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Document 1927237
{I '1)::.:1 HA VE RF OR D.NE W S ,. S%.00 A VEAl ARDMORE, P A. WEDNESDAY, li.AY 16, 1945 VOLUME -NUMBER 29 Haverfprd - 7~\fart~ore Varieti~ Friday Bigh t Rand R Member's to Leave fOr Germany ' Wet Paint' Plus Swarthmore Effort Should Equal a Hit R&R Story on Page 2 ResearciJ.er Digs Into Old RiYalry BY " NE•S On Fr-iday, May 18 and Sat· urday, May 19, S\nrthmore College and Haverford College will combine t.alent.s and effort to present one of the most stu· pendous eollege mu,icals of all EDITOII The reeent resumption of the Paint Wan between the Scarlet and the Carnet naturally has given rioe to a rood deal of acbolaily interest &J to the aoureet and the baclc:cround of all thia atrlfo. The only woy to get thiJ ln!oanation seemed to be by delving Into old bookl and mlddle..aced .profenon, whlcb wat done.. The. reaulbl proved exceedingly lnte""'llnc .•• Foo.-O Started It Ail lllave:rfo.r d.Swartbmore rival· ry bu alwaya centered a round tllo football came• between the two. The tlrst ~cllron club tool< ploee on December L3, 1879 with Ba•erlonl eme.,Pnc vletoriouo. Since that time, the talu ba•e rone ·d nt one wa7 and tb01l another with the nUJDber of vietorleo for eoeh colapproxi-lely the oome. ISwarthmore atOI boldo a alight edro. The oerleo between Ill• two wu Interrupted MYeral timea. o - In 1liCU ond op~n in 1005 when it became e<rldent thet, for oome nuon or ooth•r. Swarthmore team•t.hooubweJrbSc&riet ed and outelaoaed· cridmen ond that . lllul.n&... a ~tea~mc u1c1 utoND:r pme .... our ~·411 .,.~not a ...... wall Tho lateot .ftptun was amoothed o•ot when President 1 Morley took over the admlnfatraUve dutieo ol tho. college and recuJar cameo wue pl17ed in 1961 a nd 1942. Since then, the war baa temporaflly Interrupt- w ~~~~:iv:~~~t~s :::;: ~~~ ::; two -institutions c oes, altbouch tlle Baverfonl 'B ' teom baa played the Swarthmore Jaynu twice, In 1&43 and 1944, deleat· Inc them both tlmeo. Both eo!- !!~:Sm~ti!n'~r;wa-~ e!~er~,.~~ after the war. , BattiN of the Donllre Concurrent with thla rivalry in the field of football and other athletie., then was a certain amount o ( aggreuion on the part of both institution•. Swarth· ~~r:te~t~e:~: 0~ ~~t:~fr.,!!: 0 fires prematurely while Haverfordians eountered in like fa.sh· lon a nd with variationa. And thu1 began the Paint Wars. These campaign.s consisted o.f groups Of atudenta from one college eovertly viaitinr the other around 3:00 a. m. with buckets of paint .and brushes, and generoualy ladling t.he picment around the stonework and waUs of the vktim. Retaliatlont followed each raid and thus a cham of events wu be&'Un which haa not e:ndtd· to the present day, although tlle wa r and the college administration• have IU«eeded In patting a damper on the activities of the more ag. l'l'esl!ve members o( their re· tPect1ve atude~t bodlet. Bwartbaaoro FeiDted Feebly Bat iMplte or these obataclea, the daubing deri>y wu atarted •cain early in April when Swa.rthmore raided Haverford and got away with the que.tlon· able laurels of apUling some paint on the roada ond anndd obtained tlnd ~anc!a'o:O bolr<ut, ad,:~:~ free of charae. Ten daya later, C'AtthlwJ " , .,, , ... tJme. The ahow, the Haverford hall of which hu been christen· ed "W.E'l' .PAL'IT, or WHO •MM)E 11HE GARNET SEE SCA!RLET," will be a t wo-.bour extravaganza with each of the two college• offering an hour of fun and frolic.. . ' Wet Paint oe- Who Made the Gamet See Scarlet Act I PlanninJI[ Scene (at nuerfonl) .chorua . Act Ill __ Dormitory Grouman, Oppenheimer, Birdsall, Walton, Clay. ton, J ac,obs, Roche, Whitman, Long, ~to~e; . The Founder 1 Roundert (Good, Barker, Ollv•cr, White· bead); ChoruS. . Act IV Faculty ~ene Beardsley, Knight, Whitman, Bnrker. Alenick, Mathis; Cborut. Aet V Student Councils. Seene u n..• Levinson, " ultman; Ch orua. ~!emben ot the 0\orua Roche, Edgerton, Stone, Whitman, "Gunniaon, Dom J acob Whlt<1hcad ,Mc.ad Yamane Bleeker, ' . . ' ' .... ~ ' ' Barker, Alenick, Clayton, ru.athis, Ktndler, Lycett. !le.m..bera ol the Ballet. Beardaley, Barker, Alenfck, "Whitehead, Lycett, G Ed gerton, unn1aon. · Dl.rector· ID·Chld Katc.hen. . 1 • Musle Katehen. .\', ... '-. • ..-. L • ond Script . yneo Grosa,man, Thomaa, Beardsley, Levmaon. llualnou ond Uaaon Ja~. Tbompoon, Gt·ven " NotJ·c~ "" - - - . ~ Papers BY c·ty 1 ~.,. -~ '<Creditor Gets Song and Don.......O.IIece Lad• Play to Pay Domagea." Such ..,.. the headline on a atory In tho Phna· delphia I nquirer for Sotanlay, May 6, about t.be forthcomlns Uons, amounts to $400.00. All t tudent.a are urged to bring t his ford and Swarthmore Colleg-es thtir familiea t.nd date.s to outllt show, whkh is o·f sueh vital im· fint the probably are comedy) (musical starinr on~ portance to both colleges. to ge·t. themselve• out of a bill for damaging each other's prop. Swarthmore to Feature Girls The program of the Haverb~ ford ~~)'~~!·u~er.oplnlon show, which is expected to ., \ Good One" be only slightly s uperior to "Ok· Is elsewhere on this lahoma/' Althou:h the J)reaa was ward· ed oft' In attempts to make stor.- page. A part of the Swarth· wi11 be given by the show more ie.s out of the original paint girl1. This po"rtion of the show raidt, all three Philadelphia ha.a been given in anny hospiamuaed newspapers have gi\•en wit.h great succen and has treatment to the show-''a good tals been included in the Haverford·~~e, too," as tho Jnquirer puts Swarthmore musicnl by popular ~ntribTwo ot the higher-ups . fn the request. Haverfo~il production, both with undoubt- ~~;nn~ J'uliu~b~!~ t~~ edly just renown in the ouUide chen and nine lusty Jyria by world, permitted the variety Alfred Grossman, John Beard· show to share with them a brief 1ley, David Thoinu, and Henry and rnthe~ inatcurate not.e in Levinson. the Record's "Small Town Talk'' From the moment when the on May 7: two institutions accepted the ·• · · Understand that the idea of n. jolnt .production to pay lyr1cs for the Haverfonl for the damages o! intcrnlc:ino Col1ege-Swarthmore College warfare, the Haverford contin· musical tomedy, which will gent of write.t a, aetors, maslebe given · May 18 ond U, ian.! and stage deJ.Ignera have have been writ~en by J ohn been feverbhly and productiveBeardsley, Marme _veteran, ly at work. The unutually abort who fa alao dlr«ting the period tn whlch to write and re,. dances. . T-he mu..ic is by hearae the ahow hu Men only ' ~uliut Katchen of Carnegie an added incentive to thcir elHall fame. forta. Raid Hi.Atorlte Given Pciotero to be Dl.otriboted The feature atories in t he Evening Bulletin (which, we a rc The Committee" for Publieity, Reads) under the leaderohlp of Arch told, Nearly Everybody for !loy 4 and tho Ree~nl f or J ac:obs, plana to have posters ln Aid:more, Roa.e.Diont, Haverford. h11torf.., eoae contalned 6 May of tlle ~da ond tlle renooia of and Bryn Mawr. In addition, the vanety show. They even publicity l'!leoies will be aent mentL<>ned the ,~wart.hmore ~oed to tho • leading Philadelphia who oqueal<!l and gaYo Bav- nawapapero. It Is hoped that erfonl tho opportunity of pre- this will augment the numbers pa~nc proper delenaos. The In- of Collece atudent. and friend& qutrer lhatrated • Ita . feature ao aa to surpass tho goal Of tour hundred attendanc~ story ~lth a cartoon ~t!-:~~~~~~~~~rcof a:!:~ Aet 11 P&iat.ina Scene- (at Swarthmore) d Cb Boll oruJ. · et an H. Levinson, Yamane, Harden; Deliriu_m Coliege Show Show to Be Gf. .n Twice Swarthmore will come to Ha•· erfonl on Friday night, when tbe abow will be given at Roberta Ballot 8:16p.m., and B ..erfonl will co to ~more on S.turda7 nlcht where tlle ohow will have ita second and lut performance. '1\ieketa will be aold to outaiden aVthe door on the nichta of the performance. Arranee.menta ha•e also been made to aeU ticket& to tlle atudenta in tllo next few doyo. AD ~keto will be aold at Jl.lO and tlle money earned . from their aalo will be 1>1ed to pay for reparations of damage eou..d to both eoUecea at tho Umo of the celobrsted raldl. The quota of Baverfonl CoUoce, with regard to theae repara- Kato, Lone, Steefof. • .....,. j ventured ne•::::gJ ,-..- t'Aiit r wo • 'll'......._y, llay 11, 1NI DAVI!RPORD NB'II'S Eight R and R Girls to Leave for Ge~y; Post .W~ World-->. Morley Urges Charity in . Haverford News F ounded F•bruaf'J' U. U Ot f.Jtlo1: WILLIAM H . CtuaT1NU Bttdlrtlt M:nr•t.u: 4..._f.KCI 0 . Snuu S/'O" J f./Jior: NATtcAN J. Z~I'LU.. Nnu E.Jilom Al fred 0. Croumln, Robc-tt P. R.odtr, Matti&~ Sandrn. Joho T. Whiunaa. £1ttor: Man.in J. Oppeol.rimrt. Nnn AuorUim Jamn F. Ad.1.nu, Jr., J ollo N. 1Lwtrr~ kobcr·t P. Parro. M~nlo $q;al. joha A. $tOM. A}.·,..,; S~tW Au«Uin: / Commends Work l1 So u to all'ord the Haver- !Will Aid. Return fo·r d-Swarthmore abow the Of Slave Workers Done by Forum; crut.est -lble eo•erara, the NEWS Ia thla week d., On Continen~ Students Speak l!;.ti;.~tt: Jolao BardtJcr, Juliw Jtatc:Mn. D. Bud ,_,...,~ S#'Or/1 AIJ«uln: 'C"J ii.am P. LrkC't, II, Y ali1to F. Bow· unh, U, Frlftc:iJ A. On-it, Jr. Alwrlhi•l M•a..ttt: Bcoj.a.min Colll.ru. Cirr-t~l•liolf M•u&n: M~nrcw E. Akoldt. Clrnll•llolf AJJorU/rJ: Matthew $. Cncll, hue Lrccu. Phot•&r•,hk 1\JJoci.tt: Charla a. Moore. br tM nuda ~r of Hnufcwd Cotlcat ...utr t.h.routbowl tAt aLJ.dc-mic rcw. Prio tcd br tao. Atdmoft Pfun.i.a.a Compl.nf, 4t R.iru..o.bouc Placr, Atdmorc. Pa. rw~JUhcd Entcrtd u tcCOnd-clus auuc.r J.t tM Ardmore. Pa.. Poat wadu Ac1 of ~c-., Awpn H, UU. 06tc. In charco of thl.s loSDe: Al.f red D. Gr-•an Aui Wiedersehen AFTER TWO YEARS of training men and women for Relief and Reconstruction work in Europe and an equal period of trying to ha\'e these men and woman placed in posltionJ where aueh people are imperative, Profeubr Douglas V. Steert and his staff a re finally seeing fi.nt fruit. Three dlfrerent types of unit.a have been in the R. &. R. progrnm alnce ita inception in the winter of 1948. ·Unsympathetic ftction by the Federal Government prevented the flr1t two from ~ompleting more than one tenn of the coune. It · was · only when units composed a lmost entirely o r women were rec.ruited that plana could be made with any ceNinty more than a few wuks a head. Moat or the memben or the memben of the first women'a bnlt, who completed their course last December, are now engaged in social ~·ork of various sort.a in Mexico and Porto Rico, ns well as in this country. The unconditional surrender of Germany has lclt the tra~ic problem of displaced persons. It will be as Junior Admlnistra· tiva AUII'It.nnLa in the Dis placed Persona Scc:tion of the United Natlons Relief und Rehabilitation Administration that several o! the girl• from the present unit will go to Germa.ny. This work is vital in the reconstruction of EurOpe, and it requires people whh t he kind of training that these girls have had at Haverford. This is not to1s.ny that t hey would not bettt:r be used by an ngency like the F riends' Service Committee: UNRRA has been riddled by power politics and hamstrung by the u1ual Potomac r ed tape, or which there have been bumper crops in the past few yenra. It would be fnr better for Europe and f or the American tnxpn)•er if this relief work had tfte ty'pe of manngcment gh•en by llerbl'rt Hoover nfler the lnst wmr. But it is doublful if there is sufficient npprcciaLion of the situntion in Washington f or these girl_, to risk wniting. UNRRA is going to net in Europe, no mutter how incompetently and sloppily. Private ugendes have no n.!'Jurance or nny f reedom or action as yet. Th~ XEWS c.onl!ratul:nes Profenor St~ro and his staff on the fine manner in which the R. & R. Program has been con· ductt'd. If the product.s of this training nre uSed sensibly, they \\;II pro\·e in\•aklllb1e in repairing t he phy.slt:al ~and moral de\·asta· tion ol the European wn.r . We shttll be sorry to ne the girls lerl\'<'; they hn,·e added 3 grent dent to Hfe at Haverford. In their new jobs in Germany. we wish them c\•en• .success. " Wet l'nint" in Roberts . " . t.h , h u 1 h T c 1 10l enrd round e Mtun Line. wu Bred Aprll 7 at. 3 n. m. when n Swnrthmore delegation \'l&ited the Haverford Col· ltogc Cnmpua, nod attempted to decorate Lho aamo with paint. Crhn reprisals followed within ten daya when tolgbteen Ha verford st.nlwart.s t"etu.rnc:d the doubtful com.plimenL On totaling the ~ill for damages. u. was fo~, to the dt.Smay of both student bochea, ~bat somebody was gomg to have to pay and pay and pay. A the cessation o! hostilities. wae decla~, and the memben s tudent councill o.f both colle~a met under their respective flags brotherly love. The agreeof truce in the env~na of. the citY ment reached.at thas meetmg batted t.he pre11ea of the 'Haverford NEWS . There wu goiog to be a show. The Haverford.Swarthmore Variety Show will be held .May 18 in Roberta Hall and May 19 In Swarthmore'• Clothier Hall • Both colIere• h ave poo1ed their Anny<Navy-and.Marine depleted resourc:ea. The c.omedy bas been writ ten, produced, and will be acted solely by the etudent 'bodlea of both lnotltutlono. When tho eurtaln iON doWn for the fut time on May 10, It will brine to a eloae the last performanee of.one of the most otrancely motinted ohowa the theatre baa aeon In a lonr time. The NDWS abould like to~ Ita thank.. aDd eonrrata1allono to thoae who are malrinlr thla obow puulble, aDd to hopa that In the. not too dl.st4nt fUture, meh a obow will beeome an annual tradltlOJl...to the two CTO&t I_Ditltutlona wbleb ·have.been ..,.,h · bttter rlvalf for to lo~. of of . Lut Sunday neni.Dc, the lnter·Falth Forum ruumed ita aetivitiM with a Prayer Meeting in a~rdanee with Prui· dent Truman'a V-E Proclama· tion. 'l'he speaker of the eve-ninl' was Prealdent Felix M.. Morley. Two mlnloterial otudents, Robert C. Good and David Johnaon, offerfl<l a pi'IJtr and a abort addn>aa rupeetiYOiy. After openluc hla talk with a commendation of the alma of the Inter-Faith Forum, Dr. Mor· l~y went on t.o empba.ajs.e the ne«uity tor cooperation and eharity In poet war national aDd lnte.rD&tionol relatlono. IPresldent Morley aelected a text ap.. propriate to the oeeulon, I Corinthian& 8, In wbleb P>aul uy·• · "Knowledge p~eth a·p, but charity edifteth.." JohDeoa revealed the need for opirltua1 plonninr. If the meehanleel procents of the peat.e a.re to be re.. aUud, On Sunday evenlor, May 20, the Forum will have u its speaker Swami Nllthllananda, who will talk on the ftnal alma of Hlndulam. All student. and faculty membel'l are invited to · atund. Payro Elected IRC Pres.ident At a meeting held Thunday C\'ening. Ma)' 10, In Govern· ment House. Robert P. Payro was elected preeldent of t.M International Relatlona Club for tbe year 194~6. William H. Chartener, current president. and David E. Long, secretary, wi11 retire at the. ex· piration or the preaent term. Profe11or Edmund H. Stinne., who remains as faculty advisor for the eoming ausion, enter· t&ined the group at the Straw following a d iaeuuion of the curren·t. national and Intern•· tiona) political s tructure. One oC the matn toplea of the meet· ing was the et!'eet the present changes In thi administration have had on the current national scene. Thl.s meeting f onnn.Uy clOI<'d the weekly diacun ions held by tho joint bodies f rom Haverford and Rosemont Col· leges. ::~!t 'iOno llmltlnc our ediiDrial comment& to two colu.tllMy a mon wbleb will he beartll:r appreciated by the enttn ad· minlatratlon and tac.u.lty. ElcM meml>en of Bawr- ~ord'a ReeoD&tnoet!oo aDd Be- lid Ulllt ba'N" M ........t ap.. polntmaot. from the Ualtod Na- tioDI Rellaf aDd Rabai>Wtatioo (UNBBA), I A.dmlnlotratloo "hieh plaeoo them La U... for u lmmedlat. ahem trallll.q JIH!ocl in tbl.sfeountry, followlq whleh Summer Term I i!i:: ~~Lot-::: :t:: with the e....tlon Of Two .Months suddenly b.oatllitleo eon"-t oow upon riP! Opens June 25 eumlnatlon thenqalred. elc'bt I of La Ew<>pe and only pua1nc of I a~ the ph~ All have been I.Dt.rrl-.d by u The oummer aualon will opao UNBBA rtpreHDt&U.. ud on ~une 25, offerJ.nr 22 coUJ"Hi ha1'e met the ap and other redonttg a poriocl of two montha. quiremente. To a.-t lJUNdlat41y ~::.-:.:s~~ LDHe~~Cad~ Tboee """'IY!nc the appo!ntbury, Meldrum, ~:rder, Wylie, Kell:r; Pfnndt, Comfort, Oak- ments are Ruth A. Andanon, ley, Fou, Baob.am, Pep!nok;r Nancy L. Cunalnabam, Batt:r K. Freybof, Eloisa Gec~My, and Mn. AMDIIo. All elauea will meet live ~;,' :;~ey,~n;e.,{'·.~ ~~!j a week unluo otherwiae Wendell w. WIW.mo. They will Maih. 1 wUJ meet two eon- r<>port almoat lmmedlatly upo~ aeeutlve bonn In the mort>~n¥· suceeaoful eompletlon of the Fren<h 2 and Spanish 1 tw~ phyaleal examination to Waohone in~n !or a abort orie.ntatlon boun tn the mominc La the afternoon. wblle GermAn eoune at the UNRRA tralnlnc 1 will meet one bou.r In the aehool In Collece Park, Mar:r· momlnc aDd one hour La the land. ~ollowlnc thla brlaf trai.DLDa afternoon an aeeeuory hour lj'_;;:~r th~:.!"tratl~ ~1a"t bannc atlu to be arranae<L Aa U.ted In the aehedule of ante to uaembly eaoten La couneo ~,_ted by the Dun'a Gv-many under the dilplaced Offlee, Bi~llcal IJ~ratur.~ Ia penona aeetlon of UNRRA. and 6b, B1olon 2 and .Ca, Chem- Their work there will c:ontl.at of is try S, 4, 4, alJ .one-term sum- aicllnc' those non-German war mer c:ouraea, Enrllah b and refugees and at.ve taboren, l2a, Fren~ 2(a&b), German transplanted from their homel_(a&b). H11tory 14b, Mathema- • lands. to r<>turn onee apln. The ties 1 and S, Phllooophy 6b and Red Croas baa recently lnereued 2la, Physico 1a and 8b, Payeh- Its J ormer eatlmate of the nvmol~gy Ia aud Spanlab 1(a&b) her bf aueh penons from 10,000,000 to 18,000,000. will be offered thJa• aumme.r. Workero Needed All atudent. ar<> expeeted to The sudden and ac:ute need take three c:ounes or their equivalent plua Pbyoleal Eduea- for people in tbla ..rvJee baa tlon. No cutting will he aJ. put pM~oure on UNRRA to lowed to the aummer cl.aues find workera, for it Ia impoa- aJ will ~\~ ~;Jie'f'ortot~:kl':n~i.~ and Thunday D>eet!nc probably take place In the afternoon aa 1a c:uatomary. It is expeeted that an utimated numstudents wiU be here be.r of th11 aummer, with a amall minority of uppercl.Aumen and a comparath•ely large number of ffi!Uiremento. It lo beeause of tbU that Baverford'a Reconatru~tion and Relle:f aroup ~as so !res h men. ~b~rcui~ar~~~t!r:r~:tu:~:i~~ ing in !orelgn languages and special area atud!H aa well as o'ther fields of study baa e:1pe. dally qualifl~ them for tho poaitlono waiting to be filled. Thoae who aN~ leavina have I ....~r.:i:; ·~~ French Newspaper Collection'39 ~~~~~~~~~h here, and It It conceivable that -'~ • ·T renfUf other appolntmeuts mar be ln A ugust , nOWS S'L !ortbeomlng. Professor Lourenee Wylie of the Haverford French Depart· ment hu a diaplay of French newapapen now in the libraey. 1\lr. Wiley waa in Franc.e at the outbre.nk of war in Europe, nnd fOr hlatorleal aouvenirs he bought. nt leut one copy of all the important Parisian papers during the last week of August, 1939, after which, aa you may Russian aympathles, as well as avid anti·Nasbm. · Other papers ahow widely divene politlc.al viewa, far more extreme than American papers, amona which the Heant publicatlona aro conatdoted ex:. treme. Pape.rs varied f-rom the Natlonali1t. nnd Royallst "L'Ac· Uon Franealu" to the SocialiJt "Le Pof)ulalre," to the , ultra· ~:f~~ ~pe':rab=gcl~ty ~= ba~~ ;;e~::t•·;~d':~~~afu: varlou1 trtnda of political and financlen. thought then pJ"CCent in ParU, As a refruhln~t deviation from and for that matter, fn FTanee serio~ poHUcal thought,. ,the collection lnc.l udes the u.tineal as a whole. The date of reporting at the Colleae Parle training a<:.bool yet for ha.s not been aet u Wendell W, WUHams, while Betty Freyhof is to report on May 26 and tho rest are scheduled to report on Ptlay 18. Fay G. Calkina and Sa.rab C. Cary of the Ienior unit. wbtch completed the HaHrford course laa{ December, have alto been appolnted t~ aimUar poaltfons. C ['I_ C '-- J 0 .ege au:nuar '"J~~n::ut~~!~ WednNCiay, May 16 elaima of im'mlnent Rua•lan ag· Traclc Meet, !Jiaverford vs. grestlon upon France· the George and Haverford Schoola, 11 a 4:00. L'ds humorout paper Muelle," wbleh demonotrat.. Friday May 18 · • French humor; uLe NouveUea Lilteralr.~o.'' a oort of critical ·Baoeblll pme, Haverford n. li_terary..mac-sine: and uwatch," IWett Cheater, 8:80. tlie Freneb equlval<!nt of "Life.• ::::rfo'fr4~&more. Show, rto • • . · · ~ cblldr<>n'a comle maculne Is ~~d-.:1 ~~~\:~Jl!!"taadM~: Satorday, May It Nelchborboocl leo. The younc beroeo of this Swarthmore magulne, "Le Camarade," were Traek Meet, 8:00•. It not for their. Communl.st .9anday May ,. th~nd~ Inter .'Faith Forum, "Final ~e~~ ~ ::. ~="':!:• of J ack Armotronr Alms of Hlndnl.sm", 7:80. both are now heine printed. eov 1 . n Annie. Tbe two papert abo!' olmo• or fo;rrl\l~:';, ':!."~m:,a~i pro.F..clat pape.rt, the Ant with a circulation of 260 000 and the 1econd with a el~a· tion of 480,000. The editorials and even the newa articles In theoe two publleatlono obow clearlz antt-Britiab and anti• ~\WI an prejudlee. , Slnee the Uberetlon, both papen"J>an dla~~~~te" and "Ce Solr," lneluded La the eolleetlon, were the ehlef orpna of the Froneh Communist movement. Altboncb 1 :."tS:b• ";:f'}:• ~' JL\Y,llllPOitD NJnn - W..tnooda7, Mar 11, lNI College .Has 26 C3.sualties· , War Haverford CoUeKe;- , aceordl!lc the recorda of the. Alumni" ~fti<:e aa of. V-E day, Mar 8 has had twenty_.lx war· eaaua1: ties in Jailed,·•· wounded and tm ~':..~~ . ."·, tni!sing: · Alumni· Fund Contributions Cary, '92, Dies Alumni Fund Tbe number of eootrlbuton - lo the ,AJwsUll Fond drive puaed tile live hundred marlr. thla ""'· Tho to~ N of ·Hay 11: Contrlbul>o~ Total-486,340.13 ,).,..,.., \ ..._ _ .o....:m. Offa:e Rfl'Liiu>.ts -· Frando- G... ltll . ' . Capt. laa• A. B0..pWD. In the Medleal Oorpo of the 9"Dlted sates Army, died AprD 10 t944 In aD autO aeeldeot ui Grte'nlalld. • lost • lee in eetlTe Mnlc.. 1115 A,, ___ : l"UUU1Dl Le•- ~~~:u'j~lo~a Ad_. ______ ·. - _ ~ ·• ..-:-:--.... • The Alllllihl OIBce wlahea to 1...-zi the bome and bD&IneSI addreuee of the foiJ.owln& &v· erfordi&Jll: 1H'7 Ho-rd H. Sboemalr.er. JMt Dr. Fredtrlek R. Tarlor 1118 .Robert W; Moore. . • ~!%t AnBW' S. Bawthom. ~ H. Zoolr.. Howard B. &c-r. John F. Hellahon. Albert B. Zintl. . PTt. Pul H. W...._tar, a , bel'J of a tank c!eotzo1or 111 01 roup1 killed in Germanr 1 November 2!1, 1H4. lNI . Robert E. 1Aw1a, AJ1.C, died NO\·ember 26, 1H8, in a plane arcident near Port Moruby, New Guinea: lta7 . Flying o.- Jaa• R. Hac· risOn, .lr.; Royal CanadiiUl Air Fo!'(e, was killed over G.:rmany O<tober, 1843. ltl8 Daniel H. Peaort. a clvlllan engaged In ,..,. -rk, dled In a plane er. .h Februarr 11144. JIH Lt. Geo<Je W. .-ounded with bla paratrooper rroup, died In .t.l!e eraah of hll hospital plane m the North At!antic betw~ leeland and N:-· loundland 1n July 1944. · lNf "*' ·-,_~ :r ttiS Clifton 14. Boekatoee. lohn B. Clllatopbor. V. Putnam Korean. Charlea T. N~oloon, Jr. Clarence B. Watldna. l ta& Doucla. H. Campbell. Chester R. Bali', Jr. William H. Vyor. Samuel S Stratto:>. Irvin& TeWnB:, Jr. Alumni Notes a Ar= lost on the USS Langley, alrcrnlt tender sunk by the lapa. 19Z5 Lt. Staaler s. DiaJaoold wu Dr. Erie G. Ball, auoclate killed in action July 2i, 1944. pr<>feseor of blolog~al cbom· He was eo-pilot of a B-17, at Harvard University, Ia whieh went down in the North Se> off Great Yarmouth, Eng- giving a aeries of lectures at the Sebool of Medicine of the l>nd. John T. Hoffman was wound- Univenlty of BrazU In Rio de ed in Belgium when his jeep Janeiro, where he will direct !'<ileareh in .cellular te~plratlon. h:t a mine. )lldahlpman Edward L Kohn, Hit trip Is . under the joint auoplces of the Brazlllan Gov1!SNR, wu reported m.i aainc In ernment and tlre Department of action. Sgl. Norman D. Southcate State iJI+.Ihe United States. wa$ rf:ported misaitl.l' by the 1940 War Department aftar'l, the Bat. Ll. J oha ~1. p.ndley, Jr., and tie of the Bulge. . 1941 Enal1n Wilfrid L. SlmjnonB wns repo-rted mining in the Pa- March 26, 1945. cirlc theatre. • 1941 1942 Rev. Eugene Botelho has Lt. David J. ChambllsB waa reported killed November 26, changed his nddresa from El Hl-13. in Europe. . Dorado, Hanus, where he was • Sgt. Jam.. Phlneaa !lalfll. reetor· of Trinity EpiJCopal Chun::h, to Lawrence Hall, 4833 II. was killed l.n France. Nort.h Francisco Avenue, Chi· 1943 11 Home for John Bu.nllleJ received_ an cago, IUinois, a honorable ditcharge - from the Boys." 1942 ;\!urine Corps beca~e of mal11rin c·ontraeted In the Bouga.inLt. Frank S"eetaer and Ll. \"illc eo.mpa\gn. "Bubbles'' Smith, '.C.t, are liv· 1.1. Edmund J. Lee waa re- ing in the a.ame hotel in LonllOrted m1p ing in Burma in don. (·914 aljter Jlllrachuting. !rom hl; Flying Fortre.ss, which later! J ohn Da,..lo ThoiiiJIOn grad· trashed. . u_ated from Princeton Theologil',·t. John G. Manb wo.s eal Seminary in Mareb and was ordained at PltUburgb in April. wounded in action. He Ia going to th1! Preibyte rian 1944 Ll. Ha.rold B. Belveeton,-Jr:, ~liosion Station at Metlakatla, WAS reported by German aue Alaska, a'hortly. thoritiC$ to have died Sapteme 1945 lh·r 2, 1944, in a prisoner of Sgl. Oforles A. Shields Is In wt~r camp. ·1945 the Philippines with a mobile Lt.. William J. Bamea, Jr., r adio squadron. Be hat been a pilot, waa killed July 12, 1944, receiving the NE.WS regularly over France. and Ia delightod with the record Georce Bartllolomow """'lved of the baiketball team. ~ ~~~ :01:,"i:!',!lo J:,~~ S 1/c Vernon M. Root "Write• 1• 1944 · from a Sooth Paclfie Island that 'B.~ K. Ferae waa wound· he Ill awaiting an aselgnment l'd in 11144 In lila knee. by a ahell aa a quartumaater on a ahlp fragment. . · . or an adv~oee island bese. . LL Jam• HeCraadr Hutoa. 1948 Jr., a ftgbter pilot, waa killed · S lie WllllaJa H. Miller and '" the ~ while aorving on s lie FriDk n.-a. Hopldu the eiCOrt carrier Na1oma Bay. ..., otudylng for Radio Training Ma~k L. ~rqtat. lr~ waa in the Slme bDlldlnc. Their drowned Deeimber 26, J.U4, addreu Ia High Hanley Sehool after parachuting .from hla 2936 W"eel Polk Street, Cb~..; plane foU~ a lt:rallnc raid u Illinoll. on J a - t:tfinc• ~ 1/c 1llchard 14. ~Pte. G-.. Nlddla waa wrltea that he expect. to .Wt wounded In German7 Febru&r7 the COllege In a f.,.. weeko. Tbe 19,. 19415• Collece Commonlty Ia expected ASTP• 1o tDrn otlt at the PAW atatlon . 1101rl.rcl D. Saftp waa 1dlled eo maue 1o &TNt one of the '" aetlon nearV.&oo-the wilt- fw atlntron of G-t Laket trn front.· · boot trainlna'· lotry !!~· J~h~:r. L~d~~u~. ~r: 0 PAGB TBU B A1 of ~pril 27, 1945, ·th~ Alumni Fund had received a total of f86,449.13 from 60S eonmbutlono, <>< over 72 per cent of Ito i'oal of $60,000. C1uo M. .bera Coatri.batora 1881 • 2 1882 4 1 1J!M 8 1 188i ' 4 2 1885 7 2 188ll ' 1887 1888 2 8 9 10 13 0 8 3 18 4 u 6 19 13 _18 18 7 1 4 1889 1890 1sll1 . 8 o ISM· 22 2 8 1899 u ' 11100 1901 t902 1903 1904 1906 1906 1907 28 25 82 . 20 31 8 3 7 6 6 11 10 21 e 1908 S8 8 1909 1910 1911 1912 1918 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 19Z5 1926 1927 1923 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1985 1936 1987 1938 1929 1940 1941 1942 19ojjl • 1944 1945 ·34 41 39 41 42 38 85 41 7 7 • 8 5 so so li 52 12 10 12 12 8 S8 ' 62 56 6346 48 61 58 62 58 72 69 75 73 11 74 80 6 7 M ~ 8 9 10 11 11 6 13 9 10 77 9 9 8 14 12 12 94 100 82 65 82 77 · 85 82· 106 7 19 8 9 10 18 ·26 16 8 ,5,ooa.oo 25 12\i 60 Faculty and Ex-Facultr ' ...--, Membera of tho Class of 'US have been Informed of the death of E1bert S. Cary, who died 10.00 In the Unlvenity of Pennsyl6.00 vania Hospital at PhUadelphla 7.00 on Sunday, April 29. Exeept for a few yean he 60.00 bad served ateadily ainoe 1911 ···· as Superin.te.ndent of the Pocono 810.00 Lake Preserve, founded by 1,020.00 loaae Sharpleu and hla aaao225 oo elates. Atcordlng ~ the Jetter 29 < 8 e 1892 1893 1894 1895 18M 181'7 Tolila Per C.C.l. 60 In Philadelphia 87"'88 80 23 m:oo N':~o!" L.ruw~tesllir~yea~j zU.OO :: ::~;e a~b0t~':.i~! 22 88 37 2 156 6s many of the dU!Ieult proble!M •895:00 :h~!e~ !~~;. connection with 60.00 Ria ability in handline all 270.00 kinds of queationo, euch aa 35 00 forestry, maintenance of equip. 0 8 so 12\i . 14 29 23 200:00 ~nd~~':!:::e~l ~~:!'J 130.00 trad ot over 8600 acres, aaved 610.00 the organization thouaanda of 86 00 dollars and enabled -the mem· 8 :u:.. 4,210:00 to.~~~~~:pt1':U,~~~t 880.00 Jy auccesaful one. 21 "25. 612.60 Mr. Cary, whose home was in 295 00 Moorestown, New 1eraey, waa 18 86 38 816:00 ~i:~~;en~r~~b_er H~ t~e.:o; 5,815.00 member of the faculty at West145.00 town Sebool until he became 760.00 associated with tbe ~kea Pre- 22 21 21 17 20\i 12 12 82 2i 480·00 b:~e~r HthewPhllade~~l: Sk~: 200.00 ing Club and Humane Society 95.00 tor man7 )Years and served sev. 95.00 era! terms on the board of di- 1•035·00 recJ?:S~on, Egbert S. Car y, Jr., 324.00 was recently elected Superin· 1,415.00 tendent o·f the Preserve, his 1485.00 father being retained u Secre· so 22 12 11 12 12\i 15 20 22 0 '260.00 taFfU:e r~l-r:~i=r. on Ma)• 2 161.00 were attended by a large num· 380.00 ber of his friends, represent&· 182.00 tive of hi.a aequalntante! at 250.00 ~~;~w~nd 5p~:~o l!.\v."'f,%~ 278.00 aerve. 276.00 He is survived by his widow, 618.00 ~· Elizabeth Cary; his dau,;_~· · is 180.00 ~~. ~~be~ (.);~, J~~~d 110.00 aeveral grandchildren. 148.60 109.50 0 19 12 23 11 14 12 12 b; u7.oo,Comdr. H. Harman Serves on Carrier 215 00 · 198.00 167.00 275 00 · 147.00 269.00 160.00 385.00 220.00 200.00 .288.00 689.00 693.50 415.00 65.00 11 20 16 16 7 19 9 14 12 23 81 20 6 j·manCommander Harvey J. Ha r· is now l!len ·ing aboard nn aJrcraft carrier. On the ume earrier is Lt. J. Patrick French, '39, who was aboard the Hornet during the DoolitUe r8id over Tokyo. Commander B arman was f ootball coach at Haverford !or eight :rcnn. After leaving Haverford in 1929, he worked ns coach at the Univenity of Penn.sylvania and at Rutgers. His succeuor at this college, Roy E. Randall, is now a captain in the Marine Corps a t Wa!hington and Lee tJniversity. (Non~Havorford) 925·00 .1 !as~0~~dj~br ln~~h:'~a~n wh~! New England, Washing. usigned to the University o! ton, D. C., and Pittsburgh Iowa. His post wa.s taken O\'er Alumni Associations 70.00 ~·hen he left by Lieutenant ComA nonpnouo '" 18.50 mander A. R. Middleton, '27. Commander Harman write.s In Memory of President Iaaac Sharpless 200.00 that he is getting only flve Note: 1913 and 1917 also s upport Annual Sebolarablpa of $126 hours sleep· a night in his presa.r id '160, teJpeetl.vely. ' · ent a.ssjgnment. He also states E.. Parry and Co. · In Armed Forces Sgt. Edw~ that the average civilian does not realize what a lOng hard war is yet before ua. Scarlet • Garnet C..liowJ , _ r.., 1 ,...I E.Dies -H. White, '85, After Dlness ' Owen Patty, a irroup b f Haverford boya 'S6,. 1s one of six aona of Jud&<~ visited Swar.thnlore's plctDr~rge Gowen Pany of Com- esqtle campua and left It even mon Pleaa Court No. 1 of PhUadelphia now In the aorv!Ce. Sat. !Parry lo attaclled to Seeond Army beadqoarten. He 0 10 Ia ~~!:~t:t::O hla dlat!nctlon ·are Dt. Comdt;;. ~rge Goweil Pany, a veteNl! of · the Ita"llan and North 1 !t. !'b:..ra ~ U"sJ:, = ~.th~So~ Pac:lfie; Major Fraad.a Fox Pany, a Marine veteran · of GD&daleanal; Lt. John Colllna Pany; USNR, who toolr. part In the Guam aaaaDlt,- and OpL Stephen .Parry, a p~trooper. more pietDreoque when they departed: . The upahot of the busl· neaa wu a lim for $1,000 whleh Ia gelng to be paid by fundi ra!oed by thO muol<al eomedy to.J>e clven thla week-end. And thno wlli ena · another chapter in the tenae and ueltlng c1nuna of aa..rtord ... s,rartbmore, w.hen we all lland on the atepo of Roberto after the ahow, pat our friendly vala on the baek tid beerDy "So ion• tel a • _ .. • • lo next tlmel Word haa 1>een received that Elias Henley White, '8.5, dled !n Sewtember 1944, •t West Beach, Florida. His death came after an Ulneaa of eev· eral ye.ara. Hr. Henley's whereabouts have been unknown to hla c:laas· mateo for a considerable period of time. N...,s of his death ca- after membe"' of bla elaas had . heeD aeeklng hll addteJa for the past ten yean, aec:ord· ing to a 'letter to the NEWS from Harrlon C. MorrU, aecree tarr "for the ClaM of '86. f"AGB JPOUK llAVBRPORD !fBWS W..,_..y, May 1e. ltCS Scarlet Scores First Against P. M. C.; Fords Third in . · ~~~:><~f~~~.~Er~~>~ ~ 17 Drop Second to Elizabethtown 12-8 Four Way Meet (1Ep); ~..,.;,., .....u., x.w... 2 Wltl~); a Doucta. .On May 7 the Haverford nine May 9 at Ch..ter, Penn't.h ·t h (Ep).; 4 Thomaa (H)~·n.,. 1 met their third defeat of the [eh. h D the Have.r.:ford baseball lc.. of~Canp~ Bobu s.t!r ":h; 28;t~ •L~ x"' . season and the second at the Ig owned aylvania . .&lTliO~ 1 hands . of the Elizabethtown team bed their ftrst taste"' v~- H~erlord aplkemea man~ (iW•); 2 Fiahar ( W) · 3 0.• baseball team. This time the tory at the expense of a Penn- to but squeeze. in u a poor third (:W); • Sanden (GA). Dist. score was Eliubethtown 12, By Racqueteers sylvania Military CoUep nine. i n th~•~tt,te~:eet~~ 87' tOW'. . Haverford 8. <Wilen the dUll hed settled the boWednte ~w m- llallllhoc lbr~IEp: )I SBoFu~ "1 On Ope tl 0 1.. 't ' Fords Score First In t.he flrat three innings the &arlet showed their best 90r!ormance of the !SeMOn, paced by the play of Marvin Sept, newly installed ea~her b~t the team seemed to fade later m the game. . The Fords s~rted off :he fint inning by scormg !our t1mes on hit$ by Kato, 'Moses, and Segml and two errors by Eliza beL':· town. In the later halt ot the inning nn Elizabethtown score wa8 stifled when Segal threw to Knto, at third, to catch the ru:tner ofT "\be base. In the s~eoud inn!ng H_av~r!ord . contmu~d their first mnmg dri\'C and th1s time droye over three more runs. These run!5 we;e all ea~ned nnd were scored v1a four h1t.B by Steefel, Ka_to, Clayton ~nd Ryan. The Eht.ab.etht<!"'ll nme was held scoreless m th1.s frame. In the third inning th.e Haverford team started o!l 1ts down~ ward grade, when Ehz.abetbtown rephlced ita pitcher, Whitacre, and put in Markey in his place, who had defeated the Have.rford team two days before. Ma rkey Credited with Win A! h' H f d ter t IS, • aver or nev~r seemed to h:t •!> strld~ and :1 wasn't hll the ntnth l.nru.ng that they were able to push acrou another run. .Elizabethtown, on the other hand, set the pace by scoring four ~imes in the third in,;;;ng onbone hit, tb~r. errn': ~Teachers"8:fso :ored ~o runs in the oixth innlnc, one in the seventh, four in the eighth, which clinched the game aad once more in the ninth i~lng. Elinbethtown picked up tbese on nine hits assorted errora, and bates on 'ball• given up by Bernstein, t.he pitcher. .Credit for the Elliabethtown win goes to 'Markey,' who gave up ten hits, three bases on balls, arid sh"uck out five 'Foro.... Haverford ab r h e Steefel ..... ....5 1 1 0 Kato · ··· · 5 2 4 • 6 Moses ... .. ... ··· ....... 6 1 0 0 Clnyton ........5 2 2 1 Ryan ...... 4 1 1 0 runs g~~! ... .. ::. ~1 The Haverford College tennia team won t he first tournament of the season by 0 defeating the Lehigh University n.~eteera on Saturday, May 12, Wlth a 7-2 victory. Althou.gh ~e day was windy, the Maln -L1nera were easily able to take five of the aix aingles seta and to lose only one doubles match. J h w·108 Fl t Match o IliOn ra .~Dave Jehns~n started _off' the v1ctory by qu1ckly coppm¥ the firat match in two set.s .. Hls opponent. Bruce. Hinle1n, gave feeble competition m the fi~t set, a!ld m the, seeon~ J ohnson s supenor playmr.- showed the numbers at 8-6. Bob C!eyton g_ave up t~e only defeat 10 the s mgles ....~th the .scores of t~e two. sheu bot\ be:~g e Leh1~ man .s ow. g , orm desp1le the h1gh wmd. Malcol!fi 10 Camer~n won the next match th_e mmimum n~mber of sets With a 6-2 ma rgm. Harley ~ross also ehalked .up another tr1.umph when h~ eaaJly ':.!i ? det~ted h1s ~pponent With ~1, ~-2 scores. Bill H!l!Tis, playm~ 10 :u:be:ic~voryepot!lti:b~ bs:~:t an · r· 't.h by Wlllnmg two .seta Wl .acoru of 6-1 and 8-4. Dan OliVler, Iabor:ing under hia opponent's fast aerve, "Won the last of -the aingles by taking the third set 6-S. Olivier was able to take the first set 7-5, but the Lehigh racqueteer copped tbe seeond· by a 3·8 score. • OM Deableo Team LoeN Johnson and Clayton autrered the only defeat in the ~oubleo. rrhis m~tch .was very cloae with the Mom ~men loslnr the ftrat 4-6 and wtnning the second aet with a 6-8 score. The deciding t el resulted in hard-fought competition, but t.he Lehigh Brown and White manapd t<> cop the set by a 12-10 score. c~~e a~rG~o~:~!c.i:h Mc:Y':; and Smyth. wu quickly won in the ftr~t two sets by scores of 6-4 and 6-1. J im J ohnson and Monty Alenick copped the Jut match by winning their sets 6-4 and 9-7. Mrun . Li nen were 8 h ea d 10~ , -~t the end of ~lx innings; the_pme was ohortOned ~auae of - the time. Fint Win in Four Starta: ~Haverford hungry for ita first Y • 0 ...,........ (Ill).; 2 Wh te ' ; "'"'• (,Ep) • • Abronakl (f1p). o· t. 11 18' 78-4.". . 100-Jd. claolw1 Glenn (GA)· 2 MacLean (Ep) ; 3 Jaeo~ (GIA) · c Sharpe {IEjl). 10.8 a~. •. • 2.20-)'d. MP: 1 Vedova (H)· 2 Tbomaa (Ill); a Sharpe (.Ep) ~ 4 MacKean (Ep). Time 24.3 aee. Ja.-elln throw: 1 ~arrison (tW). 2 Dew (W). a Cook mill (!Ep); 4 JtiU (Ep). ' Dlst. t 34.a•. ,. l .. m.Jle rlln: 1 Zinetti ('Ep}• 2 Coney ( 1W); 3 Thatcher (W); 4 Carter ( GA). Time 6 min, 13.4 sec. 880~yd. daah: 1 Williami (.Ep); 2 MacCarthy (Ep); Thatcher (W): 4 Carte.r (CA).3 Time 2 min. 19.7 see. Pole nult: 1 1>ougl!lS (Ep). Hume (Ep). ~ Hooser (CAl; 1 Murray (1W ); Sanders U:l); Glenn (G.A). ~Height 9' ou. <&40~yd. d..,_: 1 Hewson (Ep}; 2 Glenn (QA); 8 :MaeCartby (Ep); 4 Cox {W ). Time 67 set. PottJq U lb. ahot: 1 Sharpe (!})p) ; 2 Rill (<Ep); S Mat.Keaa (tEp); 4 Cookman (Ep). Dilt. ftred tb :::::::::::::::::::·::::a i g ....,......., AND Beary Haverford, Pa. CURRENT BOOKS OF ALL KINDS ~9 RnTBNHOUSE PLACE FICTION ARDMORE RENTAL LIBRARY Phone Afdmore 1700 COLLEGE TEXT BOOKS FOR HAVERFORD .COLLEGE St•u••t tl;# M""' li"M Ovrr ' 0 y,., I ARDMORE 11!7 ••• or initiating•a new subjea fJ/ Neptune EYezybody eaiots a moment of good-oltU.ted lrie-ocilloess. Suc:h a moment begio..s at tb~ words ~ • GJ.U. That'a wh1 ' pa~ for .Coli•«• Preparato,.,. Boardlna Sdlool t o r Bo111 MJd Otrt• W B I 'I' 'r 0 W lf p~:.:.: ~,~ Ka.latalntd b)' Pllltadel- 1!:-.'!n~~JI:.T- at .. ::.~l~=-=~·c:::~~":,~lm~lv.::za~ COmmUDit7 a etlviUM on a Ul-&eft farm with W'OOdlota pt.aytrc hktL , IA.II:B8 r. WA.L~, laJI;e.. MU!I :-rta.-ol. W......,_ ........ W_..wa, p,..._ ~~5HaE~3E~~~BE~~a.~~~~ J. B. Longaen 4S5 Walnut 8tree1 Pblladelpllla Greetings, brother... Have a Coca-Cola E. S. McCawley &Co~ Inc. ENGRAVE..R.S Tart--- 1 39 12 12 PRJNTER.S '!'i,., ' \:ictory, peu~ced on _P .M. C, and Menno, the1r hurler, for t\ve runa in the initial f rame. Steef d th' ff 'tb 0 el sta~te mp 0 · Wl . sharp amgle to le.tt and got to second on a P.tM. C. error. Bob Clayton then punched a single to left scoring Steetel. Kato then l~orcd on 8 fielders choice of Ben "Buttercu " Collins. ~05es and Ryan out b.»t 120-yd. high 1\u_rdle: 1 While Segal, the next batter, walked, . filling the bases. Frank Davis, Haverford ab r h e the Fords' ftn~t baseman, follow- Steefel .. .... ............. 4 a 1 2 ed ex Joding 8 double to left Kato .. .................-4 2 2 1 ~leari:g the bases. At t.h.e end Clayton ..\................. A 1 1 1 of the fi.l"$t inning the score Collins ...................... A 1 1 0 read Haverford five, P. M. c. Moses ....................~2 1 0 0 nothing Ryan ............................3 0 0 0 Not i.nkin an chances the Segal ...................... ,_2 1 1 2 Main Linersg cam~ ba.ek in the Oavis ........................~2 0 1 0 second inning and scored three Bernstein ..................~2 0 0 0 more times on two errors a aMead ..... ..... .........0 0 0 0 42' 8~". base on balta, a nd a passed batt, - - - k!R unalna hJch jna.p: 1 AdroD~ and a hit by Walter Kato. 27 10 7 8 I (Ep); 2 C. Wllllama (W); Kato'a hit raised hia batting av- aReplaeed Collins in the sixth 3 Thomu (!W); I Heebink (W). to 583 hi llest f th 0 P. M. c. ab r b e Height 6' Hi". erage · • e g or Th , ~ords. An!>th~r run was added . a1 ...........................4 1 1 8 ~!!iiiii!iiilii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&i&ii!!Es m the next tnn.mg on two errora, Beeker ........................4 0 1 0 ~ . ._ a tlelders ebo:ce and a atolen .Andrea ........................4 0 0 1 " - - - DiiJo ·& Co. base. . ~~ld~burg ................~ ~ D . P.M.C.'t OaiJ Tllreat Forrest I I 8 -Now However, in the fift-h, P . .M.C. P~_u.rst ....................8 0 2 1 lnTe811Deata came to life and offered their Cbu:a:d ........................2 1 0 I 121 8 ru-u. lit. nua.. Pa only threat by putting toretber !Merino ........................1 0 1 0 four hit., two bases on ballo, ~dy .........................2 1 1 0 I~~~~~~~~~~~ two ftelden choices, and a wild · --~~ _ _ pi!A:h f or a total of ab: runs. Re !---~ u.~•• ~7 .~ .!~.~ •·~~"-~-~ m Three of theae runs were the re- a P ~ •~ """' .II w:~e au. 'loU -~ 1 suits of a triple by Forrest with HOPPER. SOLID}.~ A CO. the bases fulL Pre.;oua to this Kemboz:o .ana. 8toelt B:lochal>p 4rurlnr P.M, C. had bren unable INVa'fiiBNT ~ to aoore. Haverford Pharmacy 100 Walant 8lnat The scoring ended when BavPHILA.DELPJIIA ~~f~~ Pb~s~hin:e~~~ i'ar:~ !~~ Ettate o1 w. Pr-, P. D. _ __ a atolen bue. The game wu Ha•e:rford PIIIMJ'trula -~ ~ lhe.n ealled at the end of slx innings beca use or the lack of 1!\SURAI'I CE FOIII STUDE~TS time. Pteacriptiom Ute ~1 1Jabllf11 Bernstein Gets Victory Drugs and Sundriu nRcplac:ed Mead in the seventh Broad O•Uoral CoonH . . . Elizabethlown ab r h e 8c.bool Lite. Kaaoal Tn.e.aJ..a. Myers D ome Eeoooaales. Bbo' W e riL G 3 3 I Bo1• • ·• d 0111• t. the I••• Bucher 3 a 1 o 8ebool ••dn <OO•dU..oe that Buch .... 6 1 I 0 meet t.he Appro.-ol of the Moel J. Lcfe\·er C•re f• l, DlHrhalootl•• P u . .ta. 5 2 3 0 Endowment, 10%-Acre CamEshleman . . 4 I I 0 0. Lefever .. · 2 2 I 0 pus. 25 mil.. from Phlledelphla. 10 mu.. from Trt oton. Hershey 6 0 2 Whitncre . 0 . A . ~~~=· A. K. ....4 0 0 Abrkey 4 0 0 o-r•• k ....l. Pa. 1 Bo• 11'7 Ardmore PriDting Company .... '""',:;/:: Y ams. o3weepln.&ft'HC&'" tory was a prom.iainr ti.On f rom Episeopal Aeademy with 79 point.. A •ery younr but large fo~ of •We.-ttmm Brown and Wh:tes edpd In at aeeond with ~ut 32.1/S markera; Haverford third W1th 16 118 and Germantawn A cademy fourU! with 16 1/3. . · Th~ Main .rLinen, ~oming through only 1D the 22:0 dub where Vedova and Thomas piek~ up ftrat and second reapee~. IVely and. in ~e ru:ming broad courtesy. of Boug: Bour.arth, sorely m1s.eed the pomts ~auaUy necumulated ~Y Baker m the field events~ Summary. ~ ~ ~ d>an. Bernst.ein ehalked up his Phone Ardaore 1122 0 0 0 ~ first VIctory In three attempts, 4 o 0 0 o.tsNta~GflOR.Q.rcou..uz. walking f our and · striking out 2 0 0 0 u,__, SCHOOL '"""'...,. the same number. .-.... _..... --······ri•--··=-=· ........... 1 In a Normal Year . 38 8 10 II 90 Gr aduateo Eater CO Colle(rea I Mead &rnstci n .... nCollins . . . _ . . . . ,.... " i~ Qx:a.-Cola is sreetcd with a smile io so ma.ay places, on the. RaJ and o.-crse'U, j ust a.s it is io your home. Jr·'s a happy qm.bol amoos people who uodersrand the pleaia.o.t ways of lriea<bb.ip. . . IOnuD UNDO AII1'M01m' OP rHI! Coc;..cot..\ COMPANY IY PluLADELPHIA c.ocA-COL:A BO'n'LING COMPANY