the wooster voice (wooster, oh), 1952-04-03

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e College of Wooster Open Works e Voice: 1951-1960 "e Voice" Student Newspaper Collection 4-3-1952 e Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03 Wooster Voice Editors Follow this and additional works at: hps://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1951-1960 is Book is brought to you for free and open access by the "e Voice" Student Newspaper Collection at Open Works, a service of e College of Wooster Libraries. It has been accepted for inclusion in e Voice: 1951-1960 by an authorized administrator of Open Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Editors, Wooster Voice, "e Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03" (1952). e Voice: 1951-1960. 28. hps://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1951-1960/28

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Page 1: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03

The College of WoosterOpen Works

The Voice: 1951-1960 "The Voice" Student Newspaper Collection

4-3-1952

The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03Wooster Voice Editors

Follow this and additional works at: https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1951-1960

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the "The Voice" Student Newspaper Collection at Open Works, a service of The College ofWooster Libraries. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Voice: 1951-1960 by an authorized administrator of Open Works. For more information,please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationEditors, Wooster Voice, "The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03" (1952). The Voice: 1951-1960. 28.https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1951-1960/28

Page 2: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03

0UR FUNNY FACULTY

See Page 4 HAPPY EASTER EGG!See You Again April 24

Published By the Sludenls of the College of Wooster

Volume LXVI WOOSTER, OHIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1952

lEIiEi C""3

1 livuMdin n r m ran ran

pageant Features'Magic Shoe5 Journey

The Magic Shoe" will be the pageant for this year's Color Day.

Written by Ivan Preston and Ron Felty, it emerged the favorite

0ver Barbara Fisher's entry "A Bit of Heather" from the Student-Senate-appointe-d

script judging committee last Thursday.

The pageant depicts a boy and girlfollowing the rainbow to find the pot

f gold at its end. They happen across

u 0d woman who tells them that

there is no pot of gold, but that at

he end of the rainbow is the most

beautiful thing in the world.Travelling in an old shoe, the boy

uid girl stop at six nursery rhyme

scenes.

The co-auth-ors are both junior Eng-lis- h

Majors and members of Second

Section. Preston is sports editor of the

VOICE and the INDEX and co-edit- or

of the present Student Directory. He

lives in Pittsburgh, Pa.Felty is a varsity guard in basket-bill- .

His home town is Ironton, O.Bill McGraw chaired the committee

which selected the winning pageant.Paul Bushnell, Joan Waters, Bob Jol-lif- f,

Miss Frances Guille, WilliamGass, and Donald Shanower were theother members of the committee.

Dcdds Lecture

Considers 'Aspirin'Here April 24

"Human Values in An AspirinAge" will be the topic of a lecture here on April 24 by Dr. JohnV. Dodds, professor of Englishit Stanford University, Stanford,California.

A Wooster alumnus, class of 1924,be received an honorary degree ofdoctor of literature at a chapel conv-

ocation in 1945. However, his memb-

ership in the college "family" goeslack to 1918 as his father, the lateDr. Samuel Dodds, taught BiblicalDoctrine at booster until his ret-

irement in 1931.Professor Dodds received his M.A.Yale in 1927 and his Ph.D. there

in 1932. He taught English at theL'niversity of Pittsburgh before goinglo Stanford in 1937 where he became1 full professor in two years. Hefounded the Stanford UniversitySchool of Humanities in 1942 and

' its dean until 1948. At presentis on loan at Emory University,

Georgia as Guest Lecturer.As an author he has written "Tho-""- J

Southej-ne- , Dramatist", 1933;"hackery: A Critical Portrait" wasPublished in 1941. His newest book is

Age of Paradox: A Biographyof England, 1841-1851- ". ProfessorWds has edited, with Arnold Whit-n"Se- ,

"An Oxford Anthology of Eng-lls- h

Prose"; with Hardin Craig,of English Fiction", and in

1M ', "Modern British and AmericanfV' with W. H. Dunham.

Hoc' Schreiber Switches To English

Again After 6 Month German TourProfessor William I. Schreiber,

has jwt returned to Wooster afternilny. As one of learningmeanstwin . . i . . .

culture ProfessorSch

'j-'be-

r had volunteered to lecturej" United States Centers of Int-

onation, or "America Houses,"0u8hout the American zone.America Houses" are rather like

Jure World Fairs, according toth'VSOr Schreiber-

- Libraries, lecture,'rJensn mV'e haUs' k'nd""

ns. and, in Munich, even a model

CT"! kitchen' help to bring tief "'M to these Ameri-sciou- ,

taEuropeans. Universitye primary innu-b- r

ced y gfOUP'he centers.

t(Jofsor Schreiber received his lec- -

Baitia"1?nments from the Speakers'

toJ rf HlCOG- - His sub)ects'rem The Development of

Director Felty

Completes Casting

For "Magic Shoe II

Ron Felty, director of the ColorDay pageant, and his casting com-mittee have selected through try-out- s

the 21-pers-on cast for the

nursery-rhym- e fantasy to be pro-duced May 10.

Tom Hughart will narrate the pro-gram. Eight other voice parts roundout the sound part of the cast. DonElliot speaks as Edward, Ginger Ferrisas Ruth, Bob Hull as Jack Be Nimble,Susie Weaver as the old woman, DavePalmer and Bill Patterson as SimpleSimon, Fred Wollerman as PanchoDiablo, and Sandy Wishart as Hump-ty- -

Dumpty.The pantomime will be acted by

Tom Wise (Edward), Sylvia Spencer(Ruth), Ted Budrow (Jack B. Nim-

ble), Bette Hanna (the old woman),Jim loll iff (Simple Simon), BobDavies (Pancho Diablo), Dick Shep-par- d

( Humpty-Dumpty- ), Carol Mauer(Mice), Betty Patti (Cat), Jan Hitch-

cock (LU' Jack Horner), D. D. Mellon(Old King Cole), and Bill Garber(Georgie Porgie).

Rehearsals for the cast begin imme-

diately after vacation.Maxine Schnitzer, Joan Waters, and

Bill McGraw assisted Felty in choos-

ing the cast.

Summer SchoolOpens June 10;

Catalogue ReadyFourteen departments will offer a

total of 43 courses in the College's1952 summer session opening June 10.

it was announced this weeje.

Catalogues of the session are avail-

able at the Registrar's office, and pros-

pective students who find courseswhich they wish to take not listed

are asked to see Professor Lowell W.Coolidge, Dean of the summer session,

in the English office, or to leave a

note for him in the Registrar's office.If six or more persons request any

course not listed, an attempt will be

made to arrange for it, according to

Mr. Coolidge.Registration for students now en-

rolled will be held May 5-- 7 at the

same time as advanced registration for

the fall semester. Eight or nine credits

may be earned in the eight week

session, which ends August 2.

head of the German Department,a six month research leave to Ger-mor- e

about the present German

American Railroads to How the Christ-

mas Tree Came to America to The

Settling of the Northwest Territory.He lectured in Bonn, his home town

and now the capital of West Germany,

Munich, Erlangen and other centers.

Because he went as a private indi-

vidual among the German people, Pro-

fessor Schreiber seldom spoke English

during those six months. When he

appeared, without notes, before his

first large audience, he requested that

the listeners help should he "get

stuck." But, as a matter of fact, the

audience needed the help, because its

lecturer commenced to use regional

dialects, switching from one to an- -

( Continued on pge four)

5 --4 4

V 5

Act'1 .S-- V . T:

Howard King

s

-

i ? i

A y si

Publications ProblemReviewed By Senate

Student Senators considered the i

function and chairmanship of thePublications Committee at theirmeeting last Monday night. Thediscussion centered on whetherthe committee should have a faculty or a student chairman, andon a clarification of the presentstand of the committee as to itsfunction.

The discussion was preceded by

a report from the PublicationsCommittee announcing appoint-ment of Dick Shepherd as nextyear's INDEX Manager, andGeorge Bender in the same ca-

pacity for the VOICE. Don Orr,present INDEX Business Man-

ager, had suggested at the Publi-

cations meeting that the existingsalaries be abolished and someother method of credit be set up.A committee was appointed by theChairman of the PublicationsCommittee to investigate othermeans 6f compensauon.

President Elwood Sperry clarifiedthe present stand of the PublicationsCommittee as to its function: "TheCommittee shall have no control overeditorial policy, but it shall adviseon literary style, format, and goodtaste." Senator Bob Atwell suggestedthat with a student chairman, the fac-

ulty could not be accused of censor-

ing censoring the VOICE, in par-

ticular, and that the arrangementwould relieve the Administration of

one more burden.

Present membership of theCommittee was also explained by

President Sperry. It consists of a

faculty chairman appointed by the

Dean of the College and the Stu-

dent Senate President, a faculty

College To Be Host

To Art ConferenceInvitations have bcn sent to 36

colleges and institutions of the Ohio

Valley Art-- League for the conference

to be held at Wooster Saturday, May

19, in Galpin Hall. The group will as-

semble to discuss problems and to

exchange ideas on art in the college

curriculum.

Frank Biebel, Wooster alumnus,

will be moderator at a panel discus-

sion of "What Contemporary Artists

Are Doing and What the Public Un-

derstands and Accepts," during the

morning session. Members of the pan-

el will be Irwin Frey, sculptor, from

Ohio State University; George Culler,

head of the Akron Art Institute; and

Paul Travis, painter, of the Cleveland

Institute of Art.

Delegates will be invited to see

the Cleveland Water Color Show and

the exhibition of Ohio sculptors which

will be on display in the Josephine

Long Wishart Art Museum from April2-- 2.

Courteiy Wooster Da4y RacordReed Geigex

member from the economics de-

partment, editor and businessmanager of both INDEX andVOICE, with the retiring editorsin an advisory capacity, Presi-

dent and Treasurer of the StudentSenate, President of the College,

(Continued on page four)

Singing SectionsCompete May 2

Eight sections will compete in theSerenade Contest to be held on May2 for the silver plaque now held by

last year's winner, Eighth Section.Don Shawver will be master of cere-

monies for the evening's festivities.

Section song leaders are: First, DickSnyder, Second, Jim Hughes; Third,Bob Schneider and Tom Wise; Fourth,George Breakwell; Fifth, Gil Bloom;Sixth, Dick Carter; Seventh, BillS-ton- er; and Eighth, Ellis Clouse.Judges will be Mrs. Marjorie Golder,Miss Eve Richmond, Mr. Karl Trumpand Mr. Frederick Moore.

Charles Taft Keynotes Convention As

Student GOP's Battle Here April 30Charles P. Taft, brother of Ohio

Senator Robert A. Taft and candi-date for the Republican nomina-

tion for governor of the State ofOhio, will be the keynote speakerfor the mock Republican conven-tion to be held here April 30.

Confirmation of Mr. Taft as speaker

came on Tuesday after a series oftelephone calls between Mr. Taft andMr. Marion Graven, Wayne CountyRepublican Committee Chairman.

A graduate of Yale Law School, Mr.Taft has been a prominent Cincinnatilawyer since 1922. He has been prose-

cuting attorney of Hamilton County,an original member of the CincinnatiCitv Charter Committee, and for manyyears a member of the Cincinnati CityCouncil. In 1947, he was elected president of the Federal Council of

Churches for a one year term. Duringthe last war, he served as director ofCommunity War Services for the Fed-

eral Security Agency. Throughout all

his life he has displayed an active in-

terest in local political and religious

projects.General Chairman Walter Wolf

announced this week the commit-

tee chairman for the four conven-

tion committees. Roger Erikson

will be in charge of the Resolu-

tions Committee; Charles Ardery

will head the Rules and Order of

Business Committee; Boyd Cook

will lead the Permanent Organiza-

tion Committee; and Frank Cook

will oversee the Credentials Com-

mittee.Several changes in the state delega-

tion chairmen were also announced

Bender, ShepphardHead Business Staffs

Student editors of the VOICE and INDEX for the school year1952-195- 3 were named by the Publications Committee last week.Howard King was confirmed as editor-in-chie- f of the VOICE, whileReed Geiger was named to the top INDEX post.

At another meeting last Monday,George Bender was approved as Busi-

ness Manager of the VOICE and DickSheppard was given the same positionon the INDEX.

King, a junior majoring in PoliticalScience, has served as Associate Editoron this year's staff of the VOICE,assuming the editorship following theresignation of Jean Snyder. The neweditor is a member of First Sectionand makes his home in Wooster.

Reed Geiger is a sophomore fromLakewood, Ohio and is a member ofSixth section. He has been a memberof the staff of the 1952 INDEX, serving as an assistant editor.

Bender, who will handle the booksfor the VOICE, is a junior from NewPhiladelphia, Ohio. A member of Sec-

ond section, George served as Auditorthis year.

Sheppard takes on the financial woesof the INDEX, following his serviceas Advertising Manager of the 1952book. Dick is a sophomore from WestCarrollton, Ohio.

Under a recent ruling of the Publications Committee, the new staffsbegin operation following Spring vacation. Other staff positions for bothpublications will be announced later

'Quixote' FilmComes April 24

Members of Los Amigos and SigmaAlpha Pi, under the direction of SenorH. J. Valeila, are bringing the fdm"Don Quixote" by Cervantes to West-

minster Chapel, April 30, at 7:30 p.m.

The film, which was produced inSpain in 1949, is complete with Eng-

lish titles. Consjdered the greatest ofall Spanish films, "Don Quixote" is

the story of a "cra2y" knight who setsout to settle all grievances.

I k i ,

11 FiMr. Charles P. Taft

recently by Wolf. Brian Underwoodwill be the Arkansas chairman; Lin-

coln Griswold, Minnesota; John Low-rie- ,

South Carolina; Bev Lindholm,Hawaii ; and Loren Shearer, Districtof Columbia.

The convention is scheduled to be-

gin with an afternoon session for de-

bate on the platform beginning at3:30. The evening session will beginat 6:45, with the keynote addressplanned for 7:00. Nominations for thePresident and Vice-Preside- nt will be-

gin immediately after the keynotespeech.

Margitan, McGraw

Win Lead Roles

In Color Day 'Lady'Lorraine Margitan and Bill

McGraw will head the cast of theLittle Theater's next production,"The Lady's Not For Burning",director W. C. Craig announced thisweek. Christopher Fry's comedy of15th century witchcraft will be pre-sented as part of the Color Day cele-

bration, May 7, 8, 9, and 10.

The part of Jenet Jourdemayne, ac-

cused of witchcraft but undeservingof death and unwilling to surrenderherself to it, will be taken by LorryMargitan. Bill McGraw will playThomas Mendip, a discharged soldier,anxious for death, but unable to con-

vince anyone he is criminal enoughto deserve it.

Gordon Roadarmel will take therole of Nicholas Davize and Art Hookwill play Humphrey, his brother. PegBatterman will portray Margaret De-

vize, their mother, and Mary Limbachwill appear as Alizon Eliot, the girlboth young men want to marry. Thepart of the mayor of the small markettown of Cool Clary is assigned toPaul Bushnell. Richard, the mayor'sorphaned clerk, will be played by DonHaskell, the Chaplain by Bill Garber,and a Justice by Don Brown. The roleof Matthew Skipps has not yet beencast.

Wooster SendsGump To India

John Gump has been chosen asWooster's representative in India forthe two year term, 1952-54- . Electedby a special committee of faculty andstudents, he will leave in June to takeup his duties at Ewing Christian Col-lege at Allahabad University in theLInited Provinces.

As a teacher of English in the schooland head resident of a men's dormi-tory, Gump will represent "not onlyWooster College but the ideas ofChristianity and democracy." He willtry to acquaint Ewing students withthe way of life at Wooster and stimu-late a friendship between the twoschools. His position is, he goes onto say, "a clearing house representa-tive for students of both colleges."

John will write from time to timeof the work he is doing and will tryto organize an exchange of letters andpictures between students here andthose in India.

Wooster-in-Indi- a is sponsored joint-ly by the S.C.C. and the Board of For-eign Missions of the Presbyterianchurch. Past representatives fromWooster have been Charlie Croghan,whose term ends this year, Dave Black-shea- r,

representative from 1948-5- 0, andJohn Bathgate, 1946-48- .

Glee Club NamesAllen President

Mark Allen was elected president ofthe Men's Glee Club Monday after-noon at the group's final meeting ofthe year. The executive board of theGlee Club will remain next year ex-

cept for one new officer to be chosenfrom the freshmen members. A new-busines-

s

manager will be appointedlater by Mr. Karl Trump, director.

Among other business discussed bythe Glee Club was the possibility oftaking a trip along Skyline Drive toFlorida next year.

Page 3: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03

Thursday, April 3.Page Two WOOSTER VOICE 1952

Systems Without Honor?As we were trying to redistribute the mass of waste paper which

constantly covers the desk of the VOICE editor the other day wecame across a letter which, although unsigned, contains such a pro-

fusion of fallacious reasoning concerning the honor system that weare taking the liberty of reproducing part of it here. After the writerexplains how he feels the system will work ("which of the temptedsouls wil begin to copy his "A" neighbor's paper"), he goes on to say:

"As long as we can remember, we have been taught not to"tattle-tale.- " We found that if we did tattle on our best friendwe often lost his close friendship and also got a scolding fromour parents for telling the tale. The honor system is a completereversal of this picture, forcing students to tattle on their friends.

Is there one of us who has not, in desperation, been temptedto glance at his neighbor's caper? Why didn't you do It? Becausethe prof, was there watching you. He may be a good friend,but ne also represents authority and, if a warning fails, he hasthe long accepted power of judgement over those he has warned.It was not your grand standard of a no cheating policy that haskept you from the crime, it has been the presence of the onepower of authority, and not a lot of little, undecided powers,who has kept you under control.

In at least one of the girls' dorms at the beginning of everyyear, the honor system is tried in regard to quiet hour rules.The system always fails, and so it shall fail forever, or at leastuntil each student becomes so immune to her conscience that shewill do anything to her dorm-mate- s in the name of the law."

Without taking issue with what this writer has said, we would liketo point out some of the logical consequences ot such an attitude ineither students or faculty. We are reminded once again of the Fortunemagazine article entitled ' Group-Thin- k, in which our society iscriticized for its lack of creativeness and our love of the system.This letter expresses the very thing that inspires the "group-thin- k

article, that is, an inherent fear of self expression and noncomformity.

In this case, we feel that it is a mistake to conform to a uselessand outmoded standard such as the "I will not tattle' philosophyWe are in this school because we have supposedly reached the ageof common sense, because we are expected to be able to make ourown decisions without having someone look over our shoulders allthe time.

Every day we complain because we are not given enough freedom.We don't like to be told when to come home, when to go to bed,when to go to church or chapel. Yet when we are given one chanceto do something on our own, we fumble and complain because "wedon't want the responsibility."

The question we would like to pose is this: How can we ever ex-

pect to be given more freedom, more chances to make decisions withour own judgment as a guide, when we refuse to accept the responsi-bility which logically accompanies such freedom? Until we are will-

ing to assume this responsibility, we have no right to ask for therevision of any rules that we might feel to be oppressive or unfair.

H. K.

So The Bands Play On

The Student Senate recently improved its policy of union bandsfor all dances on campus by adding enforcement power to the policyadopted a year ago. The administration has backed up the Senate'sstand. The policy is the only practical one possible under the exist-

ing circumstances.

Immediate reaction to the American Federation of Labor's mu-

sicians' union dogmatic canon that the entire campus be regardedas one unit is to boycott union bands. But Senate experience last yearfound this position untenable. When the campus was blacklisted bythe union because one group had employed a nonunion band for adance, last year's Senate resolved to hire only nonunion bands. Butit soon found that the number of such bands in this area is insuf-

ficient to meet the needs caused by the calendar of dances.

Last year's Senate was thus forced to advocate that all organiza-tions on campus contract only union bands. They formed this recom-mendation on the assumption that dances were still wanted and onthe fact that nonunion bands could not perform for the number ofdances wanted.

This year's Senate has added teeth to the policy. It clears all bandcontracts to make certain that its policy is not violated. Its DanceBand Committee automatically approves any union band (and isarmed with a list of union bands to help organizations select a band).

Two provisions guard against violations of this plan. If a non-union band is contracted, the campus organization must pay theband, but must cancel the dance. If this stipulation is circumventedand a nonunion band plays for a dance, then the organization spon-soring the dance is suspended from social activities for a period tobe determined by the Student Senate.

The Senate has made the policy of one year's standing a real oneone with power to compel its observance. The plan protects each

organization from being blacklisted through short-sighte- d action byanother organization on campus.

Forced into a corner by the musicians' union, the Senate and theAdministration have prudently taken the only stand that will pro-vide the campus with a variety of dance music.

R. D.

lia&dtei VaiceThe WOOSTER VOICE, official itudent publication of the College of Wootter, b

publiihed at Wooiter, Ohio, weekly during the ichool year except holidays, examinationand vacation periods. Subscription price is 92.00 a year. Editorial offices are located inroom 15, Kauke Hall, phone 413. Members ol the Associated Collegiate Press and the OhioCollege Newspaper Association and printed by the Henery Printing Company. Representedfor national advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., NewYork, N. T. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Wooster, Ohio, underAct of August 24, 1912.

HOWARD KING, Editor

Richard Duke, Associate Editor Ivan Preston, Sports Editor

Jim Boerincer News EditorTom Felt Make-u- p EditorJeah Laurie Managing EditorPat Blossfji Copy Editor

William Arbus, Business Manager

Phyllis Bertinc, Circulation Manager Ceorce Bender, Auditor

Staff Assistants: Mary Crow, Martha Crow, Lauretta Dyer, Lee Terry, MarciaLizza, Fred Cropp, Frank Cook, Ivan Preston, Nell Maxwell, Mary Richards,Janla Miller, Pat Gilman, Mary J. Tenny, Carol Cobb, Gordoa Roadannel,John Bergen, Jay Cox, Mary Ronsheim, Donnis Birchard, Elsie Morrill, BevSeheSdemantle, Heather Munson, Marilyn Price, Linda Loucka, Jean Mardn-etti- ,

Gwen Walking, Qif Buahnell.

.

- )

PLEASE . .

"MORNIN "

Say Something!by Nell Maxwell

There is the dead quiet of ahaunted house on a summer'snight when the moon is full,when the crickets are chirping,when the owl hoots over thehill. There is the concentrateduncomfortable silence that de-

scends over a conversation whensome unthinking soul inquiresafter the boyfriend who has re-

cently gone the way of all boy-

friends and is dialing anothernumber for his coke dates. Thereis the whispering hush of a fu-

neral parlor.But all these are as nothing

compared to the unutterable hor-

ror of the thick oppressive still-

ness of the campus work factory.'The lib" a friendly informal

title is a deceiving one to applyto such a morgue. It should bewritten THE LIBRARY, althougheven that is not enough to ex-

press the awesome solemnity ofthe rows of students who porelike slaves over their heavy tomes.Their side-lon- g glances and fur-

tive whispers are worthy of thesouls who shall stand at the LastJudgement before the great throneof God, awaiting their sentencewith the knowledge that it will beeverlasting damnation.

There are those, it is said, whocan actually study in such an at-

mosphere; there are even a few,it is reported, who prefer this im-

personal air to that of some morefriendly room where the spectreof Sleep lurks to catch the studentwho refuses to go to bed at a con-

ventional hour.Those who cannot study in this

place of stolen conversation, rust-

ling pages, and echoing footstepsare not quite so fortunate. Themusic room, the dormitory, theShack, or the Union may providea comfortably noisy place to studyin for a while, but the inevitable,in the form of reserve books,must sometime catch up withthem.

These unfortunates may thushave their hell on earth and per-

haps who knows? escape eternalpunishment that way. But a hellin the hereafter would at least befilled with the screams of the tor-

mented; one damned there wouldhave some comfort in the con-

sciousness that other lost soulswere keeping him company. Ar.dto those condemned to expiationhere, there is nothing quite sofull of terror as the spectacle ofa room filled with these formswhich seem dead, all the whilereason screams that they must be

alive, that they must be capableof movement . . .

There was a Wooster studentin bygone days who proposed thatthe infernal sticks to which librarynewspapers are attached should beremoved and put to a better use.He was in favor of a duel, to b-be-gun

on the top of the centerdesk and continued, la Fair-

banks, from one table-to-p to an-

other.

This proposal undoubtedly hasits merits, but somehow our per-

sonal tastes seem to run to a loudand not too tuneful SalvationArmy band.

Two of the girls' dorms opened their doors to the public of Wooster College this past weekend. Westminster was transported out of this world lastFriday night. The occupants made it the universe. The living room was filledwith a rocket ship. And if you signed up for a trip through space, a "uni-versite- "

would escort you up the stairways to Paradise and Heaven, throughthe planets, asteroids, Big and Little Dippers, and other Heavenly bodies. Thesmoker was converted into a starlight room for dancing. Luckily earthlythings, iced cookies and punch, were served for refreshments.

Next door Scot Cottage, was much more mortal. "Bars and Stripes"was the theme. Friday, visiting inmates were fingerprinted and told toput down their major crime. The permanent residents of this prison badtheir misdemeanors registered for posterity on "Ye Honorable DemeritChart". Further statements of their crimes were posted on each door, suchas the following,

I killed a man.I'm glad of my crime.He's jazzed upBACH

For the very last time I

The kitchen became the "autopsy room"; the smoker, "the gas chamber";the telephone, "the general alarm"; and appropriately, the head resident'sroom, that of "the Warden." Bread, made a bit more appetizing by a cheesespread, and water were served. One very interesting notice under the clockread "How about leaving the clock alone so that people will get places ontime. Alter all, you will see him in the morning." I gather that that sign, un-like the others, is permanent.

Fourth Section had a Hobo Dance in Lower Babcock last Friday night.Couples came dressed in their old clothes, which, translated into Woosterterms, means jeans. The walls were covered with sketches of railroads,tramps, and other objects familiar to the hobo world.The main event of this past weekend was naturalhv the SDrinc-- Formal TV,,

decoration committee got very sophisticated this year and attempted to changethe gym into a penthouse. The doorway became an elevator, and the bandplayed in rront of French doors. The ceiling was decorated with blue crrnrpaper and stars. Above the walls of the penthouse terrace was the skyline ofNew York. Since there were no refreshments at the dance First, Sond andFourth Sections held open house during the intermission. First followed themodernistic tone of the evening by exhibiting their art (?) collection.

Publications Group Explains FunctionTo the Editor:

In view of the recent confusion of student opinion in the matter of

lications, it seems appropriate to describe the composition and operation ofthe Publications Committee.

The Publications Committee of the College of Wooster operates uode,

a statute which was adopted In 1949. The committee is a student faculty

group and currently functions as a sub-commit- tee of the Student Faculty

Relations Committee.

The membership of the committee is as follows: a faculty chairon,appointed by the co-chair- men of the SFRC; a faculty member from

economics department who acts as a financial advisor; the Dean of Men- -

the

President and Dean of the college, who are ex-offic- io members; the Preside,and Treasurer of the Student Senate; the present Editor and Business Manageof the VOICE; the present and past Editors and Business Managers 0f the

INDEX; and the President of the junior class.A major purpose of the committee is to exercise financial control to

prevent the VOICE and INDEX from running a deficit. The faculty

advisor is required to sign all contracts and to keep tab on budget oper-ations. The business managers are required to make periodic financial

reports to the entire committee and the committee passes upon salary

schedules.Another function of the committee is to advise editors on questions of

format, content and literary style. It should be clearly understood that tfui

provision does not include any direction of editorial policy, nor does the

committee exercise any jurisdiction over matters of opinion. The jurisdiction

of the committee includes final action on charges of inaccuracy, libel and

poor taste. Because of the practical difficulties involved, the advisory function

is largely performed by the chairman of the committee.The committee possesses an electoral function through the requirement

that nominations for the positions of editor and business manager for both

the VOICE and the INDEX must be approved by the committee before they

become effective.We are currently engaged in the task of revising the statute of the

Publications Committee as well as the operational statutes for the VOICE

and the INDEX. The aim of the current revision is to bring these doc-

uments up to date and more in line with practice.The current student petitions demonstrate the need for a clarification of

the manner in which student publications are held responsible to our college

community. It is hoped that this letter has helped serve this purpose.Sincerely,

Joe H. Bindley, ChairmanPublications Committee

More On: AuthorityDear Editor:

It is strange how seemingly unrelated news items such as "Carnegie Preiy

Visits Campus For Week-end"- , and "Student Petition Spurs Debate On Co-

llege Publications Policy" (Wooster Voice March 21)) do in the larger view

have subtle relationships.

Two students in a letter to the editor (Wooster Voice March 21) ask

among three questions 1) the difference between advice and control, 2)

the source of administrative power. I would like to quote in answer to

this from an address by Mr. Chester I. Barnard, President, Rockefeller

Foundation at a meeting of the National Association of Deans and A-dvisers of Men at Williamsburg, Virginia, March, 1950. The title of his ad-

dress was "Authority."

"My views on the subject of authority ... I don't suppose were original

but they certainly were not orthodox, because I have insisted that the fund-

amental theory of authority comes from the bottom and never comes from the

top . . .1 suppose the myth that authority comes from the top is responsible

for more difficulty in international and national affairs, and in schools, bus-

inesses and homes, than arises from any other single source."

Mr. Barnard goes on to support his opinion that authority comes from

the bottom. "Let us deal first with some of the subjective aspects of

authority. If you transmit an instruction or an order to somebody that be

or she cannot understand, it obviously cannot have any authority. You

can't get anything done unless you are able to communicate it Ptrbmf

at least fifty per cent of the art of communication lies In the listener, the

recipient of the instruction . . . There is another aspect of authority of

which Tolstoy was well aware, and that is the recipient of an instructionor an order has got to be able to carry it out . . . You will find all

through the business world, and I think through the educariooal world,

if you look carefully enough, case after case where instructions are given

in good faith, which are so irrelevant to the actual concrete situation that

they can't possibly be carried out, and frequently they are not . . . People

become quite expert in knowing what orders or what rules not to pay

attention to in the Army, the Navy, and in business organizations. Tbey

learn what is really important, and, for the most part, what people artwilling to do depends upon their sense of what is fit to do.

In order to secure order there has to be a formal and objective scheme of

authority. The authority that comes from the bottom is the authority that

accepts the obpective scheme, the hierarchy, the necessity for the communic-

ations . . . The question of responsibility, which is so closely related .

Responsibility always must be greater than authority, or an organization wouW

break down.

Any organization that has a good morale has people who feel for and

have an interest in accomplishments that are not in the book, and may

not be within the scope of their formal authority or formal functions.

I finally come to the question of persuasion ... in connection with 'Ho

do you get things coordinated without formauthority?' . . . There are manyof persuasion . . . One form of persuasion is to set up conditions of fe"I suppose that it is a net loss, in other words, that it is a failure. It is

other case where authority does not work from the tup . . . Much more i-mportant is persuasion by conditioning and education . . Conditioning people so

they can act on their own responsibility and own authority ... the last Firtof education and training consists in exposition. That is another form of

persuasion. The intellectual appeal.

Finally, I would put in the class of persuasion perhaps by stretchingthe word too much what is implicit in a good deal of what I have a-

lready said, and that is the art of creating the conditions of autonomuJorganization. The great battle between the totalitarians and the deno-crati- c

liberals is really this; to what extent can you, by formal direction,attain results as against creating and developing and permitting autonom-ous organizations which operate on their own responsibility rI believe that each generation seeks to better Wooster An es.sent.al

this is better student, faculty and administrative relations but as any teamsterof old would say, "you cannot rein a horse in when he is pulling an upr"11

load." We go to an American history class and learn of separation of

church and press from the state; we go to a compulsory chapel and read a

censored school paper. We go to introductory philosophy class and learn t

ph.Iosoph.cal fallacies; in defense of administrative policies we are givenargumentum ad vericundiam. Is it small wonder that we are concerned anthese incongruities?

Sincerely yours.

R. J. Ross

Page 4: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03

rtdaAgril 3, 1952

tfQOSTEB ViS SPORTS

by Ivan Preston. I il... 1 . f . i . .

j-jj-

IS WttN nas wcu inc uesi nine in year ior intr.imurais, with both an

rn00n and evening sport under way. At this writing, Fifth, Second, and

Sixth have led the way on the volleyball court, with the Phi Delts undefeated

five gimes. It's easy the way they do it, with such big boys as Tom

cCutdieon, Jack Holt, Dick Paige, Dick Milligan, and John Welsh. SecondJ,ai Bob Voelkel, Bob Clark, and Jay Cox to go up against them, and some

0f Sixth's best spikers are Don Leber, Carl Fleming, Vern Netzley, and Tom

Cannon. The winners will be decided before this issue comes out, but not in

dme to be put in print.

ON THE SOFTBALL FIELDS all is not well. Everybody would rather have

, practice game instead of just a practice, but when the sore comes out some-

one like 113 they should realize they've jumped the gun a bit. There prob- -

1.. won t oe any &m viui "nui" uuui a. .vuic wrew arrex vaca

tioa when the pitchers settle down and the fielders finally locate the handle on

be balL Till then no hits, many runs, and many errors.

flNEY BUSACK, Scot Basketball captain in 19-1- 9, has done something to

nuke his old coaches very proud of him. Himself a coach, Miney recently ledOregon's Rogue River High School to the State Class B Basketball Tournamenttfumpionship. How did he get so far away from home? Mose tells us that"Miney just got in his trailer and didn't stop until he found himself inOregon." Some of this year's coaching prospects who may have to do a bit

of traveling before they settle down are Tom McCutcheon, Paul Steiner, WesQiie, and Al Van Wie.

VTHY GET EXCITED about the Indians' home opener on the 18th when

,ou can see the Scots open up a whole day earlier! The Mauling Methodists

from Ohio Wesleyan will provide the opposition in the Stadium debut whichshould unveil a much stronger squad than last year's strictly average outfit.The Wooster-Wesleya- n game last year ran 12 innings to a 9-- 9 tie; this year

ix Scots should have the needed strength to win convincingly and to improve

co their record of 6 wins and 8 losses.

FEATURED on the schedule will be a number of grudge matches againstteams which weren't content just to win but had to embarrass us as well.Oberlin got away twice, 11-- 5 and 10-- 3; Kent won, 10-- 3; and Kenyon came outon top, 12-- 7. Ashland's 17-- 6 holocaust was the most disappointing defeat, butthe Eagles won't appear among this year's opponents.

MUSKINGUM will be among the teams seeking revenge for last year'sScot victories. The Muskies got the short end of a tight 3-- 2 battle of thehurlers when Keith Shearer did bis best mound job of the year. Allegheny wasdowned, 5-- 3, with Wally Joachim cutting off two 9th-innin- g runs by a spectacu-

lar catch, and Otterbein blew a 12-1- 1 decision in the 9th after getting 5 runsin the 8th. This all foretells some exciting contests this spring, though whoon tell from one game to the next whether they'll be close, well-playe- d

pitchers' battles or close, loosely-playe- d fumble fiascos.

AL PYERS, laid low by his daring skyscraper feats atop the Wooster bus,should be back on his feet sometime this spring, we're glad to learn, but won'tbe working full time until next fall when his leg will be completely healed.

AND SPEAKING of legs we'll be on our last ones soon if we don't getsotne new blood to belp write the rwws (we call it) that appears on this page.Anyone wishing to become a sports writer may apply at the old, converted carbarn next to Scovel Hall between the hours of noon and 2 A--

M. If you can'tmake it then, come some other time, VX'e'll be glad to have you.

Visit our Gadget Bar for the unusual gift, including Sewing Kits, KissTimers postage stamp holders for a small fee, $1.00 and up.

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WOOSTER VOICE

Football CoachesSpeak At Clinic

Last Saturday the Wooster CollegeAthletic Department was host to IX)football coaches and fans at its sec-ond annual football clinic. The morning and afternoon sessions of the clinictook place in the cage while the evening session was moved to Douglass.

After registration in the mnrninsSam Masi, Coach at Barberton H.hSchool talked about the backfield ofthe single wing. Marv English of OhioNorthern discussed the organizationof a defensive line, and lade Behri- O

lectured on guards and tackles onoffense.

After lunch the clinic resumed asJoe Thomas of DePauw spoke about

End Play." Jim Loughridge fromCuyahoga Falls High School talkedon the subject "Backfield Techniquesof the T." Chudt Mather, coach ofMassillon High School, gave two Lec-

tures, "Off-Seaso- n Duties of the

-- LP

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trot ,

COACH MARV ENGLISH

Coach" and "Practice Organiiatioa."la the evening there was a panel

discussion and a talk by Mr. Paul Bar-

rett oo the subject of "The Marginof Surprise." The movie "TouchdownTown," a story of football at Massil-

lon High School, was also show.

Baseball Tennis, Golf And Track

Open As Squads Get BackAll of Wooster's varsity sprine sports squads will see action for

the first time against other schools soon after vacation. The baseballteam inaugurates the 1952 season by playing Ohio Wesleyan hereApril 1 .

On Saturday, April 19 the golf team plays host to Kent State; twodays later the tennis team travels to Cleveland for a match with rennCollege. The first track meet is scheduled in Severance Stadium withCapital and Otterbein on April 26.

Coach Swigart's diamond men havespent the last week or more outdoors,after working out in the gym for sev-

eral weeks. Although the infield hasnot been in shape for infield practice,the Scots have engaged in some hittingpractice.

Nine lettermen help to make upthe thirty or more aspirants for theteam. The monogram winners are:Keith Shearer and Tom McCutcheon,pitchers; Eddie Matin and Ramon Do-de- z,

catchers; Dyke Kanai, shortstop;Bob Baab, third base; Wally Joachimand Bob Bush, outfielders; and WesCrile, second base.

Others who have had considerablevarsity experience are Carl Fleming,Al Rocco, and Dick Milligan. Amongthe newcomers are Bill Stoner, BudBarta, Darryl Smith, Cliff Elliott, andEd Beckler.

Some thirty Wooster runners, jump-

ers, and throwers have made use ofthe moderately warm weather duringthe past two weeks for their practicesessions. The dash men have workedboth on starts and speed, while thelonger distance runners have roamedthe country north of town.

Coach Munson's track team hasseven lettermen back from the fine

1951 squad. Co-captai-ns Dave Allison

(mile and two mile) and Bob Ander-

son (440 and mile relay) will defendan undefeated string against "foreign"foes in their respective specialties.

Other award winners are: Jack Hay-war- d,

record-breakin- g weight thrower;John Keitt and Art Louch, hurdles;Dick May, mile and half mile, and Bill

Prouty, dashes. Several others have had

varsity experience.Among the freshmen are Jim Price

and CTeorge Dawkins, dashes; George

Bowers, broad jump and 440; and

Fred McKirachin, 80 run.

Coach Shipe will have two of his

regulars back to push the little white

ball around the golf course. Dick

Paige, top linksman from last year's

team, and Dave Augspurger are the

veterarw who hope to lead the small

team to another successful season.

The tennis team has gone throughlittle organized practice so far, but

Mose Hole's proteges will have at

least four among them who have had

varsity experience. Pete Vosteen, Bob

Ackerly, Dirck Meengs, and JohnFarmer saw action ta-i- t year.

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Scot athletes fromhonored last Friday

all sports wereevening at the

3rd annual athletic department banquet given at the Smithville Inn.Participating were all those variouspersons connected in various wayswithe the Wooster athletic program.

The invocation, presented by DeanYoung, was followed by the famousdinner which consisted of the usualample supply of chicken flanked by

noodles, biscuits, jam, butter, potatoes,dessert, candy, nuts, and topped offwith "turns."

Although oo "big name" speakerswert present, the banquet was consid-

ered a great success. Many of thosepresent commented on the evening ofenjoyment resjlting from the humor-

ous antics of the speakers.

Mose Hole, toastmaster for the eve-

ning, introduced the speechmakers.President Emeritus Wishart presenteda historical account .of Scot athletics.Following "Prexy" were Dr. Williams,pastor erf the First PresbyterianChurch, representing the Board oiTrustees. Tom McCutcheon, captainof the '52 basketball team, spoke forthe students; Dean Taeusch represent-ed the faculty; and Df. Lowry express-

ed the feelings of the administration.

Coach Hole was honored by mem-

bers oi the 'W' association in com-memorati- oc

erf his birthday. Mose'sgift may be seen either in his officechair or on the seat of his car (?).

Pge Three

Fifth Section Paces Volleyball Loop

With Unbeaten Record In Six Games;

Second, Sixth Tied As Runnrs-U- p

As they entered their final game last night Fifth Section still ledthe Kenarden League in volleyball with an undefeated record. Fol-

lowing in the steps of last year's team, which also won the leaguewith an undefeated record, the Fifth Section boys have already wonsix straight games while losing none.

Paced by Spider McCutcheon, Jack Holt, Tom Greee, John Farmer,Dick Milligan, and Dick Paige, Fifth has rolled over Fourth, Sixth,Third, Seventh, hirst and Eighth with little trouble.

following the leaders in a secondplace tie are Sixth Section and SecondSection, each with five victories andone defeat. Thus far. Sixth has lostonly to Fifth in a tight contest Sec-

ond, however, has been beaten by

Sixth and was not scheduled to playFifth until last night.

In third place is Eighth Section withthree wins and three defeats, followedby Seventh with two victories and fourset-bad- u.

Oo Tuesday, March 25, action be-

gan when Seventh rallied to downFirst in three games by scores of 11-1- 5,

15--4, and 15-- 4. On the other BoorSixth was downing Second in twostraight matches to remain in a tiefor second place. Sixth won the firstgame, 15-- 6, and then came back towin the second, 15-- 7. Eight beatFourth in two straight, 15-- 6 and 15-1- 3,

and Fifth rolled over Third in twogames, 15-- 5 and 17-1- 5.

Thursday night featured a contestbetween Eighth and Second in whichSecood came from behind in the lastgame to win by a 15-1- 3 score. Secondwon the first game, 15-- 3, but Eighthhad come back to tie it with a 15-"- 1

victory.In other matches played, Seventh

downed Third in the final game towin by two games to one. The scores,

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in favor of Seventh, were 15-- 9, 9-1- 5,

and 15-- 4. Sixth came back after A firstgame defeat by Fourth to win thenext two games without much trouble;the scores were 15-- 8 and 15-- 4. Fourthhad won the first, 15-- 9. In the finalgame of the evening Fifth continuedits winning ways as it trounced Firstby scores of 15-- 8 and 15-- 4.

On Tuesday of this week the topthree teams again won to keep the

(Cootinaed on page four)

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Page 5: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1952-04-03

Page Four WOOSTER VOICE ThorsdaJ, April 3, 1952

during Monday night's dress re-

hearsal in search of the "news behindthe news." The first person I ran into(he nearly knocked me down a flightof stairs) was Mr. Barry Floyd, theRichard Murgatroyd-Handsom- e HarryHoward villain of the production. Atfirst I thought he was practicing hissweeping stage entrances, especiallysince he was muttering "curses" underhis breath, but then he told me hispredicament. "It's these blasted hand-

cuffs," he said. "I've got them lockedon tight and can't get them off." In-

vestigation revealed the sad truth; af-

ter two years of faithful theater ser-

vice the prop handcuffs had finallydecided to serve the cause of the law,and so had attached themselves to thenearest villain and then refused tobudge.

After a fruitless search for anon-existe- nt key to the stubborncuffs, Professor William Craigcalled for the assistance of themen who use handcuffs mostthe local constabulary. A night ser-

geant soon arrived with a ring ofhandcuff keys, and the cast all be-

gan to breathe easier.

However, fate was not kind to Mr.Barry Floyd that night, for none of thekeys would even fit into the lock ofthe handcuffs, much less openthem. After commenting that such keys

were no longer made, the policemansuggested the only other alternativehe offered to take the traitorous man-

acles and their prisoner to a nearbymachinist who had the tools and skill

necessary to saw the cuffs. He thenled the dashing villain, complete with

yAe Jtal jbliiacedV" I At f 1 , .

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CURSES . . .

Handcuffed Villain Calls Police. . . FOILED AGAIN

by Howard KingAnyone who ever accused the faculty of this college of lacking

a sense of humor will have to swallow their words after this week'sperformances of "Gold in the Hills." There are no adjectives to describe the audience s reaction to theantics of their supposedly solemn pro-

fessors as they gave their impressionsof old fashioned American melodramaas it should be played.

Thinking that there was perhapsmore to such a performance than metthe eye, this reporter wandered back-

stage

black cape, out to the police cruiserand off into the night.

Here the story departs from itsmelodramatic plot, for instead ofbeing de-hand-

ed by the saw, ourhero-villai- n was set free withouta hitch. He was even returned toTaylor Hall In time to come fly-

ing down the aisle and on to thestage to rake his first lines.The incident will not be forgotten,however, for the next day a reporter

from the Daily Record investigatedthe strange notations on the policeblotter about making a call at TaylorHall, then to a machinist's home, andthen back to Taylor, and the Fame ofFloyd was spread throughout Wooster.

KENARDEN LEAGUE STANDINGS

V ...VI ...II ....VIIIVII .rv ...in ...i

Phaedrus philosophized:

You will soon break tlie t

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FATHER PHILIP SHIPE castsout daughter Georgia Harrah inthe first act of the comedy melo-

drama "Gold in the Hills" whichoccupies the Little Theatre stagethis week. Daughter Clare Robin-

son and housekeeper ElizabethCoyle plead against father's

Volleyball(Continued from page three)

race tight. Fifth started off by down-ing Eighth in two straight matches byscores of 15-1- 1 and 15-- 9. Sixth kepttheir hopes alive when they beatThird, also in two straight games.Sixth won the first, 15-1- 0, then tookthe second by a 15-- 9 count.

In a close third and deciding game,Second came from behind to squeakby a strong stubborn Seventh squadby a score of 17 to 15. Second hadwon the first, 15-1- 6, and Seventhhad taken the second game on a 15-- 8

score. In the evening's final contest

Fourth also came from behind in the

third game to down First, 15-1- 1.

Fourth got . off to a good start when

they won the first game, 15-- 0, but slow-

ed up in the second when they weredefeated 15-- 3 by First.

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Senate(Continued from page one)

Dean of the College, Dean of

Men, and one other faculty mem-

ber appointed by the rest of the

membership. This means a 6--5

majority for the students on the

Committee.

Maxine Schnitzer remarked that a

faculty chairman might be better quali-

fied to advise on matters of style and

good taste, while Atwell pointed out

that a faculty chairman might censor

the VOICE on make-u- p night, on be-

half of the Committee. President

Sperry reminded the Senate, however,

that the Committee as a whole is to

perform these duties.

Another factor suggested by

Don Hartsough was that with a

faculty chairman, students have a

majority vote. Paul Clark finally

suggested the possibility of elec-

tion from among the members of

the Committee itself. Thus the

chairman might be etiher student

or faculty, and might vary from

year to year. No final action was

taken on the issue.

A recommendation that the new Stu-

dent Senate review and emulate the

preferential ballot system was pro-

posed by Jane Abernethy and passed

unanimously by the Senate. The action

followed a report by Margaret Beekel,

appointed by the Senate to investigate

student reaction to the preferentialballot which was used in the last elec-

tion. She explained that there has

been a great deal of confusion due to

a lack of understanding of how the

votes were tabulated.

President Sperry appointed Don

Hartsough and Sara Jane Little NSAco-chairm- an for the remainder of the

year, and George Kuzmishin to inves-

tigate the worth of WCW.

WSSF THANKS COLLEGE

A fifty-dolla- r gift from the stu-

dents and faculty of the college has

been acknowledged by the WorldStudent Service Fund. The fund is or-

ganized to help meet the needs of

European and Asiatic students.

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Dr. Schreiber Returns(Continued from page one)

other to confuse his listeners. One stu-

dent remarked: "You look and act like

an American, but you talk like a Ger-

man. Which are you?"

The answer could well be "both."

Prof. Schreiber was born in Bonn,

which he revisited during January and

February of this year, and he had

completed some of his secondary edu-

cation before emigrating in 1923 to

this country, where he obtained hisdegrees. His last trip to Germany was

in 19J7.

One of the most startling aspects of

his lecture experiences was the phys-

ical appearance of the audiences. The

war left cruel and painful marks.Many were without arms or legs;

others were blind: on n. k..

a small bone was all that rPmof the nose; and a shrapnfmarred the forehead of another

Beginning in the next issue of ,uVOICE, an article in serial f0 'Professor Schreiber, entitled Demracy in Concrete, will present a Dirt,'of the life of a few of these plthat of some University students hare practicing democracy in a Ge aBunker.

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