TUESDAY W r Etng-tum t

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TUESDAY Edition W r Etng-tum TUESDAY t Edition Washington and Lee Semi-Weekly Newspaper Volume LVII LEXINGTON, VIRGINIA, MAY 21, 1957 Number 56 1951 Calyx Commemorates Gen. Lee's Birth Finals' Cocktail Party Will Feature Rhythm Of Les Modes Quintet By Jim Greene Finals Dances will feature a young blood j azz group, rhe Les Modes Quinter, at the ZBT cocktail party and the early morn ing con ce rt on Friday, Jun e 6, it was announced today by John SinweU. Dance Board Presi-*'------------- denl, and BHI AbelofT, Fmals Dances rresident. The Dance Board aJ1>0 disclosed today the official attire to be wom nt tbe \arlou!t fun ctjons of Finals Dance . Conventional dress will be \\Om at Ute Richard i'tfaltby con - ' ert to IJe held on the campus lawn. on June 4, from 5 to 6 Jl .m. Formal wiiJ be the at- tire at the evening dance in Doremus Gym from 10 p.rn. tu 2 a.m. Formal will al- •o he required at lhe Thursday, June 5, dance in Doremus Gym from !) lo II :30 p.m. After II :30 and unt il the conclusion o( the dam·e at I n.m. s uit s and cocktail may he wom. At the con- concert of Finals Dances Friday mor ning, conve nti onal dre !> will be worn. The Le:. Modes Q uintet is a rhythm combo that specializes in cocktail mw.ic and in many respects is siml- lnr to the Kai Winding organization. The Quintet features J ulius Watkins on French Horn and Charlie Rouse on :.axophone. In 1955 Jul ius Walkins and Charlie organized a five place jazz combo that soon became an inune- dtall' sensalion in the New York club c rcuit. The group put the toe tappers to work at Blrdland in New York and Storyville m Boston. The Lcs Modes have appeared on the Steve AUcn version of the Tonight Finals Collegian To Feature Akin, Smulson, Smith Editor Jerry Hopk1ns has an- nounced the last i!sue of the SouU•- ern Collegian for the current school tenn will be released on J une 5. The scheduled army of features in store for Collegian readers contains a spicy vari ety of entertainment. A section of !Onf!S with that ever- popular t- mphasls on sex is planned by Tom Akin, and a new short story by Voi gt Smjth will occupy an honored place. Appropriate for this lime of year will be a word of ad- vice ( or waming) to lncornlng fresh- men by Mark Smulson. The beauty section this iss ue will spotlight P aula Ragusa. a Randolph-Macon sopho- more who wiJl be pictured in various poses donning her modem dance costume. There wiiJ be a profile on Jabo, the illte prot,rietor of Buddy's lunch and n serious profile on Lexington in- cluded. In additi on, the re wlll be the regular Sunny Side and M isce l an- neous sections. As a specia l feature, the annual Collegian awards will be announced. The tropy for the outstanding ath- lete of the year will be presented by Pres Brown , and the award for the best Troubadour actor Will be given hy Earl N. Levitt . .- ----------.· Ste'Ve Allen Selects Queen; W&L PUB. BOARD ELECTS u d [ SMITH EC, ROBERTS PRES. nammon , La. Gir Chosen By TOM GILLIAM Cbff Srrulh and Bill Roberts were elected Executive Committeeman and President respectively of the Pub- lications Board at its l ast r egular meeting of the year yesterday after- noon. At the same meeting Bob Neunre1ter was chOS<'n for the office of Vice-President of the Board, and Steve Friedlander was selected by acclamat!on for the position of Sec- retary. Sm1lh was sworn in as a member of the Executive Comm1ttec of the Student Body ut the EC's regular meeting last nighl He is the last Exe<:ulive Committeeman to be elected until the representatives of the freshman academic and freshman law classes are chosen next fall to complete the membership o! the 12-man student governing body. The KA junior from Frankfort, Kentucky is the editor-elect of the Tuesday edihon of the Ring-t um Phi, a member of Omicron Dclta Kappa, the intercollegiate debate team, the Christian Association, and is presently serving as a dormitory counselor. Chosen lo succeed Larry Atler in the position of President of the Pub- lications Board, Roberts will assume responsibiliLJes for the post next fall. W &L Commerce Fraternity Elects Bradford President The annual Comme1 ·ce School elec- tions we re held on Monday, May 13. Thomas Bradford, a junior KA [rom a:nningham, Alabama, was clected president. Bradford, who succeeds ZBT £ enior Sam Bend- heim in th is position, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Beta Gamma Sigma, and is active in various fra- ternity functions. Others officers elected a re Michael J. Barry, DU junior from La Grange, I'l'nc:::, secretary, and Robert Fred- erick Bnnks, P1KA junior from Up- per Montclair, New J ersey, treasur- er, No vice-preside nt was elected . An SAE junior, Roberts is from Eufaula, Alabama. He was recently elected next year's President of Scabbard and Blade Military Hon- orary. He is also Business Manager- Elect of the 1957-58 Calyx, a house officer of his fraternity, and a mem- ber of the Fraternity House Man- ager's Bob Neunrelter who makes his home in Glendale, Missouri, is the Editor-Elect of next. year's Southern Collegian. This year he served as a Vice-President of Fancy Dress, and he was recently named as Vice-Pres- Ident for Finals Dance Set. In addi- tion to these nctivttics, Neunreiter is a member of the varsity wrestling team, a CrntemHy house officer , next year 's Academic School Vice-Presi- dcn: of the Senior Class, and he has also been appointed to serve liS a dorm1tory counselor Cor the school term 1957-58. A sophomore ZBT from Washing- ton, D.C., Friedlander was elected this Spring to the post of Business Manager of the 1957-58 Ring-tum Phi . Several weeks ago he was elected Prcs1deni of the ZBT fra- temrty, and he bas previously served as a Circulation Manager for the school newspaper. The 1957 Washington and Lee Calyx is dedicated to Gen· eral Robert E. Lee on this the one hundred and fifrieth anni· versity of his birch. Bill Abeloff, Zeta Beta Tau senior and editor of the Calyx, stated that it was most appropriate to have rhis issue dedicared ro General Lee. Th e Calyx beauty queen, selected by Steve Allen, popular *television emcee, is Miss Wilma C":e DR CHARLES TURNER of Hammond, Louisiana. Other mem- bers or her court. are: Dotty Westby, TO PUBLISH WORK Sweet Briar College; Ruth Kohn, Hollins; Ann Hill, Randolph-;Mac:on Dr. Turner, professor of history at Woman's College; Molly Mitchell, Washington and Lee, has recently I DcPaw Unlversity; and I verson published two new bJogTaphlcal ar- Branch, Atlanta, Georgia. There tides. One should of particular j were twenty el'llrants in the contest. interest to citizens of Rockbridge Allen, commenting on the selection, County. The article, "LcLters of Dr. I stated : "Since all the gi rls looked Johnston, 1790-1800, Rockbridge so charming, it was a difficult choice Medical Student and Doctor," will for me lo make." appear in the Journal of the Hirtory I The cover of the annual features of Medicine published by the Yale an embossed replica of the Wash- University School Medicine. Dr. ington and Lee ring on a bluish- Turner obtained the inlorrnation for white background. The ring Is in this article from Dr. Johnston's di- rect descendents, who are sllll living in the Lexington area. Another article appcan; in lhe new edition of the Dictionary of Ameri- can Biograph ·es. Tht- subJect is ''Wi1liam Harahan. Pt·cs1dent the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad." All copies of the Calyx may be picked up at I he Student Union be- tween 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. on Wed- nesday, Thursday, and Friday of this week. while and the stone is solid blue. On the ring is the name of the uni- versity and the year, 1957. The introduction and division U.S. News & World Report Poll Reveals Growth In Job Opportunities For Seniors pages of the Calyx are done in red, from half a dozen or more offers. Do - blue, and black on light-gray an- Editor's note: The following ar- ticle is from the May 17, 1957 iss ue of U.S. News & World JUport and is reprinted hert' by the of the copyright owner, U. S. New Publishing Corporation.) Most young people about to gtt college diplomas this spring their pick of jobs-and the starting pay is the highest in hi story. rnand remains highest for graduates tique paper. The introduction con- in technical fields-science and en- tains much artwork, as well as a g·ncermg. Competition is stiffening, hiEtor.cal sketch of Lee's contribu- howcver, for those with a general lions to and Lee. The education in the liberal arts, hired ns double-spread division pages con- future business .execulivi.'S and Gov- lain S'hort quotes relevant to the ernrnent odmmiStrntors. feature. Included in the annual are Salary otTers are 5 to 10 per cent many full-page picture:; of univer- above last year's record-selling I sity buildings. levels. Pay of $400 a month is com- In the prologue there is a dedico- mon. Top prospects command $600 l ion to Lee which states: "The one a month OJ' more. Salary ranges (for hundred and fiftieth anniversary of new graduates) are the highest ye:: the birth or Robert Edward Lee is Less than a year ago their book- ing agent Willard Al exander decided to accept dates at various coll eges in the winter the Les Modes plnyt-d to enthusiasUc collegians at Yale, Harvard, and Pr inceton. This is their first southern venture. They currently have a 12 inch LP out on the Dawn lnbcl and will begin re- cording for RCA Vi ctor in the near future. TURNER TO HANDLE A get-together for a ll commerce W &L ESSAy CONTEST students and the faculty was held this afternoon at Goshen Pass. Ta lent scouts from business, indus- try and Government are doing more recruiti ng [rom cnmpuses than ever before. Intervi ew dales between em- ployers and students arc being made a year in advance for next yt>ar's seniors; thls year 's graduates, in the main, already are spoken for. Many students are choosing Engineers and Scient bts (includes o memorable occasion from any point mathematicians, chemists, physicists, of view, and has a dual signiliconce others): Lowest salary reported in from the standpoint of Washington latest survey is $375 per month. and Lee University. Not only do we Highert: $685. Offers arc from $30 to respect General Lee as a man who S75 a month above the 1956 level. believed in a cause and gave all to At the ZBT cocktall party the Les Modes will play a variety of music from rock-and-roll to Dixieland. At the wee smaJI hours concert on Fri- day from 1.15 to 2:15 a.m. to be held on the Doremus Gymnasium steps (weat her penni tting), they will play the type or cocktail they have I famous for: medleys, show- tunes, and tht>me songs. After their appearance at W&L, the Les Modes will journey to Norfolk, Virginia to play at the Continental. Four contestants have submitted I es,ays for the Cincinnati Award this year. The winner o!the contest will be announced on May twenty-fl.fth. The contestants an dtheir subjects are: Edgar Wallace, who is writing on "Dabney Carr, Louisa's Jeffer- son"; John C. White, the author of "Jack Jouett, the Paul Revere of the South"; J. J. Haun, whose essay is entiUed "Colonial Tobacco Regula- lions in Virginia"; and L. F. Bryan, who is writing on "Colonial Travel- Through Rockbridge.'' Last year's winner of the award was Edgar Wallace, a junior Pi Phi from Louisville, Kentucky. James Moffatt and Bill Koon Will Star In Dramas Scheduled for the Summer Stage Two Wa$hlngton and Lee students have chosen to perform in summer- lime dramahc productions, according lnfoJmatJon released today by Mr. L .J. Lanlch, Jr., Director for Dra- matics for the University. W&L lnw student, James Moffatt, and his wife, June, who teaches dra- matics at Southern Seminary, have been selected for and are playing very . th e leading roles m "The Founders"- the ofllcial druma of 350lh Anni- ve!'fary Festival w hich began lasl month "The Foundrrs." written by Paul Gn·en , follows the problems and c .. of the Jamestown setUers and thcii· I ndian neighbors from the doy of the landing to the massacre by the lnclinns m 1862. The Moffatts, workmg as a husband and wUe team play lhe roles of Pocahontas and RoUe in this play; and have also had roles dw·mg pnst summers in "Common Glory"-another historical play by Mt. Green, this time drama- ti z.inl{ Williallll> in the days of Jef- ferson and Patrick Henry. Bill Koon, a freshman !rom Char- lotte, N. C. and a probable journal- i!m nwjor, has btcn !-elected Cor one of tho ll'admg role:. in n religious play that is to run ln Roanoke this s ummer from June 23 to September 3. The freshntan plays two roles, one in each of the two parts of the story. In one part., h e is cast as Nathaniel, one of Paul's friends, and 1n the other he plays the part. of James the Apostle. This American religious outdoor drama, titled "Thy Kingdom Come," deals wiUl the life of Sl. Paul Pre- Med Seniors Will Enter Graduate School This Fall This June, seven and Let' pre-medicnl students will gradu- ate to enter me<hcal !iChoob through- out the nation. Among these students nre Fred Magolme, a Sigma Nu who is enter- ing Western Reserve University's medicnl school, Bernard Schaal, who going to Washington Univers•ty in St Louis, and J11cques d'Empre- mesnU, a Dell who is going to the Univer!Jty of Virginia. Trafford Hill, Phi Kap, will also at- U. Va.'s med school; Joe At.lani.s, Sigma Chi, Ken St.orllng, Pi Phi, and Bill Wilemon, Phi P:J, wilt enter the medical scltool of Duke University. ' BOB II UNTLEY rccch·cs Washington A\\ &rd Huntley Gets Washington Award The joint faculty-student comm11- at sel('Ctro and said lte on the Washington L1terary So- he wa very flattered to reccive the ctcty Award announced late yester- award day thnt Robert Royall Huntley, " Huntlt>y, a m<>mber of Phi law !iChool scmor, ito the Kappa ODK, Who's Who, the Ordet 1957 recipient of the award, to or the Coif and lhe Student B<tr that sturll'nl who rendered the Association, !rtudied here for his A.B. service to Wash- df'grct a wdl as for his law degree. ingt.on and Lee." ln his st>ven years at Washington Max Caskie, chairman of the I and Lee, Huntly according to the Wa!hington Literary Society, speak- committee, greatly to ing for the faculty-studt:nt :;elec- faculty-student relations and the lion committeE' slated that Huntley I gt'nE-ral of the student body. ,, He wAs vace-p1·esldenL of the student wal. to recognize the work bod . hl 1 t ed. t ,, in th r 1 · · h Ill y m s n erm 10 e e o a man w •mpre!!.•nons ere w 1 h 1 d h ed · th be last nlf." Ca,.kie further com- lw sc oo an as St>rv In o er th H I capacities. mented at unt ey "has contrt- MembeJ·s or thE' selection commil- buted most lo Wallhlngt.on and Lee le!' include the officen; of o 1 e Wash- in his here." mgton Literary Society, the two Thl' award was made yesterdav aflt:moon in Dean Fmnk Gllliam'.- office, where Huntley expreSlieJ hu; deans, Or. Marshall Flshwlc:k, and on<> ml ·mher at large from the So- ciety. Busint"l' (incl udes ac- defend this cause, but also a man counlanls, businl'ss - administration whose guidance and f ai th formed the majors, others): Offers range from foundation on which Washingt on and S330 to $450 a month, up $25 to $50 Lee has grown to !Ls present stature. over last year. ln greatest demand: Thus, in the realization of this fact, with and marketing the staff of the 1957 CaJyx has dedi- background. cated the yearbook to Robert Edward Libeml Demand is spotly, but salary offers are $20 to $50 n month highe1· than '56; range from $350 to $400 per month. Scarcity continues. Sal- aries Sl'C moving up; the range re- ported for beginning teachers is $312 to $367 a month. La\\ yers, other Sp4!Cialisls: Demand and )'alary otTers vary widely. The range of monthly salaries reported: journalism $280 to $540; Ia\\ yt:rs, $300 to $450: pharmacists, S300 to $475. Lee, lhe man and the ideal." Commenting on the annua l, editor Abeloff stated: "I feel that the 1957- Cal yx turned out even better than hoped for, and that i1 will be enthus- iastically accepted and enjoyed by nil May I extend my deepest appre- ciation lo the Benson Printing Co., Nashville, Tennessee, and to the Lynchburg Engraving Company as welt as to all the members of my for the cooperation, Interest, and time that they have devoted to this annual" Latching on to promising students a Yt'llr or more before graduation is Enrollment becoming common. "Trial marriage" jobs in summertime, previously re- To Increase slr1ctcd molttly lo students complet- ing their jumor year, now ore being extendcd with increasing frequency An anticipated increase in enr oll- to sophomorl'!l and <'VIm to freshmen. mcnt at Washington and Lee Unlver- Some employers find thal, if they sity over the next 15 years will re- r.cout only the senior claSli, the best suit in no lowering of ncademic stan- men already are hired. dards, President Francis P. Gaines These spots rmcrgc in reports from raid last week. in all of the coun- lie addressed 170 students and try ·reports In· "U.S News other who attend('() the on- <lnd World Ucport" in telegraphic nun! senior banquet at Nat ural survt'y of the JOb morket for gradu- Bridge, •ponrored by the Univer- ates. f.!ty's Alumni As oc1ation. Plact'mcnt officors nt univcnotlk 'll President Gainl'!l said n spcciul agree unanimou ly thnt . as far , tudy comnuttt·l' has recommended they can forc.'8ee , thl' brisk market !hal the University enrollment be for educated youths will continue incrcastd f1·om its present 1,000 Hu- indefinilely. Competition for gmdu- dents to 1,250 over a per1od oC 15 ntes now 1 !vats that dL'iplayed by I years. liCOuts offt'ring contractt! to Pr cllmt Gaines said would J>romwng players. 1 e no "conspicuous increase' in any Strong in adthllon to tl1nt c nc venr, but that the freshman cia. in the scientific and cnghtect· .ng would be incr eued by a num- fields is being mode for nccountants,lt: cr Pach St'plember. mcrcha ndi5E'r!<, law,•ers, unforest-en the and h:nchers. Hardly any graduate new Univeuity dining hall Rnd two needs to plead for a job. dormitoril'S. one Cor law .studl'nls and (CIIJ>vri(hC 1957 In U.S. P uh- one for upperclassmen. will be renrly I ,h ;nJ:" Cor.,urntion.) fo1· tlw 1957-59 bchool term

Transcript of TUESDAY W r Etng-tum t

TUESDAY Edition W r Etng-tum • TUESDAY

t Edition

Washington and Lee Semi-Weekly Newspaper

Volume LVII LEXINGTON, VIRGINIA, MAY 21, 1957 Number 56

1951 Calyx Commemorates Gen. Lee's Birth Finals' Cocktail Party Will Feature Rhythm Of Les Modes Quintet

By Jim Greene Finals Dances will feature a young blood jazz group, rhe

Les Modes Quinter, at the ZBT cocktail party and the early morn ing concert on Friday, June 6, it was announced today by John SinweU. Dance Board Presi-*'------------­denl, and BHI AbelofT, Fmals Dances rresident.

The Dance Board aJ1>0 disclosed today the official attire to be wom nt tbe \arlou!t functjons of Finals Dance . Conventional dress will be \\Om at Ute Richard i'tfaltby con­' ert to IJe held on the campus lawn. on Wt>dn~day, June 4, from 5 to 6 Jl.m. Formal dr~'l wiiJ be the at­tire at the Wedne~day evening dance in Doremus Gym from 10 p.rn. tu 2 a.m. Formal dres~ will al­•o he required at lhe Thursday, June 5, dance in Doremus Gym from !) lo II :30 p.m. After II :30 and unt il the conclusion o( the dam·e at I n.m. suits and cocktail drC'~ses may he wom. At the con­rludin~ concert of Finals Dances t~n Friday morning, conventional dre !> will be worn.

The Le:. Modes Quintet is a rhythm combo that specializes in cocktail mw.ic and in many respects is siml­lnr to the Kai Winding organization. The Quintet features J ulius Watkins on French Horn and Charlie Rouse on :.axophone.

In 1955 Julius Walkins and Charlie Rou~e organized a five place jazz combo that soon became an inune­dtall' sensalion in the New York club c rcuit. The group put the toe tappers to work at Blrdland in New York and Storyville m Boston. The Lcs Modes have appeared on the Steve AUcn version of the Tonight ~;how

Finals Collegian To Feature Akin, Smulson, Smith Editor Jerry Hopk1ns has an­

nounced the last i!sue of the SouU•­ern Collegian for the current school tenn will be released on J une 5. The scheduled army of features in store for Collegian readers contains a spicy variety of entertainment.

A section of !Onf!S with that ever­popular t-mphasls on sex is planned by Tom Akin, and a new short story by Voigt Smjth will occupy an honored place. Appropriate for this lime of year will be a word of ad­vice (or waming) to lncornlng fresh­men by Mark Smulson. The beauty section this issue will spotlight Paula Ragusa. a Randolph-Macon sopho­more who wiJl be pictured in various poses donning her modem dance costume.

There wiiJ be a profile on Jabo, the illte prot,rietor of Buddy's lunch and n serious profile on Lexington in­cluded. In addition, there wlll be the regular Sunny Side and Miscelan­neous sections.

As a special feature, the annual Collegian awards will be announced. The tropy for the outstanding ath­lete of the year will be presented by Pres Brown, and the award for the best Troubadour actor Will be given hy Earl N. Levitt.

.-----------.· Ste'Ve Allen Selects Queen; W&L PUB. BOARD ELECTS u d [ SMITH EC, ROBERTS PRES. nammon , La. Gir Chosen

By TOM GILLIAM Cbff Srrulh and Bill Roberts were

elected Executive Committeeman and President respectively of the Pub­lications Board at its last regular meeting of the year yesterday after­noon. At the same meeting Bob Neunre1ter was chOS<'n for the office of Vice-President of the Board, and Steve Friedlander was selected by acclamat!on for the position of Sec­retary.

Sm1lh was sworn in as a member of the Executive Comm1ttec of the Student Body ut the EC's regular meeting last nighl He is the last Exe<:ulive Committeeman to be elected until the representatives of the freshman academic and freshman law classes are chosen next fall to complete the membership o! the 12-man student governing body.

The KA junior from Frankfort, Kentucky is the editor-elect of the Tuesday edihon of the Ring-tum Phi, a member of Omicron Dclta Kappa, the intercollegiate debate team, the Christian Association, and is presently serving as a dormitory counselor.

Chosen lo succeed Larry Atler in the position of President of the Pub­lications Board, Roberts will assume responsibiliLJes for the post next fall.

W &L Commerce Fraternity Elects Bradford President

The annual Comme1·ce School elec­tions were held on Monday, May 13. Thomas Bradford, a junior KA [rom a:nningham, Alabama, was clected president. Bradford, who succeeds ZBT £enior Sam Bend­heim in this position, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Beta Gamma Sigma, and is active in various fra­ternity functions.

Others officers elected a re Michael J. Barry, DU junior from La Grange, I'l'nc:::, secretary, and Robert Fred­erick Bnnks, P1KA junior from Up­per Montclair, New J ersey, treasur-er, No vice-president was elected.

An SAE junior, Roberts is from Eufaula, Alabama. He was recently elected next year's President of Scabbard and Blade Military Hon­orary. He is also Business Manager­Elect of the 1957-58 Calyx, a house officer of his fraternity, and a mem­ber of the Fraternity House Man­ager's A~ociation.

Bob Neunrelter who makes his home in Glendale, Missouri, is the Editor-Elect of next. year's Southern Collegian. This year he served as a Vice-President of Fancy Dress, and he was recently named as Vice-Pres­Ident for Finals Dance Set. In addi­tion to these nctivttics, Neunreiter is a member of the varsity wrestling team, a CrntemHy house officer, next year's Academic School Vice-Presi­dcn: of the Senior Class, and he has also been appointed to serve liS a dorm1tory counselor Cor the school term 1957-58.

A sophomore ZBT from Washing­ton, D.C., Friedlander was elected this Spring to the post of Business Manager of the 1957-58 Ring-tum Phi. Several weeks ago he was elected Prcs1deni of the ZBT fra­temrty, and he bas previously served as a Circulation Manager for the school newspaper.

The 1957 Washington and Lee Calyx is dedicated to Gen· eral Robert E. Lee on this the one hundred and fifrieth anni· versity of his birch. Bill Abeloff, Zeta Beta Tau senior and editor of the Calyx, stated that it was most appropriate to have rhis issue dedicared ro General Lee.

The Calyx beauty queen, selected by Steve Allen, popular *television emcee, is Miss Wilma C":e

DR CHARLES TURNER of Hammond, Louisiana. Other mem-• bers or her court. are: Dotty Westby,

TO PUBLISH WORK Sweet Briar College; Ruth Kohn, Hollins; Ann Hill, Randolph-;Mac:on

Dr. Turner, professor of h istory at Woman's College; Molly Mitchell, Washington and Lee, has recently I DcPaw Unlversity; and Iverson published two new bJogTaphlcal ar- Branch, Atlanta, Georgia. There tides. One should ~ of particular j were twenty el'llrants in the contest. interest to citizens of Rockbridge Allen, commenting on the selection, County. The article, "LcLters of Dr. I stated: "Since all the girls looked Johnston, 1790-1800, Rockbridge so charming, it was a difficult choice Medical Student and Doctor," will for me lo make." appear in the Journal of the Hirtory I The cover of the annual features of Medicine published by the Yale an embossed replica of the Wash­University School o£ Medicine. Dr. ington and Lee ring on a bluish­Turner obtained the inlorrnation for white background. The ring Is in this article from Dr. Johnston's di-rect descendents, who are sllll living in the Lexington area.

Another article appcan; in lhe new edition of the Dictionary of Ameri­can Biograph ·es. Tht- subJect is ''Wi1liam Harahan. Pt·cs1dent o£ the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad."

All copies of the Calyx may be picked up at I he Student Union be­tween 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. on Wed­nesday, Thursday, and Friday of this week.

while and the stone is solid blue. On the ring is the name of the uni­versity and the year, 1957.

The introduction and division

U.S. News & World Report Poll Reveals Growth In Job Opportunities For Seniors

pages of the Calyx are done in red, from half a dozen or more offers. Do- blue, and black on light-gray an-Editor's note: The following ar­

ticle is from the May 17, 1957 issue of U.S. News & World JUport and is reprinted hert' by the permi~sion of the copyright owner, U. S. New Publishing Corporation.)

Most young people about to gtt college diplomas this spring h~v,.

their pick of jobs-and the starting pay is the highest in history.

rnand remains highest for graduates tique paper. The introduction con­in technical fields-science and en- tains much artwork, as well as a g·ncermg. Competition is stiffening, hiEtor.cal sketch of Lee's contribu­howcver, for those with a general lions to Wa~hington and Lee. The education in the liberal arts, hired ns double-spread division pages con­future business .execulivi.'S and Gov- lain S'hort quotes relevant to the ernrnent odmmiStrntors. feature. Included in the annual are

Salary otTers are 5 to 10 per cent many full-page picture:; of univer­above last year's record-selling I sity buildings. levels. Pay of $400 a month is com- In the prologue there is a dedico­mon. Top prospects command $600 l ion to Lee which states: "The one a month OJ' more. Salary ranges (for hundred and fiftieth anniversary of new graduates) are the highest ye:: the birth or Robert Edward Lee is

Less than a year ago their book­ing agent Willard Alexander decided to accept dates at various colleges in the ~L La~l winter the Les Modes plnyt-d to enthusiasUc collegians at Yale, Harvard, and Princeton. This is their first southern venture. They currently have a 12 inch LP out on the Dawn lnbcl and will begin re­cording for RCA Victor in the near future.

TURNER TO HANDLE A get-together for a ll commerce W &L ESSAy CONTEST ~chocl students and the faculty was

held this afternoon at Goshen Pass.

Talent scouts from business, indus­try and Government are doing more recruiting [rom cnmpuses than ever before. Interview dales between em­ployers and students arc being made a year in advance for next yt>ar's seniors; thls year's graduates, in the main, already are spoken for.

Many students are choosing job!~

Engineers and Scientbts (includes o memorable occasion from any point mathematicians, chemists, physicists, of view, and has a dual signiliconce others): Lowest salary reported in from the standpoint of Washington latest survey is $375 per month. and Lee University. Not only do we Highert: $685. Offers arc from $30 to respect General Lee as a man who S75 a month above the 1956 level. believed in a cause and gave all to

At the ZBT cocktall party the Les Modes will play a variety of music from rock-and-roll to Dixieland. At the wee smaJI hours concert on Fri­day from 1.15 to 2:15 a.m. to be held on the Doremus Gymnasium steps (weather pennitting), they will play the type or cocktail mu~ic they have I ~come famous for: medleys, show­tunes, and tht>me songs. After their appearance at W&L, the Les Modes will journey to Norfolk, Virginia to play at the Continental.

Four contestants have submitted I es,ays for the Cincinnati Award this year. The winner o!the contest will be announced on May twenty-fl.fth.

The contestants an dtheir subjects are: Edgar Wallace, who is writing on "Dabney Carr, Louisa's Jeffer­son"; John C. White, the author of "Jack Jouett, the Paul Revere of the South"; J . J . Haun, whose essay is entiUed "Colonial Tobacco Regula­lions in Virginia"; and L. F. Bryan, who is writing on "Colonial Travel­er.:~ Through Rockbridge.''

Last year's winner of the award was Edgar Wallace, a junior Pi Phi from Louisville, Kentucky.

James Moffatt and Bill Koon Will Star In Dramas Scheduled for the Summer Stage

Two Wa$hlngton and Lee students have chosen to perform in summer­lime dramahc productions, according lnfoJmatJon released today by Mr. L .J. Lanlch, Jr., Director for Dra­matics for the University.

W&L lnw student, James Moffatt, and his wife, June, who teaches dra­matics at Southern Seminary, have been selected for and are playing very . u~ully the leading roles m "The Founders"- the ofllcial druma of JamC~otown's 350lh Anni­ve!'fary Festival which began lasl month "The Foundrrs." written by Paul Gn·en, follows the problems and succ~ c .. of the Jamestown setUers and thcii· Indian neighbors from the doy of the landing to the massacre by the lnclinns m 1862. The Moffatts, workmg as a husband and wUe team play lhe roles of Pocahontas and RoUe in this play; and have also had roles dw·mg pnst summers in "Common Glory"-another historical play by Mt. Green, this time drama­tiz.inl{ Williallll> in the days of Jef­ferson and Patrick Henry.

Bill Koon, a freshman !rom Char­lotte, N. C. and a probable journal­i!m nwjor, has btcn !-elected Cor one of tho ll'admg role:. in n religious play that is to run ln Roanoke this

summer from June 23 to September 3.

The freshntan plays two roles, one in each of the two parts of the story.

In one part., he is cast as Nathaniel, one of Paul's friends, and 1n the other he plays the part. of James the Apostle.

This American religious outdoor drama, titled "Thy Kingdom Come," deals wiUl the life of Sl. Paul

Pre-Med Seniors Will Enter Graduate School This Fall

This June, seven Washm~lon and Let' pre-medicnl students will gradu­ate to enter me<hcal !iChoob through­out the nation.

Among these students nre Fred Magolme, a Sigma Nu who is enter­ing Western Reserve University's medicnl school, Bernard Schaal, who i~ going to Washington Univers•ty in St Louis, and J11cques d'Empre­mesnU, a Dell who is going to the Univer!Jty of Virginia. Trafford Hill, Phi Kap, will also at­U. Va.'s med school; Joe At.lani.s, Sigma Chi, Ken St.orllng, Pi Phi, and Bill Wilemon, Phi P:J, wilt enter the medical scltool of Duke University.

' BOB IIUNTLEY rccch·cs Washington A\\ &rd

Huntley Gets Washington Award The joint faculty-student comm11- supri~e at hein~ sel('Ctro and said

lte on the Washington L1terary So- he wa very flattered to reccive the ctcty Award announced late yester- award day thnt Robert Royall Huntley, " Huntlt>y, a m<>mber of Phi Be~ ,l!radu<~tinJt law !iChool scmor, ito the Kappa ODK, Who's Who, the Ordet 1957 recipient of the award, ~ivf'n to or the Coif and lhe Student B<tr that sturll'nl who ha~ rendered the Association, !rtudied here for his A.B. ''mo~t d1slin!!ui~hed service to Wash- df'grct a wdl as for his law degree. ingt.on and Lee." ln his st>ven years at Washington

Max Caskie, chairman of the I and Lee, Huntly ~s. according to the Wa!hington Literary Society, speak- committee, contnbut~ greatly to ing for the faculty-studt:nt :;elec- faculty-student relations and the lion committeE' slated that Huntley I gt'nE-ral ~eHare of the student body.

,, He wAs vace-p1·esldenL of the student wal. cho~en to recognize the work bod . hl 1 t ed. t ,, in th r 1 · · h Ill y m s n erm 10 e y~ar e o a man w to~c •mpre!!.•nons ere w 1 h 1 d h ed · th

be last nlf." Ca,.kie further com- lw sc oo an as St>rv In o er th H I capacities.

mented at unt ey "has contrt- MembeJ·s or thE' selection commil-buted most lo Wallhlngt.on and Lee le!' include the officen; of o1e Wash­in his ~an-er here."

mgton Literary Society, the two Thl' award was made yesterdav

aflt:moon in Dean Fmnk Gllliam'.­office, where Huntley expreSlieJ hu;

deans, Or. Marshall Flshwlc:k, and on<> ml·mher at large from the So­ciety.

Busint"l' Speciat:~t'i (includes ac- defend this cause, but also a man counlanls, businl'ss - administration whose guidance and faith formed the majors, others): Offers range from foundation on which Washington and S330 to $450 a month, up $25 to $50 Lee has grown to !Ls present stature. over last year. ln greatest demand: Thus, in the realization of this fact, gradual~!!. with ~lel> and marketing the staff of the 1957 CaJyx has dedi­background. cated the yearbook to Robert Edward

Libeml 1\ rt~ Major~: Demand is spotly, but salary offers are $20 to $50 n month highe1· than '56; range from $350 to $400 per month. Tea~her<i : Scarcity continues. Sal­

aries Sl'C moving up; the range re­ported for beginning teachers is $312 to $367 a month.

La\\ yers, other Sp4!Cialisls: Demand and )'alary otTers vary widely. The range of monthly salaries reported: journalism graduate~ $280 to $540; Ia\\ yt:rs, $300 to $450: pharmacists, S300 to $475.

Lee, lhe man and the ideal." Commenting on the annual, editor

Abeloff stated: "I feel that the 1957-Calyx turned out even better than hoped for, and that i1 will be enthus­iastically accepted and enjoyed by nil May I extend my deepest appre­ciation lo the Benson Printing Co., Nashville, Tennessee, and to the Lynchburg Engraving Company as welt as to all the members of my ~taft. for the cooperation, Interest, and time that they have devoted to this annual"

Latching on to promising students a Yt'llr or more before graduation is Enrollment becoming common. "Trial marriage"

jobs in summertime, previously re- To Increase slr1ctcd molttly lo students complet-ing their jumor year, now ore being extendcd with increasing frequency An anticipated increase in enroll­to sophomorl'!l and <'VIm to freshmen. mcnt at Washington and Lee Unlver­Some employers find thal, if they sity over the next 15 years will re­r.cout only the senior claSli, the best suit in no lowering of ncademic stan­men already are hired. dards, President Francis P. Gaines

These spots rmcrgc in reports from raid last week. collrgr~ in all ~cellon!! of the coun- lie addressed 170 students and try ·reports ~thcrcd In· "U.S News other gu~ts who attend('() the on­<lnd World Ucport" in ~~ telegraphic nun! senior banquet at Natural survt'y of the JOb morket for gradu- Bridge, •ponrored by the Univer-ates. f.!ty's Alumni As oc1ation.

Plact'mcnt officors nt univcnotlk'll President Gainl'!l said n spcciul agree unanimou ly thnt. as far a~ , tudy comnuttt·l' has recommended they can forc.'8ee, thl' brisk market !hal the University enrollment be for educated youths will continue incrcastd f1·om its present 1,000 Hu­indefinilely. Competition for gmdu- dents to 1,250 over a per1od oC 15 ntes now 1 !vats that dL'iplayed by I years. base~~~ liCOuts offt'ring contractt! to Pr ~ cllmt Gaines said LhP~e would J>romwng players. 1 e no "conspicuous increase' in any

Strong d~mand, in adthllon to tl1nt cnc venr, but that the freshman cia. in the scientific and cnghtect·.ng would be increued by a ~mall num­fields is being mode for nccountants,lt:cr Pach St'plember. mcrchandi5E'r!<, law,•ers, journeli~tts Barrin~ unforest-en dtfficulhe~. the and h:nchers. Hardly any graduate new Univeuity dining hall Rnd two needs to plead for a job. dormitoril'S. one Cor law .studl'nls and

(CIIJ>vri(hC 1957 In U.S. Ne\\ ~ P uh- one for upperclassmen. will be renrly I , h ;nJ:" Cor.,urntion.) fo1· tlw 1957-59 bchool term

Page ' THB RING-TUM PHI

ffilJr 1Ring-tum Jqi Dr. Kirk Sees Fraternities As Defense Against CollectiYism Tuesday Edition

Member of Vir&inia lntercoUef{ate Pre':. A!>l>ociatioo

Publlshed on Tut.>.!'day and Friday during Ute college year. &UtorJal and Busine:.:; offices~ Student Union Building. Mailing address: Box 899. Pruth . .U at the J ournalism Laboratory Press of Washtngton and Lei! Uni­Vt!rsity. Lexington, Virginia.

Enterl'<i as '-'econd class matter September 20, 1946 at the Post Office, ~xington. Vug.nia, under the act of March 3, 1879.

National Advertising Representative: The National Advertisers Services. lnc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York.

'l'he Ring-tum Phi is a s tudenl ncwl>paper, and, as such, the opinion or :lSSt.r~ion!! contdint'd m th1s pubHcalion are the private ones of the studmt writ!'rs and are not lo be construed as official or as reflecting the vi~:ws of the Washington and U!' Untverslty Board of Trustees, its admm­istration or faculty at large. All cditoriBls w11l be a!;Sumed to have been WTilten wtth the app!'oval of the Cull Editorial Board of the Tuesday edition unless othcrwLie mdicated

CLIFFORD £. SMITH. JR. Editor-in-Chicf-Eiecl

THOMAS V. LJTZENBURG Editor-in-Chief

STEVE FRIEDLANDER Business Mnnagcr-Eicct

PHIL CAMPBELL Business Manager

EDITORIAL BOARD l\fanal(ing Editor ................................................................................... Kim Wood A."Slstant Managing Editor ....................................................................... Russ Early Nt.>ws Editor ..... .. .... ............ . .............................................. " ...................... Peter Lee AS.llist.anl New~ Editor ............................................................................ Jim Greene F~>ature Ed1tor ......................................................................................... Tom Gilliam Exthan~e Ed1tor ................................................. ....... .. ......... . ............. Jim Boldrick Copy Editor:; ............................................................ Allen Ferguson, Tom Howard Proofrtader ... .. ................................................................................. Edward Allen Technical As:iistant ......................................................... , .......................... Jon McLin Rt:port~r:.: Roy Flanagan, Hayes Gowen, Bock Kmckerbocker, Sam Knowl-

ton, Chuck Morse, Charlie Sherrill Sport1:o Editor ..... ..... .... .......... .... .. ............................................... Jerry Susskind As·L<;tanl Sports Editors ................................................ Jim Lewis, Dave Owen Sports Rcporte~: Bill Berrington, Ned George, Buzzy Griffin, Chris Harrell,

Bob Shepherd, AI Steves Photography Editors ............................................ Jim Kressler, Avery Juhring Cnrtoonilit .... . ....................................................... .................. .Bob Neunreiter

The New Staff Takes Over With chis final edition of the Tuesday Ring-tum Phi for

rhe school session of 1956-57, rhe first product of next year's

Tuesday staff is presented for your scrutiny. The graduating editor stated last week that "Each year marks a separate and

quite distinct editorial policy for The Ring-tum Phi; n o unalter­

able traditions or policies are handed down from editor co edi· cor.'' A s tatement of policy that will guide next year's Tues­

day cditlon wUI be made in rhe first issue of next years paper. It

IS nor our purpose at this time co delve at any great length into this subject. Y et, it must be said that each year a new edito rial staff takes over the formulation of policy assisted by the suc­

cesses and fai lures of the past editions. It builds on the suc­

cesses rhat past editions have a chieved, an d it gains insight from their misrakes1 cognizant that innovations are the pre·

requisite for progress. "The rung of rhe ladder was n ever meant to rest upon, but o nly to hold a man's foot long enough to e n ­

able htm to put the other somewhat higher."

Let it also be said that n ext year's Tuesday editio n s taff will

continue to seek to be of service to Washington and Lee Uni­versity; it wtll seek, where possible, to be a guiding light which

will brighten the craditions of the past and illuminate our mu­cual hopes for rhe futur e. Our dedication to produce a n ews­paper superior co those that have preceded it, a newspaper de­

voted to serving every member of the Washington a n d Lee community, will be subordinated to nothing, including the

VIPA award. To this e nd a most competent staff has been as­sembled chat is representative of our studen t body. The col­

umnists for n ext year' s Tuesday edition will not be announced

untU next fall.

We shall strive to see more of the ideal in the real a n d more of the real in which is considered rhe ideal. Taking coun ­

sel from the voices of the past chat are incessantly guiding us. we aspire to even greater achievements. We shall seck to march

forward together with v ision and resourcefulness.

Lee us today e mbrace the past with remembrance and the

future with anticipation. --------------------------------Senior Pres. States Experiences On September 7, 1953, I was among

~Oint' three hund1·ed smilmg but de­llr.ou;; fre~hmtn Md was promptly lagged at tht• Student Unicn and herded tnto n bu~ !or three joyous days at the so-c:~lled Natural Bridge.

On May 1<1. 1957, I dressed my~elf In a while formal dinner jacket and was dnvcn to a place called Natural Drid((e wh~rc 1 (Thank God!) didn't spc:nd tmothcr three days, hut was toaslt!tl w1th some 150 semors as a future alumnus of Washington and Lr.:c.

In th~·~c· four most mt'morable y~:ars I ho \ e bu:n enlightened about a number of Uungs about which pre­vlou ly I knew so littll': books; fra­ll•l nitics; women; pretzels ... etc ....

1 consicicr myl>clf no different than anyone around this camptiS. I've b('{'n cau~ht m McCrums reading PIA) ho~ , E<,<:aJmde, ConHdcnlinJ, 'Ihe \Vnll Street Journal, and The ~c" York timeo,.

I've opcnt pll'nly (my dad has) anu han forty pounds to show for it! At lim<.'=> I've bet>n most discontented with the whole situation, but have l•ouncL-<1 back to lake a little more of this fnst<~umacoria (my thank~ to Enl(lish 1-2 ) and then, of OOUI'SC, to h.!V<! been reworded by my efforts with the u:.uAl "C plu~!'' At. times I've heunl the W&L mnn referred to (within a fifty m.ile radrus) ns a

snow machine, obnoxious, and as a gcnUeman.

In my four years here, I think the class of 1957 has been witness to more progressive changes lhan any other class in a four year period. There have been faculty and curricu­lum changes; ther·e have been sever­al proposed, completed and incom­pleted additions to the campus, and of course the athletic shakcup (bul l won't go into thal again).

But in all seriousness, to me the most slgnlftcanl things about W &L ure iW. honor system and it.s tradi­tions. ll Is my wish that these phases of the campus community be pre­served. Robert E. Lee once snid in one of his memorable notes as presi­prnl of this institution that the mark of a man is the mark of a gentleman With this l agree. It has betm both an honor and a privilege to have been a mcmtwr of the student body for the past four years.

The &cllool cat.a.loguc says, "The purposes or this colle~e are to pro­\llde the essentials of a liberal educa­tion and to encourage independent wor!< and scholarly lnvest.lgation." To the people who made this oppor­lunity available to me, and my class, I want to say thank you.

JOSEPH A AMATO, JR. Presid!'nt of the St>nior Class.

Editor·~ Note: t'ollo\\ in< i& the ~c­ond 11nd final article l.n Dr. Rassell Kirk's 'erie oC column "In Defense of Fraternities.")

In our age, onl)- one altt!rnative to voluntary communlly L. conceivable: and thal 1s collectivi!m. If free asso­ciations like our college fraternities 8l'C forced out of existence, they w,ill be rej>)aced not by an idyllic individ­uallsm, a perfection of equality and libert.y and sell-reliance, bul only by the mob-by a mass of con!used stu­dents subjed to an impersonal uni­versity administration or to a clique of studenL demagogues. There!1>re it ~eems important to inquire into the charges against. frat.entities, which the~.r enemies have been pressing en­ergetically these past several years.

The primary charge ls that frater­nities a1-e snobbish and exclusive. The immediate justification for thJs charge is the fact that many national fraternities, lrankly or implicitly, de­cline to admit certain categories oi students into their chapters: most commonly Negroes, Jews, and (sometimes) Catholics.

Regardless of the principle in­volved, the fact is that our £raterni­ties, both local and national, are less exclusive nowadays than ever they were before. Only rarely IS there ob­jection to a pledge-candidate because he is a Roman Catholic, alt.hough once this might automatically have disqualified him. ln a good many {raternities, there is mue marked prejudice nowadays against Jews. Some local-and l think some na­tional-fraternilles admit Jews.

Yet regardless of your feelings and my feelings toward Negroes, Jews, and Catholics, it is not you and I who have a right to say what quali­fications a £ratcrnity should establish for membership. lf a fraternity should admit only Negroes, Jews, and Catholics, you and 1- taking us as members of the general public­would have no right to object, If a fraternlty should admit only Anglo­Saxons, Christians, and Protestants, you and I would have no right to ob­ject. For a fraternity is not public property. It does not belong to the federal government, or the state or local government. It docs not. belong to the trustees or the faculty at the college with which it happens to be associated. A Irttternity is a private club. Its qualifications for member­ship arc the Legitimate concern only of its members.

I might wl!h, perhaps, that i£ fra­temllies exclude Jews, they should do so only out of nn honest persua-

HOf Cabbages and Kittgs"

Caskie Holds ~w &L Expose'

By Max Caskie This is (Oh, ecstasy) my last col­

umn of lhe year. U you are one of those maudlin souls who read last­

s on that. their ft'lllenHty profcs:.cs I frulcrntlil>s, or restdents of dormt­the C:hrishan ~eligion. 1 might wWt .ur.e:;, or independents. When the that. if fratem1lies exclude Nf.'grocs. rq~ulation of fratern it.cs by the col­they should do so out of some reas- Jt.ge authorities exc('( ds this prudent oned theory, true or fa llacious, about police-power, then such regulation racial intermingling and !>ocial back- becomes unjustifit'd For the fratern i­grounds. But 1 would have no right ty houses. usually, do nol belong to to enforce my wish~ upon any par- the college. And the students, always, t.lcular fraternity, unh!.c;s I were a art> not the property of the C()llege. member of that fraternity. The st.udents are frei! individuals.

Neither does a C())lcge adrninistra- fhey have enrolled in the rollege for lion ordinarily have a right to rcgu- ~l)('Cified educational purposes. The late the conditions or membership in lilwful and prudential jurisdiction of fraternities. True, a rollegc usually the college over them is strictly lim­~ues fraternities some sort. of char- ited, ter; sometimes this {unction is exer- On nearly every college faculty clsed by the general studenL council. will be found some persons who talk But the justification is simply that of "total education," of how the col­

te college has Ute duly or ensuring, lege ought to remake the personah­wit.hin limits, that the students en- lies of Its students, of how the col­rolled in the college observe certain lege ought to pave the way for a minimwn standards of decent con- Brave New World, o£ how the col­duel, whether they are members of lege ought to stamp out ancient prej-

Peeples Outlines Years at W&L l'our years ago I came Co W&L as

a young, immature freshman. Four years later J am leaving W&L per­haps as a young, immature senior, but one who is certainly much richer from the experiences and associations I have tmd during the period. These experiences Md ao;sociations are ones I shall ne\•cr forget, and they will always be deeply and conspicuou ly embedd­ed in my mind.

Last Spring you elected me to to serve as President o( your Student Body, and I have attempted to serve you in the best way I know. As 1 am about to relinquish my duties lo some<~ne else, I can look back over the year and see that there is so much more I wr.sh 1 could have done to servt> you better. However, these thoughts will have to go to your new President in the form of re<:om­mcndations. I do want to take th!s opport.unity to thnnk you for your cooperation and Interest in student affairs. I hope we have satisfied you with our actions. I also wish to show my appreciation to the other eleven members of the Executive Committee for making my job a pleasant one in many ways. I t is only UU'Ough your cooperation and hard work that this has ~ made possible.

I would )jke to rcas!lturc the stu­dent body, Ute faculty, and the nJumni that the Uonor System it. as strong and as respected as it ever has been. Believe me, gentlemen, the job of administering the lion­or System is not an easy one and often an unpleasant but necessary duty. The Honor System at W&L is w mething that should always be cherisJ1ed and lteld on the high­est plane by aU members of the University family. It should never be something Utnt is feared and should never be allowed to become

a complicated machine. Honor is n tenn thnt is hard to define, but it is something that everyone knows and should have and re­&pect.

A problem that has come to a head this year is that of athletics. The University has set the policy which they feel is in the best interest. of all couccrned. I would simply like to say that only through the full coopera­tion of tho students and alumni can any program work at a university. Th:.S IS true with the athletic pro­gram now at W&L. I honestly be­lieve that the program will succeed, but 1l w.ll take full cooperation !-rom all of us. As a future alumnus of Washington and Lee, I plan to give 1t my full support.

Each year problems will arise in the student body and each year they will have to be solved by the student body working with the faculty and administration. One major problem wh1ch is still unsolved, but has been worked on a greal deal, is that of communications between tho student body, the University, and the Execu­tive Committee of the student body. I hope the new committee will put this problem first on their agenda for next year. One last word in regard to the student body. At present you have an excellent system of student eeli-government. Don't ever lose it!

ln closing I would like to say thai W11shington and Lee means more to me tha.n just a school where I rcrcived four years of education. To me it will always be a symbol and a memory o( many wonderful experiences and trndi­C:ons. It will always be a guide for me in the future. I only hope I shall always be able to live up to e \•ery­thing thai Washington and Lee stands Cor.

ROBERT I. PEEPLES President oi the Student. Body

Growth of W&L Described flecl back. Some ills and weakness­es have been corrected; I have already mentioned several of them. But in a dangerous broad general­ization, I slill see many impedi­ments blocking a clear path to W&L's future. In the physical pl11nt alone we are solely in need of a new theater, a new physics building, a new print shop, and an expanded I!Ymnnsium as weU as nn addition to our present library.

columns-cf-the-year you will doubt- Reflections: It is difficult to stand less recall that they all deal in pro- within the boundaries of an experi­fuse compliments, snowy-templed ence such as four years of college advice, and misty-eyed reminisc- and formulate an acceptable analysis cnces. How trite. It seems to me that of the advantages and disadvantages last columns ought rather to be de- that have been, are being, and will voted to smearing one's enemies, be entailed. The justifieat.ion for an pulling down the rotted pmars of Lhe analysis or my personal experience of academic pantheon, and releasing all lour years of association wilh the the stories one has accwnulated over Washington and Lee Universi~y {am­the year and then voluntarily (for ily will come, 1 suspect, alter many diJ.lcretion's sake) suppressed be- yeaa·s of maturity and the realizations cause they concerned themselves yet to come. Perspective is es~entinl.

· h 'th d F.nancially, the university needs a w1t w1 a mtnistraUve graft, pro- and I lack, at the present, a perspec- new re-aUocallon of increased funds fe!sional delinquency, and under- tive allowing me to gt·asp the signi-

d 'd' r to McCormick Library, whJch at gra uate stup1 1ty o an individual ficance of my We at W&L as a single nature. It is a time, in other words, and thus essential and total exper' present IS operating on a seriously

N N inadequate budget. I believe that to ame ames. encc.

I am certain that 1 have been n more money should be budgeted to OTHER COLUMNISTS have not

done this; J would, except that I shall be returning here next year (even, yea, to these very pages), so doinl! something like that would certainly tn.kc more guts than brains I'll wait.

the Music Department, the English witness to a sigruficant forward de- Department, and the Fine Art.s De­velopmen' at W&.L. 1 have read and • parlment to encourage more outside heard from students, faculty, and cultural attractions. alumni, parents and administration a demand that Washington and UP Not tmmindful or ils deep roots think and act. big. This "bigness" is in the pac;t, WashingCon and Lee all about me even as I stand within is CnclnJC the future with a (olJ

Of course, when May 1958, rolls the experience. If it must be concrete real:zalion that this instHutim1, rolls around I will probably have examples that I am ex~tcd to g.ve. (Continue-' on page rour)

ud1ces and parl'ntal notions and creeds outworn. These id('())ogut•s commonly hnvr a good deal to do with campus mov<'ments to abolish or strictly regulate the fratem1hes.

But th!'se ide<~logues almost never form the majority of any faculty or college administration; still more sel­dom do they form the majority oJ any board of college trustees; and they certainly do not represent the views of most alumni, let alone of the Amcrlcan public. 1 do advise fra­ternity-members nol to give ground before these gentry; to appeal to a court. of law, If necessary, against them. For in defendlng their own right to voluntary association, fra ­ternities are defending the whole concept of !rei! community.

Let me draw an analogy. Suppose a body of vociferous opponents sud­denly were to assail that pleafanl institut.ion the Harvard Club, in New York City. Only Harvard graduates can belong to that club; and this, thE' critics might cry, ls demonstrnoly snobbish and exclusive. Down w••h this discrimination! Let the Jenera! public into the Harvard Cluh; or ilL

the very least, admit the gradw:tes of Dismal Swamp Agricultural and .i\le­chankal Institute, The College of Our Lady of Sorrows, and Wem­burg Secretarial University.

To these embattled critics, the slart_led officers of the Harvard Cbb doubtless would reply that th~ fa­cilities of the club arc limited; that since time out of mind only Harvard men have been admitted; that 1his policy implies no hatred of DJsmnl Swamp A&M, Our Lady of the Sor­rows and Weinburg Secretarml, but only a feeling of common interest among Harvard alumni; :md thai, after aU, it's our club.

The defenders oi the Harvard Club would be quite right And whatever the failings of our college fraterni­ties, they are quite right in maintain­ing that only those private clubs the fraternities themselves have the right to say who shall be invited to join, and who shall not. Everybody does not belong to everybody else. That is true only In Brave New World; and America. praise be, is not yet Brave New World.

(Tho Tuesday Edition ext>re~cs appreciation to 01e editors or Nation­al Review for pennission to reprint Dr. Kirk's series which Brsl appear­ed in May 11 and May 18 issues of their joumal. National Review is published weekly and is available at an annual race of $7.00 from 2ll Ensl 37th St .. New York 16. New York.)

Brown Rates Year's Films

By Phil Brown Seeing that this is the last issue of

the year, a little philosophizing should be in order. If one learns anything !rom writing such a column as this, it might be summed up "One man's meat is indeed another man's poison," the taste of any one individ­ual depending entirely on his par­ticular temperament, and the max­im "You can't please all the people all o! the time, including yourself."

The films we saw over the pa!>t month ranged from the lousy to the sublime. The season had a slow start, but finally came t.lu·ough with a dozen or so memorable flicks. The ones that struck me as particularly recallable were: Friendly Persuasion, Anastasia, Lust for Life, The Great Man, War and Peace, Somebody Up There Likes Me, Bus Slop, Twelve Angry Men, Giant, The AdvenlUrl'S of Sadie (for the third time), and

(Continu~ on page four)

•••••••••••••••••••••••• • • ! ~ERS : • • : HARDWARE : • • • COMPANY • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• taken on the same myopic mellow- then I pomt proudly to the complr- -------------­

ness that seems to be metted out with Uon of our Fine Arts Building, the : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •! every shei!ps.k.in; ll's probably bel- final negotiations for the construe- • • I ler that way. But wouldn't you like Uon or the Freshman Commons, nnd : MILLERS-Gifts : to see some real expo~e like lhe fol- two more additional dorm1torii'S • •

Your hair cut as you like il

low;ng, using real names and all, in Ia d f th r t If rfi • GIFI'S AND CARDS • the Ring-Cum Pl1i someday? p nne or e near u ure. ve - • FOR ALL OCCASIONS •

cation of progress is to be found in : : The Fountain Inn (S.C.) Tribune, nun1bc:rs, than I can c:Jllnto consid- • •

January, 1930-A Local Wedding) : oration the fact that nppllcolloru; for •• • • •• • • •• •• •• •• ••• ••• • • "The groom is a popular young entrance have doubled in my four .: .. : .. :.·:··H .. Ho·:·"'·H·~++·:·-:·+•!'+++•!--Io

bum who hnsn't done a lick of work years at W&L. + : s'nce he got shipped in the middle I see at W&L a resolved d1cho- ! ROBERT E. LEE ~ of his junior year at college. He tomy. Llving in an instih.1tion hal- + o .. \RBERSDOP + mnn.ngcs to dress well and keep a lowed by time and lrndit ion, I have + + 5upply of spending money because 1een new ideas meet, clash, and ••• David 1\1. Moore : his dad I- a soft-hearted old fool who emerge victorious over the stultl- ~; Proprietor + takes up his bad checks instead of fying philosophy of the unchangeable ~:.: •• ; .. : .. :··:••:•-: .. l-•!••:-:-+•!-++¥•:0+++++~ Jettinl( him go to jail where he be- and sacred status quo. Growth hao: -- --- ----longs. been immanent in this institubon,

but I And that it has been act1,•ated ART SILVER "IDE BRIDE Is a !ildnny, fast. little from its latent state in recent con­idiot, who has been kissed and han- filets to a higher d...,.,.ee than I wit-dled b bo

-a· Complete Line o( Men's Clothing Y every Y in town since she nesscd in my first encounters with

was 12 years old. She p.:~ints like 0 this school. VAN IIEUSEN SHIRTS Sioux Indian, suck.-; cigaretls in However, 1 lliD able to sec lhe Robert E. Lee llotel Building

IDEAL BARBER SHOP

First National Bank Building Shop Air-Condilicml'd

.

Tolley's Hardware Co.

For all kinds of Hardwar e

13 S. Main St. Phone 21 Lexington, Virginia

A+++O+++++++O++++++-lo++~A

i Wat~hmakJng and En~rraving ;

: Hamric and Sheridan f t JEWELERS + ? Opposlle State Theater t ~ ! (Continued on pagr four) bad mixed with the good as I re- '--------------....: +t-+++•}-t·.:.·:.-~:·+·:·~·++·>..:·..:··~·:-•!••!••!··!·

THE RING-TUM PHI Page 3

Knakal's Seven Hitter Stops Lynchburg, 5-3 ~~~~:0 s;~becue To Be Held The Generals wrapped up the 1957 scattered among the remauung ~uad Tumcr fiCOO!'IC<I a hard ht. lmcl out twelve Jo . Prosp.:cts for next yca.r A D • k s • h' F T

bar.t:ball eason, thcnr last under members. of the dirt to nat! hiS opponents. at az:e r~n.ably Lri~t. although W&L t lC mtt s arm omorrow coal·h Billy McCann, yesterday as Several sterling de!eruuve plays first, and C. I Couch made a runnmg w1U mtss the scrv1ccs of Knaknl, AI· tlwy whipped Lynchburg College 5·3 highlighted the conlclit d«:pite the ovcr·the··.houlder catch m deep left ford, Bt•lden and Turner. Washington nnd Lee's firsl com­nl Smith Field. fact lhnt W&L made five errors. The center. In the eighth Dom Flora Knaknl has bc(.'l\ the top winner bined fall, \\ mtcr, and spring sports

Joe Knakal pitched his last game most beautiful play wu a magnili· threw n perfect strike to Johnny {or three years while Belden and AI banqur.t will tnke rlace at Utck Cor the Blue and White with a seven cent running catch in foul territory Tumer at third to nall the runner ford have contributed to many wins. Sm.th'~ Conn tomorrow afternoon, htt conquest or the Hornets to end his off a line fly by Charlie Broll m the trymg to lidc after a base knock. Turner dtdn'l k>e too much action beginning at t30 p m. cnrr\!r on a winrung note. second inning !he Generals end~ the I!CaSOn until this year, but he more than Signs wtll h J>l,tccd on lht.' oltl

Knakal ended the season with a In the suth innmg Johnny w1th a record of ctght wms and made up for il with his consistent Buena Vu ~.., road lo direct student.s record of 5 wins and 4 losses, which hitting and ~parkling glove work. to the fam\, which U. located up-

h d S km 7 6 Totals arc ns follows: d h If 11 makl·s him the Cknt:rats· top winner. Wa oos E ge tt. c en _ proxtmatdy two an one a m ('S

ThrN.' oth(:r bascballers, Johnny Tur- L) nchhuf1r AB u R w down the roud. rwr, John Allord and Dick Belden, Burnette ........... ...... .. .5 2 0 0 Special athletic awards, includ-

Jamerson .... - .... ·---··.2 0 1 1

men \\ill receive a certificate with their athletic background on lt

All members of the vnr- ous squads as well a~ the monogram winners are mvited to attend the picnic, where seven ptgs arc bemg roasted for a b:ubecue.

According t.o Cy Twombly, three hll1ldred boys are expected to at­teond the banquet, which Is a digrt'!­&ton from the customary procedure m the past of having t~chool banquets al the end of the individual fall, ~~r:'ode their final appearances for To Clt.nch Va. State Title Davis ................... ______ 5 0 0 03 1 ~~=y:o~;:p~s~ld ~h~~1:~~u:~

Knakal didn't run mto much Ferguson ·--..... --.~5 3 1 0 the banquet. Also, all scruor etter-trouble until the !UX.th inning when Vlrgmia's perenrually strong Ia- I The Cavalien; scored the winning Knowles - .................... 3 0 0 2 -------------the Hornets knocked across two cr'OSI>e team main tamed 1ts supre. goal in the fourth quarter on an Nichols .. - ........................ 4 0 0 1 N Wh • VPI T E d S

wini.Cr, and spring seasons.

run•. Getting off lo a bang in the macy over W&L stickmen lost Satur- extra man, although W&L incrl!aS- Bradley ............................ ..4 2 1 1 etterS tp 0 n eason early innings, W&L recorded two day, hut only by the small margin ingly dominated the contC!S't o.s the Flowers .............................. 4 0 0 0 runs In the first, one in the fourth, of 8 point. The Cavaliers edged period progressed, shooting almost at Shelton, p ....................... 4 o o 0 Washin~ton &nd L~:e's varsity net­and two in the fifth. W&L, 7·6, thereby gaining their will.

Other statistics reveal that the third straight state championsrup. UVa. Scores in Fourth len. polished olT Virginia Tech, 6·2,

W&L AB H R W here last Saturday to complete their

(W &L) defeated Comer 6·1, 6-3; Green (VPI) de(~ted Loutlt 7-5, 2·6, 8-6.

Generals got ten hits, paced by Bill Rahmig, Cavalier attack, fired catcher John Allord's 3 for 5 per- m the deciding goal late in the fourth A.ecordtn~ to Coach Gene Corri· formance. Charlie Broll was two for quarter after a furious third period gan, had it not been for the out.stand· four and the r~t or the hits were assault had put W&L back in the ing play or University of Vlrairua

Turner, 3b _ .......... _ .. _,4 1 2 1 season with a won·lo:.l record of Doubles Broil, rf ......................... .4 2 1 1 4 and G. King and Parker ( VPI) defeated

Hurt and Gowenlock 6·4, 4-6, 7-5; Glauser and DuBois (W&L) defeated Comer nnd Hudson G-1, 6·4; third doubles match was cancelled because of bad weather.

Couch, U ......... - ............ .4 0 1 1 Altord, c ............................ 5 3 1 0

running. goalie, Bill Hoover, the Generals The Generals were down, 4-1 al would have taken lhelr first win over

haHhme before launching four goals the Cavaliers ln a number of years. in the third period. Tom Moore, Washington and Lee

Flora, cf ............................ 4 0 0 0 Belden, sa ........................ 4 0 0 0 Hoopes, lb .................... 3 1 0 1 Williams, 2b .................. 4 1 0 0

W&L Stickmen Pick All Opponent Team Wa!'hin~n and Lee's lacrosse

!!quad picked it.s All-Opponent team ut o squad meeting held recently. The team consists entirely of mem· bt·rs of ~quads W&L has played this

Rahmig and Bnan Rowe each co-captain, was easily the outstand· rcored two goals for VIrginia, with ing man on the field, Corrigan said. Joe Oyer getting credit for four as- Jim Lt-wis gave hts usual superlative sists. Dick Whiteford was W&L's performance and both Dick Moore

Knakal, p .. 4 1 0 0 Lynchburg .... - ............. 000 002 010· ·3 W&L ......................... 200 120 00 5

only multiple scorer with a pair. and Dick Whiteford closed out their '1t.T • The Cavaliers wound up their sea-l college careers with fine efforts. ~ 'otrce

The Players were ch~n lor their ability and performance against the Generals, not nec~rily for their national prommcncc. Baltimore Uni· veraity placed three men on the tcnm.

son with a 4-6 record; W&L finjshed

1

"We hit the pipe four L1mt!l> in the All football cand1dates that did not with 7 wins and 5 losses. second halt and four tim~ we had fill out their information cards are

A crowd of approximately . 300 tcoring opportunities with only one 1 requested to see Coach Charlie Har· viewed the game at Calfee F1eld, Cavalier player defending the Vir-. rington before next Wednesday. where it was sponsored by the Pu- ginia goal, but he saved the ball Card' must be tn so that Head foot­la~kl Rotary Club. The Pulaski and j every time," according to Corrigan. ball coach, Lee McLaughlin, w1ll be Dubl:n high school bands repre- Prospects appear bright tor next able to look over the squad possi· fented the two teams. season, he added. bilities for next year.

The team picked Is as follows: Attack- McFadden (Loyola College), Morrill (Johns Hopkins), end Dou· nt:y (Balt.unore Univen;ity); Mid­fle ld-Lower (Baltimore Umversity), Betz (Maryland), and Sievold (\Va~hmgton College); Defense­Kite (Maryland) and HolT (Univer­~;ity or Virginia); Goal- Ooley (Bal· t.more University) and Hoover (Uni­versity of Virginia).

Washington and Lee played a poor -:::.-::;-::;-;:;;-....,.,..;o=;;;:;p:~~~:;;_;~~~~~~"'""" ....... _......,~~~~~~9J first half in the Cavalier contest, ii spottin({ Virginia three goals at the end or the first hall. The visitors came back in the second half of the conte!'t, however, to more or less control the game.

In the third period lhe Generals registered four goals nnd lhen lied up the contest at six goals apiece in the final per1od.

;+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++: + + i For Fine Food and Service Deluxe t i Stonewall Jackson i + ~

t Restaurant ).: + ~ + v + + + • •!••!••!•O:••!o•!••!•O:•++·!··:··!··l-+-:·++·>+·!·-l•++·>+++++O:•+++++++++++++++•lo•lo+

• -;-::;:::;-7

At the

First National Bank or Lexlnrton

See Buddy Derrick, assistant cashier, about the handling

of accounts for students, fraternities and other student

organizations and funds.

Open a Convenient Student

Checking Account Today

at

Rockbridge National Bank Member of the Federal ln5uranc:e Corporation

•!·+<•+'!•-!•+-!·++++++++++++++++++++++++++++t+++++++++++• I If yot~ want good food i + lb :

~ : : The College Inn t + + + + + We specialize in Italian Dishes + ~ : •l- 8 North Moin Street Phone 110 3-0002 : t, It IJ.m. to 1 un.-E,•ery Nil(ht t '!• '!' i Combo: Friday Night Dancing ~ o{•(•-!•++•!••:•-:·++++•<·++~++<l-+•++++++++++++ft+++++•++++++++

Steve's Diner Establbhed 1810

GOOD FOOD

HOURS

Rockbridge Radio and Electric Service RADIOS, TELEVISION and ELECTRICAL APPLIAJIOCES

E. F. Nuckols, Owner Lexlnrton, Vlrginla

1330 South Main Street

'\. \ I; -~::

...... ~,

Phone 463

LA!~~~~~.!.~~~~~~~~!~~ accept.-and we're still accepting plenty! But if you want to cut yourself in, you've got to start

Stickling NOW! Sticklers are simple riddle& with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. Send your S ticklers (as many as you want-the more you send, the better your chance of winning!) to Happy.Joe­Lucky,Box67A, Mt.Vernon,N.Y.NOW!TODAY!PRONTOI

YOU1VI PROBABLY HEARD of torch songs (music to cry by}, Air Force songs (music to fly by), and Aloha songs (music to bye-bye). The Lucky Strike song is music to buy by: it's a pretty ditty that's devoted strictly to Luckies. Naturally, that makes it a Cheerful Earful! It reminds you that Luck.ies are tops and lhai better taste is the pleasin' reason. Luck.ies' taste comes from fine tobacco-mild, good­tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. So, as the jingle says, "Light up a Lucky, it's light-up time!" You'll say it's the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!

Luckies Taste Better

V~.rginia Tech captured its loneo singles victory m the number 6 match, won hy Archtc GrC!Cn over Bob Loul.t, 7-5, 2 .(), 8-6. George Stuart needed only two M·ts thls ltmc to subdue VPI's L<:wis King in the The netters wtll have 6 starters re· number 1 .tnglcs contest won by turning next season. Stuart in th~ close £ets when the ------------­two met prcvio~ly in the General's • • •••••• ••• ••••• •••••••• !'cason opencr wtth the Techmcn. • •

: LYLE D. HARLOW : Slnglc,

Stuart CW&L> ddcated Kmg, 6-4, G-4: Gowwlock (W&L) d!'featcd Parker 6-4, 6-0; Glau•er (W&L) defeated Hudson 8-6, G-1, DuBoi

• • • Watchmaker tmd J eweler • : 38 S. Main Street : : Phone HO 3-4121 : • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••

SHIRT SERVICE AS YOU LIKE IT

Quality Cleaning and Pressing

UNIVERSITY CLEANERS D03-3G22

tty our Campus Neighbors"

WHAT'$ A SAlT t.AK! CITY IOSSt

Mormon Foremon ao11•t •auantcl .

u .. or scuno•

WHAT IS ONE 0, CAfSAl'S AltCHUSt

nnto•c • UOOLI

WIUifl COUUI

Roman Bowman

WHAT IS AN ASrtliN fACTORVt

IOYI COL&.tae.

WAll fOotn

Pill Mill

WHAT'S A HOSI'ITAt fOl mSIMlSTSt

IIVIILY OlliiOW.

••••••no• suu ()yflic Cllnlo

WHAT'$ A GANOSTO'$ !MilACet

IOUW~IIU

W VIUINIA II.

WHAT IS A SINOU fiOM OKlAHOMAt

..... , .,,. IIIUU•t

6 a.m.· 1 a.m. .. IT'S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER ••• CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER l

Friday and Sunday---6 a.m. · 2 a.m.

Page 4

TOP FILMS (Continued from paae two)

Casablanca (for the fifth). T have not yet &e<:n Around the World in Etghty Days.

Tilt: ~lALE ST,\RS who mosl im· pr t!d me a ide from the perennials (I c. Stewart, Bognrt, Cooper, etc.) were Paul Nc\liman, Don Murray, Yul Brenner, Marlon Brando, und the Ja.:.t of James Dean. The out­standing female stars were New Audrey and Old Ingrid-and for the life of me, I can't rteall any others worth mentioning.

Finally, I will rundude with a re(erenre to a paracrnph from m~ first column a\ to the aim nnd method I foiiO\H'd OH'r thi pa11t year: The S11edntor and Tntler in ­cluded comment, on all l~al mo\ • ic'> and .,omt TV. II \Hilt a dMilla· lion ratht>r than a full d raught nd included mainly ofl· beal a.<oidc!>

GROWTH OF W &L CCcmtlnucd f rom pare two)

\\ ithin its conllnrmcn t: , hac; the potential to ri t to hciJhts (or in t'Cceo;s or the drt'ams and ~perta­tions of the foundin1 fatberc,. The very rnct that 1 can smcer-.ly

believe that the&e thin~ 1 have wnl· len are true Is the very rt!aSOn why J find that Wa~hington and Lee hns contributed far more to Lhe dcve-lop­menl o! my charocter than 1 ~all ever be Rblt to repay.

THOMAS V. LITZENBURG Editor, Tuesday Ediuon, The Rinr-tum Phi

S..nley w.,.., .• STATE

TUES.- WED.

LOVE ANO WEllE JUST A

ICJSS APART /

Pier ANGEll Mel FERRER J• KERR Micbeft ftiUIUitnn

IIM·C.M"o

'li,Y/NTJGE' OIUASC.OP£ I METIOCOlOI

Willi THEODORE BIK£1. Ulf ERICKSON ...

TlllJR. · FRI.-SAT.

... ~ .... ---......... ""' ~lta...S tl\ru Unl~ AntM

SUN.- MON.

J

THKMOST prASCINAT1NO

LOUSI!VOU I!VI!ft MI!T I

"' ·!o~+++ol-+++.,.+++ol-+-t-++++++""

~ Cleaning-Pressing

# BROWN'S • I CLEANING

WO RKS t, We Call for and Deliver 1o •) + ·~ Student agents in the + 9 + ~ donnitory and fraternities t, + 1 b 0:• ·:- 110 3-2013 14 Rando p St. .;. . ~

++++•+++++++0:·+++·:0..:0++++++ ++++++++••·············· • + : BU DDY'S : : Sunday Hou" from 5 to 8 p.m. t • + : Come to Me me before your ~

t WEEKEND PICNIC PARTIES+

+ Break(a'it 6 to 11 t ~ Sandwkhett-Short Orders :j: : Sra Food + + AND ALL PARTY llo"EEDS 1' + ~ + + ~ ABC license No. 5392 -:• + + + Dial HObart 3-2042 ..;. + + ···········••+++++++++++

UEXPOSE, (Continued from paae two)

ecrcl, and drmks rom liquor when ahc is out joy-r·ldlllg in her dad's car at night. She doesn't know how to cook or ket-p hou.se.

"The house w·as newly plastered (or the weddmg and the exterior pamted, thu3 appropriately carrying out the decorative scheme, for the

T H E RIN G-TU M P H I

his state m llsmtncss and h rmonlzed rucely wath the axelgr~ o! his hair. In addition to his jag he cru:ried a pocket knl!e, a bunch of keys, a dun !or the rin", and his u ual look of imblocility.

''The happy couple anUCJpatcs a blessed e\'enl in about thre-e months.

~po TCRJPT by the author: This may be the last W.ue o{ 1bc Tribune, but my life ambatron has been to

wrate one weddin~ and tell the b-ulh. Now that is done, drath can have: no sting."

It's Good Blain To Do u"'lneu

wilh IERER'S

PHARMACY groom was m·wly plastered and the ~~~~~~~~~::::~~i '"------------.J bride nt'Wly painted.

"T ilE GR00!\1 wore n rented din­ner jacket over athletic underwear of lm1talion silk. His ponts were held up by pale g~n su pt:ndt:'rs His No. 8 patent leather &hoes matched

either of eHmh themM!h.es or of )·ou-tbc spectntur. I ocCMionally threw complainb, often boquets. and 'i.Ometime.. mud, hopin1f to \limulate rather than agitate. In condu,ion I onl~ hope the limb I "ent out on didn't pro\ e too cr~n ..•. Mike has had it.

WED.-Till'R .

SUN.-MON.

B urt Lanra,tcr in

Brute Force

SPEEDY SERVICE on

All oUlke.~ or cars

Wh~l Alirnmenl BODY A ND FENDER REPAIRS

GEI\'ERAL REPAIRS

Cars Called for nnd Delh·c rcd

BAKER FORD SALES

Your Friendly Ford Dealer in Lexington

Phone 110 3· 3121

Q uality, Sales and Service

TV

Rad io

Phonographs

* Radio Hospital

7 N. Main

PICK UP A ND DELIVERY

Phone 634

••••••••••••••••••••••• • • :REDWOOD • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

RESTAURANT

* Complete Meals

STEAK DINNERS

Sandwiches of all

Kinds

* CURB SERVICE

1 1\tUe North ol Lexlnrton

••••••••••••••••••••••

R. L. H ess and Bro. JEWELERS

Lexinaton. Vif'Jinja

FREE PARKING

to students when eating a

sandwich, drinking a

soda, or eating a

porterhouse steak dinner.

Southern Inn Restaurant

with quick

excellent service

in the heart

of town

• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • i Peoples' National Bank i • • • • • • • • • uwhere Students Feel at H ome" • : =j • • : * :, • • : Member vf the Federal Reserve : • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

For Your Convenience

The University Supply Store

Now Offers

LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING SERVICE

* T ry their economical serv1ce today

ROCKBRIDGE LAUNDRY & CLEANERS STUDENT AGEI\'T IN FRATERNITY DOUSES

• •

il •

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ! ................................................. !

i s E:·~;Es T I f Dairy Products

: " To get the best get Seal test" + : over twenty differen t products in addition to l delicious Seastest ice cre.:tm

: Block and Crushed Ice : ~ Your favorite ~e.s-Ice Cold ~

: Maple-Rock Distributors, Inc. : l Phone 73 : ~ A !!.!..+++++++·:·-~t+++++of·++<-¥++•++++++++++++++++++++++++

~·+•Jo•>+++++.CO<-++++~++•:O+'{· ·:·++<·++++++++++++·:·++•!o+<•+++-1··1-·"

Ivy League Pants

+ cotton cord J + • :.• Polish Cotton ~ : Sand, Black, Olive i : Sizes 28-42 : : : i 5.99 i i t ···~········••+++++++++++++++++•~······~·········

that our hamburgers

are good, our

customers do.

with your favorite beverage PROl\tPT COURTEOUS SERVICE

8 Miles Sou th of Lexington on Route 11

Most studies of students at college disclose That boys and girls aim at quite clliferent things.

The boys learn new angles- add strings to their bows; The CO·eds would rather add beaus to their strings!

MOIAI.a Why be high-strung? Relax with the BIG, BIG pleasure of Chesterfield King! More full • flavored satisfaction from the world's best tobaccos. PLUS King-size filter action .. . a better tobacco filter because it's packed more smoothly by ACCU • RA Yl

Che•terflelciKJng hal everything I

' 180 Ill* tll Bob Armhc lll, DortmouJII Collqt, 1~ lilt CM.w Fkld pcwm. 180 for CltfrJI phflwJphicol _,. a«tpiH {or pu6li· cot/on, C/lum/ftld, P.O. Bn II, New York 46, N. Y ,

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Hy Q-the brilliant scholar • • • •

tells how to stretch your dollar • • • • • • Greyhound,s the way to go - • • • • • • saves you time as well as dough! • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Le\\ •~hur•, W. \'a. 2.2fl Charh.•,ton. W. Va. _M ..... _ 5.15

l lagt>r.to,~n. Md. - ·- ~ 5.311 Birminrham, Ala. ,_,,,_, __ , 15.2~

\\h' te Sulphur, W. Vn. ... .... 2.15 P itt..burl(h , Po. .... .. . .... " 9.7!1 Loui \illr, l( y. "'""' ........ 12.00 Philadrlphin, Pn. .................... 11.20 wo,hinl(hm, o.r .. .... . .......... 5.31 1\ lexnntlrla, Va . .......... . " ....... 5.31 Baltimurr. :\1tl . ................... 6.111 Memphi,, Te-nn . ............ " ..... . 111.31

All 1 pi • t

It's such a comfort to take the bus ••• and leave the driving to us !

GREYH OUNDe ~

ADDRESS a DEPOT PHONE

Greyhound 125 McLaughlin HO 3-2424

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••