatlons. Rodgers. ment of our work which this re-lf Il)8l'ks were the only way to get children to learn, we might have to use them in spite of their disadvantages and dangers. But there are oiher ways. Henry J. Otto and others who have made s~l!-.dies of motivation in the el­ementary school report that in schools that have done away with marks and motivated learning by other means, equally goou or better results have been obtained in the sUb{ect matter fields, and better results in those areas h~­log to do with character develop .. ment. ' Marks Tend te Further Competition Rather than eoo",ratlon. True. our children do need to know about the ways of competi­tion. But since they live in a com­petitive soci.aty they leam~ these ways from many sources. They learn them through their games, reading, conversations, radio and television programs. Children also need to know the ways of cooperation, for they live also in a cooperative SOCiety _ with the trend toward greater co­operation. It is our opiiuon that the school is the best place to further the cooperative way and that marks tend to block efforts in that direction. lIIarb Lea"" 111\1'18 AIh1 aeU. . on MaD7 ChUdren. . The establishment within each . chUd· Gf a "feeling. of personal sponse represents. WHILE IRON IS -HOT To the Edito~: I read Mrs. Bodley's recent let­ter with a great deal of interest. and found myself in complete agreement with her on most of her basic points-that the child himself is the greatest concern of parents 'and school; that children vary in _.abi\iJYi that they must learn to accept their own limita­tions; and that a certain amount of competition is. healthy.· It is strange, that with 50 much agflee­ment on basic Points~ we come to two entirely opposite conclusions. At the outset, let me say that I do not feel that our existing conference system is perfect. How­ever, I plan to reserve my com­ments and suggestions for a ~ore suitable time and place. I do feel that the two basic answers that a parent needs maY be discovered at' a parent-teacher conference. Those two facts, to my mind, are (l ) How is my child progressing in terms of his grade level, and (2) How Is my child progressing in . terms of his own abillty? If the parent does not get this informa­tion, I feel that It Is because the parent is not su1Ilclently interested or prepared t,o ask speclftc ques; tions. .J\. third question, ''How is my child dOing in relation to some­one else's chlld?" I feel 'bOolld not concern '!So as It has no aotual bearing on our own "bUd's educa- Sincerely Yoprs, Robert W. Bernhardt Executive Secretal'Y THERE GOES THE ROOF Wind can cauae" BeriouB damage. Let UB add E~- . tended Coverage to yOJ,lr Fire Insurance. Then your propert)' will be covered againat damaRe by wind, explolion and otter perllL PETER E. TOLD 1U Li ..... 0/ , ... ui-a"", 333 Dartmonth ·Ave. SWarthmore 8-1833 • n ••••1 -l1 ....-...C l n ...n You'll like the prices, and the quality, too. More and more folia a... learning every day that. you .are sure of better meat values . In your convenient Acme.· tender Standing ID ROAST~ 6ge:~·5ge nnB BEEF LIVER . . . AGAR'S SUCBD BACONCu~ PURE .oJUt SAUSAGE ~.'" .... ·4 .. .. roll 5" Girard's Ready40 .at Short Shank PICNICS ( 1.: ) .3ge: Genuine MIlle..,." Vea' VEA', ROAST Veal Claoptl ~N a ... SlIoadder Yeai CIIops Shank, Meek, Breast V ... 2t«1ttt, Setl~~~· ~ • 55et - 'lI,Ia50' • 750' ··5" FRESB . FLOUNDER lit -noaa ......... 1:8, "C'.t '" 750 Cod ,mets .. , .... Pollock Fillets ,. 2Sc I Haddock Fillets· '" 39c '"19c Mackerel - - t'21c l"ncaster Brand BEEF LOAF Large, Sweet, Juicy· (176 ORANGES ... oked, Dried size) Florida Valenda SNuor.t.b. westera WID. ... Appl. . Cora' . u. s. a",~od fancy, ...... Call1onda 1' •• ", BNaaoU , .. ,. c , .-_ , _ ''' .. a .... a .. 4':=a9G =.::r. aso '. PINK SALMON l::z49'= /JdeIII F_ey WhIte Tuna ~: HO Star-lUst C"unk Tuna 6~. 510 !)dial COOKED SPACBETTI,~,:~ .. al~,:za70 l'IlANCO·AltERICAN .~I 2!;.,""a1o CAIIPBE",,, cr AM CBOWDERa -- 550 SPAGBEU'I DINNER c"i.!::i~ ..;. 4aO JJdmI TOMATO "ASTE 5 :: aa;.·· BUN'J'lS TOMATO SAU~E 5 :.: aao .BOT CROSS ., BUNS 12:. 3ge , . . . .... tar., ..... • •. • ...... CORN ~ & .t. 23c: DECORBTTE GOUEN BAR. cm - 4Sc. corFEE BEECH-NUT !. 8ge !)dial Vacu .... Paoked CORa :.. ... 015~-a1. . PEANUT. BUTTER er!::; .. . . . .. en .... !' FARMDALE .P EAS ~. 21.. ... .. ~ 1:,:·33e 2t: 25e 25e 2111"0. can. PINEAPPLE JUICE Dol. g,IrITt r PANCAU Mil ~ DAn SLICES .,,:~---- =35e ·, ..... ~PrIM MILD CURE E. • 4t: ACME· .MARKET, Chester Rd., Swarthmore Open 7hursday an .. Friday to 9 P.M • Open Saiurday ·til 6 P.M. .. j: . ~----~ . , ) ' :' -" "00_-. __ '. , __ . ~- "-------- \ . ... , -. , . THE SWARTBMOREAN Page 9 T Girl Scout Troop 83 Holds Court of Awards Girl Scout Troop· 83 held a Court of Awards on Monday ~ their usual meeting room at the Presbyterian Church. Mothers of , the girla and Nelghborhood· Chair­man. Mrs. MaCe Gowing, were guests of the occasion. Mter a well·execu!e(( ftag cere­mony by Patrol 1, the leaders, Mrs. Victor Haworth wid Mrs. Robert Mather, presented the girls with the badges they had earned dur­ ·Ing the year. Patrql 3 then enter­talned with· songs, a piano solo and " report /if the h·oop's· activity to date. As a ftnale coo~t and lemonade we"" served by the girls in Patrol 2. :. . tOCAL HOSTS 31 Boys Receive Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Tucker of Cub Scout B dg Swarthmore avenue invite friends a es to he8\' Philip Wells of Haddon Thirty-one boys of Cub Pack Won:u;m's Club Notes The ftnal meeting of the bridge class will be held at 9:30 Mon­dey mornlbg at the home of Mi;s. J. Albright Jones, 303 Elm ave­nue. Heights, N. J. sPeak ·on "Organic 1~1 recelv<ed their ilJadges for com­Gardening" at 1617 SpruC'e Street, pl~tlng the required achievements Philadelphia, . on March 13 at 8 of tjlelr cub scout rank. As part o'clock. Their !laughter DIan.., a· of the ceremony, conducted last student at Bennington Cbllege, Friday evening in the Pl'esbyterian On T.uesday at 2 p.m. the drama will al80 speak on her recent ex- Church, each boy had to show department will give a one-act perieneeo at the ·Rest Ranch in something he had made, tell some- play, "Sally'S Hat Shop". This Florid., wherl! she spent 10 weeks _th ing he had done, or demonstrate will be followed by the ·regular on 8 college project. .ome performance requirement of His badge; or, as a group sing or stated meeting and tea. Mr. and Mr.. W.· Stanley Kite perform in a skit. Badges were The American home depart-of Ogden avenue· returned home presented to the boys by their ment .will meet at 10 a.m. Thurs­Tuesday after a month's vacation ,fathers or mothers. day for classes in tray paInting in Palm Beach, Fla. . Receiving their Wolf B"dges I\Ild lampshade making. - were David Cratsley, Nino De F"""-==--!.' ===.;;..==== C.'asslffed Ads ~ph"tis, Dick Forman, David Johnson, Nelson Schock and Ste­phen Edwards. Rubbish Collect/Oil $WiJrthJqOre Disposal Weekl,,",or Monthly .IIIS0NAL Folowing is a list of· award. and· Bear Badges went to Christy recipients: PEa,sONAL-Reglstered Spencer Decker, Saul Schwartzman, Jack Helen Calhoun, troop dramatics Corsetiere, Mrs. Elsie H. Mc- Snr<!er, Mike Fairbanks, Geor"e WARREN -"UC:E 8warthmore 6-2018 d I WiWams. Telephone SWarthmore S W ... an payer; Spencer CarrOll, troop 6-45a:J for appointment.. u van, KilOby Noye, David Scar- '''':~=55==~::::;:555=:;~ dramatics, player, cook and house- ' boro~h, Alan Stamford, Ralph I~" -.. = keeper; Antoni~a Fairbanks, troQP ~ERSONAL-Auto Priving Schpol Kletzien, Jack Jones, Bobby Wil- Swarthmor. ~.i":'. dramatics, player, and dog and - -professional instruction: We bur AI Drak Boob S W· I call_ for you. Edward F. Mau, ,an e, y mith and LLIAM BROOKS . cat; Jackie Gray, troop dramatics SWarthmore 6-2469 or CHester Larry Wight. • -h' &. and pIa yer; Anne H a,,!,orth, troop 2 - 4346• Presented with. Lion Badges ItII. . -es MR u"b..i..s. h Removed dr t · 1 ..... wns ow ..... General ama ICS, payer and swimmer; Plj:RSON'AL _ Electrioal wiring were Burke Jackson; Danny Har- Hawlin .. Ada Kroon, troop dramatics, play- new' and old, residential and ris, Jack Harrts, Jack Chambers, 236 BarcUng Ave., "orten, Pa er and cook; SuSan Marsh, troop comme,:"ial done il' _compliallce Larry Wight, Peter Bender, Skip dramatics and player; Janney w!th Fire Underwriters Speciftc- Bern.ard, Hunter AWson, George ,"'other tr d I .. tions.. S~.le and Service on ele". R· 00· F· S··· .." '. Pt· a er Heaters; Ranges, WasherS, ,- .... . "I saw It in The Swarthmoreab. ~ J • d t 1 ~. 'Tili'd .... rat'OIt lull"en'Ji HORACE A, ,. REEVES loll.og Coo.mc:t/o. • Residential • Painting • Commereial • Repairs • • AlteratioDs 17V2 So ... CH.ter Road ~ Swa .... more 6-3450 i . !; . tk.,. Christman & Joire SW 6-2290 HI 7-o~74 'Registered' PI ... IIIB, El.cirlcal Carpentry formica Kitch .. Top. "C •• tom Kitchen Caillneh" Charles E. Fischer' • , . •... , ., .... ..... , . oop. ramat cs; Susan W t > Form .. n,· Marty Franck Burton GUmm res on, troop dramatics, player, Dryers Pumps, Fans, -Cleaners Gabriel, Stanley Lowe,Robert RE~4IRfi:O ,It INST .. D ' hostess and wrtter; Babara Sey- and small appliances. Call: Ericl\ Wagstaff and John Spinkston. . W AaM-AIR HEATING I .:. . mour, troop dramatics and player, H. Haus~n, SW. 6-2850, Corner of All bo Furnal!es Vacuum Cleaned. Christine Sipler, troop' dramatics Park. and Michigan avenues. ys awarded their badges GEOR E I N or completing the requirements G MYERS and player; . ancy Thelen, troop PERSONAL-Sitter-reliable wo- for their badges by Satur- Box 48-Swarthmore &0740 dramatics and player; Linda Uthe, milO available by the hour, day day will be t . . I troop dramatics; player and metal' or week. Call Mrs. Krafft. SWarth- Sport.m 'Sh t aIi.en to the I" _ Mary Van Urk, troop !Jramatic~ more 6"4555. an s ow omorrow after- THOM SEREMBA '91 . . noon, March 14. Boys will meet BUILDER \ Swarthmore 6-2253 and p~ayer; J'!'yce Williams, trOop· PERSONAL-Grace Lewis Em at the Presbyterian Church - UP H 0 L 5 T ERE R dramatics, player, cook and child ployment Agency. Licensed and Sat- . care . Bonded. Phone SWarthmore urday. at 1 p.m. . . 1 t~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two new members of the troop, PERSO. NAL - RadiOS, teleVisIon S . h' Ph Sh Hili 0 . '6-5019.' - .I~USTOM SLIP COVERS ·1 = Sandra Lingham a .... · B'a·r· bara wart more H. S. one oron 734 ~,- . receIvers, record changers and ~ ....II Warburton, received their Qum- other electripal appllaneesrepair_ LoscsiD, Foul- Sh. ooting· ~ ~ . RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION erals. ed: Pro~pt service. Robert - BrOOD, ·Swarthmere 6"1548. The Delaware· County High ESTATE NOTICE FOR RENT 'School Foul Shooting Champion- ESTA'IE OP PAULINE E. OO.&IIER. . . ship was wo b ru·dl P k H' lata of the TownaiIlp of Ridley de. FOR RENT-Room with bath~ n y ey ar Igh ce ... d. ' . !1alldy to aU transportation. School with a total team soore of Letters ~entary ~ the above· SWarthmore .11-1148, dsYtiine. 191 for 250. This was the sixth an- ::te havl~ =r.""~ to the un. FOR RENT.. T __ g It ti nual tournament sponsored by the Igqect ,aU Ind..,te<I to the -. --.. e a rac ve Swarthm Hi h Sch ... Id Estate i\l'& requ_ ie make pay- . room, pri~a.te bath .. Space In ore' g 001 Varsity =~t, and those hanng claims Io_pre. beatM gar. agll' It_. ·desire.d.Call Club as one of the projects in the same, .. 1~C>Ut delay, to SWarthmore 6.1548. promOting harmonious relationship . ~.z: t:.7=h'=:u~ !OR RENT - 'Large, modem, in intersC'holasticathletics. Ridley Or to ' , . double bedroom - to business Park dethroned Swarthmore the JlOOOH4N E. OENS_. Attorney .:" ml en or couple. Breakfast privi- defending champions ' Girard Trust Bldg., eges. SWarthmore 6-8473: . ihlladelPhla 2. Permo. FOR RENT T Members of the Ridley Park ·6·St - 0 gentleman - te J B large third-floor room next am were: .oe urke, Harry Wat- ESTATE NOTICE bath, shared by one other. SWarth- klns, Ray G.bley, Bob Reph, Jerry PIANO TUNING MeJlIber of ·Natlonal A~I .. n of PlanO. TUners William H. Leamail . . Sunset. 9.-1082 8pee1a\ Ballea -- PETER OJ NICOLA • DrivewaV Construction Asphalt 01' Collc:rete Cellar Walls Re.Plaltered Pho.. Swartllmore 6-2526 Alterations P.R.R. freight Blcfg. Swartllmore, 'a; . J.F. BLACKMAN SW 8-8818 ESTATE OF.lI4YRTAW.I'ORTJm. de- more 6-1826. Price. Members of the Swarthmore m~.late of Borough of Swarth"· FO;R REr-lT-. Atlractive room with t~am were: Howard Shearer, Bill '~~~~~~~!I ~~~~~~ Letters of . ljath "- pleas~nt surroundings. Zle~enfus, Don Str~berg, Charles- - above &ltate h.;:S:'~;~:~ted 0:; :~: :"~~~9 transportapon. SWarthmore Gner, and Ca,ptain Bill Hoot who :nderslgned Who request all persons . _ .' . scored 417 high lor the locals. aVing claims or (!emands against the FOR RENT' Three -room d . .'. ~tate of the deCedent to make kn<>wn bath private enlrance E s lIan t 'rhe mdividual championship w~e88me andallpe ldbte f·b·· ,xceen wa b:r M . to the d' d t to rsons ned or usiness person~ Call SWarth- s .won y. oe artin of Glen-without d~y~"to·· make payment more 6-4857. . - Nor with 43 for 50. The next four HELEN P. DICKSON FOR RENT Pleasant rOom in in order were: Ken Eberly, of JOHN CHIQUOINE new hous~. Telephone SWarth- Sharon HilI-42; John Maglio of Princeton Aven!,ecu~rs more 6-6769. Haverford-41; Sheldon Dent of ~ , Swarthmore. Po. WAN,it" Sharon HilI-41; Mike Cagliano of ~ to their Attorney w." "=En H rf rd-41 . MORRIS H. FUsSETT, , .c:t..L".L IJ-We buy . furniture, ave 0 • rrophles wer::e. 12 South Avenue china and glassware, or any awarded to the team champion ~~~;t Pa. g~~6~2 items in general. CHester the individual cliampion an'd th~ '.- I ne~t four individual places. Six ESTATE NOTICD W~E.lJ--CBathinet. in good boys tied at 41 Th ~ . condItion. Call SWarthmore . ree were select- - - '- HORAeii B. 'Passmore RBAL lfSTATB- 6 lNSURANCB DAY andl'!llGJlT OIL BURNER SERVI<E :.fONDAY TIIltl1SATURDAY NOON SW 6-4041 SUNDAYS and HOLIDAYS E~~~n~!'n~ -cit\ ~A"i= 673658.. .. ed on the basis of Consecutively SW 6-0740 ~RSON, late of the Borough of WANTED-Research worker de- made shots. Tlie scores of other COAL warthmore. Deceased.. sires position. Good references. teams were as follows: Sharon Hill 609 S. eHBSTiI .. RD. !wAATHMOIUI, PIiNNA. _ Letatters Testamentary on the above Box N, The Swarthmorean.· -186, Ridley Township, 185, Ed- T./-hon. S ... 6.5510 FIREPL6.CE WOOD .QQ te havtng been gt"anted. to the" d to 183 'Y undersigned, all _OS Indebted 10 WANTED--Swarthmore newspap- ys ne - , Springfteld - 182 J A GREEN the. said Estate are requeSted to make .. rs 1893-1913, 1922-1929 for hl.- Haverford-182, Swarthmore--l77 payment. al1d those having claims to tonc"l p,UEposes. Box WZ The Glen Nor - 168, Dansdowne-160 f======:========J.~=';:·:':==::·==:::::'::::=::== p ..... nt the same, without delay. to Swarthmorel'n. . , Chester-' 159, Prospect Park-152: .. . :~. WILSON FOR SALE M<!m'bers of the tournament StI'Bth Haven Inn FOR SALE-Washing .,machine-- committe were Bill Hoot, chair Or·1o h swarthmore. Po. Deluxe Easy Spin model. Like A er. Attorneys new. SWarthm.ore 6-4819. man, Bill Kaulfman, Bill Haynes, . Sidney Johnson, Jr., Qt ' Charlie Grier, Howard Shearer, B~BEA'ITY, GREER & F<?a SALE-Books.on Handweav_ Jay Phillippe, John Hilker!, and MedIa mg:. Also Bernat magazines on 2-:n-St Pa. weavmg ana other crafts. Tell!'- Bill Ziegenfus. phone SWart~ore 6-0416. ----____ _ LEGAL NOTICE FOR SALE-Early Pennsylvania Wednesday Morning Film The School DistrIct of Swarthmore D~tch Dry Sink - completely will receive sealed. bids at the oftlee refinIshed. Phone SWarthmore The ·effect of failure to partici­~~ =001 Dlstrlqt In the HIgh 6-1126. . Pate in normal competition will be Prlncelon dl~e~::,"-,ofB':'~"':: FOa SAT,F;-Intel'l}ational Harves- depicted in the ftlm shOwing next Pannaylvanla, up to" PM. Wildn .... --· tor refngerator; hospital- bed: Wednesd " March 18, 1958. to be opened 7''; co!,,!ortable ~halrs, tables, lamps, ay mornmg m the. high meeting at 'IIIle Sohoo! Boomt ·at the sewmg machine and other hollSe'o school building. The film, "The ~OOI District omce. on· _ 18, bold articles. Phone MEdia 6-1329 Feeling of Rejection," tlikE13 23 "" 'edat 8 P .II .•. or at" a maetlng ad- /)~ CHester 4-1292. . minutes. . . ",urn from ·that _lng, ror In- FO'" .r;:;:;.;.:;:;:;-==-- struotlOnal suPpu... an'L equlPDleDt; ... SALE - Oriental rugs _ Child care is provided during JanItors supplies, aWetle medlea\ beautiful. Several. large rOQm the session which begins at 10: 20 :';~I~I':';'~=~ ~ ~~39~d throw rugs. Bryn Mawr in the visual education room. The -uted bih.f1v D A.lL -- " li.it . . cOmmunity is invited - leal Estate ; IhSlfrance Custom Homes Construction Mortgages ~-e· __ .. , .. .~ . ..( dally exc:ept- aa1nrd"J8, ~. and FOaSAT,Ji'FirelJlace bluicMs, , . , hoUdaya at the SchOOl ~ sturdy, attractive. PrIced low. The Boomt lU, .... thO rl&hS 110~· ftnished 0&'. unfinished. SWarth- Mr. and lIfrs. J. lIerbert Foley of. Dickinson avenue are enter­Iaimng as their hOWle .gUest for _.ejlll Weeks Vr. Fol..,.'s' mother IrrS. ~. J: J'oJe;r' of ShemIan, Baird & Bird 8D)' or an hldJJ In _ole or In Put In'!l'e 8-8769. , .• . ~a=n':"':= :s .... .,. ~. . FOUND; - . DOBOT&Y RODiJaas FOUND-Tiaer !)lit' .... 300 hltie1r, 91 til .... , Cornell 8"ft1lue. PhObe SWartb.­. more 8-2513. . , Texas. - t'-. . COl. DARTMOUTti ad LAFAYEI IE AYENUES Oppo .. te loroo.. HaD SWall"'ION 600101 SW .. I ... n .... l~ ~--~~~.~. --~----~.---.--. _._'

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Council Abandons plication. to the State Hlghv.:ay Department for necessary m- Incinerator plan vestigation ·and consent for the (Continued from Page. I) traffic light it desires at the ing 480 feet of Rutgers avenue be- 'Swarthmore, Elm and Princeton tweent Marietta and Juniata ave- avenue Intersection. It granted nues. The bid amounted to $7,- the request of Edward W. Coslett, 189.30. The Borough's 1951 police Jr., for a "Caution Children" sign car will be traded for a 1953 Ford on Riverview avenue. two-door sedan at a net balence Contract wllh Charles A. Tran­of . $770.39 through West Chester burgh for the lIrst house in' the Ford Company, low of three bid- development of the Smith-Garrett ders. tract on Swarthmore avenue at Upon recommendation of Bur- Dartmouth, was signed . .l\pproved gess Charles R. Russell, Public also was contract with William Safety Chairman Ambrose Van A.Clarke, Jr., who will continue Aten was asked to study price. the Swarthmore Gardens . project operation and placing of park- with· ten homes on: Marietta ave­iog · meters for the business area. nue to get under-.yay within a A report is scheduled for the fortnight. .l\.pril meeting. Dr. Parker Stamford's request ; Council proceeded to file ap- for a zouing variance to permit SALE! 25 to 50% OFF • 0.. of a lOed • DllllonHeud Items • Display Items • Outdated Items Toys America. Flyer Cars H,O.CCBrs Flillt Paper Eela ... leg· One Weelr Only! an addition to his Park. and Yale avenue home to house his own dental office and a doctor's office, was denied. However, Council stated it saw no objection to erecting an offi"; for his own private use. It further discussed amending the present zoning or­dinance . to permit a professional office in coimectlon with a private residence although not ·operated by the owner or tenant of said residence. Council authorized letters oppoaition to State House of Rep­. resentatlves Bills 21\. and 68. The former would exempt· resident over 65. having $2000 or less in­come, ,rom·. paying real estate taxes. ll'he latter would nulJlfy local option and permit granting of liquor licenses to clubs. THE SWARTBMOREAN Red Cross Panel. (Continued from Page 1) upon the presentation of a physi­cian's recommendation. Dr. Jones stated that the globulin wlll pre­vent polio in many cases and mod­ify its severity in others. The Red Cross also distributes globulin for measles prevention and provides it for infectious hepatitis. Mrs. Williams enlarged upon Chainnan Plowman's statemen.t that 166, apart from those enlist­ed for the fund campaign, Swarth­moreaos had contributed 13,000 Presbyterian Spealcer • Mareh 6, 1953 JUNIOR ASSEMBLIES The Swarthmore Junior .As$em­biles will hold dances for the sev­enth' grade at 'ro00 p.m. and the nillth. grade at 8: 45 p.m., tomor­row evening at the Womall's Club. Mrs. J. H. Jessup of Haverford avenue I. entertairitng at a lunch­eon and dupUcate bridge at her ,home today. 1 SPRING SUIT~ and COATS for the hours of volunteer work to the • Red Cross the past year by saying ~. that this was the equivalent of " . w.. . J 't1J14 . six· years of work, eight hours per day, five days per week by one individual. The "willing hearts and trained hands" of these workers h"lp their Rev. Charles T. Leber Immediate neighbors, she said, re-minding the workers that three To Speak Here Sunday local requests for Red Cross blood Th Ch"ld 'Sh had been ims_red In the past The Rev. Charles Tudor Leber,l e I ren S Op month and that in recent local D.D., general secretary of the . CLAIRE HOEFEL fires Red .Cross workers had Board of Foreign Missions of" the I 13 South Cheder BoIId worked throughout the night PreSbyterian Church in the U.S.A. 8Warl _ 6-1148 aid evacuees. "Our women will s~ak at th~ Presbyterlpn I ~=============" the Home Service ofl\ce in Church this Sunday at the 9: 30 I' er; our Motor Corps drives and 11 o'clock services. Dr. Leber Philadelphia; our Canteen has been with the Board of .For-man gets up \It live a.m. to serve e1gn MIssIons since 1938 and was collee to men conducting a Navy appointed general secretary in experiment," she said. 1952. . Colle.,e Students Help. Dr. Leber has traveled exten- . Vice-president Shane answeredsively in the far East as well as a question about c«>!Iege students' in South America and Europe. In • Ii Is bad grammar-buc support of the Red Cross by saying 1947 he was a delegate to the first Bood I.ale-to .ay that that students give money and post-war meeting of the Interna- . ;yoa~gainiaganytbins CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP I b &. f . blood gen<erously. He told of hiS tional Missionary Coupcll at Whit- by posqloDingthat visluo ··405 Dartmouth Ave. II Ice a~.I· ... t· 5 contaet; with ihree stu- by, Canada, and in 1952 he was a: abe Doctor .. Better make G. West Cochrane dents at a New York College delegate to the International. Mis- .' abe appoiatment today. 9 years in European concentration sionary Conference in Willingen, ADd when Oil have bioi 51/;, '-4191 P.rl. '·8:30 lei b . k b,uilldlln~1 camps who said that they could Germany. The same ·Y'1ar he stud- . ,. ~o..!'keepiamlad l!::==========~~" ___ o_ _. _ ~~_n_ ___~ never forget .)'Ihat the Red Cross ied refugee work and interchurch . that 'Ifi 'l"jj:falbe la ..... _ did ·f6r them when they came out service in Trieste and Greepe. : fIiI c:i>;;;.' "",ding. Thanhl of thE! .camps. Dr. L!>ber is a· member of the po . EVERY YEAR ••• FUEL SY$TEM rin4 Swarthmore~s current quota·. of executive board of the Divtsim.,of CATHERMAN"S $10,155, lower than last year al- Foreign MIssions, the department DRUG STORE though the national quota of $93,- of international justice and lood- 000,000 Is higher du£ to the gam- will and the department of church ma globUUn ,colloeCtion, was ex- world service of t1ie National . plained by Mr. Grady. Swarth- Councll of the Ch~heS 'of Christ •••• more heneflted by a national America. He)" also a member • ••• study of quota distribution of the japan I\1ter1!ational Chrl .. ~ook Into consideration three fac- .:.ti~aiinIiU~ni~v~e~r:si~.t~YAF~ou:n~iI~a~ti:o~.!I~' :r:.:,:iD.=:;~:;~::::;::;-:;:iiiiiiiiiiiij tors, experience in the .past 10 I· years, buying power and popula- You Meet the': Nice~ People at Speare' tion. He stated tllat tire Red Cross spent $15,000,000 for disaster re­lief In the United States last year and that the Southeastern Chap­ter (of which Swarthmore Is a brancli) Iml! sent $100,000 for European 1I00d relief this year. Rev. Whittemore summed up the panel discussion under the general topic "People Helping People" by saying "Here is human need". If workers ·asked contribu­tions . not to the budgeted figure but as an opportunity to cODtri- Open Friday until 9 P. M. I.U'.'" to the relief of human 11eed, he felt the reSponse would be 'quick and generous, since the ele­mental concept of religion is the love of one's fellow men. • if you'renot get.t ing 'Yc;Jur rest .' Colfee and doughnuts were served by the Red Cross Canteen, Mrs. Avery Blake chairman. . . A try resting your 'head on 'a,' .. STOP RUST IN YOUR CAR WITH '. '~ SI CLAIR ANTI- RUSTGA·SOl·INE -; -- SO DIFFERENT IT'S PATENTED uscoMotorCo. CHESTER and FAIRVIEW .ROADS Phone SWarthmore 6·3681 : Former Swarthmore Boy Drowns in Oreg,onl Brooks Anderton, son of, former Swarthmore resi­dents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. And­erton was drowned Saturday night in a pool near Coos Bay, Ore. . Mr. and Mrs. Anderton and family lived at 105 Forest lane, Swarthmore until Mr. Anderton was tr&nsferred last May.to Coos Bay as manager of the Scott Paper Company subsidiary there. Word was received at the Sec,tt I plant. Chester that Ariderton and hiS son had been skiilig, and had ended· the day wilh a swIn in a heated pool. Young .Brooks was found on the bottom of the pool. The Andertons have·a daughter, Hope, 11. Thev live at 1373 Cedar HARRIS & CO.­TAILORS Street, Coos Bay. iiiiiiiiiiiiiIi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii and FlJRlUERS 11 Park Avenue Swarthmore LADIES and MENS SUITS MADE-TO-oRDER • IF'. F __ • Fab~ 0/ ~1l.1oe# c;... SWaribmore6-0564 . really m.odern pillow FOAMED "ATEX PILLOW . The air yo~ try to punch into an Jd~f.ishioned pn­low never' leavlls the T exfoam foal'l'led latex pillow • • • it's permanently air conditioned. Never 911ts hot or smothery. Lumpy or sa99Y. AII~r9y.free. You will never sleep as well as you will on a T exfoam-and the price is the lowe.t ever for a first quality foal'tl.l'llbber pUiow. only' 4.44 , , Speare's ,Domeetic Dept.-fInt 8aor . mGH ~RADE cr.EANING, PRESSING lllid REPAIR. ..... ". ... ·~912. , HELP THE SWART RED CROSS Gvmrthmore 00ll1l611 ;''warthmore I .Pa. OREAN , MEET 'HUMAN • NEED' VOLUME is-NUMBER 11 SWARTHMORE, FRIDAY, FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1953 t3.50 PER YEAR Service for Mrs. Hunt Rabbi Freehof To To Be Held Sunday RabbIE~~m~;':r::fi: Dean's. Wife Succumbs Wed. After Long Illness Mrs. Dorothy R. Hunt, wife of Everett L. Hunt, Dean of Swarth­more College, died Wednesday morning at her home on Elm ave­nue, after a long illness. Mrs. HWlt was born in Huron. S.D., received her AB degree at Hur.on College in 1917 and her MaSter of Arts degree at Cornell University. She has taught at Huron College Acad­emy, and the Public Schools of Highmore, S.D., and in the Rose Valley Schoo~ at Rose Valley. Dr. and Mrs. Hunt were married June 24, 1919. They have one .son, Allan Reeve, a graduate of Swarthmore and now a law stUdent at Ann "Ar­the Rodef Shalon Temple in Pitts­burgh, Pennsylvania will. speak on the Contempomry Burdens of Judaism March 15.at 8: 15 in the Meeting House op the Swarthmore College campus. This is the fifth and last of a series of lectures sponsored by .I.he William J. Coop­er Foundation and the Depart­ment of Philosophy and Religion on Contemporary Trends in Theo­logical ThoUght. Rabbi FJ;eehof is president of the Central Conference of Amer­ican Rabbis and chairman of the Committee on Jewish Education. He has written numerous books of which the. most recent are "Re­fonn Jewish Practice)"~ "In the House of the Lord" and uPreface to the Scripturl.s." To Speak tuesdqy DR. JAMES H. ROBINSON _._------ Muthal .Exchange . 3 Days Next Week World Honored Pastor Church Of The Master N" Y. To Speak In Clothier Memorial Tuesday . Dr. James H. Robinson, prominent Presbyterian min­ister and missions leader, will speak in Clothier Memorial on March 17 at 8 :00 p.m. His talk will stress a positive ap­proach to America's world responsibilities. The meeting, open to the public, is being sponsored by the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church and the Student Chris­tian Fellowship of Swarthmore College. It will be Dr. Rob­inson's first appearance in Delaware County since his return last year from a six-months round-the-world mission to the students of Europe, the Near East, and Asia sponsored by the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. During Dr. Robinson's trip, he spoke to more than 700,000 people and lived in a dozen nations including Ger­many, Italy, Lebanon, India, Pakistan, Thaila!ld, Japan and the Philippines. He talked with scores of church and gov­ernment leaders including India's Prime Minister Nehru and U.S. Ambassador Chester Bowles . Reports of his trip have been printed widely in national C II C b" I magazines and have been sent throughout the world by the Mrs. Hunt has made h€f home 0 ege. om Ine n Mrs. Birney Morse Heads State Department. In December he was one of the featured on the Swarthmore campus since Clubwomen Working speakers at the biennial meeting of the National Council of bor, Mich. 1925. Throl:gh her great talents Little Theatre Play March 17, 18, 19 Churches in Denver, Colorado. Last month he addressed the she was able to contribute to all of the musical activities on the 5 ·d I d The Woman's Club Spring annual meeting of the Presbyterian Church's men's council campus and in, the Swarthmore . tu ent-Facu ty Pro udion Mutual Exchange will take place in Chicago. Music Club. Many hours were glv- "Dog Beneath Skin" Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs- In India and Pakistan great en to the Red Cross hospital mu- At Clothier day, March 17, 18, and 19 with CI bOD t crowds greeted him wherever he sic. Mrs. H.,.nt has been as much goods for exchange taken to the U rama ep. went. In Japan and ThaUand,· he a .part of the college community The Little Theater· Club of club from 10 until 4 on Tuesday, preached to overliow audiences. In as any member of the faculty. Her Swarthmore College join the fac- sold from 10 until 9 on Wednes- . Presents Play Tues Lebanon he was kept up all night home ~ been a gathering place ulty and the administration in its day, .and money and unsold goods . • answering questions from young for eveltone on the campus. She presentation of "The Dog Beneath disbursed from 12 noon until 4 Arabs. People crowded railroad will be missed as a gracious hostr the Skin", which opened last night p.m. on Thursday. Nominating Com.. Report stations to meet and say farewell ess, an understanding and 9Yl11pa- and continues tonight and tomor- General Chairman Mrs. Birney Names Mrs. Keenen to him. Moslems In Pakistan de-thetic person who was deeply lov- row, March 13, and 14 at Clothier K. Morse announces that Mrs. J. New President serted· their mosques to hear him Ed .and ; respected. Memorial. The play, which was Paul1;lrown, Mrs. Robert A. Boyle IIIlk. In Vellore, India, he gave 23 She was active and interested co-authored by Christopher Ish- and Mrs. Samuel T. Ciu-penter Under the direction of Chatr- .speeches and sermons in three in the Red Cross Blood· Donor erwood .. nd W. H.Auden, a form- will be in ·charge of. receiving man Mrs. David Bingham, the .daYs. In East Berlin he was mis­er member of the Swarthmore with. Mrs. L. J. Servais directing a drama department of the Woman's tak~·n for Paul Robeson and FacUIty, has a cast of well over stalwart committee . of hangers Club presented tJ:te one~iict . play, ne~r1y. mobbed by Communist 100. "; ,.: ':':;.,' _.. _'. . .anD. soru,.r. 91};tI!~ay.. .. "/:lal,\Y.'s , Hat ShOP~' ,t"r . members ,y"'~th raIDers. In other I'.la",,! he committee. Mrs. Hunt was an ac­tive member for. many years on ( . the Commit,tee of Management· of George School and the First Day School c<'mmlttee of the Swarth­more;. MonthIy Meeting; Chris Lehmann-Haupt, a fresh- Mrs. Donald P. Jones is respon- meeting Tuesday afternoon in the was taken for baseball star Jackie· man. holds down the leading role sible for girls' dresses, Mrs. E. 'Park avenue clubhouse. The cast Robinson and fighter Sugar Ray of Alan"-Norman, while other stu- VanS Cleveland for babies' and did an excellent piece of work Robinson. She leaves, besides her husband and SOI1, a sister, Mrs. Margaret l{orsgard of Alberdeen, S.D. . At her request a Memorial'Ser­vice consisting of reading fro·m the Scriptures, music and traditional Quaker silence will be held at the dents fill such roles as policemen, small children's articles, Mrs. with a cl;ver play. Stage arrange- A Pakistan miSSionary said after scoutmaSters, bus-conductors, and Frank H. McCowan skirts. Mrs. ·ments were made by Mrs. Robert Dr. Robinson Dad visited his col­bBrtencier~. Members of the fac- Geo:.;ge -:,s. Thorn evening dresses, M. Grogan. lege, "Dr. Robinson reached minds ulty. pt<:dominate in other areas- Mrs.' Raynham T. Bates house- At the business meeting that and grouP"7-non-Christiar-, secu­Professor Dennison Bancroft of hold, Mrs. William B. Lowe boys' followed, the report of the nom- lar, and Comm,unist-in a mirac­the Physics Department playing clothing, Mrs. Lloyd E. Kauffman inating committee was gi~en: for ulous manner. He must be set General lJotham, Professor James women's clothing,' Mrs. W. Alfred przsident, Mrs. Frank .D. Keenen; (Contin!led on Page 8) , Swarthmore· Friends' Meeting Sorber of the Spanish Department Smith· sweaters. Mrs. R. W. Rich- first vice-president, Mrs. Morris House at 3 o'clock, Sund.ay, March 15. The fam.lly request that no flowers be sent. as the Vicar, Hlelen North of the ardson men's clothing. Mrs. W. R. . I . d t Classics Department appearing as Gilmour dOD, r s, Mrs. Frank H.' Fussell,. second v ce-presl ~n f Hav'lland Peterm·an on a mad lady, and a half-dozen fac- Rodgers Gray settlement, and Mrs. Josepn B. Shane; recor<l:'ng , George H. Detweiler Dies Saturday at Home ulty and faculty· wives compris- Alice E. Mamott desk. Mrs. Car- secretary, Mrs. D. Russell Phillips; 1'U N p. , t"t 0 L ' ing a high - kicking chorus line. roll·P. Streeter is treasurer. ~~:~~~~~::~:uez~ec:r:~S::;er,M~Ss:.. - ro I r OS~ They include Mrs. Russell Clark, Started as one solution of war- D. Mace Gowing. Mrs. Bruce Dearing, Dr. North, 1 time shortages, the exchanges are Six directors were nominated:, of Mrs. Richard Brandt, Mrs. Rolru;\d I continued by the club as a com- Pennock, and Irene Moll~ ., munity service. They involve hard· whom four will be elected: Mrs. Swarthmoreans will be interest- and often tedious work by at least Bingham, Mrs. Avery F. Blake, Services Wl1re held at 2 p.m. cd to· observe several prominent 100 ·clubmember volunteers as Mrs. Robert B. Clothier, Mrs. J. Wednesday for ·George H. Detwell- townspeople in ,t he cast. Mrs. they work for the mutllal benefit Ke.n neth Doherty, Mrs. WalSt er 'tOh. er. who died Saturday of a heart Helen Bowie, wife of Dr. Morris of consignE:r, buyer and Club. The Hemze and. ryIrs. W. Alf~ed ~ . attack at his home, 550 Riverview Bowie, will play the .role of the crowd of Swarthmoreans who. Those nommated for tea s­road. . Queen opposite· Professor· Ban- swarm Into the club with goods sions committee are: Mrs. Thomas A Philadelphia lawyer, Mr. Det- croft. Cavorting as lunatics will for exchange on Tuesday; the (Continued on Page 5) weiler was born In SchuylkilL Ha- 'be Helen Hall and Gordon Lange. rush of buyers on Wednesday in ven, Pa., and was graduated from Not content with the original confident search for bargains; the Temple University Law School in music, students Jack Hughlett, satisfied receivers on Thw;sday all 1911. .. Francis Ashton and William Li- point loudly to the fact that the Mr. Detweiler was a. member of vant set Auden's and Isherwood's exchang.,s haire proved to be a the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania deceptive lyrics to parodies of community - bonanza over the and Amerl~an. Bar AssocIations Gershwin and Wagner. They also years.· and served'as chairman of. the provide background music for the --...:..------ State Bar &s.;.,;~tion's Committee 'many modern dance numbers on Workmep'sCQmpenilation laws Which pccur throughout the 13 for a total of' 15 years hetween scenes. A sizeable portion of the 1933 and 1951. He was also a mem- lI10dern dancing is done by the ber of the Pennsylvania State Oc- Greek Chorus of Swarthmore upational Diseases Compensation (Continued on Page 5) Commission, 1935-37. As 8 Mason, Mr, Detweiler was WINDMILLER ON INDIA a member of Melita Lodge No. 295 Marvel WIndmiller of the World and a former Master; be Was a AIIairs Council wlll addreSs the member of Joppa Council, ~ Junior Woman's Club Tuesday Commandery, Benjamin Franklin night, March 17, at 8 p.m. His topic Consistery, Lulu Temple of the wlll be "India'. Position in Global Shrine, past distrlct deputy G~dAllalrs." Mutual Exchange activ­Master and chairman of the-Gnmd ities in the clubhouse T\Jesday Lodge Committee on Lectures. neceSsitates the Junior Club's He also held memberships in the holding the meeting in the I.e­Union League, the Patriotic . Order Ilion Room, Borough HaD. . Sons of perlea, the' Amerlean. The .Juniors have extended an .Judicature ~ety, the lAw,ers in~tatioo to the LeagQe at Wo- Gym Night To.elght The seventlt and .eighth grades of the Junior High· School will hold their annual gym night to­night at 7: 30 in the High School Gym. Prnflcient demonstrations of "'arChing,· . tactics, dancing ana g$nes wiII, be g!ven unCier the. di­recti() D. of Alice Puinam WillettS and Wil.l iam Re.e se,· p.h ysical edu~ . cation instructors. The community is invited to at­tend. Kappas Ta Sew· The Kappa Kappa Gamma Sew­Ing Group wlll meet nezt Tues­day, March 17 at the home at Mrs. Charles· P. Larkin of Brookhaven (Continued On Page 8) men voters to .meet ·with them. road; Wallingford. H. S. National Honor . Society Initiates Eight Eight seniors and juniors were initiated Into the National Honor Society at the regular school assembly yesterday afternoon in the high schooi auditorium. Patricia Blake, Nita Gauahan, John Phillips and Mary Spiller were the senior initiates; Peter Bloom, Barbara Cobots, John Mc­Cahan and Rose Alice Richardson were lhe juniors. The traditional ceremony was conducted by, Society o.!licers, president Ronny Gold, vice presi­dent David Spencer, secretary Marilyn Green and treasurer Russell Snyder, inducted a year. alO, and Judy Bird, POlly Emery, Howard Shearer and Delores Zen­sen, brought in last November . A reception for members. par­enta and faculty fonowing the Assembly was arranged and serv­ed by students fflllD Jean Swift's domestic science· class; Dr. H. Field Haviland, Jr., and Ivan 1I. (Cy) Peterman will be the principal speakers 0'0 the top­ic, nU.N:....:.. Profit or Loss", at the Neth~r Providence High School Auditorium, Wallingford, Monday, March 23, at 8: 00 p.m. Dr. John W. Nason, President of the World Alfairs Council of Phil-adelphia, span.sors .of the forum, will serve as· moderator. Marvel Wilson, Strath Haven avenue, is the local chairman. Dr. Haviland, Assistant Profes­sor of Political Science at Haver­ford College, graduate 'of Harvard' University, went to. ColW)lbla and 'Venezuala in 1943 as a member of the Board of Economical War­fare. ·He authored an article, ''Ex­ecutive- Legislative Relations in Foreign AfHairs" fa, the Hoover Commission and is co-author of a book on the same problem. Peterman, world-traveled In­quirer columnist, is well known as a writer· with· PhlIadelphiapapers for the past 20 years. He COveIed the war from the North African Invasion to V-Day in Europe, was twice decorated, won two Inquirer awards for war correspondents. and the Poor Richard Club's silver medal of achievement in 1943. The Forum is sponsored by var­Ious civic and 8CICial org8ll1zations • in the Borough and vtcinity and is open to the public without ,harge. • •

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INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE Page 10 Council Abandons Incinerator Plan (Continued from Page 1) kg 480 {cet o( Rutgers avenue be­tweent Marietta and Juniata ave­nues. The bid amoun(eti to $7,- 169.30. The Borough's 1951 police car will be traded for a 1953 Ford two-door sedan at a net balence of $770.39 lhrough West Chester Ford Company. low of three bid­ders. Upon recommendation of BllI"­gess Charles R. Russell, Public Safety Chairman Ambrose Van Alen was asked to study p!Oice. operation and placing of park­ing meters for the business area. A report is scheduled for the 4pril meeting. . Council proceeded to file ap- SALE! 25 to 50% OFF • o.e of a Kind • Discontinued Items • Display Items • Outdated Items Toys American Flyer Cars H, O. Cars Film Paper Enlarging One Week On'y! CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP 405 Dal·tmoutll Ave. G. West Coc!1rane SW,6-4191 Frl, 9-8:30 plication to the State Highway Department for necessary in­vestigation and consent for the traffic light it desires al the Swarthmore, Elm and Princeton avenue intersection. It granted the request of Edward W. Coslett, Jr .• for a "Caution Children" sign an Riverview avenue. Contract with Charles A. Tran­burgh for the first house in the :!evelopment of the Smith-Garret! tract on Swarthmore avenue at Dartmouth, was signed. Approved 3.1so was contract with William A. Clarke. Jr., who will continue the Swarthmore Gardens project with ten homes on Marietta ave­nue to get underway within a fortnight. Dr. Parker Stamford's request for a zoning variance to permit an addition to his Park and Yale avenue home to bouse his own d~ntal office and a doctor's office, was denied. However, Council stated it saw no objection to erecting an office for his own private use. It further discussed amending the present zoning or­dinance to permit a professional office in connection with a private residence although not operated by the owner or tenant of said residence. Council authorized letters of opposition to State House of Rep­resentatives Bills 28 and 68. The former would exempt resident over 65. having $2000 or less in­come, from paying real estate taxes. The latter would nullify local option and permit granting of liquor licenses to clubs. EVERY YEAR""" FUEL SYSTEM rin4 .. STOP RUST IN YOUR CAR WITH SINCLAIR ANTI-RUST GA·SOLINE so DIFFERENT IT'S PATENTED Fusco MotorCo. CHESTER and FAIRVIEW ROADS Phone SWarthmore 6·3681 THE SWARTBMOREAN Red Cross Panel (Continued from Page 1) upon the presentation of a physi- ! ciao's recommendation. Dr. Jones stated that the globulin will pre­vent polio in many cases and mod­ify Its severity in others. The Red Cross also distributes globulin for measles prevention and provides it for infectious hepatitis. Mrs. Williams enlarged upon Chairman Plowman's statemenl that 166, apart from those enlist­ed for the fund campaign, Swarth­moreans had contributed 13,000 hours of volunteer work to the Red Cross the past year by saying that this was the equivalent of six years of work, eight hours per day, five days per week by one individual. Presbyterian Speaker Mareh 6, 1953 JUNIOR ASSEMBLIES The Swarthmore Junior Assem­blies will hold dances for the sev­I enth· grade at ~ 00 p.m. and the I ninth. grade at 8: 45 p.m., tomor­I ~ow evening at the Woman's Club. , Mrs. J. H. Jessup of Haverford avenue is entertaining at a lunch­eon and duplicate bridge at her : home today. '~~====-r SPRING SUITS (!Jnd COATS for the • The "willing hearts and trained hands" of these workers help their immediate neighbors, she said, re­minding the workers that three local requests for Red Cross blood had been answered in the past month and that in recent local fires Red .Cross workers had worked throughout the night to aid evacuees. HOur women man the Home Service office in Chest­er; our Motor Corps drives in Philadelphia; our Canteen chair­man gets up at five a.m. to serve coffee to men conducting a Navy Rev. Charles 'f, Leber To Speak Here Sunday The Children's Shop experiment," she said. Collelre Students Help ,Vice-president Shane answered a question about college students' support of the Red Cross by saying that students give money and blood gen'erously. He told of his personal contact with three stu­dents al a New York College after years in European concentration camps who said that they could never forget what the Red Cross did for them when they came out of the camps. Swarthmore's current quota of $10,155, lower lhan last year al­though the national quota of $93.- 000,000 is higher due to the gam­ma globulin conection, was ex­plained by Mr. Grady. Swarth­more benefited by a national study of quota distribution which took into consideration three fac­tors, experience in the past 10 years, buying power and popula­tion. He stated that lhe Red Cross spent $15,000,000 for disaster re-lief in the Uniled Slates last year and that the Southeastern Chap­ter (of which Swarthmore is a branch) has sent $100,000 for European flood relief this year. The Rev. Charles Tudor Leber,! D.D., general secretary of the. Board of Foreign Missions of' the' Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. will speak at the Presbyleri,m Church this Sunday at the 9: 30 and 11 o'clock services. Dr. Leber has been with the Board of For­eign Missions since 1936 and was appointed general secretary in 1952. Dr. Leber has traveled exten­sively in the far East as well as in South America and Europe. In 1947 he was a delegate to the first post-war meeting of the Interna­tional Missionary Council at Whit­by. Canada, and in 1952 he was a delegate to the International Mis­sionary Conference in Willingen. Germany. The same year he stud­ied re1ugee work and interchurch service in Trieste and Gr~e. Dr. Leber is a member of lhe executive board of the Division of Foreign Missions, the department ·of international justice and good­will and the department of church world service of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in America. He is also a mem'ber of the Japan I"temational Chris­tian University Foundatioll. CLAIRE HOEFEL 13 South Chester Road SWarthmore 6-1148 • It is bad grammar-but good sense-to .ay tbat you ain'~ gaining anything by postponing tbat visit to the Doctor, Better m .. ke tbe appointment today. And wben you bave bi. prescri,Ption, keep in mind that we ;pedali7.e In care­. lui compounding. Thank.1 CATHERMAN'S DRUG STORE •••• • ••• .... 11111111 ' .. Ittlllllltlllg ~ llI .. you Meet the Nicest People at Speare s :: 5 5 = = Rev. Whittemore summed up the panel discussion under the general topic HPeople Helping People" by saying "Here is human :="'_=_- ESTER'S· Eashl'on Corner =="'_-_= need". If workers asked contribu- .- j lions not to the budgeted figure = 0 diP M = §1~:§':t<o~~ I p~ '"j; ~:u~r~ ~ot g~ttjng your rest! mental concept of religion is the = :: love of one's fellow men. try resting your head on a Coffee and doughnuts were served by the Red Cross Canteen, Mrs. Avery Blake chairman. really modern pillow Former Swarthmore Boy Drowns in Oregon Brooks Anderton, six-year-old son of former Swarthmore resi­dents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. And­erton was drowned Saturday night in a pool near Coos Bay. Ore. My. and Mrs. Anderton and family lived at 105 Forest lane, Swarthmore until Mr. Anderton was transferred last May to Coos Bay as manager of the Scott Paper Company subsidiary there. ® FOAMED "AlEX PILLOW The air you try to punch into an old.fashioned pil-low never leaves the Texfoam foamed latex pillow • it', permanently air conditioned. Never gets hot or smothery. lumpy or saggy. AII~rgy,free. You will never ,Ieep a, well as you will on a Texfoam-and the price i, the lowest ever for a first quality foam rubber pillow. Word was received at the Scott plant, Chester that Anderton and his son had been skiing, and had ended the day with a swin in a 5: heated pool. Young Brooks was ~ only' 4.44 Si found on the bottom of the pool. ~ ~ The Andertons have a daughter, ~ Speare's .DomesUc Dept. _ first 800r iii Hope, 11. Thev live at 1373 Cedar - - Street, Coos Bay ~ . ~ . >illllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllUlIllllllllllllllllllllllllUlIOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOlllnrlllllllllllllllllllllUlIIll11111111111111111111111" 1Il1l1l1llllnlUlUlinlUlIllllllUl'llImlllllllllllllllllnllmlllllllllllllllnnmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllUIIIIDllIllllllllnl1llllll1llllllllllllllllmllllllllllllllnllnlllllllllDl1IIlIIlII1 ommlllnllnllni II0nnnlll1lJl HARRI S '" ."mllull _ uUllln"" 1111IJl11Illllllll1H1lll11lllllllllnIII1llDl1llRll1nnnnnmmnHRllin .. & CO. § LADIES and MENS § . TAILORS § SUITS MADE-TO-ORDER ' ~ mGH GRADE CLEANING, 11 p. k Aa nd FURRIERS §'" We Fealure Fabric8 o/lhe Highest Grade ;~;; PRESSING ad RnEPAI.R ,lI' v~nue Swarthmore ~ SWarthmore 6-0504 ~ EatablUhe41912 _nn·;..lt~i.a22a:jh"iA'daiilllnDnmnmnlllmmmmllmlnnunmUllllQmllllRnlliiillllmnlfmmmmam'd.i1iilUUkIlfIIRlllllllllillfillll.IIIIIUfilliIllRlRmHllmnnRnumnlllllnnfu.unmnmmlmrnmmn_mllIIIIl111ln'llilitAiill,illllftlIlllllfllHilftllmlhmlmmIllIRRI •• HELP THE SWAR RED CROSS l3vmrthmore Co lltlge ;''vffirthmore, Pa.. OREAN MEET 'HUMAN NEED' VOLUME 25-NUMBER 11 SWARTIlMORE. FRIDAY, FRIDAY, J\IARCH 13, 1953 '3.50 PER YEAR Service for Mrs. Hunt Rabbi Freehof To To Be Held Sunday RabbiE:~m~:o!.e:r~::ieo: To Speak tuesday Deon's Wife Succumbs Wed. After Long Illness Mrs. Dorothy R. Hunt, wife of Everett L. Hunt, Dean of Swarth­more College, died Wednesday morning at her home on Elm ave­nue, after a long illness. Mrs. Hunt was born in Huron, S.D., received her AB degree at Huron College in 1917 and her Master of Arts degree at Cornell University. She has taught at HUron College Acad­emy, and the Public Schools of Highmore. S.D., and in the Rose Valley School at Rose Valley. Dr. and Mrs. Hunt were married June 24, 1919. They have one son, Allan Reeve, a graduate of Swarthmore and now a law student at Ann 'Ar-bar. Mich. Mrs. Hunt has made her home on the Swarthmore campus since 1925. Through her great talents she was able to contribute to all the Rodef Shalon Temple in Pitts­burgh, Pennsylvania will speak on the Contemporary Burdens of Judaism March 15 at 8: 15 in the Meeting House on the Swarthmore College campus. This is the fifth and last of a series of lectures sponsored by lhe William J. Coop­er Foundation and the Depart­ment of Philosophy and Religion on Contemporary Trends in Theo­logical Thought. Rabbi Freehof is president of the Central Conference of Amer­ican Rabbis and chairman of the Committee on Jewish Education. He has written numerous books of which the most recent are "Re­form Je.wish Practice," "In the House of the Lord" and uPreface to the Scriptures." College Combine In Little Theatre Play I DR. JAMES H. ROBINSON MutllalExchange 3 Days Next Week Mrs. Birney Morse Heads Clubwomen Working March 17, 18, 19 of the musical activities on the d The Woman's Club Spring campus and in the Swarthmore Stu ent-Faculty Production Mutual Exchange will take place Music Club. Many hours were giv- II Dog Beneath Skin" Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs-en to the Red Cross hospital mu- At Clothier day, March 17, 18, and 19 with sic. Mrs. Hunt has been as much I goods for exchange taken to the a part of lhe college community I The Little Theater· Club of club from 10 until 4 on Tuesday, as any member of the faculty. Her Swarthmore College join the fac- sold from 10 until 9 on Wednes­home has been a gathering place ulty and the administration in its day, .and money and unsold goods for everyone on the campus. She presentation of "The Dog Beneath disbursed from 12 noon until 4 will be missed as a gracious host- the Skin", which opened last night p.m. on Thursday. ess, an understanding and sympa- and continues tonight and tom or- General Chairman Mrs. Birney thetic person who was deeply lov- row, March 13. and 14 at Clothier K. Morse announces that Mrs. J. E:d and respected. Memorial. The play, which was Paul Brown, Mrs. Robert A. Boyle She was active and interested co-authored by Christopher Ish- and Mrs. Samuel T. Carpenter in the Red Cross Blood Donor erwood rand W. H. Auden, a form- will be in charge of receiving committee. Mrs. Hunt was an ac- er member of the Swarthmore with Mrs. L. J. Servais directing a tive member for many years on Faculty, has a cast of well over stalwart committee of hangers the Committee of Management of 100. ana sorters on Tuesday. George School and the First Day Chris Lehmann-Haupt, a fresh- Mrs. Donald P. Jones is respon- School committee of the Swarth- man, holds down the leading role sible for girls' dresses, Mrs. E. more. Monthly Meeting. of Alan Norman, while other stu- VanS Cleveland for babies' and dents fill such roles as policemen, small children's articles, Mrs. scoutmasters, bus-conductors, and Frank H. McCowan skirts, Mrs. bartenders. Members of the fac- Geo~ge B. Thorn evening dresses, ulty predominate in other areas- Mrs. Raynham T. Bates house- She leaves, besidES her husband and son, a sister. Mrs. Margaret Korsgard of Aberdeen, S.D. At her request a Memorial Ser- P f D' B rt f hi' • • • • ! ro essor ennlson ancro a 0 d, Mrs. William B. Lowe boys' VIC~ conslstmg o~ readmg fr~~ the the Physics Department playing clothing, Mrs. Lloyd E. Kauffman ScrlPture~, musl~ and traditIonal General Hotham, Professor James women's clothing, Mrs. W. Alfred Q,uaker Silence wI~1 be held at !he. Sorber of the Spanish Department Smith sweaters. Mrs. R. W. Rich­Swarthmore, FrIends Meetmg as the Vicar, Helen North of the ardson men's clothing, Mrs. W. R. ~ou;-h at ~ 0 ~~OCk, SundaY'hMarCh Classics Department appearing as Gilmour door s, Mrs. Frank . e amI y request t at no a mad lady, and a half-dozen fac- Rodgers Gray settlement, and flowers be sent. ulty and faculty wives compris- Alice E. Marriott desk. Mrs. Car­ing a high - kicking chorus line. roll P. Streeter is treasurer. George H Detwe'ller They include Mrs: Russell Clark, . Started as one solution of war- • I Mrs. Bruce DearIng, Dr. North, I tIme shortages, the exchanges are DI"es Saturday at Home Mrs. Richard Brandt, Mrs. Roland conti.nued b! the clu? as a com­Pennock, and Irene Moll. mumty serVice. They mvolve hard Swarthmoreans will be interest... and often tedious work by at least ed to observe several prominent 100 clubmernber volunteers as townspeople in the cast. Mrs. they work for the mutual benefit Helen Bowie. wife of Dr. Morris of consign~r, buyer and club. The Bowie, will play the role of the crowd of Swarthmoreans who· Queen opposite Professor Ban- swarm into the club with goods croft. Cavorting as lunatics will for exchange on Tuesday; the ·be Helen Hall and Gordon Lange. rush of buyers on Wednesday in Services were held at 2 p.m. Wednesday for George H. Delweil­er, who died Saturday of a heart attack at his home, 550 Riverview road. A Philadelphia lawyer, Mr. Det­weiler was born in Schuylkill Ha­ven, Pa., and was graduated from Temple University Law School in 1911. ' Mr. Detweiler was a member of the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and American Bar Associations and served as chairman of the State Bar Association'S Committee on Workmen's Compensation laws for a total of 15 years between 1933 and 1951. He was also a mem-ber of the Pennsylvania State Oc­upational Diseases Compensation Commission, 1935-37. As a Mason, Mr. Detweiler was a member of Melita Lodge No. 295 and a former Master; he was a member of Joppa Council, Mary Commandery. Benjamin Franklin Consistery, Lulu Temple of the Shrine, past district deputy Grand Master and chairman of the Grand Lodge Committee on Lectures. He also held memberships in the Union League, the Patriotic Order Sons of 4merica, the American Judicature Society, the Lawyers (Continued on Page 8) Not content with the original confident search for bargains; the music, students Jack Hughlett, satisfied receivers on Thursday all Francis Ashton and William Li- point loudly to the fact that the vant set Auden's and Isherwood's exchanges have proved to be a deceptive lyrics to parodies of community bonanza over the Gershwin and Wagner. They also years. provide background music for the ________ _ 'many modern dance numbers which pccur throughout the 13 scenes. A sizeable portion of the modern dancing is done by the Greek Chorus of Swarthmore (Continued on Page 5) WINDMILLER ON INDIA Marvel Windmiller of the World Affairs Council will address the Junior Woman's Club Tuesday night, March 17, at 8 p.m. His topic will be "India's Position In Global Affairs." Mutual Exchange activ­ities in the clubhouse Tljesday necessitates the Junior Club's holding the meeting In the Le­gion Room, Borough HaIl. The Juniors have extended an invitation to the League of Wo­men Voters to meet with them. Gym Night Tonight The sevent!> and eighth grades of the Junior High School will hold their annual gym night to­night at 7: 30 in the High School Gym. Proficient demonstrations of marching, tactics, dancing and games will be given under the di­rection of Alice Putnam Willetts and William Reese; physical edu­cation instructors. The community is invited to at­tend. Kappas To Sew The Kappa Kappa Gamma Sew­ing Group will meet next Tues­day, March 17 at the home of Mrs. Charles P. Larkin of Brookhaven road, Wallingford. World Honored Pastor Church Of The Master N. Y. To Speak In Clothier Memorial Tuesday Dr. James H. Robinson, prominent Presbyterian min­ister and missions leader, will speak in Clothier Memorial on March 17 at 8 :00 p.m. His talk will stress a positive ap­proach to America's world responsibilities. The meeting, open to the public, is being sponsored by the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church and the Student Chris­tian Fellowship of Swarthmore College. It will be Dr. Rob­inson's first appearance in Delaware County since his return last year from a six-months round-the-world mission to the students of Europe, the Near East, and Asia sponsored by the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. During Dr. Robinson's trip, he spoke to more than 700,000 people and lived in a dozen nations including Ger­many, Italy. Lebanon, India, Pakistan, Thailand, Japan and the Philippines. He talked with scores of church and gov­ernment leaders including India's Prime Minister Nehru and U.S. Ambassador Chester Bowles. Reports of his trip have been printed widely in national magazines and have been sent throughout the world by the State Department. In December he was one of the featured speakers at the biennial meeting of the National Council of Churches in Denver, Colorado. Last month he addressed the annual meeting of the Presbyterian Church's men's council in Chicago. Club Drama Dept. Presents Play Tues. Nominating Com. Report Names Mrs, Keenen New President Under the direction of Chair­man Mrs. David Bingham. the drama department of the Woman's Club presented the one-act play, "Sally's Hat Shop" for members meeting Tuesday afternoon in the Park avenue clubhouse. The cast did an excellent piece of work with a cl~ver play. Stage arrange­ments were made by Mrs. Robert M. Grogan. At the business meeting that followed, the report of the nom ... inating committee was given: for pr.::sident, Mrs. Frank D. Keenen; first vice-president, Mrs. Morris In India and Pakistan great crowds greeted him wherever he went. In Japan and Thailand, he preached to overflow audiences. In Lebanon he was kept up all night answering questions from young Arabs. People crowded railroad stations to meet and say farewell to him. Moslems in Pakistan de­serted their mosques to hear him talk. In Vellore, India, he gave 23 speeches and sermons in three days. In East Berlin he was mis­taken for Paul Robeson and nearly mobbed by Communist youth raniers. In other places he was taken for baseball star Jackie Robinson and fighter Sugar Ray Rob!nson. A Pakistan missIonary said after Dr. Robinson h·ad visited his col-lege, "Dr. Robinson reached minds and groups-;-non-Christian, secu­lar, and Communist-in a mirac­ulous manner. He must be set (Continued on Page 8) H. Fussell; second vice-prcsid~nt, Hav"lland Peterman on Mrs. Joseph B. Shane; reco.r~mg , secretary, Mrs. D. Russell PhMllhrPsS;.' 'U.N. _ Prof'lt Or Loss' corresponding secretary, Pierre Decrouez; treasurer, Mrs. D. Mace Gowing. Dr. H. Field Haviland, Jr., and Ivan H. (Cy) Peterman will be the principal speakers on the top­ic, "U.N. - Profit or Loss", at the Nether Providence High School Audito.i:"ium, Wallingford, Monday, March 23, at 8: 00 p.m. Six directors were nominated, of whom four will be elected: Mrs. Bingham, Mrs. AVery F. Blake, Mrs. Robert B. Clothier, Mrs. J. Kenneth Doherty, Mrs. Walter O. Heinze and Mrs. W. Alfred Smith. Those nominated for the admis- Dr. John W. Nason, President of sions committce arc: Mrs. Thomas the World Affairs Council of Phil- (Continued on Page 5) adelphia, sponsors of thc forum. will serve as moderator. Marvel H. S. Nalional Honor Society Initiates Eight Eight seniors and juniors were initiated into the National Honor Society at the regular school assembly yesterday afternoon in the high school auditorium. Patricia Blake. Nita Gar:fahan, John Phillips and Mary Spiller were the senior iniUates; Peter Bloom, Barbara Cobots, John Mc­Cahan and Rose Alice Richardson were the juniors. The traditional ceremony was conducted by Society officers, president Ronny Gold, vice presi­dent David Spencer, secretary Marilyn Green and treasurer Russell Snyder, inducted a year ago, and Judy Bird, PollY Enlery, Howard Shearer and Delores Zen­sen. brought in last November. A reception for members, par­ents and facully following the Assembly was arranged and serv­ed by sludents from Jean Swift's domestic science class. Wilson, Strath Haven avenue, is the local chairman. Dr. Haviland, Assistant Profes­sor of Political Science at Haver­ford College, graduate 'of Harvard University, went to Columbia and Venezuala in 1943 as a member of the Board of Economical War­fare. ,He authored an article, uEx_ ecutive-Legislative Relations in Foreign Affiairs" for the Hoover Commission and is co-author of a book on the same problem. Peterman, world-traveled In­quirer columnist, is well known as a writer with Philadelphia papers for the past 20 years. He covered the war from the North African invasion to V-Day in Europe, was twice decorated, won two Inquirer awa~ds for war correspondents, and the Poor Richard Club's silver medal of achievement in 1943. TIl<> Forum is sponsored by var­~ ous civic and socia. organizations . in the Borough and vicinity and is open to the .public without ,harge.

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Pqe2 PersolUlls Elizabeth McCahan, Wilson Col­lege senior and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D,avid McCahan. Strath Haven avenue, will take part in the annual modern dance concert to be presented tonight by the Wil­son chap~er of Orchesis, national dance group. Mr. and Mrs. ~arle P. Yerkes of Princeton avenue entertained at a dinner-bridge for eight on Sat­urday evening. and Mrs. Percival Armitage of Harvard avenue. Miss Armitage has been transferred. by Eastern Airlines from Miami. Fla. 19 New York City. Miss Anne R. Hussey of North Chester road entertalned as her week-end guest Miss Alice Nowell who was en route to her home in Boston froUl St. Petersburg. Fla. TilE SW ARTHII10REA;" KNOX·GILBERT The. marriage of Miss Harriet Gray Gilbert, daughter of M .... and Mrs. Percy Gray Gilbert of Park avenue. and Mr. Earl Douglas Knox. son of Mr. and Mrs. Doug­las G. Knox of Altus. Okla .• took place Saturday. afternoon at 2 0'­clock in the Swarthmore Presby­terian Church before an altar banked with cibotium ferns. white gladioli, snapdragons, c~mations and lighted candelabra. The Rev. Joseph P. Bishop per­formed the ceremony. Mareh 13, 1953 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Lue. d-I and Mrs. Joseph LaPann of Glens ers of Princeton aveliue. and ]!,Ir. Falls. are james' grandparents. INTRODUCING Wyco Sock "N" Sweater Yarn Shrin~-Proof. Moth-Proof. Wash-Fad Colors Reg_ 60<: Skein (I-oz)-Introductory Price, 49c .' LAST TWO DAYS Shop 19 South Chester Road, Swarthmore CHARLES H. GRIER , Mrs. George B. Heckman and daughter June Lee of Park ave­nue. attended a reunion o~ Camp Winoemont, N.H. in New York City Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Tucker of Swarthmore avenue invite their healto group and any interested friends to hear their daughter Di­ana speak about her recent exper­Iences in Florida during her 10- week work project from Benning­ton Cone~e, Vt" tomorrow evening at 8 o·clock. Mr. Henry J. Faust. church' or-ganist. presented the wedding mu-' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sic. Ii Mrs. E. K. Boehmer of Park ave­nue entertained at a luncheon and canasta . at Strath Haven Inn Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Bowden, Jr., of North Swarthmore avenue will have as their guests . for a short visit Mr. Bowden-'s brother-in-law arid sister Mr. and Mrs. Warren Rhodes of Atlanta, Ga., while en route to New York City. Dr. and Mrs. John R. Bates of North Chester road will entertain as their week-end guests Mr. and Mrs. George E. Beatty and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oliver of Shoreham, L.r. Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Wilson of Walnut lane will spend the week­end visiting Mrs. Wilson's brother­in- law and sister Mr. and Mrs. W. · D. Sizer of Glen Ridge. N.J. Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Poole of North Swarthmore avenue will entertain at a co*cktail party from 5 to 7 tomorrow afternoon in hon ... or of Mrs. Poole's cousin Mrs. James W. Lukens, Jr., and Mr. Lukens whose marriage took place in Washington ,December 6. Mr. · and Mrs. Lukens are now livIng on Fairview road, Swarthmore. Mrs. Lukens is the daughter of Capt. and Mrs. J. Lockwood Pratt of Washington. who will be the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Poole. Miss Muriel Graham of New York City was the week-end guest of Dr. and Mrs. John R. Bates of North Chester road. Mrs. Roland G. E. Ullman of uApplebrook", Park avenue left Thursday to spend a week as the guest of her cousins Mr. and Mrs. William B. Ulrich at their home in AUantic City. Dr. and Mrs. Richard C. Am­merman and daughter Judy are occupying their newly purchased home at 904 South H~rvard ave­nue. Mrs. W. Rodman Shoemaker of Riverview'road returned Tuesday from a visit to Highland Park Florida Club, Lake Wales, Fl~: Mr. and Mrs. C. C. West of Wal­nut lane, who left here January 2 00 an automobile trip to Mexic.o, will arrive home this week-end. Pvt. Jim Hornaday. of the U. S. Infantry, is spending a leave until March 20 at his home on Dickinc son avenue. Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Merrick. 3rd. arrived Thursday from Cleveland. Ohio for a visit with Mrs. Mer-rick's parents Mr. and Mrs. Nor­man Hulme of Rutgers avenue. Mrs. Mei'rick will be a bridal at­tendant In the wedding party to­morrow of Miss Grace Brewster and Dr. Edward L. McConnell. Mr. Valentine L. Fine of North, Swarthmore avenue is attending for several months the Advanced Business Management School at Harvard University. TOMORROW'S BRIDE Mis~ Grace Brewster, daughter of Mr. Sergeant B. Brewster of Swarthmore avenue, will become the bride of Dr. Edward Lockhart The bride. who was given In marriage by her -father, wore a gown of white organdy. fashioned with long tight sleeves. Peter Pan collar with appllqued flowers. fltted bodice with tiny covered builons to waist and a full _flow­ing skirt falling into a short train. Her cap was ·pf matching oI'lgandy made in soft tucks with a finger­tip veil caught with appllqued flowers. She carried a cascade bouquet of starlight roses. steph­anotis and ivy. Her sister, "Mrs. Thomas G. Ch;:w of Swarthmore was her only attendant and wore a pink .gown made with a satin bodice and full marquisette skirt. She, carried a bouquet of violets. Pinochio, roses and ivy .. Mr. C. Willoughby. Whitmore. 3rd of Norwood served as best man for Mr. Knox and the ushers included Messrs. Thomas G. Chew, Wayne Kohman and Charles King of Nor:wood and William Wino of Prospect Park. The mother of the bride chose a street length dress of hyacinth blue silk with small pink hat. Her corsage was of shell pink camel­lias. A reception in the church parior followed the ceremony. BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Donovan of Elm avenue announce the· birth of their third child and second daughter, Joanna Lee, on February 27 In Bryn Mawr Hospital. . The maternal grandmotljer of the baby is Mrs. L. F. Coy. also of Elm avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. P..aulson of Park avenue have returned home folloWing a five week 50- jo~rn south. They spent four we~ks in Keystone Heights, Fla., and a week visiting former · Swarthmoreans Mr. and Mrs. Al­ton Kahler of. Tampa. Mrs. Leroy T. Wolfe has re_ turned to her home on Park ave­nue after spending two months jn Dallas, Texas with her husband .who is there ·on business. On her way home Mrs. Wolf' visited rel­atives in Terre Haute, Ind., and Utica. Ohio. and also stopped at McConnell, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. McConnell of Roxborough, tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert LaPann in Trinity Episcopal Church, of Glens Falls, N.Y. announce the Swarthmore. The Rev. H. Law- birth of their second son, James renee Whittemore, Jr., will om ... LUEders. on March 3. , Elkins, W. Va., to visit her son Jim. a student at Davis. and El­kins College. ciate, assisted by Dr. J. Jarden Guenther, rector of St. Peters Church in the Great Valley. Paoli. . Mr. and Mrs. McConnell, par­ents of the groom will entertain the bridal party at a supper fol­lowing the rehearsal this evening. The brlde-to-be was guest of honor at a miscellaneous shower given Saturday afternoon by Miss Margaret Lukens of Germantown, who will be a bridesmaid in the wedding party. ,Mr. and Mrs. John Gale and baby son have moved from Elm avenue to their,· new home' at Aston Manor. Ir==:;;;;==========::, Mr. Robert Richardson of Park SUBSCRIPTIONS avenue left TlWrsday to spend FOR ALL , father-daughter week-end with MAGAZINES his daughter Greta at Western College for Women, Oxford, Ohio. Mrs. Lovett Frescoln of Harvard avenue is. entertaining Mrs. Gor­don Lee Parsons of West Collings­wood. N.J. as her house guest for several weeks. Miss F<ances Ai-mitage of New York City spent several days of this week visiting her parents Mr. PLAYERS CLUB of Swarthmore presents "Edwina. Black" By Wm. Dinner and Wm. lIIorum Charles Seymour . DIreetor MRS. LLOYD E.KA~N 313 Dartmouth Avenue Swaribmore 6-2080 COLLEGE THEATRE Swarthmore, Pa. Fri. &: Sat. OLIVIA d.HAVILLAND Daphne DuMaur1.,', hst S.II.r "MY COUSIN RACHEL" Special Ch; 'dren's Show Saturday. 1 P: M. CARTOONS, SHORTS, COMEDY & SERIAL - Plus - A Rlp.Roarln' Western With Wild Bill Elliott Sat. night only­feature ·· tltnea 8. 8. 10 Sunday thn Thrsday ROBERT TAYLOR ELIZABETH TAYLOR "IYANHOE" (Technlcolo;) S1r Wolt.r, Scoff's Famous Novel CJooInl' !'erfMmaDces TcmIdtt "vdl IS Tomerrow-lIIarch If CartaID TIm•e - 8:zt P.lII. "PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE' ., Starts Friday .................................... ! (T ..... lcoIor) • Top COMFORT and never a garter run with the glamorous, new ''give and tDW' Nylace Top only on sheer sheer stockings 15 Sollfll CleM' load The Bouquet BEAUTY SALON ARE YOU GROOMED FOR WEARING O' THE GREEN? '9 Chester Road 'CaII Swarthmore 6-0476 SPECIAL for MARCH OVERHAUL MOTOR VALVE JOB ROBERT J. ATZI Owner RUSSELL'S SERVICE OPPOSiTE BOROUGH PARKING LOT SW 6-0440 Dartmouth &: f.afayette Aves. WI~COX APPLIANCES Lansdowne and Baltimore Av~nues YOUR GE .DEALER OPEN EVENINGS , MAdison 3_0767 RCA, CARRIER, BENDIX, MAGNA VOX You Can See Them Anywhere For Service Buy Them Here Two special reasons why we like to say "Good MQrning" .1. Because you're a "special" person here - we like to welcome you when you come in the bank. 2 •. Because it means you ore banking early in the day, at a time when the bank is not crowdesl­when we can render the best service for you. DO YOUR BANKING EARLY IN THE DAY ••• EARlY IN THE WEEK ... HUE WITH US SWARTHMORE.AtIOIAL Bill IIDTBOS! COMPAII ·.N.-Hr. PoHnrI ~oiI r _ .CerJlO. ~! •• • - . , . . _-~ .. L.~-,_,., I THESW ARTHMOREAN PUBLISHED EVEBY PJUDAY AT 8WARTIDIORE. PA. THE 8WARTIIlIIOREAN, INC., PtlBLl8BEB Phone SWantuD_ • ..,.. . . PETER E. TOLD, EdItor aDd Pub......... . . Just In ••• SPICE ISLANDS Wooden Spice Raclls Three Shelves Holds 21 Spice Jars $6.95 Diluzio and Sons Florist Formerly lIIA1UORIB TOLD aDel BARBARA KENT. Assocta'" EdUon CARNS Rosalie Peirsol Lorene McCarter Entered as Second Class Matter. Januari 24, 1929. at the Post OftIce at Swarthmore, Fa., under the Act· of March 3, 1879. Last Words!' Maundy Thursday _ April 2 - 8:00 p.m. Holy Com­munion Service. Good Friday - April 3 - 12 noon to 3 p.m. - Trinity Episcopal Chureh. Mr. Bishop will be the preacher. Easter Sunday - April 5 - 9:00 _ Church School and Family Service. 10:00 and 11:30 - Iden­tical Festival Worship Services. Fine Spice_Wine Vinegar., 650 lalHmore Pille Springfield, Del. Co.. Pa. DEADLINE-WEDNESDAY NOON SWARTHMORE, PtJ:NNA.. FRIDAY. MARCH 13. 1953 TRINITY NOTES Holy Communion will be cele­brated at 8 o~clock Sunday morn­ing. ·At 9: 30 a. m. all dEpartments of the Ch)1rch School will meet. At 11 o'clock there will be a ser­vice of Morning Prayer and Holy Baptism. Junior' Confhmation Class will meet at 7 p.m .• followed by the Adult Confirmation Class at 8 o·clock. Antiques & Gourmet Shop PROVlDBNCB ROAD WALLINGFORD, PA. SWorthmore 6-0450 Op ••• A.M. to 6 P.M. PRESIYTERIAN NOTES Mr. Stettner will preach at the 9:30 and the 11 a.m. services Sun­day. The topic of his sermon will be uConceming Unity." The Church School and the Men's and Woman's Bible Classes wil! meet at their regular times. The Church Hour Nursery will be held during the. s~ond service. 11 will De under the leadership of Mrs. T. D. Stevenson. Mrs. Luther Conant will review uBridge to Africa." There will be sewing and knitting in the afternoon. Mem­bers are asked' to bring sand­wiches. The ushers for the services Sun­Circle 2, Mrs. H. H. Hopkins, day morning are as follows: S. B. chairman. will meet at 12:30 in Brewster. W. M. Bush. F. S. the Woman's Association Room of Chambers, Jr., Wm. Freegard, W. the Chureh. Mrs. F. Harry Bewley S. Patton. J. Reynolds. S. D. Rey­and Mrs. Frank Morey will be the nolds. and J. S. Thompson. Dana hostesses. Mrs. W. R. Leeron will Swan is· scheduled to serve as give the Spiritual Meditation. acolyte at 8 o'clock and George Mrs. George M. Ewing will talk Hansell at 11. During the 11 0'­on the "Cameroun." Members are clock service Martha Calhoun and asked to stay for the sewing per- Elizabeth Gibson will be in charge lod Y'hich follow5; the program. of the nursery .. Circle 3. Mrs. Harold Griffin. The Boys' Choir will rehearse • LOYALTY to the highest standards-since our 'founding 75 years ago. • THE OLIVER H. BAIR CO. DlalClolS o. PUNDALS 1820 CHESTNUT STRIET OUVER H.BAlII, Found.. MARY A. BAlli, Proold .... Telephone RI 6·1581 The Senior High Choir will re­hearse at 5:45 followed by. supper at 6:30 for the Senior High Fel­lowship. At 7: 15 the movie "The Barrier" will be shown. The Jun­ior High Fellowship will meet at 6 for a showing of the film. "The Barrier" in McCahan Hall. The Young Adults will have supper at 6:30 and the program will' be an open forum on questions about the Bible. chairman. will meet at the h,ome on Monday and Wednesday at 4 of Mrs. O. M. Hook. 611 Strath p.m. and full choir rehearsal will Haven avenue at 10:30. Mrs. be held on Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. David Bingham will be the co- The Gi.rls· Choir will rehearse on hostess. Members are asked to Monday at 5 p.m. =!UIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIlIIlIIlIIlllalIIIIIIIIIIIllIllIIII11I!S The Mr. and Mrs: Club will' meet at 7 for a covered-dish sup­per and meeting in McCahan Hall. The program wil be a talk by Mrs. Charles Henderson. Jr.. of the Marriage Counselling Sserv­Ice. = = bring sandWiches and saleable There will be a celebration of articles for .the Co-op Shop. Mag- the Holy Communion at 7: 15 azines jam or jelly for the home Wednesday morning. The Wo­for Widows and Single Women. men's Sewing Group will meet at i . MUTUAL EXCHANGE ; Circle 4. Mrs. P. Willard Crane. 10 o'clock in the Cleaves Room. § At The ;: chairman. will meet at 10:30 at At 3: 45 p.m. the Children's Lent­the home of Mrs. J. V. S. Bishop .... n Service will be held. and there 739 Harvard avenue. The co-host- will be a service of Evensong, with e55 will be Mrs. Henry Godshalk. the Girls' Choir assisting. at 5:30 Luncheon will be served. Mrs. p.m. At 8 o'clock the Parish Dis­Arthur Whitney will speak on cussion Group will meet to discuss Africa. the Burial Office as an event in = = Circle _tinp Wednesday § • E Circle 1. Mrs. Seymour Kletzlen § SWARTHMORE WOMAN'S CLUB : chairman. will meet on Wednes­day at 10:30. at the home· of Mrs. R. K. N aye 3rd. 520 Rutgers ave­nue. Program and DevoUons at 5 a ~ ~ = = ~ MEN'S, WOMEN'S and CHILDREN'S CLOTHING 5 == EASTER BONNETS and SHOES for the young Bene :- CHURCH SERVICES Circle 5. Mrs. H. Lindley :reel. the Hfe of The Parish Family. chairman will meet at 10:30 at the Holy Communion will be cele- ~ EVENING GOWNS, TUXEDOS § PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH home of Mrs. C. MacDO'Ilald brated at 11:30 Thursday 'morn- § HOUSEHOLD GOODS and TOYS' ~ Joseph :r. Bishop. Minister Swan. 910 Mt. Holyoke Place. ing. followed by luncheon and . JohSnu nS,dtaeytt.n leIrI.a rAchs si1.5ti mt Mrs. Joseph Gee r and Mrs. meeting _o.f the Women's Auxil- 9:30 A.M.-Church School. Men's Samuel' Bigger will be the co ... iarY. A movie. "Liberia, Africa's I RUBBERS and BOOTS I - = and Women's Bible Classes. hostesses.' Members are asked to Only Republic," will be shown. 10:45 A.M.-Senior High Class. bring sandwiches. At 5: 30 p.m. Saturday there will § Bring l'hings Tuesday, March 17, 10 a.m •• 4 p.m. § I Buy Things Wednesday, March 18, 10 a.m. 9 p.m. I ~ Collect Retums Thursday, March 19, 12 noon to 4 p.m. ~ . 9w:3i0ll apnreda 1c1h:. 00 A.M.-Mr. Bishop Circle 6, Mrs. Herbert Sanford, be a service of Evening Prayer. 4: 30 P.M.-Conflrmation Class. chairman. will meet at 10:30 at WednesdllY. lIIarch 18 the home of Mrs. Loren Forman. METHODIST NOTES 10ii'aQy."".M.• .-W~~en's Associatio.n 60~ ,!~niversJt~ planc.,,: Melllbers The Sunday School meets at . are asked to· bring sandwiches. 9: 45. Classes are· provided for all 8~00 P. M.-Lenten Service. §= . ., . . 5 5 METHODIST CHURCH Mrs. H. D. McCray will lead de- ages. The Young Adults meet at iillIIIlIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllUlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIllIlIIllIIlI1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOIIIIIIIIII"'U", Roy N. Keiser. D.D .. Minister votions. The program will be 10 o'clock. Sunday. lIIarch 15 Local Projects. At the 11 o'clock service. Dr. 9:45 A.M.-Church School. Circle 7. Mrs. George Hunter. Keiser will preach the fifth in a 1.0:00 A.M.-Young Adults. chairman, will meet in the morn- series on "The Lord's Prayer." 11:00 A.M.-The Minister will hig. . The topic will be "The Founda-preach. Circle 9. Mrs. Martin Luther. tion' of Temporal Blessings." 11:00 WAe.Mdn.e-sCdah.uyr, cMh aNrcuhrs e1r8y . chah'man will meet at 11 at the The ushers for the day are J. 8: 00 P. M.-I,enten Service. home of Mrs. Lyman Darling. 314 Justus Bodley. Warren Crafts. TRINITY CHURCH Lafayette avenue. Mrs. Raymond Charles. H. Grier and N. Martin H. Lawrence Whittemore. Rector Rogers will be the ·co-hostess. Kapp ... . Sundlly. March 15 Elsie Bailey will lead devotions. The Nursery for children is 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion. Mrs. C. W. Croco will do an open during the morning service. 9: 30 A.M.~hurch School. Easter vocal solo. Members are . Mrs. Edward Collins and Mrs. 11:30 A.M.-Morning Prayer and .. Charles H. Grier will be in Holy Baptism. asked to bring sandwiches. Dr. Wednesday. March 18 Robert Walker of Swarthmore 7: 15 A.M.-Holy Communion. College will· give an illustrated 3:45 'P.M.:....children·S Len ten I lecture with color slides on Death 5~3eorvipcMe. E . Pr' I and Resurrection ~ the. Isenheim 8:. 00 P..M. -_ vePnamrtgs h Dayiescr.u ssion A Itarp·.ec'e. b y Math·. as G rune- Group. wald. Tb,lJI"lIdllY, lIIarch 19: Circle 10. Mrs.' Walter Moir '11,30 A.M.-Holy Communion. . chairman. will meet in tlte Wom- S .. turd .. y. lIIarch 21 an's Association Room following 5:30 !?M.-Evening Prayer. the Lenten service at 8. The host- '1'ltE RELIG Iotis-SciCIETY esses will be Mrs. Leroy Peterson. . OF FRIENDS chairman. Mrs. Raymond Winch SunOl'. lIIarch 15 and Mrs. Thomas Prather. The 9: 45 A.M.-First Day School. program will be Projects and an 9:45 A.M.-Adult Forum "Messi- ·audience-partlclpation program. anIc Prophecy" Willialn Hordem and others. The n~t in the series. (If 4nl\ln 11:00 A.M.-~eeting for worship. services will be heid t\lis W~s­ChIldren CIIred ftil" In Whittier day evening at which time ¥r. Hquse. All are welcome. Bishop will continue his medita- 7:99 P. M.-Senior High Fellow- tion on Our LontsPrayer. shlp· lIIAmdlly. March 16 . The choir Rehearsals are as All day sewing for A,F.S.C. follows: The Junior Choir at 3:30 TuesdIlY. March 17 and the Chapel Choir at 8:00 on 7:30 P.M.-Monthly Meetipg for Thursday. and the Cherubs' Choir bUSiness In Whittier House. at 10:30 on Saturday morning. weJnllr.:r ..... 18 Anyone desiring to place lilies 7:~ ~~.se~_~~A.l!':~ or other white ftowers in the for W(I~p. church for the Ea.~ter services. FIBST CRUl\l5ii OJ' April 5. may make. arrang~ments CfnttsT. setENTIST to do so by calling the church SWARtHMORE office. SW 6-4712. Park A_ue below Hilrvard The Holy Week services will S"pdpr• Va ell 11 be as follows: Palm Sunday. 11:00 A. lII.-Sunday School. March 29 _ 9:30 - HoJy Com- 11:00 A. ".-The Lesson-5ermon will. be "Substance!' . munion and Confirmation of Com- Wednesday evening m~ municants Class. 11 - Holy Com­each week; 8 P.M. ReadIng room munion and Reception of New open d~ ex~ Stmday 12 to 5· . P.lII. ".. .aV~" 7 to Members. 8:00 P.rn. - The Chapel ":$0 p..-: ua II to .=-p.v.. ~.wIIl presmt tluBola' "Snen charge. The Choir Association meets on Tuesday evening at 8 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Carl Behenna 214 BiIyhwood avenue. Aldan. Special Lenten Service will be held in the chapel on Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Rehearsal for the Junior Choir is on Thursday evening at 6:30; Senior Choir meets at 8 o'clock. . CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NOTES ''Su\>S,tance/' th~ s~bj~t of the Bible Lesson to be read in all .c;:!hristian, Science Chqr.c:hes next Sqnday. will be exp~e4 as that which Is eternal. as \ndi'cated In the . Golden Text. tak!!l\ from the 'book of Ecclesiastes (B:a): "I know that, whatsoever God doeth. it shall be for ever: IlOthing can be put to It. nor any thing taken from it." FRIENDS MEETING NOTES The Adult F01"\lm series on the Bible will co'lltinue this SUnday with WIIllam Hordern and others reading tram seations dealing with Messianic Prophecy. Monthly Meeting for Business will be beld on Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. In Whittier House. Mr. G •. Alexander Mills of Wal­nut lane accompBnled by Mrs . MilIa, will leave today on a 10- day business trip to Los Angeles. Mid-Winter Prices Reduced! ON • Sport Coats • Jackets ,' .. • Winter Slacks • Wool Shirts • Sweaters, etG. Have You Seen Our DUNGAREES AND RIDERS for the Whole fa ... lly • Buchner's, Inc. AI Carney •. Mgr.· 8 Pa..- Ave. • •

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'Legloll Auxillory to Meet The Legion AuxilIary will meet Monday, March 16, at 2 p.m., in the Legion Room, Borough Hall. Members will discuss two impor­tant m.atterB. CO-ED BEAUTY SALON Open ,Thur.day Nigh,. PARK and DARTMOUTH AVE. Swarthmore 6-1013 Girl Scouts Observe 41st Anniversary Swarthmore's 11 Girl Scout Troops, comprising 165 Brownies and Intermediate Scouts, will join the nearly two million members observing the 41st Anniversary of Girl Scouting in America, on March 12. The Borough's fifth grade troop 429 celebrated it on Monday by giving a birthday party of their Own. Mothers were invited and en­tertained by a play which Suzanne Prescott rurected. At their next meeting these girls and their leaders, Mrs. Maurice Webster, Mrs. GeorgI!' Patterson . . TIlE SWARTBMOREAN and Mrs. Morris Hicks, ~ill make 'Edwina Blaek' Mystery Chi1Js~layers' Audiences plans for an all day camping trip at Suns:t Hill on the Brandywine. Few 01 the Players Club's 312 late, "Man, she's.a cold one, isn't productions have set audiences so she?" But when that curtain falls Townspeople can acquire some adrift as to villain or motive as with prospect of Act 3 wltho~t idea of what a troop camping site looks I,'ke by studying the· replica "Edwina Black". the current Lisa, the prospect is chill, indeed. on display in Sipler's Hardware Charles F. Seymour directed David C. Elklnton plays In" Store window. All the troops in mystery. Playwrights Dinner. and I spector Henry Martin in the ap- Swarthmore have made some par t Morum have paced the neatly proved casual, thorough unemo~ contrived plot so that each line tional Scotland 'Yard manner and of this exhibit. 'and tantalizing situation is savor- is most disarming with his com- The Rulgers Fifth Grade Troop ed until the suspense, despite the mi!llts about his missus and his 331, Mrs. Roy McCorkel and Mrs. fait accompli when the curtain dependence on tea, which of Thomas Prather, leaders, have opens, mounts and shifts with the coprse does stand him in good been learning some square dances ingeniously tossed charge of guilt. stead. Mr. Elkinton is to be con­as part of their Second Class One thing the audience agrees gratulated upon his performance. Badge achievement. They have upon, no one wants to be left· Few Individuals are guiltless progressed 'Q weil under their "alone with Edwin.a." enough. to face inspection by his instructor, Mrs. Herbert Huse, that. The cast of four is strong and discerning method. ANNOUNGING last Monday they invited their able in the subtle building of John A. Jefferson handles the mothers to a square dancing party suspicion. Isabel Briggs Myers. extremely complex role of Greg­to demonstrate their knowledge ot and Marian Brill Chamberlin, ory Black ably. He' infers vague calls and steps. absent from the Club stage for too confusion as to his own guilt or long, contribute superior per-I conspiracy in guilt as weU as the formances, each intense in her degree of it in his household. Hus­own role. Mrs. Myers as Ellen is band of Edwina. he is troubled chilling in her restrained grief and ineffectual but promise of and hatreds. Her tensions and I tenderness and strength is in him strains are eerily developed. This. too. It is this indecisiveness which ~,porter does not hanker to be makes the damage against him alone with Ellen, either. Mrs. puzzling as well' as threatening. Chamberlin (Elizabeth Graham) Add to the' excellent direction, adds presence and charm to the the able cast, a staging which lonely scene but is skillful enough deepens the import of the play in her portrayal that it is not and the audience has challenging, until the second act when rain is stimulating theatre fare, which almost a fifth dominant character continues toni~ht and tomorroyi that viewers are heard to elacu- 11ight at the Players Clubhouse. In further commemoration of Juliet Lowe. lounder of Girl Scouting in America, an Interna­tional Fund has been set up to which 'each troop contributes yearly a sum of money ~arned in­dividually by its members. Two girls are chosen from each troop to coHect this money and present it at a special meeting of delegates in the county. This year's '~Juliet Lowe" girls are as follows: PROMPT DELIVERY ON NEW FORDS NO TRADE NEEDED BUT IF YOU HAVE ONE - EXPECT PLENTY FOR IT Walsh Ford Company Yale & Sylvan Avenues, Morton, Pa. Phone SWarthmore 6·7381 Dr SWarthmore 6.1445 Troop IS-Molly Huse, Amy UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!! Ryerson; Troop 83-5 pencer Car- EE DELICIOUS DINNERS to SUIT the TAST.E of EYERYONE =a -roAlln, nBea rbCaoroap Sere,y mLoyunrn; eT rPoroapt h2e6r9; TENDER STEAKS and CHOPS Cooked to Order ~ Troop 331-5hirley Little, Nita EXCELLENT BANQUET AND PARTY FACILITIES ii Slatner; Troop 429-5uzanne Pres- BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12.1,30 P. M, ii cot!, Bar.bara Bernhardt. = 5 Elevator = s" Comfortable Rooms Day or Week Friendly Circle Hostess iii Mrs. J. Harlan Jessup. of 243 ii • STRA. TH HA. YEN INN_;= Haverford avenue will be hosless ~ = to members of the Friendly Circle Advance Agent Look out of tTie window! The Biue Jay is here, that comical, serious gUI/. He examines OU1" place with a home seeker's urge3 wondering 1-Swarthmore, PD. Telephone SWarthmore 6-0680 ii at her. home next Thursday, WALTER E. PARROTT, Mgr. FREE PARKING 5 March 19 at 2 o'clock. Belle Dud- . Ignoring the weeds, the cind.,., 11111111111.11 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111.11 111111111111.11 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111I111111111111=11~ ;l;e:y:: :w::i:l:l: :b:e:: :c:o::-:h:o::s:t:e:s::s:.: ::::::===.- abunsdi IsI/o ofltl,/ ,a nd the spaM'OWS that whether to buy. H.S. Fren~h Students Serve Annnal Banquet Students of French at Swarth­more High School held their an­nual Banquet Wednesday even­ing, March 11. In the atmosphere of a Parisian Cafe, diners enjoyed a typical French menu of hor d'o~vres, soup a l'oignon,' entree, salade, pain Francais and "Ie vin". DEW DROP INN Op!lning March 23 He estimates shelteT from sun, wind and ,.ain; and gauges. the wat.,. supply. Girls of the first year class served Ihe traditional dinner. 407 DARTMOUTH AVENUE Students of the second and third year classes presented the· even­BREAKFAST. LUNCH • DINNER ing's entertainment. Wjth aew lAIr­prise. fl'O ID the Nareabul T07 Pair. '~Not so bad", says he, from the apricot tree. Participating in the three plays, 44Chez Ie Dentiste", "Au Bal" and "Un Peu d'Exagere", were Delores Zensen. Judy, Bird, Helen Steph-. ani, Frances Raczak, Beverly Bailey. Saily Bates and Bill Cope. CLOSED EVERY SUNDAY OPEN 7 A. M. to 7:30 P. M. Monday Thru Saturday He sees it with Spring in his el/e! Clara M. Grogan Daily Dinners 90c to $1.65 Special Children's Platters THE EASTER BASKET To,. •• Cifta, Decoration. UI B. CIIBSTllUT 8'1'a8ET WEST CHERTD, PA. (Rome 01 ,.. £.rlatm.. atoCltlat­wbleh re-oplQ Oct. 15th) Mrs. Alvah W. Stuart ot Vas­sar avenue entertained members , ... ,~ '" . \ of her bridge club' at a luncheon- A quartette composed of Bob Clothier, Bibsy Cobots, Janet Crothers and Jud Mygatt sang a few popular French songs. "Tl;le Whiffenpoof Song" (J'entends dans les Bois) was presen~d' by Cornelia McKernan, Dotty Hop­kins, Pete Bloom and Roland Ken­schaft. bridge at her home last Thursday. r . !!.2.Yl' islliUll!: AT ANY PRICE TODAYI To drive the .stunning <:hryBIer New Yorker is to !lJIlarge your every concept of moto,!"g well·being. Here, pioneered by this One car, are all the . outstanding advances of the past few years ••• which, excepl for ChryBIer's own Imperial, you will find duplicated IIOwhere else today, no ! • mailer what y~u pay! Here is the utmost in Car Power: a new-type engme th~t ~ deliver more drive to the rear wheels than any other • • • the SOul-satisfyingsafety and control of full-time Power SIeering and Power Brakes • . • and road-taming Oriflow shock absorbers. Your personal trial of this beaUliful car is warmly invited_ by your Chrysler-Plymouth dealer •. DE LUXE -----------...;,,--'-_ONE OF AMERICA'S FIRST FAMI~Y OF FINE CARS __ -:-_:-____ ....;, ____ _ HANNUM & WAITE • :C.HESTER RQAD AND YALE AYEN~1i SWARTHMORE 6.1250 Among the guests were the Frank Moreys. the 'William Bushes, Dr. James Irwin and Russell Snyder. JR. COMMlnEE. BAZAAR AIDS D.A.R. SCHOOL The Junior Committee of the Delaware County Chapter p.A.R. gave their Fashion Show and Ba­zaar last Saturday afternoon in the Media Woman's Club. Between 2 p.m. and 4 commit­tee chairmen and mem'bers helped their guests make selections, en­tertained them with a spring fash­ions supplied by Swarthmore 'Shops, and served them tea in an enjoyable affair to raise funds for the Kate Duncan Smith School in' Tammassey, Ala., supported by the p.A.R., and for the Helen Pouch Scholarship: Among the committee chairmen serving th~ cause were Claire Rin­cliffe, Strath Haven avenue, Mrs. Lewis B. Beatty, Jr., Drexel Hill. the former Peggy Rincliffe and' Mrs. Edward L. Legg of Secane. Local models included Mrs. George·Plowman, Harvard avenue, from tlie Senior D.A.R., Miss Rin­cliffe, Mrs. Beatty, and Patricia Weiland of South Chester road, ftom the Junior ·Group. Larry and EunIce Legg. and David and Adis GilftUan were among the children in the show. PETER E. TOLD All U.s 333 \ • ,I • . . t Club Drama Dept, Play (Continued Irompage I) Four Reviews Planned For Lit. Group Meeting THE SW. ARTBMOREAN Page 5 H. Ingram, chairman, Mrs. P. L. Whitaker, Mrs. William W. Turn- "Books That Heip Us Under- Er, and Mrs. Harry E. Corl. s!snd Our Children" will be the Aubrey Gives Fourth Religious Series Talk The fourth lecture in the Coop­er Foundation series upon modern theology was given last Sunday by Dr. Edwin Aubrey of the Univer_ sity of Pennsylvania. He outlined OR LON SKIRTS and SWEATERS I - . Pull·on or BuHon.up Sweaters in Dan or Light Colors _ and Skirts to set 'em off! Bright for Spring and right for iIIe casual occasion THE CHILDREN'S SHOP Members of the nominating theme of the fourth in a series of committee included Mrs. 'Birney K. meetings of the Swarthmore Moth­Morse, chairman, Mrs. A. William er's Club literature group to ,be Bass, Jr., Mrs. Samuel T. Car- held Wednesday evening at 8, at penter, Mrs. Ford F. Robinson, the home of Mrs. Charles' R. Ger­Mrs. Peter E. Told IIlld Mrs. ner, 109 Princeton avenue. , E. Dwight Brauns, alteniate. An election committee to serve for two years was appointed: Mrs. Charles E. FIscher, ch8trman, Mrs. Alvah W. Stuart,· Mrs. Earl P. Yerkes, Mrs. John H. Pitman and Mrs. Harold G. Gri1IIn. Four members of the club will review a. group of current books \hat are outstanding in the field of parent-child relationShips the nature of liberal theology un­der the topic of "Religion and Ihe SeIcJublearra Mlisimnd ."a rose, observed Dr. Ili i~;~ii~~~;ii~;;~~;~~ii~~~ Aubrey, as the response of Chris-tians to the scientific spirit, the new methods of studying history and the new sociology. Liberalism is suspicious of all authOrity in religion. The Bible is cherished as the record of the contact of God with man but it is not held as an infallible book. The ',liberal cher­ishes freedom to exchange ideas with others in the belief that such exchange will lead to truth. In this way the liberal keeps his faith open to new light and to whatever change may be required by the facts. 13 S. Chester Rd. SWarthmore 6-1148 . A tea in charge of the hospi­tality committee followed the bus­iness me.tlng. Mrs. Ross W. Mar­riott had arranged the center­piece of spring blossoms. " Portraits in Oil by WINIFRED RUMBLE SW 6·7061 Of.Sample In Hobby ShopJ child development. Mrs. James Jezl will review one ot the well known books of Drs. Arnold Gesell and. Frances IIg, "The Infant and Child in the CWture of Today," while Mrs. Robert Hall will pre­sent a review of "Fathers are Par­ents Too," by Dr. Spurgeon Eng­lish, Temple University. "Living With Our Children," by Lillian Gilbreth, industrial consul­tant and mother of 12 chlidren, and "All in the Family" by Rhoda Bacmeister will be reviewed by Mrs. Carl Flammer, and Mrs. Heinz Heinemann will review Dr. Dorothy Walter Baruch's "Parents Can Be People.'"' Mrs. Flammer, who is co-chairman of the group, will lead the discussion. The meet­ing is open to all who are inter­ested. The Swarthmore College ' LlnLE THEATRE CLUB Presents iIIe S·ludent.Fjlculty Production THE DOG BENEA.TH THE SKIN By W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood March. 12, 13. 14 8:15 P.M. IN CLOTHIER MEMORIAL Th. liberal Christian believes that the clue to the meaning of life is found in Jesus Christ. God reveals himself in science, .history and the depths of the human heart but he is particularly revealed. in the career of Jesus. Jesus was a man who was so completely given to the doing of God's will that that will is made clear to all men. Those :Who act' according to the spirit of Jesus are thus cooperating with the creative forces of the universe itself. The liberal has a new concept of salvation. Although the liberal still belieVES in immortality as the continuation of the present life, he puts a greater emphasis upon sav .. ing human society. He has faith in man's ability to progress.' He stUdies the Bible to find the teach­Ings of Christianity about society 't's to Your Advantage SHOP AT THE f;O-OP Birds Eye Peas - 2 pk. 29c Leg of Lamb - 69c lb. • Large Head Iceberg Lettuce __ 15c Dartmouth Avenue (Across from Borough Haln .'15 School and College $1.00 and looks to the Chllrch to work .... _~ tc;.wards the building of the King- ORIENTAL RUGS $50 SQ. YD. Orientals of supf)rior qumity, in a wide I'8nge~ of s~ and colorings. 9x12, $600. lOxIa, $1,000. . .. Orienlal rugs and ;"""et samples displayed in tite hOJqe •. ·(PAuls.,,, & CMttEen)!. Mohawk Carpeting • Complete Size Range • Oriental Rup 100 Park Ave., Swal'thmore, Pa. SWarthmore 6-.6 000 - Clearbrook 9-4646 Paulson KNOWS Carpet HERE'S THE ROAD. to good party-line telephone service It's the road of simple consideration. Remember the three Rs Qf party-line courtesy-be Reasonable about how Ions: you ~; Release the line for emergendn when asked; lleplo"" tho __ gently wh .... you find tho line In UIO. U you are al~ courteoua on the telephone, you're o1ire to find your party.~ neighbors tho' ._ . Happy result: better telephone eerrice for eVBlyune _modi ,.. "" ""'. .., . -. ". ...,.. ... @ i dom of God'upon earth. Distinguishing liberalism from other religipus ~ovements, Dr. Aubrey noted that liberalism is at­tacked by the humanists upon its left and the neo-orthodox upon its rIght. This might mellll that Iiber':. allsm is the stal?llizlilg middle w.ay between extremes. However, Ub..; eralism is not Something static, it adheres to the principle of change through self-correction. Little Theatre Play (Continued from Page 1) coeds, which serves to tie togeth­er and comment upon th<: many plot strands. Choreographed by jane Woodbridge, a sop~omore, their movements and speeches are as much concerned with· the parade of personalities and situa­tion, as co-authors Auden and Isherwood are concerned with the inconsistencies of modern living. Due to the unprecedented size of the prodUction, elaborate back­stage plans have been blue-print­ed to keep the bulging wings free of stray kings, curates, "Queens and journalists. Barbara Pearson Lange, who directs the unusual drama, ex­tracts every bit of meaning from the play. That ''The Dog Beneath the Skin" is an allegory is admitt­ed by all who work 'on the gigan­tic production. However, specula­tions as to the specific theme un­derlying the multi-facited action range from those which postulate ua biting, sarcastic eomrdent on 20th century valu~s" to less specific suggestions which see in the plight of the dog, "mants never ending search for self-real­ization." Rotary. Club Elect Newly elected o!llcers of the Swarthmore Rotsry Club are Hor­ace Passmore, president; AverY Blake, vice-president; .tint Green, secretary and Harold Ogram, trea­surer. The B'oard of Directors include Ambrose Van Alen, George Sal­mons, John.Michael; Joseph Bish­op and Samuel Carpenter:· . The neWly elected omeers and directors will serve one year be­ginning July I, 1953. ,,'; .0 , -;-: i' • , . I . :- IN WILL OPEN A WHOLE NEW'w.c'RL,D OF ENTERTAINMENT FOR YOUI SOON ... IN ,Cttd,~ . DEVIl: In Thrilling' COLOR' ,torting Rober~ Stack • Barbara Britton. Nigel Bruce DELAWARE COUNTY PREMIERE STARTING TUESDAY, MARCil 17th This picture will be shown only at the specially equipped STANLEY ,THEATRE WEEKDAY -FF.ATURES Matinee - 12:30 _ 2:30 Evenirtlis .- 7:30 - 9:30 PrIces for thJs Preview _ E"-ment 011171 Adults-Mat. 740 Eve. "~5 Cltlldren--Mat. 500 Bve.._ ALL TAXES INOLUDIID STANLEY CHESlER . 2-3912 '.

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Page 6 THE SWARTBMOREAN Spring Survey Continues 1.8 Association Campaign The De;awar> County Tubercu- Township, Lima, Drexel Hill, Stonehurst Hills, Upper Darby, Woman's Club Notes 69th Street, and Darby. On Tuesday at 2 p.m. there will losis Association's campaign to find unknown cases of tuberculo­sis will be continued when ils Spring survey begins April 13. The program will continue through April 24, and will reach the fol­lowing communities: Concord, Crozierville, Rosemont, Darby The x-rays, paid for by the An- be a meeting with the League of ual Sale of Christmas Seals, are I Women Volers at Borough Hall. conducted by the Delaware County The Junior Woma~'s Club ~iIl Tuberculosis and Health Associa- meet in the AmerIcan Legion tlon In cooperation with the Del­aware County Medical Society and all reporls are confidential, going only to Ihe Individual x-rayed and his family physician. room of Borough Hall Tuesday, March 17, at 8 p.m. Marsh~11 Windmiller of the World Allatrs Council will speak on "India's Position in Global Affairs". We'll Pay Top Prices For Your Old Tires • Built to stay white • ToPs for safety, comfort and mileage • Stop In todayl . NO MONEY DOWN - UBERAL TERMS FUSCO MOTOR CO. CHESTER and FAIRVIEW ROADS phone Swarthmore 6.3681 The orchestra group will meet at 9: 30 a.m. Wednesday at the home 01 Mrs. Frederick Van Urk, 401 Thayer road. Thursday at 10 a.m. Delaware County Fine Arts Day will be held al the 'Twentielh Century Club, Lansdowne. Anyone wishing to exhibit paintings or crafts must enter the w~rk at the Lansdowne Club before 12 noon. The .trip of the art department to the Philadelphia Museum of Art scheduled for Thursday has been cancelled. There will be a meeting of the travel group at 7: 45 p.m. Thurs­day. E. P. Yerkes will speak and show .pictures which he took on a trip to the Caribbean last October and v~ews of Mexico taken on a trip in 1948. The literature department will meet. at 10 a.m. Friday. Mrs. Ro­land G. E. Ullman will review "The Houses in Between" by How_ ard Spring. NEWS NOTES Mrs. Robert H. Reed of College avenue has returned from a week's visit with her daughter . Mrs. Robert W. Gregory of Highland Park, Ill. Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Myers of Millington, N.J. will spend the week-end with Mr. Myers' par­enls Mr. and Mrs. Clarence G. Myers of Dickinson avenue. S~evenson . Hansell, nine-year­old son of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hansell, Jr., of North· Swarth­more avenue. has a broken right arm sustained while playing in the yard of his home. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sanford of Vassar avenue have returned liome following a three-week lmo­tor trip thr~ugh Florida, stopping at Orlando and Sf.. Petersburg. Mr. and Mrs. C. IrWin Galbreath of -Benjamin West avenue enter­tained over the week ... end Mrs. Galbrealh;s uncle Mr. John Taylor of Baltimore. Lt. Jay B. Snape of Harvard avenue who has been spending a week at his home following his graduation as a iet pilot at the Craig Air Force Base, Selma, Ala., left Wednesday for Moody Air (1) * Force Base at Valdesta, Ga., to L~-+l~/.~/!j ~)~' ~O.~~JI ~·.~W.~.~ . :C:J~~;. ~. __- ----~====== itnakge ~soiJr< ,twheee kSs loraf teagdivca nAceird tCraoimn-- 1 ~~ __9 mand. Midshipman John Tyler of the _---;=.. S - U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, ., ;;5".~_!I' _e. ~- . Md.. accompanied by three class- --- ." *] R S Vl? mates, will arrive in Swarthmore n 1. next Thursday to spend several ~, • •• • days ·at the Tyler home on South ~~~' ,nn 0 .#ui~ J! J!I Chester road. ~~ "0{, ~ Mr. and Mrs. James Bacon Douglas of Norlh Chester road re- . This i. your invitation to come in and see for yourself what kind of employer y~ur tele­phone company is, and to learn more about the jobs waiting to be filled. You'll like the people, the surroUndings, the pay_nd you'll find the work so interesting that the time flies fast. You'll discover other advantage.. t;"" such as • Good Chances for Advancement • Regular Employment • Vacotlons with Pay • No Experience Needed to Start For further information about operating ... any other type of telephone work, atop ill at ODe of the otm:e. IDted below. turned Saturday from a week's trip on the Queen of Bennuda to Bennuda and Nassau. Mr. and Mrs. Harold McCorkel and chlldren of Hummelstown spent the week-end with Mrs. McCorkel's parenls Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sheppard of Vassar ave­nue. The seventh birthday anni­versary of Kathie McCorkel was celebrated Salurday. . Midshipman D~a!d Ogram of Riverview avenue, and Midship­man William Soden of College avenue, will vacation at their re­spective homes here from the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis-, Md., from March 19 to 22. You'll Make a Hit .by """'nfl rite .. LENTEN FROSTED FOODS 5pedally .Iectecl for you to add ,.. let)' to your Lenten meals. Not only a c_ plete line of vegetable., etc., but also many kinds of .eafoods. .. .9dNJ French Fried POTATOES;; 1ge .9dmI or Birds Ey. 0 ......... Z. _ sse /JdmI Bru.sels Sprou~ 1~' Z7c .!Jdea£ BrucoD Spears Z :; 490 .9(Ime B ..... d 0 ..... '. ,Juice z t: Z90 Also In our Frosted Food Case. Grean, Headleu 1;k:,z 6ge Bread-:ed---:--::S=h-"'=-m--'-p-=":--a---="=--'::-k-et-:l-l::'-" ... . .... Lob.ter TaUs IRod<I 1~ 890 Quality Seafood In our Meat Departments FLOUNDER F'U;::,d Acme Guaranteed Qu~IIty Mecrt. U. S. GRADED CHOICE BONELESS POT ROAST n. nation'. fln •• t ..... . from the Welt. Supre .... 'I .... or and nutrition. Ib 3ge -----'--'- P .... h Ground Rscular Be .. Shoulder Veal Boast s.c'::- Ib 43C Ib 43C Ib 65C Ib S3C Ib HC. Ib 490 Veal Chops loIn Ib 75C a RIb Breast, Sbank, Meek Veal P ...... La ... Over Agar'. SDeed Bacoa Spiced Luaeheoa Meat I4lb 15C Plcknlck Special Price DILL PiCKLES FIG BARS GRAPE JELLY Patsy An. 'deu'.rancl Specl •• Price quart 2ft.. lar .,- ..Ib.. /}r,kal APPLE BUTTER 28-0z I.. 1Vft .. SAVE $1.27 EACH ON THESE LOVABLE '. " BEAUTIFUL CHARACTER DOLLS OF THE NATIONS. A $2.25 Value. Choice of 12. Iach91' Only WIth lach '500 PUICIASE IXQUISITEL Y DRElSID-COLORFUL COSTUMES .... 901-'.. ...... ....107-.~ .... ly Ho. 502 - _.rI ... _... .... _ ~ .......... \01 . Ho. 501-_ .... 11. .... __ -.. Olot Ho. 5M-V._Ia..... .... .,0-PoII .. Olrl No. 90S -Iw ... ilh Old .... 511-eo ... lal Girl No. S06 - Parl.l .... d .... 512 _ .... I ....... 46-54 SIze Lara.,. SWeat, lulcy, Florida 6919 Ludlow Street, Upper Dwltt, ... 1631 Arch Stl"', PhHadalphla, Pa. Miss Teel Dunn, daUghter of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Dunn of Dick­inson avenue, and Mi-.. Joseph E. Padgett, Jr., of Lafayette avenue UI.IU'.O 0 whose marriage will take place n .. " TAT IS.:.-:trss 5 ... 2Sc April 11 in the Swarthmore Metb· "'11' CAllFODmA IHE aRl mlPHONE .(OMPAIY OF PlllII$YI.YM!~ ~A I';...", pic. .. _ odIst Church, were guestli 01 honor ".~_ an .. CAUOTS"'ll:i::'" -= ISc ~~r!~!r:u~:~e~~=~ ACME MARKET, Chester Rd. - Swarthmore c!ently by Mr. and Mrs. l'\eY Gukk , Of. Havertown, fonnt'rly of Open Thursday and Friday to 9 P.M. Swarthmore. Open Saturday "ti1'6 P.M.\ , Mareh 13, 1953 THE SW ARTHMOREA,N Page 7 IIOY SCOUT TUINING Carpenter Addresses ESTATE NOTICE HI saw it in The' Swarthmorean." COURSE BE~INS MARCH 19 Swarthmore Lions ESTATE OP PAULINE B. GOEllER. iill--;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~ NEWS NOTES A Basic Training Course for all Boy Scout Unit leaders and assis­tants in the Brandywine District will begin March 19 at 7: 30 p.m. in Nether-Providence High SchooL The course will be given for all Scout Masters, Cubmasters, Den Mothers, Explorer Advisors and assistants who have not attended the course previously. The course cons~sts of six two .. hour' sessions. A session will be held each Thursday from March 19 until April 30 with the' excep~ tlon of Holy Thursday; April 2nd . BIG BARGAIN 'ARts EXTRA I' N&DED 9 operations ... Slar1II& Ilea" "'iaIIoI ... llitl u~ 10 IruI • KQio"' ..... ~ • .... An1 P I. -, Iv Mild· • TIt RIll EHs ,...., • T ....... )ostod • SlID, Gooaolry ..... • PiNt Pill pld .t SAVE MONEY SAVE YOUR CAR Our Mod.rll Visualiner USED ON THESE ADJUSTMENTS .' James R. Taylor, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Taylor, 01 Westdale avenue, will return to his home Friday, for a tWQ weeks mid-semester vacation from his duties as Master at Episcopal High School, Alexandria, Va. late of the TowDSblp of RIdley. de.. W m~~'~- ceased. I Letters Testamentary on the above ".frd Generation Builder.' Bstate having been granted to the un-c! eralgned .all persons Ind.b~ to the HORACE A. Dr. Samuel Carpenter, profes­sor at Swarthmore College and member of the Swarthmore School Board, was the principal speaker at the Uons Club regular meeting held Monday night at the Slrath Haven Inn. said Estate are requested to make pay-ment, and those having clalma to pre- REEVES Iii sent the' same, without delay, to y& Thomas Rutherford, Westdale avenue, has been named to the dinner committeee for the Blair Academy (N.J.,) area alumni who will hold a reunion in German­town next Thursday. BTBELE D. GENBEMER.. Executor Building Construc:tlon '~ . 226 Vassar Ave., Swarthmore, Ps. %~ E. GBNBEMBR. Attorney • Residential • Painting 10M Girard Trust Bldg.. • Commercinl • Repairs Ph1ladelphia 2, Penna. S-G-at • A1leralioDS Introduced by He""y Hofmann, Dr. C,!rpentEr spoke about 'the need for. expansion and -improve­ment of the Swarthmore School system to meet the increasing en­rollment expected during the next several years. Several stop-gaps and long range remedies were sug­gested by the speaker as a solu­tion to the problem. . Mary Ellen Snalle of Harvard avenue will arrive home. next Thursday from the Grier School to vacation through the, Easter holidays. ESTATE NOTICE EB'l'ATE OP MARTHA w. BMERSON. 8180' known as MARTHA WALLACE EMERSON. late of the Borough of Swarthmore. Deceaeed. 17Y2 South Chester Rood ; Swartltmore 6-3450 I Following his talk, Dr. Carpen­ter opened the meeting to a dis­cussion of the proposals and ans .. wered questions. Classified Ads ' PERSONAL PERSONAL-Piano tuning. Rea_ In closing, Lion President Bar- sona'ble. Member Nation'a] Asso-ton Calv~rt announced the next ciation Piano Tuners. Call Leaman, meeting on March 23 to be Ladies Sunset 9-5082 for rates. Night. PERSONAL - Confirmation and Letters Testamentary on the above Estate haVing been grazlted to the ~nders1gned., all persons Indebted to the said J!:II.tate are requested to make payment, and those having claims preeent the &ame, without delay. HELEN C. WILSON Executrix Strath Haven Inn Swarthmore, Pa. Or to her Attorneys· . A. Sidney Johnson, Jr .• ot BUTLER. BEATrY. GREER & JOHNSON 'Media, Pa, LEGAL NOTICE Christman & Joire SW 6·2290 HI 7·0674 'Registered' Plomblng Electrical Carpenfry • Formtca Kitch •• To~. "CUlto.. Kitchen CabInetsli Boys Lose Kiwanis Crown By One Point party dresses. slips and pinafores custom made for little girls from one to 12 years. MAdison 3-2733, 305 S. Church avenue, Clifton Heights, Pa. The School District of Swarthmore owfi llt hreec eSicvhe oosel alDedis trbIicdts Iant tthhee oHmigche ~~'~"~.~'~'~'~"~'~'~'~'~'~'~'~.'~'~'~'~'~'~'~""~'~'~'~' School BUilding, corner ot College and Princeton Avenues, Swarthmore. Swarthmore High School's boys PERSONAL - Baby sitting. Call Pennsylvania. up to 4 P.M. Wednesday. baskethaU team iost a spirited ==S~W::a=r=t:=h:=m:=0::r-::e=E!=---=4=25:::1:.:.--:-:-__ -: over-time game to Chester. High PERSONAL-House painter and School 63-62, ·thereby losing the repair man - available. Call 19~3 Kiwanis championship, last SW 6-3764 between 5 and 5:30. Tuesday night. An extremely en­, thusiastic Swarthmore crowd packed the stands in an exhibi­tion of grand team support. The first quarter was dominated by PERSONAL-Auto priving School -professional instruction.. We call for you. Edward F. Mau, SWarthmore 6-2469 or CHester 2-4346.· March 18. 19S3. to be opened, at a meeting of the School Board at the SchOOl District omce on March 18. 1953. at 8 P.M .• or at a meeting ad­Journed. from that meeting, for in-structional supplies and eqUipment. Janitors suppl1es. athletic medical supplies, printing. periodicals. and book rebinding. Specifications can. be secUred betwee'n 9 A.M. and 4' P.M .• Charles E. Fischer BUILDER Swarthmore 6-2253 Chester who built up a 7 point PERSONAL--Sitter-reliable wo­I d Th d t' man available by the hour, day ea. e secon quar er was en- Gr week. Call Mrs. KrafTt. SWarth-tlrely Swarthmore's when they more 6-4555. oulscored Chester 22 points to ====cc:--::----::--::-::-=-- 10, thus making the half-time PERSONAL--Grace Lewis Em­daUy except Saturdays, Sundays and hoUdays at the School District· omce. The Board reservf!:s .the right to reject any or aU bids in whole or In part. and to award contracts on any Item or It.ems making up any bid. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ DOROTHY RODGERS Becretary-5~5l§~ ployment Agency. Ucensed and score 32-27 in Swarthmor~ts fa- Bonded. Phone SWarthmore vor. During the thlrd period Lee 6-5019. Swan dropped in 3 quick baskets PERSONAL - Radios, television to help the Utile Garnet increase their margin by another point. The gam·a grew progressively tight as time went on and with 2 receivers, record changers and other electrical appliances repair_ ed. Prompt service. Robert Brooks. Swarthmere 6-1548. PIANO TUNING New and Rebun. Plano. and Repairing Since 1908 . ALBAN PARKER Phone Melli .. 6·3555 minutes to play Chesler once again I'OR REN.T Swarthmo.e 6.1448 took the lead, this time by 4 points. FOR RENT-Pleasant· room in WILLIAM BROOKS The local boys then pressed Chest- new house. Telephone SWarth- Ashes & Rubbish Removed ter all OV'<r the floor and in themc~0~ r;i'e~6;;;-6~7i;;6i-9,-." .= ==:;-;===::; . very last minute tied the score FOR RENT-Furnished apartment Lawns Mowed, General 62 -.62, forcing t h e game m· to over- -d three. ..ro omPsr i antd bath - 236 BardinHg aAwvlei.n, lMl orton,. Pa. . - ~ ~~-.. - mo ern utililles.· . va eentrance. time.· " .. . . . References. SWarthmore 6-3168. In the overtime period only one FOR RENT-Apartment _ large ( shot was taken by Swarthmore livlng room, one bedroom, tile ROOFS· GUTI'ERS I (a near-miss) While Chester had bath, complete kitchen. ·Private REPAIRED & INSTALLED I entrance. Near transportation. $10 WARM AIR HEATING I· many attempts on the foul line, a month including utilities. Avall- ..• ! finally making the deciding .mar- able April 1. Phone MEdia 6-1810. Furnaces Vacnum Cleaned. ! RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION Alterations P.R.R. Freight Bldg. Swarthmore, Pa. J. F. BLACKMAN SW 6·66J6 gip of victory. foR SALE GEORGE MYERS ; Outstanding perfonners for ;;;;=,,=";'-=:'::"iCO=:::"--.m-=:.- Box 43-Swarthmore 6-0740 I ou. ~.All CON1IfllONlNO OIl FIll_US Chester were Paul Wollcale and FOR SALE - "Top-soil, fill-dirt, I~============~'I '-~-"-'-l-!l'~"~''~' ''~.U.NINQ and mushroom-soil. C a I I WAUl HIAlIU , Matty Mi\1er with 21 and 12 SWarthmore 6-3400. points respectively. For the local FOR SALE - Loom - four har- THOM SEREMBA team Don MacElwee performed ness, eight inch structo sample U P H 0 L 5 T ERE R brilliantly under the boards, in loom, $12. Phone SWarthmore . addition to dumpmg in 17 points. .,6-",3~9;-17:;.,..",_--,;==-:::=o-_ CUSTOM SLIP COVERS FOR SALE - Studio couch - Bill Hoot, hampered by too many g 0 Q d condition. $20. Ca\1 Phone Sharon Hill 0734 personal fouls, scored 13, and Lee SW8rthmOr=e=6:--c34iI9~2T,··iCiMii:a;idJeii= I Swan, who played t11l" best a\1- . _ , ____ .. ______ ... around game of his career was high man with 19 points. Other COli"', boys who played important parts in the game were Howie' Sh~arer I Bob Doherty, Rob Wright, and Don Stromberg. Swarthmore earned the right to play In the final game:. of the . tournament by defeating :Nether­Providence 67-38 and Upper Chi­PETER 01 NICOLA Driveway ConstracHo. Asphalt or Concrete Cellar Walls Re .• Plclst.tredl Phone Swarthmore DAY and NIGHT OIL BURNER SERVICE MONDAY THR1;J SATURDAY NOON $W 6· ... 041 SllNDAYS,ancl HOLiDAys SW 6.;0740 COAL FIREPLACE WOOD J.A •. , chester 66-53. Swarthmore's only FOR SALE--Girl's ticycle, 26" . other appearance in the Kiwanis Wheelbase. Valley Brook 2425. finals was in. 1935 when the tittle FOR SALE - Oriental rugs _ RUMSEY Chevrolet SWarthmore 6.6130 Thecatre Square Sou'" Chester .Roacf Garnet was defeated by Upper beautiful. Several large room Darby 28 to i2. sizeS, and throw rugs". Bryn Mawr . 5-3939; The squa. d m. embers and thelr ·FOR S. T ~Fi I b h ~ rep Bce enc es Dads are. lllVlted to attend the sturdY, altractive. Priced low. Kiwanis Basketball banquet next .finished or unfinished. SWarth- Wednesday at the Chester more 6-6769 . Y.W.C.A. Next Thursday both th!!I=='-'O--'-'~W=A::N;:T::E;:D::---- J.V. and Varsity teams will be WANTED-Swarthmore newspap­honored by the Citizens Commit- ers 1893-1913, 1922-1929 for his­tee's Basketball banquet to be held torical purposes. Box WZ, The .-at the Strath Haven Inn. ,S;"w :;;;a"rthm~~o:"r-'cean,,=,===:.---:c:=== .. WANTED-Professlonal. engineer A Compl... 'nsuranc. au !leal Istate Agency WIshes to rent house having three or four bedrooms. Newly emigrated Canadian. Two children -Dale 4 and Jim I. Call SWarth­SWEENEY & CLYDE 29 EAST 5TH ST., CHESTER PhoRIS: 3-6141 3-6142· 4-4291 4-4292 Samuel D.(]yde J.Edwldda,de • 'Samuel D. C1ycle, Jr. _. --- -'--'=:- ------------=----=...: ----- - -=---;:--=------ -~- ---'---- - - more 6-0680 evenings. WANTED-Young. woman desires full or part-time housework. Five days week. References. CHester 4-3321. LOST AND FOUND FOUND-Red shoulder bag at Rutgers avenue bus sIop,Satur­day_ Call SWartbmore 8-0209. . LOB'1'~Pair brown boots, size 8. Victoria MacNair, SWarthmore 1-,051. Real Estate . . Insurance , Custom Homes Construction Mortlage~ --e-- Baird & Bird COR. DARTMOUTH a.d LAFAYETTE AVENUES Opposite 8orollgi Han .. a SWa,li.oreUI. . SWlJlllimore 6-1202 •

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• mE SWARTHMOREAN March 13, 1953 Local, Media Leagues . Plan Combined Meet Tuesday . Discussion Will Concern Johnson House; this meeting is to have people become aware of their re­sponsibilities. If it goes through the State Senate, it will be voted upon by the citizens of Pennsyl­vania next November. St~dents Work to Detweiler Dies Saturday Earn Charity Fund (Conl!nued from Page 1) Although first reports from the Club of Philadelphia, the Caveat United Charities Drive launched Club and the Constitutional Club. Monday by SwartluJlore, ··t~~~!~~ I In addition he was president and and senior high school S' last surviving charter member of will not come officially until to- the 43d Ward Savings and Loan day,. $15 has already been collect- Association. BURNED OUT Nancy Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mts. john ·M. Moore, 2 Whittier Place, was one of 99 Antioch .College freshman girls who lost personal belongings in the fire which gutted historic North Hall dOrmitory on the night Bill at Washington's Birthday. A combined meeting to discuss "Why We Need a Revision of the State Constitution" will be held by . the Media and Swarthmore Leagues of Women Voters, next Tuesday afternoon at 2 p.m. in the American Legion Room at new. Borough Hall. The meeting will tallow the.reguiar monthly lunch­eon of the Swarthmore LWV at 1 p.m. . Under the general direction of Mrs. Norman Hixson, Know-Your­. State' Chairman for the Swarth­more ~ague, this meeting is part of a County-wide project arrang­ed by Mrs. Hixson. Those taking part in the Swarth­mor~ program will include: Mrs. William C. McDermott, Mrs. Maurice L. Webster, and Mrs. Hix­son of the local League; Mrs. F. Harold McCutcheon, Allce Darnell and Mrs. Rose Saul of the Media League; and three from the Hav­erford League. The Johnson Bill, calling for a convention to revise the State Con­stitution, has already passed the Swarthmore Jr. Assemblies The Swarthmore Junior Assepl­blies will hold formal dances for the eighth and tenth grades to­morrow evening, March 14 at the Woman'.s Club. . Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Turner are hosts for the eighth grade which meets at 7:30 p.m. The chaperons will be Dr. and Mrs. Harold Roxby and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Turper. The tenth grade meets at 9:30 p.m. and the hosts are Mr. and Mrs. J. William Hollander. Mr. and Mrs. Warren R. Godfrey and Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Brinkmann will be the chaperons. On Leave Following his graduation from the N'Iovy line officers school at Newport, R.I., March 6, Ensign Richard Taylor spent several days leave with his parents" Mr. and Mrs. E. H.· Taylor, of Harvard avenue. Ensign Taylor will report March 16 to the Naval Air Tech­nical Training Center at Jackson­ville, Fla., for preliminary train­ing as a Navy Air Intelligence officer. MARK·ON TAPE· A New Low Cost Answer To Label Problems Print on it with pencil.or any blunt pointed instrument The Result?-A permanent, soll,proof ·Iabel-oelf.adhering, self'protecting Strongly Resists Water, on, Chemicals CAII1~RA & HOBBY SHOP 405 Dortmouth Avenue G. WEST COCHRANE sw 6-4191 Friday 9 _ 8 :30 i. • MODERN ~ RANGES are built f. I ~~"I!B. co.nve.ll-'r;f~ • . YOII'II thrill to the easy opefatlon af • _ tlern gas 'Glage. DesIgned for convenience ... _ iCIdcs !!Ide easily In and out while a catch .... ,I 's their being pulled too far. everything Is will_ ..tsreacbl Choose your modern gas range at )IOUI' pluMber's.dealer's.or any Philodelphia Electric L bcw Itt Fl. . .ICI •• ' ed by Nathan Bell's seventh grade Active in the Swarthmore Meth­homeroom. The students odist ChurCh, Mr.. De.tweller their contribution by conducting a formerly served It as trustee and bake sale at the school early this was "us representative at the Phil­week. Other homeroom and class adelphia Conference. projects will be carried out In the He is survived by his wife, the ensuing week. .. former Eleanor G. Middleton; his The drive is being headed this son Robert A. and four grand­year by Seniors Liz Forsythe and children Marloll, Mark, Georgia Cornelia McKernan. It will con-and Janice of Cornell avenue; and tinue through next Friday, March his sisters, the Misses Ruth and 20. Maria Detweiler. Elizabeth A. McKie, faculty ad- viser for the proj.ect, has assured The services in Clifton Heights Within hours after the lire was linally quenched early Monday morning, clothing contributed by upperclass stu den Is, Yellow Springs townspeople and nearby merchants was being distributed to the burned out girls at an emergency clothing center in the Antioch gym. n-as.i um. Wives of Antioch faculty mem­be r s staffed ali Ualteration shoppe", ..,t up beside the racks of clothing, and turned out cus­were conducted by the Rev. Dr. tom-tailored fashions on the spot. parents that while every effort Roy N. Keiser, minister of the is being made to have a success- Swarthmore Methodist Church. l u I campa lg O, no pressure 1. 5 b e- Interment followed in Fernwood Pam Foster, a member of the . g b ht t b th hil Senior Planning Board, and Ann In roug 0 ear on e c - Cemetery. dr-en. She hopes that contributions _________ Hay, of SwartluJlore, were among will be the expression of the chil- the representaUves of Delaware dren's wish to share with those Group Hear Mrs. Bishop CoW)ty at the Chester Counl}' Se-less fortunate rather thah a sum The Friendly Open House Group nior Girl Scout Day at West Ch'est-obtained from their parents. She which held its regular meeting er Saturday. Both are members emphasizes that there is no com- March 2 in the Swarthmore Pres- of the Lansdowne Mariner Troop. petition among the children as to byterian Church, heard Mrs. J. V'I'-:============ the amount giv~n. S. Bishop review "Cry, the Be­loved Country" hy Allan Peyton. Robinson to Speak Tuesday (Continued from Page 1) aside, at least part time, as an am­bassador- at-Iarge to the colored peoples of the world." In Japan, a university vice­president/ commented, "The Com­munist students, of course, out and tried to get Dr. Robinson to answer questions on the race question. They thought he would help thel~ vicious propaganda cause. He was very honest in his answers but very astute. It was a real piece of diplomacy which left even the Commie boys somewhat fla1jbergasted.tI . Since Dr. Robinson's return to the United States, he has talked to local student and church groups in· many parts of the country. Af­ter his visit to the University of California at Los Angeles, 11 stu­dents decide.d to go to India tell Indian students about United .States. The 11 UCLA un­dergraduates returned to the U.S. last September- after a success .. ful trip. In addition to his recognition as a student counselor, Dr. Robinson is widely known as pastor of the Presbyterian Church of the Ma~ter in NeVI York City. He is also founder and head of the Morning­side Community, Center in Harlem and one of the founders 9f New York's Sydenham ·Hospital-the first such interracial institution in the· Uniied States. He was born in Tennessee in 1908 . and was graduated at head of his class from Lincoln Uniersity, Chester County, in 1935. 'He was president of the class 1938 at Union Theological Semin­ary, New York, from w!)ich he received his Bachelor of Dlviniiy degree. He is a member of Board of Foreign Missions of ~resbytepan Church U.s.A. has been active in numerous corn-I munity service organizations. autobiogra'phy, c'ij.oad Without I Turning," was published in 1950. To Entertain Teachers Rutgers avenue teachers will I!\lests of honor at a luncheon the Ingleneok tomorrow. Hostes­ses will 'be sixth grade mothers and include Mrs. Robert M. Gro­gan, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Howard Dodson, Mrs. Roy Mc­Corkel, Mrs. William Taylor, Mrs. William Uthe, and Mrs. Edward Cratsley. Pi Beta Phi Alumnae of Phila-delphia will meet at 7:30 Tuesday evening, March 18, at the home of Mrs. Raymond K. Denworth, 301 . Elm avenue. New ofllcers wlll be The Communiiy Health Society as hosts, served refreshments with Mrs. Charles E. Fischer, chalrman, assisted by Mrs. Walter Schmidt, Mrs. H. IJndley Peel and Mrs. Marvel Wilson. r Win a. Bridge The following members of the Crum Creek Bridge Club won at the Tuesday evening meeting: seated north and south, Mrs. T. Saulnier and Mrs. H. B. IJncoln, first; Mrs. W. Steuher and· Mrs. A. B. Anderson second. Seated east and west, Mrs. J. Brownell and Leslie Luckie tied with Mr. and Mrs. William H. Webb for first and second place. You Me~t the Nicest ESSENTIAL • Good health i. the first essendal. All else depends upon genmg w.11 and A.ep­ing welL See your doctor promptly, at the first sug· gestion of illn ..... And, of . coorse, brin,S his presetip­cions to th •• dependable source where you. ,,!e as· sured prompt,lrease com· pounding an uniformly fair price •• Thank you! CATHERMAN'S DRUG STORE ........ -J...:~=~)CH ESTER'S Fashion Corner it looks .. feels ... washes like in fact it is a miracle! ORLON 5·98 Orion miracle fabric cardigans have the feel and texture of Cashmere Cardigans by Helen Harper, Glengary, Catalina and Mademoiselle in the widest range of colors both pastel and darlc; All popular sizes. Sportswea..-cond floor Open every Friday night until 9 • • elected. . HARRIS & CO. TAILORS and FURRIERS 11 Plrk Avenue Swarthmore ~ . LADIES and MENS SlilTS MADE-TO-ORDER FeP--.. P".riQ 0/'" .""..., Cr .. '" SWarthmore 6-0504 i i . mGH GRADE CLEANING, PRESSING and REPAIR. , . HELP S\'lIlrthmore ~'warthmre J MEET THE· 'SWARTHMOREAN RED 'HUMAN CROSS NEED' VOLUME 25--NtiMBER 12 SWARTHMOIU:; tttmAY, FRIDAY, MARCI:i 20,1953 , .' Jr. High Girls to Aid Easter Seal Campaign Mrs. Zecher Heads Sale Sponsored by Soc. for , Crippled Children Forum Speaker . , .. Open forum Set for 8 P. M. Monday Night Correspondent. Professor To Speak on UN Forecast Ivan 8. Peterman, well known Students from Swarthmore Ju- war corr"spondent and authorliy nor HIgh School .wlll sell Easter on International affairs, will be one lilies tonight, March 20, in the of two main speakers on "United Borough's business section for the Nations - Profit or Loss" at the beneftt of the ~953 Basler Seal open forum In the Nether Provl- 45 Pct. to Gol Red Croas Treasurer Mrs. Collben Shute announces that $5592.00 have been collected so far in the annual campaign for funds ,being conducted this month. The drive, although half over, has less than 50 per cent to go to reach the $10,155- .00 goal set for Swarthmore. Gedrge Plowman, chairman of the Drive, urges all 'Workers to co"er their territories as soon as possible. campalgn sponsored· by the PhI!- dence High School Auditorium, !-_____ = __ .....:.. __ ..J adelphia SocJe\y .for Crippled Wallingford, at 8 p.m. next Monr ' , Children and AdUlts. . day, March 23. Mr. Peterman will St· ·t S· S H S N t ·Mr •. Paul E. Zecher is in general giv. local listeners his Impression a e ays •.. 0 charge of the sale, assisted by of what the United N .. t1ons has .• ' Mrs. Peter Coste, Mrs. Howard Y. accompllshed and what the future Financially Distressed Clymer, Mrs. Robert Hall and holds for that peace organization. Mrs. James O. Stephens. Joining Peterman as a torum The followJnc junior ·high school IV "N H. PETERMAN speaker is Dr: H. Field Haviland, girls, wearing colorfulY.aster bon- __ Jr., assistant professor of political nets will ",,11 the lilies:·· Babble· . . science at Haverford College. G.a";ahan, Danna Cope, Rosemary Antl'ques· Authorl·ty Dr. Joinl W. Nason, President of Cox, Alice Carroll, ·Nlncy Ernest.. . Wo~ldA1lalrs Council of Pliiladel- Doris Snyder, Jeanne Schloesser; To Speak Her'.e' Tu· e's. pliia which Is supervising the June Holt, Mary Elmore, Julie . • forum, will be moderator. Marvel Borough's Bid for Raise In Legal Tax Rate Turne.d Down One of the Swartlunore School District's bids for permission to Tucker,· Ann Hirsch· and Ann . .. Wilson Is chairman of the com. incre.ase is legal tax mll!age re- H uteh in son. M rs. Re gar Feat·u· red •In mlttee which arranged the affalr. celved official refusal at Wednes- The Socleiy; ·which conducts a . • There is no admission charge. dsy evening's session of School year-round treatment anlJ.,nhab" ·2 P .M. Meetl~g at Board. The State Department of Ilitation program in' ~~, •.. '0Woman's Club .. Public Instruction notified the Philadelphia, Bucks, Montgom...-y Health Nurses Report District that its investigation, re-and Chester counties, obtains It's A meeting' of the Woman's Club . . vealed Swarthmore did not con-maln source of ~come' from this not scheduled In the talendar will 438. VI·S·ltS I'n Feb. stitute a financially distressed dis~ annua l .......... v e. .I t . as h ead quar ters be held March 24 at 2 . p.. m. when. trlet under exi. sting law. at 20th ljpd ·South COllege. av. enue, Mrs. Olivia Regar, a dean amOll6 Porothy M. Sldner, acting dlr- Following this news the Board PhilacJeIjlh!a, and It's !reatment antique dealers, will talk on "All' j!ctor of the Community Health proceeded to review a rough draft ~~!!:,.r:!.~umpa":O":~1 ca:;:;!hplYy-, :~~~ s:~ ~i~e~~~~: c~t:.,~: :=::c':!"~:n:a:he v~~~th f: of a 1953-54 budget which.lt will ........ " to show the lIudlence and in her authorize for posting next monlll functlOli~Find vocational training talk will discuss what people February at the March 12 meet.- and approve In May .. · Based on and job placement. ,. should know about 'buying an- log of the Board of Directors In retalnlng the maximum 35 mill .. Included in the Society's speclal tiques. There will· be' a quest!. on the Borough Hall. Sev,eniy .two of real estate levy, a ·one pe~ cent. services are Camp Daddy Allen, a and answer period. these were to acute cases, primar- property transfer tax and lbe$15 $ummer camp for crippled chi!. .Mrs. Regar has been giving a lIy InOuenza and grippe; 152 (18 of per capita levY of ,the present dr·e n in· the Po OIlftO • .. .' c~,th.e F u•. "..-..a~ n series of. lectures on the· sub'ect them requiring longer than one sch 00I year the propose d new b ud- CUnic for Cereb1"al· Palsy ·C~'ldrefl. 'J hour visits) wer.e chronic cases; g t tot Is $8'0000 Increase of • .. . - .,. .~. ,... '~':l"T' to.· .<lealers, She has a shop In 61. were to cancer po. tients, this .·7'74 oa "th· i 't·almn ted f th and a workshop.·. .-.".;.;. "enos· ylvanla· and one In New Jer- . .. ,.0 over at es a or e ... ftgure listing a sharp'lncrease In t n __ . ts I d·· sey, ~nd has been.exhlblting In the ·curren year,-"""ell!' are ncreas- Penn.Prof. to A dress. . Swarthm. are Anti. ques FaJio s.lnce such·';;'re, edby. $·12,500' inanti¢ipated:taxes, P.5O PER YEAR Attentive ,Audience . , Hears Dr. Robinson PresbYterian,Pastor Urges American Creative Spirit "Eurol'e is the land of yester­day, America the land of today, and Asia I.the· land of tomorrow." Dr. James. Robinson announced from the ,Clothier Memorial stage last Tuesday night. "Africa is tlie land of.·the day after tomorrow." He added that Ibe Asians will de-termine: the outcome. Presbyterian Missions leader and pastor of the' Church of the Master, .New York City, Dr. Rob­inson made a six-months tour of the world last year for the Pres­byterian Church, U.S.A. Although he publicly regretled Ibat he would have to 10rego iel1lng of the "most· interC!Sting experiences" of his trip, his audien<;.e hung, al­most Uterally on his words throughout his, hour-long talk. Every: American is a witness for democra(:y, I1r. Robinson sald, ad­ding that Amerleans in their en­thusiasm for ·freedom make it li­cense, and. tlie result Is deplal'libly (Continued on Page 10) C~.Sponsors Easter Egg Huitt Ap.ril'4 Miss Sidner 'brought the Board dd't' I $9 500 Itt- E ". Lea M t·he ftrst one eight years· ago. an a Ilona , n sac ap-venmg gue on, Patsy Ruth O'Brien of ihe Home up to date on three of the Socioty's propn. at io n, $1 ,0 00 In ml.S ce1 1 an- . Where, . of Where is the Easter . hil del· hi long term patients. The daughter .eous income· and $25,000 more Bunny, changed to When, oh Dr. J. C. Charlesworth, a pro- for· Incurables 10 p. II P a of displaced persons who was· dls- When, this week as the largeheart- lessor at the University at Penn- w II I op. en the program with voc al covered when almost totally deaf loan. $375,000 loan was placed in ed. IJons. Club sent out an SOS ' • i the current budget 1n case it was sylvania, will address. the even- mus c. . by a staff nurse making a routine needed for land and building ex- to this Herald· of. Spring anq De-ing meeting of the S.wai'tlifuore"".Hostesses at the ·door will be: ., M . ." P W· M school checl< has now been treated panslon before· the end of this light of Small. Egg ·Hunters; League of Women VI/ters 'at 8 .rs. Geor6e.· '. arren, rs. to' thq· point where a· hearing aid school year.· The .. new budget'listS . With an· alacrity that almost o'clock Monday night In McCahan ThOmas K. Brown, Mrs,. Gorton is not needed. A tuberculosis pa- Ooored the stalwart Servic.e Club, Hall, Presbyter'I'an Church. . W. ·Brush and Mrs. Morris H. the full $400,000 bond issue which .. tient has now been admitted to a is i t is kl . hit Ibe Bunny not only accepted the Dr. Charlesworth will lJPCak· on 'Fussell. At Ibe tea; Mrs. William stale hospital where he can re- the' D tr c as ng tee ec or" invitation to stage one at his fa- "State Constitu· tio' ns-We N·eed a R.' Huey and Mrs. Clalre H. J".g- ate to approve In.the May primary. eel. Ch·ange." Mrs. Normah' Hixson, l.um will pour. Mrs. Hans K. Steln- ve good care. Nurses have also I n addI. ti. on the ··. b·a I ance ca rrie d in.o us Sw. arthmore Easter Hunts, Know ~ Your _ State ·Ch·a,·rman feld and Mrs. Clarence C. Fr.a nck helped to place the four children fo.r war d t 0 th-e new year I.S esI i- April 4. ~ . of a sepously ill cardiac-diabetic $37 400 i I f th but promptly set the date for . will Introduce the speaker and tiEf 01' the hospitallty committee, will patient In homes in order that the mated as .,.. n p ace a e "At 10: 30 a.m." he said, "on in general charge of the meeting, assist. (Continued on Page 4) $8.000 with which' It began the the college lacrosse field, if that's which Is open to all. residents of 1952-53 ftscal ~riod. The expense . CI M· h R 'd il· side is ralsed by increases In all all right. Suppose we have three ,the community. ara ars. etlre 13 F" e £or School, . hunts ~ one fcir the 1l1l1est ones, Dr. Charlesworth is a member B' W D- 1.1 dE-partmcnts and interest on the of the faculty of the UniverSity's uSlness oman• . . les B· ' h Offi new 1o an. another· for the bigger ones up Institute. of Stale and Locai Gov- Clara Mae Marsh,· a business oroug ces Reviewing architect's sketches of through the third grade, and 'the ernment, and conducts a course in woman in S:-varthmo~e for over Thirteen Swarthmore citizens the Rutgers avenue school exten- !:~gh0":xth~or fourth graders public administration at the Unl~ 40 years until her ~etirement 18 have lIled in the Republican Pri- sian, the Board set an April 1 verslty. He is a consulta;nt of ,~ ... tJ1onths ag?, was bUrled ~esterday mary for School Board and Bor- meeting for the purpose of ap- "Now, prizes for each grade "L'ttl Hoover Co~lon'''·· andl ~ernoon 10 Mount MorlBh Cem- ough offices; to be nominated May proving delj.nit!' preliminary draw- group would be nice ... " the au~o: of the book, ;'Go;'ern- etery following funeral· services 19. Ings. It also asked Architect How- Bunny's voice faded gently as he mental Administration." Dr. in Philadelphia at noon, Six candidates are ·contesting ell Lewis Shay, Jr., to seek infor- apparently started dreaming of Charlesworth also serves as an Miss Marsh operated. a utlUty four vacancies on the School mal approval of the present seven gay spring colors, soft green grass, associate editor of "Annals" a shop on South Chester. road. She. Board. Running for a two year classroom and multi-purpose a sunny, day-· publIcation of the American died Sunday at the age of 75 at term, one to be nominllled, are room plan from 'the State mean- ''Sunny Day!" Ibe Bunny's Academy of Political .and, ,SoCial the home .. of her nephew Harry Charles C. Martin, 406 Haverford while. Numerous bids on miscel- voice oame suddenly back across S . ,. Moylan In Prince Bay, Staten Is- place and Robert H. Wilson, 603 lsneous supplies were opened and the wire, "I'll certainly do my c::~~er feature of the mee~g land. ~.Y., Harvard avenue. Three contest the turned over.to Supervising PrIn- best! I'll call you later on, with will be a report of the panel, .'. She 15 also SUl'Vlved"by a broth- four yellr term, two to. be nomln- cipol Frank R~ Morey for an~sis. further details." , "Wh We Need a Revision of the er Frank R. Marsh, Venlnor ated: Jean Bass (Mrs. A. W"ilIiam, The Mayfair Agency Was awarded !Jons President Barton Calvert Sta~ Constitution", by lorr s. Heights, N.J. Jr.), 241 Ogden avenue; Donald P. contract for supplying periodicals hung up the receiver with con- Mathews Johnson. The panel was Jones, 407 North Swarthmore ave- on its low bide of $171.65. siderabl~ jubilance and relief, but conducted by the Swarlhmorl! and College Students Give nue, Incumbent; and Mary'Splller The Board approved its usual there was a delay on the other Media Leagues last Tuesday as 124 Pints to Red Cross (Mrs. Robert E.), 603 Ogden ave- contribution ot $400 and use of end. Th~ Bunny's ear, far too long part of a couniycwlde p'r?lect, One· hUndred and twenty f"", nue.· JOM F. Spencer, 210 Yale bulldlngs and'-grounds In connec~ for an ordinary telephone, had . - ..... , pints of blood which formerly avenue, incumbent, stands alone tion with the Swarthmore Recrea- curled ,ent/lUsias\ically around the ·Sc.ool Vac..Ii .... , BQwed in the· veins of Swarth". for the six year ten.n. tion ASSOI.'latiOn's community sum- reee1ver,and tangled with the cord Todliy 'marks tile .".oloIIe at more College. students, are now For :ik>rough offices there Is no mer prognim. It took some time and dexterous Swarthft.ore Schools' for· .. Spring safely stowed away in. Ibe Red contest. .Those who have lIled. are: Henry HOlmann was named to manipulation to free It, so it was Vacation. They wlll open·iIIiaIn at Cross Blood Bank as a resUlt of Tax Collector, Mary Parke conduct the Summer School under perhaps no wonder that the. oper­the usual time on MoiI!iay, March Tuesday's ·blood donor day at the Do9d. ,205 North Swart.hmore ave- the supervls.l .o n cif .WilIiam Bush, ator's voice, crisp and deceivingly .. 30. college.. nue; Burgess, Joseph Reynolds, 1 ., efllcient,.starUl!d hin).·.in his·labors. . • .. ,." >. Bruce Gould student chairman Oberlin avenue; Auditor,Richard high school ~cipal. "Is .there some delaY :oh your , Tharsday Se-.::·:for Ibe project. was assisted by SnYder, 209 Dartmouth avenue; a ~~B:O~~~~":~eth':h!:rr::: C~'~ought.ti.~Bunny,mas_ The March mee!iDe at, tile .'Qo!ltll ,Richard Laeuber. ane!- Lincoin Councilmen, Thomas Hopper, 10 th high soh '1, hi h would move gI 11m d retIIrnlng G.amma sewing groU:p will' I';e. held . Potter. Local Red cross Units on Dogwood lane, . Frank . McCowan,e . 00 w c . _sa ng ,., p ear ,an at the horne of Mrs.' charI ... G. duty were c..nteen, Gray Ladies, 407 V8J!S8r· avenue, Harry Wood, mUSIC grollI'. rehearsals and con the ~yer .~ .l~ cradle, delay ateher 613 Ogdl!li· avenue . on Nurses Aids, StaIr Aids and Motor 317 l'l'orih Cbester road and Birney f~ces tOI7, other studenta from .Is right. l.cIldn't I>e1leVe -5,:"arth- :11rsaa;;· Ml1rch 211. .. , ' . Oorpo. Morse, 742 Harvard avenue. . . (Oontbl~ on Page 10) more would call me ~ y.ear. .... -'" , ,

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INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE • Page 8 Local, Media Leagues Plan Combined Meet House; this meeting is to have people become aware of their re­sponsibilities. If it goes through the State Senate, it will be- voted upon by the citizens of Pennsyl­Tuesday Discussion Will vania next November. Concern Johnson Swarthmore Jr. Assemblies Bill I The Swarthmore Junior AsseJ;11- blies will hold formal dances for A combined meeting to discuss the eighth and tenth grades to­UWhy We Need a Revision of the morrow evening. March 14 at the State Constitution" w~ll be held Woman's Club. by the Media and Swarthmore Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Turner Leagues of Women Voters. next are hosts for the eighth grade Tuesday aftErnoon at 2 p.m. in the which meets at 7:30 p.m. The American Legion Room at new chaperons will be Dr. and Mrs. Borough Hull. The meeting will Hurold Roxby and Mr. and Mrs. tallow the regular monthly lunch- Donald Turner. eon of the Swarthmore LWV at I The tenth grade meets at 9:30 1 p.m. . p.m. and the hosts are Mr. and Under the general direction of I' Mn;. J. William Hollander. Mr. Mrs. Norm.an Hixson, Know-Your- and Mrs. Warren R. Godfrey and State Chairman for the Swarth- Mr. and Mrs H. W. Brinkmann more League, this meeting is part I will be the ch·aperons. of a County-wide project arrang-I ed by Mrs. Hixson. I On Leave Those taking pa~t iI.l the swarth-i Following his graduation from mor2- program Will Include: Mrs. the Nc.lvy line officers school at William C. McDermott. Mrs. Newport. R.I., March 6, Ensign Maurice L. Webster. and Mrs. Hix- Richard Taylor spent several days son of the local League; Mrs. F. leave with his parents, Mr. and Harold McCutcheon, Alice Darnell Mrs. E. H. Taylor, of Harvard and Mrs. Rose Saul of the Media avenue. Ensign Taylor will report League; and three from the Hav- March 16 to the Naval Air Tech­erford League. nical Training Center at Jackson- The Johnson Bill, calling for a ville-. Fla., for preliminary train­convention to revise the State Con- ing as a Navy Air Intelligence stitution, has already passed the officer. MARK·ON TAFE A New Low Cost Answer To Label Problems Print on it with pencil or any blunt pointed instrument The Result?-A permanent, soil. proof label-self.adhering, self.protecting Strongly Resists Water, Oil, Chemicals CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP SW 6-4191 405 Dartmouth Avenue G. WEST COCHRANE Friday 9 _ 8:30 MODERN tfII~ RAN~ES • are built for , ~1t·eB· co.nvefl/~~ " .' .~"""'"­- . . ..". You'll tbri11 to the easy operation of •. - clem gas range. Designed for convenience, til. _n racks slide eaSl1y in and out while a catch pre­wnts their being pulled too far. Everything is withia -'S reachl Choose your modern gas range at )IOU!' plumber's,dealer's,or any Philadelphia Electric I bwbca·h II. THE SW ARTHMOREAN Students Work to Earn Charity Fund Although first reports from the United Charities Drive launched Monday by Swarth~ore junior and senior high school students will not come officially until to­day,.$ 15 has already been collect­ed by Nathan Bell's seventh grade homeroom. The students carn('d their contribution by conducting a bake sale at the school early this week. Other homeroom and class projects will be carried out in the Ellsuing week. The drive is 'being headed this year by Seniors Liz Forsythe and Cornelia McKernan. It will con­tinue through next Friday, March 20. Elizabeth A. McKie, faculty ad­viser for the proj.ect, has assured parents that while every effort is being made to have a success­ful campaign, no pressure is be­ing bruught to bear on the chil­dr. En. She hopes that contributions will be the expression of the chil­dren's wish to share with those less fortunate rather than a sum obtained from their parents. She emphasizes that there is no com­petition among the children as to the amount given. Robinson to Speak Tuesday (Continued from Page 1) aside, at least part time, as an am­bassador- at-Iarge to the colored peoples of the world." In Japan, a university vice­president commented, "The Com­munist stUdents. of course. came out and tried to get Dr. Robinson to answer questions on the race question. They thought he would help their vicious propaganda cause. He was very honest in his answers but very astute. It was a real piece of diplomacy which left even the Commie boys somewhat flabbergasted." Since Dr. Robinson's return to the United States, he has talked to local student and church groups .in many parts of the country. Al­ter his visit to the University of California at Los Angeles. 11 stu­dents decided to go to India to tell Indian students about the United Stutes. The 11 UCLA un-dergraduates returned to the U.S. last September after a success­ful trip. In addition to his recognition as a student counselor. Dr. Robinson is widely known as pastor of the Presbyterian Church of the Master in New York City. He is also founder and head of the Morning­side Community Center in Harlem and one of the founders of New York's Sydenham Hospital-the first such interracinl institution in the United States. He was born in Tennessee in 1908 und was graduated at the head of his class from Lincoln Uniersity, Chester County, in 1935. He was president of the class of 1938 at Union Theological Semin­ary. New York, from which he received his Bachelor of Divinity degree. He is a member of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. and has been active in numerous com-munity service organizations. His autobiography. "Road Without Turning," was published. in 1950. To Entertain Teac:hers Rutgers avenue teachers will be guests of honor at a luncheon at March 13, 1953 Detweiler Dies Saturday BURNED OUT Nancy Moore, daughter of Mr. (Cont!nued from Page 1) and Mrs. JohnM. Moore 2 Club of Philadelphia, the Caveat Whittier Place, Was one ot' 99 Club and the Constitutional Club. Antioch College freshman girls In addition he was president and who lost personal belongings in last surviving charter member of, the fire which gutted historic the 43d Ward Savings and Loan North Hall dormitory on the night Association. of Washington's Birthday. Active in the Swarthmore Meth- Within hours after the fire was odist Church, Mr.. DEtweiler' finally quenched early Monday for~erly served it as trustee and morning. clothing contributed by was its representative at the Phil- upperclass stu den t s, Yellow adelphia Conference. Springs townspeople and nearby ·He is survived by his wife, the merchants was being distributed former Eleanor G. Middleton; his to the burned out girls at an son Robert A. and four grand- emergency clothing center in the children Marion, Mark, Georgia Antioch gymnasium. and Janice of Cornell avenue; and Wives of Antioch faculty mem­his sisters, the Misses Ruth and be r s staffed an "alteration Maria Detweiler. shoppe". set up beside the racks The services in Clifton Heights of clothing, and turned out cus­were conducted by the Rev. Dr. tom-tailored fashions on the spot. Roy N. Keiser, minister of the Swarthmore Methodist Church. Interment followed in Fernwood Cemetery. Pam Foster, a member of the Senior Planning Board, and Ann Hay, of Swarthmore, were among the representatives of Delaware Group Hear Mrs, Bishop County at the Chester County Se­The Friendly Open House Group nior Girl Scout Day at West Chest­which held its regular meeting er Saturday. Both are members March 2 in the Swarthmore Pres- of the Lansdowne Mariner Troop. byterian Church, heard Mrs. J. V. _-::=============­S. Bishop review "Cry, the Be-loved Country" by Allan Peyton. The Community Health Society as hosts, served refreshments with Mrs. Charles E. Fischer, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Walter Schmidt, Mrs. H. Lindley Peel and Mrs. Marvel Wilson. I Win at Bridge I The following members of the Crum Creck Bridge Club won at the Tuesday evening meeting: seated. north and south, Mrs. T. Saulnier and Mrs. H. B. Lincoln, first; Mrs. W. Steuber and Mrs. A. B. Anderson second. Seated east and west, l\ifrs. J. Brownell and Leslie Luckie tied with Mr. und Mrs. William H. Webb for first and second place. ESSENTIAL • Good health is the first es.ential. All else depend. upon gelting well and " .. p­ing well. See your doctor prompdy, at the first sug­gestion of illness. And, of course, bring his presccip ... dons to this dependable source where you are as ... sured prompt,!reclse com .. pounding an uniformly fair prices. Thank you! CATHERMAN'S DRUG STORE ~1I1111111111:" You Meet the Nicest People at Speare' S .. IIII11II11I11~ I : I ~ = = ! = I Fashion CornJ it looks .. feels ... washes like in fact it is a miracle! ORLaN . . . the Ingleneuk tomorrow. Hostes- 5 98 ses will be sixth grade mothers and include Mrs. Robert M. Gro- • gan, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Howard Dodson, Mrs. Roy Mc- 5 :: cW~~I~ell MUrs. William Taylor, Mrs. E~ 55__ I lam the, and Mrs, Edward - 0 I . I f b d' h h f I d Cratsley, = r on mIrac e a ric car Igans ave t e ee an texture of = ~ Cashmere Cardigans by Helen Harper, Glengary, Catalina and ~ Pi Beta Phi Alumnae of Phila- ;: Mademoiselle in the widest range of colors both pastel and :; delphia will meet at 7:30 Tuesday ~ dark All I' S rts d fI ~ evening, March 18, at the home of =---=~ • popu ar sIzes. po wear-seeon oor -=_=~ ELECTRIC COIIPANY Mrs. Raymond K. Denworth, 301 • Elm avenue. New offieers will be Open every Friday night until 9 • • eleeted. ~ ; - ""11111111111111111111111111111111111111110 11111111111111111111 In II m 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE UIIIIIIIIIIOIlIlIllIlIllIllIllIlIlIlIlIllIlIllIllIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIllIllIllIIIllIllIlIllIlIlIlIlIllIllIliIIOIIIIIII~1II11II11111111111111111OOOlOOOllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllOIIIIIIIIIIIUOlllillOOllllllnnilOnn1ll1111111111111111111111111111fOIIII01ll11ll1l1l11ll1llllnnlllnnlllllllllllllllllllll0lllnnOillOmOmnnlilinnmm HARRIS & CO. ~ LADIES and MENS ~ TAILORS ~ SUITS MADE.TO.ORDER : and FURRIERS - _ 11 Park Avenue Swarthmore ~ We Fealure Fabrica o/.he Higheaa Grtule ~ mGH GRADE CLEANING, PRESSING and REPAIR. . ~ SWarthmore 6.0504 - -'I. .l lrnIIiMllnnnnmoonllhAllidblUiUUiUilillliUmdllilllnuaunuaaz.uuii.IUIWMlh& DiMlIiiH......)1R£IIJ. .I III11I1111I1B111ii~· iilllllIl8IlRIIIIIBIIIIIIUIIIIftHII IlntIIIIIIlmra=" _.-010 ... _~"""'tm""'l1111 'MRii.ddiUillHBlonLMi& ....... iiiHlbiMiHHjnnnm.' .... u LEI. E.labli.hed 1912 HELP RED UVl/1rthmore Co lltl6El »'vmrthmore J Pa.. Libr"ry . MEET 'HUMAN ........... - CROSS THE SWARTHMOREAN NEED' CO! .. l.Hi ~; L 1 6 t·; ..1 , t~ 1 VOLUME 25-NUMBER 12 SWARTHMORE, FRIDAY, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1953 '3.50 PER YEAIC Jr. High Girls to Aid Easter Seal Campaign Mrs. Zecher Heads Sale Sponsored by Soc_ for Crippled Children Forum Speaker : ,;_-~ ,I'- : /".!'>: Open Forum Set for 8 P. M. Monday Night Correspondent, Professor To Speak on UN Forecast Ivan H. Peterman, weJl known war correspondent and authority on international affairs, will be one of two main speakers on "United Nations - Profit or Loss" at the open forum in the Nether Provi- 45 I'c:t. to Gol Red Cross Treasurer Mrs. Co.ben Shute announces that $5592.00 have been collected so far in the annual campaign for funds being conducted this month, The drive, although half over, has less than 50 per cent to go to reach the $10,155- .00 goal set for Swarthmore, George Plowman, chairman of the Drive, urges all 'work<ers to cover their territories as soon as possible. Attentive Audience Hears Dr. Robinson Presbyterian. Pastor Urges American Creative Spirit Students from Swarthmore Ju­nor High School will sell Easter lilies tonight, March 20, in the Borough's business section for the benefit of the 1953 Easter Seal campaign sponsored by the Phil­adelphia Society for Crippled Children and Adults. dence High School Auditorium, ' _____ ~:---------' Wallingford, at 8 p.m. next Mon- ... "Europe is the land of yester­day, America the land of today, and Asia ·the·land of tomorrow," Dr. James Robinson announced from the Clothier Memorial stage last Tuesday night. "Africa is the land of the day after tomorrow." He added that the Asians will de­Mrs. Paul E. Zecher is in general termine the outcome. charge of the sale, assisted by Mrs. PetEr Coste, Mrs. Howard Y. Clymer, Mrs. Robert Hall and,. Mrs. James O. Stephens. IV~N H. PETER~N --.--------- Antiques Authority day, March 23. Mr. Peterman will giv::: local listeners his impression of what the United Nations has accomplished and what the future holds for that peace organization. Joining Peterman as a forum speaker is Dr. H. Field Haviland. Jr., assistant professor of political science at Haverford College. Dr. John W. Nason, President of World Affairs Council of Philadel-phia which is supervising the State Says S.H.S. Not Financially Distressed Borough's Bid for Raise In Legal Tax Rate Turned Down On ~ of the Swarthmore School District's bids for permission to The following junior high school girls, wearing colorful .. Easter bon­nets, will s,ll the lilies: Babbie Garrahan, Danna Cope, Rosemary Cox, Alice Carroll, -Nincy Ernest, Doris Snyder, Jeanne Schloesser. June Holt. Mary Elmore, Julie Tucker t Ann Hirsch and Ann Hutchinson. To Speak Here Tues. forum, will be moderator. Marvel increase is legal tax millage re­Wilson is chairman of the com- • ceived official refusal at Wednes- Presbyterian Missions leader and pastor of the Church of the Master, New York City, Dr. Rob­inson made a six-months tour of the world last year for the Pres­byterian Church, U.S.A. Although he pUblicly regretted that he would have to forego telling of the "most interesting experiences" of his trip, his audien~e hung, al­most literally on his words throughout his hour-long talk. The Society, which conducts a year-round treatment and rebab­ilitation program in De~aware, Philadelphia, Bucks, Montgomery and Chester tounties, obtains it's main source of i.ncome from this annual drive. It nas headquarters at 20th 'Y'd South College avenue, Philadelphia, and it's treatment centers provide -medical care, phy­sical and occupational therapy, functionai and vocational training and job placement. Included in the Society's special services are Camp Daddy Allen, a summ'Sf camp for crippled chil­dren in the Poconos; the Fuhrman . Clinic for Cere.bral Palsy 'children, and a workshop. Penn Prof. to Address Evening League Mon. Dr. J. C. Charlesworth, a pro­fessor at the University of Penn­sylvania, will address the even-" ing meeting of the Swart~more League of Women Voters 'at 8 o'clock Monday night In McCahan Hall, Presbyterian Church. Dr. Charlesworth will speak on "State Constitutions-We Need a Change." Mrs. Norman Hixson, Know ~ Your - State Chairmallt will introduce the speaker and be' in general charge of the meeting which is open to all residents of the community. Dr. Charlesworth is a member of the faculty of the University's Institute of State and Local Gov-ernment, and conducts a course in public administration at the Unl ... versi ty. He is a consultant of th~ "Little Hoover CommiSSion", and author of the book, "Govern­mental Administration." Dr. Charlesworth also serves as an associate editor of uAnnals" a publication of the American Academy of Political and Social Mrs. Regar Featured 2 P.M. Meeting at . Woman's Club In miUee which flrranged the affair. A meeting of the Woman's Club not scheduled in the calendar will be held March 24 at 2 p.m. when Mrs. Olivia Regal', a dean among antique dealers, will talk on "An­tiques and Old China." She will bring some of her china collection to show the audience and in her talk will discuss what peopl .. should know about -buying an­tiques. There will be a question and answer period. Mrs. Regar has been g~ving a series of lectures on the subject to dealers. She has a shop in Pennsylvania and one in New Jer­sey, and has been exhibiting in the Swarthmore Antiques Fair ~ince the first one eight years ago. Patsy Ruth O'Brien of the Home for Incurables in Philad·elphia will open 'the program with vocal music. Hostesses at the door will be: Mra. George. P. Warren, Mrs. ThOl:nas K. Brown, Mrs: Gorton W. Brush and Mrs. Morris H. Fussell. At the tea, Mrs. William R. Huey and Mrs. Claire H. J.g­lurn will pour. Mrs. Hans K. Stein­feld and Mrs. Clarence C. Franck ~of the hospitality committee. will assist. There is no admission charge. Health Nurses Report 438 Visits in Feb. Dorothy M. Sidner, acting dir­!' Ctor of the Community H .. alth Society re{lorted 438 visits for nursing care during the month of February at the March 12 meet­ing of the Board of Directors in the Borough Hall. Seventy two of these were to acute cases, primar­ily influenza and grippej 152 (18 of them requiring longer than one hour visits) were chronic cases; 61 were to cancer patients. this figure listing a sharp increase in such care. Miss Sidner 'brought the Board up to date on three of the Society's long term patients. The daughter of displaced persons who was dis­covered when almost totally deaf by a staff nurse making a routine school check has now been treated to thE: point where a hearing aid is not needed. A tuberculosis pa­tient has now been admitted to a state hospital where he can re­ceive good care. Nurses have also helped to place the four children of a seriously ill cardiac-diabetic patient in homes in order that the (Continued on Page 4) Clara Marsh, Retir~d 13 File for School, Business Woman, Dies B' h Off- Clara Mae Marsh, a business oroug ICes woman in Swarthmore for over Thirteen Swarthmore citizens 40 years until her retirement 18 have filed in the Republican Pri­months ago, was buried yesterday mary for School Board and Bor­afternoon in Mount Moriah Cem- ough offices, to be nominated May etery following funeral services 19. in Philadelphia at noon. Six candidates are contEsting Miss Marsh operated a utility four vacancies on the School shop on South Chester road. She Board. Running for a two year died Sunday at the age of 75 at term. one to be nominated, are the home of her nephew Harry Charles C. Martin, 406 Haverford Science. Moylan in Prince Bay, Staten Is- place and Robert H. Wilson, 603 Another feature of the meeting land. N.Y. Harvard avenue. ThrEe contest the will be a report of the panel, I She is also survived by a broth- four year term, two to be nomin­" Why We Need a Revision of the er. Frank R. Marsh, Ventnor ated: Jean Bass (Mrs. A. William, State Constitution", by Mrs. Heights, N.J. Jr.), 241 Ogden avenuej Donald P. Mathews Johnson. The panel was Jones. 407 North Swarthmore ave-conducted by the Swarthmore and College Students Give nue, incumbent; and Mary Spiller Media Leagues last Tuesday as 124 Pints to Red Cross (Mrs. Robert E.), 603 Ogden ave­part of a county-wide project. One hundred and twenty four nue. John F. Spencer, 210 Yale Sc:hool Vac:atlo. Today marks the close of Swarthmore Schools for Spring Vacation. They will open again at the usual time on Monday, March 30. Thursday Sewers The March meeting of the Delta Gamma sewing group will be held at the home ot Mrs. Charles G. Thatcher, 613 Ogden avenue on Thursday, March 26. pints of blood which formerly avenue. incumbent, stands alone flowed in the· veins of Swarth- for the six year term. more College- students, are now For Borough offices there is no safely stowed away in the Red contest. Those who have filed are: Cross Blood Bank as a result of Tax Collector, Mary Parke Tuesday's blood donor day at the Dodd, 205 North Swarthmore ave­college. nue; Burgess, Joseph Reynolds, 1 Bruce Gould, student chairman Oberlin avenue; Auditor, Richard for the project, was assisted by Snyder, 209 Dartmouth avenue; Richard Laeuber. and Lincoln Councilmen, Thomas Hopper, 10 Potter. Local Red Cross Units on Dogwood lane, Frank McCowan, duty were Canteen, Gray Ladies, 407 Vasser avenue, Harry Wood, Nurses Aids, Staff Aids and Motor 317 North Chester road and Birney Corp~. Morse, 742 Harvard avenue. day evening's session of School Board. The State Department of Public Instruction notified the District that its investigation re­vealed Swarthmore did not con­stitute a financially distressed dis­trict under existing law. Following this news the Board proceeded. to review a rough draft of a 1953-54 budget which it will authorize for posting n~xt month and approve in May. Based on retaining the maximum 35 mill real estate levy. a one per cent property transfer tax and the $15 per capita levy of the present school year the proposed new bud­g~ t totals $850,000, an increase of $77,400 over that estimated for the current year. Receipts are increas­ed by $12,500 in anticipated taxes, an additional $9,500 in state ap­propriation. $1,000 in miscellan­eous income and $25,000 more loan. $375,000 Joan was placed in the current budget In case it was Every American is a witness for democracy. Dr. Robinson said, ad­ding that Americans in their en­thusiasm for freedom make it li­CEnse, and the result is deplorably (Continued on Page 10) Co.Sponsors Easter Egg April 4 . Where, of Where is the Easter Bunny, changed to When, oh When, this week as the largeheart­ed Lions Club sent out an SOS needed for land and building ex- to this Herald of Spring and De­pansion before the end of this light of Small Egg Hunters. school year. The nEW budget lists I . With an alacrity ~ha~ almost the full $400,000 bond issue which floored the stalwart ServIce Club, the District is asking the elector- the Bunny not only accepted the ate to approve in the May primary. invitation to stage one of his fa­In addition the· balance carried mous Swarthmore Easter Hunts, forward to the new year is esti- April 4. mated as $37,400 in place of the but promptly set the date for $8.000 with which' it began the "At 10'.30 a.m." he said, "on 1952-53 fiscal period. The expense the college lacrosse field. if that's side is raised by increases in all all right. Suppose we have three dEpartments and interest on the hunts - one for the littlest ones. new loan. another for the bigger ones up Reviewing architect's sketches cf the Rutgers avenue school exten­sion, the Board set an April 1 meeting for the purpose of ap­proving definite preliminary draw­ings. It also asked Architect How­ell Lewis Shay, Jr., to seek infor-mal approval of the present seven classroom and multi-purpose room plan from the State mean­while. Numerous bids on miscel-laneous supplies were opened and turned over to Supervising Prin­cipal Frank R. Morey for analysis. The Mayfair Agency was awarded contract for supplying periodicals on its low bide of $171.65. The Board approved its usual contribution of $400 and use of buildings and -grounds in connec­tion with the Swarthmore Recrea­tion Association's community sum-mer program. Henry Hofmann was named to conduct the Summer School under the supervision of William Bush, high school principal. Mr. Bush informed the Board of a new proposed time schedule in the high school, which would move music group rehearsals and con­ferences for other students from (Continued on Page 10) through the third grade, and the third one .for fourth graders through sixth. "Now, prizes for each grade group would be nice . . . .. the Bunny's voice faded gently as he apparently started dreaming of gay spring colors, soft green grass, a sunny day- "Sunny Day!" the Bunny's voice came suddenly back across the wire, "I'n certainly do my best! I'll call you later on, with further details." Lions President Barton Calvert hung up the ff:ceiver with con­siderable jubilance and relief, but there was a delay on the other end. The Bunny's ear, far too long for an ordinary telephone, had curled enthusiastically around the receiver and tangled with the cord. It took some time and dexterous manipulation to free it, so it was perhaps no wonder that the oper­ator's voice, crisp and deceivingly efficient, startled him in his I~bors. "Is there some delay on your ca1l9 sir?" Delay, thought the Bunny, mas­saging . a limp ear and returning the receiver to Its cradle, delay is right. I didn't believe Swarth­more would call me this year.

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• • Pap 2 THE' SW ARTHMOREAi~ ~----------~---------------=~~~----~----------------.--~==~~-- Personals McCONNELL-BREWSTER Newton Keiser performed the cer­The marriage of Miss Grace emony before an altar banked with Almon Brewster. daughter of Mr. Easter lilies. white snapdragons Mr. and Mrs. Raymond' C. Sergeant. Barto!,. B~ewster ~f and cibotium ferns. Lassiat of North Swarthnj'ore.3ve- North Swarthmore avenuei to Dr. Mr. ~nja":'in L .. Kneedler. or­nue entertained at a nelgh~rhQod .Edward';·Lockl\i-t':Mti~onneU; Jr:. ganist; father of the bri~egroom, supper party .. Sunday evening In 'son of Mi-:-anit Mrs. McCOnnefl of' p"'sented the wedding muSic and honor of Mr. Lassiat's sister Roxborough, took place Saturday accompanied Juanita P~ul, so­Madame 7Fernande. "Augeard of at 3 o'clock in Trinity Episcopal prano soloist, who sang "Because" Church, Swarthmore. The cere- and during the ceremony Metz and'-Nice, France who will- mony was performed by the Rev. Lord's Prayer". " ",,,' By rift ~ di~: Air '~hce for ?c;t~is ,H. Lawrence' 'Whittemore,' Jr" . Give~ in' maritage by tier fath­Sunday aft,cr a ~onth's visit here. ~ector, assisted by the Rev. Dr. J. er, the bride wore a gO'!-9 of whi!e Mr .. andMrs, W .. H. Gelu'j;ig of· .Jarden Guenth~r. rector of St. satin trill11l1ed wjt,/J·cn!,liti!lY..IS,CE:. U .' 'f (.'. '11' "\"1';" ,'. 'Peter's Church 10 1I1e Great Val- Herflnger·tlp v;;if'Of'/tilie wasJit-mvekrStl UY p acte wt I en er ,un at :ley.:Paoli before a background of tacbed to a Dutch. cap of match a eoc a 'pjlr y . omorrow· even- 'b" . h .,' .' - " . h f· Mr" .' d' M . CI ohum .erns and lig ted can- ing 'Ia"e embrQidered' with. seed l~g lfl onor 0 " an rs. 'delabra. 4 ~- ' Birney K. Morse of Harvard ave-. . . . .. . pearls. and her bouquet was h 11 'I '" h'" . 'd The bride, given lfl marrIage by white, bridal roses ,and' gardertias hue W 0 WI sal ·on,~t e· I1e~ e 'her father wore a wedding gown .. Fra~ce April 2 for .. ~: ,t9Y:. "f t~e. i of . White 'satin and nylon tulle Mrs. Richard :Fellows of Better-contment, and a YISlt wIth theIr !wI't"h ne kl'n t· ed ·th ed ton, Md., as matron _of honor for • ._ I • C 1 e rlmm ·.wI se . .,. son-In-law and (laughter Mr. and 'pearls in' a' Grecian de "go Her her sl,ster, wore a gown of sea blue Mrs. John McCoubrey ~fld twin veil fell from a' Juliet s~a~ em.. taffeta and car~ied violets wit.h a s.o~s St~p~en, a~~ Daniel who are 'broidered with. seed pearls and coronet of the :Same tIowez;s, hvmg near P. an.s' , Fr•a•n ce. ,: .5 he C arr'Ie d starlI' ght roses, s t eph .. Small Linda Fellows as fiower Capt. and Mrs .. C. C. Shute of anotis and. ivy.. girl for her aunt. wore a long dress Maple avenue entertained at a Miss Frances Brewster was her with hoop skirt of salmon pulk dinner - bridge for 12 at their sh=ter's maid of honor. The brides- chiffon and carried a basket of home Saturday evening in honor maids were Miss Jane McConnell, spring Bowers. of Mr. and Mrs. Morse. sister of the. bridegroom; Miss Mr. Benjamin L, Kneedler, Jr., Mrs. Morse was guest of honor Louise .. Arch~old _of New York served as best man. The ushers Friday' at which time Mrs._ J. P. City, step-sister of the bride; Mrs. were Mr. Russell Conwell Kneed­Daugherty of Dickinson avenue ·~ergeant Barton Br.e",st~r,_:Jr:, of ler of Bryn Mawr, another brother entertained at a lunr.heon for 12 Springfield; Miss' Margaret F. of the groom. and Mr. John Day-followed by bridge. Lukens of Germantown. and Mrs. ton Gibson of Media. Mrs. Wallace McCurdy of Eldridge Gerry Merrick. 3rd. of A reception followed in the ','Bluebird Meadows", Westtown Cleveland. They wore gowns of church parlors. The bride's meIth,,. en t er t a in e d 'Kappa Kappa shell tan' challgeable taffeta with wore a slate blue taIIeta dress with Gammas at luncheon and a ','_white pleated ~bodices· and full skirts matching hat and. corsage of white elephant'~ sale at _her home Satur'!" over pleated underskirts. The garderiias. The groom's day. The proceeds will be used 10 maid of honor carried a bouquet wore a dark blue sheer . dress and buy material· ·for·- sewing. Mrs. of pale pink carnations encircled blue straw: hat. Her corsage was 'Oliver Swan' of, North 'Chester with Pinnochio roses' and ivy -and of pink roses. road is the president... the bridesmaids carried Pinnochio Mter a wedding triP. to New ME. and Mrs. Haldy Miller Crist roses and ivy. York City, the couple will Jive in of uOpen ' Doors''',.· Park', avenO:e Mr. Thomas D. Langston of their newly bullt"home o~ Sandy have returned after spending,. six Ardmore served as best man. The Bank road, Upper Providence. weeks in_ Ft. Myers",Fla~ ushers were the, Messrs. Allen . .. .. ~. McConnell and S. Paul McCon- .. 'BIRTHS ", -. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. John- Dr. and Mis. Wllllam Y. Rial of, ston announce the birth of a Harvard avenue announce the daughter. Margaret Rutherford. on birth of a ·son. Christopher Wi!" 13 in Hanover N.H: llllD\; on 'March 13'in Taylor Hos. . . The b~bY'1i grandparents are. 'Mr: pIta!., . . . and Mr... Robert E. Spille~ of 'Og- . Cl\rlstopher's maternal gralid~ . mother Mrs. Arthur.L. GlIYlord ot den avenue. and Mrs. Louise A. Saxonburg,Pa:. Is visiting at thi. Johnston of White Plalus. N. Y. Rial home for several weeks •.. · '0 .J . ,~. CRAFTS BY TOP CRAFTSMEN! . ~ ~ ,.;. -. The Co~mun'ty ArtS Center • .... Ro,er~ Lane, Walllngforci; . .,' CRAFT"~SALE, AND EXHIBIT THURS., FRI., SAT., MARCH 19,2.0. 21 .. ....! 12 noon to 9 P.M. : Admi$$ion. 25c plus tax . . Ref~eshments . . . . , ~uest Exhibitor, WiliiarriD. Parry, of Phila •. Museum School of Art . ..' The Bouquet BEAUTY SALON . BE..,UTY IS' WINTER·WEARY TOO 9 Chester Road Call Swarthmore 6-0476 .. SP~CIAL for MARCH OVERHAUL MOTOR VALVE JOB ROBERT J. ATZ. QWlier R.USSELL'SSE:lVICE .' 'f , OPPOSITE BOROUGH PAllKING' LOT . SW 6-0440 Darttnouth &: I.afayette Aves. Mr. and Mrs .. Harry .. L.M'lIler of Thayer road, and Dr. and Mrs. E. Leroy Mercer of North Chester· road have returned from a six­week trip south ... Mr. and MrS., Miller stopped at Cocoa, Fla. Dr.' and Mrs. Mercer stopped a~ Win-' ter Park' Fl.... and spen~ :two weeks visiting their son-in-1aw' and daughter Mr, and Mrs.Ross Allen of Isle of Hope. Savannah. nell, 'Q,rothers of the bridegroom; Sergeant Barton' Brewster, Jr.~ brother .of the bride; William B~gi~, 3r~. of Haverford; Dr. Warren R. Lang and .Dr. Linton Turner of Philadelphia. .' A' reception followed at the Merion Cricket Club. Mrs. Brew .. ster chose a gown of silver blue tissl.le taffeta of ballerina length with small matching velvet hat. Her corsage was of pale yellow cymbidium orchids. Mrs. McCan .. nell. mother of the bridegroom, wore a gown of tissue taffeta of cinnamon -shade with bat of pale pink straw, and pink orchid cor- Mr. arid Mrs.·E; S.~ Hanford of 'B'aItimor~ announce the birth of a daughter, Barbara _Susan, on March 10 in: Union Memorial Hos~ i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pital. Baltimore. ~ Tbe bahy is a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Knabb of Princeton and Lafayette avenues, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Han­Ga: . ford of Drexel Hill. . Kenneth Wright. son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy F. F. Wright of Kenyon avenue, was recently Initiated into Sigma Chi frater­nity at Denison University, where he is, a freshman. Nancy Chambers, daughter of Mr. arid Mrs. Carl C. Chambers, of Sycamore Hills road;' Media. has b~n named to the dean's list. at Dickinson College. Nancy. . a freshman at the college, is a 1952 graduate of 'Swarthmore High' School.' She Is' a member of' Pi !3eta Pili sorority. sage. Following a two-week wedding trip by plane to- Bermuda, the couple will live at 326 South 19th street; Philadelphia. The bride's traveling costume was a suit of sheer green wool with~dark brown accessories and corsage of broWn spray orchids. ·.Mr. and i.li:rs. Maurice L. Web; KNEEDLER-SCOTT ste~, Jr.,' o::Elm a;veii~e' entertait1;,-~ Miss Helen S~ott, daughter of, ~~ ,,:S. ~helr Jw~-~~d guests Dr., Mr. and' Mrs. Fred L. Scott of . and ~s. :P~V\~_rT:' ~f!~man. and, Girard 'avenue, became the bride son Ene Of KutlOtown. .' . . f M . Ch I· K dl 'f . -I'!h 1; .J)~1f~~c:·'n:',:. ,0 r. ares nee eri son-;..o ' •. '; .," iod..'lIi' . ......... ',. . ; Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin L. Kneeo- . .. . ',. ~~"~"''''''I\IT . ler of Springfield. Saturday at 3 :. Mr.f!lsnd: Mrs. ,John' Hofffl1an. o'clock in the Swarthmore Metho .. 'Murray of "HearthwoQd",' Mead-; disl Church. The Rev. Dr. Roy: Dwbrook, Penna., annQunce.:the engagement of their daughre.l'; Miss, Elizabeth Jea~ Murray,' to. Lt. Jay Barclay Sn~pe. son of Mr .. and,Mrs. J. Roy Snape of Harvard' 'avenue. Miss Murray attended Welles­ley College for two years and is, now a junior at the University of Pennsylvania where she. is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. fraternity.' " : . Lt .• Snape is a graduate of.Bow­doin College, Brunswick, Me., ,and a member of Delta Upsilon frater­nity. Lt. Snape is now at thE! Moody Air Force Base, Valdosta, Ga., for advanced training. MARGE and coi' 'Casserole Catering Setviee SPECIALIZING' IN LtlNCIIEON8 BUFFET 8UPPERS OOCKTAIL PARTIES CALL Marge Hurd '- Swa. 6-3138 . Ola waite to .... COLLEGE THEATRE Swarthmore, Pa. Fri. & Sot. Spenc~r Tracy. Gene Tierney "PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE" (Technicolor, ,An historlcol ~~rn.nt of Early America Special Children's Show Saturday, 1 P. M. :CARTOONS,"SHORTS: COM£DY "SERIAl - Plus,- Excitinli w.,tern w:tth Randolph Scott Sat. night only­featu, r~ tlmes 6. 8, ,10 Sun. & Mon. Jean Simmons· Victor Mature .$.or,e Bemar.:l ,Shaw's comedy hit "Androcles &: th~ Lion" Tues. Only Stewart Groftget "King Solomon's Mines" . (Technlcolor) A 9ref:!t picfvte-Pleose dan't miSs till Wed. thru Sat. Ralph Richardson _ Ann Todd 'Bre •• 'n, the So .. d Barrier' DaItQ_rOui aftd &cHfft9 W"1fftesI iPHd and man.llftfQllity of let planes Mr. and Mrs. John Yingling of Academy road announce the birth of a baby. girl. lI.targaret Louise. on February 28 in Bryn Mawr Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Cor­dray of Neptune City, N. J., an­nounce the birth of a daughter, Virginia Ann, on February' 23 in Germantown Hospital. Virginia Ann is a, granddaugh .. ter of Mr. and M,s. R. E. C6rdray of Pine Ridge road, Media. SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR ALL MAGA~S MRS. LLOYD E. KAUFFMAN 313 Dal1mocUt Avenue S .. arthlnore 6-2080 ~ "PACKAGE DEAL" FOR RNE IIOIIES A Combination Residence policy will provide broad insurance in,' one -policy. Inolude. liabiljty. burg­lary. Water "damqe, glau breakage ud. explOsion just to' mention a few. PETER E. TOLD . . .... u Li ..... ollruuraJlN' 333 Dartmouth Ave. SWartbmore 6-1833 BEAT THE HEAT WILCOX APPLIANCES Lansdowne and Baltimore Avenues, Lansdowne Open EVenings MAdison 3.0767 lower that Humidity and Feel Re&eshed and Relaxed • Financed for Your Convenience BUY A . USED CAR .And Save'c,Money DON'T WAIT BECAUSE YOU WILL PAY MORE MONEY LATER , HANNUM. & WAITE CHESTER ROAD and YAlE AVENUE, SWARTHMORE . • : · ' . ~ " ."., , ' ., Mareh 20,1953 'fIIE SW ARTHMOREAN ._ _____~ ..;... ____ '_-.. _. ..... "__.! '...:: ·';Il,, ______ I sessions bellin on Wedn.eSdSy. . .... , TH_E . '. ·S.W.. A.. D'" 'DUORE.· ·i.·.N.•.. .... '.'.,.,... March 25 at 10 a.m. In .the Race -,-,~"4&f.".~' Street MeetiJig ·House. Philadel- . PUBLISHED EVERY FlimAY AT SWARTIDIOBLl'A. phis. They ;"'111 continue througb THE 8WARTBJIIORBAN. IN''~ PUBLISHER Mar~h 31. .' . Phone 8WariIImMe 8-0Il00 PETER. E. '1'QLD. EcJJtor and PiablWler IlAR.JORm TOLD and BARBARA KENT. Associate EcJJton Rosalie Peirsol Lorene McCarter Entered as Second Class Mtit~: .January 24. 1920. at Ute Post Office at Sw~ore. 'pa.,. under the Act :.of.March 3. 1819. r DEAnLINE-vn;DNESDz\Y NOON c· SW.'tmIIORE; PENNA.. FRIDAY. MARCH, 20. 195~· ,', ' . TRI"ITY NOTES held at 3: 45 p.m.. and at 5: 30 there· will be a service of Even- Tbere will be a celebration of song. at which time the Girls' the Holy COll11l1union. at 8 o'clock ChOir will sing. The last of the Sunday morning. A;ll departments Parish . Piscussion Groups will of tbe Church Sc~ool will meet :"t meet at 8 o'clock Wednesday night. 9: 3ll. and at 11 0 clock there will The Holy Communion as an' event be a. service of Morning Prayer m the life of our Parish Family and Litany. will be considered. . ,Ushers for the services are as On Thursday at 11: 30 a.m. there follows: S. D .. Clyde. Jr.. R. M. will be a celebration of the Holy Daniel, W. R. Fawcett. C. E. Fel- Communion.' foliowed by luncheon 10\l,(s, W. C. Giles, R. B. Price, Jr.~ and meeting of the Woman's Aux­H. P. Stamford and H. G. 'foland. iliary. The Rev. H. Lawrence John Simon' is scheduled. to serve Whittemore, Jr., Rector, will speak as acolyte at the 8 o'clock ser- on the" work pf the Holy Cross vice. and Howaii! Dodson at 11, Mission. at Bolahun, Liberia. A During the 11 o'clock _service, service of Evening Prayer will be Molly Banks and Susan Ha~U beld at 5:30 pm. will be in charge of the nursery. There will also be a service of The Junior Confirmation Class Evening Prayer on Friday at 5: 30 will meet at 1 p.m. Sl1}ld~y .. :101- p.m ••. and on Saturday from three lowed by the Adult Confirmation to fo~ p.m. the Children's Lent­Class at 8 ,,·c1ock. en project sponsored .bY the third, The BOys'Ch"ir will ~eheilrse on fifth and eighth grade pupils. will Monday and Wednesday at 4 ·p.m. be beld In . the basem*nt of the and again on Thursday' ·.lIt 7:.30 chur~h.· p.m. The .Glrls· ChoU' rehearsal will be held on Mondlly.ati5:p,m. PRESBYTERIAN NOTES There will be a mld~:weekcele" Mr .. Bishop will pi'each at the bration of the Holy Ciln:uDunlon 9:80 and'the 11 AJd. services. this on Wednesday at 1: 15, ':.w: . ;(\:t. Sunday morning. :The . title' of his 10 o'c1ock the Sewing Group"will sermon will be "Tbe Sorrow of in'eet In the Cleaves Room. The ·God ... · Children's Lenten· Servlc~ will be AlJ departnlents of the Church ---~ __ -,-.!I ____ .:;.;··. Sehool' and the Men's and WOo CHURCH SERVICES men's Bible Classes will meet. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH The Junior High Fellowship will Joseph P. Blshop;l.I!I.inister . meet at 6 In McCahan Hall for a' · . John Stettner,' Assistant "Game Night:'TlIe'Senior High Fel- Sunday. March 22 lowship will meet for supper at 9:30 A.M.-Church School. Men's 6130 followed by a prpgram at and Women's Bible, Clp.sses. 10:45 A.M . ...::senior 'High Class.' 7: 15. :M~. Bishop will lead a dis- 9:30 and 11:o0·A,M.-Mr.,Blshop c'!SSion.on "The Meaning of SaJ-will preach. vation." The Young Adults will 4: 30 P.M.-Conflrmatlon Class. meet for supper at 6: 30 followed , Wednesday. March ,25 by a program at 8 at. which time .~ P. Mo. _Lenten .. Se1'Vlce.~ Dr. E. Fay Campbell will talk on METHOPIST- C_~~"-' 'tbe".Bible."'· '. . Roy N. KeIser •. D.D .. M1Dlster Tbere wI'1l b the reguiar Sunday. March 22 e 9: 45 A.M.-Church Scboo!. monthly meeting of the Board of \0: 00 A.M.-Young Adults. Deacons at 8 Tuesday evening In 11: 00 A.M.-TlJe Mjnis.ter will the Woman's Association room. . . preach. The next in a'series of medita- 11:00 A.M.-Church Nursery. tions on Our Lord's Prayer will be Wednesday. March 25 8: 00 P. M.-Lenten Service. given by Mr. Bishop at the Lenten TRINITY CHURCH service held in the church at 8 H. Lawrence Whittemore. Rector on Wednesday evening. Coffee will SundaY •. March. 22 be served afterwards in the 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion. Hearth. g: 30 A.M.-Church School. There will be a dessert meeting 11: 30 A.M.-Morning Prayer and for th.!' Session and new members . Litany.' Wednesday. March 25 of the churcli at 7:30 Tbursday 7: 15 A.M.-Holy Communion. evening in the Woman's Associa .. 3:45 P.M.-Childre'l''''.j~enten tion room. Service. . . The Choir rehearsals are as fol- 5: 30 P.M.-Evensong. . lows: the Junior Choir at 3: 30 8: 00 P.M - Parish Discussion d Group. I an the Chapel Choir at 8 on Thursday. March 26· I Thursday evening, the CherubS' 11:30 A.M.-Holy Communio!1. Choir at 10:30 on Saturday morn-s: 30 P.M.-Evening Prayer. ing. and the Senior Higb Choir at Friday. March 27 5: 45 on Sunday evening. 5: 30 P.M.-Even~ng _Prayer. . The H'oiy WeEk services will THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY be as follows: Palm Sunday. OF FRIENDS March 29 - 9:'30 - Holy Com- Sunday, Mare~ 22 munion and Confirmation of Com- -9:45 A.M.-First Dav School. municanls Class. 11-Holy Com- 9:45 A.M.-Adult Forum "Job". Wm. Price, Barbara Lange, Lu- munion and I(eception of New cius Shero.. Members. 8: 00, p,m. - The Chapel 11: 00 A.M.-· Meeting for worship. Choir will present DuBois' "Seven Children cared for in Whittier Last Word..... Maundy Thursday House. All are welcome. . " 1:00 P. M.-Senior High Fellow- - April 2 - 8:00 p.m. Holy Com-ship. . munion Service. Good Eriday - . Monday. March 23 April 3 - 12 noon to 3 p.m. - All day sewing for A.F.S.C. Trinity .Episcopal Church. Mr. Tuesday. Match' 2( Bishop will' be the preacher. 1: 30 P.M.-Monthly Meeting for Foaster Sunday _ April 5 - 9: 00 business (postponed from March 11). - Church School and Family Wednesday. Mareh 25 Service. 10: 00 and 11: 30 - Iden- All day sewing for A.F.S.C. ti~al Festl17al Worship Services. 10: 00 A.M.-P.hiladelphia yearly . Meeting Sessions begin. • 1: 30 P.M • ...:. Mid-week meeting for Worship .. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST SWARTHMORE Park Avenue ~Iow Ha,rvard SWlcJa:v.·lIIafth lIZ 11:00 A. M.-Suuday School. 11:00 A. II['-The 'LesSon Sermon will be "Matter" Wednesday eVeDlng meeting each .. eel:. 8 P.M. Reading room open dally except 8uB.day 12 to 5 P.M. Wednesday e~gs 1 tQ "~P;M. and 9 to 9:80 P.M. FRIENDS MEETING NOTES The Adult Forum this week will feature readings from uJobi ', given by Barbara Lange. Willlam Prtce. Lucius Shero andoth!,rs. 'Olis Is the session originally Scheduled for March 9. • Monthly Meeting for Business will be held lit Whittier House on Tuesday. March 24. at 7: 30 p.m. TbIs meeting I is one postponed from March 11. . Philadelphia Yearly Meeting CHRISTIAN .SCIENCE NOTES U.W.F. Plans Dinner Plans for a large educational and fund-raising dinner, to be giv";' en 'by the West Delaware County Chapter of the United World Fed­eralists at the Aronimink Country Club on April 27, are fast nearing completion. . Mrs .. Clyde Shuler, chairman and Ralph Little, vice-chairman of the Chapter h'lv"! obtained the services of Mrs. Arthur Robinson and Willard Tomlinson as co-chairmen of the dinner commit­tee. They will be assisted by an invitation committee headed by Mrs. Isaac Dornblum, a finance committee led by Frank Royce; an attendance committee with Mrs. Richard Dole as chairman; an arrangement committee headed by Mrs. Frederick Dudley; a Publicity Committee with Mrs. Arthur Warner and Mr. Little directing, and William Shank as treasurer. NEWS NOTES Mr. William M. Bush. Swarth­more High School principal, Mrs. Bush and their son William, Jr., will spend several days of next week on a trip through Virginia. Their son, a senior at Blair AcademY. Blairstown, N. J., ~c­companied by a class!Ilate, will • ART' SUPPLIES For t.. ArtI,t • . Oil, • c..va, • Water Colon. Paper • ',alatlo, 011 .T • ..,..II •• • ........ :. Ea,.I, . • COlllplet. sets . For ... U.talel!lted "Artl.t'· • TOLE CRAFT -- wa,te • Dett 'a,b_.mbor.d· for Palatla., - Complet. • CRAFTMASTER - N ••• b.red 'alnt Sets ..... ~--~ CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP 405 Dartmouth Avenue G. WEST COCHRANE D'a .... - SW 6-4191 Friday 9 _ 8:30 REASONABLE Because you determi~e. the cost. • THE OLIVER H.BAiR CO~ OllletOIl O. .UNOA1S • 1820 CHESTNUTSTREIIT OLM!II H.IAIII, _.r MARY A. IAIII, rr.oId .. Te..phon. II 6-1581 .. •

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• .. • • ·Mr. and Mrs. John Seybold Of'~g th~ wiliter in Ha'Vaii. Elected- aushle" Mallager Fieehof Lecture Sunday Jane Allen of R1v~rview road, Concludes Cooper.Series a junior at Wellesley College has been elected busl!)ess monoger of the 1954 year book. This year Jane . has been Bursar for College Gov­ernm'lllt and was head of Fresh­man Week. In the spring she will head Lacrosse. The Swarthmorean is deepltl In­debteel to William HordeTn of the SwaTthmore College Faculttl who.e final summaTt/ of the Coop-i.; perf~rni for God. It was through them that the belief In monotheism Amherst avenue entertained as Mrs. Jo",ph H. .Perkins of ,C,dar came to the world' and that pag- their house guests for several day. ;1iiit\!'entertaIned at a luncheon-for anism wI¥' overcome. There Is thus of this week Mrs. Seybold's father eight on Tuesday in honor of the a' partl~ll1.r agr-Eement or cove- Mr. H. L. Blood and Mrs. 'Blogd, I....... ' R nant' between God and the Jewish who were en route to their horne :birtloday anniversary, of Mrs. . people. It is this belief that has _i~n~w~o~r~ceste~r~,=Ma~=ss~.=,af=te;:;;:r=spe==n=d=.::.: tH=.'; :B=,ank=.& =O=f:::c =o=m;:;;:eII=:==av=e=n=u=e=.=:==, PATTERSON' FUNERAL UOAIE Elchtft,n Years' Experience Phone )Iedla 6-3400 A price to meet every FamUy's need. CO·ED BEAUTY SALON Open Thuraday Nighfll PARK Bnd DARTMOUTH AVE. Swarthmore f-1013 Carefully Selected Items for Year·Round Gift Giving Antiques & Gounnet Shop PROVIDENCE ROAD WALLINGFORD, PA. Phone MEdia. 6·4751 Weekdays 10 A.M. 10 5 P.M. Except Wed.-l0 A.M. 10 1 P.M. er Founclotlon's five lecture series on Teligloil Is published heTewith. Many ""aclers have erpresseel theiT appreciaq,m of the accuTate condensations Of fhe erudite stim­ulating presentations which a si.teable group of the community has faithfully .attended. Hb aT­ticles have stTengthened the con­tribution which the College series made to wlelened understanding. The final lecture in the Cooper foundation series . upon modern theology was given last Sunday by Rabbi Solomon FrEehof of the Rodeph Shalom synagogue in Pittsburgh. His topic was "Con­temporary Burdens in JUdaism." Rabbi Freehof opened by point­ing o~t that JUdaism does not put as much ~mphasis upt\D theology as does Christianity. Whereas Christia'ns h~ve 'been concerned. with the right belief, the Jews have been concerned with the right acls. Christianity tries to lead men to deeds through the creed, while Judaism tries to lead men to creed through deeds. For this reason it is necessary to know the J e';'lsh people in order to know Judaism. .JUdaism is characterized by three f,~atureS. First, it believes that it has received a God-given law which it is ils joy to follow. Secondly, it believes that the Jew­ish people have an unique ~rvice enabled the Jews to kee!, their r ' . solidarity as a pwple despIte per- AN' NOUNCING seculion. This does not mean that other people do not also have their PROMPT DElIVElY"ON"' NEW FORDS part to play in God's plan. He has . .... N' 0'" . his covenant with them also. Lastly: Judaism has been. a for- TRADE NEEDED ward looking religion, looking not '. QT'. to a golden age in tho past but to a triumph of good over evil in the IF YOU HAVE ONE -'EXPECT PLENTY FOR IT future. The Orthodox Jews emphasize Walsh Ford Compa.ny the law and follow it as closely as Yale & Sylvall Avellues; Morton. Pa. possible. The Conservative Jews Phone SWarth'more 6-7381 or . SWarthmore ,6-1445 emphasize the Jewish people and try to keep them an unified whole. The R.formed Jews emphilsize the forward looking hope of Judaism. Easter PoHed Plants . , DiLuzio' & Sons, Florist Lilies Gardenias Tulips Azaleas Hydrangeas Hyacinths KARASTAN RUGS WANTED The -Jews came to America as a land of'opportunity for JudaIsm. But they found that America cre­ated particular burdens. The Or­thodox with their emphasis upon law, f~und that America is the land that discourages all author­ities and encourages non-confor­mity. The Conservatives found that America is a land in which different people mix freely and it has b'::en difficult to maintain the unity of Judaism. But, ironically, the greatest problem has been that of Reformed JudaiSm. Who could have forecast that hope would .per­ish in America, the land of hope? Who could have forseen that the hopes of the last generation would appear ridiculous to this genera­tion? The Jews have seen six mil­lion of their people slaughtered by the land most developed in sci­ence, educaiion and culture. It is difficult in face of the present world to maintaIn a hope for the We have numerous requests on file for Oriental rugs or American Orientals, especially in 10 x 14 and 10 it 1"3 sizes, Saronk colorinl!s,. Call PAULSON for free appraisal. , (PAuls"" [; CMttg~n'-. Mohawk Carpeting 0 Complete Size Range 0 Oriental Rup 100. Park Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. future. Rabbi Freehof closed by in-sisting that the greatest burden of al1 was that of Retonned Judaism, for men cannot Jive without hope. JUdaism and Christianity have proven that man must have an Ultimate meaning to life In order to go on Ihrbig. Thus we must cling to th~ faith that the present storms of world ,crisis wHl pass. FRESH CUT, FLt"ERS ,-,,' , , , , Visit Our Greellha!!se Early alld Select from. Our Thausallds of Blooms We Telegraph - We Deliver • 650 BalHmore P!ke' . ~ .. ' :SWa"hIilOre' 6.0450 bpe" 8 A. M. to 6 P. M; , SWarthmore 6-6000 - CLearbrook 9:4646 Health Nurses Report (Contln,ued·from 'Page 1) I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ mother ~jght" continue convaJes-l: I Paulson KNOWS Carpet cence following hospitalization. BEST RECIPE .' FOR' A IANKING CONNECTION When you apply here for a low-cost loan ••• use any of our other helpful banking services ... or merely ask oUr advice on financial matters-you benefit from our up-to·datethinJdng and facilities, plus . juq.gment seasoned by experience. We invite you to do aU your banking here. SWARTHMORE' NATIONAL BANI AID TRUST COMPANY Mrs. Charl<s E. Fischer repor.ted as the Society's delegate on the 'Friendly 'Open House Sponsors Like Committee. ,Board members are • • • serving thre=- March teas under <':~;_" Mrs. Fischer's direction, the dates being March 2, March" 16 and March 30. . Two members were elected to the Board from Ridley Park, one of the six communities served' by I the Red Feather Agency, Mrs. Walker Evans anCl Mrs. Andrew Alexander.' , Reports w,;re heard from all chairmen and officers. The nex.t Board Meeting will ·be on Thurs­day, April 9. Mr. and Mrs. Norman A. Da­vant and family returned to their home in Miami, Fla., by plane . Monday after a weekts visit with tIje Belfield family of ~i~higan avenue. During their Vlslt the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Da­vant's great - grandfather Mr. Percy C. Belfield. Sr., was observ­ed . Something Out of a , ''":' ,' .. ,.! .. ~;.1,~,', at! } . , ;~,I .' .. ~, THE EASTER., BUNNY • will be in SATURDAY. APRIL 4th. 10:30 A. M. College~"f.ps$e Field For Children-Tots througb 6th Grade Sponsored by the Swarthmore LIONS CLUB " -" ,~ , .. , ' I , Mareb 20, 1_953.·, . .,. . '" 'from a motor trip 10 Florida. . NEW$' NOTES Their son William Edwin Harris Mr,' and' ~." C. H. qllfriSon, is hpme for the spring vacation Jr., and ·cI,illdien. Barbara, and from Phillips Exeter, N.H. He Is Garry"of Yale' avenue, spent :the week-end In Easton visltinil"M:ts;· a member of the graduating class Garrison's brothltr and. dister-in- In June. law Mr. and Mrs. Eo Bld41e.Heg. _Mr. and Mrs. Warren B. War­. Mr.Heg is lISS!st8nt Dean of Stu- den of Yaie avenue will'entertain dents at Lafayette Coll~II<C;·. ~\. at. cQl'ktaii party I\t their home Mr., and Mrs. S. C..of. before the Duck Club dance In the 'W. e, llesley road have Woman's Club tomorrow <!venillg. .< .- , '. '. DID Y,O'U KNOW? , -i '~".' In cas. of, a War' Eme..gency anywhere in the MetrOPOlitan Philadelphia area; Swarthmore would need approximately 100 trained- auxiliary polic,e . .. Without .training,. contusion. would result. Let's be prepared. Call SW 6-0122, the· Swarthmore Police Headquarters, and volunteer as an auxiliary policeman. Women, for daytime duty, are needed as w·e ll as men. Only 24 hours, of training are requir;;:d. So call SW 6-01l\2 I\OW. '1>olice are on duty 24 hours each day. Give your name, arldress and phone number. SWARTHMOR~ CIf\9L DEFENSE COUNCIL , ' ,';. I Enjoy PALM SUNDAY and EASTER SUNDAY DINNERS Graciously served in quaint (;010ni81 atmosphere. Featuring _;.I 'l'l t . THE swAiti1iMo~ Wo H. Linton Jr • Promoted by DuPolits Swarthmore High' Grad. Will Direct Polymer Research ' Former Benjamin West avenue resident Dr. W .. Henry Linton, Jr., since 1949 a member of the re­., arch st8"ff of the 'Du Pont Com­pany, has been promoted to re­search supervisor in the research division of the Poly-chemicals De­partment at the EXperimental Sta­tion here. Dr, Linton will direct chemical and physical studies of polymer structures. He joined the com­pany as a chemical engineer at the Arlington, N. J. plastics plant in 1949 and al year later was trans­ferr-, d to the Experimental Sta­tion, Wilmington. He worked on the development of processes lor making chemical intermediates, nylon ihtermediates, applications for "Teflon" tetrafluroethylene resin, and on process cost studies. Puge 5 • You-r Red Cross (A POEM) • • Symbol of hope. how it glows through the darkness!.. • Spreading compassionate arms wide above Fear and disaster-encircling the hopeless, The hungry. and· helpless, with your care andlove'J Whereve~ need is, your Red Cross is ready! Helping those stricken by fire and flood, Cheering the lonely· man far from his homeland; Staying Death's hand with :'iour life.giving blood. Your Red Cross-:.tireless in missions of mercy, 'Done in your nanie! Make it strong-make it live, A symbol of hOJ16 glowing bright through the darknessl. family dinners with ~P, m..e ..'!~,1.i'! !~,' stries., delicious steaks and , · '< c~'d~{ " ~ order. Born December 23, 1922, in Up­land, the son of Mi. and Mrs. W. H. Linton, of VaIley Road, Wawa he went to Swarthmore High School and in 1943' received the degr.ee of bachelor of science from Drexel Institute· of Technology where he majori!4 in chemical en­gineering. The Lintons moved from'the Borough in 1950. Answer the call ••• from your open heart, give! .! .' S.erved ,:0 to 7:30 P. M. . For Rese"';!lHons - SWarthmore 6.0680. STRATH HA.VEN INN . Yale & "arvard Avellues. Swa"hmore. Pa. . WALTER E. PARRon. N,,. . FRU PARKING Linton was a tieutenant in the chemical warfare service of ·the ]1. S. Army from his graduation .. ',; ®'., .. '. - ~Spec,ializing in short run jobs for, those who prefer perfection until 1946 when he entered the 1-------------__________ -:-___ :- Massachusetls Institute of Tech- • ' 0 nology. In 1949 he r.ecelved the " degree of doctor of science from M.LT., where he majored In chemical engineering. " PRINTIIGt-H~~~rBa~r~!~EY Dr. Linton is a member of the American Chemical Society, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers,. Tau Beta PI honor en­gineering jIOCiety, Sigma XI, honor sci~ntiftC ..,arch society" and Phi Kappa PJI.! honor society. . MEDIA, PA. .' . REAR DF MEDIA F'lRST NATIONAL BANK MEDIA 6-04B6 EVERY YEAR. o. FUEL SYSTEM ~.. '" ' • ., tI. , ..... \ _ ..... , "" ... -"-,,, 1(arin4 He and Beatrice Brewster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fw>nk V. Brewster, of 223 Dickinson avenue were married in \,945" ',I'hey have two' sonS, Douglas;,and.Bruce, and live at 3U Cleveland avenue, Mc­Daniel Crest, Wilmington. 'Workshop' Planned For Mother's Club One of the highiights of the Swarthmore Mother's Club pro­gam year will be pJ;'esented Mon­day 'evening' at 8 at the Swarth­more Woman's Club when by pop­ular requ~st there will be a gym night and a workShop on faces. Rhona Lloyd, well known radio and television commentator, will tell each woman how. to bring out her best features by the proper ap­plication of cosmetics. -In additioll, in her work.shop on fa~s, she will advise individuals on hair styling. She will also show' how One can co-ordin~te hats to accessories. Well ,known in the Philadelphia area" Miss Lloyd is a radio com­mentator, has had her own tele­vision show, and Jor a number of y.ears, was a foreign correspondent. She Is an authority on cosmetics. Virginia Hath, associate profes­sor 01. physical education for Wo- STOP RUS o men,:', Swarthmore College, win YOUR CAR WITH condu.ct the gym night program. , SI This, part of the program, which '. 'C"" L A: I R. . wupisllt aiinrcsl, uwdeit he xtehrec ioseths,e rw pilalr tb eo fh tehlde program to be held downstairs. Tliose Who are interested in par­ti~ ipating In the exercises arere­quested to wear slacks. " ANTI-RUST GASOLI·NI · . . 50 DIFFEREN.T IT'S PATENTED , CHESTER and FAIRVIEW ROADS '.011. SWart .... o ... 6-3681 o. - Mrs. John B.' Roxby is in charge of the program which is open to anyone who Is interested. A simi­lar program was held last year mid was SO popular, that upon re­quest of the members th'1 program Is being r .. pea~ed. Mr. and Mrs. Roberl Wentz and ' daughter Linda of L'lPIa' spent the wE!ek-end visiting Mrs. Wentz's patents Mr. and Mts. William H. Lee of Harvard avenue. Laboratory-Tested .' More':han 600 Times A Day! SPRINGFIELD W--~-!-~-~- , PHILADELPHIA SUBURBAN WATER COMPANY. . , Serymg 49 M~Jrll(lpaIJI!f'5 In Delaware Monlgomery and Chesl., Counties Mom fiRK! fOr PTA ••• _".d r0lc' l"r,y. _,. ".,,.,, ".., .. 1II'Ib,Ie .. -"-,,.,. with my new freedom! Thousands of home makers are making good use of Ihe new freedom Ihal Iheir electrical ser:vants give them. Year by year more and more of these willing helpers are tuking Over lime-consum_ ing. wearying tasks. Giving parenls mare time for living. mare time for such activities us Parent-Teacher Associa­Iicins. is the Big Ideo of your electric company ••• ceaselessly planning, in the American way. to provide bette • and better service. , A .,.a. MOfA_. TAX-PAYING I/laIlY 'COMPANY 0_ IY Ma.t lIfIoN 100,_ 5TOCIOtOtOas • I 1 1

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: . ;~ I , .". . '"r- ,). Mr. and .Mrs. W. E. Hetzel of Tbsy'er road spent several days of this week visiting their son-In­law a,nd daughter Mr~ and Mrs. W. Thomas Morris and' neW baby daUShter of Troy, Pa. days In Clearmont, Fie., visitlDg his paternal grandparents Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Seybold. Mr. and Mrs. Ralpb V. Little, Jr., of Haverford place will enter­tsin at a buffet supper before the Duck Club dance in the Woman's Club tomorrow evening. ~ohnny Seybold of Amherst av~nlie will spend the school holl- , r t . i , ',\ • ,.II,de'ph'. I. V''1'~ I" 350 wif' f'e Ne" PTe S'REE' arid 'RAISI' GUIDI Tbis helpful and reliable ''Key to tba City" is now on sale at principal 081111- daDds throughout Philadelphia. The Guide bas been comp1etel, reyisecl aInce the '61 edition and contains infor. mation about new streeta and street extensions opened up by the city's ~t postwar development ••• and you recelV8 how.to-get-there transit .info~tion ~or aU aectionB and streets m plnledelphia. The Guide lists Phlladelpbia's many places of interest and incorporates SllVeral new features including an inde:I: of .pecific point.: and sectiOns in and near l'hi1adelpbia; rail, air and bus travel facilities; city officeS and oourtII; govern­ment offices, and the larger indiJatries. ~rClwnie Troop Gives 'Dream' Play March 17 Brownie Troop No. 225 under the leadership of Mrs. James R. Taylor, . presented In connection with International Friendship an original playlet :'Mary's Interna­tional Dream" In the playroom of the Rutgers avenue School, Tues­day evening. Although the short playlet was. primarily tor educational purposes cullilinating the girls' studtes dur­ing the past two months, it was presented for the mothers, fathers and friends. The original playlet bad been written, di~ and produced by Mrs. Emmy Kroon and bas musi­cal accompaniment by Mrs. Eliza­beth Gabriel. "Mary's International Dream" is a dream playlet wherein Mary played by Barbara Jeri Taylor, surrounded by ber dolls has a dream in which the International Dolls come to life and In native costume present short native dances. The dolls were portrayed by: Molly Bimker, Lela Cooper, Christine Curtis, Marjorie Gabriel, Barbara Garrison, Alice and Sara Gorgan, Heidi Honnold, Jean Johnson, Dory Kroon, Jean Ann Magee, Joan McKlnnell, Cbristy Palmer, Karen Peterson, Marsha Silvers, Kathy Stamford. Live background effects were presented by Mrs. Taylor, and Mrs. Kroon. NEW BULLETIN ISSUE!;) . Adeline Strouse. swarthlnore, teacher of Frencll at the high school, is a member of the com­mittee of 11 whi"h compiled a new bull<!tin just issued by the Stste QUALITY LOW£I.IICES ..... .., ..., t ·A.·.· U.s..raded Choke. Lamb LEGS Whole or IIthw Half , Ib sQum CUT SBOutDD LAMB UD ClOPS loin Ib 95c : .. SIUI or NBCI LAMB SIOULDERI.IMB ClOPS Squa .. Cut Shoulder VEAL ROAST ...., ....•. . .... • sso ____________ -:::=:=:-==----------1 Department of Pobllc Instruction in Harrisburg. Bntitioed "Course of Study In. Modem Foreign Lan­guages for Secondary Schools", Bulletin No. 350 is a new approach to the teaching of foreign lang­uages, and marks a step forward in language instruction. PHIlADELPHIA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY 1:0 ZSe Sea ScIIIttI I I ADB:ET ONB (~~) . -rott~diA~~ Fact is, girls, there isn't room in this ad to show all the "Good for" tickets that go with a telephone operator's job. Among those wflve mentioned above is "Intl!testing work." Our operators say their work is so interesting the time fairly Ilies. Quitting time comes "before you know it." For complete information about operating or any other type of telephone work, stop in at one of the offices listed below. 69.1693 .L udi_ Street, Upper Darby, Pa. Arch Street, Philadelphia, Po. IHE lEU TElEPHOIIE COMPANY OF PENNSnYANIA . • A friendly placs to wadc" ' .. Miss Strouse was district chair­man for Southeastern Pennsyl­vania. Elec:ted to College Gov't Richard S. McCray, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. McCray, Jr., Cor­nell avenue. has been elected sec­retary- ttllllsure~ of the College Body and president of the' Chris­tian Association at Wesleyan Uni­versity, Middletown, Conn. Mc­Cray is a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. His' campus activities have been varied and include chairmanships of The Campus Cbest, the college charity; the Christian Association­Connecticut Stste Hospitsl Recre­ational Therapy Project; and the Wesleyan Blood Bank. McCray is also a member of the Vocational Guidance' Committee and the Pre­Ministerial Club. He is a graduate of Swarthmore High School. Swarthmore Alumnus Assists Tufts President C. Russell DeBurlo, Swarth­more College graduate and Tufts College budget officer smce 1949, has been elecled assistsnt to the Tufts president for college opera­tions. In this new position Mr. DeBurlo will have· administrative duties relating to college financial affairs. Mr. DeBurlo was graduated from Swarthmore with a B.S. degree in civ~l enpneering· in 1947, after his undergraduate course has been Interrupted by military service In the U.S. NallY. In 1949 he was graduated from the Wharton Graduate School University of Pennsylvania with a Master of Business Administra­tion degree In finance. Mr. DeBurlo's wife Is the fonn­er Miss Edith' Thatcher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles. G. Thatcher, Ogdenave.nue. wrmlll Baddock FiB ... Jb 39c ftO .... 1I ~ The ... I. No Substitute· For C/l", .JIIL Sweet Cream ~;. 75 ~t"'? BUTTER p~~ . C Amerlca,.,~t prise wtnner. A gelMfOVS ....... Colfal ... than 2c. Riehl .... Butter PrI::'-=.11ty ,,::". . 73c Cbeddar c::Jaee .. Jhc:% Ib 6se I t= .. Ib 7 .. Krait Natural swIi.· Chee.. . ~k': 5 .. BIIlen.t Cbee.e Spread !i!: 75e TKoemDa.t,o.. 'o. J",_ J:.~:o!~r. ,::z z" CorD. Jl'lake. ~k': I.se jJi,+ Evaporated MUk 4 ~:--.:z 5Se Paul' Ann I' .... b nc Ban .!r. Z5e MIracle Whip D:t~G ~ 4 .. Dole Sneed PIneapple ~~. 5Se l'aInat I'adal Tlalue. ~ 1.0-= • Standard Quality TOMATOES Z~: Z3c EGGPLANTS .~:rlL.· .... 15c GUPEFRUIT '·=ri~ICY 4 for Zgc .9dmJ Braad Calilornla I.e ...... = '='I.5e I)dmI BROCCOLI :-w: Z::: 4~c ·BAR LAYER' CAlI :e=: -3tc SAVE $1.27 lAC" ON THISI LOVAILE BEAun'UL . CURAan DOLLS 01 THE NATIONS A $2.25 Value. Choice of 12. :=:98C WIth Each • Host to hppeteers PUICH' ASE· Mr. and Mrs. Ralph V. Little, . • Jr., and family of Haverford place '------,;;;;;;;;..----..;: ....... ..;;;..;:;.;;;,;,,;:;.;;;;;;;;;;=.=...1 ~:= ::1 =:~ oi= ACME MARKET, Chester Rd., Swarthmore peteers of America, with a puppet Open Thursday and Friday to 9 P.M~ show at their bome· during 1be week-end. Open Saturday "til 6 P.M. \ ! • • • ., .- ... ,. NEWS NOTES , ' . ..', .Classified Ads THE SWARTHM9,BEAN . _, I D.A.R. MEMBERS ELECT OFFICERS FOR NmYEAR Mr. and Mrs. Edward W .. Furst . of Guernsey rQad have retruned PIRSONAL . Mrs.· ·HenrY J. Weilanci, South from.. ~nth's trip. to Dunedin, PERSONAL-Bulldlng, painting, Chester road, pr~sided as regent at near Clearwater, FIe. En route alterations and all kinds of car- the Marcb meeting of the Dela­they stopped at Sea Island; 6a., pentry .. For. estimates, caU Ja.ck ware County Chapter, Daugliters and Ponte Vedra, Fla. Prichard,_ SWarthmor .' 6-876.1. of tlie American Revolution, held . Mr. and: Mrs. LaRue' Hendrix- PF;RSONAL._ .Broken 'lr· weak Monday afternoon in' CroZier. Bern-son of· North'Chestertoad enter- ~artsof a,~ furi1I~I!~and .otller inary, Upland. .'. tslned at a dinner party at their articles rePl!lted - saves you big . ·.D~h.g t.·he/iisc.ussion.. .o f plan. s upholslery·"job.' ·New· parts' made, ho",e Saturday evening. . -. refinished;. complete n"w· carving, for the' 6.2nd Na.tional Conference . Mrs. Frll1lces G; Lumsden and etc.· C"U SWarthmore 6.11<13, Fix- to begin April 20 i';- Washington, her granddaughter Bar b il r a It;Sb,op,.lllir :Sollth Chester,' Rd. D .. C.,. It was revealed that Pres­M? rari, both of KenYOn avenue, PERSON4L -., E.\ectrical wiring iden~ Eisenhow'er is sc~ed!lle/i to leave today to spend the school . new' aqd, .ol!!,. resi!!e'l-ti'!l apd be welcoming speaker. Mrs. Jona­spring v.Bcatlon VI·sl·tm· g . Mrs. cwcimthm Fericreia' lU Qddoenrew riinte rsc oSmpepcliifalnccae­tlian p. riehar.d . _of Swa.r th~. ore will Lumsden's brotber. Mr. Frank A. tipns .. Sale ... and Service on elec. be working. delegate to the con- Green of S'p!ing Lake, Milch.' Water .He,aters, Ra.nge$, Washl'!fs, vention. Mrs~ Wiliiam M. "McCawley and Dryers, ... Pumps, . F~s, Cleaners The nominating committee com ... and smllll applianCes.' Call~ Erich daughters Sally and Peggy of H. Hausen; SW '6.2850, Corner of prised of Mrs. Edwafd pittaCk of Forest lane Hew to Tucson, Ariz., Park an~ Michigan avenues. Moylan, Mrs. John Rife of. Wall- Miss Teel Dunn of Dickinson avenue who will be an April bride, was !luest of bonor at a luncheon and surprise miscellaneous sbow­er given Tuesday by Mrs. D. Mal­com Hodge and Mrs. John Mc­Kernan of . Swarthmore at the Hodge home on Sirath Haven ave.: nue. " Mr. and Mrs. Ford F. Robin­son of. Guernsey road. will enter­tain at a small. coc~8il party· to­m~ rrow afternoon for a few close friends of Capt. and ·Mrs. Johan Natvig of Harvard avenue. c~Pt. Natvig reports for' sea duty Mon­day following a month's, leave. Mr .. and Mrs. W. E . .Hetzel and Miss Carol Hetzel of Thay~r road will. vacation for 10. days :.at Sea Island, Ga.' . Pap 9 ~. . rr"'rdG.".raJ'oD Bufldert ~ HORACE A. . .j. . REEVES I Building· Construc:tlon ~ .. R~ld~ntial .• Painting ~. Commerci,,1 • Repai1'8 iii • Alleraiions . I17V2 SO.uth C. h'lter Road I ~ Swarthmore 6-3450 3' t:·· . H~~'~~~~ Christlnan & J.oire • SW 6·2290 HI 7,0674 'Registered' . th~ week .to spend the S~hoo,lpERSONAL _ Registered Spen- ingford 'and Mrs. C. Russell Phil- ESTATE NOTICE hohdays v.;lth Mrs. McCawley Seer Corsetiere, Mrs. Elsie H. Me- lips of Swarthniore. announced the ~;t?!f~:e ~!= :i ~"~"Ee"'~"~"~"'e: 'PI,mbJDg mother Mrs: ,Downs Fisher. . Williams, Telephone Swarthmore fol1ovi~ng nominations for next ceased. . EI.elrlcal' ,. formica Kitchen Justine Bodley of Park avenue 16-4583 for appointment. year: Letters Testamentary on the above h I PERSONAL-Piano tuni g R .~te havIng been ,granted to the un- W q was 1.0 years 0 d oq March n. ea_ Regent, Mrs. Harry Bates; first <!erslgned .all persons Indebted to the 17 will entertain a grOUP of her . s,?nable. Member National- Asso- vice regent, Mrs. David 'Bingham,' aaJd Estate are requested. to make pay. .' ., elation Piano Tuners. Call Leaman, ment d th h Ca;p •• try. Top.: . "CUllom Kitchen Cabinets"' friends a\ a St. Patrick s Day Sunset 9-5082 for rates. s.::cond· vice regent, Mrs, George sent •t haen samoes.e · wlathvoinug,t cdlae1lmay.s, ttoo pre-party . tomorrow. afternoon in PERSONAL _ Confirmation and Plowman; corresponding secre- STEELE D. GENSEMER.. Executor ••• "" ......... "".,,""""""""""""'" honor of her anniversary. , party dresses: slips and pinafores tary, Mrs. John Michael; historian, Or tQ225 VB888l' Ave., Swarthmore, Pa, 1_ n' I'" Ida Mae Lewis is a member of custom made for little girls from Mrs. Prichard; registrar. Mrs. F. JOHN E. OENSEMER, Attorney' ,III'F the Dean's list at Boston Univer- one to 12 years: MAdison 3-2733, Harry Bewley; treasurer. Mrs. 1004 Girard Trust Bldg., sity, wbere she i~ a freshman .. A ~~g:tS, ~:urch avetlUe, Clifton John Larson; chaplain, Mrs. r.:,~:::elPhJa 2, Penn •. graduate of Swa~more HIgh . . George Stull; director, Mrs. Weil- r~~~-~~~~~~~~ School, class ~f '52, Ida holds a PERSONAL - Bahv sItting. Call and. All were unanimously elected. S,,:,arthmore Hlgb School Scholar- ~ • -it Mrs. Roy Rlncliffe, . Strath Hav-ship. . . . ~ ~~~-~ aa~d en avenue. was narratOr for col- Kippy and Johnny Kippax' of ored. slides showing the National Academy road are recuperating at 1 ~;i.- :'~~; .AD D.A.R. Headquarters, .Constitution their home following tonsilIec-1 ~~; Hall, in Wasblngton. tomIes a.t.tJ1~ Bryn Mawr Hospitall ...... "?vl;'·:i ,Uon. We last Wedn~sday. I ~'!~ :~r F._ LEGION ",UXILlAil'Y NOTES Mr. Cornell Archbold who is you. or CH:~~; attending George . Washington <C. . At a meeting of the Legion Aux- UniversitY 'Law School Washing- ...I ma<3. held Monday in the Ameri-t DC" i th 'k.-e d t pERSONAL-Sitte~-. reliable WD.- can Legion room, Borough Hall, ~n, . .' .' spen. e 1!'* -: ", ";. .• man available by the hour, day members o' the Um't voted to hIS home on North :swarthmore er'week. Call Mrs. Krati't. SWarth- • avenlie. more 6-4555. change the date of the 'monthly Mr. Laurence Fabrot .of Hous- gathering from the first to the sec:' ton, Texas wI'II be the week-end PERSO.N AfL "--·Wt iil cain, upholster, on d M ond BY of the month. repaIr urnl ure for good used guest of Mr~ and Mrs. Birney K. typewriter, piano accordion, zylo- The Auxillary 'will send a girl Morse \ of Harvard avenue. Mr. phone, hand tools. machinery. Fix- from the seventh grade to Key- Morse and Mr. Fabrot were It Shop, SWarthmore 6-1143. stone Camp near Chambersburg together In Leda, India during WANTED. to attend an American Citizenship World War II. course. The girl, to be chosen by WANTED Young englneel'. get- th H· Rubbish Collec:tion Swarthmore Disposal Weekly or Monthly , WARREN PIERCE Swarthmore 6-2078 Swarthmor. 6·1448 WILLIAM BROOKS Ashes & Rubbish Removed Lawn8 Mowed, General IlawJin~ 238 Harding Ave., Morton.Pa Illi.; ROOFS GUTTERS . REPAIRED & INSTALLED' , WARM-AIR HEATING I' Furnaces ·Vacuum Cleaned GEORGE MYERS Box 48-Swarthmore 6-0740 Charles E. Fischer . BuILDER, . ;.;,-. ... ' ',. ' .. .. , ... .' ' Swarth;n6... 6-2253 • '. t '.' ? ,'.': ' ' :i.'~ ;'-", .ESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL ", CONSTRUCTI()N . Alteratio~s P .R~ R. Freight· Bldg, Swcirthmore. Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan G. Foster ting married In June, desires 3- e Igh School, will have her ex-of Crest lane, have as thei~ week- room apartment with bath. Occu- penses paid by the Auxiliary. end guest Mrs. Foster's aunt, pancy June 1. $60-70 month. Send ~warthmore friends who have In Mrs. Dora Keen Handy of West 1 ~~~, t~a~chard, Box 28~, Wa1llng- the past collected coupons, are Hartford, Vt., formerly of Phila- [} asked to continue giving them to PETER 01 NICOLA J. F.B.!,ACKMAN SW 6·8618 delphia; Mrs. Handy has just re- I •• ':' •. ~~ . work wo~';.t Mrs. Herbert Bassett, or any other turned from .a three-;.months_ trip" r. -.~<! Phone member of the Unit. by air to Africa and the Near 1 ~ ~ , .. -... Mrs. Margaret S~rvais announc_ East. . 1 WAl rT,ED -. To ~Uy a _~arge ed I the names of' tll:ree new merne . - sturdy doll carriage. Phone bers: Mrs. Walter' Snyder, Mrs. SWarthmore 6-2607. DalTls Hopson and Mrs. John Mc. .. ~. :-.o;,~ . .' hil!h Williams. la;.v:e ' -,~ Q two :rhe Unit sent waists, sneakers, . 6-3570'. skIrts and woolen' garment~ to WANTED ._. Would like a 'good Holland Relief, New York City. :====- music teacher. Call SWarthmore Mrs. Alban Rogers gave an en- \ \ I1 ~n~1-0~;6'~3.~·t~~·~-'_-~_~..."..m ~t-"''.'~'~r''~re ~."_~_~~·: B;OX·~'ltrliibghutteen iwnga s tpalakid toon EdLiethgi sMloartiroin~' ~\ 12fJ.'C. Pa. Rogers who has helped to bring \ ~ I WJUi American Legion btils before Ates wish to rent three or four Congress. bedrpom house; furnished or un- Christmas cards may be sent or furnished, by June 1. Call SWarth~ ,aA~U to the Betty Bacharach . more 6-3575.' . Home in Longeport, N.J.; the Chil- FOR SALE Heart Hospital, or St. Basil's FOR SALE _ 26" .hoy's bicycle. Orphanage in Philadelphia. LIKE YOUR OWN CHAUFFEUR «Sood cQndition, new.. tires. $7.50; 'r.. . .. , Call SWarthmore 6-281' evenings. ! (1,Ip.: S hIM '" . FOR SALE Top soil and mush- ,~. C 00 USlClanS . room soil. Call SWarthmore Entertam· CI t 6.6317.aSSma es • [t's like having your FOR sAlI!: -. Antique walnut bed, complete, $50; electric stove, new units, $20.. Call SWarthmore A 20 piece combined elemen- ! tary school orchestra was heard fl::;h::: o~o~:::;:n . r Cellor Walls Re.Plostered ; P.hone Sworthmore 6.2526 HORACB B. 'Passmore RBAL BSTATB /lo INSURANCB 609 S. CHBSTBR RD. SwAllTHMOU, PBNltA. Tmph_ S ... 6-5510. '. 'I'IH:&EN Mm~ OIL HEAT CIa WIIUH.AII; COHIIIIICINIftO OR FIIIMfoCIi '" 01\ IOIU .. : 01\ W ... I .. tllA .. n DA. Y and NIGHT OIL· BURNER . SERVICE: IIiONDAY THRU SATURDAY .,.. :,, I "I .' J NOON' .... . SW 6-4041 .. • SUNDAYS and HOLIDAYS SW 6·0740 • COAL FIREPLACE WOOD J.A.GREEN ., I e -.' own chauffeur to ride the handsome new' buses and rail cars Red Arrow has adde4 recently to its fleets;· . 6-3096. . recently in an informal con- , cert given at both the Rutgers i========~=~~~~"~I~s~a~w:. ~,~~t~i~n:,,:::T:h~e~s:w=a~rt~h~m:o:r:e:an~ -I Not only is this equipment so roomy . and comfortable ••• it's in constant serv­ice through the day. And if you ride be.. tween 10 and 4~ . when trafIic is lighter -you'U enjoy plenty of room and a relax­ing ride. . I RED ARROW.UNES .~ , P I 1 LINES FOR SALE 0.27 Gauge Lionel freight train. Includes whistle avenue and Colleg~' avenue build-tender, automatic dump car .trans­former, track, switches, piatform iogs. All children from" kinder-and acces. 89ries, ,25. Call SWarth- I.,:arten through grade six ~ere mQre 6_2811 eveqlngs. . I.... attendance along with parents FOR SALE -'Bicycle (boy's (26" of the participating players. - good rubber, oril!inal paint, The group under the dil"ction $10. SWarthmore 6-6~. . of String In~truclor RObert'- Bar- FOR' SALE - Top·so!!, fIll"dirt, clay was heard in four nu b a n' d mushroom-soil. C a I 1 .. ' m ers, SWarthmore 6-3400. mcluding two marches, a waltz and an intermezzo. In addition to FOR RENT - FOR RENT . ~. cotts'ge I AvallAhl .. June to 'it ~e·2?il8.e~ .' - I ~!.~ ~ --' -and: The the numbers by the orchestra, several soloists and smaller groups performed. Heard in tbis capacity were· a brass quartet composeClof Rutgers avenue boys, Joe Marim, MartY Franck, Billy Medford and Dicky Dodson; a flute duet. by Sally Huse and Carol Honnold; a violin I" ~' .. :.~.~ RoOm and .. for gentleman. ===;.;6:..-.;,3737. . IF~R Call solo by Ada Kroon and a cello duet by two College 'avenue mu­: tWO !!iciaos Mary Van 'Urk and Danny Inue, :~w!~!b ath.;;".i''r''H3; ~.~ 39-.:.::=-:av=e-] RoOdgneer sb.a lf of the orchestra play- LOST el'!) started Instrumental instruc­LOST Green zipper wallet in village, Tuesday. FInder please cill SWarthmDl'e 8-1510. tion as late as this past Fail, and for them. the concerts were tI1eIi Initial lIUblic patorin8ittoe. • Real Estate .. - Insu.-ance Custom Homes ~onstructloti ·_.rtgages • -~,.-- Baird & Bird COR. DARTMOUTH aJldLAFAYETTE AVENUES 'Opposite &oro.g. Hall SW.llu. ore• 6-0108 S'HGilblo. .. "IH2 . :

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'J, .~ l,,. , I, i Page 10 Arts Center Crafts Show Now on THE sw ARTBMOREAN .. MlIJ'eh 20, 1953 ::n:o!~~~';::. and the PWIlp- Wesleyan Glee Club In a brief but dUBcult list 01 . To Sing Here .April 25 Blind Center of Chester is also exhibiting. Attentive Audience work are: Marjorie T. Dutton, .hlng •. Americans could do, Dr. The Wesleyan University Glee Other Hears Dr. Robinson exhibitors and their (Continued from page 1) lery, and Miriam tlroree, jewelry negative. He listed ·as fOl'eJl~o'itl.aoblnson suggesled drst that they Club, . Middletown,Col1ll., will Craftsmen Exhibit Wares negative induences at work should begin to love people; to present a concert here on .the In Three Day Affair and enameling, both of Waillng- us, cheap American movies be more creative through spirit·nifht of April 25 under the spon-ford; Waiter Omlor, WOodwork, of Ihelr false values, drst, and rather than equlpment, and to \1Se sorship of the Education Commit- Ending Marc:h,21 Media; Mrs. F.rancls Pennell, art ican tourists, with their the force of personality. "I love to tee of'· the Woman's Club of Works of art crealed by mem- books, of Moylan; Mrs. Theodore and arrogance. flaunting talk' to young people, because Swarthmore. D1x, hand-painted china', Ann money everywhere they go, they ask 'What can I do.' Adults • Proceeds' of the concert will In-bers and <!xhlbitors of the Com- Reinhart, jewelry; Mrs. Stanley second. ask, 'Have you thought of' thiscreBS<! the Club's Elizabeth Hub-munity Arts Center, are currently Third, he said, is fear. We tear -7'" With weariness, and some- 'bard Bonsall scholarship to be on dlsplay at the Cenler's b,uildlfilg,.1 W. Cochran, J.eather gloves and revolution and talk of thing very close to disgust, Dr: awarded a 'girl in the lII'aliuatlng Rogers Lane, Wallingford. Opened lampshades; Mrs. Mi.r~iuerit,e I service, but in the wot"ld of tur- RObinson. answered, "Of course I ,class. of the High School lil ·June. yesterday, this drst Annual Crafts Montgomery, dutch pottery; Mrs. moil which Dr. Robinson term';'" have." 'For the past two years the Ober­Sale and Exhibit will continue Roger Tay,lor, weaving; Mrs. F. a battle for minds and souls we Democracy costs something. You Un .COllege a Cappella Choir has through today and tomorrow, Silbergerger, rugs and candles; need a selective service of ideas can collect things, but they do been presented in behalf of the March 20 and 21, from 12 noon Mr. and Mrs. L. Kilns and Mrs. with our brightest and dneSt not pervade the spirit. Work on Sc~ol!',~s~ip,. which was awarded IHltll 9 p.m. John Sanborn.' Mrs. Gerald P. young men chosen for that'rather one. human being and give him th!, :,flr,\'t .xear in the 'amol,Ult of Top craftsmen, members of the Kynett,. Mrs. Charles Hogg and than the army. The Russians go- hope, and you endow the world .... '~lo0r.Qa'~ast year in two scholar- Arts Center and invited guests Mrs. Haines Turner, all of Wall- ing into the outside world talk sh P. 01 $,,00 and $250.' . bave worked to mak,e this the best ingford, are the days' hostesses. peace; Dr. Robinson said; Ameri- Dr. Robinson was brought to ., The. <!l1ncert wID ·be held in the craft show ev.er to be given in the cans talk arms, and the peoples of Pthree s,Bbyotreoruiagnh Cbhyu rtchhe aSnwd atrhthem Soture-. 'H. igh'School Auditoriu m. f"~ ltooc daliistpyl. a. Ey ahcihs eoxwhnib iwtoorr.k I;s tperae saenndt E. I. and S. Comm.·Hee tvhaelu ew. orld take us both at 'face dent Christian 'Fellowship of Miss, ·Leanore Perkins of Cedar . cake contributes to the sociability Plans. April Party In the batUe of ideas. Dr.' Roh- Swarthmore College. lane .. spent several days of. last t, of the visit. inson questioned America's "ex- .we~k, visjting her aunt Mrs." R. K. . . The Entertain...,.,nt Instruction 5 5' , William D. Parry, instructor at d SIC . t f change" student plan which has .tate ays S.H.S. Not Levering of Claymont" I?eL' "; the Philadelphia MUseum School ~~o~s '::'::: a :;'=i~ge:t tht:~:.::: 30.000 international students In . Financially Distressed Mr. John M. Foster of Ci'est lane !.; ,, .in- -po,tt-er=y,, i,s -g=ue~s=t =ex=h. i.b.i ~to~r. ~i I of Mrs. R. T. Bates to plan a United States and not 1,000 of 1\3 (Contin\led from Page 1) received the degtee of Doctor of B Ii own students studying abroad. The .' Philosophy at Harvard UniVErsity .t". ',. ene t - Dessert - Bridge. Mem- speaker quoted one native's ques- Ia .t e afte rnoon to early morning. this mont h. bers of the committee present in- -=============- J, cluded Mrs. Walter Giles, Mrs. J. tion: "Does that mean 30 of ~s Following these new periods Q F. Gaskill. Mrs. Agnes Sheldon equals orie of you?" The govern- which begin at 8 a.m. the lete bell • Mrs. Lewis Goodenough, Mrs. F. S. ment pf India which has one-half would sO)lnd at 8: 45 instead of tlie .. ,. Gillespie, Mrs., William Gehring the budget of New York, neverthe- pres.ent 8:30. The sports program .; and Mrs. John'L. Good, Chair- less has set up 50 free Internation- would run from 3:45 to 5:30 in- .': man." . al scholarships. Money spent noW st~ad of 4: 15 t06 which some par- E'F"F E (II V E ., " " .. on studel)ts Is worth thousands of ellts felt was too late. . . " The party will be held at the the dlillars to be spe' nt 10 years Before adj ourning near the Woman's Club on AprU 29, at 1 from now in arms and men. stroke of midnight the Board de- . _iY. our firll tbought i.l ! p.m. "We. can sell things _ 'lipstick cick<l the former supervisory post ~essistogetbadi:oD'the Sub Teen .Dresses $4.98. $6.98 This committee, which gives an d . cars, but not ideas. People of I nteh eI ement .u....~. school left open ...., ~..-,......_- An E"W- ',..,...........·. ddy parties for the men of the nearby the United States will have no by thr: recent withdrawal of R. ":pos.ible. eoDllult your veteran hospitals, d ... e s not Socialism in this country, but Mildred Kldd, should now be a physician promptly. aad receive any funds from the gen- Ii . i Ishi i brid! t preaCri...toDS to eral Red Cross fund. Therefore, It ar" content to let the ~'v:::~~~ I tPr tnic pa p n"olving admlnls- q 2~..·. d endabl:;ourc:e. The Children's Shop do their work for them a ve as well as supervisory ser-is necessary for this hard-work- Businesses, by gathering 'up v Io e. i. ll view of the. proposed ex- Here, you are .nUred the ing committee to raise the nec- serviee of a skilled Regis-· CLAmE HOEFEL 13 SouUO ~r Road swart_ore 8-1148 to h · resources and selling 'Ideas pa.nslon and concentration of grade teredPharmao'st oftdpri-einsvsaarluya bmleo n·weoyr k. of.c gaorordy ochne et r eblyr go far. he said. Jackie sc.h 1 1 -- - 00 c asses at the Rutgers ave- ., . ,- ~.hat are uniformly tair. giving benedt parties. SPRING CLEANING TIME? There will be a large number of Swarthmore College i stude!lts fre!!. next week who wi\l desire jobs. College : vacation begIns Saturday, March 21. and ends nine days .later. ~any students live too far from' Swarthmore to ,go home and are very anxious to have some' vacation . em.p loyment. . • , . Please write Phil Swayne, Swarthmore College .or call SW!1rthmore.6-0200, ext. 292 between 12 and 1 any day dunng vacation. .NOTE: After vacation the Student Employment Office wll! be the place to direct all calls in reference to work. . ThIS office functions throughout the college year as an . employment service for the students. at college and for : the townspeople of SWarthmOre. . . . 't', to Your Advantage SHOP AT THE t. , : U. S. Choic:e • '. 'CHUCK ROAST ':"'39c lb. • • Extra Large Heads ·LP"IEj"'. UCE-lSc hd. 1f_!"I ~.. ..... • • for whom Dr. Robinson was mis- nue site. .' , CATHERMAN'S-. .' : ,DRUG STORE taken in his' travels or a· Singing team like the Mariners, could reach young people better than he, the spesker stated. (Dr. Rob­Inson spoke to more than 700,000 people and in :one six weeks per~ lod made 238 speaches). The peoples of the world, including Asia, which is highly, 'color con­scious, have been begging tor col~ orf!d mission8r~es from _ America, and yet there are but six such missionaries in the whole world Dr. Robin$ion remarked at on~ point. In expressing his disapproval of the Voice of America, Dr. Robin­son announced himself as being far from Mr. Taft and Mr. Mc­Carthy (heaven forbid!) but €x­plained that there were more ra­dio. s in New York City than in all Asia. One and one-half per cent qf tlte population has radios; 14 per cent are literate, 6 per cent understand English. It Is the pErsonal witness that Is needed, Dr. Roblnson'said in dif­ferent ways again and agalll-.th,.1 witne.., to open doors. "If 'we dropped a ·bomb in Korea would lose Asia tomorrow." And yet, he said the general wish of many of the citizens is to America before they die. Thus start with an initial adyant~ge we !ion'! do anything with it. confusion over Korea is pl,ea'dnJ~. to Russia, for the,re is no end Korea. If Russia and the w,,., I wer~ not' in there, Asia would Japan's in 10 years. Japan h •• · .. : •• 1 lbest education, science, s~::~':d and what is invaluable, a ( language. uJapan is the one coUn­try In Asia with a common langu­age." Dr. Robinson had 18 inter­preters in India alone. Americans, he commented have the attitude that lif: you want to talk to me -you learn English'. "When you know a Mr. and Mrs. James R. Taylor Of Westdale avenue have as their hous~-guest MiSs Nina Lincoln, of , ,! :' " ,. t ' . West'Haitford. Conn. . Mrs. A. L. Clifton of the Swarthmore Apartments return­ed home Thursday following a three-week trip to Beaufort, S. C. 'You Meet the Nicest r>e.qp(", crt Speal'e , ' . '. • ESTER'S, fashion Corner . -' i';' ,~'\'<. \. J, P" :- \' . _ ,.., ~-~C!stm;,~.. f.ashions :f.. I a.: , AN OUTSTANDING GROUP OF GENTLY . TAILORED SUITS FOR E~STER AND' AFTER , ; f.. !., ~~ "17"·f'·· '.' to ..... .. ,- ~ , . ' .69"98 , . Y;'nr wU is genUy cut wlUO emphasis. on' ftne tabrlc • ; • A . ftatterl!>K: new &t7Ie look for 1953. See the Match Box .. suIt, ",e',s&ole sute. the tIftss­. mak'lIl'·'1I1IIt:,- the fitted suit. 11'",un to his language, you have love . and Understanding. We have handful ()f people to speak a llm-gusge ~f the land where . '- -:to ,'. r .-, -.,' , , SIseiI' lOt I *",,= . .. ,;'iYJttD"'~ :'tili:::: ..... d·~;·· .. ,_' .~~')J~; ~~~11,:' '. '- are going to be made." ~:ilii~~~~~~~~~ii~~~~~ii~~iiiiiiii~~~o:U~g~ht to subsidize an endeavor Shop' Fit.':m 9-Sat. TIiI • . • this deld, Dr. RobinsOn felt, '~~=iiiiii'ijiiiiii ~iiiiiiiiiiii~';' i:·~qi:r'ii"·ii·' ii'iiii=~i!' ~ HARRIS & CO.' LADIES and MENS' . • . . . . (Across frolll 10 ..... , Halll ,: ' 8 _ ..T ~~" SUITS MADE-To-ORDER , mGH GRAO~:':cLEANING, ..... . It'Park "'v.e..n. "ue' u~Sw artlimore Fe Fea. ....e ·F,.",," oJ'dae Hu.... -L~- C_~_~ pRESS. i.N . G' __._" ~o!.I;'~6mA.I R. ~~. ......~ ~.~~.:':': !6-=O~5042·~·~ '."~::';'. .! L. .........~ '~'~'~ ,• .~ ,,,.~,.~,,~~~:.~::~:,:~~_~~21 .': • . ' . , ..... """ MAR i.l HELP 'RED THE .SWART ·~ROS5. Mrs. Hopson, Mrs. Ogral'Q .• Announce C<n'l1j)algn'.' , S\VARTHMO~E.FIUDAY. MARCH 27, .s.sO PERYEAP The. Committee of Ministry and Swartlunore, . Media ': Banks' Plan' Merger- Primary Election (May 19). in- Meeting announces 'a series of Will Be Oldest Nalional terest centers, locally; on the. six three ta1ka to acquai'nt interested Bank in Co.; Deposlts FriendsMeetin9,Offer~. Series on Quakerism Candidat.e S "·Se.e kin g . School Board Posis Sole Primary Race ' Counsel of Swarthmore; Friends candidates for schqol director members of the community an<l Top $2 ",000,'000 . with four vacancies to be fllled. ' . . At , eeka the Meeting with some of·the Sig- ; Mrs, Roberl' HopsOn' an.i' Donald P. Jones s re-elec- The Dlrect()r' of the S1IIarlh-' Harolll Ogram"cp.chairmen of . tion to the .Boaril for a term of nlllcant aspec.1s of Qusker history more National Bank and Trust' -, Workers'··· .. 1953' Salvation Army Fund Drive four years, having completed six and thought. These talka"will be Company and The First National· which openS"Wednesday. April I, years of service all the Board. He held in Whittier House at 8 p.rn: Bank of Media have approved a hav.e announced their solicitors as is vice-president of the Board. on the flrst thiee Thursdays in merger; of these well-kno_ bank- I fol ows: . chairman of the finance commit- April, as tollows: .' ing in' stitutio, ns sub ject to. the ap~ , ' tee and former treasurer. Raised WorJqnj: .with MrS. Ogram north in the Borough. he is a graduate April 2: Eleanor Stabler Cla~k~' p~oval of .. ~helr respective. stock-oftbe railr~ad will be Mrs. Mel- of Swarthinore High 'School, Grln- -"The Origins 01 Quskerism _ holders and the Comptrot,Ier. of vin' C. Molstad. Mrs. Harry nell CoUege, and the Harvard the Story of 1652'~ lliustrated -rith t"~· Curre'1cy .... This .. consclidatlOn· . Lock tt M A'W Kitts M . bnngs.. . to.gel.her tw.o of the oldest e, rs. •. ,rs. School of Business Administra- slides taken at the Tercentenary b' nk' . 'in' Del . G' t th Abe. rSt idTn. eyB ,aJsoShentt~,o n'MJ aJrry., MS.r s. Her- ti()n.. . m. En~land last summer. Maedlsa'1'!a nk' ,ahwa"aiirreg b.oeuenn ye,~ ab_e' AIlce Aye• •: M~s. . C~therine ___ He is the Comptroller of the April 9: George Walton nslled. hI.' .1864 ·and. the Swar.lh"· ~~~~~~~~ __ ==- Sun Oil Company anc the Nation- "Quakerism Over' the Years· more Bank'inJS'Q4,'The combino:d Cleaves, Mrs. Helen M. Hali, ~s. al General Chairman of the -Some Major Trends." .... . ba.-".,. • .. 'wi.l"l. ' op' ~~~te ... under. t.he G. 'Wllls Brodhead, Mrs. George . Financial and Accounting Com- A'l E 1 E' .~.. .. '. -" M, Karns, Mrs. G: P. PIlgtim; Music: Club Features mittee Of the Amedcan Petroleum 1'rI 16: ar e . dward""""C~~ fbarier. ·oi. tile .. ¥. ,,~a .. .B}I. nk .. a,!d Mrs. George A. Hunter,." Mrs. : 16-Year-,Old ,Pianist Institute. Of. his three children t~mporary Quskeri¥n - Its Sig-. I.tl'l'! ,wUl .Q~'<;9~~,th~ .oldest, ~a- Ralph, Schmi\lt.:Mrs. John; G. .,' . . . olle. son graduated from' Swarth- mdcance, Nature and Ex~nt.n ".: tI9nlll.)'!~.lp ~w!,re, Cp~ty, .. Schmidt,' M..rs.: "S"o .1,m~ d. Laid, Mrs. ·The Swarthni.o re Mus.i c CI!ub'.1 more High Sdhool last June and, All persons . interested a.re w'el ~, !' 'The m.e rged Bank will have to-< Fred R. Wilson. ...... . monthly .meetlpg MOIlliay. isn!>'" a freshman at Wesleyan come. . .• ~al' d~~O~!~i of_,Qyer . $~~,OOO,~pO Mrs.: ......I lliam· C. C·' am' pbell-, Mrs. 3D, in . Whltti. ".'.1.. ~ou. se ,w.i ll fe. ature.. College' in Connecticut, a daugh- 1 • aIn'a cs.'p,U'"a l. "l,u,',n "a s" "o.f ' $-'1 ,,8.0 0'.,0'.9 0. . It . W, R. Leeron. Mrs. A .. L, .. Baxl!ir, David Bloom, 10-year~0'd pianist terBeth Is ln the 9th lII'ade. and C.aQdl"dates. Named fwWa.!ie ",fo?un'~ty' 1~,;;~~,.: ·an'.IDd· .",nthgus,J?~:,'. , ......... John A.: Sehrlnia.cber,·Mrs. ~ew Yo~k.DI,I'1d; is a senior in L . 7th 'gr d His h me A 'Q '" U .,.,. S~uel T.' <:.~ter. ,Mrs Maur- '. ~ew. Yo~JJtgq}!~h~l ,!f arratY4'0S7 aSwarth':o::' avenue~ F· M h ' E bB-ilie<!- ·ti;~~~t b'1*~:iiii>'llaili<~! iceGriest;~.'Ji Weston Clarke, slc·~!iAl·t, and .. ha. been a John F. Spencer, . another .·or.· ot 'ers' Iectl"O' 'n' ing demiiirdil'Qfthe:r:;o'Uptf· 'l'h~~e ~". ' __ cia' Garre' tt. Mrs.' J. of Mrs. Nothera B. Hubbell, now alumnus of the local schools, 'is' Will~·thri!e"oIBcelf'WIi(C1\' ani to ~n~.~ A,\~., '.' . . ~w~=',':t~e: 'WiII In- unopposed for: the 'silt year ·term. Clubmembers Will . V~t~:d'~;~~,:je·~:~~,.~' Krauq; ,Mri' • .rofd,!'.. .,. gram .. Appqlnted to the B!)ard.in Ap~ll, . I ...,' ..... ..." . Mrs. William H;.West;Mrs. 1~52, to dll the. Board. VaCaney . On 1953-54 .. 5 (Jt~ . s~.'.,~~;.~:~tM't· O~:'~o~T. Scarlatti-Three Sonata8;El" ,M,gau'-'1c al/sed' by .. the ~iguatioll. of . . In April ." ~u~tl.es but all. of the;ai!i~~t, ~~:~}~~:~ 'soUih "of por, ~A;:Minor, .F' .Major . Mc.cahlll1; fu, ;,owHeks . . '. municipalities of' centi'al and Mrs.' H wID (known as the "Cat's Fugue") to olBee. 'His ~our 'college BallotS with the names cit p~~ W&lern ·.:De!ai'Wlii'e' CoUnty. Ail .. opson .)!<II!tho';~--fj$ata . Opus . . were divided!'l>etw~n:Car- peotive c'!nd\datesfor ofQCe.'!lD·~.ot ... co~~~':t>"nJrl,ngi;~~~ 1 .... ~.iJ .. ,' .:":; . A)j.~." .. Ad~RlOI.~eniiet~. Rondo. Institute of Tecbnology .and the board "of ·the Swarthmore~. servlC'1"~ll be inade avilll~ Mlcliii '.,""ptliln, netiussy~l'out It!' Piano Pre-Of Wisconsin. M~the~'s Club' wlli bem;,Ued . to. apre'::.o·· ~at th'1S!i' ~nIJiliiDItieil '.f1I~aCll·.!!:n'!!:.:..:Mrs. Iude,' ~ara1>8J)de,Tocca~. He,1s associated" .' wI'.·th II Ches' ter incU\'ldual clUb' m=~it.:was Willr'eCeive~e,~ 'bime1ltS~'t!i~t ':' .... ". •• ;DUb. R. 'Chop~Prelud~.ln B.Jffi\tand ... . ' ''''--' ..... (IoW'·:trom .• 'laqer and"'a pUlIUc tonnl!D.. b Mlnof ... 'OPUS:'.81': .. ' p~ting· firm founded '111·, ill!! l!nD"\l!'~'!'i. ,y~,..., .... .:...·nde.t~~ ins<rttitlon ,.' .. '.' , 14", c. .. .' Jirlll1~at"C!I' ,an4 ~o.!' hellded by . Th.!>J8 W.ho wl!i..,be;Qjl -*he. ~tE! ~". ..,:.. .. ,:",. 'I ...• '.;" ''''. '~'''';' hlil R, ~~;;,,:. s~n"... •• ~DIB~~8i to~ ~(I'l~fqf,~the,'-m~,~~!i ~n,n.~~~j=~a~t!!; !lY!!,,~, ,Jolin ~piin- 1911S-"·_n".'!ll~ th.~i;~" ·~!!iI'Ii~: .",,,,,'" , .•.. ,. . ~. chUtfl'el{.-Nfneyear which 'tI\ey'will,be, e~.m<.~: ~;. ~~itl!.~.conimun . , Mrs '" sus. an is··jn 4th .1II'8d. e, .seven· . President:';Mt. ·s. John Espen. t'!.~rt· ·~~~RriSf:..; (:~. p'~g' ... W. . ' . .' ..' . .' ... - .... """aware \Countv ",' . , . H.W:ebh• ,. (ContinuedonPag;;'5)' Qhade, Mrs. LeRoy Peterao;>n',and . ThB'rd "f DIr to"m'b'" .1' . Mrs; Paul·ZeOller; vice pr8sident~ .. '· e_~'f' Os . ecbrs ,wall' ef · ""J4rs. Walte, Moir,. 'M H . d I . compo ...... 0 1 mem era, 0 ~rke.-.; '1\lrs: 'Ge01'lleMyep!~' . . .,~!le .' "Womlll1's .. Club CI"b 'An' nounc:es . rs. owar C ymer, .Mrs •. Ed- ""hom have been activ@lyide-n'li-" . .' ,won several .. "';" ,'. .... . mund Jones· a,nd Mrs. Norman ". . '. '. " . ~_A......l b,e . ~.e .'~!~~,'~. ~.r s'. MrAsn ' tho'ny Ilt . ~ FesUval of'"' .' . Po'. .'. .'.' .r ,·<,:'r~'i.:n.~ e". Weeks; recording secretary: MrS, fled ~th the business !U'J.dcom- C" .'. H M th . Ii I tt M . Le munlty life of thiS area. The pres-iV~ t"er, Mrs. Frederiek JUssen, Delaware County Federation The AntiqUes·i'1':"',so~~tee M" hailer 'd"MPPr snco, I rs;"llls~ Ident cit the merged bank will be ~.' Nino . DeProphetis, ·Mrs. Women's Clubs held March 19 of· ~e Woman's Club ann~iuices ars a :~'" .~.:~ Mta"'Ed' Richard G. 'Burn; who Is' now LvmKippax, Mrs. Jain~s CUt- LallSdowne. The exhibit of tray drs~ place in the. ,:,ostei" con- corr:sps':,~ mg;;creH rybe t S· .th' president of· the Media Bank. Har-fom, Mrs. Daniel L. Goidwater. Jj>ainilng done by the Americim test for ~e Fa4' goes. to Liz For~ wa; Mrs ';'Ull rs. S er r no. 61dOlll'am,:who is now' president. Mrs. 'John O. Honnold; Jr., Mrs. home' department, Mrs. W. Alfred sy~l'e wlth second place earned an '. am penoer. . 'of 'the Swarthmore· Bank; 'wl.ll be A. Robb Cochran, Mrs.. SFth .. chsinnan, r\'!'elved by Betty Musante. Liz executep. Treasurer. Mrs.' Laurence Con- vice-president in charge' of the U6shton, Mrs. R. .Reynard, honorable mention tor a display '!. Pennsylvania' putch geometric w~ll, Mrs. Ilavld Speers and MrS. Swarthinore ollice.· Edward H. Frank Chapma,j.· ~s: Harold of crafts; 12 clubs had ~ntered. design In red, white, green, and Wllllam. S~r.oud; board member:, 'Rl~by, who. is' now caShier of 'the Mabbott, Mrs .. A. L. Tyler, Mrs. Mrs. AltredE. LOngwell· was black. to give her poster good Mrs. Fr",*, C~apman, Mrs. Daniel Media Bank, will become 'a vice- · C. M. Black, Jr., Nancy awa, r,d ed second place i.n the inili- carrymg effe.ct. Be,tty fe'ature d. a Johnson and M. rs. C. William preS. 'ld 'e . nt 'a .n d ' cash i'e r. . A'1 1 0 ther Helen Anderson,; Mrs. . vidual aV{ards of the- American cut-out provm~lal cupboard wlth Ramsay; hospitality: Mr~. Edward omcers and personnel' will con- Wright, Mrs. George F. Cbrse; home exhibit' for her braided excellent letterIpg. . ' Cornelius, Mrs. Joseph Schubert, tinue with the merged 'institution. ,Mrs. Oscar Hart, captain; work- ~In' • Honorable menti.on goes t!' and ~. Peter Wilson; and mem- • Informal . discussions' between era: Mrs. Robert Boyle, Mrs. drama, Mrs. Charles D. Patsy Blske for a Dl~ely. balanced bershlp: Mrs. James .Connor. Mrs. the,Boards of the two' Banks were Robert Clothier, Mrs. Karl recelve<\second award poster layout and splnnmg wheel Randolph Lee and Mrs. Robert entered Into in the early part of lng, Mrs. G. S. ToWnes, Mrs. for her play "Alpha and Omega cut-out and to Margo Morrison Pfeifer. 1952 ~oncerning 'the desirability to L: Whitaker, Mrs. Thomas Casey, 'of a Perfect Day". whose post~r starred ": well Election of ollicers and board the Banks and the advantages to Mrs. Charles Grier. Mrs. J. C. Swarthmore recel"ed three handled china dolly. . Eighteen members will be helot at the April the communities in' the consolida­Celia. Mrs. S. W. Johnson, Alice awards in the literature depart- posters were submitted, each or- meeting; however. for those 'who tion of, the two institutions These Marrio.t,t Mrs. E. H. Bea.d.le. ment.'g iM .r s. Ro.l andd GI., E. fUllma'n i gionda l tihn t idteha a.n dd so• utnasifko rmly are unable to att. end the . meeting conve.r sat i' ons. eA"'"> e.n d·ed· ove.r many .Mrs. Stella Simpers, captain; was ven ~econ pace .or. go a e JU ges . wa~ it will be possible to mail In an months aird became' crystallized (Continu"~"' .ton, . Page '4I' trwe"yeieenw bo f H. T hwe fdH~ USS e.s' m F1B e- .d if1f icults.e 1 Thtie y cfo mmtein ded It ht e absentee ballot. The name of the .0 uI·y· in" .. rece'n., week s . J i. 0 a .:rmgi. or- c.o or,. ec on 0 tI an q\les, e - person to whom the, ballot may 'The' Pirectors and OIBcers' of MRS. • JEAiN·'E.··,'O· ND enbcle .. tiuc~e reo -i-V;ed f~n'T°hr- ttierts~' ~ndBexttecu ond °Pf atsythe ar- be mailed wID be prlntedon the '!lie two' Banks' believe that the Mae men_ on .o"r a rev,ew 0 e ' s._ Liz, ,e y , an '_ are list to be mailed to all club mem- merger'' wlll cont ri'bu te verysub- Mrs.' Jean 'Ellza~th Bond; Witch's Thorn" by Ruth Park and 12thgraders, Margo Is 11th lII'ade. bers·stantlallyto the bankln . welfare wi. dow of' St. GeO.· .e ", B.. on. ...· ..... ~.. tl1ird award. f.or a '~haracter sketch The awards are $5. $3 and tickets 'd .; ';' tsbllity g f' Del- 'D " ..... "" "Sam: The Most "Unforgettable of admission. . 'IID econorruc s 0 a TUesday, March 24 at her. Yale Character' I've Met.'.' . .The· CIllb is grateful to Claudia Spencer Earns AII-S. tate ware Coun. ty. avenue home ,«fr' a 14'montii 0 h A -~------- , Eleven. !"embe!"S. 9t the local Hancpck, art supeI'\'lsor at the rc estra pp*rntment '. . .• I~-::: :~:d~":d8:~ed at 723 club' attended' the·Pest!val. hi. gh. school, un"der W"hOse. su pei:- D aVl' d S pencer, son of M'r . and LBoc al kB URSi nde ssC DlstrRtct d sin 1899 H h b d vlsion the poste" were achieved. rea s e ross ecor avenue ce . er us an , VOLUNTEERS NEEDED Mrs. A. E. Rogers is chairman of Mrs. Steven M. Spe!,eer of Ogden secretary of the ,Devon and Bryn Mawr Hor"" Shows for many FOR RED CROSS posters. Miss Hanco*ck and the · years, died in Novembei-; 1949. AIl services 'of the Red Cross prizewinners will be the, in,(ited $he is survived by are seeking new mE!rlYbers to help luncheon' guests Of. the Club dl1l'- da1lllhters, Mrs,' Jean' with the various pillises of Red ipg tl'e' three-:day AnUques Fair, .Bowers, PennIngton, N. J.; CI1'O!'S\'(Qr!<: . " .' , . April 14. 15 and 1,6. LUcille'Beekjulil, Media; and.~ . 'Anyonei\lterested in becolnlpg MIldred Bond, Swarthmore; anil a Grey Lady. Nurses. ~de. Stall . LAST. G",SPl tJro 'lII'aDdchlldien: .' . Aldi!, .' SOcial weifare JUde. or Tomorrow, March 28. is the last .Funeral serVi.,.. were heId at getvmtr on the Motlll' CorpS, Can- 'day electors mily register to vote :z ;p.m. y!!Sterdsy at the Patterson teen or Home' Nursinll Staff Is at. .the Primary Election. This in­P! U>eral Home, Media, with the asked to eontacl Service Chair- cludel those who will become of Rev. Joseph P. Bishop of man Mrs. J •. Albright Jones, age on' or before i!i!Y20 .. 1953. .~ore Presb)oterian Church, Sw8ftbmore6-81150.· Mrs. Jones The Media Court House is' open avenue, was ~warded the Concert Red Cross Drive Chairman George. 'Plowman reports the Master's. Chair In competition for Swarthlt10re Business District, that position at tb... AII~tate under ,the leadership of Al Carney. Hi!!h School Ol'chestra . Festival. has . completed an out-standing which was held last w!!ek-end at job •.. having doubled last. ;y:ear's Sharon, Pa. A senior, at Swarth- returns .wlth 44 donations total­more High School, David has Men Ing $500. concert master of the SoUtheast . At the same time ·Mr. Plowman DIstrict . HighSchool' Orch-.tra announced a residential lag with four times, . '. .only,115 ;workers ~ o)1,t of: "~",,, ..... · ~ chatge. BIlrial followed in will . of the speciflc ;UBtiL 4:30. p.m. today. ,and ftoID ~';Cem~. ,'" .' ",;,,' .. . 9 a.m. ·.untll noon Saturday; . Russell Snyder, Jr., sbn of Mr, ti¥' J50. and only' $8.12s ""llecWd and. Mrs.'. SnYd~ of J)lc1dnso~ of .the $10,155 goal. Mr; Plowman , avenue, was awarded the first urgEd ali captains and wOI'kers to ; chair of. the. viola Section at the complete their return'S· u 'Scion as; A'n-stata,. Orchestra Festival - pilidib!e. ',:' ,..,",,, -' - ... " . " i( , ~ " .. ,

---------- Page 19 ----------

INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE .' .' Page 10 Arts Center Crafts Show Now on Display Craftsmen Exhibit Wares In Three Day Affair Ending March 21 Blind Center of Chester is also exhibiting. Other exhibitors and their work are: Marjorie T. Dutton, pot­tery. and Miriam Elsbre~, jewelry and enameling, both of Walling­ford; Walter Omlor, WOOdwork, of Media; Mrs. Francis Pennell, art books, of Moylan: Mrs. Theodore Works of art created by mem­bers and .exhibitors of the Com- Dix. hand-painted china; Ann Reinhart, jewelry; Mrs. Stanley W. Cochran, leather gloves and munity Arts Center, arc currently on display at the Center's building. Rogers Lane, Wallingford. Opened yesterday. this first Annual Crafts Sale and Exhibit will continue through today and tomorrow, March 20 and 21. from 12 noon until 9 p.m. lampshades; Mrs. Marguerite !\Iontgomery, dutch pottery; Mrs. Roger Taylor, weaving; Mrs. F. Silbergerger, rugs and candlesj Mr. and Mrs. L. Kilns and Mrs. John Sanborn. Mrs. Gerald P. Kynett, Mrs. Charles Hogg and Mrs. Haines Turner, all of Wall­ingford, are the days' hostEsses. THE SW ARTHMOREAN Attentive Audience Hears Dr. Robinson (Continued from page I) negative. He listed as foremost negative influences at work against us, cheap American movies with their false values, first, and Am:r­ican tourists, with their swagger and arrogance, flaunting their money everywhere they go, second. ,raining in Hawaii and the Philip .. clines, not Harvard. Ia a brief but difficult list of .hings Americans could do, Dr. ,~obinson suggested first that they shc.u!d begin to love people; to bz more creative through spirit rather than equipment, and to use the force of personality. "I love to talk to young people, becaus.; they ask 'What can I do.' Adults ask, 'Have you thought of this -?'" With weariness, and som.z­thing very close to disgust, Dr. Robinson answered, "Of course I have." Democracy costs something. You can collect things, but they do not pervade the spirit. Work on one. human being and give him hope, and you endow the world." Mareh 20, 1953 Wesleyan Glee Club To Sing Here April 25 The Wesleyan University Glee Club, Middletown, Conn., will present a concert here on the night of April 25 under the spon­sorship of the Education Commit­tee of the Woman's Club of Swarthmore. Proceeds of the concert will in­crease the Club's Elizabeth Hub­bard Bonsall scholarship to be awarded a girl in the graduating class of the High School in June. For the past two years the Ober­lin College a Cappella Choir has been presented in behalf of the Scholarship •. which was awarded the fh:st year in the ·amount of $300' and·· last year in two scholar­ships of $300 and $250. .~ Top craftsmen, members of the Arts Center and invited guests "have worked to make this the best craft show ev,er to be given in the locality. Each exhibitor is present to display his own work; tea and cake contributes to the sociability of the visit. Third, he said, is fear. We fear revolution and talk of selective service, but in the world of tur­moil which Dr. Robinson termed a battle for minds and souls we need a selective service of ideas with our brightest and finest young men chosen for that 'rather than the army. The Russians go­ing into the outside world talk peace, Dr. Robinson said; Ameri­cans talk arms, and the peoples of the world take us both at face value. Dr. Robinson was brought to the Borough by the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church and the Stu­dent Christian Fellowship of Swarthmore College. The concert will be held in the High ·School Auditorium. .r ; E. I. and S. Committee Plans April Party Miss Leanore Perkins of Cedar lane spent several days of last week visiting her aunt Mrs. R. K. Levering of C1aymont, Del: William D. Parry, instructor at ~, the Philadelphia Museum School ,~' in pottery. is guest exhibitor. The The Entertainment Instruction and Supply Committee of the Red Cross held a meeting at the home of Mrs. R. T. Bates to plan a Benefit - Dessert - Bridge. Mem­bers of the committee present in­cluded Mrs. Walter GilES, Mrs. J. F. Gaskill, Mrs. Agnes Sheldon Mrs. Lewis Goodenough, Mrs. F. S. Gillespie, Mrs. William Gehring and Mrs. John L. Good, Chair- In the battle of ideas, Dr. Rob­inson questioned America's "ex­change" student plan which has 30,000 international students in the United States and lIot 1,000 of its own students studying abroad. Th"e speaker quoted one native's ques­tion: "Does that mean 30 of us equals one of you?" The govern­ment of India which has one-half the budget of New York, neverthe­less has set up 50 free internation­al scholarships, Money spent now on students is worth thousands of the dollars to be spent 10 years from now in arms and men. State Says S.H.S. Not Financially Distressed (Continued from Page 1) Mr. John M. Foster of Crest lane received the deg~ee of Doctor of Philosophy at Harvard UniVErsity this month. ,, , , .:/ i · , .. "·1 'f,l ' .. .l man. The 'party will be held at the Woman's Club on April 29, at 1 p.m. late afternoon to early morning. Following these new periods I-==============­which begin at 8 a.m. the late bell would sound at 8: 45 instead of the present 8: 30. The sports program would run from 3:45 to 5:30 in­stead of 4: 15 to 6 which some par­ents felt was too late. EFFECTIVE Before adjourning near the stroke of midnight the Board de- e: Your first thought in cided the former supervisory post iU.:;tess is to get back on the in the elementary school left open Road to ~erovery as quickly .1 ' Sub Teen Dresses ·t. $4.98· $6.98 This committee, which gives parties for the men of the nearby veteran hospitals, d 0' e s not receive any funds from the gen­eral Red Cross fund. Therefore, it is necessary for this hard-work­ing committee to raise the nec- "We can sell things - lipstick and cars, but not ideas. People of the United States will have no Socialism in this country. but they are content to let the government do their work for them abroad." Businesses, by gathering up their resources and selling ideas could go far, he said. Jackie Robinson for whom Dr. Robinson was mis­taken in his travels or a" singing by the recent withdrawal of R. as p~'~lble. Consult your Mildred Kidd, should now be a p~y"cl~n promJ't~y. and principalship involving adminis- ,.; 1"-' "r!~)t ~IS pl'escnpuons to I trative as well as su ervi __. . l dlrs: -de;pendable source. l· T~~ ~~t~~~;~~~~OP essary money to carryon their invaluable work of good cheer by giving benefit parties. . .. p sory ser Here, you are assured the vIce . In VIEW of the proposed ex- servI. ce 0 f a 5 kI' lle dReg'ls - panSlon and concentration of grade tered Pharmacist and prices schoo~ classes at the Rutgers ave- that are uniformly Cairo nue SIte. I SWarthmore 8-1148 SPRING CLEANING TIME? There will be a large number of Swarthmore College stude~ts fre~ next week who will desire jobs. College vacatIOn begms Saturday, March 21, and ends nine days later. Many students live too far from Swarthmore to . go home and are very anxious to have some vacation employment. ' Please write Phil Swayne, Swarthmore College or call SWarthmore 6-0200, ext. 292 between 12 and 1 any day during vacation. .NOTE: After vacation the Student Employment Office Will be the place to direct all calls in reference to work This office functions throughout the college year as a~ employment service for the students at college and for . the townspeople of Swarthmore. 't's to Your Advantage SHOP AT THE co-op U. S, Choice 'CHUCK ROAST -39c lb. • Extra Large Heads LETTUCE-15c hd. ~ • Dartmouth Avenue (Across from Borough Hall) team like the Mariners, could Mr. and Mrs. James R. Taylor reach young people better than of Westdale avenue have as their he, the speaker stated. (Dr. Rob- house-guest Miss Nina Lincoln, of inson spoke to more than 700,000 West· Hartford. Conn. . people and in one six weeks pel'- Mrs. A. L. Clifton of the iod made 238 speaches). The Swarthmore Apartments return­peoples of the world, including ed home Thursday following a Asia, which is highly ·color con- three-week trip to Beaufort, S. C. CATHERMAN'S .DRUG STORE scious, have been begging for col- ~1II1II1II1II:"you Meet the Nicest Peo.p/e at Speare's"IIIUllfllllf_=1! ored missionaries from America, ...., = and YEt there are but six such == missionaries in the whole world, == 5! Dr. Robinson remarked at one 5 5 point. 5_ a In expressing his disapproval of ~ ~ the Voice of America, Dr. Robin- =55 son announced himself as being 5: far from Mr. Taft and Mr. Mc- == a Carthy (heaven forbid!) but ex- ~ ~ plained that there were more ra- ~ 55 dios in New York City than in all ~ ESTER'S fashion Corner ~ Asia. One and one-half per cent 5=- - qf the population has radios; 14 ii per cent are literate, 6 per cent = ~ understand English. ~ ,.,-East~r.:·'fashions ~ It is the pusonal witness that is § =_=__~ needed, Dr. Robinson said in dif- a ;;;;;I; ferent ways again and again-the ~ AN OUTSTAN""ING witne~ to open doors. "If we § U 5 dropped a bomb in Korea we e GROUP OF GE 5! would lose Asia tomorrow." And 5 NTL Y 5 yet, he fsaid the general wish Of~_= . TAILORED SUITS FOR ~ many 0 the citizens is to see i. . America before they die. Thus we ~ EASTER AND AFTER == start with an initial advantage but 5 I, ;f, ';', we don't do anything with it. Our 5! i confusion over Korea is pleasing ~ 1 7.98 E to Russia, for there is no end to 5 = Korea. If Russia and the West ==_5 to" wer2" not in there, Asia would be = Japan's in 10 years. Japan has the = 69 98 best education, science, shipping, I. " = ::!:a~:t !~!;:~l~:~~; ~::~:~n § .=.- . .. try in As·ia with a common langu:_i Y~::mr suit is gently cut with age." Dr. Robinson had 18 inter- == emphasis OR' fine fabric •.. = preters in India alone. Americans, == A· flattering new style look = he commented have the attitude i for 1953. See the Match Box == that 'if you want to talk to me you 5 suit, the ·stole sule. the dress- § learn English'. "When you know a _= mak..... suit the fitted I' = man to his language, you have love §= SizeS...·.. . l fo'.r ' ~, jun.isours.., =51= and understanding. We have a .~. women, Petites. Suit Dept.- E handful of people to speak a lan- = ""cond 11~. _I guage qf the land where decisions E ' , are going to be made." Somebody = I ought to subsidize an endeavor in ~: Shop Fri;· Till 9-Sat. TIll 6 !i _ this field, Dr. Robinson felt, with =- .:. ' , == a lllAImliiMZIAM:a_llUIUmilmInnmmUlIImmmnmllnmnnIIIIIUllmmnmmlllllllUlnnmnmmlnmmu ,dIlInllIllflllllllllllUlllllIlllIUlIlIlllllnmnll1llnnlmmmmlllllllllllllHlnnnnUUl11llmllllnlIlOIIII1I11I"0111n.i HARRIS & CO ~ nllllHlllllIllllllmllmnlllmnnnllmnnmllllflnnlnnmnmnnnlllnn!!!lmmmlmnnmUllllllll'llllllmnllnmmnlftDIIIIHIIIRIdIWlmlllllllll1l11l1llllnllmnnll_ • ~ LADIES and MENS ~ . '. anl~~~RS ~ SUITS MADE-TO"ORDER ~ mGH GRADt:. CLEANING, JJ·Park Avenue Swarthmore ~ We Fea'SWFabrics oj 'he Highest Grade I PRESSING and,R,EPAIR. __ UAWiIIZIINIII* .. I" __ OllhllllQfillfi = . arthmore 6-0504 5 E.tnblUW 19"2 .... RDHi .... llm· •• IIIIIILdLIUUBIR'ftlDlDll!= .... I _11IIIIIIII nnmnnlnMdIIlUldlUiMnldlllliiUi"iiUlnnlamtlllildlm• _ nnnU-.-n~".'+U"4'U 'UiMlA.M iIIMOOi HELP 3vmrthmore Collece RED THE SWART REAi\I CROSS 'HUMAN NEED' VOLUME 25-NUMBER 13 Salvation Opens· Mrs. Hopson, Mrs. Ogram Announce Cainpaign . Workers . Mrs. Robert Hopson Ha~old Ogram, .c,o-chairmen of the 1953 Salvation Army Fund Drive which 'opens Wednesday, April 1, have announced their solicitors as follows: SW AUl'III\IORE. FRIDAY. MARCH 27, 1953 '3,50 PER YEA II Music Club Soloist , DAVID BLOOM Candidates Seekitig School Board Posts Sole Primary Race Primary Election (May 19) in­terest centers, locally; on the six candidates for school director with four vacancies to be filled. Donald P. Jones seeks re-elec­tion to the Board for a term of four years, having completed six years of service on the Board. He is vice-president of the Board, chairman of the finance commit­tee and former treasurer. Raised in the Borough, be is a graduate of Swarthmore High School, Grin­nell College, and the Harvard School of Business Administra­tion. He is the Comptroller of the Sun Oil Company and the Nation- Friends Meeting Offers Series on Quakerism The Committee of Ministry and Counsel of Swarthmore Friends Meeting announces a series of three talks to acquaint interested members of the community and Swarthmore, Media Banks' Plan Merger Will Be Oldest National Bank in Co.; Deposits Top $24,000,000 the Meeting with some of the sig- The Directors of the Swarth­nificant aspects of Quaker history more National Bank and Trust and thought. These talks· will be held in Whittier House at 8 p.m. on the first three Thursdays in April, as follows: April 2: Eleanor Stabler Clarke -"The Origins of Quakerism - the Story of 1652" illustrated with slides taken at the Tercentenary in England last summer. April 9: George Walton "Quakerism Over the Years -Some Major Trends." Worklnll with Mrs. Ogram north of the railroad will be Mrs. Mel­vin' C. Molstad, Mrs. Harry E. Lockett, Mrs. A. W. Kitts, Mrs. A. Sidney Johnson, Jr., Mrs. Her­bert T. ,~asse,tt, ~ary S. Pusey,! Alice Ayers, Mrs.. Catherine Cleaves, Mrs. Helen M. Hall, Mrs. G. Wills Brodhead, Mrs. George M. Karns, Mrs. G. P. Pilgrim, Mrs. George A. Hunter, Mrs. Ralph. Schmidt, Mrs. John' G. Schmidt, Mrs. John G. Lord, Mrs. Fred R. Wilson. .• . Music Club Features 16.Year-Old Pianist al General Chairman of the Financial and Accounting Com­mittee of the Amer"ican Petroleum Institute. Of his three children one son graduated from Swarth­more High Sdhool last June and April 16: Earle Edwards-"Con­temporary Quakerism - Its Sig­nificance, Nature and Extent." , ' All persons interested are wel- Company and The First National Bank of Media have approved a merger of these well-known bank­ing institutions subject to the ap­proval of their respective stock­holders and the Comptroller of the Currency. .This consolidation brings. together two of the oldest banks in :pelaware County, the Media Bank having been estab~ lished in 1864 and the Swarth" more Bank in }904. The combined h<;lnks will operate un.der the charter· of the Media .Bank and thus will become the oldest Na­tional Bank' in 'Delaware Coun·ty. • ·The merged Bank will have to-: tal· deposits of Qver $24,000,000 and capitai fundi;' of $i,800,OOO:U will be foli~th in. size amOng· Del- . aware County ijahk~;. ~n'd thus be' enabled. to meet. bettei' tlii' barik­ing demarid~ of' th~'coiinty. There wiU be three· ·officeli··w!fich are· to 1>e· located ·in Swarthmore,· Media' and Springfteld. These 'offices will serve' !lilt. dniytheiF. o~n·. qorri~ mtiniUes but all of the' adjacent municipalities of Centtal 'and Weslern· Delaware' county. All kinds of commercial banking and trust services ·will be made avail-: abie . so· that these communities will receive the full INinefttS'ihat flow from a larger and· a public rrilnded' banking· institution. The Swarthmore Music Club's monthly meeting Monday, March 30, in Whittier House will feature David Bloom, 16-year-old pianist of New York. David is a senior in ·the New York ·High School of Mu­si~ and Art,· and -has'~been a pupil of Mrs. Nothera B. Hubbell, now -of Swarthmore, since he was four years old. His prpgram 'wlll in-is now a freshman at Wesleyan come. Mrs. William C. Campbell, Mrs. College in Connecticut, a daugh- --------- ,. - .. elude: W. R. LeCroD, Mrs. A. ~. Baxter, Mrs. John A.' ~chuma.cher: Mrs. Samuel T: Carpenter, Mrs Maur­ice Griest~ Mrs. H. Weston Clarke, Marcia· Garrett, Mrs. J. Herbert Glenn,. Mrs'1 A.'. IV!. ,Lackey, ·Anne Kraus~ Mrs~ .Ford. F. ' Robinson, Mrs. William H. West, Mrs. C. R. LOughead. Scarlatti-Three Sonatas, E Ma- , por, -A '.'Minor, F' Major Fugue .;·Those soliciting souih . of the rhllroad with Mrs.· Hopson will (known as the "Cat's Fugue") . ,Beethoven-Sonata Opus 22. h)"lude: . Allegro, Adagio,. Memlelto, Rondo. ~:Mrs. John ·E. Michael, ~aptain; . DebussY-"-POlit Ie Piano Pre­workers: Mrs.L. C. Bennett, Mrs. lude, Sarabande, Toccata. H,' Bernard, Lillian Boyt, Mrs. R. Chopin-Preludes. in B ~lat and C;< DiS'llle, Mrs: "1.. Forman, Mrs. D Minor Scherzo, Opus 31. . E., A. Hendrickson, Mrs. C. D. All music lovers are invited to If/iw.ard;, M~:Sl\m'lI'Y\ Milne, Mrs" ,attend the 8:15 pi-9gram. H, ,W.Jacl<l!01\"M'rs. Joseph Quln~.' , .. . la,,; Mrl;. 'II. G.· Rin~1l1Ie, Mrs. W. W 'Club·· M· b R, 'Sanborn, Mrs W. W. Turner, oman s em ers Mrs. W. H. Webb. Witi iti Arts Festival Mrs. Walter Moir, captain; w.:orkers: Mrs. George Myers, Mrs." AII>eria Blankenship, Mrs. Rob­ert Detweiler, Mrs. Anthony Ventner, Mrs. Frederick Jussen, Mrs. Nino DeProphetis, Mrs. Lynn Kippax, Mrs. James Clif­ford, Mrs. Daniel L. Goldwater, Mrs. 'John O. Honnold,' Jr., Mrs. A. Robb Cochran, Mrs .. Wilson Rilshton, Mrs. R. Reynard" Mrs. Frank Chapman, Mrs. Harold Mabbott, Mrs. A. L. Tyler, Mrs. C. M. Black, Jr., Nancy Bunker. Helen Anderson,' Mrs. LeRoy Wright, Mrs. George F. Corse. . The Woman's Club of Swarthmore won several awards at tlie Fine Arts Festival of the Delaware County Federation of Women's Clubs held March 19 at Lansdowne. The exhibit of tray painting done by the American home department, Mrs. W. Alfred Smith cQairman, r~ceived first honorable mention for a display of craftsj 12 clubs had entered. Mrs. Alfred E. Longwell· was awarded second place in the indi­vidual awards of the American home exhibit for her braided rug .. In drama, Mrs. Charles D. Mitchell received second award for her play "Alpha and Omega of a Perfect Day". ter Beth is in the 9th grade, and Candl"dates Named Larry is a 7th ·grader. His home is at 407 Swarthmore avenue. For.Mothers' Elect"lon J a h n F. Spencer, another alumnus of the local schools, is unopposed for~ the "six year term. AppOinted to the Board In April, 1952, to fill the. Board vacancy caused by the resignation of Clubmembers Will Vote On 1953-54 Slate In April David McCahan, he now seeks election to office. His ~our college Ballots with the names of pros-years were divided 'petw~en Car- pective cand~dates for office ,;on negie Institute of Technology and the. board of ~he Swarthmore Univetsity of Wisconsin. Mother's Club .will be mailed to He is associated with a Chester I individual ClUb. members. it was printing firm founded by his announced .yesterday. . . . grandfather and now headed by Those who will be oil the slate his father R. Chester Spencer, of officers, to be elected for. the· Swarthmore avenue. John Spen- 1953-54 season and the .offices for cer has four children. Nine year which th.ey will be chosen ore-: old Susan is in 4th grade, ·seven President:'. Mrs~ Jobn Espen- (Continued on Page 5) shade, Mrs. LeRoy Peterson and Club Announces Poster Winners The Antiques Fair Comm~ttee of the Woman's Club announces that first place in the poster con­test for the Fair goes to Liz For­sythe with second place earned by Betty Musante. Liz executed a Pennsylvania· Dutch geometric design in red, white, green, and black to give her poster good carrying effect. Betty featured a cut-out provincial cupboard with excellent lettering. Mrs. Paul Zecher; vice president: Mrs. Howard Clymer, Mrs. Ed­mund Jones and Mrs. Norman Weeks; recording secretary: Mrs. H. Mather Lippincott, Mrs. Leo Marshall and Mrs. G. Alex Mills; corresponding secretary: Mrs. Ed­ward Scheu, Mrs. Herbert Smith and Mrs. William Spencer. Treasurer: Mrs. Laurence Con­well, Mrs. David Speers and Mrs. William Stroud; board member: Mrs. Frank Chapman, Mrs. Daniel Johnson and Mrs. C. William Ramsay; hospitality: Mrs. Edward Cornelius, Mrs. Joseph Schubert, and Mrs. Peter Wilson; and mem­bership: Mrs. James· Connor, Mrs. Randolph Lee and Mrs. Robert Pfeifer. Mrs. Oscar Hart, captain; work­ers: Mrs. Robert Boyle, Mrs. Robert Clothier, Mrs. Karl Reun­ing, Mrs. G. S. Townes, Mrs. P. L. Whitaker, Mrs. Thomas Casey, Mrs. Charles GrierJ Mrs. J. C. Celia, Mrs. S. W. Johnson, Alice Marriott, Mrs. E. H. Beagle. Swarthmore received awards in the literature ment. Mrs. Roland G. E. three depart­Ullman Election of officers and board members will be hele! at the April meeting; however, for those who are unable to attend the meeting it will be possible to mail in an Mrs. Stella Simpers, captain; absentee ballot. The name of the (Continued on Page 4) MRS. JEAN E. BOND person to whom the ballot may be mailed will be printed on the list to be mailed to all club mem­bers. . Due to the· strategic location of ~~se' ',omce~· the .consolldat~d . bank will b,<ser:ving'the corrimun..;.. illes : that comprise· t. ~ banking heart "f'Delaware County. The Board of Directors will be composed of 13 members, all of whom have been activ~ly identi­fied with the business and com­munity' life of this area. The pres­ident of the merged bank will be Richard G. Burn, who is now president of the Media Bank. Har­old Ogram, who is now president ·of the Swarthmoi'e Bank, will be vice-president in charge of the Swarthmore office. Edward H. Rigby, who is now cashier. of the Media Bank, will become a vice­president and cashier. All other officers and personnel. will con­tinue with the merged institution. . Informal discussions between the Boards of the two Banks were entered into in the early part of 1952 concerning the desirability to the Banks and the advantages to the communities in the consolida­tion of th~ two institutions. These conversations extended over many months and became crystallized only in recent weeks. The Directors and Officers of the two Banks believe that the merger will contribute very sub­stantially to the banking welfare Mrs. Jean . Elizabeth Bond, and economic stability of Dela­widow of St. George Bond, ·!lled Tuesday, March 24 at her Yale avenue home after a 14 month illness. She was 84. was given second place for. her review of "The Houses in Be­tween" by Howard Spring. Flor­ence J. Lucasse received honor­able mention for a review of "The Witch's Thorn" by Ruth Park and third award for a character sketch "Sam: The Most Unforgettable Character I've Met." Honorable mention goes to Patsy Blake for a nicely balanced poster layout and spinning wheel cut-out and to Margo Morrison whose poster starred a well handled china dolly. Eighteen posters were submitted, each or­iginal in idea and so uniformly good that the judges' task was difficult. They commended the color, selection of antiques, let­tering, and execution of the ar­tists. Liz. Betty, and Patsy are 12th graders, Margo is 11th grade. The awards are $5, $3 and tickets of admission. .The Club is grateful to Claudia Hanco*ck, art supervisor at the high school, under whose super­vision the posters were achieved. Mrs. A. E. Rogers is chairman of posters. Miss Hanco*ck and the prizewinners will be the invited luncheon guests of the Club dur- Spencer Earns All-State ware County. Mrs. Bond had lived at 723 Yale Eleven members: of. the local club attended the Festival. avenue since 1899. Her husband, VOLUNTEERS NEEDED secretary of the Devon and Bryn FOR RED CROSS Mawr Horse Shows for many years, died in November" 1949. All services of the Red Cross She is survived by three are seeking new mem'bers to help daughters, Mrs. Jean Elizabeth with the vario!)S phases of Red Bowerst Pennington, N. J.; Mrs. Cross work. Lucille Beekjuis, Media; and Amy Anyone interested in becoming Mildred Bond, Swarthmore; and a Grey Lady, Nurses ~ide, Staff tW'o grandchildren. Aide, Social Welfare Aide, or Funeral services were held at serving on the Motor Corps, Can- 2 p.m. yesterday at the Patterson teen or Home Nursing Staff is Funeral Home, Media, with the asked to contact Service Chair­Rev. Joseph P. Bishop of the man Mrs. J. Albright Jones, . Swarthmore Presbyterian Church, Swarthmore 6-6650. Mrs. Jones In charge. Burial followed in East will supply details of the specific Lawii • Cemetery. . . functions of the different Services. ing the three-day Antiques Fair, April 14, 15 and 16. LAST GASP! Tomorrow, March 28, is the last day electors may register to vote at the Primary Election. This in­cludes those who will become of age on or before May 20, 1953 . The Media Court House is open until 4:30 p.m. today, and from 9 a.m. until noon Saturday . Orchestra Appointment ------ . Local Business District DaVid Spencer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. Spe!,cer of Ogden Breaks Red Cross Record Red Cross Drive Chairman avenue, was awarded the Concert Master's Chair in competition for that position at the All-State High School Orchestra Festival, which was held last week-end at Sharon, Pa. A senior at Swarth­more High School, David has been concert master of the Southeast District High School Orchestra four times. Russell Snyder, Jr., son of Mr. and, Mrs. Snyder of Dickinson avenue. was awarded the first chair of the viola section at the All-State Orchestra Festival.· George Plowman reports the Swarthmore Business District, under the leadership of Al Carney, has completed an out-standing job, having doubled last year's returns with 44 donations total­ing $500. At the same time Mr. Plowman announced a residential lag with only 115 workers reporting out of the 150, and only $6,723 collected of the $10,155 goal. Mr. Plowman , urged all captains and workers to complete their returns as soon as possible.

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~~~P:e: :..'.:. ===;~~----~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~-=----------------~'~~'-'-2~~'~"~''G'2~7~,'~i~ ,OI1 ... .hls •O V,'" the Cast and Gauntlet Club of The bride, given in marriage by nut lane, and Judge and Mrs. J. Park avenue. Dartmouth· College. her father, wore a gown of can- Bume~t Holland of Gu,lph Mll!s... , Mrs. Willlam H. BroWn .of Riv-' Mr. and· Mrs. J.Passmore dlellght taffeta with a wide bertha' ""_ . . . , I d ' Elldnton of Harvarcj of helHilom 'ro ....... lnt lace. Her :. " ' ,', ,Mr. and Mrs. C. Milton PIke erv ew roa will leave April 8 to have' retu-ed f' <0' m th' e'\'- 'tiJ~e- • . -"'- . ; Mr. and' Mrs. DouglU BldWit ,:.rio.; of beK~b, Ill, announce ih~ visit uhtil the middle of Mab wit' h .u < ~ vell of Illu810n fell from a cap of ot PI"" .... 1 ' h ' day motor trip to attend the the same late and she carried a ensaco a, ~ .a, .. annOunce me ai-r!va of' a . 80n Stephen Wlllard II,e. r son Mr. Brown, Jr., and cu' t'lve Comuu·ttee of the A'm' e'rI- ., birth ot their fourth chlld and ftiost PIke, On MarCh' 20. f G" te'h' , e bomjue.: of fieur d'amour and d 'h • . , .... 0 ran ester, near Cam- can Section of Ji'riends World lllies of the valley. aug ter, Stephanie Johanns on The baby Is a trliiidllO t D ~iidge, England, where' Mr. Committee at Richmond Thursday, March 19. and Mrs .. ,H. H, Hopkins ~f 0 c~ :~~n Is taking a coUrse in sta- on March 14. Enroute t h Mil's, Ann Ware attended her EmJMrs. Blount is the former Miss iane,. an. d Mr. -~" ' .•' ~. ' .... 'r~,n-. ~• • "tlstics. sister as maid of honor, and the... ' . ~.u ........... a.u ... M. ... Walter A. Sclunidt of Riv- fcoarllmede rlyo n oMfr's .M oHyolaranc, e nWowit maonf bridesmaids were Miss Eunice irw..,~"J~"oise~p~hi~n~e .iSmJ~~t~h~0~f~3~2~Z~Pik~e~of~S~toweAA~,,,V•~ t.~w~..,..;~ erv1t!W road entertained a. few Harrisburg and on Mr. and Mrs. Story ·Eaton, sister of the brlde- - ,- , ... ",. .. . " " ' friends ,of Mrs. Brown at a Rudolph ~de1s\on, formerly near groom, of Germantown, ,Mrs. . S~II;C;:_AL fo;.' :.MARCH '., ' luncheon at her hoine 'i:Uesdloy.! Evans SChwarZ of Wilmington, . "M" ,!.. .. ''''. Medl~, now at Frostburg, Md. Mr. Mrs. Ro'bert Van Sant of Levit- ' ·0' y'" E, RNA''. UL'··,· ' 'oro"1t Next Tuesday, Mrs. Russell and Mrs. E1klnton showed their , ]tent of Philadelphia wl1i enter- co, lored pictures of Japan at town, t. r., and Mrs, Kennl!th tath at a luncheon at th" Ah>nl~ FrI~nds Boa r din g School at Stevenson of Short Hills. They Y" A" L,'' y'" J. '0". 8 ' ~ Country Club for Mrs. Barnesville, O. and in Richmond wore gowns of mirit green lrides- I:. Browb., at the Forum of Wesl Richmond cent taffeta with matching mitts. " " . ' Mr. 'adn ' Mrs'. J 01 m "h ei <'l "••, anna .......... 1 ends M eeting and in the new Their headdresses of matching R' OB' E' af'. J'" .. A ~' .0 -.... ""' ... of Rlvemiow. road have ,Meeting House on the Earlham taffeta were outlined in seed • .... 'II' n..- from a" three-week hoUday in College campuS. pearls and they 'carried bouquets iUSSEL,,'S SERVICE Marathon and Fl.' Lauderdale ___ '-'-____ of lilies of the valley and violets. OPPOSITE IIOBOt!GIJ PA~ING LOT , Florida. 'HONOR C:OUI'i.E Mi". Eaton served as best man SW 6-0440 Dariiilo.utii &, 'Lafayette Aves. Mrs. E. M. Bassett of Miss Jean Brown, daughter of for his son. The ushers were the Chester road entertained at Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Brown of Messrs. Thomas Sorenson dinner-bridge at her home Satur- North Chester Road, and Mr. Ar- Brooklyn, N. Y., Evans Schwan, day evening. thur Jennings. of Springfield, Philip Cashman. of Wilmington, M r. and Mrs. Marvel Wilson whose marriage will take place and John Beddoe of Media. and M. r .. and Mrs. Donald Pooie of Saturday, Ma•v 2, will be guests The bride's mother wore a S wart hmo re will tomorrow attend of honor at a buffet supper to be gown of orchid chiffon with m. M liford, pel., 'the .dedI cation of given tomorrow evening by matchinTgh habt rla' nd an orchid cor-the new Hospital Bullding and LOra Blackman of Sproul road. sage. e degroom's N. urses Home ,named ,'inM memoirys s Blackman will be .a brldes- chose a gown of rose chiffon of Mrs. Wilson's and Mrs, Poole's maid In the wedding party. hat of ite blue .straw. Her cor- .I at he r, Dr. G' . . Layton Grier: Miss Brown was guest of honor sage was of deep rose cym·bidium Saturday at which time her sister orchids. Mr. and Mrs. R. Chester S~- MrS. Walter L. Douglass of Sea- A rec,;ption ~t the Fortnightly cer of Swarthmore av.mue ford, Del., entertained at' a lunch- Club, Summit, N. J., followed the arrived home following a two- eon~hrldge at the Brown home on cer'e~ony., week motor trip to St.,Petersburg, North Chester road. Mrs. Douglas After~, wedding trip south. the Fla. . will. attend her sister as matton c~uple Wlli reside in Wilmington. Mr. and Mrs. Charles .G. of honor. The brlde, It graduate of Wh'eel- Thatcher of Ogden avenue return- o"k, Bosion, is It I9nderg"rten . ed last WedneSday evening E"&AGEMiafT' .. teacber'in tbe Harlan School' WH-piane following a two-week Mr. and Mrs. Edward William niln'gton. The, brl~egrOOm 'Is a tion in Ft. Myers Beach, Fla. .TeniiIi1li1! of Haddonfield, N.J., en- I!l'I!du!'te of. Lafayette College. He " Mr. and MrS. Earl terlibi'ell illtonnally Saturday' Is \\nIh DuPontS. Klibx: have t;.\urnt!d, from anno~ce the,engallement of their wiitfding hip ;to ~li.ri. and· da\lBb'ter, f41i!s btarY-Lou jen- iittHS reatdihg in Sl!cail\!. "Mrs. lthox Is nings, t!> !a:r. Iforace A. Reeves, M . the foi-mer MlS$ It'arriet GfIbert Jr., of Swarthmore. ' ..Th r ~a nB ad IMrst. . .Jo";', W. of Park 'RVenue. Ml J _. "'- "". d ted ,. '. lmore, B.d., . ss ennm .... w_ lIta ua celYlng' 'congratUI tl ....... ~. -.rlim!!;' Wlkoft·'of from New Jersey College for.btrtb ot' a dalll/llt:",~..;;In toil, !lo., is viSiling ,Id. aunt W9me~, rn.st June. , ", ,:'. on Milrch 20 iI'l the Wo' men'sL eillie,j W. F; H[aDriy of Ville il'O\\n'iie. M" r. Reeves, son. of Mrs. . Elton pi'..e..."... , BaIti.'m ore . Rodger Gllnlour of' C. ~~k"of Colli~gsw~od, !l',.J.. Mrs. TaylOr i~ the f r avenue, it freshi'nlut' at and Mr. Reeves of 'Elin avenue, 0 mer Miss C o,u.~e. ge, Wi,u. ' Br'rIve . home Is 'a tt ndelng 'S warthmore •C o"ll"eg e N. a' nc"y Van Al,e .n ' dallghter o."f .u.._.. row for ~e Spring ;;.,catlon. 8n~ Is !' member of Delta Upsllpn an~, ~rs. A. H. Van Alen of Park Mti. Donald Cl'<ISset 'of Rlver- !.Jr. and l\!:rs. Horace A:. Ree17e~ . avenue. view road Will drive to : of Elm avenue aitended the·' . . . b urI'SH, V ..~ ~' . "t h~ dd .. Mr. ~~d .¥rs. . J8D.teS P;-'Br~wn,' 'nI.lli'il'day and ga,e",~ ~a\'If,~' Hs. onfl:eld. Jr., of Old Saybr"'1k, Conn., be aeC()m~ie'd hornl>. by 'p. ' .'" '.. . " nounce tIie birth of their .... 'oI.d,' daughter· Barb'Rra, a jimlor EATON·WARE son, M,athew,' on March 25 In William and Mary who will vacii- The mamage of Miss Joan tion ,tor 10 days through Ware,dllUghter, ot Mr. and Mrs. Nazareth Hospital, New Haven. If You H'tIve Cowboys in YDlllr Hom., ••• fOU NiiD Itu'iii eusHioNi "NDEi yOUR RU.S 't£.f:. "" . ~' ... ....." .11.; fe.llTh ,_,10" 0iIe0it1l .., 0-, I ,-r," O..f .. .....• ICH,'". ....... In .""."."."- ~,co. on. can cut g .... or "dod h H4 ~~: ~t'" iii ........... - nog.. Id .. 1 for , * 12 - $30.00 J'~,"~ It ~~ • .b •• ~~.'" Sirelllooie ................. 00 Pill S)YlIiililliOre. Pt. WilCOx ·A~P.LJANtES: . : .• ! J; I ' .. :., ..•• OPEN EVENINGS EaSter holidays. . K~liodjr Riddell Ware, of Short l'he caby is a grandson of Mr. Mrs. Alexander Robinson of HIllS, N. J., to Mr. Roland .;-,:,..,.,M"" rs. i. lJ:iaul Brown of Wal-I ~~~~~ Chestnut Hill is visiting her Lecinard Eaton, Jr., son' of Mrs. I. daughter Mrs. William Robert Kline of Y~u ~a. sa Tlfem ~nyw"ere 'For ServIce Buy 'hili H-. "'Blackman aild famJly of road, and Mr. Eaton' Wil- ,,"road. mlngton, took place Saturday af- 'c Mrs;'John Pearson of ternoon at 4 o'clock' In Christ , 'avenue entertained as her Episcopal Church, Short inn •. The end guest her brother Mr. Rev, Herbert Hannan Davie of Los Angeles, Calif., rector, officiated. came east for a conference inlr============::; Chicago. SUBSCRIPTIONS Mrs. Clifford Banta, Mrs. E. D. Brauns, Mrs. Elliott Richardson :!.~:~S and Mrs. Thomas K. Brown, Jr., . of Swarthmore motored to Prince- MRS. LLOTDE. KAUFFMAN ton, N. J., Monday to visit Mrs. 313 Dartmouth Avenue J. E. Underwood of Painesville'l FS"w=art""""m"o"r"e,,6,,-,,2,,08,,O=====~ Ohio, formerly of Swarthmore. '1 who is visiting her daughter Miss Caroline Underwood in Prince­ton. ·Mr. Richard, Hook of Strath Haven avenue spent the week­. end ·in Hanover, N. H.o and at­tended the reUnion of members of EASTER BONNETS ! The Children's Shop CLAIRE HOlitFEL Is'SoUth Chaler ..... iIWirt'tunin 'fI.l1Y COLLEGE, THEATRE Swarthmore. Pei. Frl. & Sat • Danqarous & &c1tin9 Rolph Richardson Ann Todd Breaktng tlte SQund BiI'rrier Vot,d the bes' En4Ush picture of the year Special Children's Show ,SaturdCly. 1 p.. M. "Wac 'from '¥falla Walla' with . Judy Canova On. of th. 10 best picture, of the yea,n - Plus _ CARTOONS. SHORTS. COMEDY & SERIAL Sat. night only-feature tlmea 6. 8. 10 Sun., Man.. & Tues. R~b.rt Tcirtor "ABOVE i. BEYOND" Story of the first atomic' bomb Wec!o Only . . S~ltc.r Tracy loreHa Yount "A MAN'S CASTLE" An oId .. time romance you'll ,..oU, e"tor TlHIrs. til ... Sat. Je""ifer J....' Charlton H.ston .tRUIY GEJlnY" . A stfrrlfNJ aCtion drama Statts ""-.'SttOws Of ICfUUlah(o'O· ~~-".,~ IN.:ntREE DIMENSIONS R The .inspiring story of the esarrection ill_ted in lif .. like d.~tb and full color...ro. 8IDa2ing new View-Muter Stereoscopic Pl_ Available .. Paclcet of three Reels (21 pictura> for'_ ID Vi ... ·Malter Stereo. BCopea and Projec:tom. Story folder with each Reel. A delightful gift for children and adulta. Seefot~, - mIirt IIiIIS ......... 1. ~ .. IIOBBY SHOP '405, .,..ti1i6." Ave. . G.WE'ST~ • sw ..... 9. ..... ,..,1301 • LOCAL PEOPl£~l MAKE VALUABLE , ' DISCOVERY! More and more of ,om-neighbors 'are .­discovering how convenient it isto do all their banking at one place: . here. Discover for Y.O . urBell how a ban. ing cOtmection with US makes mans, ing money matters easier. Come in. . " SWABTHMOBE .' RATIONAL BANI. liD TB'UST COMPAI' ...".,., -1/..,.,., ».,al'll I ..... " CtWlas .. _ • • ,, • . ~ •• Mweh 27, 1958 ff , , TQE. . SW~TmJOUAN. • THE SW ARTI!M0REAN P., S of 165:1." !'lhe will !ll~\l'1II" her t a I k with Kodachrome slides taken at the Tercentenary In Eng­l'ui, USIfED EVBBY FBlPAY AT SWARTHMORE. PA. land last summer. 'fQB. SW4RTIQIOBEAN, INO~ PlJaJdSHER . : , ,'. '1'110 ... SWarUunore 8-~" '.' which Ilme the Rev. Josep\l:J>., CttRISTIANSCIENCE NOT~S Bishop, o~ the j;'resbytert~ The Pllbllc Is cordially invited Church, WIll preach. The Boy" to services in Clirlstian Science Choir, will sing Lenten m~.lc In churches next Sunday .wben the the Grand COllrt at John Wana- subject will be "Reality" and the r=-=====.======, maker's on Good Friday from .Golden Text taken from Isaiah 4:45 to 5:30 p.m. They will per- (64:4): "Since the beginning of form "Christ Lay in the Bonds of the world men have' not heard, Dea!h", CIjIltata No. 4 by J. S. nor perceived by the ear, neither 'Bach. hath the eye seen, 0 God, beside . 'p£i'Ei Eo TOLD, EdllOr an4 Pnbllsher . ,: JlAlUORU TOLD ,an4 BARBARA KENT, AssoeIate Edllon. , ROsa!ie Peirsol . , '. . . , Lorene McCarter Entered as ~nd .qlasa.Matter, -'ljIlllary ~ .. 19~, at the Post Office at Switi1limqrii, Pa., undar the Act of March 3, 1819. DBAD~~ND!Q~¥ N.OOlf· On Easter Eve there will, be a thee, what he hath prepared for . Service of Eversong and Holy him that waiteth for him." l;\aptlsm at 5 o'clock. SWARTHMORE, PENNA., fRIDAY, MARCH :n, 1953 FRIENDS MEETING NOTES ' :, , . " . . . ;METHODIST NOTES' 'Th~re wlll be no. first Day · PRESIYTERIIoN N~lE' will meet for ~upper at 6:30 on The' Sunday School meets' at School' for any classes this Sun-fOR .4STE" , " , Fill a lail •• t with . hurmet Gift Goodie. ar Cho.... an Aat'qu. F.III: Lalfl.g Vallill Antiques & Gourmet Shop· . PROVIDENCE 'ROAD' . WALLmOFOBD, 'PA. . On Palm Sund!ly, March 1l9, Sunday !'veping and Win follow '9:45. Classes are provided for all daY, M.rrch 29. FamllleS' 'are en­there will. bet thll ,regulilrtwo with· a diso}lSSion ,,!eeting led by age~. The Yoillig 'Adults' meet at couraged to attend Meeting for morning wil.r's"h ill servlc,. es· at. ' 9:~ 0 Mr. Bis4I"D>' 9n ",The '¥,ea nlng of .111 o'clock. Worship' at •'I ., 'in th, e 'Meeting r~= ===:;::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;::"""~: ,:: ;::~ and 11, at which Mr. Blshop will FOrg;V,m"",,:" , .., . ~t the 11 o'clock service, tlte }fouse, as a family unit. follow-preach on "Who Makes The Woe-' The Jumor High Fellowsh.p :minister will preacll on tbe topic,. ,ipg the F'!JllilY DaY at l\Ieetin~ for fui- Heart To Sing." At the 9:30 will meet' fo~ their last regular "That It Might Be Fulfilled." Worship. \liere wlll be a coffee service there .will.be Confirmation Sunday evemng get-togethers at There will be reception of new hour in Whittier House to which of the new'· cornkiuucantst class, 6 p.m. and will ha"{e a discussion members and baptism for chil- all members and attenders are , ".' , )! :, OBERLIN COLLE~E CNijIR and at the··jj 'o'clo'ck service there pe,iod .on "When I Worship dren. invited. , will be the, <lteception . of new Alone." The Nursery for children is, Th,,' first of a series o! !hree members: " , . The Young Adults will meet for open during the morning service. talks on some of the' significant Mon.d ay,. A.p ril ~.. FIRST UNITAltL\N CHURCH Chestnut west of 21st. Philadelphia TICKETS $1.00 'At 8 p.';;:. 'o;(Paim 'Sunday eve- supper at 6:30 p.m. a,ncj "tt!,nd Mrs. S. W. Jqhnson assisted by aspects of Quaker History ancj ning, the Chape\ Choir and guest the cantata "The Beven. Last Anne ard Jean Paul wllI be in Thoullht will be given in Whittier soloists will present DuBois' Words." - r·,· ~charge.' House at 8 p.m. on ThursdaYI "Seven Last Words from the On Maundy ThursdaY, ?"pril 2, The ushers for the day are Ed- April 2. At this time Eleanor Cross'" to which all !Dembers and there wl11 be a Commuruon Serv- ward H. Alston, William C. Coi- Stabler Clarke will speak on "The can sw 6~74, or SW 6-0137 friends are cordially Invited.' ice at 8 p.m. .. lenberg, Warren Crafts, N. Martinl~CI~,n~'gJ~'n~s~o~f~Q~u~a~k~e~r~is~m~-;~t~h~e~S~t~or~y~============~ The Senior' Hlg!) . Fello~ship .On: qood Friday, April 3, there Kapp and George W. Zanzinger. ----~=----..:.'. .,.:..'- ..:-" will be" a community three-hour A Candlelight Vesper Service CHURCH SERVICES se.:vic;; held' at the Trinity Episco- will be held at 4 o'clock, at which pal 'Church at whl~h ,Mr. Bishop time the choir will sing ''The l'RESBYTERIAN ,CHURCH wlllbe'the preacher. Crucifixion", by Stainer. They , Joseph P. Bjshop, M;inister'l'he Choir rehea~ ... ls wui, meet wlll be assisted by Donald Mc- John fjtetl!ier,' N;~.stant at, ,thelr \Isu.al times during this Call, cellist from the Curtis In- SllDday, Mareh 29 '", . 1 C' h' t't t 9:30 A.M,;·."Cliurch·School; Mell" we~~ exc~pt for ~~~ape . olr.s, u e . and Women', Bible "Classes. ,wp~ch ,'wlll have ,~rehearsal Lenten service wlll' be held on 10:45 A.M.-Senior 'Hldh Class." . a ~·t. e r' . C'Omm~on serylce on Wednesday at 8, at which time Q: 30 and 11: 00 4.},f.-Mr. Bishop , Maundy Thursday.' ',. . the minister' will spellk on "The OWlll preach.' ' .. , . . ...... ' , . . . 4:80 P.M.-ConfirniaUon"Cli!$S.-':: O~};;~*,r Sun!lay, ,41'111. 4, Meaning of the Cross," SWARTHMORE PROPERTY OWNER.S The Architect has about convinced the School Directors that they should' have a one story addition t~ the Rutgers Avenue Build.ing. Do YOU want anoth~r onll story public build. ing in Swarthmore? If you do NOT, write or leillph!)ne John . Spence" !lr I)onald. J'>n8S AT OI'lCE! as the final' dll,*ipn will be made on April First. 8: 00, p.M.~antati!; ',~Seven ~t . th~", '1'111 'be a COn(lJIl,Inltl' ji:aster On Thursday evening' there' will Words.'" ..;. ,'-;-".:'< .Sj,in'ise'Service to be helq:~ii 1I>e 'be the Celebration of the Holy . 0' · Weolnes4ay, .t).prll.l;".",·: ·sti.ps'.of Clothier Memol:lal,a* the Communion. This church' has ~='f.:' ~~~~~~!~~~~!~~~~;!~~~~;'I ALLAN C. WO()D. 8:00 P. M.-LentenSl!rvice. ·Conege. In case of rain;'iI!e,s'll"'- 'opl'n cO':l1munion and all diSCiples f Maunu Thllrsdaun/1, April 2 ice will be held Inside of pll'thler . of Ghrist are Invited to' collie .to II: 00 y.M." :<::~!'1'" on Service. Memorial Chapel The s,ervice is 'the ~ord's Table. ',' :. ,,' METHODIST CHUR9B in charge of the Young, ,/\.dults' ''fbI' "lower Committee Qf .the .Roy N. Keiser, D.D .. Minlster'G f 'h Ch h d th C I ~~ Sunday, ~ 29' • roup O .• e urc an e 0 - Young Adults has issued an'open 9: 45 A.M.-Church School. lege StudC~ts. lnvil!llioll' f~r particip!lti9!l In pro- 10:00 A.M.-. Yg\ulg' Aduits. ' ". Th"1~ ,\"ill bo! nt;l Sunday School 1r!4InJ lilies or w!'ile flowering 1~~00 ~.M;;:rT~~':" 'M!nlst~., ,wp1o~ :.~'!!ltl!{. SUDl,~'!Yo, .1ll1t)~~;.will ,p!~nts for, the, chancel OR Eu.~er. prea,ch. " ' ,." .'. 'N' ;' .: be a.Fari\ily Service ,foro 111etotal 'Those wishing to secure plants,in 14\'i0o0o AM .....church' urs,,".'· '. h "'ch<' ·S hi' t iI 'm' Th " .pM:'--Candle11gpt Vesper. C. ur ",c ~o .. ,~; a..:. ere .memory of..)oved ones,s\lQlIld see' '. :Service:' . , WIll be two Idenbcal Easter Fes-, ,Chades Grier, Mr. Craft~, Wesley tf . WedD.sdll:Y, April 1~'(~ S~ryjce~ held, one ~L1!! m,'d, ~Fr.'!Pce, or ~f~.IJ!lYd· ·E .. ~~ 4 . ~.;!l~;,:'wl:'imi~ .. ~';:." . ~~i:~n~>J'~!t~~~~f'C!1:: ~ ;~ ; ~~i ,~r..~.'!:~'!:r i~!:' ,theh" !,r~!f!! . . : ,- . • .w R • t',. :~ ' •• \ 10-: j '. ~ f ) _, ·~u.!$,. De placed ear:IJ In t e .w~. 3:00 P.M,o--,Hp1y. CoitHh1pilon, ' , ,'. . ',n'NITY'NOTES'" :.. '." ' . H: ~~~~~~~ Rec~~r There";;ll ~ ~: ,~eleb~alio':' of .Cdic. bar .. c,: .,"' REMEMBER You cannot b. better 'served 'h . ~ . . ..f1P,,¥. " ., DII~Cf~i a~ ~NIIiA" . 18~Q . '"I,IN,,' S.T~II" OIIYJR H. IAII. _do. MAlI" A. ~I. _ ... ·' .. ephO .... 116.15.1 ,- , ,',,, Sunday. lII!>reh 29 the Holy CommunIon at 8 o'clock' ':. . " it' 8iOO·:A!;'M.--"HoIY" COmmunion: ;.,- Sunday: 'morning" and at 9:30'.all 9 I S Q; 341 A.M.-Chur~h School, ... departments i)f t1!e Churc!' ~h,ool ': . '. ." ." " . ,~ 11("1 30 AM.Mon.-dMayo,r rMunargo l'lP,SrAOy e, r. bwei ll am eSeto.l eAmt n1 1 Por'colcoecsks itohnearle wanind ', _~~~o~l~-d.~' ~ b~a~n:,k; r:' ~ b.~U"~i"~l,d~ ~': n~c~,U~'~': ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'! ~'''~~ 1115 A.M,-Holy Co!ii.riituiion. service ·0f'~rnIng Prayer. 1~;:00 A.M.-Holy CQ1fu>i~o.n. Th6',:1ii!:iiO{ €:onfirmation Class \\', Tuesday, M.ar.CJr'~31.,. . _ .!' 1." _ .... y '.' 7115 A.M,-Holy. C,O.min~on. ~,.'JjJee~' at, l p.m .. :tollowed by HI~oo A.M.-Holy C.. ~ D!ntwii~n;, tIW::A-dult :Confirmallon Class at ~30 P.M.-Evenlng"ppyel'l. '. :8' 'o~cloCk.· ., I'. Wednes4ay. A,"'t,l "', .' c' .:,:Tbe· usheh. for the services will, 7; 15 A.M.-Holy C01!!'1'~oi:I.~ ". be '-as -f~Ilows: R. J. Baker, A. G. 10:00 A.M.-Holy COII)p1union, ,.,:0;,' ' . • E 3:45 P.M.-ChUdrens'''E.;e:n, t'lt n '~,o:rd, . G. W. Cochrane, J. . ~ervice. . ~:':'.-.. :, '[::-' Ecl!:enhoff, R. H. Fe~ows, W. E. 8:00 P.M.-Evensong ':~.4·· '~!.l-' Hetzek,·,1r., .f>.. E. Pfltchard, and ~dress. ,';: '., : , G;". S: ,yal~ntjne. Hugh' Morrison' :' Maundy Thursday, ~ .,2 is . scheduled . to serve as acolyte 7: 15 A.M.-Holy Co~lii!Ib!,: , , '«t the S' o'cloCk service and Robin IQ'OO A.M.-Holy Communi!>'\, "I···' . ,,' " .' . 5?30 P.M.-Evening P.ri!ier:;, ~'. ,Wrlghtc ·~t-: 11. Dunng ,!,e 11 '" Good FrIday:'. " .•. ,·.o'clock 'SefV1C!', Evei)'n BulIitt and Hi,oo A.M.-Litany and AI'lte~ Betsy l'!rinkirtann' will be in Communion. • . .,.,. . ~- .. ' ': ': charge .of th~ nursery. 12" No~n to 3 P.l\f.-:-Three-)!.o\!i" '. 0-.. Monday'U,ere 'Will be a cel- ServIce. Easter "Ev,e . .-" '" ' , 'ebratirin o~, th~ ."Holy Communion 5:00 p.M,-Evens!)ng· and Ho!y. at ·7:I5:'and.lff Ii"", At 4 p,rn. the ..1! to . . Boys' Choit'will"rehearse, follow- • ~S;~LIGIQUS ~OC~ ed by the Gir~' Choir rehearsal 'O~ 'FIln:ND.S at 5 o'clock." 53 S' d . b k · $tuidaf; Mate ... 29 ' Holy 'cOrnmuniOli ,will be .cel- N w 19 . tn" e a er u,oo A.M . .!.-Family Day at Meet- ebtated at 7:15 and 10 a.m. Tues- e ,. , Ing for Worship.. day, and at 5:30 p.rn. there will be· .' . ."", , .' _,: " . "". 12 Noon-Get acquainted Collee a setvice of Evening Prayer. '- "AID .,. ,~Op.IM~:i:r ~t":'Fellow- On'WednesdaY there will be a thr.' , ills all'· . erl~~ a . ' ship. . ~elebration of the Holy Com- '" ' Monday, Mareh 30 munion at 7:15 and 10 a.m., and All day sewing 'for A.F.S.C. at 3:45 p.m. the Children's Lenten r--.------------, Wednesday, Aprtl 1 Service will be held. The Boys' I 'All day sewing for ,A.F.S,C. Choir will' rehearse at 4 o'clock, I Dfo;';P cor ./Itz#" 7:80 P.M. - Mid-w~ meeting and at 8 p.m. there. will be a serv- I . in 9 104, ~la '.for Worship...1: . , Huge crowds jam sMwlGOmS to see and ..., the most exciting new car in yean . Thursda:r, _r11 2 ice of Evehsong.' , I """"..tmtricmr ~ , II: 00 P.M.-Eleanor S t. a b i e r The~will be a Corporate 'Com-: 11·1MiUI. a1II/ Atmt!u.r WI d ---" 19"" 'Clarke on "Qriglns of Quaker- munion of the Vestry at tbe 7:15 Come in rfaUlt away an ..... er your OJ;> lsm -' the Story of 1952".- celebration of the Ho'- Com- II '""""'."".r<"'!I1.~lIxf,,!S S'tude. ....· .. . er- Be one of theflrllt. to own th,ei:arthat .'WhittIer HouSe." , mw.lonThui'Sday·mom~g: and I IWaII ,"and Wiikr trwuh ...... - . ," . ..~. .................. ..,... ~.... .. C~R OF there will "gain be a celebration .,. ..e.· v eryone, ev~bere" Is ta1k1nll about. TeD us now I...,.. . -J.' ': . C~~flB ' of the 'HolY' Communion at 10 I IMIiMI t~ '{1;':::t" which Studebaker ChampiOQ. or ~I!'mander V-8 ',. Park AVlinije ~lIaJ;vard o·clock. At 5:80 p.tn. tliere will be· I . n" • • • You want. Sedans. ~ ... , ~-t~~"" ~Iora '.. 81111i11i.y,. . . '11, a service, of Evening Prayer, and. II """" r.ad-~IIQUr,..: .Ie , IlIlln,1itJ, 'I' all ....... t· "a _ ~-.. in pri . ' l~~OO A. lIL,.;:sunday Sclioot at 1:30, p~: UU; Men's and Boys' I......' """"triu/, 'tIii'DtI'l aslore are -_ _wn .... -~... . ce. . =beA;'lt"IJ'!!~ :~.:~alDOD Choir wl11 rehearse. L ________ - __ --..J And they an save gaaOlilie 8"I1''J.nati~·· . . . , . We,dr!1!Sd1lY. e~.·:meeting 'nI.e servI~ ~te-C,Frlday ~ , iii .~" 01 ... yt,M';' A.m .. ,;". Driw.,. Ch".1w • I ,h ..I "'" ih.w ,,--4 _ week, '8 1'.111 •. Reaalng room be 14tant" anu AU ommuruon" . . . .' F' U· S COWl 0 T ft R COM PAN VI . _ . ~Te;tc;,:.,=.:27to t! :.!~ ~-:':~:: ':r;-!': , ci~ eecI F.AlRV~.OA.S· . "'" + .Ji:l:'"' . ~-.r '. - PlIO .. 5 •• 1"."&,."''''' P.M:. and,lI to 9:30 P.M. . . , (0' , , . .;- ·, • .' •

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• Page 4 . Mllftb !'J',.11:1 S S Salvatif)n Army Drive Cllb Pack .1,01 M .... , To.lght Long Illness Fatal Frances Pearson of Cornell and Mrs. Duane R. Terry, 'NDl'th ' -O ....n s Wednesday Cub Scout Pack 101 w il_l h old To Walter S. J ames atlv enue arrived Friday to vaca- -Cheste,r roa-d;, 'w ill appear In' the ,..,- its monthly meeting tonight, on ,until Sunday from Wilson anllual original S'l'an Club water (Continued from Paie -1) March 27, at 7: 15 in the Swarth- Walter S. James, retired disWct College. 'show which began Thursday at- worker: Mrs. Herbert Ingraham. more , Presbyterian C' hurch. An manager for the Bell Telephone Nancy Terry, daughter of Mr,' 'Bowling Green State University. important feature of the program Company, passe~ away M.onday, !5u1ll1Ri .. OOM'iiUilHHDHitiilllJlllllllllll_ ..... ,uumm Mrs. D. Reed Geer, captain; will be the demonstration given March 16, followmg a long illness. !i , ' workers'. Mr.'. C' .".~.-. u-.--u" Renshaw, by Boy Scout Troop 2 on the re- A f ormer re8l'd ent a f S wa rtlunor e, IE!! Mrs. S"",uel Mann, Mrs. John quirements necessary to become Mr. James, and his family lived Ii! FaWcett, Mrs. T. H .. VonLaue. a 'Scout.- at 407 Yale avenue for 21 years. -. MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY Mrs. John L. Comog, captain; work"rs: Mrs. B. C. Hirst, Mrs. A. P. Shenkle, Mrs. Francis Chambers, Mrs. D. S. Harris, Mrs. John Brobeck, Mrs. John H. Pit­", an,Mrs. Fred N. Bell, Mrs. Earl It Taylor, Mrs. R. T. Bates, Mrs. Joseph Storlazzl, MrS. Harry ijewley, Mrs. Percy G. Gilbert, MrS. Walter Shelly, Mrs. Frank McCowan, Mrs. Herbert B. San­ford, Mrs. Harry Crowther, Mrs. H. P. Stamford. .• CO·ED BEAtlTY SALON Open Thur.day Ni,h16 • PARK and DARTMOUTH AVE. ,S .. arlhlDore 8-1013 Cubs who have completed A native of Scranton, Mr. i§ achievements since the last pack James had spent much of his time B meeting will be awarded their there after his retirement in 1946., I respective badges. He was a member of the 5 The' -Clubs will also have an Swartlunore Presbyterian Church I exhibit of models and articles and had served it as a trustee. =_~ made during . the weekly den He is survived by his -wife, meetings. Rhoda Elias, and a daughter, Mrs. =: William C. Campbell, 508 Cedar Film Wednesday lane. i! - , COMPLETE ,:WITH YOUR EASTER ,'BON'NET An 18 mlnute 11Im, "Life with Services were held at Oliver ~ Babies" will' be presented Wed- Bair's, Philadelphia on Thursday, - § nesday, April 1, in the "High March 19, with interment follow- : '= School Visual Education room -at ing on Friday at Dunmore Ceme- _=! from ~ , 10:20 a.m., tery, Scranton. = Thi,{' noq-technical, hwnan in­te!' est film shows how children grow mentally and physically. Anyone interested in attending is welcome. PETER E. TOLD All Lines of Insuranc" 333 Dartmouth Avenue Swarthmare, Po. 'swarthmore 6-1833 NEWS NOTES ~ , Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Lippin- § : cott of South Chester road were =!i1 ~_ ' hosts to their dinner-bridge ,club sa~~:: eV;::~n of Harvard ~ ~ avenue is visiting friends in - ; RiverSide, Ct;)nn., during the ~ = spring vacation of the Swartb- 5 more schools. ! Mrs. A. H. Van Alen of Park ~ ~ ----------------------------------------------------- avenue who is spending a few I: e days in Baltimore will be accom- 5 : ~i£~-... " .=== -------------------------------------- DEW DROP INN 407 DARTMOUTH AVENUE ' 'BREAKFAST· LUNCH • DINNER CLOSED EVERY SUNDAY OPEN 7 A. M. to 7:30 P. M. Monday'Thru Saturday Dally Dinn~rs 9Qc '0 n.65 , Special Children's Platten panied home by her daughter ~ ......... ~ Mrs. John W. Taylor, Jr., and ~' infant daughter Carol Leslie. =~ 5 ,5 Eric Sharpless of Cornell ave- i! . ' -_§ nue has enlisted In the Marine E! ~~::~a~l: :::ed o:t :::: i i ' Haven avenue has been pledged i! i Middlebury College where she is = a freshman. Mary Lou will arrive , "'I to. . Kappa Kappa Gamma af.1 ' ; . ~'_"'-"" Iii home April 3 for Die Easter holi­ri. umi"Mlllllliimal~i~~~,II!*I~I_~~HildRgf!Ult1lHmnnmlinidli~hl days. i! Enjoy PALM SUNDAY and EASIER-$jJNDAY DINNERS Betty McCahan of Strath Haven -------------- -- ~rac:iously serve, d in quaint" Colonial' a,~' ". -I.ere• Featuring ave:lue is home for a week of - ... , sprtng vacation from Wilson Coi- I family dinnen with 'hO, me I?aked pastries; 'd.I~I~,IIJ; s,t"e,_"o and, -lege. , ,chops cooked to order. '-'--:0,:."', -', , ". I S.rveell-00 i-. 7-30 P M "j - ,;"':. . .-..;,~aruold Ogra!'l, .Jr:, a junior at !!5 -;.". \:'/.. ,'" . ~ ~ " . ~ .... ' " • .... • "'c,;-' '/:,)':.~L niversity of Pennsylvania, II Far Re .. rvatla.s - $\Varthmare 6-0680;;';)/i : l);~"g the holidays at his Ii 1 5 S' : iii Ch : R·· ; .', 1 8TH. "T· H' H- "V-'E~ N IN·-N· -):·(~;;;;~ll!tt~r:~:rr~~dDogwOOd ;;=; _ 1... 011, ',"- '.. ,: ester".'. ,oa_ d, -,:·'1'. '~: Yale & Harvard AYenues, Swarthmare, Pa. from Cornell Univermty to vaca- 'mliDl'mlllUOUl_U'IDiIUllllIIIII'_mlliinRi'lUu'D'...iliillilDi'mluilmllllanintlmnnn;. ...~ b .tt..tt. ; ;l~ne' .WjJI . a"ive home 'tomorrc!W WALTER E. PAIROTT, Mtr.- , -FIn PARKING tion until, Easte~ Sunday. 7~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~~~~~~~ ;~~~IlllH~Ui~iilUU~llIIU~nu~UR~llUl~'II, ~_ ~M~IIIIII~I_,u~ilu~lliiiil~llDl~lm'~lIiou~nll~iliD~llUl~DID~i ~I cuMperrs.a_t lBng.S a.C, hewrt,i_g lhlo~m, eJ.r o.,n IWs erset-- !I dale ",venue following -a -.major operation performed in the Uni­' HA MARK versity of Pennsylvania Hospital., EASTR' CARDS Holly~ock Shop Park Avenue Mr. and, Mrs. Fr,onkE. Mcfadden, Praprletars , . { . 't's to Your Advantage , '- SHOP AT THE co-o-p , ',•:• SWIFT SELECT RIB ROAST 494: lb. TOMATOES - ~SC: lb. HEINZ'rqMATO KETCHUP -·",14:0"-19c:. " . ~ . • D.ll.;' .. AVI •• " ". ~. (Aeroll ..... Ia ...... HOII) -­. t: :r Dr, and Mrs. E, LeRoy Mercer of- North Chester roadentertain~' ed members of their bridge club at a dessert-bridge at thair home Saturday evening. Mr. _ and Mrs. Donald P. Jones of North SwarthmOre avenue en­tertuined at a dlnner~bridge Fri­day evening in honor of the birthday anniversary of Mr. Jones' fathet Dr. Arthur J. Jones. Or. and Mrs. Eugen'e Spitz of Riverview road _ spent last week vacationing at M'asapequ8, Long Island where they enjoyed sail­ing. Mrs. E. D. Brauns of Vassar avenue entertained _ her bridge club at a luncheun-bridge at her home Friday. William D. Jones, Jr., of Va~ar avenue a junior at Swarthmore College, is visiting f~r. several days during the sPr\wr vacation with a classmate on Long ·Island. , Mrs. A. G. McVay of Front Royal, Va., will spend this week­end in Swarthmore visiting friends and atte{,ding the Swarth­more High School reunion for the class of 1932. Mrs. McVay is the daughter ~f the late-Mr. and Mrs. n;,Witt· A. Hills Of-mm avenue. • ORDER, NAME TAPES tor c;olleg't .. Sclloal Apparel ~Dar DeI,Yery' . 'Utllity SII.p ·19 S. C",ler Road • . . .. . THE EASTER BUNNY '. will be in Swarthmore SATURDAY, APRIL 4th 10:30 A. M. Coliege Lacrosse Field For Children-Tots through 6th Grade , .' . . Sponsored by the Swarthmore I .'LIONS -.CLUB .. ~ ., .. ." . ,. '" ':.\ TIlE SW ARTBMOBEA1'I , ' '.' PageS Mareh'27, 1953. soOn avenue before join. jrig het: spend next week of the college' I d P , vania and -has just .been., elected Harvard avenue and has a 13 year - ' - Schoo 8~ar osts " _ 'a: cfuec~r of tl!e Sw.artlunore oid 'da,llghter Nanna, . who Is In husband in Oran,eburg: - , sPring vacation playing' lacro"\"' , ,_', Sole Primary' Ra~ PubUc ' Llbr~ty _ Association. tbe 7th grade o~ the local sChools. Thomas Hopper of Dogwood ,with the· University of North , He has resided In Swarthmore for lane, a member of the LacroSse Carolina, Chapel Hill and with . (Contin~ed}rom page 1) . ,,' ~D~ Z :y~ Term 19 years. ,team at Cornell University, wl1l other colleges enroute. ~e ar old Jay is In 2nd grade,' Jill 'The other contest, I~ the Pri- For several years Wilson was a ~====~======:::=::::===========l foUr and Peggy 14 months o~d. m~ EJection _Is. for. the two yellr newspaper repOrter In' Atlanta, . The Spencer. homi!!s at,:210 yille te,rm _on .the Scboel-;Soard_to 1111 Georgia, an d In Philadelphia av~nu'l!. - , . " the ~ai:an_cy C crea~edp b~t th~es- where he was City Hall reparter Seek Woman's P_ Ignatlon_ of . arro . ree • I for the Public Ledger and the TW_<!")Noraen co~test the four Candidllte Charies C. Martin, a I Philadelphia Record. In 1939 he year term: of 'School Director chemist in the Sun Oil qompany's i seNed as Deputy Treasurer of the which will complete tl!e lI!'exptr~ Re~earch Laboratory, g~duat.ed I City of Philadelphia and -Deputy ed term of:Mrs.OllVer 'R.odgers, .from ~wartlunore C~lIege m 1942 1 Treasurer of ~e Board of ~uca­resigned. 'E~ch.ls 'supported by a followmg education In the publlc. tion for the School DistrIct of vocal and loyal group oLfriends schools of Lancaster, Pa., whe~e Philadelphia. In 1940 he became who-requested her candidacy. he was bom and raised. Marlm associated with the Girard Trust Ws"A. W. Bass, -Jr.; 241 Ogden lives at 406 Haverforo place. He, CompanY. . . avenue,.~& ,a graduate of, H~ton qas three ,children Susan 8, now I Wilson' has been a trustee and Hjgh School and -Pennsylvania in the College avenue 3rd grade; member of the Executive Com­State. College with a B. A. in Ed- David 6, who attends, the Rutgers mittee of the Bureau of Municipal ucatlcin certificated to ,teach LaJin, avenu~ kindergarten; Richard, 3. Research, a non-partisan fact­Mathematics, and Social Studies. - He is ~ active' member of. the finding body which studies im­She is a m,!mber ,of the National Swarthmore' Presbyteilan Church provement in government and ed­Education 'Honor - SOciety Alp~a where he has been superintendent i ucational facilities. He ~ a mem­Lambda Delta and the SOCIal Of the, JuniOr High Departmentol ber of the Public RelatlOns C~m­fraternity Chi Omega.- Following the Church School for the past mittee at Swarthmore College. college she. completlld a business flve years. He has also been a During the 'last war, he served course at the McCann School of member of the Board of Deacons. in the NaV'.f where. he was convoy Business; '~aching in its night lie is doing graduate' work at the communications officer In the At­school while taking the day Unlverslty' of Pennsyivania and is lantic and Mediterranlan and then course. 'a member ot the honorary scien- served as Public 'R,elations Officer PrJor to her marriage she had tiftc society Sigma Xi:- According in -the .office of the Assistant Sec~ extensive business ,and e~ucatlon. ·to _ Herbert Michen~r who Is .an- retary of the Navy. al e~rience~ .For one y~r 'she nounced as ,;' Martirt~ "caD1paign was in charge- of o~e of;he -;"anager, Martin's -supporters earliest Campus Shops 10 a Phlla- seek additional representatlon_ on Mr. and Mrs. -H. W. Stauffer of delphia d""""tm.en~ s~re. IntOI9:~ the'· School .. I\'oard "from ani,?ng oak Crest lan.e :-vill entertain, at 36, 37 she_- was Se<!reta.rY '" parents _of younger school-age co*cktalls before the Series Dance personnel oolcer of the penbn- chlldren. in the Woinan's Club tomorrow sylv:lll'1ia Company and a mem e,: of the. Phlladelphla Personnel As- Robert H. -Wilson, vlce-presl- evening. . . NEWS NOTES sociatlon. In' 1936 and ,37 she was dent, in, cha.ge of public relations Mr. James F. Newman who is also _a. member of,the Commlttee and advertising of the Girard a pitcher with the Yankee Farm of '-70 'sponsored Education Com~ Trust-Corn Exchange Bank, Phil- Team, Binghamton, N. Y., left nilttee -of the Pennsylvania :Eleon- adelphia,' is the second contender Tuesday' for spring training .at HERE'S THE'­TRICK to good party-line telephone service It'. a matter of eimple con,ideratiOn. Remember the thr8e Rs of party-line courtesy-be Reasonable about how long you talk; Release the line for emergencies . when alked; Replace the recijiver gently when you .' find the line ~ U~ . , If you. are alway. courteous on the telephone, you te sure to 'find yoUr party-tme neighbors the same. Ha~ :rMutt: better te1eplio'na Service for everybody . concerned! THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY ,OF PENNSYLVAN,A , - ed th for the' two year school, dIr~tor Orangeburg, S. C. Mrs. Newman " amy ~~e which survey -, e term. A graduate of Swa~more is visiting her parents Mr. and Phltadel~ia Public Schoo1 Sy.. ;c§o~iI~eg~e~, ~in~' ~' ~19~3~1~;~h~e~li~v~e~S-~a~t~60~31Mr~s~.=W~ilJl~·~!'~m~R=.~H~u~e:y~O~f~D~i~C~kIn~-~~==========::;;;~====:::=;:;====== - tern and Issued a report with rec- .: _ , ommendatlons for: improvements, to the' head of the Phlladelphi~ Schools. '_',' ' Since coming to swarthmore,}3 years -ago' Mrs. Bass- has partlcl­pated:- actively in commlUllty lIle. In the; sch'lols. wher~ ,she, has two, sons, David- in -8tl>-. gr ... de ,¥,d, Dirk ;it 5th grade, ~!!, ~: a fon>\tr_ publicity chairman for -Home and Schodl' and has served' as grade group-chairman and on the Moth-ers' 'CouncU. ' -' " ' She:"hali~~'bt ~.;,:, ,n.' the EOarcf.:'O'f'1-m..e'cioni 'W' .. Wom~'s Club, part of that time as treasurer anc~ corre"l'0ndlng, secret8.ri:- She' waS amemher of . the orIgln81 cominittee of the '--'-'- Antlqiles Falr, having managed It ' for three years, and has ~. 8C,­' tive ~ithe Mutual Exchan'j!e, sinci; its beJinning, Sh~ is a R¢ cro~, Gray :Lady and was S~!lrIhmore· , Chalrtilan of the 195~, _Tuber - culoslS':Chrlstmas Seal ,Drive. Her' husband, who is· with the, AtJani\:c 'Refining ComllanY" is • serving bis second term' as dlrec-, tor of:,the swartlunore Public LI­brary In the post of secretary. ' , , Mrs:: Robert E. :Spiller,60;! qg­den av.enue~ has also .filed ~s, a candidate for tbe four, yeat term; Sbe Wils educated in the Philadel- " l'hia Rublic Schools, received' an A.B. degree from Bryn ~awr Col­lege u1 1920, an 'A.B. degree, from Swarthmore CoJlege in 1928.- and her M.A. in Education from :Swarthmore in, 1930, _-" '-' Mrs. Spiller .,ha~ !laught at_ the elementarv schOol-,'I""el in several -" T!I ."" . nEdghborlng, private, ,:SW,h Q 0 Is , among ,them, Rose Valley School, with which she was_associated from 1929 to 1948 as head of its nursery school and Its teacher of third, grade, and at Merion Friends School where she Is now head 01 the nursery schoo1.~:,e has written widely in the field of elementary education and has had considerable supervisory ex­perienCe. Aniong her, many inter­ests have been the, Delaware County Chlld',Care Association, the F~ Rela!ioDs - Cotnml.ttee o~ the Swartlunore Friends Meeting, and the 'Swarthmore Recreation Association. _ '" : THE BIO 4.P OW E it PAC .c. Ii 0 EO F -. • -4 •• 't' '.' 'J. .' .. " ,- "". ' • ..; .1: . :,~ . 1 ",",' - •• .,. :"j T _ i:·~ - - \ . ?~.i . ...;.", oJ . - • , , . ' - . , ':"'. ; .. : : , .' . ,,;.' . ~ ,; .. ,1 .. :, .' , , .... 1 . '." ,: .. :.; . ". ! '. •••••• '.W' •• '11 •••• •. POWER • •• POWER • •• EJTE1(YJPBEREI Tba,' • the'.uperb new Super "88" 6Jd.mobile for 1953! Po_ ls th .... in the feather·toueb ~c of Q/dmtDbile _ DItAK •• ", sieering./ In lhe ""bj, ... tiag .weep of new P ....... - StyUn&, • • -. flowing from bold ilew front ODd to long •• D •• 'W, M •••• OW ••• UL rear deck. New and migbty,. too, are Oldamobi/e PeiLd.&.e p"..,..,. lITizkeI •• ' ;. just a toueb of your . toe-and u:ltool Most exciting. there"'s a new higher. '· •• c •• ,·- •••••• • poweo:ed venina of Oldam<>bile'. famous "Rocket" Enginel Make • cbt!! with the -Super "88" todayl ______ 'llly ou .. •• A .'. a, OLD a • 0 • IL. D ~'.'L' • WHITAKER -BARRETT, . Inc. . ~' . •• . , Two,of her childre!ihave grad­uated " from sw~ore' liigh School and' thethlrd, M:aty will graduate In J'Une of this ·Y!!8l'· She hils seft'ed the local _ schbols as president· of 'the Mother's Council and as a ehaImlan Of 8e\'- 340 W. iALTIMORI 'IK.: -- '., ' MEciia ~100 era! grade mother gr<!UIi6. . - . Dr. Spiller Is plote IOJ or Eng- • OtiT ........ Co .. s. N.,riwHli ....... Eft •• M ••• IIJ",",'II.a, at 7:30 ....... ,W.~U .• " C ...... 10 U.1h at the Univef!Ilt:F. or ~l- '. ;_ . - , . . . - '. -, •

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• ,• • • r I • • l'l'ge 6 MODI,. ~ RA •• ES ar. built for ).i.; -" ' . ; . You'll thrill fothe easy operation 01. ' - clem gas • Gilge. Designed for cOnvenience, the - racks slide easily In and out'while a catch pre- \IOI!IIIIs their being puRed too far. Everything is witIiIa "'S reachl a- your mocJern gas range at )"DUI' plumber's,dBcder' .. or any Philad.'phla Electric I II ban sbte. 1T .: i ) THE SWARTHMOREAN • Woman's Club to Show' Movies of Scan~a~ The regular meeting of the Woman's Club will be held Tues­day, March 31, at 2 p.m. MovIng pictures on Seandinavia· s':Cured from a company which produces "Films of the Nations" will be shown. The subjects of 'the films are: Swedish Industries, Child Welfare in Sweden, Life In Stock­holm, and Majestic Norway. Some Grieg music will bo played dur­Ing the program. Hostesses at the door will be: Mrs. Harry E. Corl, Mrs: J. I!;en­noth Doherty. and Mrs.' Kendall C. Sadler. At the tea Mrs. S. Murray Viele and Mrs. Claire H. Jeglum will preside at the tea table. Mrs. Ford F. Robinson and Mrs. Hans' K. Steinfeld of the" hospitality committee will assist. OBERLIN CHOIR IN CITY Oberlin Alumni in the Borough and vicinity' will hear the Oberlin College Choir, makirig an. unex­pected Eastern tour in order to accept an invitation to appear in concert in Town Hall, New York City, in its ~hiladelphia Concert on Monday, April 6. The Choir which has sung in Swarthmore the past two years under the sponsorship of the Woman's Club of Swarthmore, will sing in the First,.. ' Unitarian Church· at 8: 15 . p,m. The program will include selec­tions from the great choral litera­ture of the past live centuries, SljDg In. Latin, French, German, EUaRle CO··IP, ..... y IlIiJian;' iilid . English. The J. S. , Mareh.' 27, ! 1953 the nation'. fi ..... ...." IliJaarfor In fiavor and nutrl"on. flnl"" ~Ie'l' tiR~11y far mark.ton fop . qualltyaraln. , .... , ., .. ~. S. Grad~·-='Cho;-.-:-.!ce-:--:W:::.; -"'-:em-. -:S:"!"*.•-. ,..~-:.:-.!!-.f:- CHUCK ROAST .Ib ATS haelesi Rolled Chlick INd • 55e Bolteless Cross Cat RoaSt . , Teader CIi.c. Ste. • lie • 4h Fresh iepluGroaad Beef L!lncashtr Brand L.an, Smoked, Shankl." • 31e HAMS '~: ..• ~~~~ ... 59c : ~~. 61e You" "'Yea:' bow ...... ~. lay.r ua,U ,.o~~y. trI~ • "'acalfe. Mllk.fed Quality Vea. tOBl ClOPS rb 7ge: RIB CIIOPS flo SBODl.DER VEAL eliOps SBODl.DERVW. ROA$! 'J."!.'T.e" BREAST, SRA"~ lEa VEAL . 61e flo SIc flo '31e flo 2Se Bay W ..... , :,::~~t~~~ !:;:;! b:~~":x,:~ -----------------------~-..." ito members recruited from tqe chojr:The progfalll will pe. in ,keeping "-,it!> the):~r tid~. I' . AT 'HE SWITCHBOARD y .... 'time actually fila keeping pace With fiyIDg Ong- 1I1lf9n. yoq know It, lunchtime; before you !mow it, tim" to appiy the lipstick and go home. Any number of operators. given a chance to do other telephone work, prefer to stay with operating. They lind the work so interesting that the time p ..... rapidly. And here I!!l' SOme other advantages' of a teiephone joh: e, plea ..... urrou.tI .... • eoocl ltartl... talari, good challICe. fer aClYancement ..... ular employment with a well-lc:no .. , . weU-retlanied employer • ito • .,.rle.. n..... to dart Fw oompLote Information about operating or ..., ....... type of' telephone wmIi;"",,1n at oM of tLa .... Ilstecl below. . 691.' w.d'01lJ Slreet, Uppar Dca .... , ~ c -'631 Arch Street, Phllcidelph", Pa. lIE IEI1 TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNCR'ANIA "A 'r"."~ ·"I.ee t. wori" .·"W •. ~~ LISTED ON MEMORIAL ~. The name ot Joseph McAtthur Youmans, gr~duate ot" Swarth­more High School~ and a resident of Swarthmote for mimy . yeari, is among the 478Comellians. who r their liven -. in the second ., '. WClrld .W ar listed on the Memor-' l'!acqu~ in th.;,' l1ow'Anabel' T~Ylbi-Hiill; Cornell Uhlverslty. ·Theb\aCk granite base of the Me;;'orial ·:,bears· the quotation trom Abraham~'~nCOln, "SQ coStly a ;':crillce upon theaitBf ot Free-dom." . . );. . . Broadcast Antiques fai,r Fifth grader Dirk 'Bass will show !Us collected old muskets and powder-itorns over WFIL-TV Wednesday morning, Aprjl I, on behalf of the eighth: annual Swarthmore Antiques Fal~ April 14, 15, and 16. The program is the Mary and Howard Jones Show at·IO:45. Dirk's appearance for the Fair was arranged by the Fair's general chairman Mrs. F. H. Forsythe and its publicity chairman Mrs. Peter E. Told. Members of the committee will forecast this year',s; Fair over WPWA with Marian Pedlow on April 13. '. , , (II saw it in The ~~!4Jtpm,¥,~~." Enjoy the salt ocean breeze and warm Spring sun at this famous beachfront holol. Oceanfronl Sun. decksllnd porches. indoo{lounges' and lelevision salon, excellent CUisine. Evening enlerbinmenl for guests ilidudn music, movies bridge, gameS, lad da_ I:fot -':"~~ and c:oId ocean waler in all balhs, ,I _. ES doz2ge 'ifi~~.~.. ; ;-.. . fa'.. . :).. '... . ~.' -~ f ;1 l;'·· . . '. 'RESEIVES .... a .. CUi.wI Do[i.i~9ic ", WITH:;'UCfI $5.00 PURCHASE ,~ ...... doll. 1Ie'_,~ buy .. II ...... \ 4CME MARKET,· Chester .Ild., '. Swarthmn . , . '., .:' I ,,,:- 0, .. 'lI.raday ... d Fridclyto·9P.M~ . . ,. . :. . .. .,' Open semireiGY .~ 6'.P~~· .'., '.: .. .:" ':.;r -i". ,.~.~~, .'~ .1'""._ ,'1_ ~.': , • Mereh . 27, 1,. 958 TOE SW• 1A RTBMOJlE..\N • Mrs,. Wood Nainei[f Judge ~:::~:.:.:::,~va~:ehor_ Quartet to Pre~ent.~. A,.~:~ v~~ta!n.c:=::tCe For Bermuda Pageant UCtillurIl! chiill-inan 'Of the. Gal- C;onCfrt Here April 3 the SW811hmore Rotary Club, and M . H·WOOd Waln' t lane den Cluli Federillloil Of Pennsyl~ Swarthmore College wUl pre- Mrs. Van Alen of Park avenue, i.N"',""',"w~;W"';W~;Wif rs. arry • u • vanla. She reeenUy won lIrst prize . attended the 255th District Con- "'hristlllall & .Ieire parents. Mr. and Mrs. Edward N. HaY at Ogden avenUe for a few daYs. has been asked to res>tesent .lit The' PhUitdelph11i Flower Show sent a chamber mUSIc concert ierence of Rotary in Atlantic City ... National Cou,ncllof State G~n for her al'iilllgi!llierit In "The neict FrIday, April 3, at 8: 15 in Sunday and Monday;sW 6-2290 HI 7-0674 CluP.. Inc,. !IS. aju\lge for The e~' M·"~r." ' Ciotbier Memorial by the Wash- Dr. Patrick M. Malin, Executive '. 'tl!.tls,....d. , , LlI P I B d ..... ~ ..... bl.t, ...... "'.'01 _ ca, .... <\, Easter, . ,y . agea~t n. ermu a. Mr. Wood. SUperinli!itdebt of Ington Quartet. Secretary of Civil Liberties Union, .. lei ...... ' •• i ~::I ~ to !!·e ~~ ~!: one Swarthmore College. will acom- Raoul Berger and Gordon addressed the group Sunday eve- "Co.to. Kite... Cab' .... " lfu e cano~ada and one fron! Eng' _ pany. Mrs. Wood on the trip.' staples, viollnists. Richard Parnas, nIng. I~;~~~~~~~~~~~ rom Mrs. Wood is to lecture for the Vl·olist and Paul Olef ...... cellist, Also attending from land. .' Gatden Club ot Bermuda and will will ~orm the M~ '''Hunt- more and vicinity' were Mr. and swoi It Hi ~I"" Mrs. Wood Is a mo:.mber .at ,the show pictures of the college cam- ing" quartet In B lIat, the Brahms Mrs. Horace Passmore, Mr. and W1lj.1~, ~'Q:bKS . Providence Garden ",lub, a life pus. quartet In. B fiat, opus 67, and Mrs. John Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Aohei '"" Rubbiab.Remtwed .. . a member ot the Winners Na~ the Debussy quartet in G mlnor. Joseph Reynolds, Dr. and Mrs. l.irwftt &d~ Winners at ·the Tuesd,a"y · .t... v~n- opus 19. The performance will be George Heckman, Georg• e Salmons ing meeting of the C. i'uln. ~. k fro ee. and the pulj)lc is Invited to and James Green. , . -£c" "te"rf.t• . ". sEREMBA • Representatives from the Ches-, i;:;:~':'~ ~~~~~~ii~~l Bridge Club include: seided ~orth attend. IMr Rotary Club included Mr. and and south Mrs. W, it'Dis- Mr. Berger is a pupil of Franz d 'd~& CUSTOM SLIP 'C1;)YERS kern and Mis. W. Kneisel and Carl' Flesch. and Mrs. John· .W . Carrol. .l, M.r. an RE..P. Yo . ..,;. iNstULED"' I II t M T SauIn1e a d Mrs I . tho CI . ttl Strln· . Mrs. Hugh Wagnon,. Mr. and Mrs, . .. . ..... Phona 0734 rs ; rs.. r n . p ayed' Wlth e nCllla g I. R. MacElwee, Mr. and Mrs. W. WARM-AIR bLSTER.ER i~~~::~~=!~~1J RusSell H. Kellt, second. Seated Quartet with Vladimir Bakalein- Edward Medford, Mr. and MrS. Furnaces Vaepilm Cleaned ·east and west: Mr. and Mrs. W. H. ikoff. The others are currently John Spencer, and Edmond Jones GEORGE MYERS Webb. first; Mrs. John Brown and members ot t?e 11!avy ~estra'i of Swarthmore. The Marcus H~k Box 48-Swa ..... more 6.0740 ·PIANO Mrs. H.' S~ Toole. second. an? have sludied·Jn the PhliadeI- 1 club representative was Benjanun anNde wil eSplIadir JHn&e' ""S'I"n cP~f aJ1u9l0s8 Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gustafson Aphciaad emarye a,o f MMr.u sSict,a palneds Mate sstrhse. MileS of Guernsey road. . ALBAN PARKER and two children, formerly of Elm Pamas and Olefsky at the Curtis Phone, MeiJlti 6-3555 avellue. are' now reSiding at. 3 Institute. The latter was solo cell- Leslie lane, Wallingford. ist ot the Philadelphia Orchestra 5$5jj at the. age ot 22 .. NEWS NOTES I Miss Teel Dunn of DiCkinson avenue 'WhO will be married PETER oi NICOLA Drlv.way Canstructlon . A (ompl.,.'nsurance iI"" Re., ,Estate Ageiq SW£ENIY &. CLYDE urday, April 11, to Mr. J~~:;~ I Mrs. Paul E. Zecher and chil- Edward Padgett, Jr., w:as dren Linda and Paul, 2nd of of honor at a surprise china show­Swarthmore avenue left Tuesday er given Thursday with Mrs. Allan AspJllilt 'Or Concrete canCll' WaHs' R •• Pla.stered Phona sWarthinorlt \ 29 EAST sm ST., CHESTER Phones: 3-6141 3-6142 ~291 4-4292 wto~ ksp einn dV ethnIen orre, mNa.IJn.,d ewri Vo> f Mtrhse. Mwe. llS masi thho satensds eMs. rs. A. E. Long- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zecher's mother Mrs. Maitha ,J. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith, Jr., Fisher. Mr. Zecher 'oY1ll jOin his I and son Jeitrey.of Webster, N. Y., family for the week-~I\d. are fhe guests at Mrs. ,9mlth's ~·7'II'rd. Generaflon 'uiJldl,n Samoel D. 'Clyde HoueE A. J. Edward Clyde '. '. ,'" .. Real Estate" • Insurance . . Samuel D. CI;1Ie, Jr. Geqrge Plowman . , Custon. '·Homes . --- .. _- -,' ._. .-- -'. .- -:--.-- Baird & Bird • ,. _ t . '. _ . _ . COR. DAR.T MOUTH a_lAFAYETTE AVENUES . Opposite SWarthmore 6,0108 Borough Hall sWIiI~."~r.e 6.1202 • PEtlsONAt. elatiOIl Sunset cW tor SWarthmorl' 2-434'6. for Ntautinoinnagl. ~' G~;;:: f Call Leaman, ADS wo- -~ =:;:=;=:--;3~~~~~=~~~:;:~3::;;;;;;;~~:;:===::: orm waene.k a. vCaaillal bMler sb. yK rtahfef t.h SouWr"a rdtahy-more 8C4555. FOR RENT-On Hill, second lIoor ' apartolent - Iivmg room, lIre­bedroom, private porch,· I ~t,'t~!" bath. Garage. Box S, The Swarthmore8II.· FOR RENT - Apartment-living room, bedroom, bath, kitchen_ in village. Available after June 1. Call SWarthmore' 6-3575 . REEVES . lalldlng Constractfo. 8esidenlial • l"aiimllQ Commercial • R" ... ~ • Allel'alioll8 171f2 So ... Ch.lhr, .1 ... ·swa ...... o .......... . ';: Charles E • .fischet .. · . , ,'. -. _ ... ', .. --~~-- -~-- - -- REslDENTlll ~'MD .C OMMERCIAL " .. CONSTRUCTION Alteraticins .... i.R. Freight Bldg. S1IJarthma':' •. Pa. J. F. BLACKMAN SW 8-6616 ~• , ~~roho~uose~. mC~al,I ~~~i;:~~~~~~~~~====~ We'll Par Top Prices·F.r· YOlr Old ti .. e~ • .... to 1liiy WhU. • Tn.. - for saf.", comfOlt and '. ai_ • Slop iii lOdayl NO MONIY DOWN - Uu."'l raMs FUSCO MOTOR CO. I CHESTER an. PAI'V_ ·ROADs Plto.. swarth ....... ' .. 6-3611 . HARRIS It CO~ TAaORS Mld' JIUIUUEBS UP. A-Mli'es.v~ .. FOR RENT - May 1 .:... Moylan apartment - furnished or un- ;-;;;:;;: furnished. Living room, open. fire-place, kitchen, 2 baths (tub and . All utilities. Separate one car. r~~~~~~~~~~~~t Pci.lRit.iRes. . statio!). and bells. Media, . Swarthm'ore. 0847. ~~~;r;~~~~~lia~n~d~6c-~45h8e~s ter. Telephon, e i~ -A;;';;;;;-=-= of Yale a·nd~~~;:~a~v~e~n~u~es~.1 ~~:;~~~~~~~~~: SWarthmore 6-4216 . FOR SALE .an'd ave .. ' at The Swa;rthmorean n Ii . TI." EN ~~ OIL HMT ~....as.M~,~_a..~n .... on IorUIi • OR. IU."I"CJ WAn. "IAnu DAY and NIGHT OIL BURNER SERVICE rolONDAY THRU SATURDAY NOON ". SW 6-4041 811M:JAYS and HOLIDAYS . sw ~-()7.40 . ,.;. COAL .' ·~iREPLACE WOOD ·J~A.CRE£N LADIES and MENS SUrrs MADE-T()..()lIDEil. Fe Pearl.t! .,....",'fo!a ./. HirJA J 'Giotls . ~. SWWtldtt'oPe 6005M mGH GRADE CLEANING, PRESSING aridREPAIIl. TQ(1I1' TI.P §'. IF! tr' ' .

---------- Page 23 ----------

'Miareh 21 1953 . , PageS THE'5W ARTH1\lOREA~ Swarthmore High School friends Swarthmore ,avenue, and Mrs. of Laura Hobbs of Park avenue Peter 1;. Told of Park avenue are h!lped celebrate )er 16th birthd.y . spending' seve;al days on, a motor' Saturday evening .~t I:'aura'~ hom~·trip to WilUamsburg, Va: · Mr. 'and ·Mrs. William H. Brown RUTGERS ,KINDERGARTEN of Riverview road have returned PARENTS, TO 'MEET home after spending 10 days a1 Dr. Ruth-Jean Eisenbud will ~inehurst, N. C. Var,iedProgram Tues. Delights Clubinember~ discuss the socialization of the five..;year-old with Rutgers Ave­nue Kindergarten pa~ents meeting She was the recipIent of ,two ' , ' lovely gifts~ the game ,~byrinth,: Mrs· JU,chard F! Bovard pI ~;E.: CONOMICAl', :Monday evening. March 30, in the kindergarten room. The talk will emphasize the whole child - a 'contente~ bein'g as well' as a good The Woman's Club of Swarth­more enjoyed an uDuSuallY flbe musical program' T~~ay', ~en Patsy Ruth O'Brien Of,' the" Phila­delphia Home for· In~urables, obe of the six' finalists in a ~~ent Eugene Ormandy 'Youth Contest, delighted .the audience, with her lovely soprano voice and ~harm­fng ,: personality. Her, group .of French songs were' sung ,with clear . enunciation, an'd . d,eel? feel­ing .. and 'a' long p)aying record, from 'Clarksburgi W. Va., is visitiJlg; her members of the 10th' grade, her parents' Mr. and Mrs. 'F. Norton class' at ·high school, . . . : Landon ~f NorthPrlnceton ave~ Mrs. Donald P: Jon(!s, daughter, Due for t~o weeks ov'er tile East­Beth and son Larry of· North' er season. 1 i t·· ! I • I. • When there is illnes; in IOur household, you want ihe beat semceto be had, regardless of cost. But it ,S worth noting that, although we, main~i,! hil~llethical standardi, WIth s edper-sonnel8Jld ample stoW, it costs no more to have your Do~or's 'prescri~onscom;. poundea here. Make it a point to' try us next time! CATHERMANIS DRUG STORE cltize·n . . Dr. Eisenbud, one ,of the p~,.. ents of the group, ~btairied her Ph.D from Harvard in the field of clinical ps~chology .. She is on the staff' of the Graduate Hospital, and maintains a private practice for psycho-analytical therapy. Mr~ and Mrs. Thomas A. Brad­shaw of Benjamin West avenue entertained 'as their week-end guest Mr. James F. PinIoiey of Wash\ngton, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold of Wallingford, will entertain infor­mally at their home tomorrow evening before the Series Dance in the Woman's Club. .' PONTIAC , , A ,General Motors Mlsterpiece "So Much' More of " ,Every'hing,...;.. " ~ Eii~ept; Price! , ' " 'C. ,R.' LOUGHEAD~ INC.· .. ,': ' "1 it"'" 'J!dgmont t-.ve.: , . cheder. ' . " " . (4111 CHister 3~33t4 .~.;' ., , :.. . .. .:"" . I, ' -.: . Among her· other, numbers which showed to ,advantage the wonderful range and sweetnes.c; her voice were "Let My Song Fill Your He..t", "Nocturne'" and "ItaUan Street Song." Mrs. Le-roy C. Gilbert, a graduate of the ANNO~NC'NG . ; PROMPT" DELlVER~ 9N New. FORDS , . NO-"" " • t- ~I , TRADE, NEa»ED' . " BUT Cincinnati School of ~usic, was Miss O'Brien's accompani~t. ~~iiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiii~~iiiiii~~iiiiii~~~ After the music, Mrs. Olivia tl Regar, one of the deal~rs in the Swarthmore Antiques !,'ai~" gave a very informative taUt on ,"An­tiques and Old China.", Mrs. Regar told of the history. of ,porcelain in Germany, France and England, giving special mention to Sevres, Wedgewood, Royai Worcester and Straffordshire ware. Club members were interested to leart! that the first china made in 'America' was manufactured in Philadelphia. One, of ,the best known American manufactUrers .was Tucker of Philadelphia, who'se work first appeared in the middle of the 19th, century. There :were. very, prosperous potteries in B~nnington" Vt. Of, particular i~­terest to us bi this' area . .is tl1e Et~scan majolica '~~e{ twhich was: . made ' in' PhoenixVille until the works' closed in the, 80~s: ' , .• ; r" ~ • ,_.. -I. • • - , "StudY. pf porcelain"" said M.-s, Regar, "~Oiuiects· "up, with. the his-tory, "I 'natic#Ul, . ~nq .. reftec~ ~r ar~t,cultur6an.d' faslrlons. . We should' 'not ;j~dg«- ,:china by the mark. '01' absen~eof it,but 'by, ~ti~~y;;chaiiicter tUid,workman- ~h.p.lt ". . :', ': .. , .. ,- ,. '.-:- .... :::-~. :~-:-;. ;'. DiLuiio .. &.·S ons,' :Florist lilies "Gardenlas , .' ,Tulips Azaleas Hydrangeas '" Hyachiths .. • .'. ,,\ .~ ;'. .: - • • • . ..~ : •. "' • l • . , . . ~ ,~ . :'. ): " . ~ ,; ,; ;~: '," Visit Our Greenhouse Early , and Setect from Our thousands of Blooms ~Mrs.- Donald W. Poole of North ~warthinore'" avenue ,e~tertaineda few, 'neighbors at a,luncheon.last Wed~e~day iii ho,nor' ~(Madame' ,. ,~ .j···.*SPECIAL! r~~naD.~e 'A\~,ear4, ~f France\vho We Telegraph - We 'Dellver ,Was visiting her.brother Mr. Ray:, . ." mond C. Lassiat.' aDd' family' " of 650 Baltimore Pik~ ,',. .. ' ": SWqlrtllinore 6.Q450 • 'Swarthmoreaveniie~"', ,.' Open 8 A. M. to 6.P. M. " . " ' !' '. :' ~" • j , ....\. :1-.• ',; ) ',' " ~-'~ Ii f I :, limited tinje only';';;~,:'~" introduce an excitiqg ,~perfUme , ,l?r. and: MrS'. ~alfer' Moir ,'shd ;~;~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IIJ ,~~u.gh.t e,L'S'JJnni, e. ' ,ana ,, JQ8o"'of • Yo' u Meet the ""Ciest 'l"'elDDJre a"t ,. Sp'" eare• s • ' PRINCE' MATCHAIELU'S , 4 Perfume Pune Crowns -a.lov~dand Crown Jew.l, imported from France-plul Stradivari ,and a new perfum •• a $5 value ft!s the talk of the town I Match your mood with four dlfferen~ perfumes ••• and also be the first to try Pi.MeI Ml.TCHAtIW'S exciting, new perfume-Wind Song. *NEW! Duch ••• , of York "Red Reel" lip.tickat no extra cha.". with new duch*e .. of York Colaln. Par. fum... ' ., $4 yoh,. fw ,$ 3 ~01:lth ',Che$ter ,rQad : WIll spend :Palm Sunday week-end in New York c~ty.,' , lVIrs. Earle P. Yerkes of Prince':' ton avenue will return this week­end from a 10-da~' slay, in At:" lantie City. Mr. Yerkes joined her there for a few" ,days. Mrs. ' Edmund' Jones and chil­dren Linda, Elet~, and Teddy of Haverford avenue, are spending the spring vacation of" the Swarthmore' Scho'ols visiting Mrs. Jones' parents Dr: anci Mrs.Alex­ander Purdy of Hartford, Conn. Mrs. Mary Foster and daughter Pamela of South Chester road will be in New York today to bid bon voyage to Mr. P. Jame~ Foster of Philadelphia, fo~erly of Swarth­more, who will' sail tomorrow on the Queen Mary for a' two-mo;"th visit with his sister' Mrs. Fred J efl'eries of Radlett, ;England. ' Mr. and Mrs. E: J. Faulkner of Dickinson avenue. are spending the college sprlD.g. vilcation visit­ing their daugh~r Jefyl, a stu­dent at Rollins College, Winter' Park, Fla. Mrs. H. H. Hopkins of Crest lane left Monday for a three­week visit witll her son-in-law and daughter Mr. and, Mrs. C. You'll falll~ love with Milton Pike. Jr., .Qf DeKalb. Ill, , ,the new, 1I1ac.laden duch*ess " Mrs; Peter E., " Told of Park of V.It'I'longer lasti~g ••• more potent tool And with each avenue, presen~, a Lenten' pro- ~~ ~~~ y~ receive PaINCI. !t\ATCHAIIW's creamy gram for the, W~man's Auxiliary _ ~ ,'ipStiCk-a gift for a limited II",. Onlyl of the St. Faith Episcopal Church, , , ',' Brookline, Wediu!sdayaftemoon. > • ..las PlUS T~, Lt. Henry A. Peirsol, J.r., of , .• O'U QUE T ~"!et:;=e :nv:: := '..' ,cruise to CUba " ',' , , ' - ESTER'S Fashion Corner EASTER FASHION for 1953 ORLON TOPPERS Completely ."tUMble. Can be washed in an,automatic IM3la.er. It~8'You can hang, it up to dry . . • never need to preSs it. It's __ ~ wrinkle:-proof • • ~,' it's water repellent! It's moth' proof and mUd,ew proof! Store it any­, Where! Misses sizes. White and pastels. ORLON FULL· LENGTH' COAtS ~ 49.98 '. '~',' 13 South Ch.ster Rd. , sw h " ,Mrs. W. R. S~oem~ of River~' art more 6-0476, view road entertafnect "'The ~t~ : Jwt one of m4ftll fClm0t&8 ci,afa 'On ~1e ',,,' our 'aeconcl' , , flOor CoatDepcirtntem. mIop FricJ4v 9:10 to 9":,00" .' ' ~m~' bii~f cl~b'at~ a' JuneheOn . ... . . iiiiiiiiiiiiii.liiiiiiii~iiilliiiiiiiiiii~~iiiilliiiliiiiliiiiiiiii~;;;;;';;"';'iiiiiii'." =' __ ;i; at the blgieJieukTUeSd.y. ' ", . .';. . ,( , , , ~ '.: . '" "

The Swarthmorean, 1953-03 | TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections (2024)

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