4
%ht Bailg pennsgiuanian Official Forecast U. S. Weather Bureau Mostly sunny and moderately cold. Low 25; High 40. Vol. LXIX PHILADELPHIA, PA. i . . I'l Cl UltKK 13, University Will Receive $2,742,800 Of Half-Billion Ford Foundation Grant Beckert Named Head Mumford, Six Others Elected IFunds To Bolster Of Interfraternity Week At l-F Council Meeting Committee Chairmen Also Announced at l-F; Rushing Directories Distributed February 6 Bruce E. Beckert will be chair- ed Inti ity Week, h culminates with the l-F Ball, Friday, March 17. Hugh ident of the Inter - eetlng last nlfl kert Is ht uer of aid Key Society and Friars Senior Society. The final band arrangements ii made as yet, but will be annou . Beckert stated. Committee Chairmen Named The committee chairmen were They will be Edward Hanlon, banquet; and, qua Strlck David Zack Bowen, spe- ilenry Safran, pub- licity; John Woodland, ti< IU stork, faculty-frab (1 Walter Schroot, exchange luncheon. In other business, Joseph Cul- hane, Council rushing chair- announced that pictures for tl rushing dh will be taken the week of Janu- ary 9, and will be distributed to the fraternities on February 6. Suggestions To Curb Drinking Suggestions were made by fraternity representatives to curb drinking at house parties wl :netimes result in destruction to campus prop- erty. Son were: if party; keeping the intoxi- cated from leaving the frater nity; e drinkers to De. - for a dlacu i of bar privileges for i; and not al- lowing stag outsiders Into party. These and other sugge will be mimeographed and dis- tributed to the fraternities, Vaughn stated. To Academy of Arts and Letters BRITF. E. BECKERT Manson Concludes Fall Lecture Series The fall Philomathean Lecture Series, "Modern Man: His lilth Century lleri tajre," will be concluded this afternoon at 4 with a talk by Dr. Gnat C< Manson. vice dean of the School of I ine Arts in Alumni Hall of Dietrich Hall. Dr. Manson will speak on the continuity of the asthe- tle values of the 19th century into the 20th. Previous Philomathean lectures were by Dr. Morse I'cckham, who spoke on "The I i . as a Whole." Dr. Wal lace E. Davies, who discussed Karl Marx. Dr. Conway Zirkle. who lc< tureel on Dar uin and lasl week's speaker, Dr. Julius W i s h n e r , who talked on Freud. I is Mumford, visiting Pro- r of Land and City Planning, elected to i,i In the American i my of Arts and Letters last I in New York. Others elected to the Academy, whose membership is limit) 50, are painter Andrew Wyeth, poet Moore, play- wright Maxwell Anderson, paint- er Edward Harper and composer Walter Piston. Wyeth is the youngest mem the Acad- emy has ever I Moore is i.ird woman ever elect" membership. A Prominent Author Mumford, who I asso- v for five y< prominent author in authority on architecture. For over 20 years, he h. sky Line, a column ll forker on archlb luring his stay at the University he has glvei eral ll rious ar< i subjci a professor of Land and City Planning, Mumford's activi- ties have included a variety of Interests. While at the Univer sity three of his books have been published. They include "The Art and Tech- and "In the Name of v." published in 1951, 1952, and 1954 respectively. Two of his books, "Technics and Civi- on" and "The Culture of onsldered m I i their Held. Beeenl Opinions Mumford Is noted for hi id on such issues as death weapons and the nent ban on travel by th U. S. He clfl death weapons without los- t, thus endanger- ing his ex and thai Departn a on Rus- sian travel WS iliation. Born in New York in 1895, Mumford received his I the College of thi of New York and Columbia Uni- versity. Cornucopia On I-our WhstU Faculty Salaries Largest Single, Private Grant In History Made To Hospitals, All Non-Public Colleges in U.S. Th.- University will receive $2,742,000 from the half billion dollars that the Ford Foundation appropriated yes- terday to colleges and hospitals throughout the country. In- come from the grant will be used to increase t.uult\ salaries, ding to Gaylord P. Harnwell, president of the Uni- ts. Two hundred and ten million dollars of the total gift, the largest single appropriation in the historj of philan- thropy, will go to every one ol the 615 regionally lited, Itel) supported colleges and universities in the I St at. amounts each school i was determined h\ tel) matching the ills for instruction APO To Sponsor Ride Sharing Plan Friars Will Present Basket Drive A wardCA Christmas Dinner Features^ To Leading Group Haverford Professor as Speaker The Frtnrs Seninr Honor So- * ,v *^^» *^" ** IWI «»«»«» »**» wjww«-n«,. The Friars Senior Honor So- ciety will present an award to the c organization that contributes the most baski the All-University Basket Drive. All fraternities, dormitories, and campus organizations are eligible for the award which will be presented annually. "Al- though the final form of the award has not been determined, It will probably have the shape plaque or trophy." Alan Ackerman, publicity chair- man of the Drive. The purpose of the Drive, ii is under the direction of Kirby Fltzpatrick, Abbot of Friars, Is to provide Chri food baskets for the needy families in the West Philadel- phia area. Each basket CO and members of the Friars So- ciety will fill and distribute the containers the day before Christ- mas. "The Award was originated to recognize that campus organiza- tion which through its efforts in contributing baskets evidences the motto of this year's Drive, It's Nobler to Give'," Ackerman said. This is the second year that the Drive has been conducted at the University. Dr. Douglas V. Steere, profes- sor of Philosophy at Haverford e, will speak on "The I Spirit in a World of he Christ ciation's ninth annual Interna tional Christmas Dinner tomor- row at 6 p.m. in Memorial Hall. e Gordon, Christian Association publicity chain: Dr. Steere lias been conducting goodwill missions throughout the world under Quaker atis recently in India and in i where he lived with Dr. Albert Schweitzer. In 1946 Dr. Steere was I dent of the American Theological Society and, before that Secretary. Some of his other Im- portant positions include Chair- man of the American section of the International Fellowship of .dilation, President of the Board of Trustees of John Wool man Memorial, advisory counsel lor for the Danforth Foundation, and member of the Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee for Pennsylvania in 1952 and 1953. Numerous books and articles have been written by Dr. Steere. some of which are "Prayer and Worship." "Doors into Life," and Ford Foundation Philanthropy Stems From Model T Fortune In its brief history as a major philanthropic organization the iFord Foundation has been severely criticized by leftists for being rightist and by rightists for being left; In spite of all this criticism and two congressional investi- gations money has continued to gush out of the fabulou Madison Avenue and Fifty-first Street in bursts that n the recipients wallowing In wealth. In this hard boiled age in which "nobody gets somethi ave been able to understand this flood of Ehilanthropy. Columnist West rook Pegler called it "a front for d a n g e r o us Communists." Pi med to disagree when A new Share the-Ride pro- U charRed that -the real bus! i has been instituted by A , )f tne Ford Foundation Is pha Phi Omega national servi, s murd , fraternity, Robert Waldmai , U rs, and wreckers to chairman of the program, an- ern Europe" nounced yesterday. ' Franklin started It 'tents ' ; ' «f The Un re in the driving and would la|esl philanthropic gusher ike riders will be able to obtain ; dwarfs the the size of th( information from the Share the s | gnlflcan t American endowment, b °oth 1! , -lly enough, was I he Info, ma on Desk bv the founder of lhe University, IIIK today. It will be open Benjamin Franklin. Franklin's until Wednesday December 21 munificent bee, / ay* 111 }*a map ()0 o pounds to the cities of d States with pins on it Philadelphia and Boston, which •.senting destinations. Stu- was lo be lent out at interest to s can then cheek the lists marrl ed apprentices. oI rides bo h offered and avail- The foremost foundations of ?u ». a J a -fii ie earlle r P art of tnis century then be made with the individual. were th ose based on the steel The booth will be open on. p of Carnegie, the oil em- olidays. since dema. Rockefeller, and the for tation is greatest cop per holdings of Guggenheim. hen However. APO will ow the Ford Foun<! the lists In the information de at otlv of the year. Wald added. foundations like a colussus. Its only capital is 90 per cent of the -lock in the Ford Motor Corn- valued, for tax pur at $417,000,000. Stock On Sale Its actual worth will be 15 per "On Beginning From Within.'' The International Christmas Dinner is open to anyone who to attend Its purpose is to extend some of the Christmas spirit to students from other lands who will not be home for the Yuletide season. Wice To Conclude Series Of Hillel Lectures Today Dr. David H. Wice, president oi clearly when the Philadelphia Board of Rat ,,f the stock is placed on bis. will speak on "Rededication" sa le In January. The $400,000,000 in the concluding lecture In to $500,000,000 harvest which Hillels Hanukah series today at will be reaped from this sale will 4 p.m. in the Main Lounge of provide the funds for the founda the Louis Marshall House. tlon's latest experiment in full- Dr. Wice, spiritual lead. ale philanthropy. Congregation Rodeph Sholem. As one vice-president of the foundation put it, "You can be- gin to act like a foundation in- stead of like the United States Treasury" only after getting rid of most of the money in a few huge chunks. Interested persons have offered a multitude of ideas on how the will comment on how this an- cient holiday affects the modern Jewish student. His talk will be followed by a brief candlellght- ing ceremony in honor of the holiday now in progress. Dr. Wice was ordained by He- brew Union College In 1933 and was awarded an honorary Doctor | foundation could k bur- of Divinity by his alma mater in den . One of these was a plan to 1948 He has been a director of plant three miles of flowers on the World Union of Progressive each side of the United States- Judaism since 1945 and has been Canadian border. Another plan chairman of the World Commit- was to melt the polar ice caps tee for Liberal Judaism in I , the earth would not suffer the Dr. Wice is a Phi Beta Kappa. .c.«iW./ o* /»«« F.»r> 1954-55 for each institution. In addition to its share ol the half a billion dollar grant annoum ed yesterday, the I ni- verslty has Included In its share an additional amount which is part of the $50-mllllon grant for teachers' salaries which was an- nounced last March. The additional sum was grant ed to the University because it was one of the Institutions that was "a leader in raising teach ers' salaries." Harnwell Comments Harnwell told The Daily ylvanian last night that he had received no further In- formation from the Foundation except confirmation of the fact he University had the 1. nt. "This is the nicest Christmas present the University has ever Dr. Harnwell have many real flnanciil problems. None is more impor- tant than faculty salaries. The faculty is the heart of a univer- sity and this action by the Ford Foundation strikes at the core of a major problem. "These grants mark a mile history of educa tional philanthropy. They should be a great stimulus to othi in the task of flnanclnK higher education." McCracken Comments Robert T. McCracken, chair man of the University's Board of Trustees, reached by phone night, said that this ws "wonderful grant." "No Univer- sity could be otherwise than pleased," he continued, "at re- ceiving a grant to assure pi payment to the most lmpo people we have, the teaching y." added that we have r for buildings and for things and now this aaa the needs of the faculty will b< taken care of. Comparison Not Made The committee of the Founda tion which announced the gifts said it "did not attempt to com- pare the caliber of the many different colleges, their general excellence or reputation," but noted the variety of the instl tutlons as "a healthy aspect of our entire system of higher edu- cation." No single grant was to exceed $5 million. Only one school York University received this amount. Other large grants in- clude $4,510,000 for Harvard: $4,000,900 for Yale; and $4,324,200 for the University of Chicago. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Syracuse University and Columbia University each received more than $3,000,000

%ht Bailg pennsgiuanian - Penn · PDF fileMumford Is noted for hi on such issues as death weapons and the ... APO To Sponsor ... though the final form rowof the

  • Upload
    hanhu

  • View
    215

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: %ht Bailg pennsgiuanian - Penn  · PDF fileMumford Is noted for hi on such issues as death weapons and the ... APO To Sponsor ... though the final form rowof the

%ht Bailg pennsgiuanian Official Forecast U. S. Weather Bureau

Mostly sunny and moderately cold. Low 25; High 40.

Vol. LXIX PHILADELPHIA, PA. i . . I'l Cl UltKK 13,

University Will Receive $2,742,800 Of Half-Billion Ford Foundation Grant Beckert Named Head Mumford, Six Others Elected IFunds To Bolster Of Interfraternity Week At l-F Council Meeting

Committee Chairmen Also Announced at l-F;

Rushing Directories Distributed February 6 Bruce E. Beckert will be chair-

ed Inti ity Week, h culminates with the l-F

Ball, Friday, March 17. Hugh ident of the Inter -

eetlng last nlfl kert Is ht

• uer of aid Key Society and Friars

Senior Society. The final band arrangements

ii made as yet, but will be annou

. Beckert stated. Committee Chairmen Named The committee chairmen were

They will be Edward Hanlon, banquet;

and, qua Strlck David

Zack Bowen, spe- ilenry Safran, pub-

licity; John Woodland, ti< IU stork, faculty-frab

(1 Walter Schroot, exchange luncheon.

In other business, Joseph Cul- hane, Council rushing chair-

announced that pictures for tl rushing dh will be taken the week of Janu- ary 9, and will be distributed to the fraternities on February 6.

Suggestions To Curb Drinking Suggestions were made by

fraternity representatives to curb drinking at house

parties wl :netimes result in destruction to campus prop- erty. Son were:

if party; keeping the intoxi- cated from leaving the frater nity; e drinkers to De. - for a dlacu

i of bar privileges for i; and not al-

lowing stag outsiders Into party. These and other sugge

will be mimeographed and dis- tributed to the fraternities, Vaughn stated.

To Academy of Arts and Letters

BRITF. E. BECKERT

Manson Concludes Fall Lecture Series The fall Philomathean

Lecture Series, "Modern Man: His lilth Century lleri tajre," will be concluded this afternoon at 4 with a talk by Dr. Gnat C< Manson. vice dean of the School of I ine Arts in Alumni Hall of Dietrich Hall.

Dr. Manson will speak on the continuity of the asthe- tle values of the 19th century into the 20th.

Previous Philomathean lectures were by Dr. Morse I'cckham, who spoke on "The I i . as a Whole." Dr. Wal lace E. Davies, who discussed Karl Marx. Dr. Conway Zirkle. who lc< tureel on Dar uin and lasl week's speaker, Dr. Julius W i s h n e r , who talked on Freud.

I is Mumford, visiting Pro- r of Land and City Planning,

elected to i,i In the American

i my of Arts and Letters last I in New York.

Others elected to the Academy, whose membership is limit) 50, are painter Andrew Wyeth, poet Moore, play- wright Maxwell Anderson, paint- er Edward Harper and composer Walter Piston. Wyeth is the youngest mem the Acad- emy has ever I Moore is

i.ird woman ever elect" membership.

A Prominent Author Mumford, who I asso-

v for five y< prominent author

in authority on architecture. For over 20 years, he h.

sky Line, a column ll forker on archlb

luring his stay at the University he has glvei eral ll

rious ar< i subjci

a professor of Land and City Planning, Mumford's activi- ties have included a variety of Interests. While at the Univer sity three of his books have been published. They include "The

Art and Tech- and "In the Name of

v." published in 1951, 1952, and 1954 respectively. Two of his

books, "Technics and Civi- on" and "The Culture of

■onsldered m I i their Held. Beeenl Opinions

Mumford Is noted for hi id on such issues as

death weapons and the nent ban on travel

by th U. S. He clfl

death weapons without los- t, thus endanger-

ing his ex and thai Departn a on Rus-

sian travel WS iliation.

Born in New York in 1895, Mumford received his I

the College of thi of New York and Columbia Uni- versity.

Cornucopia On I-our WhstU

Faculty Salaries Largest Single, Private Grant In History Made

To Hospitals, All Non-Public Colleges in U.S. Th.- University will receive $2,742,000 from the half

billion dollars that the Ford Foundation appropriated yes-

terday to colleges and hospitals throughout the country. In-

come from the grant will be used to increase t.uult\ salaries,

ding to Gaylord P. Harnwell, president of the Uni-

ts. Two hundred and ten million dollars of the total gift,

the largest single appropriation in the historj of philan- thropy, will go to every one ol the 615 regionally lited,

Itel) supported colleges and universities in the I St at.

amounts each school i was determined h\ tel) matching the

ills for instruction

APO To Sponsor Ride Sharing Plan

Friars Will Present Basket Drive A wardCA Christmas Dinner Features^ To Leading Group Haverford Professor as Speaker The Frtnrs Seninr Honor So- * ,v*^^» ■ *^" ** ■ IWI «»«»«» w» »**» wjww«-n«,. The Friars Senior Honor So- ciety will present an award to the c organization that contributes the most baski the All-University Basket Drive.

All fraternities, dormitories, and campus organizations are eligible for the award which will be presented annually. "Al- though the final form of the award has not been determined, It will probably have the shape

plaque or trophy." Alan Ackerman, publicity chair- man of the Drive.

The purpose of the Drive, ii is under the direction of

Kirby Fltzpatrick, Abbot of Friars, Is to provide Chri food baskets for the needy families in the West Philadel- phia area. Each basket CO and members of the Friars So- ciety will fill and distribute the containers the day before Christ- mas.

"The Award was originated to recognize that campus organiza- tion which through its efforts in contributing baskets evidences the motto of this year's Drive, It's Nobler to Give'," Ackerman said.

This is the second year that the Drive has been conducted at the University.

Dr. Douglas V. Steere, profes- sor of Philosophy at Haverford

e, will speak on "The I Spirit in a World of

he Christ ciation's ninth annual Interna tional Christmas Dinner tomor- row at 6 p.m. in Memorial Hall.

e Gordon, Christian Association publicity chain:

Dr. Steere lias been conducting goodwill missions throughout the world under Quaker atis

recently in India and in i where he lived with Dr.

Albert Schweitzer. In 1946 Dr. Steere was I

dent of the American Theological Society and, before that Secretary. Some of his other Im- portant positions include Chair- man of the American section of the International Fellowship of

.dilation, President of the Board of Trustees of John Wool man Memorial, advisory counsel lor for the Danforth Foundation, and member of the Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee for Pennsylvania in 1952 and 1953.

Numerous books and articles have been written by Dr. Steere. some of which are "Prayer and Worship." "Doors into Life," and

Ford Foundation Philanthropy

Stems From Model T Fortune In its brief history as a major philanthropic organization the

iFord Foundation has been severely criticized by leftists for being rightist and by rightists for being left;

In spite of all this criticism and two congressional investi- gations money has continued to gush out of the fabulou

Madison Avenue and Fifty-first Street in bursts that n the recipients wallowing In wealth. In this hard boiled age in which "nobody gets somethi

ave been able to understand this flood of Ehilanthropy. Columnist West rook Pegler called it "a front

for d a n g e r o us Communists." Pi med to disagree when

A new Share the-Ride pro- U charRed that -the real bus! i has been instituted by A ,)f tne Ford Foundation Is

pha Phi Omega national servi, „s murd, fraternity, Robert Waldmai ,Urs, and wreckers to chairman of the program, an- ern Europe" nounced yesterday. ' Franklin started It

'tents ';' «f The Un re in the driving and would la|esl philanthropic gusher

ike riders will be able to obtain; dwarfs the the size of th(

information from the Share the s|gnlflcant American endowment, b°oth 1!, -lly enough, was I

he Info, ma on Desk bv the founder of lhe University, IIIK today. It will be open Benjamin Franklin. Franklin's

until Wednesday December 21 munificent bee, /■ay*111 }*a map ()0o pounds to the cities of

d States with pins on it Philadelphia and Boston, which ■•.senting destinations. Stu- was lo be lent out at interest to s can then cheek the lists marrled apprentices.

oI rides bo h offered and avail- The foremost foundations of

?u ». aJ a-fii ie earller Part of tnis century then be made with the individual. were those based on the steel The booth will be open on. p of Carnegie, the oil em-

olidays. since dema. Rockefeller, and the for • tation is greatest copper holdings of Guggenheim. hen However. APO will ow the Ford Foun<!

the lists In the information de at otlv of the year. Wald

added. foundations like a colussus. Its only capital is 90 per cent of the -lock in the Ford Motor Corn-

valued, for tax pur at $417,000,000.

Stock On Sale Its actual worth will be

15 per

"On Beginning From Within.'' The International Christmas

Dinner is open to anyone who ■ to attend Its purpose is

to extend some of the Christmas spirit to students from other lands who will not be home for the Yuletide season.

Wice To Conclude Series Of Hillel Lectures Today

Dr. David H. Wice, president oi clearly when the Philadelphia Board of Rat ,,f the stock is placed on bis. will speak on "Rededication" sale In January. The $400,000,000 in the concluding lecture In to $500,000,000 harvest which Hillels Hanukah series today at will be reaped from this sale will 4 p.m. in the Main Lounge of provide the funds for the founda the Louis Marshall House. tlon's latest experiment in full-

Dr. Wice, spiritual lead. ale philanthropy. Congregation Rodeph Sholem. As one vice-president of the

foundation put it, "You can be- gin to act like a foundation in- stead of like the United States Treasury" only after getting rid of most of the money in a few huge chunks.

Interested persons have offered a multitude of ideas on how the

will comment on how this an- cient holiday affects the modern Jewish student. His talk will be followed by a brief candlellght- ing ceremony in honor of the holiday now in progress.

Dr. Wice was ordained by He- brew Union College In 1933 and was awarded an honorary Doctor | foundation could k bur- of Divinity by his alma mater in den. One of these was a plan to 1948 He has been a director of plant three miles of flowers on the World Union of Progressive each side of the United States- Judaism since 1945 and has been Canadian border. Another plan chairman of the World Commit- was to melt the polar ice caps tee for Liberal Judaism in I , the earth would not suffer the Dr. Wice is a Phi Beta Kappa. .c.«iW./ o* /»«« F.»r>

1954-55 for each institution. In addition to its share ol

the half a billion dollar grant annoum ed yesterday, the I ni- verslty has Included In its share an additional amount which is part of the $50-mllllon grant for teachers' salaries which was an- nounced last March.

The additional sum was grant ed to the University because it was one of the Institutions that was "a leader in raising teach ers' salaries."

Harnwell Comments Harnwell told The Daily ylvanian last night that

he had received no further In- formation from the Foundation except confirmation of the fact

he University had the 1. nt.

"This is the nicest Christmas present the University has ever

Dr. Harnwell have many real flnanciil

problems. None is more impor- tant than faculty salaries. The faculty is the heart of a univer- sity and this action by the Ford Foundation strikes at the core of a major problem.

"These grants mark a mile history of educa

tional philanthropy. They should be a great stimulus to othi

in the task of flnanclnK higher education."

McCracken Comments Robert T. McCracken, chair

man of the University's Board of Trustees, reached by phone night, said that this ws "wonderful grant." "No Univer- sity could be otherwise than pleased," he continued, "at re- ceiving a grant to assure pi payment to the most lmpo people we have, the teaching

y." added that we have r for buildings and for

things and now this aaa the needs of the faculty will b< taken care of.

Comparison Not Made The committee of the Founda

tion which announced the gifts said it "did not attempt to com- pare the caliber of the many different colleges, their general excellence or reputation," but noted the variety of the instl tutlons as "a healthy aspect of our entire system of higher edu- cation."

No single grant was to exceed $5 million. Only one school York University received this amount. Other large grants in- clude $4,510,000 for Harvard: $4,000,900 for Yale; and $4,324,200 for the University of Chicago.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Syracuse University and Columbia University each received more than $3,000,000

Page 2: %ht Bailg pennsgiuanian - Penn  · PDF fileMumford Is noted for hi on such issues as death weapons and the ... APO To Sponsor ... though the final form rowof the

#The Ford In Our Future President Harnwell's statement that

tin- Ford Foundation*! grant to the I ni- tv was "the nicest Christmas pres-

ent the I lity lias ever received" echoea our lentimenta exactly.

It is probably welcome newi alao t<> the faculty membera who had been patiently awaiting ialar) increaaei foi some time.

What intrigued ui ount of the grant which said that the grant ii to ui' rea for in- struction in the liberal arts and aciem While no complete information is avail- able, it i UI that the emphasis is

on the liberal arts and only incidentally on the I 111 tO be the

elaat hich will give ra aei to Wharton teachi

This would seem to us to imply that

liberal arti are l>\ no m. am a gotten field, that tl '-Till conaid-

I worthwhile suhjeets to il

Wii.it could be more ind of a I than the tinancial support of the

supposed!) "impractical" liberal aits l>\ ., foundation whose very sir was

from its share of the profil

bill I'll ||", . this will m,

the revitalization of the liberal aits ami the attraction of the b( those fields we hail ii ntial

illy tor the Col-

^ministration of the ^rant.

whether directly 01 kcl\ through an endowment fund, how.

will determine the course th rait) will take.

| |,,. g ie which

has financed the Educational Surv< the I '\ to date—arc both I lent opportunitiei tor Pennsylvania. We

confident that the I faiverait) will the grant wisely and well. Where

Id it he better used, initially, than to

talize the College by improving the prospects of its facult) ?

Hhc Bailu ;pcmiGUJoaman A franklin Society Pnklicttion

Pukliiktd Monday tkroufk Friday ky and In iki .„„_ ,{, Vndtrfaduatt, of »*« 1 Ue;e 1885 i „„,..„, .1 P—UIMBBI 1TOO

VOL. LXIX DECEMBER 13, 1955

Viewing

JOHN W. ALEXANDEB, JB.

Editor in-Ckilf

W II HAM K. BollAN Manaainf Editor

I). EDWI* Lull Attociatc Manafinf Editor Mo*TOH Mum

lift FBANXUN B«OWN, JB.

/.,*■„,:., . BuBTON M. MlBIKT lary I'HJILII B. FBIEDMAN

Stnin AJriior ... Ro»l BATE Pkotofrafky Editori .. GEOBGE SATTBBTHWAITB, II

l'kvffropkcri MABIN L'H«ut, JOHN KBOONEBB, HEBBEBT

WlNICOT. hralurti EJim A»rHH« ROIENJTBIM

Senior Editor, WILLIAM LIMB, RUMAEB I.ETINION

• • • • • •Vor/i aMinW ... ... JOHN DUOAN /wrilll J>or;i Elun HOWABD BAUM

Spnlt Ntv» Ediln .... IIU<;H JAICOUBI

Sporti Ftaturti Editor LuiB GLAMMAN

Sporti Promotion Editor RICHABD ABTHIX

Sporti Copy Editor JotEPH ABBAMI

Sporti Rtcordi Editor RONALD ANDEIION • • • • •

Junior Editorial Board: ROBIBT DAEOEE, GAETON

.11, LAIEI N» KOINILOII,

( II..II" II. M. \.M«U, AlIBl'l C PABIENTE.

. ZAUMTS. Junior Ftaturti Bond: JAT FEANK.

Junior Sporti Board: LlANIEL UAWLET, GEEAII

IIIEK HHOEN, LEWIE D. SMITH.

LAWBEMCB M. ROIEHTHAL Buiintil Manaftr

LiirrUtina Mana.it' AlAN Ai KEEMAN Promotion Manaftr RICHABD GEEEEE

Anotiait Manaat'i ... MICHAEL I.IEIEN,

JEEOME MAKOWEKT

Production Manaarr . JONATHAN K. GBEENBOBC

Anountt Manaftr HABBY N. BLOCK, II ABHOLS i

Ulmn Manaarr WOLE SrBINOEE BawJ Manaarr DONALDDUNIAP

Anociati Produttion Manaftr JOEL EHEENBBANE

Art Director MOEEAT WilUMAH Aliociatt Circulation Manaftr I.DII PEBEI

Junior Buiintil Manaftri: HoWAED AAEOH, LAW-

■ I NCI BROWN, DATID GABODNICK, CHABLEI

.•. DATID GOLD. HOWABD RKBT. HENET

SATBAN, JEBOLD SCHWABI / M in. ! • • «. \IJII IN Wan M

EIlMABt. OfficCI

THE FEANKIIN SOCIETT BUILDING

344J Woodlind ATtnuc

BVergrren 6-0100 Fit S35, 536

HUMAN II Don. Cradumtt Manaftr BEt. 534

Member Intercollegiate Press

THE SPORTS PARADE _ by John Dugan

—D.P. Pkotoi by Ctoift I

DON I DO II LOW No. Lou Bayne (10) didn't kick his fallen Navy opponent in the head on this play, but the referee did rule charging against the Penn forward.

You may b> ihat football tied from Frank-

i may b ■ <l if

ir football : by two i.or," but

,.ny 19 6

liovwvn. uii.it might add more MH lo IIn- ivoiinds oi Pi that haven't yet healed from the football scan is the I that »i the live eitj lehoola, Penn Agoree

the "lie most likely tu lose the cltj series. Think uhai noise the oiii gradi

E if Temple, Villanova and 8t. Joseph succeed in humbling Penn

The crux of our on who pi

highest scorer in Penn history behind Ernie Beck and Herb Lyi

: rebouni Coach R

found or develo, "big ho can both

Nothi the on Saturday as Navy, the

tl we will face all \ far more rebounds than they should 1

Earl Ki nl Rube McD the three men from whoi: must get a rebounder and scorer rolled

of th from a football hip injury and Is :own quality. MeDaniel showed

. Navy games and if it col lie might maki

iin.

We all ezpeetad t" see Sturjtis |Miur them through again this season anil his II points in two ramee conflrnu oat faith. However, the real Story is the way Irannv Mulroy h lOOmhll as a line sciirer as uell .IN ,I good Doorman We thought he looked great when he poured through four straight long sets and hit IB points in the Brat name, hut his driving play for 14 against Navy showed u1- that we can export nothing but the best from both of our co-captains

The fact that f echelons Ol both the city and thi ue may help the basketballers pull off

a few upsets Sturgls and Mulroy ing a flghtinu team and []

ire help up front and have a few hot nights at the Palestra we're going to

plenty of fun knocking ovei Duke and Temple are next (tl

Kentuch■ nuch

the other Iocs heir

• • • • • . 5011 people took in the suimming

and wieollliig down at the Palestra on Bat urd.iy and came ftWaj «ith memories Of fine

nuances on the mat and in the tank. i i u Didn't I reaU through and

i liber meet

e of ih. las only a few top men and he I

in m al

i.son,

line a Wn

. in the

i CO

d attack '•ttinK hi

i ad of one of his fraternity bn>' him a t

SIDKOI KT SHOTS The new press tables at tlie Pi

i out

writ i doubleheader ac

Wonder how the complimentary ticket Nil nation uill be corrected. It MCIUS that the Penn players have suffered quite a cut in the tickets thej receive I». , some of the other local schools didn't gi^ many complimentaries and we have to be fair. Why not really be fair and help out our boys by giving out the same number of scholarships that the other schools do?

Congratulations to Dick Tyrrell who in the Olympic Socce

in New York. It hat "Goose' ■aroo blood in him and wants

to try for a trip to Au Although the fencl on has not

ted yet, it looks like Maestro Lajos ers may come up with the best

rd among the winter sports squads. An interesting note on the maestro is that he

an all-Hungarian soccer player besides being an outstanding fencer In his college days.

Save Dollars On Your Christmas Shopping

Show Your Malric Car«l for 25-50% Discount

at

Safian and Rudolph 708 SANSOM STRKET

f/JoMwsfairs,)

IMnhHl.-lphia 6, Pa.

DiaiiioniU

\\ al« In-

Sterling

Jewelry

Silverware

(!l<M-ks

Ratdioa

ipplianeee

Loajpafc

< aniiTas-

Cameraa

Pen s.'i-

Leather Gooda <»ifi» Typewritera

A Small Deposit Will Hold any Article Till Christmas

(»pen Monday, Wednesday & Friday Evening Till 9 P.M.

MA 7-1834 Fair Trade Items Exempt MA 7-0967 .j

On Campus with Max Qhuiman

(Author of -Barefoot Boy WttH Chink," tic.)

HOW TO HE A BWOC

e BMIM for coilefl

and mi' ' BWOC is t ntion. (i' I B il t»

i .ng way. I n.' .KI girl is bound ' ieeil if she goes around with a placard tl "HEY!

I.OOKIT .Mi in h a horrid lafle. On your placard put: "Z\ iRDEZ-MOl!" This, u roa

whole new dimension tnd digni! I, it is no longer

the placard. It Will suffice if. from time to time, fOU make d it", for i >r four minu

vim cry, "Whip-poor-will!" you cannot but stay freaa in the mimls of onl

\V a come now to ■ vital accessory to the BWOC lnd< i to any girl who a remain out of jail. But to the HWOC

too

Tin- "little boy look" is all the rage i. in a mad effort to I i little i I oti

pants, la doing m She Irng in achievlog little b

frogs in her po< ki wn on her ii| : lip. and is followed everywhere by a dog nan

All this, of eourae, la on! When evening falls and I dati calling, tin BWOC ii n • very pii ture of chic fem- ininity. She dresses in severe, simple basic black, i only by ''ii pound charm bracelet Her hair la axquisil miffed, with a fresh rubber band around the tail. Her daytime scuffs have been replaced by fashionable hiy:. pumps, and she does not remove them until she y

After the movies at the campus cafe, the BWOC under) her The true HWOC will r, order the entire menu only eau 'late to blench. The true HWOC will pick six or seven good entr and then have nothing more till dessert. This is class and is the hallmark of the true I'.WOC.

j&tei&? ot'&ttxrfa/a?

\isht E.lilor Jsy F. Frank Inuf Editor Larry Knciirl

A WINNER AGAIN! Parland Johnstone about to kick off on another winning back stroke effort for Pennsylvania.

HEADS UP! Three feet in the air and the decision still in doubt. However. Penn's Steve Freidberg (striped pants) eventually won.

Finally, the BWOC. upon being asked by the cigarette vi which is the brand of her choice, will always reply, "Philip Uorria, Otf eorria!" For any girl knows that a Philip Morris in one's hand stamps one instantly as a p- taste and

rnment, as the possessor of UB '-iir of the finer, gentler, higher This Philip

Morris, this badge of ttkvoir faire, now comes to you in a smart pack of red, white and gold, in k ar, at

popular prices, wherever cigarettes are e*ia« BBWIBUB. IISS

To all i»n iniiipua. hip: trr ntiiiill. men or unnun. the mnkrro of I'lulip

Miirrin. urhn hritig MIII taWf column, pxleml <i inrilial inritiilitin to try

toAay'n grnlli- I'hilip Morrio. made grntlr to tmokr finllr.

Page 3: %ht Bailg pennsgiuanian - Penn  · PDF fileMumford Is noted for hi on such issues as death weapons and the ... APO To Sponsor ... though the final form rowof the

Rutgers Matmen Beat Penn; Heavyweight Match Decisive

Rutgers' heaywelght wrestler Mike Fisher, who never donned a wrestling outfit before entering the New Jersey State University two years ago, foiled a Pennsylvania attempt for a tie by pinning Vlnce Dioguardl In 41 seconds of the third period in the Anal match at the Palestra, Saturday. Rutgers won 19-9.

Dioguardl entered the bout wit! railing by five points and needing a fall to tie the - Scarlet Knights. Vince four

tly. and at times gain* hand In the third Si

I en ingled in ■ tier applied a

body press to end the match. Penn Takes La

Charlie Rldenour start- ;th season as Penn mat

or saw li Jump oft id by virtue of Dick

m's win in t. Ing 123 '•nt. Nathan look) In his varsity debut by

ng a decision over the vlsi- c b M l 2.

Quaker 147 pounder. Ken in over Dwight

i who four out ot five bout

.ii he underwent a I In a

Tom Peschol in the 167 pound evi

Innaii (.rapplers Lose i closed to within two

ts of tlelng Rutgers, but rlet pulled away In the last

all lies. The visitor's Neal her beat veteran Jay Gold-

enberg, 9 3, and Fisher beat Dio- guardl.

The frosh matmen also lost its opener to Rutgers, 21-9, as Bob

IThc Bailu pcnnsuloanian

SPORTS TUESDAY. DECEMBER 13. 1955 PAGL 1HK1 I

< HUM.IK RIDENOUR

WXPN Airs Sports hockey game between the

11 the Cllnto HI be broadcast

renlng at 8:15 as part WXPN sports

It between i nd Duke, which gets un-

Karchmar, Dan Hendrlckson and derway Friday evei 7:30, Frank Knlpe won for Penn In a I eluded on this week's losing cause. ogram.

Palestra Opener Tense As Navy Sinks Quakers

by Dan Dawley Despite its three-point loss to Navy, the Pennsylvania basket

ball team did provide some exciting moments for several thousand spectators In the Quakers' Palestra debut on Saturday.

Although the contest was not one of the smoothest-played on the Penn court, the outcome was in doul until

nnal « The lead —— red hands no less thai- l™e. provided most of the scor-

times during the course of game, '»s punch with two Held goals and the count was dean. "«'(' th" on i. * K the lead to the Both squads enjoyed fairly com- Middles early in the second halt, fortable margins at one time o Quakers slowly fell behind

iily to have:; m"! the count reached 82-51 put on a vigorous rally ualning. But spec

ow the gap once again. were filing out Defense Shinrs "' scurrying back as Defense SOU* DR.k Csencsltz and Lon h

Offensively the Qu. ft ,ombined for nine points to nar- much to be desired, but their ,,)W ,,„. N.,vv advantage to three

half in particular, was their ' Collins Sinks Set display of the year In that The M1(: lnree

department. Penn controlled thi Dut diminutive Tommy bOmd?iilrol1,!h.0Ut mu,cU °J lhS ColUn ■ good and with 12

. 1 20 minutes, and Red arid seconds left Sturgis was awarded ff.1i!..plafce? made 7eX block^^f lwo free throws. He made the Middle shots several timea Th. ,nd Cseii< ped in the

id half was a differen d attempt to bring the tally story, however, as the Navy quin ,„ 6766 but the Quakers' full

.insistently outhustled tl. to Bob Albert- lring loe gon KOt loose in forecoui i

Two Penn spurts, one In ear ,yup as the clock ran half, made things much more in- out.

. might other- Sturgis, whose 19-polnt total have been. Trailing 19-12 was high for the game, Fran

with 11 minutes of the gameMulroy, and Csencsltz, who completed, the Quakers finally chlppi ii 14 points apiece, found i;e and proceeded were among the few bright spots ID run up a string of 11 consecu . perform- tive points before ik Petlnos, sophomore Middles could score again. Jo ad captain Dave Sturgis, who turned in an out- Smaller led the Middies with 14

nng Job throughout the each.

Four Quakers Excel in Defeat As Yale Swimmers Top Penn

Despite Yale's 61-23 victory over the varsity swimming team Saturday at the Hutchinson Pool, Pennsylvania Coach Jack Medica was all smiles because of some fine individual showings.

Captain Parland Johnstone and Jerry Gleason both came through with stellar performances In taking firsts while Gene Coggins and Al Sears both showed promise for the mermen in their future meets by giving the KII

yctrlinacl «««»PI»rtt>Tilt rh;imi)s' **"> ,KlVl' »™ won 129 eariings Loseneoei nt ...... dual meets, a good race. OVV/ I C I Cl . • Joni lus specialty.

n Weakroul OhoOtinq myard backstroke, to run his victory string in this event

Pennsylvania's freshman quin- tet salvaged at least one consol- ation from Saturday's 75 to the Navy Plebes.

Coach Len Tanseer unveiled ing threats, as

George Schmidt and Paul Kelso d 20 and 19 points, respec-

tively, to keep the Quake the ball game.

Fouls Mean Difference Penn lost the game on the foul

im hit for 27 but the Middles connected

on 21 of 34 fouls, while l iage only 15 of 38.

With Schmidt, a strong 6'3" t from LaSalle High,

inside the keyhole and 511 Kelso from Darby High

>g good on long sets and Red and Blue

was out in front for much of the P«t" Mahoney's

Navy squad rallied to pull ahead, 37-34. at i ion.

Johnson Leads Navy Dick Johnson, a lanky red

to 16. Gli servers with his excellent

>rm, came to edge Doug Starkweather in the

diving eve Taking seconds In both the 50

the 100-yard Coggi: i Uni-

lo be Penn

Pool Record Tied It took a record tlelng i

by Yal Aubrey I the Penn swimmer in the 50

Aubrey, Ya traliai. .mpic

il. tied the Hutchl Pool i< t by Kerry Dono- van. ;, . ale, with

me for i I Sears, only a sophonn

through with a second in the 200 yard bi oke event and

rd in the 200-yard nil o prove that Penn has a

tar In future events. Willis And Bogdanoff Score

The rest of the Quakers' p were accounted for by Dave Willis and Charley Bogdanoff. Willis took third 220 and the 440-yard freestyle events while

grabbed gam. '.ugdanoil third In the Held goals and 200 yard backstroki

out of eight fouls to An Inter idelight to the tribute 22 points to Navy's 18th

Ight victory. I Mike Fluher

fact that thi ■:i different men t.

same number of positions while the only other Quakers to Penn had to depend on 11 men

for double figures. Bow- to fill their 23 slots In the meet d 5 and 2 for 12, The swimmers next meet is

and Fluher tabbed 4 and 2 for 10. against Delaware away.

It's a pleasure to |el to know Ou SMCI \MIH SHAYI

LOTION. Each lime you shave you can look forward lo some- thing special: il"' OLD SI I brisk, sriap, tn

the tani of thai vigorous astrini i ii film, heals tiny raaot nicks. Splash on

uni SPICI - and start the day refreshed!

Add Spice to Y ... Old Since For Men

S H U LT ON Now York • Toronto

PICTURE OF STUDENT DREAMING OF AN EDDIE JACOBS CHRISTMAS This year, be sure that something special for someone special (namely you) come, from the preferred store. Eddie Jacobs. Ltd. A comprehensive selection of moderately priced clothing and furnishings of the utmost distinction, mosth exclusive* and originals.

sroKT COATS Shetlands, cashmeres, tweeds and flannels

sum Flannels, gabardines, Shetlands. tweeds, worsteds, sharkskins.

TOPCOATS Shetlands. tweeds, coverts, gabardines.

i; \i\< OATS Our own imported English rainwear.

SHIRTS Oxford button downs, club and Pee Wee plaids.

Open Monday, \\ <'iln««(la> ami

FH<la\ Evenings Till O I nlil ( liri-lma-

/ A.. -Ill, it Ho;JU*J

Sl.\< KS Flannels, gabardines and whipcords In the "Pirns" model.

NIC KWKAR Authentic regimental stripes and foulards

SWEATERS Pure cashmeres, lambswools and Shetland long sleeves.

HOSK Argyles, clock argyles and solid color hose.

CLOTHES OF CHARACTER

EDDIEXJACOBSLtd. 3417 WALNUT STREET

PHILADELPHIA A. PA.

IT'S NOBLER TO GIVE .. DECEMBER 25 This space donated to the Basket Drive by Dally Pennsylvanlan

Page 4: %ht Bailg pennsgiuanian - Penn  · PDF fileMumford Is noted for hi on such issues as death weapons and the ... APO To Sponsor ... though the final form rowof the

i FOUR Nil DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN rUESDAY, DKCKMHER 13, 195<

Dr. Harnwell Defends Perm's Football Team Before Address To Pennsylvania Society

Departing from a prepared address to be delivered at the 57th r of the I sylvanla Society, Dr. Gaylord P. Harnwell. president of the Unl-

y, Saturday defended Penn- sylvania's football team.

Dr. Harnwell diverted from his Benjamin Eairless,

id the 1,500 i that

VOUld be less' to ask Dr. Harnwell about

of Pei . is .simply reinstating foot-

iirlate po In the ac ime of the

I)i Harnwell said, adding that he was "proud" of

Among the members of Hie

Robert T. McCracken ho was t Also

i. now Advisor on Disarmament to

n nor Stassen address ie group.

Notices \( 11\ rills NOTICES

Highball D| it 4 p.m. in

\llrndance il ditof In

Hightail if heelers of

husiness office at 1

Grover Talks To DP Heelers or of the

Phllad r, William Grover. will B 1 p.m. to

at a meeting of The Daily

i the Joui Build- (439 Woodland Avenu DarofT, heeling co rhairman,

J'l'ir «X Cuiiiiiifrliiiia.l Srt

SPECIAL $4.95 VARSITY SHOP

(Opposite Men's Dorms) J ************************ A***********************

* FOB COLD DAYS

i ALL * « * « * « : * « * « *

WOOL SLACKS

from 110.95 Including Alterations

VARSITY SHOP (Opposite Mens Dorms)

.mw 1 to 9 rfc

—U.P. /'*./. at- Arthur I'arirnli

Robert T. Met 'rat-ken, chairman of the Board of Trustees, Dr. irtl P. Harnwell. president of the Iniversity, and Benjamin

I airless, president of the Pennsylvania Society, pause outside the main ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotei, following the Dr. Ilarnwell's delivery of the main address at the Society annual dinner.

Ford Foundation Is From Henry Ford's Original Model T

I Continued from Page One) indignity of revolving on tilted axis.

Much of the recent criticism of the Foundation Is a result of the $15 million grant which es- tablished the Fund for the Re public. The critics still thrive despite the statement by Robert M. Hutchlna thai the fund wholly disowned subsidiary of the Ford Foundation."

The Ford Foundation and other such organizations are exempt from taxes under Section 501 (c) (3i of the Internal Revenue Code. If, however, Henry and Edsel Ford had left their stock to Edsel's children Instead of to the

datlon, the Inheritance tax would have come to over $300,000,000. The present value of the stock is approximately $2.5 billion.

The smallest of the 182 grants the foundation made last year was one of $900 to Princeton so

Professor Kazuo Mldutani could stay in the U. S. to com plete a study of international trade. The largest slice of the $68 million melon, $34 million, went to education.

Have a WORM of FUN! Travel with IITA

Unbelievable Low Cost

V .1* &S fe (HIM SI RESTAURANT"

146 N. 10TII STREET Open—11 A.M. to 3 A.M.

The Moat Outstanding

Food in the

Heart of Chinatotrn

MENU LUNCH—11:30-2:00

Hot Raul Beef Sandwich, Brown Sa

DINNER—5:30-7 (Mi

Koa-i Turkey, Filling. (>iltlri Grav)

HOUSTON HALL

Europe

For hM weeks only . . .

a Lucky Silver Dollar with every $10.04) i

purchase or over . . .!

VARSITY SHOP j for Mens wear the men

wear . . .

u,m $499

Orient ,43-65 D.yl . . ,,.m $97fl

MOHY four* include 31.1* '"VrcCl collig* credi' \PtHD_^jAl.o low-toil fr.ps to Me>.cc

$129 up. South America S699 up. Hawaii Study Tour $498 up and Around the World $1398 up

Aik Your Travel Agent

545 5th Aye.. New YorK 17 MU 2 6544

Sphinx Luneheim There will be a luncheon at 1

p in today at the Christian Asso- ciation Building for all members of the Sphinx Senior Honor So clety.

CLASSIFIED ADS OPTICAL REPAIRS—Prompt student

service, broken I row. replaced, Irauiei and end pieces repaired, glasses adjusted

Scientific Eye Examination. To avoid in- convenience have ua copy your prescrip tion (mm vour leases. No obligation. Dr.

raits, Optometnat. 14 S. 40th St. Open until 9 p.m. on Moo. and Fri.

WANTED—Ride daily from Broad and nvcrsity ol Penn-

sylvania, Arrive 1 a.m. Will pay. Phone Mr. Hill, EV 6-135J.

At Lehigh, December 17th. WILBUR DEPARIS and STAN RUBIN 1:30

P \l All the BEEP, you can drink. Ticket. ($2.25) from Gene 3800 Local. EV 2-3 584.

tti>tta>*«>**t««**tttttt*«*taa**«a***<a>****<f***

PENNSYLVANIA NIGHT AT

THE MEADOWI.KOOh. THE DORSEYS—Cedar Grove, New Jersey

For Reservatioi IV 2-6965

»<^.>.>».M-«M»-X-:-;~:~>-W~>«X'-X";">-X~>»-X»-X »♦»•» M 0 »♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

YOU'RE INVITED :

TO THE

BERMUDA TEA

BENNETT HALL LOUNGE

TODAY—3-5 P.M. \H>yIKS—GUEST SPEAIPI

REFRESHMENTS

IITA AN INVITATION TO . . . CONSERVE YOUR INCOME

SAVE THR0UCH TCA! (TEACHERS & COOPERVIIM. ,\ssO( IATIONS)

The TCA Buyer's Guide now lists several hundred reputable business firms cooperating with TCA members. Since, for a number of years now, each issue has been widely used, members have developed much confidence In relying upon our pocket size booklet as a valuable guide to excellent consumer sources.

Used properly with the TCA Membership Card, the Guide has provided TCA members with a new and easy way of obtain- ing substantial discounts from numerous neighborhood retail

l. More important, for greater savings, members may I %M (3 also buy directly from a variety of basic sources, major Whole- • w" ■— sale Distributors and Manufacturers who are Included among

the prime suppliers of the entire Delaware Valley area. The TCA consumer service program Includes the TCA Buyer's Guide, revised

and published at lea^t twice a year; the TCA Service Form (mall); and, for up-to- date information on latest consumer sources, a telephone receptionist on duty daily.

In order to continue these services, TCA relies on the very nominal $1. mem- bership fee per calendar year. In order to Insure the proper functioning and to maintain TCA as the outstanding consumer opportunity, you are cordially Invited to Join and experience the benefits of TCA from now until the end of 1955! This membership fee Is easily recoverable many times over In substantial savings! Send this application now!

1955-56 — TCA MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION — 1955-56

Pleaae Print: La" Pint Name

: ♦^^^♦•^•^•^•^•^•^•:••:••:••^<••^•^•^•^<••^•:••^•:•<••^•^•^•^•:••^•^•^•^•^•^•>♦•M••^•^•>♦•>•M«^

•Drink a highhall at nightfall . . ."'

from sparkling new platinum rim

Pennsylvania Glassware Highball GlaUM* S 8.50 a doz.

Juice frlaMifig S 8.50 a dm.

CokeGtMMi S 8.50 a «l«.z.

Old-Fashimtef $ 8.50 a doa, llo.ml.l. OM-la-liiom-.U £10.00 a doz.

with the Pennsylvania shield in

permanently fired-on red ami blue

Houston Hall Store

—Headquarters for I'niv.-rsity Shield Christmas Cards

Mew Member

Tel

□ Renewal Enclosed Is $1.00 Annual Membership Fee

ills Walnut sr.. Philaielphia .'. Pa. — DA. *)-.:■ Your TC \ Man he used ai I and all niemberi of your family.

TCA SERVICE FORM V M I Not all dealeri can be mentioned bv name in the Guide. As you return your application

below. Information concerning these sources will hr leal to you be return mail. Theae are among the finest offer11 \. It nut checked ""», Jiinil Mill be sent with >rrahip card for your possible u»e later.

In the near future, I may be interested in purchasing the iletni checked: Date

1 ir.) 2. □ I urniture (Wholesale 1) 'I J. G Dining Room I'urn. (Wholesale Distr.) 4. G Decorator's Furniture Showroom 5. □ Summer Furnitt; ale Distr.) 6. 'mlesale Di- 25. 7. □ Fura (Wholesale Distributor) 26. 8. G Luggage (Wholesale Distributor) 9. O Wholesale Distributor!

10. G Camerat (Wholesale Distributor) 11. G Diamonds (Importer) 12. G Roofing Suppliei (Wholesale Distributor) -I 13. Q Plumb ing Suppliea & Fixtures (Wh. Diatr) 32. 14. n Portable Typewriters (Distributor) 15. G Vacuum Cleaners (Distributor) 16. G Bedding. Mattresses. Box Springs, 26-2 IT. Q Children's Outerwear (Wh sale Distr.) 36. IS. G Men's Sport Sons. Slacks (Manufacturer) 19. G Bicycles (Wholesale Distributor) 38. G L«'je Appliances (Refrigerators, Washers, 39. G The following Small Appliances 40. G Nationally Advertised Aluminum Doors and Dindows

■ ■lien's Dresses. Coata (Wh'sale Distr.) ] Men's Sortl, Topcoats (Wh'sale Distr.) ] linens (Wholesale Diatribe

3 Gift Suggestions (Wholesale Distr.) 3 Clock. ft Travel Alarms (Wholesale Diatr.] G Watches (Wholesale Distributor) ] Silverware (Wholesale Distributor) 3 Rings (Wholesale Distributor) 3 Electric Shavers (Wholesale Distributor) 7! Record Plavers (Wholesale Distributor)

en Cabinets (Manufacturer) G Gas Rangers (Wholesale Distributor) 3 Binoculars (Wholesale Distributor)

Floor Polishers (Wholesale Distributor) ] Pianos (Wholesale Distributor)

3 Lamps (Wholesale Distributor) "2 Kitchen Sets (Factory Showroom)

G Toys (Wholesale Distributor)

Air Conditioner!, etc.)

WRESTLER PINNED, BUT WINS! (Reading Time 59 Seconds)

Harry Rubbarknce, outstanding Penn wrestler '53, wts pinned DECEMBER 17. but won. This is because Harry was finally pinned to his high school sweet- heart Simple Sue at the YULETIME DIXIE PARTY at LEHIOH. He groaned will glee and tied up Simple Sue in a full nelson to the continuous music of WILBUR DEPARIS and STAN RUBIN

rry laughed gleefully as Simple downed a full ken of brer. Why not, the sign reads ALL THE BEER YOU CAN

INK and the great dixieland music from 1:30-5:00 P.M. and all for only $2.25. It took Harry just an hour and a half to drive to the FROLICS BALLROOM in BETHLEHEM and he wanted to help support the Penn wrestlers who faced Le- hlgh that night. He got his tickets from:

GENE—:.»oo LOCUST—EV 2-3584

or

NORM—.1817 SPRUE—K\ 2-6865

start Xmns right! 6V/ your lieki-ts now for the

YULETIME DIXIE PARTY—DECEMBER 17!