, Page 8 I Furness Library Sets Annual Spring Awards Book Sale Dates Banquet Set for Thurs. . The Annual Bargain Book Sale of the Helen Kate Furness Free Library, in' Wallingford, will be held at the library on Friday, June 5 from 3 to 6 p.m,; Saturday, June 6 from 10 1I.m. to noon, and Monday. June 8 from 3 to 6 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m. Hundred. of books in the field. of fiction, biography, belles leitr.., FOOD MARKET Bengough, Elinor Burgett to Speak a.t 6 P.M. Event at High School ~Jore than 160 SwarthmOl'o ll!yh lacrosse team was entertained at dinner at the home of c!>-Captain Susan Marsh on. Columbia avenue last Thursday evening followed by dessert for both Varsity and Junior Varsity teams at co-captain Betty Gemmill's home on Muhlenberg avenue. Guests ",'ere Miss Virginia Allen, Miss Elinor Burgett ano! Miss Dee Boughner. The Varsity played eight game. with nd Sw",.thm~re High School graduate, or ,third copies of boOks in use at Elinor' Burgett and well-known the library, books for which there baseball hum39c Vacuum Packed COFFEE .... • ALL BRANDS OF 'OIGARETTES STOOl UP NOW A-Size POTATOES 3 • 19c • aca Ion lme Be Slicing TOMATOES Time for Sun and. Fun and Time to Shop at SPEARE'S for ,Everything You Need to Make Memorial Day and VISIT OU·R VEGETABLE DEPARTMENT This Summer's Holidays Your Best Ever ..• BEACHWEAR • BATHINP SUITS • SHORTS ALL FLAVORS' of I O.A.R, TO PARTICIPATE II MEMORIAL DAY SERVICE BIEYER'S ICE CREAM Pills 11'7 GaIIllS L_----------.. . -------------' SLACKS • COTTON DRESSES • SLEEVELESS Mrs. William W. Turner of Mt. Holyoke place will take part in the Memori!,1 Day service at the John Morton grave in Chester. Mrs. Edith Morton Scott and· John Morton, direct descendents, will place a wreath OIl the grave. JUN 5 1959 Lacrosse Team Elects Sue Bruce, Sue Campbell Sw~rthmore High·School'. Varsity DRESSES ·TERRY !=OATS • TERRY JACKETS COORDINATES lind Mllny Other Summer Needs 'L____________I_ _ _ _ _ _~------- Our Best .Wishes to the Classes of 1959 THE S, Swal'thmore, Pa., Friday, June 5, 1959 VOLUME 31-NUMBER 23 Oollege to Graduate 185 Seniors Monday UN Representative to India Will Deliver Address Dr. Frank Porter Graham, Uni· ted Nations representative to India and Pakistan, wil1 deliver the Com. mencemont Address at Swarthmore Col1ego' June 8. Commencement exercises for 185" graduating seniors wil1 be held in the Arthur Hoyt Scott Outdoor Auditorium on the campus at 10 a.m. Dr. Joseph H. Willits, di,recior of the Educational Survey at the Uni. versity of Pennsylvania, will speak at Baccalaureate services at 11 a.m., June 7, in Clothier Memorial. Dr. Hannah Arendt, member of the faculty at Princeton Unlvers· ity, will deliver the Phi Beta Kap· pa addre'5s at 8 :30 p.m., June 7, in the' Meeting House on the campus. The former president of tbe University of North Oarbbi of Boston, Mass., and Miss 30 YALE AVENUE MORTON, PA. ton of Juno Beach, Fla., formerly' oi~s L. Turkevich, Houston, Tex.; Julia Brabson of Cambridge, Mass. of Swarthmore, arrived Monday Mr. James I. Craig, Jr., Treadway, They were similarly attired in TELEVISIOII - HOME and AUTO RAOIO - PH OliOS evening' to spend a fortnight as and Mr. Thomas F. Long, Jr., maise gowns of Italian cotton, and "Bring It to Us or We'lI Come to You" bouse guests of Mrs. Gilman Ithan. wore small bands of daisies in their Klngswood 4·1028 Spencer of Ogden avenue. Many A reception will follow the cere- hair. They carried bouquets 'of plans are being formulated by mony at 'tSunny Creek/' daisies cascading from small bas· mnDllIIlIIlDIIIDllIIlIIDUlUlIlIlIlDlIIlllHlnlIrnnllllllllClllIIUURlCllIIHllHllDlllllllmnCIIIIIIIIIIIIDlUlllllnDDlIlIllIIIIUDI~ .:iriends and former neighbors to enkets. tertain the Hetheringtons at lunchNAMES ATTEIIDANTS Mr. Thomas Rush BroWD, Jr., of • REPAIRING PARTS • ACCESSORIES i!! eons, picnics and dinner parties. The marriage of Miss Deborah Tucson, Arh., was best man for i!! During their stay here they plan Knight Thompson, daughter of LAWHMOWERS Sharpeoad&Repalred • LOCKSMITHIIIBUe,sMade ~ his brother. Ushers included the to visit relatives in Langhorne for Mr. and Mrs. John B. Thompson of Mssrs. Bruce E. Campbell of HatEVANS BIKE 6' LOCKSMITH SHOP ·three days and to bring their daugh- Clifton Forge, Va., formerly of = tisburg, Miss., Robert A. Brown of a ter, Sarah, from Hood College in Sw'arthmore, to Mr. Alan Ginn Phone Klngswood 3·5404 ~ Lafayette, La., and Phillip Mey- ~ Fredericksburg, . Md. Lewis, son of 'Mr. and Mrs. Henry farth of Cambridge. ~ Linden and Morton Av!!nues, Rutledge § Mrs. Henry C. Ford of Amherst P. Lewis, Ware, Mass., will take (n..t to Rutledge po.t Ollice) . ~ Mrs. Pownall chose a light green §= c avenue will attend her'reunion this place on Saturday, June 13 itl the 501UOlllIUlUlUDlIIIIIIIIIIIDIUIIIIIlIIIClllllnl1lllDlllllllllltlDllllmmUDIIIIIIllllllcmruIIII11CIUIUIIIIUDDllllllllnCIIHIIIlIlIIDt. ~ chiffon street-length dress with week at the Columbia Presbyterian Presbyterian Church, Clif.ton Forge. ma.tching sboes and hat, and wore .iIlDllImmIUDlwllluIUCIIIIIIIIllIIUIllIUIIlIUDIJ111DnUIDIIIIIIIUlIIDlIIIIIIIIIIIDlnIDl1II1IDUlDlIWUIllllllllllluaIIllDlIIUll! Medical Center of New York City. Mrs. Joseph F. Gaskill of Marwhite orchids. Mr. and Mrs. John MacAlpine, sha:lltmvn, la., will be her sister's T·he bridegroom's mother was in Jr., of Nort,h Princeton avenue with matron of honor. Miss Lois Thomp. D son of Clifton Forge, another sisa pearl gray lace dress of street :: their son Gordon attended the gradE = ,uati'on of their daughter Jane, from ter, will be maid of honor. The length, with shoes and hat.to match, B = .. bridesmaids will be Mrs. Robin and wore yellow orchids .. Iowa State College, Ames, on FriLewis of Ware, Mass., sister-in-law Fol'lowing a six weeks' trip to the day, May 29. FOR LOVELlIlESS THAT RISES· TO AllY OCCASIOII of.the groom; Miss Jane MacAlpine West Coast, the couple will reside i_-_ Dr. and Mrs. Roy W. Fairchild of Yale avenue with their children of Swarthmore and Miss Ruth in the Boston area. = 9 South Chester Road e The bride is a graduate of RanJ aniee, Nancy and' Christie, are Hawkins of Clifton Forge. Deborah B § Call K1ngswood 3-0476 .. moving Tuesday t~ San Anselmo, Elizabeth Gaskill, niece of the dolph-Macon Woman's College and = .. ~ .A.eUve Jlember .f lIle 8wat'&hblDl'e Bulae •• A...oIaV" § Calif., where Dr. Fairchild has ac- bride, will serve as flower gir1. Foa Mr. Robin Lewis of Ware will 9 \ ~ cepted the appointment of Profes01MtlmlllllcwnmncmunDlUDlllllliIliliDiiilliRUliDIiRlIIHnlamlilllllllDiiHlI1II1ltDHJIIIHlmamWOIII1CHlllIUWIlDPlIO MUlllNE SUBSCRIPTIOIIS sor of Christian Education with the be his brother's best man. The usb· Call ••• San Francis~o Theological School. ers will be Mr. Joseph F. Gaskill, Jr., brother-in-law of the bride, of Mr. and Mrs. Joel Bloom and their MRS, LLOYD E. KAUFFMAII two sons of Haverford avenue will Marshalltown; Mr. Lynn K,ppax B."lnr••ottd I-JOIO move into the Fairchild house. . of Swarthmore; Mr. Robert GallaAPPLES. HONEY· EGGS· POTATOES gher of Clifton Forge and Mr. Har_ Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Miller of i Thayer road returned l\tionday eve_ rison Dey, Jr., of Staunton, Va. A brunch for out-of-town guests ning from a week's holiday in Walwill be given by ·Mr. and Mrs. W. lingford, Vt. "The Farm "'ith. the Ootagonal Barn" Kent Ford at their home with Mr. Mrs. Henry A. Piper of Mt. HolSWARTHMORE, PA. DIRECTIONS: From Chester north on Edgmont Avenue (Middletown Rood) yoke place has len for an extended and Mrs. William Goode serving as 3 miles to Knowlton Road. Turn left Yz mile to Orchard. ; . trip. She plans to visit her sou l\-Ir. co-hosts, the morning of the wedAIR·COROITIONEO dint;. Robert G. Piper in Alburquerque, TRemont 6-9047 Open Daily and Sunday , N.M., and her sone;, and daughtersFri. 6' Sat. June 5, 6 MUSANTE RIDDLE· in·laws Mr. and Mrs. John Piper Cary Brant and IngrId Bergman Mrs. Augustine F. S. Musante of North Springfield, Va., Mr. and Are a Magical Combination of Rose Tree road, Media, announ. ~ Mrs. William G. Piper of Richmond, ces the marriage of her daughter Va' J and Professor and Mrs. Henry D. Piper of Pasadena J Calif. Mr. Eliza~eth Duane to Mr. Robert L. (Teebn1eolor) Flush Cooling System . Front End Alignment and IIIrs. W. R. Snydei· of lIIanila Riddle, son of Mrs. Leroy Riddle of Friday Features-7:25. 9:25 P.M. STATE tNSPECTIOH Wheels Balanced will occupy Mrs. Piper's home dur· Media and the late Mi'. Riddle, on Saturday Features-l>, 8. 10 P.M. Saturday, May 23, at St. Thomas ing her absence. Tune Motor Check Brakes Mr. and Mrs. John Aaron. of Apostle Ohurch, Ivy Mills. "TAlA, SOH OF COCHISE" A reception at the Rose Tree Fox North Swarthmore avenue with for Children's Show Sat. I P.M. their children spent the Memorial Hunting Club followed. The bride, Color Cartoon Festival RUSSELL'S SERVICE Day weekend at their summer cot· who is also the daughter of the late 3 Stooge Comedy Mr. Musante, graduated from tage in Stone HarborJ N.J. Opposite Bora Parking La! Swarthmore High School and atKatrina McKernan of Rutgers Closed Saturday 12:30 P.M. Sun., Mon., Tues. avenue arrived home Tuesday eve- tended Bennington College, Benning from Wheelock College, Bos- nington, Vt. • June 7, 8, 9 Mr. Riddle graduated from Merton J where she completed her freshAcademy Winner for cersburg Academy, Mercersburg, man year. Best Supporting Actress and attended the University of Pennsylvania. He was graduated TO WED TOMORROW The marriage of Miss Mary Jane from the Maine Maritime Academy. IIIr. and Mrs. Riddle sailed this \lones, daughter of Mr. and ·!\Irs. Fur Cleaning by Vita· Pelt William D. Jones of Vassar ave- week on the S. S. America for a nue, to Mr. James H. Foster, Jr., six week hip abrOad. SPEC/AUZING IN THE CLEANING OF son of Mr. and Mrs. .tames H. Fos(Technlcolur) ter of Drexel Hill will be solemnized ROCK HUDSON LAUREN BACALL tomorrow aiternoon at 2 o'clock in STORE HOURS Feotures-7:30. q:lO .M. the Trinity Episcopal Church, ,vita the Reverend Layton P,' Zimmer FOR JUNE Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. officiating. DIOI FRANCHETTI - TELEVISION E BICYCLES • § i i I I= The Bouquet I I BEAUTY SALON I § e STRAWBERRIES College Theatre LI NVI LLA ORCHARDS "INDISOREET" Gel Ready for SPRING and SUMMER Driving ROBERT J. ATZ, Mgr. II 3·0440 .. Dorothy Malone "WRITTEN ON THE WIND" Certified Cold Fur Storage SLIPCOVERS DRAPERIES 9:30 - 5:30 YOUR WEDDING Portraits and Events Photographed in' Your Home. Church. or in Our Studio. CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS Entertainmentlill DANNY KAYE "THE INSPEOTOR GENERAL" Feotures-7:30. Q:30 P.M. 215 ColIsCJe Ave., Swarthmore Klngswood 3-2290 \ CURTAI~S Returned for Your Hilarious PHILIP MAYER KlngsWood 3·9927 , • June 10, 11, 12, 13 AMPLE FIlEE .AIIIR. • Junior Olub Installs Officers for ,1969·'60 Committee Chairmen Also Named at May Banquet Dry Cleaners· Tailors 100 'Park Avenue Klngswood 3-1127 , Formal W~ar 10 Hire Faculty Promotions Announced for '59-'60 Dr. Courtney Smith, president of SWar.thmore College, announced the following faculty promotions for the academic year 1959-60: William C. Elmore, chairman of the physics department, was named Mords L. Clothier Professor of Physics. Elevated to professor were l\fon~·; roe C. Beardsley, philosophy j Laur· ence D. LaforeJ 'history; and Hadley Rhys, fine arts. Carl Barus, electrical engineer· ing, and Peter Gram Swing, music, were named to 'associate professorships. Assistant professol'."hips were awarded to Jacob Nachmias, psy· chology; Gene D. Overstreet, political science; P. Linwood Urban, Jr., religion and philosophy. Helen Nol1th was named chairman of the department of Classics to succeed Professor L. R. Shel'o. D.A.R, WELCOMES THIRTY.FOUR : zenship. Mrs.F. Harry Bewley of IIEW ClTIZEIiS AT MEDIA I Park avenue i' regent. The· Delaware Cotylty Chapter D.A.R. was represented in the NatSee the Cornell Avenue Resident uralization Court in Media last week when 34 new citizens beMEMORIAL PARK Completes Nearly 40 came naturalized. Mrs. Arthur D. in beautiful Griffith, chairman of the N aturalYears' Service Phillip G. Wrightsman, special ization Committee, presented the WEST LAUREL HILL assistant in the manufactul'ing di- new citizens with manuals for citivision of Du Pont's Explosives Deany day from 9 to 4. partment, retired Friday after almost 40 years with the company. a.lmont Ave. above Oly Une Mr. \VrightsmanJ who Jives on Bola-Cynwyd Cornell avenue, started as a chemSlop in Office at Oode: Tower ist at the Eastern Laboratory, for guidonce Gibbstown, N.J., in 1919. He became a laboratory supervisor in 1929 and a year later he was transferred to Wilmington as a. special assistant ·in the Chemical Division. Since then he has held various posi••• announces its ..• tions in the Explosives Department·s Research and l\Ianufactu~ing Divisions. . Mr. 'Vrightsman was born in REGISTRATION: 'tuesday, June 9 and WednesWashington, D,C' J and was graduday, June 10, from 9:00 until ated from the Catholic University 11 :30 a.m., in the American of Amedca with a bachelor of Legion Room, Borough Hall • science degree in chemical engineering. Following his graduation, he 1. PRE-SCHOOL _. Six weeks beginning June 22, 1959 attended the University of Iowa Monday through Friday, 9:00-11:45 a.m., at Rutgers Avenue Elementary School Primary Building. . and also taught chemistry there. He For children 3 years ('by May 1, 1959), 4 years. is a member of the American Chem. pre.kindergarten and post·kindergarten. ieal Society and the American In~ LIMITED to 30 Children in Each of These <1 Age Groups stitute of Chemical Engineers. Fees: $16.00 for one child.' NEWS NOTES $11.00 for second child in same family.' $38.00 maximum per family.· A group of former Swarthmoreans held a reunion recently when 2. ,PRIMARY - Six weeks beginning June- 29. 1959 1I1r. and IIIrs. Wayne Gerson, Mr. lIlonday through Friday, 9 :00-11 :45 a.m .• at Rutgers Avenue School Primary Building. Thomas Jackson and Mr. William For children who have completed the first and lor second Piper were the dinner guests of Mr. grades. and Mrs. Allen Sayre of Tulsa. The Fees: Gersons make their home in Tulsa. ~16.00 for one child.' '$11.00 for second child in same family.· Mr. Jackson· and Mr. Piper were $33.00 maximum per family.· there on business trips. Mrs. Franklin .Robblee and her staff of trained teachers and 1IIrs. J. Arthur Johnson of Daassistants will administer these programs. Games, music, arts mascus, Va., is visiting hel' son and and crafts, story-telling are included. daughter-in.law Mr. and 1\l1-s. Gor· 3. SUMMER CLUB-Six weeks begInning J.une 22, 1959 don D. Johnson of Oberlin avenue. Monday through Friday, 9:00-11 :45 a.m., at Rutgers Avenue Mrs. Richard J. Restrepo of Elementary School Primary Building. . Dartmouth circle entertained at a For children of all ages who have completed the third grad•• Fees: neighborhood coffee yesterday to *10.00 for each child (materials for crafts included.)' meet a new nei'ghbor Mrs. Warren 1\'11'. Frank Piccone and his st~f of qualified instructors will Lutz, also of Dartmouth circle. supervise this program. The club will be organized into teams which will compete in softball. basketball, tennis, volleyball, dodge "[ SQ.w it in The Swa-rthmorean", ball and other group games. Handcrafts will include cloth, leather, wood, beads. raffia, paperJ ceramics, and metal work. ·The full amount 0/ all jees will be required at the time of I OAREER GUIDANOE ~ The Swarthmore Recreation Association SUMMER PROGRAM FOR 1959 ,·egish·a,tion. . \ NOTES: All tuition students and out-of-town registrants who do. not. go to Swarthmore-Rl,IUedge Schools will be charged $5.00 extra per child f(ir 'anyone .uf the above programs. Occasional visitors are welcome at the rate of 75 cents per day (50 cents at Summer Club). "••. and you folks will find that statement absolutely true when you come to see me, FARMER' DICK BARONE, about your '59 Chevrolet! THE READING LABORATORY New York Sin Francisco Philadelphia announces its SPECIAL SUMMER PROCSAM lor adults and students DEVELOPMENTAL READING Student Reid BeHer ••• ' Faster Rates • Ratio • Comprehension • Individual Instruction • • Study SkHls • Concentration • All laboratories Are Air-Conditioned for further information on !How To Improye Your Reading Write or Phon. • •• R.adlll( lI'erlter, r.. . ZIZ4 L...lt StAtt P......., ... PI. Unst ....... . I PageS Phillip G. Wrightsman Retires From duPont The Junior Woman's Club of Swarthmore ended its 1958-59 season in a spirit of fun and festivity last week. The annual banquet and installation of officers was held in Rose Tree on May 26. Mrs. Charles Keyes read the invocation immediately preceding a dinner of turkey or lobster. As a special feature of the e~ening, chor· al selections were presented after dessert hy Dr. and Mrs. James Clark and Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Wagner, accompanied by Mrs. Walter (Irene) Black. As an encore to their medley. which includeld "Close 'As Pages In a Book", "Chris· topher Robin's Prayers", "Old Abram Browne", "Rock·a My Soul", apd two tunes from "My Fair Lady", the group sang "Good- Hansen Named Manager • night, Irene" to their accompanist. Of Collingdale Labs Mrs. Randall Burr, outgoing Al~ert Hansen, Jr., of Drew ave· presidentof·the Juniors, opened the nue has been named nlanager of a official installation with a welcome new eight-laboratory section of a to members and an introduction of Direct Current Advanced Engineerspecial guests. Mrs.. W. Al1red ing Center in Collingdale. The anSmith, recently elected president of n:ouncement, made by General Electhe senior club, and Florence Lu- tric Company in April, stated that easse, immediate past-president, the center consolidates static power shared the 'honors with Mrsf Peter equipment work formerly carried E. Told, newly selected semor ad- on in three areas. Vlisor, and Mrs. Francis Forsythe, The laboratory section will be who has been the club advisor for operated as an organizational com· four years. ponent of General Electric's low Mrs. Burr briefly reviewed high. voltage switchgear department. lights of' this year's state convention in Pittsburgh. She once again To Attend Red Cross commended the erforts of 'Mrs. Nat'l Aquatic School James Lukens and her committee1 Linda Walkin of South Chester who created the club logbook that road, will attend a Red Cross N awon first prize .in state competition. tional Aqua-tic School this summer Following the annual report and at Camp Tevya, Brookline J N.H., a fiscal review of ·the year, a hand. it was announced by the Western p ..imed cake plate was presented Delaware Branch of the Red Cross. to Mrs. Forsythe in token recogniMiss Walkin will be traine4 ·as an tion of her many years of warm instructor in 5w~mming, lifesaving, "rlendship and helpful guidance to water rescue, and fir~t aid. Upon the Juniors. The floral design was her completion of this course, she painted by Mrs. Robert S. Deacon " of Riverview road, mother of mem. wH.l be.qualified to teach Red Cross sWlmmmg and water safety classes ber Mrs. Ddnald Aikens. and will be equiRped to handle Wa~t to find WOtle or ~.hobby, f4?r .'~hlc;~ you Mrs. Told presided at the .instal- sWimming emergencies. are baffllf suitedl Want to male. more of '" uleful contribution? Send for free folde, L. Iation ceremony and w-elcomed each Miss Walkin will be among 3000 officer to her new position. The students enrolled,this summer at 25 $inc.. 1937. Klnglwood 3·2022. 1959-60 ro"ter includes: TOMLlIISOIl COUNSELORS Red Cross swi!iuning and boating 'Mrs. Robert, Morrow, president; instructor training camps through- 546 Rutgers Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. Mrs. C. D. Miller, first vice-presi- out the country, according to Sam· dent and program chairman; 'Mrs. uel A. Montgomery, Water Safety John M. B. Ward, second vice-presi_ Chairman of the Western Delaware dent; M'l's. John Gersbach, record- Branch. This is the 38th year that ing secretary; Mrs. Edward· Mah- the National Aquatic School has ler, corresponding seci'etary; Mrs. been in pr-ogress. J. Stuart Torrey, treasurer; and Mra. Aikens, director and 'logbook Nj:WS NOTES cha1rman. Mrs. Morrow then Ipre_ Dr. and Mrs. J. Albright Jones sen ted '8 past..president's pin to ·Mrs. of Elm avenue spent Memorial Day Burr who, in turn, handed her pin weekend at their cottage in Eagles~ and gavel to Mrs. Morrow. mere. Their guests were Mr. and Before concluding the evening Mrs. Birney K. Morse of Harvard I \\1lth the wish of a pleasant sum- avenue. mer to ail,_l\.f.rs. Morrow introduced \\fr. and Mrs. I;tobert Brodhead her committee chairmen: of Ogden avenue entertained at a The Mesdames Robert Pember- small supper in honor of their ton, American home; Charles Cry- daughter Virginia on Sunday eveer, eommunity affairs; 'Villi am ning . Nolan, finj'i!: ·arts; Donald Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. David Ullman and drama; WiUiam Poptius, litera· their family returned Monday ture; Walter Black, music; Robert from a trip to their summer cot· Kyle, art; Frank O'Brien, 'hospital. tage in Sebasco Estates, Me. ity; Howard GiUiams, internation· Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Williams al sMairs; Frank Walter, member- of University place and Mr. and ship; Wiliiam Salom, publicity; Er- Mrs. Percy Gilbert of Park avenue win Schmidt, "News, Views, and returned by plane Saturday eveCues", and Charles Keyes, year- ning from a two 'weeks' holiday in book. Bermuda. M. WEINSTEIN & SON . Free Pick.Up and Delivery THE SWARTHMOREAN lune 5, 1959 • Bil: W "And say ••• th, word's gotten around that I'm giving the BEST DEALS and the FINEST SERVICE ANYWHERE! "lim proving this statement every day ••• ICAN AFFORD TO BEAT ANYDEALI" . . GOOD STOCK ·OF CORY'ETTES AVAILABLE . TBE 8WAaT~~oKEAN Detroit and Winnipeg, Canada and from there traveled by train to Banff, Alta., and tilen to Victoria, where she was joined' by her husband, Mr. Edward Coslett. Among the delegates to the convention was Mrs. Robert E. White of Honolulu, the former Edith Kniskern of Swarthmore. From Victoria Mr. and Mrs. Coslett journeyed through Sates, of which our individual actions and bind e 0 IS rea IZlDg a w a for 'Middlebury, Vt., to attend the ted for the 1960 teams. Junior Ron he is a past president. them together and together they ever we have been, whatev~r we graduation of Craig Peel from Smith of Madison, N.J., will capDr. Shero has taught Classics at become part and parcel of Ollt: na- are, whatever we hope to be IS the Middlebur Colle e. " Swarthmore for 31 years. He also tain the 1960 tennis team. Smith product of freedom. Freedom uny g served as registrar of the college tional strength. der God-that is the very warp Mrs. L. li.. Wetlaufer of Strath played second ",d thil'd position on for four years 1944-48, and as sec"The genius of our people lies DQt and woof of our existence and binds Haven avenue entertained at a. des- this season's team which won the only in the capacity to do things us together as a Nation.' sert-shower on Tuesday in honor Southern Division Championship of re\ary of thG faculty for three years well, to make things in profusion, Following Mr. M'\l'kley's speech, or Miss Kathleen M. ,Baird of the Middle Atlantic States Confer- 1941-44. During his professorship at to distribute goods with remarkable the para<\e formed for the tradition- Scarsdale, N.Y. The marriage of ence. Swarthm'ore he maintained an acefficiency. It lies even more in,the al march to, Eastlawn Cemetery. Miss Baird to Mr. John F. M"", ..han Juniors Dave Denhardt and Herm tive interest in several outside orretention of those human principles Paced by the High Scliool Band, of Strath ttaven avenue will take Feldhusen were elected co-captains ganizations. He served as secretaryof the 1960 track team, Denof individual liberty which mark off "motored" 'leterans of the First ,place on June 20.· Western civilizatkm from others World War, members of the Legion Mrs. DonaId P . .Jones 0 f North hardt recently won first place in treasurer and later as president 01 the American Philological Associabased on slavery. Auxiliary and Red Cross Ladies; S war thmore avenue and Mrs. Peter the College Division of the two mile tion. He has been 8 member of the "It is a 'bitter' fact in hu"}an his- marching Veterans of the Second E. Told of Park avenue will accom- event in the Middle Atlantic States managing committee of the Ameritory that slavery is more usual th, an World War and the Korean War, pany th' . elr SIster-in-law Mrs. J. S. Track and Field Meet. Both Der,can School of Classical Studies at freed!>m. . , since the birth of accompanied by Boy and Girl T urner of Washington, D.C., to hardt and Feldhusen broke SwarthAthens, where he has also been a more track records this season, Den,Cbrist, there have been about 40 Scouts, Sea Scouts. Cubs, Brownies, M'ddl '1 eb ury, V t., on Friday, where visiting professor. He has pubbillion people on this earth; but not and ,tbe Fire Company with all ita they will attend the graduation of hardt in the two mile and Feldhusen in the shotput, and contributed sig.. lished articles in a number of scholmore than three 'Per cent of them engines, made a quarter of a mile Mrs. T urner's son S tephen. nificantly to the undefeated season arly journals. have ever known freedom as we un- spectacle for the noh-participating 'Mrs. Alex Mills of Walnut lane !Jr. Shero graduated from Haver' derBtand it ..• Today in America community who visited friends and and Mrs. Paul Zecher of North scored by the team. Denhardt is ford College, After studying at Oxwe have achieved a civilization "the neighbors along the line of mareh. Swarthmore av.nue entertained on from Baltimore, Md., and Feldhusford University as a Rbodes Scholis from Delmar, N.Y. en last best hope of man for peace and Later in the morning, smaller Wednesday morning at a coffee for Larry Christianson of Dalton, ar, he obtained his master's an(. freedom on this earth', which f ry :too young to join in the parade theJ.r new neighbor's Mrs. William doctor's degrees at the Univel'sity exists because it was founded (and a good many of their older E.Jmore and Mrs. Al Boyd of Wal- Mass., will captain the Garnet baseof \Viscoqsin. Before joining thl ball team next year. squarely upon the concept of human b r oth ers and '. sisters) took a more nut lane and Mrs. Martin Estey of Lee 1II00re of Cambridge, Md., Swarthmore faculty, he had taugh. I;berty. We have a responsibility to vigorous part in the events of the Ogde n avenue. will captain the 1960 golf team. at Macalester and S!. Stephen', future generations to preserve'this day by riding on the fire engines heritage.' Dr. Francis Shunk Uowns of HarThe lacrosse team decided to elect Colleges. and eating of the popsicles provided d . . "We must teach-in our classVar avenue paItlclpated this week different captains for each game. by the hospitable firemen. . hi' rooms-that liberty is man's greatSome 500 children enjoyed the In tea ' . umnae t L'and Icommencement • Among letter winners announced Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Wilsoc in track were Peter Kroon and 'Vilest t, reasure ..• We must be vigilant ride along the carefully planned exerCIses a mco n University, 0 f d H I of Harvard avenue left this wee:, that the lure of all-embracing so- route, waved at the crossing guards' x or. the meet- liam Welsh, both graduates of for Grinnell, la., to bring their f' th e aBso attended d of r curity does not beguHe our young (patient A,uxiliary Police, and still mg Trustees of Swarthmore High School. h' ()h h be b9B be daughter Norma who has completed people into unthinkingly forsaking more kindly firemen), and cheered w IC e das theen a mem r for 35 her freshm~n year at Grinnell Coltheir liberty which, once lost, lis on the drivers and seconds who ob- years, an e meeting of the M Th I . I S ' r. and Mrs. Carroll P. Streeter lege, home. Norma will leave the' oglca emlDary seldom regained ..• We must not Iigingly pulled the bells and stepped' eoh' D D of which he. of Columbia avenue spent the week- middle of June for Buck Hill Fal!. only guard our liberties of relimon, IS· ct"' aIrman. b' on the sirens. t' -' . r. howns will be end as the lP'ests of Mr. and Mrs. where she will spend the summe:' of thought and speech and the press, par lClpa ' All in all, the Fire Company dis- me t f lUg both mL ft e commence- Owen W. Gay in Lakewood. as a camp counsellor. but also our economic Uberties. n s 0 a ayette College, I ~============================= Over the years the American ,pensed 800 popsicles to young visi- Easton and Princeton Theological I , tors, and nine eases of coke for 0_ • P . people grow increasingly dependent ..:n:mmary, rmceton, N.J., this unifomted marchers, both young com' k d IUpon government for security and mg wee en . people and adulta. contribute an i·ncreasing share of Mrs. Harlan R. Jessup, accomFinal "formal" events of the day . t h elr earnings to ,the government in panied by her daughter Martha, has were the exbibition baseball games th e f orm of direct and indirect taxes left Tulsa, Okla., to visit the late staged by the various teams of the out of which the government promMr. Jessup's parents Mr. and Mrs. . Knee-Hi League. J ISes to provide that security . . . • Harlan Jessup of Haverford Borough statisticians are still add- I TaXIeS can 'be a weapon of revolupace. Enroute she will visit her ing up the number of f ...mily gatheri 1 d >!.ion . . • can become sO high that son- n- aw an daughter Lt. and they rob a man of choice and .will. ings and neighborhood picnics. Mrs. Henry S. Harvey, Jr., in San "1 want to urge you never to think Marcus, Tex. She will make her that you ·and I are so infinitesimally "I saw it in.the Swarthmorean." home in Frederick~ Md. 'F';;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Dr. and Mrs. Ed ward F. Camp••• as • •• . bell, Jr., of Chicago, III., have been visiting their families Dr. and • •• __ Mrs. E. Fay Campbell of Cornell avenue and Dr. and Mrs. Seymour w: Kletzien of SO'\th Chester road th,s week. Dr. Calnphell· has just completed his doctorate at the John HopkIns U/mversity, Balti"Famous for the Finest Meats" more, Md."and will be awarded his degree this month. He is presently assistant' professor of Old Testamen tat McCormick Theological / Seminary. Judy Hollander of Ogden avenue HALF OR WHOLE arrived home Monday evening from (City Dressed) Saratoga Springs, N.Y., where she completed her freshman yenr at CENTER CUT Skidmore College. Mr. and 'Mrs. Joseph P. Remington of Park avenue have as their guest until June 15 Mr:;. Remington's mother Mrs. Charles P. Deems l of Rumford, N.J. U. S. CHOICE Mrs. Herschel Smith of Walling(Ground to Order) vicinity~ ford entertained the Danghters of /;h~ 17th Century at tea Tuesday of POLISH this week. Mrs. Smith is State pres-' -ident of the organization. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin R. MacElwee of Mt. Holyoke place spent the weekend in Riverside, N.Y. with JUMBO JUICY their son and daughter-in-law Mr. ..................... and Mrs. Donald Ma.cElwee who are CANTALOUPES l l moving this week to Winchester, SWEET SUGAR CORN , . , ....... ' . , . . . . . . . 5 ears 29c Mass. Mr. MacElwee is taking the position of production engineer in FRESH SLICED - Ready to u.. GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS . , . . . .. giant jar 75c Fibremold, Inc.: the Woburn faclin Attractive Containor) ·tory of ,his uncle Mr. Paul Collins. . ' case $1.09 Mrs. Samuel D. Clyde of SwarthPEPSI COLA (Case of 24) .. ,. ffiOl'e avenue had as her house UNDERWOOD .. 4 cans 95c guests over Memori!-l Day weekend DEVILED HAM 'her granddaughter Mrs. Edwin O. KRAFT Lomerson 'and her 'husband of GlasMAYONNAISE "', ...... "' ...... qt. jar 59c REMEMBER ••• JUNE 14th IS tonbury, O>nn., and her three MUSSELMAN'S FATHER'S DAY great-grandchildren, Ned, ,Gini. APPLESAUCE ..... ' . ' ....... ' .. 3 Ig. cans 39c Louise and Meg. .I. ..' h' . . , · -an S B ac A COMPLETE F 0 0 D M A R, K E T A 514 YaIeve. LADIES', MEN'S and BOYS' SHOP Swa rIh mora, Pa. PORK SALE LOIN OF PORK lb. 59c PORK CHOPS ~~~T~:~ CHICKENS lb. 19c TOP SIRLOIN lb. ,69c BOILED HAM SLICED BACON lb. 9Bc Wei at the Swarthmore Toggery ShoPI take great pride in being able to offer to the residents of Swarthmore and the nation/s leading brands of apparel. Ib.39c Ib.59c . For holidaYI or year-round shopp,ing remember you are always satisfied most, with a brand that has made a name for itself. • • KOSHER PICKLES ... ",.' ....... qt. jar 39c PENN TREATY Kladarrartan Picnic , Page 0 TBE8WAa1~MoaEAN June 5, 1959 June 5, 1959 APPLE BUTTER ..... ' . . . . . . . . . . ... qt. jar 2~c '. C.-11llp1lOOd 3-1100 DELIVERY lor FREE FREE PARKING Honor Miss McCreight A farewell party wa3 given on Wednesday afternoon for Jean McCreight by fourth grade children' Bnd their mothers at the home of Mrs. Howarf the varied practical services maintained! for the comfort of the guests and, as a ;final innovation announced the Sunday evening sacred stringed orchestra concerts held in the lobby to which the townspeople were invited to come and partake of the enjoyment of the music. I thought it was lovely and planned to visit the inn at my earliest opportunity. . On a bright Monda~· morning a few days later a gentleman came into the office. In reply tQ my inquiry as to what I might do to help him he c9nfessed he didn't want anything but just to 'browse around'. And so after he had browsed awhile, he turned to me and asked if I knew of any nice place nearby where folks could go for a weekend or longer. lIIemory of the little leaflet flashed into my thought and I found myself repeating its content to' him as he listened intently and soherly until I reached the Sunday evening concerts when he could maintain 'his feigned poise no longer. With a hearty hurst of laughter he exclaimed, "Young lady, you certainly know your job." Reaching into ·his pocket he withdrew a card which he gave ",e. On . ·it I read _ ' Mr. Frank oM. Scheibley Owner - Manager 8trath Haven Inn SW8t,1'hmore, Pennsylvania Sinc6rely ·yo.urs, Eleanor Vierra s. Ros:e Valley Nurseries, Inc. MiddletowII Road -Media, Pa. Opposite High }Ieadow (between Dutton Mill Road and Knowlton Road) • WORK CUSTOM LANDSCAPE n:iendly Sound Ad';ea - FRE~ Telephone TRemont 2-7206 Ask for BEN PALMER SHADE TREES - SHRUBS Flowering Trees, Rhododendrons, Laurel Open Weekday Evenings in Good Weather Open 7:30 A.M. _ 5:00 P,M. Daily and Saturday Sunday: 12:30 - 5 P.M. OUR RECORDa pendabnity and highest standards; • THE OLIVER H. BAIR CO. Dluna.. 0' ftlNRAlI 1120 CHISTNUT STRIIT MAlt( "'lAIR, 11.111. . '.1.'_ .. 60'"' I' " next winter heat your house automatieally WITH IT'S CHEAPER THAN YOU THINKI Gas house heating is cheap to Instcdl - cheaper than any other automatic heating system - and economical to operate, too. In additioq fa thorough heating comfort all wint.r, you enjoy economy and convenience, For more information call your local plumbing or I ~ ating contractor, or any of our suburbaq Clfllces.; CONVENIENT BUDGET PLAN For added convenience, gas hOllse healing pay;"'"" eon be made in equal amounts over a to-month period. Get ~e delails at your neorasf P'hi/adelphia fledric sUburban ollie.. . , '1ILADEl'HII ELEC'.IC COM'II' • THE SWAR'fUMOR FiA N College Residents Prepare for June Craduations Carolyn Schott, daughter of Mrs. John Schott of Fairview road, is a candidate for the bachelor of arts degree at Grinnell College Commencement exercises which will be held June 7. A sociology major, she plans to do social welfare work in either Maryland·or New York starting in September. She plans to be married August 8 of this year to Micbael Goodrich of Severna Park: Md. He is a 1958 Grinnell graduate. Carolyn has been an active member of the Grinnell Y.W.C.A. and waS·8 member of the cabinet 'her junIor year. She has served on the governing body of her residence hall for two years and has also been a member of the Women's Recreation Association and the Intern",tional Relations Club. fraternity and a member Ingswood 3-2198. ~ lawn and gardening j~b for va· TIIIRDB OF THE TOTAL COSTS e § cationing families or those at home. THEREOF AOAINST ALL ASSESS§ ~C PERSONAL-Out to Make Money! ~ CONTRACTOR ~ 5 ABLE PROPERTIES ABUTrlNG Phone Klngswood 3-0554. Do it pleasantly calling with THEREON', THE REMAINING COST § 2906 Burden Rood li! Avon. Write Mrs. Ivins, Box 464, WANTED - Typing, all kinds FOrmerly TO BE BORNE BY THE BOROUGH B g stenography,- dictaphone, wot:k at West Chester or call OWen 6-243& OF SWARTHMORE; PROVIDING § Par bids, Po. 9 " CARNS ~ home. Will call for and dehver. FOR 7HE COLLECTION OF SAID after 6 P.M. ASSESSMENTS IN ACCORDANCE ; 650 Baltimore Pike " ' ~ ~ PERSONAL - Help the birds to K!lngswood 3-3982. WITH LAW. TRemont 2-5487 help you to enjoy them. Bird WANTED - To buy china, glass· THE COUNCIL OF THE BOROUGH ware marble top furniture. Also , feeders, baths, etc. Make modern' furniture. Phone TRemont OF SWARTHMORE DOES ORDAIN: gifts. The S. Crothers !,lll11l11I11IUIIIUIIIIIIIUIlUIIIIUlIDIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIII! Sedlon 1. Drexel Avenue between Park """,,":"':---;--:-:- and Va.sSar Aveoues sball be opened as Jrs., Plush Mill Road, Walling. 2-7473. mIllIllIllIllDIIIIIIIIUlIUIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIDIlIIIUlUIlDIU'ai ford, PR. Telephone LOwell 6-4551. WANTEII Baby sitting by re· of a wIdlb of 50 feet. equIpped with ~l1nD1IUIIUllncIIIIIIIIIIIIDllllllllllllullllllmlllclllllIIlllII~ sponsible woman. Morning, after- proper drainage facU1Ues •. gTaded. and the § FOR SALE noon ·and night. Kln~wood 3-0907. car'way the!'eof Improved to a width of feet. by establlshing the Ilnes aod FOR SALE _ Girl's 26 inch W ANTEU - Cleaning or ironing 3ft grades paying wlt.h bnumlnous concrete. 5 Schwinn bike, $6.50 as is. Needs Monday and Tuesday. Swarth· and Installing granite curbs on each std& Itires. PhonE: Janice Fairchild, more references'. TRemont 4-0708 thereof. all In accordance with plans and speclflcatlons on fUe in the office of the Klngswood 4.412~.,-:_ _ _-.;-;:-;; after 6. D 5 2507 Chestnut St., Chester Borough Secretary. Tne work shall be FOR-SALE Mushroom soil, 50 WANTED To buy second hand " INTERIOR & EXTERIOR " done und~r the supervision of the proper §. cente a basket. Delivered. LE,high chest of drawers for storage pur. TRemont 2-5373 2 999 poses by the Community Arts Cen- officers of the Borough. SecUOD 2'. The aforesnld work shall be ~ Free Estimates li! ;;F-~~~R;':;;S;"'A"Lr1E"-S-'»...:;;:n:rda~r;;di"o;;f'"fnie;:;e;-;;m;;o::id;:. tre Junior The"tre. Call LOwell 6, S(..Boar Harellli Cue done pursuant to a lVrU.ten contract Bond Aged. SenUe, ChroDlc ~ el Remington noiseless typewri. 1075: proper surety bonds after due advertISing CGnva!oeaccn't Men and Women tor; like new, little used, perfect WANTED - Mature woma'! for in accordance with law. Upon COJIlple; Klngswood 3-8761 Exeelleut F:eod - spaelollS Greldllh condition. Price $75. Reply Box T, seUing position. No· experle~ce tion. two-thirds of the total costs thereof. Blua Croas P.onored Includlng publlcaUon, engineering s.nd lega.l necessary. We'l\ teach you. Five § g The Swarthmorean. expenses. shall be ast:esl!ed according to SADIE PIPPIN TURNER. proprietor fluIIDIIUlnDlllDlIlIlIlIIIllOIllUIllIIUUIIIIIIIIIIIIDlIIllIlIIIHC1! FOR SALE _ iDeSoto 1956 Fire. days a week. TRemont 6.9:=1:!:44~.,::;= tho foot-front rule agaInSt all assessable , dome two door hardtop, radio and WANTED - Summer baby sitting properties abutting thereon; the rema.lnder' of the costs shall be paid by the Borough. high school graduate. Phone KIngs· anywhere by experienced 1959 SecUon S. If any such assessment sh&11 car. wood 3-1174. not be paid within thirty (30) days after Ohip~an digan, rustic 38. WANTED - Day's work, ironing completIon of the wort. interest shall be at Ule rate of six (6%) per cent· wood 4-3523. I preferred, S\yarthmore referen- added per annum (rom the! date of completion. FOR SALE _ Three all wool rugs, res. TRemont 4.1948. and. U not pald within flve (5) months 9x12, excellent condition .. Small WANTED - High scilool boy de· after such completion. the BOrough Sollcp General Contractor throw rugs to match. Call Saturday, sires odd Jobs around the house. ltor shall cause liens to be filed against the various properties Involved [or the Sunday. Klngswood 3·3329. Call LOwell 6-3452. CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS b, respective amounts of such assessments. BUILDERS 'Since 1920' FOR SALE - Wanted home f()r LOST AND FOUND together with lawful interest. from date of two year old fawn male boxer, compleUon. an attorney's commission. and TILE FLOORS· PLASTIC TILE 'AKC ,·egiStered. Affectionate, ex- LOST, - Keys on chain bearing five (5%) per cent penalty. as allowed bY medal and silver knife. Phone FORMICA COUNTER TOPS law. The Borough reserves the right to cellent with children. Call Kings· 3 PARK AVE" SWARTHMORE K>lngswood 4-4623. enforce collection (rom the owners of such ROOFINa and SIDINa wood 4·2166 .. abutting properties by such additional Kln.qswood 4-2727 CUSTOM KITCHENS lawful methods as the Borough COunell ADDITIONS • ALTERATIONS ma.y authorize. PASSED this da.y o( A.D, lOS9. Free Estimltes EMIL SPIES Funeral Home ROOFING Convalescent Home H'e George Myers and CO. r a REAL ESTATE! i~ Picture FramiRg !i ROGER RUSSEU \,~~~~~~~~I~oc~aitt~'o;.n~'~Sh~.a~d~y~ S KI 3-1112 IHeinrich N. Knudsen i IB Diluzio and Sons , FLORIST I. i I 8~~::::~e~~~~:; ! B ~ Jack Prichard B Belvedere, Convalescent Home a ., PAl NTI NG ; a i i I 4th, 3rd Grades Entertain the elementary grades 0;' May 21 Hearing. were held Wednesday and 3[ay 22. Mrs. Elizabeth GarraWith Song, Story Programs Qf ~ast week in J uven'ile Court, han's third grade group presented Mrs. Benjamin Swan's fourth the proirarn with the assistance of Media for three Morton boys in. Volved ;n the disappearance of a g1'8de at Rutgers Avenue School en- Mrs. Grace Yeaw, who coached the wallet from the truck of Horace tertained the primary and inter. dramatic presentati?n; Mrs. Molly Finch, Springfield, while the latter mediate grades with a program of Gwinn accompanied the singing and was collecting trash on Bowdoin songs and stories from Hans Chris- Mrs. Laura Dechnik, who assisted , avenue, 'Swarthmore on April 4. The tian Andersen on May 21 and 22. with the art work. lh·,. Donald Dye 14-year·old youth supposed to have Afwr Terry McCurdy read the was the costumer. taken the wallet was placed on in. Bible and led the audience in the Those taking part in the program definite probation. One was dis. Lord's Praye~, Billy Bradbury an. were Rick Martin, Tyrone Crittencharged upon payment of a third nounced the program. The class den, Tommy Keller, David Dye, of the costs, the other was dis. sang ('I'm Hans Christian Ander.:.. Nancy Cornelius, Gretchen Rial, charged completely. On Wednesday sen" as John Horneff played the Ann Hoenigswald, Sally Lamber. of this week an 8-year-old, also ac• part of Hans. son, Ann Michel, Jani'ce Detweiler cused of receiving part of several Th~ second song announced br Ted J ones, Tommy Lau, Robert hundred doDars cash said to have Phylhs Martin was "Thumbelina" hoi, Trudie McInroy, George K.cf., been in the walh,t, p le'lded guilty in which Peggy Schmidt played the fes, Roy Heisler, Chris Bouda, Ruth in C. degree from 4th; of Northfield, Ill. as fourth goode teacher. Miss University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Professor and Mrs. I. J. Schoen- Sharpe, Whose home is in Ridge- Willits has been a member of the berg of Harvard avenue entertain- wood, N~J., is receiving her degree Board of Managers of Swarthmore ed Sunday at a tea party for gradin elementary education at the Uni- College since 1956. uate students in Professor Schoen- versity of" V~rmont this sp~ing and pro Arendt -is V.isiting Lecturer berg's department at the Univer- has done practice teaching at Eg- in the Special Program in the Husity of Pennsylvania, and their sex, Vt. Miss Judd, a resident of manities, Visiting Professor of Polwives.'Professor Hans Radenacher, Burlington, Vt., is likewise gradu- dtics, and Visiting -Senior Fellow of a former Swarthmorean, was ating from the Univer8-ity of the Council of the Humanities at among the gues~. mont. She did her practice teaching Princeton. She is the author of .Mr. Henry A. Peirsol returned in Winnoski, V-t. "Origins of Totalitarianism" and to his ho~e on Lafayette avenue Pat:ricia A,nn Moretti, a mewber uThe Human Condition' and severSatul'd~y evening after a twoof thls year s graduating class at al magazine articles: week business trip to Ohio during Springfield High School, who studwhich he spent a weekend visiting ied academic as well as· commercial "I saw it in the Swarthmorean." his brother-in-law Mr. James M. ,subjects, will replace Mary Lou Dryden and family in Dayton. Miss Barbara B. Kent of Dart- Eckm·an who resigned recently as mouth avenue, with Mrs. M. R. elementary school secretary_ Speers Named Solicitor • THE SWARTHMOREAN THE Dimmitt of Rutgers avenue, will A. Dilvid Speers, of Drew av·en ••e, I leave tomorrow by, car to vacation was appointed solicitor for the through June in Gloucester, Mass. Board for the new fiscal year be· Miss Anne Morse of Parrish road was honored at a kitchen shower ginning July 6. The attendance of Ernani FalTues1iay evening given by Mrs. coone of the high school facultv Charles Mitchell of Avondale road, WaUingford, and Mrs. George War- the sixth annual college entr~nce -ren of South Chester road at Mrs. exoamboard advanced placement conference at Yale University June Mitchell's ·home. Kimberly Morrow, daughter of 25 to 28 was anthorized' with halfMr_ and Mrs. Robert G. Morrow, expenses paid up to a maximum of Jr., of Westminster avenue, cele- $25_ It was thought Board meetings brated her sixth .birthday with' a following the regular one on Jun~ party for 12 girls. Hugh Morrison of Dartmouth 17, would be held in the cafeteria avenue and his brothel' Bill are ex- since the recent meeting room pected home this weekend from col- biology room, would be taken 'over . lege for, the summer. Hugh has by the 'high school office dnring the finished his jnnior year at Lafay- summer when shifts are necessitaette College and Bill has completed ted by work on 'the new high school. It is expected the hiology and art his freshman year at Princeton. , Mrs. W. R. Leeron of Cedar lane rooms will ultimately exchange entertained at ,a small luncheon on quarters. Friday. Mr. and Mrs. W_ R. Leeron of . John Wetlanfer, son of Mr. and Cedar lane entertain.ed at a MemMrs. Leslie A. Wetlaufer of Strath fiaven avenne h ... returned to hia orial Day cook-out. Among the 'home from Lehigh University, guests were former Swarthmoreans Bethlehem, ..mere he bas completed Mr_ and Mrs. John Ogden of Wm Grove. his ju~r year. · , "',." we I" III~I~P? "You Meet the Nicest People at Speare Bros." ~ and telephone your need.. and we'll deliver. You'll ap- preciate our court.ooa service and fair prices, CATHERMAN'S' DRUG STORE Klngswood 3-0586 "They Do Sell Nice Things at Speare 8ros." GRADUATING C LAS S FIRST ROW (Left to Right) OF SECOND ROWMICHAEL KELLEHER BECKER JOAN ELLIOTT BEESI NGER WILLIAM HUMPHREY BEIK SVEN HANS EMIL BOREl ~~:::: c.....• _ SEVENTH AND WELSH BTBEETB A Speare Bros. - - Chester THIRD ROWJUDITH DAWN BOYER NORMA LI NDSA Y BREAKELL MARGARET BROWNELL HELEN FORDHAM CALHOUN .. FOURTH ROWSPENCER PACKARD CARROLL JEAN MARGARET COLAFEMINA MARION B. COLTON JANICE ANN COMPTON exclusive - first with the BEST in Swim Suits Pick yours NOW! I I • FIFTH ROWLAURENCE E. CONLY ELIZABETH ANN COOPER JOHN CHRISTOPHER CRATSLEY BRODIE HASTIE CRAWFORD , , ~nne I "Get in the Swim this Year" • Our YOU NEVER FIGURED SO PERFECTLY as you will wilh the help of Roxa!'ne's ABC bra cup~ in every swimsuit size and very special foundation fit. all the way. That's why you can wear any style, Heartiest beautifully, ,il it's Roxanne. Congratulations •• to the Class of 1959 .'j ,I ~ .. -, • Others from MICHAEL'S 10,98 Shop for these famous suits on our SeCond Floor COLLEGE PHARMACY LUAU FOR THE EYES ••• abito! South Seas magic ")rved up by Roxanne in an alluring Sarong-draped suit that knows how to tuck you into your best figure. Printed acetate laton faille with a soit-as-cotton feel, in a lush flowering of South Seas Blues. 32 to 38, all in A, B, C bra cups. "s warthmore's and, for "fashion-wise figures" ROXANNE provides their HOLD-N-MOLD play briefs, perfect control with featherweight comfort, completely washable. S-M-L, white'or blaak ....... ' .. . . SHOP FRI. TILL 9:00 - BOUQUETS WE COMPLIMENT to the YOU CLASS ON A of 295 ( SCHOOL BARBARA SANDRA AD,.... S THADDEUS ADAMS SUSAN BETH ALLEN KATHLEEN MAY AULL • When you need "sam.. thing fr"", the drng star." think of this professional phumacy. Drop in at Dar convenient location.-or SWARTHM SAT, TO 5:30 1959 Finest and Most Complete Drug Store" • BOUQUET BEAUTY SALON 9 South Chester Road EVERYTHING IS FINE WELL EARNED FOR '59 VICTORY • CLASS OF '59 • HARLOW SHOP • • • • THE CAMERA &HOBBY SHOP 4 - 6 Park Avenue, SWI!!'thmore INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE Page 10 Seniors Rehearse for Final Exercises at SHS New Budget Demands \ H. S. Math Students 62 Mill School Tax Present Second Fair (Continued from Page 1) Over 200 projeots were displayed accomplished. Upon further study by the Mathematics students of Last Day for Underit was discovered no cuts could be Swarthmore Junior - Senior High graduates Is made- and that a 'plan to increase School in the Second Annual MatheW'rent income by borrowing a June 16 sum to be repaid over the next ematics Fair held in the gymnasium Plans fol' the last week of High three years was not a l'eal1~' good Monday of last week. School have been completed. The eXl)edient due to its effect on the An audience of 300 enjoyed the seniot's have finished their examin'budget of future years which in presentation of a num!>er of outations and today will begin prac- themselves would require addition- standing projects. The p'rograrn, as tice for Baccalaureate and Com- al increases as costs continue to introduced by John Cratsley, inmencement. mount. Thus. the extra thrce mills cluded the following highlights: Other high school classes will were added now in ordcl' to keep Conic Sections, Janice Carroll; have regular sessions through to- on a current basis instead of borArchimedean Solids, Peter Oliver; dav with examinations beginning rowing, and in order to better The History of NumiJers, Susan , the afternoon of June 8 ano COIl- equalize the tax burden o\'cr the Severs; Binary System of Numbers, titlUing through the 11th. The Jane Michener; History of years. seventh and eighth grades will Mr. Spencer said, "The Board 'P uter:;, John Bond; A Computer for change to the morning schedule (8 has spent much time trying to find Adding Binary Numbers to Sums to 1~:25) beginning JUlle 8, ami the minimum sum that would meet Not Exceeding 62, Sandy Tompcontinue through the 11th. Grades current expenses, and this is it! As kins; A Computer for seven to 11 may clear their obligalong as the ~eople here want good "Nim," Patton Steuber; An Elections with the teacitcrs on June 12 teachers, well paid, and other mod- tric Slide Rule, Bart Schneider; and 15, ern educational features the costs Abacus, Linda Jones; Biography-of June 16 will be the stUdents' last will h~ve to be met. If the people Napier, Thomas Miller; Napier's day fol' school. Grades 10 and 11 decide they don't want these, that- _Bones, Connie Johnson; Mathematwill receive their report cards in is another matte... ies and Music, Janet Hunt; Topoltheir homerooms at 9 a.m. Grades Hl\-Iaybe we could use a lay com- ogy, Shelby Seltzer; The Color se\'en to nine lUay obtain their re- mittee on finances!", he sighed. Problem in Map Making, Anne Wilports at 9 :30 in their homerooms. ,McCollin, Swan Resign burn; A Problem in Navigation, The final faculty meeting will be Myrtle :McCaHin, sixth grade Gail Donovan; Symmetry, Betsy a luncheon at the Ingleneuk at noon teacher who has spent 27 of her 35 Walker; Geometry in Nature (an Wednesday, June 17. teaching years here, tendered her Original Film), Steve Hansell. resignation and retirement. The The fair was under the direction NEWS NOTES Board expressed its regret and of the Mathematics Sequence com· I\[rs, William R. Curtis, daughter wished Miss McCaHin ;"ell in a post posed of 1\Irs. Priscilla Swan, Don-I of Mr. and Mrs, M. W, Garrett of she will accept as director of the. aId Henderson, James Miller, Jr., North Princeton avenue is spend- school affiliation program of the Arch Wallace and Halfl'ed Wertz, ing a few days in Boston with her American Friends Service Commit- Sequence Chairman. husband, Lieut, (j.g.) CUl'tis who tee. is at ,present attached to the cruisKathalene D. Swan, fourth grade College to Graduate er Macon, which is now in port. teacher also resigned. Mr. and Mrs. John Rumsey of The Board elected a new sixth 185 Seniors Monday Park avenue returned Sunday from gl'ade teacher to replace Philip (Continued from Page 1) a month's vacation in Europe. They Swayne who resigned last month, were accompanied by :Mr. Rumsey's Luman J. Gesfol'd, of Sharon Hill, ority in the field of labor relations, sister Mrs. Marian Smyth of Mor- who has been teaching a like grade Dl·. 'Villits is a former professor ton and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mc- at Chichester School· Distl'ict since and dean of the \Vharton School of Cann of Drexel Hill and traveled 1955. He has studied at William the University of Pennsylvania, by jet both ways. In Frankfurt, Jennings Bryan University, the 1933 to 1939. He is a former direcGermany, they stayed for a few University of Tennessee, and Tem- tor of the Social Science Division days with Mr. Rumsey's brothel', ple University, and completed work of the Rockefeller Foundation 1939 Lieut. Col, and Ml's, Clifford M, for his master's degree at the Uni- to 1954, president and executive diRumsey who outlined theh' tour and versity of Pennsylvania, majoring rector of the National Bureau of accompanied them on their visits. in elementary education. He is nOw Economic Research 1933 to 1939, They visited seven countries includ- \vOl' king toward his doctorate and and a former member of the Feding a brief stay in London, Eng- majoring in elementary administra- eral Advisory Council of the United land, States Employment Service. tion. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lange of Dr. Willits, who holds -bachelor's New England Touch Cedar lane will have as their guests Two other new teachers will be and master's degrees from Swarthfor two weeks their son-in-law Suzanne Sharpe, to take ovel' the more, was awarded an honorary and daughter Mr. and Mrs. James second grade cla;;sroom being left LL,D, degree by the College in Parker Hall, 3rd, and two children, by Nancy Hagy, and Mary Jo Judd 1937, He also holds a Ph,D. degree Martha and James Parker Hall, who will succeed Kathalene Swan and an honorary LL.1). degree from 4th, of N ol'thfield, Ill. as fourth grade teacher. Miss the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Professor and Mrs. 1. J. SchoenSharpe, Whose home- is in Ridge- Willits has been a member of the berg of Harval'd avenue entertainwood, N.J., is receiving her degree Board of Managers of Swarthmore ed Sunday at a tea party for grad. in elementary education at the Uni- College since 1956. uate students in Professor SchoenDr. Arendt is Visiting Lecture-r versity of Vermont this spring and herg's department at the Univerin the Special Pr-ogram in the Huhas done practice tenching at Essity of Pennsylvania, and their manities, Visiting Professor of Polsex, Vt. Miss Judd, a resident of wives. Professor Hans Radenacher, Hies, and Visiting Senior Fellow of Burlington, Vt., is likewise gradu. a former Swarthmore an, was ating from the University of Ver~ the Council of the Humanities at arnong the guests. mont. She did her pru('tice teaching Princeton. She is the author of 1\:[1'. Henry A. Peirsol returned "Origins of Totalitarianism" and in Winnoski, Vt. to his home on Lafayette avenue Pa~ricia ~nn Moretti, a meljlber "The Human Condition' and severSaturday evening after a twoof thiS year s graduating class at al magazine articles: week business trill to Ohio during Springfield High School, who studwhich he spent a weekend visiting ied academic ·as well as commercial "I saw it in the Swarthmorean." his brother-in-law Mr. James M. subjects, will replace Mary Lou Dryden and family in Dayton. Miss Barbal'a B. Kent of Dart- Eckman who resigned recently as mouth avenue, with Mrs. ~1. R. elementary school secretary. - " JUlie 5, 1959 THE SWARTBMOREAN Speers Named Solicitor Dimmitt of Rutgers avenue, will A. David Speers, of Drew avenue, leave tOluorrow by car to vacation was appointed solicitor for the through June in Gloucester, Mass. Miss Anne Morse of Parrish road Board for the new fiscal year bewas honored at a kitchen shower ginning July 6. The attendance of Ernani FalTuesday evening given by Mrs. cone of the high school faculty at Charles Mitchell of Avondale road, \Vallingford, and Mrs. George War- the sixth annual college entrance ren of South Chester road at Mrs. e~am board advanced ,placement conference at Yale University June Mitchell's home. Kimberly Morrow, daughter of 25 to 28 was authorized with halfMr. and Mrs. Robert G. Morrow, expenses paid up to a maximum of Jr., of Westminster avenue, cele- $25, It ,,:as thought Board meetings, brated her sixth birthday with· a followmg the regular one on June party for 12 girls. Hugh Morrison of Dartmouth 17, would be held in the cafeteria avenue and his brother Bill are ex- since the recent meeting room the pected home this weekend from col- biology room, would be taken 'over lege for the summer. Hugh has by the 'high school office during the finh:.hed his junior year at Lafay- summer when shifts are necessitaette College and Bill has completed ted ,by work on the new high school_ It IS expeeted the biology and art his freshman year at Princeton. Mrs. W, R. LeCron of Cedar lane rooms will ultimately exchange entertained at a small luncheon on quarters. Friday, Mr, and Mrs. W. R. LeCron of John Wetlanfer, son of Mr. and Cedar lane entertained at a MemMl's, Leslie A, WeUaufer of Strath fiaven avenue has returned to his orial Day cook·out. Among the ,home from Lehigh University, guests were fonner Swarthmoreans Bethlehem, where he has completed Mr. and \l'[rs. John Ogden of West Grove. his junior year. mag we , 111~1~1)? • When you need "something frQDl the drug .tore" think of this profes.ional pharmacy. Drop in at our cODvenient location-or telephone your need., and we'll deliver. You'll appreciate our COUl'teoa. .ervice and fair price•• CATHERMAN'S DRUG STORE Klngswood 3-0586 THE SWARTHMOREAN SWARTHM.rv'h "You Meet the Nicest People at Speare Bros." and "They Do Sell Nice Things at Speare Bros." GH SCHOOL Page-l" GRADUATING C LAS S FIRST ROW ILelt t. R;ght) OF 1959 J BARBARA SANDRA ADI'f,1S ('i II ' I~·. P. THADDEUS ADAMS LI~~: SUSAN BETH ALLEN KATHLEEN MAY AULL SECOND ROWMICHAEL KELLEHER BECKER JOAN ELLIOTT BEESINGER WILLIAM HUMPHREY BEIK SVEN HANS EMIL BOREl EDGMON'I: A~";NUE - e.....• SEVENTH AND WELSH STREETS A Speare Bros. - Chester exclusive - first with the BEST in Swim Suits Pick yours NOW! THIRD ROWJUDITH DAWN BOYER NORMA LINDSAY BREAK ELL MARGARET BROWNELL HELEN FORDHAM CALHOUN , .) ' FOURTH ROWSPENCER PACKARD CARROLL JEAN MARGARET COLAFEMINA MARION B. COLTON JANICE ANN COMPTON " FIFTH ROWLAURENCE E, CONLY ELIZABETH ANN COOPER JOHN CHRISTOPHER CRATSLEY BRODIE HASTIE CRAWFORD , -~xanne "Get in the Swim this Year" Our YOU NEVER FIGURED SO PERFECTLY as rou will with the help of Roxanne's ABC bra cups in ~\·err swi1llsuit sizc and very special foundation fit, all ~he way. 'That's why you can wear all}' style. Hearliest beautifulh', if it's Roxanne. Congratulations • to the .j '. \ Class of ·t,: · · 1959 .,. , • • Others from 10.98 MICHAEL'S Shop for these famous s.uits on our Second Floor COLLEGE PHARMACY LUAU FOR THE EYES ••• abitof South Seas magic served up by Roxanne in an alluring Sarong-draped suit that knows how to tuck you into your be.t figure. Printed acetate laton faille with a soft-asoCotton feel, in a lush 1I0wering of South Sea. Blues_ 32 to 38, all in A, B, C bra cups, and. for "fashion-wise figures" ROXANNE provides their HOLD-N-MOLD play briefs, perfect control with featherweight comfort, completely washable. S-M-L, white or bla!i:k . .. . .... SHOP FRI. TILL 9:00 - SAT. TO 5:30 BOUQUETS WE COMPLIMENT to the YOU CLASS ON A of 1959 "S warthmore's Finest • WELL EARNED • BOUQUET CLASS OF '59 Drug Store" BEAUTY SALON • Chester Road FOR '59 VICTORY and Most Complete 9 South EVERYTHING IS FINE HARLOW SHOP • • • • THE CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP 4 - 6 Park Avenue. Swarthmore IDa.,. . Page June 5, 1959 THE SWARTHMOREAN 'l. fOb SWARTHMORE HIGH OF CLASS GRADUATING SC H 00 L 1959 SWARTHMORE HI G H SCHOOL FIRST ROW (Left t. Right) - FI RST ROW (Left t. Right) - PaICe..... GRADUATING CLASS OF 1959 JAMES SHERWOOD HUESTON. JR. SARAH GAY HUSE ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSON, III KATHLEEN KELCY LARRY EDWIN CREASY JEAN ANNE DEYO CHARLES WILLIAM DIETZ JAMES ERWIN. JR. SECOND ROW- ~ECOND ROW- PETER MAX ESSL ANTONICA LOUISE FAIRBANKS JANICE KAY FERGUSON ELIZABETH JEAN GEMMILL THE SWARTHMOREAN ADA HERMANCE KROON WALTER J. LEWICKI, JR. MARY LEE LEWIS ERIKS ARTURS LlKUMS •. THIRD ROW JOHN HENRY SOTHORON LONG JOHN GARVIN LORD, JR. SUSAN LOUISE MARSH CHRISTOPHER EDWARD MARTIN THIRD ROWELIZABETH ADDIS GILFILLAN WILLIAM DONALD GLASER DAVID ROhERT GROGAN MERIC GURLER FOURTH ROW- FOURTH ROW- ELIZABETH ANN MC CORKEL NANCY Me DOWELL WILLIAM LEROY MEDFORD, JR. EUGENE LEE MELCHER LINDA KAY HALL ROBERT MANFRED HALLIER ALBERT HANSEN. III MARIJANE HASELTINE FIFTH ROW- FIFTH ROWJUNE LEE HECKMAN KENNETH ALLAN HEWES CAROL LINDA HONNOLD DAVID FRANKLIN HOUTZ JULIA SMEAD MONDALE JOSEPH L MORAN DEANNE MARJORIE MORGAN KATHIE 8. MORRELL SARAH ELIZABETH OAKEY HAIL BEST ": GRADUATES! WISHES ~,7:;0)~~ ~', :~ . I •. • o- f. for a • HAPPY and :;':' . ." -. .-. 1 SUCCESSFUL ., FUTURE Bound to the to Build CLASS OF : '. ~.. , ,:.- ';~~~~~- ... ,. . ,. . 1, " " .'., + 1959 , ' , .. , '. • L • • EDWARD .. . .. " .~ SWARTHMORE L.NOYES and CO. 23 S. Chester Road Swarthmore GOOD LUCK TO GRADUATES OF 1959 • • • • • BAIRD & BIRD Lafayette Avenue KI 3-0144 World! .. I CONGRATULATIONS TOGGERY CLASS OF 1959 SHOP, • Inc. • • • • Opposite Borough Hall Phone Klngswood 3-0440. We hope that you have enjoyed the hospitality of THE FOUNTAIN as much as we have enjoyed the pleasure of your company. • RUSSELL'S SERVICE Dartmouth and LafayeHe Avenues CONGRATULATIONS to the Class of '59 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1959 • Don't forget to "Meet and Eat" at THE FOUNTAIN when yau come home for vacations. ROBERT J. ATZ, Mgr. Park Avenue "~, i , !, " a Better .. . '.1 • • • • • • • RUMSEY CHEVROLET Klngswood 3-6130 THE FOUNTAIN Bob, Betty and Andy Hopkins • Theatre Square South Chester Road JOe.. INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE Page '2.. THE (D" HI G H SWARTHMORE June 5, 1959 SWARTHMOREAN GRADUATING SC H 00 L C LAS S OF 1959 SWARTHMORE SCHOOL Paae"i. GRADUATING C LAS S OF 1959 JAMES SHERWOOD HUESTON. JR. SARAH GAY HUSE ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSON, 111 KATHLEEN KELCY LARRY EDWIN CREASY JEAN AN NE DEYO CHARLES WILLIAM DIETZ JAMES ERWIN, JR. SECOND ROW- SECOND ROW- ADA HERMANCE KROON WALTER J. LEWICKI, JR. MARY lEE LEWIS ERIKS ARTURS LlKUMS PETER MAX ESSL ANTONICA LOUISE FAIRBANKS JANICE KAY FERGUSON ELIZABETH JEAN GEMMILL -""!S"'" " , THIRD ROW JOHN HENRY SOTHORON LONG JOHN GARVIN LORD, JR. SUSAN LOUISE MARSH CHRISTOPHER EDWARD MARTIN THIRD ROWELIZABETH ADDIS GILFILLAN WILLIAM DONALD GLASER DAVID ROBERT GROGAN MERIC GURLER , LINDA KAY HALL ROBERT MANFRED HALLIER ALBERT HANSEN, III MARIJANE HASELTINE HI G H SWARTHMOREAN FIRST ROW (Left to R;ght) _ FIRST ROW (Lell to R;ghl)- FOURTH ROW- THE , FOURTH ROW- ...... , ELIZABETH ANN MC CORKEL NANCY Me DOWELL WILLIAM LEROY MEDFORD, JR. EUGENE LEE MELCHER " ,\. , ,.'-. ' .. ~. . I , FIFTH ROW- FIFTH ROWJULIA SMEAD MONDALE JOSEPH l. MORAN DEANNE MARJORIE MORGAN KATHIE B. MORRELL SARAH ELIZABETH OAKEY ' JUNE LEE HECKMAN KENNETH ALLAN HEWES CAROL LINDA HONNOLD DAVID FRANKLIN HOUTZ BEST HAIL WISHES GRADUATES! ..• for a 4'&. ~, f. • HAPPY .I and , I You're SUCCESSFUL I, , .. FUTURE Bound i 1 to Build to the , I ,I . ,, l' :j , • k .-J l.-. GLASS OF ! a Better 1959 World! - \ l' ' :a ", • "~, ~," -" II : ',·1! EDWARD SWARTHMORE L. NOYES and CO. 23 S. Chester Road Swarthmore GOOD LUCK TO GRADUATES OF 1959 • • • • • BAIRD & BIRD Lafayette Avenue KI 3-0144 CONGRATULATIONS TOGGERY CLASS OF 1959 SHOP, • Inc. • • • • Phone Klngswood 3-0440 to the Class of '59 We hope that you have enjoyed the hospitality 01 THE FOUNTAIN as much as we have enjoyed the pleasure of your company. • • • • THE FOUNTAIN • RUSSELL'S SERVICE Opposite Borough Hall BEST WISHES TO TH E CLASS OF 1959 • Don't forget to "Meet and Eat" at THE FOUNTAIN when you come home for vacations. ROBERT J. ATZ, Mgr. Dartmouth and Lafayette Avenues CONGRATU LATIONS Park Avenue Bob, Betty and Andy Hopkins • • • • RUMSEY CHEVROLET Klngswood 3-6130 Theatre Square South Chester Road IOc. THE Page -4..IOJ, SWARTHMORE GRADUATING SCHOOL HI G H FIRST ROW (Left to Right) JANET WEBB PETERS SUSAN PRESTON ANN HOWARD PYLE WILLIAM C. ROWLAND. JR. MARGARET W. RUSSELL SECOND ROWCAROL ANN SMITH CHRISTINE DARLINGTON SIPLER BARBARA TUKE SEYMOUR THERESA ANN SCHULTZ KARL W. SCHOLZ THIRD ROWCRAIG 1. SMITH LAWRENCE A. STEAD, III ELSA KATHRYN STRADLEY RONALD TAYLOR JOHN N. THURMAN FOURTH ROWJOHN FRANCIS TRIBOLETTI JOSEPH ARCHER TURNER, III MARTHA TURNER LINDA L1EBECK UTHE DAVID JOHN VINT, III FIFTH ROWJUDITH ANNE WAGNER ALICE STIMSON WALKER KENNARD D. WEST JOYCE WILLIAMS MARSHA JANE WILKI E C LAS S OF 1959 VOLUM~ t r '. ' .. .. , '-' , .." 'F' . to the CLASS 'I' ,. . 1959 • May Swar.thmore, Pa., Friday, Jl\11e 12, 1959 I Canteen Japanese Lantern Council . Party:romorrow N i g h t , Moves Road .' Sidewalk Projects i? h~i>lllP~",:~" ·~y~~D~I~O:I~.:r:.;~':/;';:/i5- eslt'~ :el>it!!~lt~!I:' r.-' ". Wishes FriendsN urserySchool Names New Be Fulfilled • PORTER H. Our Heartiest Congratulations to the Yale Avenue and CLASS OF 1959 • • • • SUCCESS TO THE CLASS OF 1959 With the sincere wish that all your ambitions will be fulfilled. • • • • • • GO·Op FOOD MARKET Consumer's Cooperative Ass'n of Swarthmore, Inc. 401-403 Dartmouth Avenue Swarthmore 10 Park Avenue Klngswood 3·1460 Your Flag on Flag Day June 14th $4.00 PER YEAR Christian Science Lecture ~nll}ll!lt· .S':t~A~':f1et~Jc1::~:;()is~::.!'_e Sixth Graders Visit United Nations Tues. 1\"IF . All Your KI 3-1250 .' Display Gollege in High Award Dr~ Shero, 2 Daughters The healing and saving power of This week Canteen will go out" scienmic prayer will be the topic doors for its annual/gala Japanese of a lecture on Christian Science to Honors Kohler, Harnwell, Lan,tem party which will begin at Meeting Ranges From be given here Thursday, June 18 Local Family Receives Josephs, Moe.Ii p.m. Saturday, June 13. Apartment Houses by Richard L, Glendon of Los AnCommencement The entire Swartfimore and to Birds geles, Cal. Warren Open to the public without charge Ovation Dr. Courtney Smith, president of Nether Providence student bodies BOI:ough Council Monday evening h iect ure WI'11 be sponsore d b y t h e are invited. Ohaperons will be Mr. t e Professor Lucius R. Shero, chairSwarthmore College, conferred five and Mrs. George Glaser, Mr. a"nd awarded a contract for paving and members of First Church of Christ, man of the Classics Department, honorary degrees at the 86th ComcUt'bing Drexel road between Park S· t S war th more. M r. Gl enclen bi s, Swarthmore College, and professor mencement exercises on the cam- Mrs. Harry Buckley and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Scutt. and Vassar avenlJes to Wayne G. dort will speak in Clothier Memor- of Greek and his daughters Caropus June 8. Degree recipients are . I The following students have vol- Lyster and Son, Glen Riddle on a .aat 8: 15 p.m. His subject will be line "Shero, '39, assistant controller, Devereux C. Josephs, Ga;-Iord low bid of close to $6,466. "C'ltrlS . t"Ian S· unteered to help this week: Jeri clence: Th e H ea I'mg accounting and..finance; and FranHarnwel1. Wolfgang Kohler, HenT.aylor and Bob Smith are in charge Howard Borden, Jr., told Council Comfol'lter." CBS Shero, class of '40, secretary for ry Allen ,Moe, and Robert Penn of refreshments; Margaret Rox~y, his parents, one of four property Now on nationwide tour as a Warren. the Engineering Department, reDr. Harnwell, president of the Cindy Roberts and Abigail Warnes owners who must bear the cost of member of The Christian Science ceived top honors awarded by University of Pennsylvania, 'was will handle decorations. Richard the improvement, are in their 70's Board of -;Lectureship, Glendon was Swarthm6re College during tbe awarded the degree of Doctor of Kent; Bill Biddle and Alan Sta'm- and Hving :on Social Security so a moderator recently on several Commencement program, ·the John would find paying their share of television ·programs in the series W. Nason Award. Laws, following presentation by Dr. ford will "set up" the music. "Bute'h" Hofmann is in charge the ex·pense a 'hardship. Council HHolV Christian Science Heals." Clair Wilcox. An eminent physicist The Nason Award, a gift of a of setting up the tables and Ian· passed.a motion to put a lien on the A native of Denver, Col., he bebefore he became an administraof the College in ,honor of • terns. His eommittee consists of property ·and charge six per een"tf came interested in Christian friend tor, he was ·professor of physics its eighth president, is presented and chairman of the department R'onnie Noyes, Ricky Gwinn, Gary interest if the amount was not paid Science as a boy. He withdrew from annually to '.'one or more members at ,the University, where he com- Gallagher, Phil Delano, Joe Rehl, within five months of the assess- business in 1934 to devote his full of the total staff of the college, or pletely reorganized instructional Roger Anthony, Mal Anthony, ment, but to have its solicitor do tiMe to the public practice of Chris_ to members of their families, who and research work, taking into ac- Ralph Kletmenl Russ Hoge and nothing about pressing the matter tion Science healing. During World have made a distinctive contribuuntil at least J anilary 1962 unless War II he was aotive as a Ohristian count wartime development in the Keith Fox. .' tion, beyond the scope of their nor~ Everyone helping is requested the ,property was sold. Science Wartime ·Minister. f'eld. During his chairmanship the mal duties, to the life of the college to arrive at 7 p.m., bringing at Mrs. W. W. Watkins of Magill community." It consists of a fonna] Betatron Laboratory. was built in least one card table. There will be road eing divided through Friday from 10 a.m. till tion.She has 'done substitute teachrained out, will be held on Monday rill B. Hayes, Troop Consultant on Into groupS of 20. The young wom- noon. The evening hours will be ing at the Whittier House Nursery evening, June 16 at Smedley Park tbe Neighborhood Council, for her' en acting: as gnldes are from all from 7 to 9 p.m., Monday through School. Mr. and Mrs. Field have at 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Howard C. Jack· 'help in organidng and adwsiag the (Continued on p .... I) Thursday. four "hildr"n. son is the class chairman. . group this year. tlo'~'A~ Swarthmore SWARTHM L" t R· IYlngs on ecelyes F ibrig • hi Lecturesh'119 of Chester Road 31-NUMBER 24 • Summer Recreation Enrolls Again Tuesday , WAITE, Inc. THE~ ...... Gollege Gonfers FiYe Honorary Degrees 1 I, f BwnrtlmoTo {;ollegr Lihrary Svrarthmore Display Your Flag on Flag Day June 14th Not Pictured: BIRGITTA HULTGREN ROBERT U. TAnOR SUCCESS , June 5, 1959 SWARTHMOREAN INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE THE SWARTHMOREAN Page -4-IOd SWARTHMORE HI G H GRADUATING SC H 00 L I FIRST ROW (Left 10 R;ghll JANET WEBB PETERS SUSAN PRESTON ANN HOWARD PYLE WILLIAM C. ROWLAND. JR. MARGARET W. RUSSELL SECOND ROWCAROL ANN SMITH CHRISTINE DARLINGTON SIPLE~ BARBARA TUKE SEYMOUR THERESA ANN SCHULTZ KARL W. SCHOLZ THIRD ROW CRAIG T. SMITH LAWRENCE A. STEAD. II' ELSA KATHRYN STRADLEY RONALD TAYLOR JOHN N. THURMAN FOURTH ROW • _ JOHN FRANCIS TRIBOLd" JOSEPH ARCHER TURNER, II' MARTHA TURNER LINDA L1EBECK UTHE DAVID JOHN VINT, II: FIFTH ROWJUDITH ANNE WAGNER ALICE STIMSON WALKER KENNARD D. WEST JOYCE WILLIAMS MARSHA JANE WILKIS CLASS 1959 OF I """" I ! , I, I, I SUCCESS 'I ~ to the '.~'~ of ._\ \t I I • May L 1 B K .\.....It Y Swal'thmore, Pa., Friday, June 12, 1959 I Canteen Japanese Lantern Council Party Tomorrow N i g h t . Moves Road • ' Sidewalk Projects Wishes Friends N urserySchool Names New Diredor Be Fulfilled • ~l . ' : ''\j PORTER H. Our Heartiest Congratulations to the Yale Avenue and CLASS OF 1959 • • • • SUCCESS TO THE CLASS OF 1959 With the sincere wish that 01/ your ambitions will be fulfil/ed. • • • • • I • CO·OP FOOD MARKET Consumer's Cooperative Ass'n of Swarthmore, Inc. 401·403 Dartmouth Avenue , Swarthmore 10 Park Avenue Klngswood 3-1460 Display Your Flog on Flog Day June 14th $1.00 PER YEAR Christian Science Lecture The healing and saving power of scientif.ic prayer will be the topic of a lecture on Christian Science to be given here Thursday, June 18 by Richar'd L. Glendon of Los Angcl(>s, Cal. Open to the puhlic without charge the lecture will he sponsored by the members of First Church of Christ, Scientist, Swarthmore. ~Ir. Glen~ Jon will speak in Clothier l\Iemorial at 8:15 p.m. His subject will be "Christian Science: The Healing College in High Award Dr. She10, 2 Daugoters This week Canteen will go outdoors for its annual 'gala Japanese Honors Kohler, Hilrnwell, Lantern party which ,vill begin at Meeting Ranges From Local Fa;nily Receives Josephs, Moe, 9 p.m. Saturday, June 13. Apartment Houses Commencement The entire Swarthmore and Warren to Birds i'lethel' Providence student bodies Ovation Dr. Courtney Smith, president of BOl:ough Council Monday evening are invited. Chaperons will be i\tr. Professor Lucius R. Shel'o, chairSwarthmore College, conferred five and Mrs. George Glaser, Mr. a'nd awarded a contract f01" paving and man of the Classics Department, honorary degrces at the 86th Com1\Irs. Harry Buckley and Jlr. and cUl'hing Dl'exel road between Park Swarthmore Col1ege, and professor mencement exercises on the cam~ ~nd Va~sal' avenues to \Vayne G. Mrs. Glen Scutt. of Greek and his daughters Caropus June 8. Degree recipients are The following students have vol~ Lyster and Son, Glen Riddle on a line Shero, '39, assistant controlIer, Devereux C. Josephs, Gaylord unteered to help this week: J ert low bid of close to $0,400. accounting and. finance; atld Fl'ap. Harnwell, 'Volfgang Kohler, Hen. Howard Borden, Jr., told Council Comfol~ter.fJ Taylor and Bob Smith are in charge ccs Shel'o, class of '40. secretary for ry Allen Moe, and Robert Penn his parents, one of four property of refreshments; Margaret Roxby, Now on nationwide tour as a the Engineering- Department, re~ Warren. Cindy Roberts and Abigail Warnes owners who must bear the cost of membel' of The Christian Science ceived top honors awarded by Dr. Harnwell, president of the will handle decorations. Richard the improvement, are in their 70's Board of Lectureship, Glendon was Swarthm6re College during tilting, gaid he had done so he- -"oejation announces there will be a onment of edueatioll, he will leave Leaves june 15 for U. 01 eause he felt all the people in the second opportunity for parents to 67 yea!'~ of service, all of them his mark on the face of \Villiam area were not familial' with the register their children for the marked both by skillful and effecPenn's city." Dacca, East proposal. He withdrew his objec- 195!) SU!llmer program, jf they tive profeSsional performance, and Devereux Josephs, former presiPakistan tion and COllncil decided to follow were unable to do so earlier this by a warm concern for the individdent and chairman of the board of Dr. Luzerne G. Livingston, assothrough with plans to gain the nee- ' .... eek. There still remain vacancies uals with whom they have been as· the New York Life Insurance Comsocia ted as well as for the interests pany, was presented by Edward K. ciate professor of Botany at cgsary de.dications of property. ·in all age grolips of pre-school priof the community as a ,vhole. College has been Cratsley for the degree of Doctor Swarthmore The Greylock Realty-"Compan!! mary and Summer Club. "Luciu:;; Shero, a Haverford ~)f Laws. He WaS president of granted a Fulbright Lectureship informed Council of its plans to All groups open on i\londay, June graduate and a Rhodes Scholar, Teachers Insurance and Annuity in Botany in Pakistan. He will apply next week for permission to 22. (Continued on Page 10) Association, a pioneer. cO.lllpany·. de:-. leave with his wife and their 11- erect a. four-buil.d~\1gl 4.~~~p.a~·tnHmt· For complete information see the . t.·· .' . 1 '. • voted to improving the economic :lp~h";.-old ~on Dougla's. briO June; 15 structure next to file present SWHrthmore RecreatIOn Associafor Dacca, East Pakistan. Dr. Liv- Swarthmore Apartment HOllse on tion advertisement on page 2 of 16 Girl Scouts Receive (Continued on Page 5) ingston will remain at the Univer- South Chester road. Council s8.id this issue. Second Class Awards sity of Dacca from July J 5 to April it. would call a special meeting to Registrations will be taken from Girl Scout Troop 741, under the 1960.· Mrs. Livingston ·plans to do consider the plans when submitted. 9 a.m. until 12 noon on Tuesday, leadet'ship of lIf,·s. Walter C. Snynutritional research with the chilCouncil agreed to settle a claim June 16, by Mrs. \Valter Geer at der and Mrs. David Sensening, redren of Dacca. for damag~s against Harry Scy- her home, 617 Academy road, tele. Breakfast was served early in cently held their Spring Court of Em'oute to Pakistan, the Living_ ll:tour of Dickinson avenue for $756 phone Klngswood :1-6011. homes of 122 Swal'thmorcans on stons will stop in Belgium neal' Awards in tlw All-Purpose Room Tuesday, June 9. The sixth graders Brussels to visit 1\'1rs. Livingston's which will be paid by an insurance of the nlltgers Avenue School. (Continued on Page 10) marie a trip to the United Nations sister-in.law, Mrs. Lionel Patrick Presbyterbl1 Vacation The afternoon's program, to accompanied by their four teachers, and her daughter Penny, before whieh the girls' parents were inChurch S:hoo! St.1iiPhilip Swayne, Frank Piccone, continUing through Switzerland, to The Presbyterian Daily Vaca- vited, incluued a short ~"\Ik on Grace Yates and .Myrtle l\IcCallin, IiJalyand then to West Pakistan. tion Church School, under the di- badge work given by Mrs. Joseph the school nurse Marian Pierce and The Livingstons now plan to prorection of 1\Irs. Matthew McKinnell, J. Donovan, who will also be workeight mothers, leaving on the 7 :22 ceed from East Pakistan in April The \Vhittiel' House Nursery will hold classes beginning :Monday, ing with the girls during the sumtrain. to nl'azil where Dr. Livingston will School, held at the Swarthmore June 22 through July 3 from 9 :30 mer. Mrs. C. Calvin Naylor gave At Suburban Station the group do l'esearch and -the family will Friends Meeting is about to sec to 11 :30 a.m. for Kindergul'ten, a brief talk on the value of scouting was met by l\f rs. Esther Holmes visit in Rio de Janeiro with the some changes, The Committee has· Primary and Junior children. bcforc prcsenting the mcmbers of Jones, an ex·perienced tour guide Livingston's son·in-ls\\' and daugh- accepted with regret the l'esignaMrs. Henry T. Gayley, Mt·s. Dav- the troop with their Sc;cond Class and UN observer; from there the ter 1\11'. and 1\1rs. Walter Daetwylcr tions of ;\Irs. Helen S. Stuart, di- id Bingham and ~Il's. D. Evor Rob. award which they earned as a trin was continued on three air- and their daughter, Patricia Ann, rector, and Mrs. Gertrude P. Bell, erts will he in charge of the kinder- grollp. The Adventurer badge was conditioned Gray Line buses. Mrs. until August. teacher. They have 'fiven their de- garten; Mrs. Samuel Hayes, :\-11'5. also earned as a troop project. Jones rode .part of the way in each Members of the troop rec('iving \'oted services to the school for 10 David McCahan and Mrs. Joseph bus, briefing the group on what was their Second Class award and Adyears, -first when it was Helen Truitt, the Primary and !\:Irs. L. TEACHERS ELECT ahead for the day. venturer badge were: Officers selected £01' the Swarth- Stuart's private school and since C. Gatewood, l\lrs. \VilIiam Park Lona Ahrcnsdorf, Claudia Coit, Coming off the ,turnpJke the eag- more~Rutledge Teacher Asociation 1954 when it operated as a Friends and Mrs. Donald Dye the Juniors, er sightseers caught glimpses of for the yea1' 1959 are president School under the care of the Jo-Ann Dumm, Jeanette Grier, A~sisting students wiJI be Molly New York's skyline, the Statue of Donald Henderson, vice-president Swarthmore Friends Meeting. Anne Hayden, Katy Herschel, Bunker; Joan Duncan, Maria Dye, Liberty, the Queen Elizabeth, and Ernani Falcone, secretary \Vilma The Committee has elected a new Cal'oline ~lcKinncll, Joan McKin- June Hoch, Shelby Jackson, Linda other ships in dock. The short ride Lewis, and treasurer Halfred director, Mrs. \Vinifl'ed (John \V.) nell, Nancy Egan, Gail Forwood, Jester, Sally Kurtzhalz, Bevel~ly across town also aff-orded an intro_ Wcrtz. O'Brien, 24 Dartmouth circle. She Nancy Gayley and Karen Schloes- Moten, Sally Sensenig, Debby Torrey, Ann Townes, Rochelle Young, duction to the great and small of Irma Zimmer, LaVina Hurst and has studied at The Philadelphia scr. ·and Minnie Zanzinger. this country's largest city. As ~he Alene McCutcheon are the repl'e- :\"o1'mal School and received her B. The following girls received adciation. Dana 1}le Ulniversity. She has had 11 Margaret Yeatman's fifth grad. Lona Ahrensdorf, reader and the 82·member nations waved a Swan was chosen representative to years of experience as a kindergarers and their families will enjoy a child care; Claudia Coit, C(lok and proud greeting. the Delaware County Teachers ten~primary teacher in the Phila- supper ·picnic with games on FriAfter a short walk about the Council. The following committee delphia Public School System. Mr. day, June 12, (rain date, June 15) reader; Jeanette Grier, homemaker; Anne Hayden, child care; June grounds, including the busy East chairmen were also selected: pro- and Mrs, O'Brien have three childheginning at 5 o'clock and contin- Hoch, Shelby Jackson and Linda River front, an early lunch was en- fessional organizations, Mr. Hen- reno uing- until twilight. Parents will he Jester, cook; Sally Kurtzhalz, dabjoyed at a l'e~taurant on First ave. derson; ·public relations, Mrs. LewMrs. Dorothy (David M.) Field, welcomed whenever it is possible bier; and Minnie Zantzinger, cook, nue. Thus :fortified, the tour began is; finance, Mr. Falcone; and so· 315 Vassal' avenue, has been elec- to arrive. homemaker and reader. in earnest. In one of the conference cial, Mrs. Marian Stuart. . ted as an assistant teacher to reThe picnic will he held at the Following the badge presentarooms.a young Chine8e ,voman exJlI~ce Mrs. Gertrude Bell. She re- Rutgers Avenue Sehool footbail tion, the girls presented a skit on plained the organization of the UniFurness Library Summer Hours ce.ved her B.A. degree fro,? Do~g­ field. If trans>portation is needed, fire prevention entitled "Smokey ted Nations, and two films, one on Effective Monday, June 15, the lass College, Rutgers Umverslty. it may be secured by calling KIngsthe Bear". The program closed the work of the Trusteeship Coun- Helen Kate Furness Free Library, She .is currently taking work at the wood 3-4273. with the serving of cookies, cake cil, the other on UNICEF were ~ether Providence, will maintain University of Pennsylvania tow. and punch. \l"lewed. a summer schedule of hours." ards ·her 'M. S. degree in Education f IIh GRADE PICNIC The troop and its leaders are Next was a tour of the buildings The library will be open Monday with a major in elementary educaThe 11th grade picnic which was particularly indebted to JIll's. Mer:"ith the entire group being divided through Friday from 10 a.m. till tion. She has done substitute teach- rained out, will be held on Monday .nto groUps of 20. The young worn. noon. The evening hours will be ing at the Whittier House Nursery evening, June 15 at Smedley Park t'm B. Hayes, Troop Consultant on en acting as guides are from all from 7 to 9 p.m., Monday through School. 1111'. and Mrs. Field have at 0 :30 p.m. Mrs. Howard C. Jack- the Neighborhood Council, for her help in organizing and advising the (Continued on Page 5) Thursday. foUl" children. son is the class chairman. group this year. Sixth Graders Visit United Nations Tues. All Your KI 3-1250 SWARTHM Livingston Receives Fulbright Lectureship I 1959 Swarthmore C( II • L fill. U<: Summer Recreation Enrolls Again Tuesday CLASS Chester Road THE~ L. College Confers Five Honorary Degrees \,~ Not Pictured; BIRGITTA HULTGREN ROBERT U. TAYLOR WAITE, Inc. Display Your Flog on Flog Day June 14th 11\\,,\ In·l..I~IOBJo; [)y,'nrthrJO:o:"0 College" Lj.hrnry SVI8 rthmore VOLUME 31-NUMBER 24 . t . .. _. i ..... ..... JUN 12 1959 June 5, 1959 2 High School and Bucknell University. Her husband also attended Swarthmore High School and graduates this year from Harvard University. T.he rehearsal dinner was given by Mrs. George F. Dunn and Mrs. A. E. Longwell at the Dunn home, 204 Dickoinson avenue, following the rehearsal at the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church, Friday evening, June 5. Members of the wedding party, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bunker, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Bunker, Sr. and Mrs. Allen M. Smith attended 'the dinner. beige feathered hat. 'The groom's mOther was dressed in pale blue chiffon, compleme."~d by a small hat of light blue vedmg with shaded blue velvet leaves. A reception at the bome of the bride's parents followed the ceremony. infant ;s the of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Blackman of Ohestollt Hill and Mr. and Mrs. Anderson , of P·hiladelphia. - 'Was held at the Rose Tree Fox Hunting Club. The couple will reside in Wawa after a wedding trip. WED TOMORROW The marriage of Miss Carol Lincoln daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cha;les E. Lincoln of Haverford BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. William B. Laseravenue, to Mr. Paul Wesley Stew, Mr. an~ Mrs. John G. Althouse sohn of Cleveland, 0., announce art, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Stewof Hibbing, Minn., an~ounee the the arrival of a son, Peter Nathan, art of Pittsburgh, will be, solemn· birth of their second child, a daugh- born on June. 9. The baby's marerized tomorrow afternoon at 2: 30 ter, on June 7. The infant is the nal grandparents are Professor and in the Swar.bhmore Presbyterian SMITH. BUNKER granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. IIIrs. John III. 1II00re of Whittier Church, the Reverend Robert O. Miss Nancy Watts Bunker, Samuel L. Althouse of Woodbrook place. iJrowne officiating. daughter of Mr. and IIIrs. Henry road and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lloyd Bunker, Jr., of lilt. Holyoke Stettner of Columbus, O. . alice TOMORROW'S BRIDE place, became the bride of Gordon '!lldss Nancy Meredith Carroll, Victor Smith, son of Mrs. Allen M. IIIr. and IIIrs. Leioy L. Anderdaughter of IIIr. and Mrs. John Smith of Yale square, Morton, on SOD, Jr., of Green!;eld. lIIass., an. W. Carroll, of College avenue, will 'Saturday, June 6. The marriage "ounce the birth of their third old buildln~ become the bride of Mr. Ray Hugh was solemnized in the Swarthmore child and second son on June 9. The CORNELL· SURRICK lIIacNair, son of Dr. Everett W. Presbyterian Church with Rev. D. .IHDllmIRUIIDlnIIIIIIIltDIIIIItIIIIlIUIIIIIIIIIIIIDlllllhDlllcIIUlillmlClUnllIIIUCUUDllllIIDlllWIIIUlDUllIIlIIlUDIIIUllllDllt Mis" Ann Surrick, daugh~r of lIIacN air and IIIrs. lIIacN air of Tal· Evor Roberts officiating. The ladegQ, Ala., aecording to the cus· bride was given in marriage by Mr. John Earle SUITick was married to Mr. Thomas Hilary Maher tom of Friends tomorrow afternoon her father. 9 at 3 at the Friends Meeting on the The gown worn by the bride v.:as 'Cornell, son of IIIrs. Thomas H. a light ivory taffeta styled w.th Cornell, of Haver:ford, and the late campus. ----:-:-: an Empire bodice and with a por· Mr. Cornell, on Saturday, June 6, HONOR BRIDE· TO·BE trait nEOkline. Tiny pearls studded at 2 o'clock in St. Paul's Episcopal SUMMER'S BEAUTY IS ON THE .MAKE . A number of parties have been the bodice in a leaf pattern and Church, Chester. The Rev. Henry given to honor lIIiss Nancy M. Car- her bell.shaped sldrt featured a Hauser officiated. E South Chester Road Ii roll, daughter of IIII'. and IIIrs. John bow in the back. Her veil of silk ilMiss Surrick was given in marCall KIngswood 3-0476 'W . Carroll of College avenue, lusion was of. elbow length and riage by her father.' The bride's mb .. 01 lb. S...,lbmo,. Ba.",... ............ whose marriage to Mr. Ray H. Mac- cascaded from a small disc of lace gown was a silk organza creation Nair of Talladega, Ala., will take flowers and petals outlined with embroidered with white roses. Her ilITlllnllll1DIIIIIIIIIIlIomiHIUluDUlIUlIDllclnllllliU1CI1111nllmnllllllllliliCIIIIIII1IIIIUlIlllluIIIIDlllnmlllluIIIIIIIIIIIIDnr,1Qi pl~ce tomorrow. College friends at tiny pearls to which it was att:ach - white net veil was held in place Oberlin entertained lIIiss Carroll ed. She carried white gardenIas. with a crown of the same material ~ at two showers on May 23 and 25 and a cascade of whi~e roses was ~Irs. Dan Anderson Daly of at Oberlin, O. Summit, N.J., sister of the bride her bouquet. Miss Martha Calhoun and lIIiss wns the matron of honor arid the Flush Cooling System Front End Alignment The matron of honor was Mrs. Jean Coe gave a shower yesterday STATE INSPECTION Wheels Balanced bridesmaids were 'Mrs. Donald E. John F. Cramp, sister of the bride afternoon for Miss Carroll at the Widdowson, Miss Molly Carolyn and another sister, Miss Helen Check Brakes Tune. Motor Calhoun home on Elm avenue. Bunker and Miss Judith kbbe, all P'Owell Sur rick, served as maid of This evening Mr. :MacNair's 'par- of Swarthmore; and Miss Judy Me· honor. ents, Dr. Everett W. and Mrs. MacAllister of East Williston, N.Y. The bridesmaids were Mrs. RobN~ir will entertain at a l ehearsal RUSSELL'S SERVICE The attendants wore gowns of blue ert K .. Surrick of Carlisle, the dinner at the Carroll home for the and white flowered chiffon with bride's sister-in-law, and Miss 'Opposite Boro Parking Lot (bridal party, relatives and out-of- blue sashes. Their bouquets were Carol D. Frederick of Philadelphia. Closed Saturday 12:30 P.M. town guests. yellow carnations and pale yellow The attendants were all gowned in blue embroidered white organza HUNT. WATSON marguerites. lIIiss lIIarjorie Kate Watson and. [)avid Smith was ~hi~ brother'.s with matching blue veils and carMr. Everett Lee Hunt have an- best man. James J. :sm.th of Ch.- ried ,bouquets of chrysanthemums nounced their marriage which took cago and ~arl Thomas, Edward and cornflowers. , San FranoisCD Philadelphia Catherine T. Cramp, niece of the ,place at the Memorial Chureh of Noyes and Henry Bunker, brother New York bride, and Rebecca Cornell, niece the Good Shepard, Philadelphia, on of the bride, all of Swarthmore, announces its of the bridegroom, were the flower S'aturday, 'May 16. . served as ushers. 'Mrs. Hunt-was a resident of GerMrs. Bunker, mother of the girls. SPECIAL SUMMER PROGSAM T·he bridegroom's brother, Mr . .mantown. She will continue her bride, W.as dressed in a gown of for adults and students Edward H. B. Cornell, served as voice teaching in Philadelphia. white lace over rose satin. DEVELOPMENTAL READINC IIIr. and Mrs. Hunt are ...t home IIIrs. Smith, mother of the bride- best man. Ushers were Mr. R. Bargroom, wore a gown 'Of powder clay Surrick, brother of the bride; Read BeHer ••• Faster on Elm avenue. Student Rates IIIr. Philip Byrnes, IIIr. Willard blue lace and chiffon. • Ratio • Comprehension • Individuol Instruction FETE BRIOE·TO·BE . A reception at Springhaven ,Cohn, and Mr. Oscar Pederso. . • Concentration Skal, • All Laborotories Are Mr. Jeffrey Wllks of Wayne en- Club in W"llingford followed the Following the ceremony a recepAir·Conditioned • tertained at a luncheon Sunday in ceremony. :Mr. and Mrs. Smith will For further information on How To Improve Your Reading honor of Miss Marian Gayle Han- live in New Castle, Pa., when ,they The Reading Laboratory na, daughter of IIIr. and Mrs. John return from a wedding trip in New 2024 Locust Street Reid Hanna of Riverview road, and England. Philadelphia, Pa. Box W SWARTHMORE, PA. 'Mr. William Earl Stauf.fer, son of The bride attended Swarthmore LOcust 8·4481 IIIr. and Mrs. Paul Leaman StaufAIR-CONDITIONED fer of Lancaster,whose marriage win ,take place Qn Saturday, June Fri. 6' Sat., June 12, 13 27, in the Swarthmore PresbyterLast 2 Days ian Church. Mrs. Donald W. Poole and IIIrs. . •• announces its •. -. Raymond Lassiat of Swarthmore will give a tea and shower on Wednesday, June 17, in honor of Miss Hanna. REGISTRATION: Tuesday, June 16. from 9:00 9 -I barber:F t S Ilank I The Bouquet i I Ie I = BEAUTY SALON 'I R 9 I I I .......... I SUMMER DRIVING IS HERE ROBERT J. ATZ, Mgr. o II 3·0440 THE READING LABORATORY • Study College Theatre Your key KAYE more abundant lifel SUMMER PROGRAM FOR 1959 until 12 noon at 617 Academy Road. Swarthmore. Mrs. Waiter Geer, Klngswood 3-6011 Friday FeotiJres.-7:30. 9:30 P.M. Sot1,lrday Features-b. B. 10 P.M. "Francis in the Navy" for CHILDREN SATURDAY I P.M. Color Cartoon Festival 3 Stoage Comedy PROVIDENT TRADESMENS , "KEY" CHECKING ACCOUNTS Sun., Mon., Tues. June 14, 15, 16 A Super Western .. RICKY NELSON John Wayne ... let you pay bills in the comfort of home, safely and easily, with proof of payment . Dean Martin "Rio Bravo" (Teclm1color) Feotures-1:15, 9:40 P.M. Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. June 17, 18, 19,20 Yul Brynntr William Joanne Woodward Faul~h.r·s Novel "The Sound and -the Fury" (Tecbnlcolor) PROVIDENT TRADESMENS Feotures-7;25. 9:30 P.M. Attention • .• Starting Wed., June 24 WALT DISNEY'S Bank 1ST Trust Compan, Ddawan c.Un/y O/lire a s_1I rose- Wr1te or Phone ... ' "Shaggy Dog" Matinee and Evening Klng$wood 3-2290 'M.LE FREE PARIII. 1 PRE-SCHOOL • Six weeks beginning June 22. 1959 Monday through 'Friday, 9 :00-11 :45. a .."'., at Rutgers Avenue Elementary School Primary BUlldmg. For children 3 years (by lIIay 1, 1969). 4 years, pre-kindergarten and post-kindergarten. . LIMITED to 30 Children in Each of These 4 Age Groups Fees: $16.00 for one child.' . • $11.00 for second child in same famdy. $33.00 maximum per family.· . . 2. PRIMARY _ Six weeks beginning June 22, 1959 Monday through Frida~" ~:00-11:45 a.m., at Rutgers Avenue School Primary BUlldmg. . d/ d For children who have complete d the fust an or· secon grades. Fees: $16.00 for one child. * . • $11.00 for .econd child in same famdy. $33.00 maximum per family.· . . d IIIrs. Franklin Robblee and her staff of tramed teacM!", an assistants will administer these programs. Games, mUSIC, arts and crafts, story-telling are included. . 1959 3. SUMMER CLUB--Six weeks beginning J:une 22, Monday through Friday, 9 :00-11 :45 a.m., at Rutgers Avenue Elementary School Primary Bunding. . d For children of all ages who have completed the thud gra e. Fees: clU ded.). *10.00 for each child (materials for crafts' .. 1D. '\1 IIIr. Frank Piccone and his staff of qualif.ed ~nstr~ctors Wi supervise this program. The cluh will be orlfamzed mto teams which will compete in sof~ll, basketball, .te~ms, volleyball, dth0dge ball and other group games. Hand,crafts Will mclude clotb, lea er, wood, beads, raffia, paper, ceramICS, and metal work. .The full amount of all fe .. will be required at the time of , registration.. NOTES· All tnition students and out-of-town registrants who do ~ot go.to Swarihmore-Rutledge Schools will be charged $5.00 extra per child fdr anyone IOf the ahoV, programs. Occasional visitors are welcome at. the rate 0 75 cents per day (50 cents at Summer Club). Juile 12, 1959 THE SWARTHMOREAN PageS Mrs. Alexander's parents, Mr. and Field Day _Postponed _Tied! CO. WRITERS' ILUB LUICHEOI Mr. and IIIrs. G. West Cochrane Mrs. Ray L. HarloW The 1959 edition of the SwarthThe annual luncheon of the d of Lafayette d Mr and avenue and IIIr. an Mrs. Andrew Writers Club of Delaware County of Riverview avenue an • Alexander of South Swarthmore more elementary school Field Day, .. John E Michael of Harvard . was held lIIay 26 at the Strath ",rs... . I' avenue. The Alexanders w.1l be traditional annual games competiHaven Inn. Tltose attending from u attended the Interna.t.ona aven e .. here till the first of July and'then tition between the Whites and GarRotary Convention 10 New '11 b~sal0ne t t' d'In N ew Lonon, d this ., York. I Wl h M area were Florence J. Lucasse, Mr. Cochrane was the ofi.Clal de... Conn nets, was per aps the most exrs. George A. Hunter, Mrs. Bess gate and IIIr. Miehael, the alternate. . . I citintg and eventful one of many a Lane, Mrs. Ellen Cleveland,lIIrs. Mr .and IIIrs. Lawrence Diercks Barb. Moran, daughter of Mr. year. Rain hit ·the field day upon Wimam Gabbot, IIIrs .. R. F. Yeager Decker have returned from San and Mrs. Joseph 1II0r...n, Jr., spent its first attempt, but the pupils and ·lIIrs. Oscar J. Gilcreest. Diego, Calif., where Mr. peeker ~ednesday, June 3, m New York able despite the rain to COin-I IIIrs. Yeager is recording secre. h leted hi semce in the City as a gu,est of the Teen-Age plete the running of the relay races. tary, Miss Lucasse leads the Artitl':~s~;':VY. Theys sp~nt the. week- Club of De';,ees, Philart Cheyney, of ~er mother Mrs. James Healing. 1035 Baltimore .pike, Springfield, T. Houghton on May 4. Services THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY on Wednesday at 12:30. Members were held in St. Thomas Chapel, OF FRIENDS New York City. are to bring a box lunch. Sunday. June H The "Pairs 'N' Spares" will sPon11 :00 A.M.-Family Day at Meet- sor the annual All-Church"Picnic on Yocum Heads Delaware ing for WOl·ship. Saturday, June 20 from 10 a.m. to 12 Noon - Annual F.D-S. Picnic County Branch P.S.E.A. 3 p.m. to be held in Smedley Park, on Whittier House I ..awn. The May meeting of the Dela· area 132. There will be planned Monday. June 15 ware County Branch, P.S.E.A., ingames from 10 :30 on. Picnickers All-day sewing for the A.F.S.C. are expected to bring lunch and stalled two Swarthmore High Tuesday, June 16 beverage. There will be free ice School· teachers as officers for the 8:00 P,M. - Monthly meeting for cream. coming year. Business; William Penn Room. President Frederic W. Yocum is Begrinning Sunday, June 21, SunWednesday, June 17 day School and Morning Worship a member of the Social Studies deAll-day sewing for the A.F .s.C. will be conducted on the summer par,bnent of the Swarthmore High FIRST CHURCH OF schedule as follows: 8 :45 a.m. for School. He has served as president CHRIST, SCIENTIST Sunday School and 10:00 a.m. for of the Southeastern District Social SWARTHMORE the one service ot Morning Wor- Studies Section. For the past two Park Avenue below Harvard ship. This schedule will continue years he has been vice-president of Sunday, June 14 t~rough the summer, ineIuding the the local branch. He is currently a 11 :00 A.M.-Sunday School. -member of the Executive Commitfirst Sunday in September 11 :00 A.M.-The Lesson - Sermon tee of the Delaware County Coordwill be entitled "God, the PreCHRISTIAN SCIEIlCE NOTES , inating Council and a member of server of Man". HGod, the Preserver of Man" _ .t!ie ElGeCutive Committee of the Wednesday eveningm;eting-ea~h In the paat ten years, while the price of nearly everyweek. 8 P.M., Reading Room, 409 the Lesson-Sermon to be read at Southeastern Di~trict P.S.E.A. Dartmonth Avenue, open week- Ch~istian Scien~e servi~es Sunday Mel Drukin, secretary, is a thing else in the family budget baa gone steadily up, the days except holidays, 10-5; Friteaeher at Swarthmore science - ~s based upon the inspiring exaverag£ unit coot of electricity bas gone steadily down I day evening, 7-9. periences of the patriarch Abra- High School. He has served as repDEL. CO. UNITARIAN Your total electric bill ia undoubtedly higher now than resentative of the high school to the ham. Old Marple. Road, Springofield it was tea years ago, but that's becauae you are using Herbert F. Vetter, Jr., Minister Scriptural selections will include local branch and as representative on the tOelaware County Coordinamore electric appliancee, electric lighting, or' electric Paul's statement ~. the Galatians Sunday, Jane I. ting .Council. He is chairman of the devicee in your home. Yos. you're using a lot more power. 11 :00 A.M•. -Morning Service. (3:7): "Know ye therefore that they which are of faith, the same Committee for Cooperation with Professional Organizations. No doubt about it, electricity does more for /eBB. than NOTRE DAME DE LOURDES aTe the children of Abraham." Rev. Oharle. A. Nelson, Pastor The Golden Text is from Psalms ever before, and ia the bright spot in the family budget! parl.h~e,:'.r~irv~ct;:!::Avenne .(16:1): "Preserve 100, 0 God: for , BROWIIEI 'IClle Daily Mass--8 A.M.-Rectory IT. thee do I put my trust..H Leaders MI'lI. John Magee- and Sunday Masaes--8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.All are cordially invited to at,. Mrs. Elmer Atkinson enterta' ad College Theatre tend the servic t F' ",,--' . m Co.nfesaion-Saturday, .-0. :80 P.M. . . ~ a . lrst vuurch I~rs of Browme Troop 2U at A IUSlNOS.PNMED. IAX.PAYING UTll,ln COMPAN'I' OWNED l1li4 11-& P .JI.--Reeto~ of Christ, Belentist, 206 Park a_ a pienie at the ')(qee h _ em Tale .., _ ThA" _ STOCIO:"'t"fRS . .~ 1 .._ nue at 11 o'eIoek.·· .' """.... Tats' y THE SWARTHMOREAN ."'pr•••• How does Christian Science heal? I ~ HIGHEST STANDARDS • THE OLIVER H. BAIR CO. . The \\Bright Spoi' in the - family budger . I -' .'.: ;" ', ... :: .. :_,' :'---. . . -':'~' 'RI'.' .,'. '. . . ' , '~-~ aftoI_. ..... .','-- ..' .... '. -, . -' .- -:, PHI~ADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY June 12, 1959 , Swarthmore College Confers Five Honorary Degrees THE SlVARTHMOREAN Police and Fire NelVs Sixth Graders Visit United Nations Tuesday At 10 :09 a.m. last Thursday Hal Vassalatti, 54-year-old Abington (ContInued from Page 1) bricklayer, who was working on a (Continued from Page 1) position of the college teaching pro- new building at the College, fell member nations. 'Dhe last activity fession. He then ,became president from a scaffold and was taken to was an interview with a tepresenof the Carnegie Corporation. Fitzgerald Mercy Hospital, Yea- tative of the UNICEF program, A business leader who believes In don, in the Springfield ambulance. with which Swarthmore young peothe social responsibility of business He was released after treatment. .ple are familiar through the Trick At 12:48 p.m. that same day a or Treat pr?ject at Hallowe'en. leadership, Mr. Josephs has well practiced this belief. In the field truckload of steel girders, driven by After and between times there of education, he is c·hairman of the Henry B. Vogelman. Jr., of Phila- ·were odd moments for shopping, President's Committee on Educa- delphia, stopped for the traffic avidly enjoyed: Cards were mailed tion Beyond the High School. He light at Baltimore pik.. imd Cedar from the United Nations post ofwas chairman of the Ford Foun- lane ..According to .polit~e, John R. fice to families and friends j picdation Committee that made a dra- Cammerer of Glenolden whose car tures, boOklets, stamps, gifts, and matic contribution to improving the was immediately behind the truck, souvenirs were carefully chosen. salaries of college teachers by giv- ,was unable to stop and th\~ ear ran By 4 o'clock the buses were 8tarting more than $260,000,000 to the up onto the girders whi;,h went ing the southbound trip. A slLpper colleges, hospitals and medical through the windshield and roof. stop at Howard Johnson's left the schools throughout the country. Cammerer was treated for a cut restaurant shor.t on hamburgers, Psychologist ano author, Wolf- nose by a Springfield physician. French fries and milk shakes, gang Kohler, was awarded the de- The car, a total loss, was towed which strengthened the travelers gree of Doctor of Science. He was away. for the last leg of the trip. presented by Dean William C. H. A.t 9 p.m., also on June 4, local Almost all this was happening in Prentice. Dr. Kohler was ProfesIjlolice assisted Springfield officers air-conditioned comfort while folks sor <>f Psychology at Swarthmore in respovdring to a call from a :home at home sweltel'ed in 90·degree heat for 20 years until his retirement on the Springfield side of Mt. Holy- and high humidity. in 1955. He is one of the foremost Waiting parents greeted the e"ponents of the Gestalt theory of oke place where a woman resfdent psychology, which interprets phen- had suffered a fatal heart attack_ tired and happy boys and girls at On Monday of this week a local 8 :25 and in a matter of moments omena as organized wholes rather than as aggregates of distinct high school boy paid a fine of $10 the group was dispersed, already parts. 'T,his theory has been ex~ for driving too fast for road con~ begun on enthusiastic l·eporting. The adults accompanying the tremely influential in the develop- ditions on Vassar avenue north of Yale on May 16. group would like Swarthmore resiment of psychological thinking in . the fields of· perception, learning, At 9:30 a.m. Tuesday local fire_ldents to.kno~ th~t theY'look back social psychology and personality. men and policemen assisted Morton upon thIS trIp WIth pleasure beBorn in Estonia and educated authorities at a house fire at 11 cause the boys and girls measured there and in Germany, Dr. Kobler Broad s.treet, Morton. up to a high standard of cooperasubsequently was director of the Last week fin Media, Andrew tion and showed concerned and inanthropoid stntion at Teneriffe, Donato, ,Sr., of Milmont avenue, formed in~erest in the affairs of .Canary Islands. His book "The Ridley Township, was f;ned $200 the world. . Mentality of Apes", published in by Judge John V. Diggins on char· Mothers accompanying the group 1925 in English translation, was ges of selling liquor to minors and were Mrs. Howard Jackson, Mrs. the outcome of the investigations pennitting ·minors to frequent his Kirk Nevius, Mrs. Charles Gerner, which he and an associate made at establishment. Mrs. Charles Martin,. Mrs. Douglas Teneriffe. The '4London Times Lit. State Liquor Control Board Davidson, Mrs. Hilton Duling,Mrs. erary Supplement" said at t.be agents said that Donato was cited William McInroy and. Mrs. Oharles .time: "Professor Kohler's work on January 9 after a group of Craden. will, we 'think, ,always be regarded Swarthmore College students made as a elassic in Us kind and a model affidavits tl'at they had been served 6tlo GRADE IN ORIGINAL for future studies in animal psy;n his place on Deeember 5. The BALLET TUESDAY P.M. chology." Dr. Kohler is also the students were between 18 and 20 Tuesday evening, June 16, Philip author of "T,he Pla~e of Values in years old, the court was told. E. ,Swayne's sixth grade will prea World of Facts", the published sent an original ballej. -Scheduled collection of William JaIl!es' lecStationmaster Succumbs to begin ",t 7 :46 p.m. in the elementures given at Harvard in 1934; 4IDyna~ics in Psychology"; and William T. Tracey, 2 South tary school primary building' audi"Gestalt Psychology". Chester road, died suddenly ~ June torium, the ballet, which was writ~Dr.· Kohler is at present presi- 1 at .the Bryn Mawr Hospital. Mr. ten by the daneers themselves, will dent of the American Psychological Tracey, who ,vas forty-three, has consist of eight short scenes and a Association. been 'an agent for the Pennsylvania speaking chorus for the uninitiated. Henry Allen Moe, secretary~gen­ Railroad for 17 years and a resi- This creative experiment is an aderal and trustee of the John Simon dent of the borough for a year and aptation of a Brazilian fairy .tale "Why the Sea Moans", and the bal-' Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, 11 half. was awarded the degree of Doctor He was graduated from Roman let bears its name. of Laws, having been presented Catholic High Sehool in 1933 and Special assistance has ,been given by Peter van de Kamp. A Rhodes attended Temple University ~nd by Mrs. Robert Kama> in the actual Scholar at Brasenose College, Ox- the Wharton School of the Uni- ballet, while ·Mrs. Grace Yeaw has ford University, he was recently helped greatly in the chorus work. made an honorary fellow at BrasSwarthmor~ns and friends are enose. He was a barrister at law cordially invited to attend: . of the Inner Te~ple, London; a member of the New York Bar, and has lectured in law at both Oxford The and Columbia Law School. He Mr. and lIIrs. Herbert I. Slifer Philadelphia served as secretary of the Ameri- of Rutherford, N.J., were the weekcan Philosophical Society in 1954, end ,guests of Mr. and lIIrs. Jel'Story has ·this year been elected its ·pres- orne J. Bongiovanni of Media, forWe'd like to send you a ident, and in 1955 was the recipient merly of Oberlin avenue. Mr. Slifer folder on this aspect of of the Award for Distinguished attended his 30th Swarthmore Colbeautiful Service to the Alts given by the lege reunion. WEST LAUREL HILL Institute of Arts and LetMr. and 1.hs. Frank L. Gettz of I :~!~onal George J. Becker presented poet and novelist Robert Penn Warren, who was awarded the degree of Doctor of Letters. Wal'ren ,is author of the PuHtzer Pl"'ize winning ~ovel HAll the King's Men"; and "Promises", his most recent volume of poetry, received the National Book Award and the Edna St. V,incent MiHay A,ward of the Poetry Society of America in 1958.' His other writings include the novel "World Enough and Time", the long narrative poem UBrothers to Dragons", and several critical studies and textbooks. He has taught in several colleges and universities, most recently ..t Yale, and he held the Chair of Poetry at the Library of Congress 1944 to 1945. .(Bet he &Ot- tired II!!) Dr. and Mrs. J. J. ·Ferguson have recently moved from Bryn Mawr avenue to 516 Westminster avenue. Jane MeAlpine of Princeton avenne left W1ednesday for Clifton Forge, Va., where she will serve as a' bridesmaid for ,Deborah TItonIp,. I . ~.~:a~'dtw:V:~~ v~:i~e wi~~tu:;:~: son-in-law and daughter Mr.' and . Write or phone. 215 Belmant Ave .• Bolo-Cynwyd. Pd. MOhawk 4.1591 Page 5 NEWS IIOTES Mrs. Irvin R. MacElwee of Mt. Holyoke place was recently entertained at Sergeant Hall, University of Pennsylvania, by Dean Althea Hottel and Mrs. Ray Biester, director of the United States Mint. Mrs. MacElwee is one of 10 women who have assumed each the responsibility fol' l'aising money to build one unit of the new University of Pennsylvania Women's Dormitory on Walnut street. Mrs. MacElwee has already raised $20,000 contributed by members of Hannah Penn for the unit to be named for Hannah Penn. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gersbach of Yale avenue spent the weekend in Rochester, N.Y., where they at.tended Mr. Gersbach's 20th class reunion. ·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. DON'T FORCETf Woodlyn Child Health Center Benefi~ Oard Parlt Central COlnmillee, Community Nunlng Service, Delaware Count" Sponsors JUNE 17th SWARTHMORE WOMAN'S CLUB Donation $1.00 STRAWBERRIES APPLES!- HONEY - ECCS - POTATOES LlNVILLA ORCHARDS "The Farm ,With the Octagonal Barn" DIR.ECTIONS: From Chester north on Edgmont Avenue (Middletown Road) 3 miles to Knowlton Road. Turn left Yz 'mile to Orc:hgrd. . TRemont 6-9047 Open Daily and Sunday 's FOOD MARKET Swarthmore, Pa, 514 Yale Ave. "Famous for the Finest Meats" U. S. CHOICE !~~~~~HOUsESteaks lb. 89c Strictly Top U.S. Choice Meat, Cut Especially for tbe Charcoal &rlllU.S. CHOICE SQUARE CUT PIN BONE ROASTS(Lean and Deliciousllb. , U. S. CHOICE TOP SIRlOIN (Ground to Order) 89c lb. 19c U. S. CHOICE LEGS 0' Ib.19c UMB (Real Spring Lamb) POLISH BOILED HAM Ib.98c (Fresh Sliced) I PEPSI COLA ................ case of 24 $1.09 Pineapple-Crapefruit Drink ... 3 46-oz. tins 95c PENN TREATY . ,. WHOLE PEELED APRICOTS ....... 3 cans 95c MUSSELMAN'S ........ 3 cans 39c APPLESAUCE REAL KILL Ig. spray can 89c BUC BOMBS ...... CAMPBELLS 4 Ig. cans 89c TOMATO JUICE OEL 'MONTE 2 Ig. cans 6Sc TUNA FISH ALL LAVORS OF JELLO .8 pkgs. 69c · .. 1 . . . Oall Klngswo d 3 1100 0 • for F, REE DEL I VERY FREE PARKING Mrs. C. W. Ramsay of Birmingham, _~~~=====~~:...._!.-'=============~===========­ Mich. Mrs. Leroy E. Petersen of Vassar avenue spent the early part 'of the week in Reading where she attended the Convention of the Pennsylvania Federation of. Democratic Women, Inc., as an official delegate from the Democratic Women's Leagne of Delaware County. .Mrs. Jerome J. Bongiavanni of :Media will entertain at luncheon 'Dhursday in honor of Mrs. James Twin beds willi baIb 1I'0Il U5. . Wyche, the former Arleen Snyder of Swarthmore who is visiting her ·brother and sister-in-law Mr. and Mail AlL PIal S5.25 ' Mrs. Paul. Snyder of Lima. Mr. a/id Mrs. Wyche and their ch11dren willi Ocean waler ill .. kills. return to their home, Belmont We hove built extensive outdoor facilities for your relaxation Plantation, New Iberia, La.; the and rleasure_ No,!" you will h~ve the enjoyment of a spocious following day. swimming pool 'with odjoining 'dining and Ioungin!l areas. Ownership 1IMIIQ1lII. Lounge in bedch attire on our new sundeclc whe .. you get a JosiIII WIllie , _ til 2nrl lRAOE ,ICIIC mognificant view of the beach ond C Cion activities. &ks. Valentine's second grade will hold a picnic for tbe children Atlantic tiIy 5-1211 and their mothers at the Rutgers avenue field on Tuesday, June 16, 11111. Y. 1«1 2-4849 Olarlbordugb :::1)Ienbeim SOD, j a 10J1Det' Swart1mtorellD,· on at noon. Satllrday. ~ • A business meeting will fol ...... I ON THE 80ARDWALK • ATLANTIC .CITY I ean • T~~ SWARTB~OREA~ "age 6 June 12, 1959 BOROUGH OF SWARTHMORE Graduates candidate for a !hlgree with honor.. and Senior Class secretary. She Wallingford, and David H. Gieger, Gayle Hanna won "First Hon. He was awarded his second varsity was also on the Dean'. list. Jr., Gir!,rd avenue. ors" at .the 84th Commencement Nancy Carroll, who graduated letter in baseball. A third baseman, Mary Kirby Van Urk, daughter William Bevan, son of Mr. and Exercises of Centenary College fOr from. Oberli~ College M~n~ay Dellmuth is eligible for the Wes- of Mr. and Mrs. F. T.Van Urk, Mrs. Henry·D. Bevan of Crest lane Women on Saturday, June 6. The award is for general ellCel. mornmg, receIved· her commISSIon .tern Massachusetts hitting crown. 401 Thayer road, was graduated on graduated from Friends Central to go to India for two years to He;s the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl June 6 with honors from the Pri'n- on Wednesday, at the Co.mmenee- lenee based upon high scholarship, teach English at. the ·traditional Dellmuth 323 Swarthmore avenue. cipia Upper School, St. Louis, Mo. ment exercises in .the morning. BiU conduct ...nd loyalty to the College, Oberlin· Shanshi breakMst. Her ' I t" t' . II Bowie, son of Dr. and Mrs. Morw Active in the e~tracurrjcular pro- was co.-eaptain of the undefeated geneIla par lmpa Ion In eo ege fiance Ray 'MacNair received the -~I'vI'tl'e pDpula't a 'd ed same commission at the breakfast. ris A. Bowie, 120 South Chester gram, she was a member of the football team last season, the third 'A\;'' ' 5, rl y s eVl enc Nancy received Independent Stud. road, has been awarded his thitd Chorus, the Library committee, and undefeated ·team in the history of by a vote of the College, and faith· ies Honors at Commencement. varsity letter for lacrosse by Am- was a group chairman. the school. He participated.. in work tlul discharge of an important of. herst College. He was a valuable At the annual awards ceremony on the yearbook and was active in fiee. Peter Asch, son of Mr. and Mrs. player on the Amherst squad and Miss Van Urk 'was honored with the draI\latic a r t s . · I Gayle served as president of Phi Solomon E. Asch, 613 Elm avenue, started aU seven games in the the presentation of the Headmas... Bill ,ViII enter Washington and Iota. honorary senior leadership received the Bachelor of Arts de- crease attackman spot.! Bowie is a ter's Award for Citizepship, which Lee University, Lexington, Va., in society, and a vice-president of the. gree, cum laude, from Oberlin CQI· member of .the Amherst Glee Club gives recognition to the boy or girl the fall. . Senior Class. lege at its 126th Commencement and is affiliated with Theta Delta in the Fourth Academic Class who Donald S. Guthrie, son of Mr. ----------exercises Monday morning, June 8.. Chi at Amherst/ Dr. and Mrs. Bow- has made SUbstantial contvibutions and 'Mrs; Dale S, Guthrie, 314 Cor· Asch's major was Economies. ie will attend the Commencement to community life and in service to nell avenue, graduated from TemY Robert C, Borer, 210 Garrett ave- exercises. others. pie University in Law yesterda:y. Leigh Hollis received one of Denue and Dorothy Lee Hopkins, -110 Hummer is the son of Mr. and David Preston, son of Mrs. G, D. Perry Anthony, son of Mr. and Pauw University's top senior schol_ Haverford place, received degrej!S Mrs. Charles D. Hummer, Wood- Preston of Dogwood lane, Swarth. Mrs. Frederick Anthony of v,assar arships recently during the an_ of Bachelor of Arts at the Uni- brook lane and Wellesley road, He more, was graduated from Swarth- avenue, graduated from Friends nual Recognition Chapel. The versity of Pennsylvania's 203rd is a member of the Pre-Medical So. more College June 8. Dave was a Central on Wednesday. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Perry was vice-president of the Hollis, South Chester road, she was Commencement in the Municipal ciety and will begin medical stu4y Mechanical Engineer. He was also Auditorium, Philadelphia, Wednes· at Hahnemann Medical School, a member of the varsity swimming graduating class and was varsity awarded the $500 Pulliam jDurnal. day morning. Judith M. Shimansky Philadelphia, in the fall. His frat- team. end on the undefeated football ism scholarship as "the member Df Prewitt, 733 Harvard avenue, re- ernity is Theta Xi. His parents will Five Swarthmore area cadets re- team, He was also a me-mber of the the junior class who gives greatest ." ceived the degl'ee of Master of attend the Commencement exer- ceived diplomas at the 31st annual Octet. Perry enters Grove City Col-. promise of succeeding in some phase Arts; Douglas A. Cartel', 323 cises. Commencement of Valley Forge lege, Grove City, Pa" this fall. of journalism." South 'Chester road, the degree of Mary Elsbree, daughter of Mr. Military Academy, Wayne, on .Mrs. Libby S. Hummer, wife of· Leigh, who currently is city edi. Ma,;ter of Science in Education; and Mrs. Wayland Elsbree of 203 Tuesday, June 2. Paul Hummer, 412 Walnut lane, tor of DePauw's student newspa. Recipients included Cadet First whose parents a~e Mr. and Mrs. 'per,will use the academic grant Toshiyuki Fukushima, 519 Walnut Linden lane, Wallingford, received lane, Master of Science in Mech- the Bachelor of Arts degree from Captain James A. W-hite. Walling- 'Daniel Seifer of East Lansing, during her final yenr at the Univer... anical Engineering; Arpad A. Conecticut· College at Commen.ce- ford, regimental commander of the Mich., was graduated from Swarth- sity. The award is given in the Bergh, 209 Rutgers avenue, Mar. ment exercises held on Sunday. 9()0-me~ber cO'ps of cadets and more College Monday. Mrs. Hum. name of the Indianapolis Star and ianna Bogojavlensky, 405 IIlichigan Miss Elsbree majored in Botany, president of the graduating class. mer was elected to Pbi Beta Kappa the Indianapolis News, the scholar. avenue, and Laurrence W. Fred· sang in the College Choir, was Others are Chalmer G. Kirkbride, and awarded the B. A. degree with ship os endowed by Eugene C. Pul. rick, 805 Harvard avenue, the House Junior during 1957-58, en- Jr., Harold D. Cooper, Jr., and dismnction for having done distinc- liam, newspaper publisher and De. degree of Doctor of Philosophy; graving chairman for graduation, William B. Hubbard, 3rd, aU of tive work in the course progr!'m. Pauw alumnus. Jerome D. Goodman, 1166 )luhlen- --------------------------------------------------__________~__________________~__~~________________________________ berg road, the degree of Doctor of Medicine. At the University of Pennsylvania's mid-winter convocation in Irvine Auditorium the following local persons received degrees: Jesse M. Matlack, Jr., 201 Swarth· more avenue, and Peter B. Murray, 328 Park avenue, the degree of Master of Arts; Paul A. Hummer, 430 Rutgers avenue, the degree of Master of City Planning; Smedley G. Taylor, 908 Westdale avenue, Master of Science in Education. Mrs. Alice DeCaindry Tyler, wife of 1st Lt. John T. Tyler, pre· sently stationed with the 3rd Mar· • inc Air Division in Japan, received a de~ee in Childhood Education at the Commencement exercises at the University of Maryland at Col· lege Park on Saturday, June 6. Mrs. Tyler is the daughter of Mrs. William A. DeCaindry, 139 Rut· gers avenue. First Lt. Raymond E. Matson receives the degree of DOI'tor of Medicine from Ohio State's College of 'Medicine and his wife, the for· mer Virginia DeCaindry, receives the degree of Bachelor of Science What has been going on inside hospitals. behind our The Cos~ 01 Living in Physical Therapy from the Ohio backs, that proves so effective in prolonging Ji[e, restor Is Always a Bargain State University at today·s· Coming health? Developments like these; In 19~6 only 7U~"" menpement exercises at ColumbtlS, Almost all of us at one time or a1minute of hospitals had X-ray departments-last year '96:'0 O. D... Matson and his wife will another yearn for the "good old leave on June 26 for Hawaii where had; in 1946 only 75% of hospitals had laboratoriesmessage days" that are gone, never to reDr. 1\1atson will intern at Tnp1C'r last year 95% had; in 1946 only 10% of hospi " ha,1 turn. Some dream of the brimAt'my Hospital, Honolulu. fm.~ OTie recovery rooms-an important, if less known, advano" year. Mrs. Matson is the daughming $1 market basket of yesterfor saving life after surgery; today 50% have. ter of Mrs. William A. DeCaindry. year. Those low taxes. The gentler pace of life. Mrs. Julie Hunt Owen, dau&'hter Those improvements, and many more, tcll the WOI\" , But did you ever meet anyone who longed for of Mr. and )lrs. Ray P. Hunt, 731 derful story which means so much to all of us. 0",' the good old days in hospital care? Wl)o would Harvard avenue, received a Bac-hetimes have witnessed unbelievable breakthroughs ill want to enter a hospital today that offered the lor of Arts degree in F'rench at medical science. This has brought us equipment, medi· same service-even at the old, low charge-it Earlham College at Commencecines, techniques and skills undreamed of before. offered 25, 20 or even 10 years ago? . ment exercises Sunday, June 7. Twenty years ago the average span of life was 61 years. Victoria MacNair, daugh~r of Yes, hospital care costs more today. A lot more. And Mr. and Mrs. Pierce MacNair of Today it is 69\6, thanks primarily to modem medical -make no mistake about it-it will continue to mount Maple avenue, received the history care in hospitals. so long as we demand further control over ~th and of art prize at her graduation Back in 1935, when only 36% of American b9- bies disease. from Nor.thampton School for Girls, / were born in hospitals, 60 out of every 10,000 died. Northampton, Mass. But the cost of living is always a bargain. T04ay 95% are hospital-born. Only 5 out of 10,000'die. Patton Gilmour, son of Dr. and • " Mrs. Wm. R. Gilmour, 210 Harvard .' Please Nole: Think twice before joining sO-(;a}]ed ''essential,'' "basic" or other limited hospital-bill 4; avenue, was graduated from Dickprograms now offered. Only Blue Cross provides "service benefits" you need in a modem hospital. inson College on June 7. He will study for an M.A. in Economics, J in which he majored. He served as .president of the Economics Club in his senior year. He is a member of I'hi Delta Theta fraternity, of which he was librarian in his soph· omore year and steWard in his senior year. He .is a member of the Mohler Scientific Saeiet:\,. He was on the staff of the Daily Senator, college n~wspa'Per, in his junior year. .. • Three local men, Stuart S. Bow· ie,Charies D. Hummer, and Carl Write Blu~ Cross, 112 S. 16th SL, Philadelphi.. 2, Plio S. Dellmuth graduate Sunday, June 14 ;tlI!llent H-Kom N ......... Care Klngswood 3-0272 r..::==::==::===::===::==:! • • ~ Picture .FramiRg ROGER RUSSELL To Newark and Photographic Supplies NEW'YORK STATE '" MONROE STS. MEDIA for families LOwell 6-2176 ~1~.~k~lIIIII~m~DIIII~I~III:::IHI~II1I~n::::n=.nnu::::::m:::"'::::..: : I U: : lmu: : : I: :1I1: :run: :I I: :I~' l! • • and Sons FLORIST DILUZIO 3."aUlIIIIIIIIICUIIIIIIIII!DunrulUllalllJmll.IIDlUIRllllIIlJllP~ ; C,jllI MAdison 6-3675 r '11H&.EM· ' Convalescent Hame Formerly !!! § Ii = CAR N S 8!10 Baltimore Pike SprlD&"f\elcl. DeL Co-, - Klngswood 3-0450 Edward G. Chipman and Son ~ Over 30 Vears l Experience WEEKEND FARES ELNWOOD Belvedere Convalescent Home ~ 8 Years of Swarthmore Refer8n~e. NEW LOW PENNSY A, L, PARKER • LOweU 6·3666 Good of Harvard avenue left yes- .=!!:!!!II1'1!!!!!!um~.!!!!!n!!!ID!!!UD:!!U!!!III~'"!!!"U~IIII!!!!!!III!!!UI!!!"n!!!D!!!UI!!!II!!!"U~1I~!!l terday for Clifton Forge, Va., I'" where they will attend the wedding of Miss -Deborah' K. Thompson to Mr. Alan G. Lewis tomorrow. Mr. ~ppax is an usher in the wedding party. ~507 Chestnut St., Chester Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Hea·th TRemont 2-5373 of Cedar lane, aceompanied by their "BOlLI' Nanbs, Care daughter Ba~bara, spent the weekAged. ~nUe. Chrolllc end in Darien, Conn., where they Con"a.acent lien and Womell visited with 'Mrs. Heath's brother EzeeUeat FNCl • BpacJou Gl'8IIIlb and sister-in-law Mr. a1\.d Mrs. JonBlue Cross PDoorecl ' , athan H. Conrow. On Saturday ·afSADIE PIPPIN TURNER. Proprietor ternoon they attended the wedding of their niece Miss Marion J. Conrow to Mr. John E. Kimberly a·t the Round Hill Community Church in Greenwich J Conn. and the re· ception following at the home of the bride's parents in Darien. General Contractor Mrs. Ma.rie Donnelly of Vassar avenue has left ·for her summer BUILDERS 'Since 1920' cottage in Boothbay Harbor, ,Me., :for the season. ' TILE FLOORS· PLASTIC TILE == UPHOLSTERY and SLIP COVERS 5 ~ ~ § ~. . FORMICA COUNTER TOPS ROOFINB Ind SID1Na CUSTOM KITCHEIS ADDITIONS - ALTERAllOIS Fre. Estlmlt.. = 1401 Ridley Avenue Chester, Pa. I TRemont 2-4759. TRemont 2-568? Ii a ilhLHHRIiIIIDHl1iHiDnDIIIIIIIIHllDfllnnulllt."'7 and Groups All summer long (except July 4-5 and Lobor Day weekend., new low weekend Family and Group Fares from Philadelphia to Newark and New York when the followinG travel together ••• 2 or more aduhl or 1 adult and accompanying child or children 5 years or over. 1001e ", these lew . ROllnd-Tri" Coatll fares ~, ',. (All 10'" IndudH) WUlDtD FUE ".... B.y ., 0.1 (12"'7 Year.' SAVIll. $6.00 $2.18 wmmco rAIIE SAVlla $4• 50 53.68 WEEKEND FUf SAVIIIS 51.09 Each additional Child (5-11 wmmcorAIE SAVINQ $1.50 52.59 Veart) ChUd under $ al ulual fravell FREE ----------TOTAL SAVING OVER THE REGULAR FARE FOR FAMILY Of 5 WItH ONE CNIID UNDER 18 AND TWO UNDER 12 YEARS , , $11.73 No limB 10 the "utnbel who can 10. A wonderful Idea for your duh. SPECIAL IN NEW YORK FOR PENNSY CUSTOMERS USINc,J THESE FARES I e Low.Cost Slghts.*ing To,," I • Econamkal Week.,.d Rott. at 2 Famous Hoteb I • ThrIfty Package Taun !ndudlng Hotel' Your PRR Agenf win 1M onange Ofty of ,Ite.. glod to ~", I ,~~ I ~.!~!'-~-'! III "'~ _ " " • ~ aUIMIMO- WAua ...... 11.. , New split level home on established tree-lined street. SWARTHMORE Also on drawing board a lovely Ranch Home being COLONIAL BRICK Attractive house on Thayer Road. Large center hall. living room with fireplace, dining room. breakfast room and kitchen on first floor;.3 large bedrooms. 2 tile baths plus maid's room a~d bath on second floor: 2 bedrooms and bath' on third.' Recreation rooI"Q. in basement. 2-car garage. Beautifully landscaped. designed for tree lot in established much sought l \.'---I!!8n~MJf'HCmP~l---~' after location•. / DAY ancl NIGHT OIL BURNER SERVICE • MONDAY THBU SATURDAY NOON SUNDAYS .... HOLIDAYS Klrigswood 4-.1234 J. A. BAIRD· and BIRD Klngswood 4-1500 , Opposite Boro Hall " D. PA11lICI'WEUH' 409 DarlnlOUth Avenue - ---_.,.... Services ~or Mrs. Emma A. Lullum, former resident of North Che&ter road were held in Elizabethtown, N.Y., her late home, on Tuesday, June 2. She wasihe widow of Mr. Dawd S. Ludlum. Mary Byrne Winter, former res· ident of Cornell avenue, was graduated 'rom Sacred Heart Academy, Overbrook,. and will attend Dum~ barton College next year. Former Swarthmotean Mrs. Sheri Wil)ter' and Mrs. John Rob- Mr. and Mrs. Dean Morse and their son ·David of Canton, and Mr. and Mrs. Ricbard Springer and their son Stephen of Wakefield, Mass., are visiting Mrs. Morse' and Mrs. Springer's parents Mr. and Mrs. Dale S. Guthrie of Cornell ,,""nue while they attended the graduation exercises of Temple · .. h U DIversIty w ~re the~r brot?er Mr. Donald GuthrIe receIved hIS Law. degree yestetday. cepted a· call to the pastorate of Dr. and Mrs. James Richard Hart the First PresbyterIan Church of and their three children are visiting Geneva, N.Y., effective AU8"'!st 1. Dr. Ha.rt's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar S. Hart of Lafayette avenue. iA1Ifi!it; FOB f i " . Dr. Hart, who is currently asso-!!! MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS "late pastor 0 f th e P res b y te' rt< ,. ~ pan CaU • • • Church of Pleasantville, N.Y.; ref' ceived an earned degree of Doctor" MRS. LLOYD E. KAUFFMAN ~ 313 Dart.llle.th An.aue of .Sacr~d Theology from Temple: 1<.......... ...... Umverslty yesterday and ·has aC-it! I crmm't7@W!f;'IW'Wr f I f j' I m. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ert All Make. a;;__ ~ THOM SEREMBA -;: 47 Years of Experience with I DRIVEWAYS and PARKINC AREAS - Without Obligation EXPERT PIAIIO TUNINa and REPAIRINa 27Eck Gerner, son of Mr. and MrS'1 Oharles Gerner of Princeton avenue celebrated his,12th birthday !! Friday by entertaining a few of ~ his friends at a supper and movie ~5 +21 at the Scarsdale Golf Club, Searsdale. 'Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Harris of Princeton avenue entertained at a bon voyage party for their neighbors Dr. and Mrs. Frank H. Murrayon May 29. The Murray. will enplane this month for several weeks abroad. Mrs. ·Donald W. Poole and Mrs. Raymond C. Lassiat of Swart4tmore avenue are entertaining today at a tea and pantry shower at the Poole home in honor of Miss Gayle Hanna of Riverview road. !Miss Hanna's marriage to Mr. William E: Stauffer of Lancaster will take place on Saturday afternoon, June Q MRS. EM.A A,' LIDLaM .' IEWS 10TES NEWS NOTES George Myers and Go. ~ '. GOINI) FIOM PHILADElPHIA-on IIIny non-r.Mrved ...at caadI tra~ Soturday or Sunday from Penno. 510. 130th 51,••,) or N. Philo. $10. RETURNING_on any nan·r...~­ ",01 coach fro ... Soturday 01 Cllot. l1li ~5 PoM. frvm New Von 01 &12 P.M. Irorq Newark Sunday. TAKE 11IE WHOLE FAMILY OR MAkE UP A PAITY WITH. YO.,. aua 01 GlOUP. For holn, tow one:! botellnfor_otJon Me or col yow n.arelf PO TIck., Agent. .PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ~ L1oyd,;f Washington spent the past week at the Walnut Park Plaza and attended the commencement and the exhibit at the Academy. Shop Thu... 'til 9 p._ Shop Fri. 'til 10 ..... 1 Charles P. Wentz, son of Mr. Graham Wentz, 440 Strath Haven a'venue, has been awarded his var. sity letter in baseball by Lehigh University and also freshman num~ erais for athletic nctivities during the year. , James \V. Noyes, son of Mr. and iMrs. E. L. Noyes of Riverview road, has been awarded his varsity letter in lacrosse by. Amherst College. Noyes, a sophomore, was the second highest scorer on the team with '·10 goals and five assists in the season. He is being counted on as a big offensive threat next year. Peter \Villiam Curreri t Swarth· more avenue, a student at the Uni· versity of Pennsylvania Schol of Medicine, has been awarded a National Polio Foundation fellowship for $600 for special research in the biological a·nd physical sciences related to medicine. Mrs. Irvin R. MacElwee, M·t. Holyoke place, outgoing Regent of the Philadelphia Chapter of the D. A. R' J was a guest of 'honor at a tea given yesterday by Mrs. Birchall Hummer at her home, Fair· acres, Rydal. Also honored was the ne w Regent, Mr5. Leonard Stiles. Mrs. Hummer received the Gimbel Award in 1958 and preceded Mrs. .MacElwee as Regent. Vicki Willis, daughter of Mr. . and Mrs. Richard E. Willis, Dogwood lane, has been elected seCretary of the 35th Hotel Ezra Cornell, the world's only ·hotel-for·a· day to be held early in May, 1960. VickJ is presently a sop'homore in the School. of Hotel Administration at Cornell Univer3ity where she Ilms been on the social committee and a counselor for freshmen. Peter Kroon, junior at· Swarthmore CoUege, has been awarded a varsity letter in track. Kroon con. tributed significantly to the team which chalked up an undefcated season and tied for third .place in the Middle Atlantic States Track and Field Meet. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Kroon of Wallingford aud resides at 334 Vassar avenue with his wife, the former Mimi Wisdom. Another sopbomore at Swarthmore, William Welsh, Jr., received a varsity letter in track, having been a 'valued member of the team. He;s the son of 'Mr. and Mrs. William A. Welsh, Swarth·more avenue. Dr. Dallas E. Buzby. Park avem1e, received the surprise honor of the dedication to him by the grad'.,uating class of Beaver College, Jenkintown, of the yearbook, The Log. Dr. Buzby is the head of the Psychology Department at Beaver where ,he has been a faculty member for 13 years. He will teach during Beaver's summer sehool ending July 31. John Pegram of Yale avenue is home from Columbia/ University having completed his junior year. John has been appointed general manager of radio station' WKCR and WKCR-VM. / Ensign and Mrs. Reuel Kaighn of Crest lane are at the present time stationed in Key West, Fla., where Ensign Kaighn is .a~ending the Na"val Anti-Submar"ineWarfare School. Mrs. K:aighn is the former l\nn~ Lor'd. ' Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Clark and daughter, ,Miss Vicki Ann Clark, visited the Henry A. Peirsol family on Lafayette avenue last weekend while en route to ,tlie interna, tional Rotary convention in New ·York.Mr. Clark is presiden1; of the Rotary Club in Hot Spr-ings: Ark. AU prices efFedive Juno 10 thru 13; 1959 lancaster Brand T-BONE, SIRLOIN, PORTER.HOUSE None Priced Higher! Ib RIB ROAST No" "'ced Higher Owen Re.1d. 65e Ib Lancaster Braner Young, BELTSVILLE TUR EYS .~~ 39 Lancaster Brand Lean Fresb~ Smoked Butts 1 !:.~. "$ Ib LeaD 59C Ground Beef 494 3p~. $1.35 Ib ImportedtlDanisb Fresb Cut Sliced(leue,Lunch Roll Ib Quanlities at Regular Price-I.' CJ.~n,,':1:: 99c Fillet Haddock Leg 0' Lamb Whol. Ib 594 DOLLAR SALE Louella Homogenized 2nd BIG WEEK! Dog Food 8 141{"0'lo0 Punch Ideal Green Label Chunk 7 Light Tuna 3 Reg.& Golden c"ns Fjesta (Be.f", Chid.en) 46-02 cans 4 14~,ozlo0 CGns Princess 100 b'h-oz • cons Miracle Whip Waxed Paper 6 Golden (orn 6 100ft plgs_ 100 ' Salad Dressing 3 pi 100 18r$ . Round the Clock Nectar! 16-02 coOns Campbell"s Chicken Orange-Apricot Juke 3 4b,0'lo0 cons New Fruit Drink Noa~le S~Up BIE),nnd Ready to Serve 46·0' $1 00 6 'O'/'·oz 100 Punchinello 3 con:; cons Glenside Pund; Drink, 4 ql cons Fancy Pineapple·Grapefruit 3 Bart. Pears 29,o, cons 100 Nabisco Oreo Creme . 4 Ideal Drink 46-02 cans Ideal Fancy Sandwich Cakes 3"'°'1°0 Snack Sticks 3 9'/',0> 100 pkgs Nabisco Salt Tang Grape Drink 4 Ideal Fancy Cheese Slices Either Half Hawaiiae Evap. Milk Del Monte Crushed C ql cons p~gs Nabisco Potato Amer •• Swiss or Pimento CRISP, NEARBY 4 a,021 00 Chippers plqs c ICEBERG LETTUCE Ig heads Ripe, Firm Tomafoes REAlEMON FROZEN cello pkg 19C PINK LEMONADE' 3 37 DONUTS 5~~ 12 :.19 FRESH. EGGS .2-85 C 2 cans 6-0 Virginia lee Gold.... Sugared, Cinnamon C ..4 IDEAL lARGE, AlL. WHITE C , , SWARTHMORE STORE, Chester Road - Open Thursday til 9 P.M •• Fricloy tl1I 10 P.M. Kingwood 3-0560 / ". - • • y Seahorses 10 Defelld Relay Dup Tomorrow Col/ege in High Award To Dr. Shero, 2 Daughters Shero is known for his IndefatigSible stJPport of college ,md community activities. AB Senior Warden "Of the Episcopal ChurM he has participated actively in its concerns. Any student organization which ventures to present a program with cultural ambitions has been sure of his hearty support. His record ofor attendance at Collection, whether as· organist or auditor, is unmatched and unchallenged. But it is probably as a polished and versatile actor that Lucius Shero is known to widest circles in Swarthmore - in contemporary comedies, in Re.shl1"ation ,Drama, and very especially in the G"eek plays iii the originlllianguage which he directed and aded in just before the war. No one who saW and heard him will forget him declaiming in Greek as he ·ascended to ·heaven·, by way· of the Clothier .tower, in a beetle devised by the Swarthmore engineers to the speeifications of Aristopbanes. A unique combination of the scholar's familiarity with the an~ cient theatre and a temperamental affinity for Old Comedy made possible these rare productions. Such n combination symbolizes the varied facets of Lucius Shero's personality, the fusion of what the ancients called ingenium and doctrina, to produce the vir humanus whom we honor today. lEW. IOTES FETES lEW OFFICEI' Dr. E. T. Severs was guest speaker on Wednesday at the regu_ lar meeting of the Optimist Club of Chester. His topic was "Polypropylene and AviSun". Dr. Severs is oproduct manager of polypropylene plastic of AviSun, the newly formed affiliate of American Viscose Corporation and Sun Oil cOmpany. Mrs. Oharl.. Gerner of Prince_ ton avenue entertained new seventh grade officers at a Coffee last Thursday morning. They are Mr•. James Nemon, program; Mrs. ChaI1les Martm, treasurer; Mrs. Lillian Bohe, secretary; Mrs. Wil. liam Campbell, hOSllitality; Mrs. John R<>xby, telephone and Mrs. Henry ·McCorkle, Home and School. Mrs. Gerner is the new chairman. (Continued from Page 1) came with his Wife, Julia Adr-ienne, Borough Swimmers a distinguished mathematician, to Enter League Swarthmore in 1928 as Professor of Greek. In their home they carried Schedule Aftell 10 days iutensive free- oUr their ideal of community life style training, members of the which was so influential in aha·ping Swarthmore Swim Club team par- Ithe lives of their children, to whom ticipated in time ·trials yesterday the church, the schools, the college, and today to see who, at this point, and the "illage are alia part of . .In each home. were the f astest SWImmers age-group and thus would defend "Oaroline Shcro was graduated the Seahorses' honor in ,tomorrow's from Swarthmore in 1939. After ., relay carnival of the Suburban taking a Master's degree at the Swimming League at Mar.ple-New- Wharton' School in preparation fqr town Pool. The carnival begins at a professional career, s~ joined the 9 a.m. Swarthmore will do its best administrative staff of the college, to win the freestyle relay cup for where she has served in various the thil'd consecutive year. capacities, with ever increasing re· Next week the team will brush sponsibility and influence. She was up on breaststroke. backstroke and appointed to her present position butterfly in preparation for the ·of Assistant Controller-Account~ weekly meets between indiVlidual ,ing and Finance in 1956. One memteams in the league. OCl' of the Faculty has· remarked Individually fitted to you for comfort and beauty. The complete league schedule for that amQng ·her many duties she Swarthmore after tomQrrow~s Re- gives sympathetically to absentAll Famous Makes. Alterations free. lay Carniv·al follows: Saturday, minded professors the information June 20, Ply-Mar (away); Satur-and advice they need about hoUSing, day, June 27, Martins Dam and hospitalization, retirement annuiEast Whiteland (-home); Thurs~ ties, and other realities sO foreign day, July 2, Great Valley (home); to the. academic mind. Her interest Saturday, July 11, with Walling- in sports leads her to attend with ford and Rose Tree Woods at the zest almost all the intercollegiate latter's pool. All Saturday meets be- contests either at home or away, gin at 9 a.m. rain or shine, evening and if rthis zeal ever puts her bemeets at 6 :30. Diving events for hind in her wOl'k, she is in her ofReceives Award '-the evening meet and the two tri- fice Saturdays and Sundays and SherI Joseph Winter, formerly ~~~~~~~;;;:;;;;:;;;;:::;:;;::;:;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ angular meets will be held at 6 :30 evenings to keep fully abreast of of Swarthmore, won two awards at .. the iprevious evening at the same campus proceedings, to give aid to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine "You Meet the Nicest People at Speare Bros." pool scneduled for the swimming ,tudents, and to lend a hand wher- Arts during the past year, which and events. ever needed. were exhibited during the annual The annual championship events "Caroline's sister Frances was student exhibiti911 for the Cresson "They Do Sell Nice Things at Speare Bros." for .all 12 teams in the League will graduated from Swarthmore in srholarships. be held Saturd"y, July 18 through 1940, and entered secretarial ser'Vinter's' work, which included Wednesday, July 29. vice in the engineering department two figures from life :won the nntwo years later. She 000 has borne nunl Emma Burnham Stimson Council Moves Road, increasing responsibilities; she is award and the Edmund StewardSidewalk. Proiects n source of wisdom, comfort, and son award. Each carried a prize of gaiety to students, and when pro- $100. Each figure was 48 inches. (Continued from Page 1) Hls exhibit also included a fulllifec-ompany. A borough sewer was fessor so-and-so is out of his office size figure and .the head of his damag2d when a roadway was put she fills in most acceptably. She has year and a half old daughter, devoted ~erself single-mindedly to in from Yale avenue to a property EDGMONT;:;-:W;;~ SEVENTH AND WELSH STREETS Kathleen Anne. Seymour developed at the rear of understanding and serving the en~ The show, which has been exhibgineering departments and keeps STORE HOURS: Mondoy Ih,u Thuudoy, 9:30-5:30 his own. ited a month, closed Sunday. the channels of communication Ordinances defining parking re. F,idoy, 9:30-9:00: Salu,day, 9:30,5:30 Winter was also awarded a scholstrictions on many borough streets t open. arship to the Academy for the "Now we turn to the head of the regulating lines on Drexel road, ac1959-1960 year. He is a candidate cepting dedication of Il)rew avenue family, who has governed by exam- for a degree of .Master of Arts in and parts of Strath Haven and ple rather than precept. Lucius Fine Arts at the University of Michigan avenues develope4 by Shero· has served the College in im- Pennsylvania, coordinated with Jackson Blackman, and authorizing portant positions as teacher and the Academy. one-hour ;fire resistant walls be- administrator, bestowing upon both He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. tween resident occupanc·ies in mul- kinds of activity the same scrupu- Sheri J. Winter, formerly of Cortiple dwellings were passed. They lous and untiring attention that he nell avenue. The family now live in appear in detail elsewhere in this has always devoted to the pursuit Beckley, \V. Va., where Dr. Winter which perhaps attracts him more is chief of pediatrics and director newspaper. research and of the out-patient clinic at the Beck- . A brighter street light at the than any .other writing on subjects connected with ley Memorial Hospital. . Ohester road driveway to the College Library and a fire hydralllt at Greek ar:d Latin literature. As Prothe borough limit of Hillborn ave- fessor of Greek and Chairman of IMrs. W. B. Pegram of Yale avethe Department of Classics he has nue ~as returned from her class nue were authorized .. NATIONALLY Residents of Dogwood lane were for more than 30 years been respon- reunion at Barnard College, ColumADVERTISED denied permission to shoot annoy- sible for the training of Swarth- bia University, which took place more students in this field. Generaing crows with shotguns. Burgess last week. Mrs. Pegram served on Joseph Reynolds said he would ask ,tions of Swat'thmoreans owe to him the committee for the reunion. the Fire Chief to have the Fire not only an acquaintance with the MI'. and Mrs. John G. Lord of Company train its high pressure riches of ancient civilization, but Crest lane hare visiting them from hose on the birds. There seemed no an even more enduring impression South Pasadena, Cal., Mr. Lord's II speculation as to whether the crows of the highest standards ()f scholar- mother, Mrs. Frank Lord . ship, rigQ1"Ously maintained. As an would be uncooperative with this system, or would welcome what administrator Professor Shero has spray they couldn't elude on hot turned his hand to whatever needed to be done, notably as registrar dry days. . A letter of appreciation for the (from 1944 to 1948) and as Chairannual report recently pUblished by man of the Division of the Humanithe Borough, was received from the ties (from 1950 to 1953). As a local Property Owners Association. scholar he has brought distinction The attendance of Boroull'h Sec- to Swarthmore by his· studi~s of • When you need "someretary Elliott Richardson at the Roman satire, the history of thing from the drug store" Pennsylvania State Association of Sparta, and the Greek drama. His "think. ofthis professional Boroughs convention in ·Harrisburg contributions to American classical pharmacy. Drop in at our scholarship were recognized in 1949 next week was authorized. ONLY convenient location-or by Ibis election to the Presidency of TAYLOR DOCTORS ELECT the American Philological Associatelephone your needs, and Several Swarthmore physicians tion. For many ·years a member of we'll deliver. You'U apAlterations Free! were elected to office or appointed the Managing Committee of. the preciate our courteous to chairmanships at the May meet- American School in Athens, where lervice and fair prices. ing of the Taylor Hospital Medical he was annual Professor in 1936w A fine selection of new Staff, May 31. 37, he is internationally known for Dr. (kol'ge Heckman was elected his support of Hellenic studies, and shades. Sizes for shorts vice-president lind Dr. Harold is a familiar figure in classical CATHERMAN'S Roxby the secretary, to sp.rve June circles from the British Museum to regulars - and longs. DacDRUG STORE 1 through May 31, 1960. the 'distant shores of Samothrace. Dr. J. Albrig'ht Jones chairs the Nor doos this account exhaust his ron blends - Orlan blends Klngswood 3-0586 credentials committee, Dr. William varied intellectual interests: the - Arnel blands. Brand-new' 1959 styles. WouldY. Rial the rules and by-laws C()m- problems of the Rhodes Trust, the mittee, Dr. Harold A. Willdnson concerns of the American Guild of n't you like to give Qad one of these fine suits the library committee, Dr. John H. Organists, the demands of organiWigton, staff entertainment. zations promoting International on "his day"? Dr. Jones with Dr. Harry Pote bonds among scholars - all have is representative at the communi- commanded, and continue to comSPEARE BROS. - MEN'S DEP'T - FIRST flOOR cable disease station at nel'aware mand, his willing service. I County Hospital; "A:t h"",e in Swarthmore, Lucius !..._ _........;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _• film J'[I • Celebrate the 4th 01 July in Swarthmore , Girdle and Bra Shop Tour to· Go 2 Ways Boarding their own chartered ; Pan American .plane· named ~'Hanna h Penn" were' 65 Republican · women of Pennsylvania from this . . · area who left Philadelphia AirpOrt · Sunday, June 14, on their ,fourth : "good ·will" vacation trip to· Eu- The .Fashion Center for Girdles and Bras, Corselettes and Camp Supports, etc. school, primary and summer club. There will.be a. final opportunity to reaister on openi~g day, Monday, JUl)e 22. Reglsttars will be at th~ Rutgers Avenue School, Primary Bu·ilding, rJ at 9:0 a.lII. TIte directors have made ·plans for a most interesting . and varied program. . 11 are urged to seize this oprope. portunity lor summer fun and Tthis time they set down in Lis- companionship! bon, Portugal, to begin their tour . · of the southern sun~lan d countries of the continent. They will return' C 00 to Philadelphia July 9 from Vienna, ' Austria. A S' h I Won·ders . 'W'hat • Price Public Relations?' 815Yz Edgmont Avenue, Chester Mrs. Irvin R. MacElwe, president, and ·Mrs. Paul H. 'Clark, diI d t · rector-chairman 0 f th e rip, ea the group on this 25 day jaunt to Liebon, Salamanca, Madrid, Palma, Barcelona, Nice, Monte Carlo, Rome, Stresa, Lucerne, Innsbruck, Salzburg and Vienna. Many special treats including.. side trips and a 4th of July party are }:>eing planned for everyone'~ enjoyfncnt. Mrs. Clark ";"ith ~2 tour members. 'Medford, Mr. and ·Mrs. C. L. ·Davitanbul, :r'urkey, for a six~day visit in these ancient ~ities. Florence Lt!CRase of Dartmouth House, a 101'mer teacher of Latin and Greek, wilL·be among the 12. Those from this area who ar~ on the tour are Miss Lucasse, Mrs. James P. Daugherty, :Mr. and ·Mrs. MacElwee, Mr. aJtd Mrs. Edward will fly to Athens, Greece arid Isson Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hunter: ·Mr~;".bheadquarters in 1950. the summer.· He was' elected Issistant secreA Band and Orchestra will be tary of Indemnity Insurance Comformed to give those who already pany of North America in 1953 pl,y an enriched musical experand in 1957 was named accident and sickness secretary for both the ience. Sessioris will be held Monday Indemnity Company and Lne In- through Thursday, through July surance Company of North Amer~ 30 with .the average students reica. He was promoted to assistant porting twice weekly for instruc~ vice iPresldent of Indemnity in 1957. tion and pleasure ,playing. Prior to joining INA Mr.• Mar- . The ensembles will be of oparticushall was an underwriter with the lar value to those who have finished Bureau of Casualty and Surety Elementary School and·Who plan to enter one of the High School groups Underwriters. in the Fall. Automatic Wash- and - Wear Anglo Breeze" 37.95 SUITS at Speare Bros. $28.00 • Pa., June' 1959 I day III~I.. P? WARTHMOREAN 21 Local Residenls on . v Swarthmore Ties for Recreation Program • Hannah Penn Tour The Swarthmore Recreati6n AsSWim Relay Dup sociation announces that there are o·Isqua Iif·Icahon • I ' Mrs. MacElwee Lea ds still vacancies in all groups, pres for father's mar/me' T VOLUME 31-NUMBER 2f e.,..• • JUN ~ 9 195~ • TO STUDY COMMUNITY HEALTH ,Mrs. Marion L. Pierce, school nurse at Swarthmore High School, Swarthmore-Rutledge School District, has been lawarded a scholarship to attend the worbbop ;n Community-School Health Education from June 29 to July 17 at West Chester State Teachers CGilege_ . Tlle awards are sponsored by the Delaware COUllt:9' Tuberculosis and Health .Association and the InterAgency Planning Committee, 'an 'organization . representing state health and welfare ageneies. Three sehool nurses and two teachers from Del._re County reeeived the scholara\aipo. . , BEREAVED Mrs .. H. F. Roberson of Albany, N.Y., mother of Mrs. Alfred E. Longwell of Lafayette avenue, passed away on June 10. She was in her 91st year. Mrs. Roberson, who was a fre· .berts,. and the children Ul'S, n.a.Vld, Kitty !,nd Clinton,. were widely entertallled throUghout the """,munlt)'. ... ;' .. _. .'.. }-- Celebrate the 4th 01 July in Swarthmore PER YEAR Canteen Announces July Wednesday Night Meets Beginning Wednesday, July 1, and every Wednesday in July, there will he a summer Canteen held in the basement of Trinity Church. There will be ping-eter 17, and p.m. until 2 p.m. the Commencetwo girls 11 and 8 years old. Their ment party was held at Whittier home is in a small town, Nieder- House under the general chairIitan.. wurzbach, near Saal'brucken, in ship of Mrs. Roy Carroll. Saarland, Germany, in a large Decorations were in the school apartment over the shops. Robert colors. The setting was cabaret. will share iamily pleasures, hiking There was a game ropm, baby pic .. and swimmiilg, and will enjoy a tures were shown ·for identificagroup trip of tr~vel before sailing tion and a buffet supper was servfor home. ed under the charge of Mrs. WilJohn Seybold will live in Voor- liam Rowland. The class received. burg, Holland, near The .Hague, .prizes from businessmen of the with Mr. and Mrs. Oyevaar and Borough for which tlte committee their four children aged 18, 17, 15 of the Senior Class Pat:ty and the and 9. The Oyevaars own a yacht members of the class wish to thank and a sail boat and enjoy swim- the merchants most heartily. ·Mrs.. ming. John will attend school there A. L. Marsh solicited the prizes. in the fall and until returning ·home Dancing was to the rhythms of the "Melloaires.' in January. The ,prized souvenirs of the Mary Lou's hosts, Mr. and Mrs. event were the small favor figures Karlo Af Heurlin and their five of the class given to each member children aged 16,14, 12, 10, and 9, and made by Mrs. John Thurman. live in Kilo, Finland, some 25 minutes from Helsinki. Their home is The boys' were garnet, the girl an .estate near the seashore so that figures white academic gowns and matehing mortarboards and car-swimming will be enjoyed.. Mary ried diplomas. in their hands, each Lou will accompany the family on with the graduates' name. traver weekends ·in southern Finland. She will attend the SuomalaiEarn Top Honors nen Yhteiskoulu School. f.rom SepMrs. Willi&m A. DeCaindry, 139 tember 1 until she returns home in R;utgers avenue, ,has received news Januaw· that Her son-in-law Dr. Raymond Eugene Matson, who was amoq Instracts S.fety Ohio University's 2426 graduates Virginia Hath, 738 Y~le avenue, Friday, lead the "summa cum. participated; in the Red Cross span- laude" list with an academic aver... sored Delaware Valley Safety Sor- age of 3.991.' 1"!1I vices Institute held at Medford His wife, .theformer Ginny no.; Lakes, N.J., recently. . Caindry, was awarded the ColumAttending from this area were hus, Ohio, Rotary Club's ScholarCarolyn and PSitriciaCrowl; Farn-. ship Aw>ard for 1959. Mrs. Mataoa urn road,. and Esther L. M'\Jtin, ...... also a member of the gradu208 S¥lvan "ve.nue,.Rutiedge. ating class. . Swarthmore Hi Pupils 'Saillo Homes Abroad S.H.S. '59 Graduates In Celebrations / THE Pqe2 groom, wore a beige lace go"WIl with matching aecessories, and a pale Miss Sally Bates of New York olive orchid at iller shoulder. City and her mother Mrs. John R. A reception was held at the home Bates of North Chester road are of the bride's 'Parents on Haverentertaining at a bridal luncheon today at,the Bates home in honor is a graduate of of Mis. Susan M. Hansell of North S warthmore High -School, class of Swarthmore avenue whose mar.. 1956, and attended Grove City Colriage to Mr. Robe\"" E. Shapley will lege for two years. She has prestake place tomorrow. Miss Bates ently been employed at the Ford will attend Miss Hansell as maid'Motor Company, Chester. The of-honor. om graduated from Bellevue FETE IRIDE·TO·IE fO~h:ve~~~'e High S.."h~1 graduate and ~s graduated ID. June fro~ Oberhn College, O~erllD, O. She .s a m~ber o~ Ph •. Beta 1C a ppa and malored ID soc~ology. .. . of thene, b 'd was d ress Clark, 8.ster ed in pink pleated nylon orpndy and also carried a nosegay of pink roses. The best man was Dr. J. Law- Hi~~e S::~~M~~~~~::' ~;:~r~!~ :~~~n ~:p::, gr~=.rt~~~r~::~ Mrs. Kenschatft, mother of the groom, was gowned in rose lace with beige """"ssories. Her corsage was white with blue assorted flowers. beA rec! 0 f th e groom, . b roth erRutledge; James Mannmg, in-law of the groom, Holmes; Bruce Clark, brother of the bride, Nutley, N.J.; Albert Adler and Jack Fiteh, iJoth of Springfield, served as ushers. The bride's mother was gowned in beige lace with ehiffon inset.in the back. The aCip. ilege in this moment of local, national, world crisis has the '120 CH . . TNUT I f . l n Sermon: "Strange Sins--Seeond energy to waste on throwing verbal stones. It will take the CIIMIIL IAII, r " MItIlr A,IAII, II~"'"II'., Best." combined efforts of every graduating class of 1959, of every 6 :46 P .M.-Senior Hi Fellowship. ""."",.,_ . . .1111 sensible, dispassionate adult in this country and others to Monday, June Z2 keep the world from bloWing itself up. 9 :00 A.-M.-Daily Vacation Bible When one is young, it is parents who help end a tanSchool begins. trum. To this end parents resort to such ways as sending children to their room until time and quiet restores wholeTRINITY CHURCH Layton Parkhurst Zimmer, Rector ness and a child is once. again able to live peacefully with, others; or, after a smaller storm, a loving, understanding Sunday,June 21 parent can say "Find a smile behind that chair" and the 8 :00 A.M.-Holy Communion. 10:00 A.M.-Morning Prayer. sun shines again. An early century author wrote for herself in a moment Wednesday,June 24 - of stress some mQralizing lines. She sought the comfort (Nativity of St. John Baptist) _ (which each persons neens at one time or another, after 7 :00 A.M.-Holy Communion. • making one of the errors to which all humans are prone) of Thursday, June Z5 finding 10 :00 A.M.-Holy Communion.! " ••• that wonderful place called the Land of Beginning THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY Again; OF FRIENDS Where all our mistakes and all our heartaches and a\1 S,unday, June Zl of our poor selfish grief 11 :00 A.M.-Meeting for worship. Can be dropped, like a shabby old coat at the door, All are welcome. And never put on again. 12 Noon - Annual F.D.S. Picnic on Whittier House Lawn. "And it wouldn't be possible not to be kind, in the Land Moniray, June 2Z of Beginning Again; AII,day s~ing for the A.F.S.C. The ones we've misjudged and the ones whom we've Wednesday, June Z4 grudged their moments of victory here ..\.II,day sewing for the A.F.S.C. Would know by the grasp of our loving handclasp more than penitent lips can explain." FIRST CHURCH OF What is needed. is a Wi1I Rogers, someone to start us CHRIST, SCIENTIST as a matter of prudent SWARTHMORE' in a healing wave of good, wholesome laughter to blow away Park Avenue helow Harvard wasteful p'rides and self-importance; to· harness indignafamily planning tions and energies and hours of talking into constructive Sunday, Jnne 21 channels. 11 :00 A.M.-Sunday School. A IIlOIJIiDr or afternoon spent viewing ita This is June and early June in Swarthmore is so beau11 :00. A.M.-The Lesson - Sennon ,will be"entitled "Is the Universe, tiful! There are the gardens and the trees, and nO' mos- ' wcmdrous blend of natural and 'fonnRliMd Including Man, Evolved by Atomquitos (thanks to Charles Topping among others) and all e1egance Wlll be an uperienoe both inter· ic Force?" '. the.won~erfuny good, appreciative, kindly people! As conerrtinI aDd rewardinl. Whether you prefer Wednesday evening meeting each fUSIOn dies and the summer exodus begins Swarthmore week. 8 P.M., Reading ROO"!;.,~ memorials tnditioDlilly erect or level with seems like "our old Swarthmore Village" and'in the serene Dartmouth Avenue, open the ground, ar favor cremation OVI!l' burial, hot dusk the thrushes sing. ' days exceJlt holidays, 10-6; Friday evening, 7-9. West Laurel Hill can more than satisfy your TRINan 10TEI \\~e.dnesday morning, June 24., (NaDEL. CO. UNITARIAN ..tbatic wish , .• all witlUn your economy. There will be a eelehmUon of t'V1ty of St. John Baptist). On Old Marple Road, Springfield the Holy Communion at 8 o'clock Thursd~y morning there will be a Herbert F. Vetter, Jr., Minister Come any day between 9 and 4. Sunday morning, and at 10 a.m. a ~elebration ,of the Holy Co~munSunday, June 21 service of Morning Prayer. The .on at 10 0 clock. . B7 ' ' t CIa P , et Avawe'" PbDa. Cit7 !.iDe. 11 :00 A.M.-Guest Speaker: Rev. .,. ".T.c. _ '10 .. B II/:" '" Nih 8t. a. Cib' Lillo 1oc:ol tui _ _ Edwin Lane, "Religion in Public ushers; for the 10 o'clock service . School." will be as follows: IHRISTIAN IIIEIIE .IOTEI ~ ...JUt. N_...... Iiiimda to u.._I1lIlta..... G. S. Valentine, head usher; C. "Is the Universe, rn~luding Man, NOTRE DAME DE LOURDES B. Blake, alternate; R. H. Fellows, Evolved hy Atomic Forcet" is the Rev" Oharles A. Nelson, Pastor Parish Rectory - Michigan Avenue Joseph Reynolds, W. N. Ryerson, subject pf the Lesson-Sennon to and Fairview Road and W. B. Sdler. William Ryerson be read at Christian Science servDaily Ma.. 8 A.M.-Rectory is scheduled to serve as -I¥te at kes Sundav. The Golden Text is Sunday Masses 8, 9, 10, 11 ArM.215 .....nt Ave.. aalo-Cynwrd,"". 8 o'clock, and Terry Davidson and ecause of the Miss Mildred Bond, Swartkmore- class, took advantage of a captive building 'problem, and they obave Rut/edge School District and to the audience. You droned on for a full met it more cheerfully than most of attention of Mrs. Hallock Campbell, half hour on the subject of the us who are parents. If we in Amer- demanded public reading. Mr. increase in school taxes whe~ the LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ."'pr.... .... .......-::-;~~. occasion called for nothing from 0/ .the trouble and to make them you but a few words of congratula- loud and clear. tion to the class on behalf of the Since no pu".,se will be served 800001 Board. by this letter if it only gives vent Your insensitivity to what was in to my angt!r, I ·hope that this matthe hearts of the audience last ter will .point up the great inednight, your lack of concern for the equacy of the Board's public relaclass itself at -that important mo- tions. If the School Board had a ment, your lack of judgment in us- well-functioning Public Relations ing such an occasion for what Committee to inte"Pre.t the probamounted to School Board propa- loms and actions of the Board to ganda, to say nothing of the poor the taxpayers, there would have taste of some of the rest of your been nO felt need on your part to remarks, casts doubt on your ca- "protest too much." The Boarll pacity to serve the community as owes the .community a complete and the leading member of our .5cltool year around interpretation of its Board. I feel th- of us can feel that the past year and morean must bo ail/ned. P.eudo- a half has been ideal, but we have nllmm mall b. us.d il tM writ... is known to the Editor. Letters progressed in the development of will b. published onlll at the dis- our children's capacities to meet cretion of tM Editor. difficulties and adjust to them. We are not raising these children to live THANKS TEACHERS in a soft world, so it may be that the inconveniences we have all had T o th e Ed 't lor: . are mOre valuable than any other At the conclusion .of 8 hectlc ye~r 'part of their education. in our local educatIOnal system, It At any rate, those of Us who have seems to me appropriate to expres!> noted the fine performance of our to the teachers and staff of our teaching staff would like them to schools some appreciation of the extru efforts they have had to make know that we deeply appreciate in order to give our children a high their extra efforts. quality of instruction. As a critical RUTH C. ENION observer, I would like to assure 1;he members of the School Board that the standard of instruction is high The following leiters 'lve"e read in Swarthmore, and that it is in- at the School Board meeting Weddeed desirable that our tax dollarb uesday '1light and arc the)'efore ,be used to keep it so. "cported in entirety. The reading 0/ the first letter, The teachers in the high school and junior high grades have had addressed to Mr. JOlles, in ca-I'e 0/ an increased burden because of the ilfiss ,Mildred Bond, Stvarthmorebuilding problem, and they ,have Rutledge School Dist,.ict and to the met it more cheerfully than most of attentio" of lIIr•. Hallock Campbell, us who are parents. If we in Amer- demanded public reading. Mr. SWARTHMOREAN JOM.· answer .QG8 Bfmt dir.ctlll to occasion caUed for nothing from MrB. McDow.lI. you but a few words of con@Tatulation to the class on behalf of the WHO PROTEST. TOO MUCH? Sohool Board. June 9th, 1959 Your insensitivity to what was in the heart. of the audience last Dear Mr. Jones, night, your lack of concern for the As a parent of one of the mem- class itself at that important mobers of this year's graduating class ment, your lack of judgment in usat Swarthmore High School, I want ing such an occasion for what to express to you my feelings and amounted to School Board prDpaviews on what took place last night ganda, to say nothing of the poor at Commencement. taste of some of the rest of your The Class of 1959, togetlier with remarks, casts doubt on your catheir parents, relatives and friends, pacity to serve the community 'as many of whom were from out the leading member of our School town and uninterested in local Board. I feel that your resignation matters, were gathered in a beau- as Chah'man of our Board would tiful setting for what should have be appropriate. been a most happy and memorable I, of course, do not know wheoccasion. The class went through ther your Board authorized you to its part to ,perfection, Mr..Carroll use this occasion as you did or gave a pertinent talk and Mr. Bush whether it was your own idea, so presented the facts about the class I am sending this letter to the in a pleasing fashion. Then at the Board's secretary with the request ,point where the program announc- that it be read at the next Board ed that you would present the now meeting in order that all the Board eagerly awaited diplomas, you may be acquainted with my reaeBrose and without a word to the tion. Indignation is raging among class, took advantage of a captive the families and friends of the audience. You droned on for a full class, but it may dissipate itself balf hour on the subject of the in cocktail party gossip. I prefer increase in school taxes whe;' the to direct my remarks to the source of I June 19, 1959 of the trouble and to make them loud and clear. Since no pU"i'Ose will be served by this letter if it only gives vent to my anger, I ·hope that this mattel' will point up the great inadequacy of the Board's public relations. If the School Board had a well-functioning Public Relations Committee to interpret the problems and actions of the Board to the taxpayers, there would have 'been no felt need on your part to "protest too much." The Board owes the community a complete and year around interpretation of its problems and program and all relevant data. This can only be accomplished -by a Relations Committee of the Board which could include several members frcnn the community at large who are talented and e,xperienced in this field. T,he Commencement fiasco where you lost friends for the Board and influenced people unfavorably, probably would not have occurred if such a committee had been dirading these matters. On the other ·hand, I am sure. that greater community understanding and support of higher school taxes would be the result of careful interpreta,tion. ' Previous experience has made me unusually sympathetic with' the Board's current c'rop of problems and I have defended the Board's actions on numerous private occasions. I also respect the sincerity of the efforts of individual Board members. However, all Boards need good leadershi.p from both their. Chairman and their paid administrators. A community has a right to expect this. Ther~fore I -am making ,these statements to you directly in the bluntest possible manner. If future Commencements are more dignified and happier occasions due to this and other letters which you will undoubtedly receive, I will feel that my concern has not been in vain. Yours truly; RUTH H. McDOWELL THE ANSWER .. ... .~ :::- '.. -. " .. .•.. . TOO YOUNG TO DIE. When epidemic strikes and takes its sudden and deadly count of the young, it tears at our heartstrings for there is so little we can do about it. Such tragedies may occur once in a year or two. But the highway toll of young innocents produces a casualty list every day, year after year. There is much we can do about it, for we are responsible. In one year 4,300 young lives are snuffed out, over 200,000. injured and maimed for life. Three out of every four of these lives sacrificed to care· lessness are from 5 to 14 years of age. Too young to diel School safety patrols are holding down the casualties of children going to or coming from school. Two Gut of three are killed while putside of school supervision. That's the big reason why it's up to you, Mr. and Mrs. Driver, to protect little children. Be alert for the unpredictable actions of youngsters at play, crossing streets, chasing balls and riding bikes. Little ones are thoughtless of danger; perhaps, too, they trust grown folks to guard them. Don't be the one to carryon your conscience the life of a child. Slow down, be alert where children may be at your mercy. THE BOUQUET SWARTHMORE CO·OP THE INGLENEUK E. L. NOYES al)d CO. BAIRD and BIRD J. A. GREEN THE SWARTHMOREAN PETER E. TOLD PORTER H. WAITE, Inc. SWARTHMORE TOGGERY SHOP PROVIDENT TRADESMENS BANK and TRUST CO. p. PATRICK WELSH SWARTHMORE PRINTING CO. CATHERMAN'S DRUG STORE June 16, 1959 Mrs. H. Woodw>ard McDowell 25 Woodbrook Lane Sw~rthmore, Pennsylvania My dear Mrs. McDowell: Your letter of June 9th eXlpresses your indignation together with that of some of your friends over the remarks which I made at the High School Commencement exercises last week. It is always a cause for regret when ,any activities connected with our school result in iudignation and resentment. Certainly, I am sorry if any remarks of mine contributed to the failure of our 1969 Commencemen·t to come up to the expectations either' of members of the graduating class Or of their !parents. In order that responsibility may be clearly placed, may I say that the School Board does not customarily instruct its President as to what he should or should not say at Commencement. If my words have been offensive, they -are my words alone and not those of the School Board. Attendance at previous Commencements, however, would have acquainted you with the fact that it is customary for the President of our School Board to do considerably more ,than merely to say Us few words of congratulations to the class on ·oellalf of the School Board'" Since well before my time, it has been customary to comment on issues of the day which bear on our school pt'ogram; and on at I.east two previous occasions the cost of education was the topic dis~ cussed. In addition, you may recall that I have had three children gradu ..te from Swarthmore High School_II under circumstances quite similar to those of 1959. Perhaps. then, it is not too much to say that I am fully aware of what is in the hearts of fathers and mothers on such oc~ casions. However, Commencement is not only a time to deal with the heart and the emotions-it is also a time ID clearly set forth any intellectual (Continued on Page 9) ... rY . . . . . . . _ , . . - June 19. 1959 l'age'l THE SWARTBMOREAN June 19, 1959 of Harvard avenue attended the Commencement exercises of New York University, New York City, last Wednesday when Mr. Craemer was a guest of the University as a member of the class of 1909 cele· brating its 50th anniversary. Chief Justice Ear) \Varren received an honorary degree on this occasion. NEWS NOTES New United Fund Committee Surveys Plans IIer mother Mrs. Harry Bernard of Union avenue for a few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Gaskill of University place have returned (rom Clifton Forge, Va., where they attended the wedding of Miss Deborah K. Thompson to Mr. Alan G. Lewis on Saturday. . Mis. Sandra Milne of Park avenue was the guest of honor at a miscellaneous shower last Tuesday evening, June 9, given by Mrs. A. Blanton Tiller of Haverford place and Mrs. William A. DeCaindry of Rutgers avenUe at the Tiller horne. Mr. A. H. Marsh of Columbia aveThe engagement of 1\1 iss Milne to nue 'has returned from a business Mr. Rodger S. Rickard of South Mrs. William T. Bell of Ft. Lautrip to Washington, D.C. Mrs. Euclid, 0., has been announced. derdale, Fla., with her children Mr. and Mrs. William Craemer Kathie, Billy and,Hol1y, is visiting Marsh accompanied him. Double Saving Values I LOW PRICES+S&H ,..---GREEN STAMPS! Shop Thun. 'til 9 p.m. Friday 'til 10 p.m. ; '. All Prices Effective June 17 thru 20. 1959. LANCASTER BRAND, BUDGET·SAVER'S FAVORITE! BIG 8£Ef S &£1 LANCASTER BRAND, BLADE BONE REMOVED! • • • Two members of the newly-organized Women's Educational Committee and Francis W.Plowman, Delaware County United Fund chairman, survey an outli.~e of the committee's year-around program through the "Big cDI", symbol of the large part the county will play in the forthcoming Fall United Fund drive. They are: (left to right) Mrs. J. Watson Pedlow of Chester, Mr. Plowman, North Swarthmore avenue, and Mrs. William F. Geigle, Spring!field chairman of the new committee. Another local member of the eolllJIlittee (not shown) is Mrs. W. Randal Reed of Wallingford. 35th S.H.S. Reunion On Saturday, June 13, 18 graduates of the class of 1924, together with their wives, husbands and friends, gathered at the home of }lr. and Mrs. Cresson Prichard on Michigan avenue for cocktails and a buffet supper. The previous reunion was held on, December 11, 1966 at which time there were 21 graduates present. It is interesting to recall that this class lhad 39 graduates in 1924, the largest number up to that year. Qf the original 39, five are deceased and only a very small percentage of the total living are more than 100 miles from Swarthmore. ,Mr. and Mrs. James Wyche of Belmont Plantation, New Iberia, Louisiana, traveled the greatest distance to attend the reunion. Mrs. Wyche is the former Arlene Snyder. Present plans are to hold the next official reunion sometime in 1961. Cook and Animal Raiser; Joanne Swan, Cook, Drawing and Painting; Anne \Vhittier, Cook and Seamstress. As alfinal activity, the Troop will participate in the Coordinated Troop Camping IJ)rogram at Sunset Hill from June 24 to June 26. Leaders of the troop are Mrs. William Collenberg, Mrs. David Field and Mrs. Leroy E. Peterson. Cirl Scout Troop 683 On Tuesday, June 2, 1959, fifth and sixth grade, Troop 683 had their family picnic and Court of Awards. Due to rain it was ,heJd in Parish Hall of Trinity Church. Badges were awarded then. The following girls received the out-door cook badge: Christine deMoll, Wilda Fowler, Stephanie Gayley, Frances Hoenigswold, .Jean Jackson. Barbara Jezl, Katherine Madis?n, Patsy McInroy, Linda Patchell, Beth Pinkston, Judy Rox. by. Christine Smith, \Vendy Tompkins and Judy Tucker, Those awarded Folk Dancer Cirl Scout Troop 744 Badge are the girls mentioned above and Li:;;sy Elmore, Margaret Intermediate Girl Scout Troop Liddell, Laura McCorkle, Sally J 0 744 held its last regular meeting of the year on Monday, June 15, ·when Pyle, Suzanne Seeman and Ann the girls in the troop entertained Shugarts. My Troop badge was awarded their fathers at a cO'l:ered dish supper i. McCahan Hall at the Pres- the following girls: Christine clebyterian Church. All of the girls Moll, Wilda Fowler, Stephanie have earned their Cook Badge this Gayley, Joan Ja.ekson, Barbara spring, and 'prepared and served Jezl, Katherine Madison. Patsy McInroy, Linda Patchell, Beth Pinkthe dinner. ston, Judy Roxby, Christine Smith, Following the dinner, the girls and their fathers were joined by Wendy Tompkins, Judy Tucker, the mothers for the Court of Margaret Liddell, Laura McCorAwards. Linda Lane, Charlotte Ol- kle, Sally Jo Pyle, Suzanne Seeman, cott, Ida Hay, Janet Fox and Lyn Ann Shugart. and Pam Spitz. Camp Craft badge for sixth gradClarke formed the Color Guard. ers only was awarded to Christine A fantasy on ·how the Laws were written was presented under the deMoll, Lissy Elmore, Joan Jackdirection of Barbara Gerner. The son, Patsy McInroy, Beth Pinkfollowing badges were awarded: ston, Sally J 0 Pyle, Judy 'Roxby, Jennifer Bell, Cook and Homemak- Suzanne Seeman and Judy Tucker. Other badges awarded besides er; Beverly Bird, Cook, Skater; those above for fifth graders were: Lyn Clarke, Second Class and Cook; Jean Col\enberg, Cook and Tree; Margaret Liddell, Game: KatherLou IDudley, Cook; Linda Esta- ine ,l\Iadison, Musician, Housekeepbrook, Second Class, Cook and Child er, Dabbler and Garden Flowers; Care; Nancy Field, Cook, Seam- Linda Patchell, Cook; Pamela stress, and Skater; Cynthia Fox, Spitz, Cook, Housekeeper, Child Cook, Skater. Homemaker and Mu- Care; Wendy Tompkins, Tree; sician; Janet Fox, Cook~ Dabbler; Wilda Fowler, Homemaker. Six;th Graders: Christine deMolI, Barbara Gerner, Cook, Dabbler, Tree: Pauy .1J!:cInroy, Child Care, Skater, Homemaker and Tree; Basketry and Bird: Judy Roxby. Judy Gol., Cook. Child Care and Dabbler; Ida Hay, Cook; Lin- Tree, Bird, Drawing and Paintda Lane, Cook and Salt Water; ing, Garden Flower; Joan Jackson, Charlotte Olcott, Cook; Sandra Tree, Bird, Athlete, Cat and Dog. Sll7der, Cook; Jill Spencer, Cook Seamstress: Lissy Elmore, Animal ~ Skater; Patricia BI:a1IIfGrd, Raiser. 'CHUC ROAST Ground Beef Ib 4ge 3 Ib, $1.35 Cross Cut Roast "::i\~' Ih 7ge Arm Roast .0""",8... Ih 5ge Rib Roast N·Hr.'::r4 Ih 65e Corned Beef C~-V:. Ib 6g e NONE PRICED HIGHER I c Ib SPECIA1.! 4 to 6 Ib AVERAGEI CAPO ETTES Roasting Chickens Fresh Frying Chickens , NON:CARBONATED, READY TO SERVEI HiC Orange Drink Hunt's Fruit Cocktail Libby Dill Pickles Pure Grape Jelly Grapefruit Sections Tetley Tea Bags REFRESHING DESSERT TREATI FANCY LONG SLICESI IDEAL FANCY IDEAL FANCY DESSERT FAVORITEI DELICIOUS ICED TEA COOLERI Ji! ~Iut~.;utl whole Ib 29c cut-up Ib 31c 3 46 z85C 2 1az 41C 21.6-az49C 2 z35c 416.az69C of 48 59C -o canl- 4cans lars 1•2 -o IDrs cans pkg YELLOW, FREESTONE 'PEACHES th:I~:a:nl 3 Ib·29C SAVE 4 e ""@'. FRESH FROZEN FRENCH FRIES 3 :k;~40C ~3":O'£ee. FATHER'S LAYER DAY CHOCOLATE . 79C each SWEET CREAM, QUALITY BUTTER ~!t 1·1b qtn SWARTHMORE STORE. Cheder Road - Open Thursday till 9 P.M., Friday till 10 P.M. ... ' .. ~ " .. 8 J~ ~r~Sw.tt,~!eE!on, CLAS S I FIE DAD S PATTERlOI" Funeral Home Mrs. 3rd, Dartmouth av.nu. flew to RoohN.Y., on Sunday to visit with Patterson's pa' r.nts, Mr. and FOR REIT FIOR RENT-Two bedroom apartPhone LOwell 6-3400 ment unfurnished, yearly lease; OVItB tI YBA&8' DPB&IIUI1m two bl';"ks from station and bus. A. Pdoe Ie lI.d EYe.., F • ....,.'. . . . . KJngswood 3-9728. FOR RENT - S""ond f!oor com~ 3-1448 fortabl. pleasant room, With meals. Klngswood 3-0149. FIOR RENT - Vermont, ne'!r.St. Johnsbury, house, large hVlng Ashes and Rubbish Removed with fireplac., six bedrooms, UIIW1l8 Mowed, General Hauling I~~~t~~~,.:k~i.ttch.n, boat house, dock I." . .,rl Available by week at Z36 ~ Avo. MorloD, I'a. per week 'during July and AuIUIlSt. Phone Klngswood 3-6088 or I~;iF'i;4-5360. WILLIAM BROOKS EMIL SPIES WATCIlMAKE~ Fo.no'erb of F. c. Bode and S 11"'n. Watch and 128 Yale Ave. Clock Repairs Swarthmore, Pa. ROOFING cottage w.ith from 8,Bradford June will fly toJunior Spain College on June on 27 with the University of San Fran- room, living room, kitchen, mountain view,. near le.ke. one and half baths, electric stove and hot I ~·Ab. . heater. Fireplace K1ngswood and space ;76 weekly. will five Study weeks Group. studyingShe at ciscospend Foreign 3-2136 the University of Valencia and then travel through southern Spain be- 1st. Write Box KI 4-1214 CRESSON PRICHARD 900 Michigan Avenue 1=_i!i Swarthmore, Pa, !!! KI 3-1112 != "._- .. . .. II1l1IIIDllUlIIIl1IIllIIImUlUllIIlnnm -- IU;~:;;:;'~:;:;~;;i ! .. GENERAL ~~~~~~~~~~ • WANTED _ To buy china, glass. ware, marble top furniture. Also mod.rn furniture. Phone TRemont 2-7473. WANTED - Refined companion over" 1!8 and und.r 45 for elderly blind person for two '11onths. Will in in Chautauqua, N ;Y. patience and tact. ROGER .RUSSEU Photographic Supplies I~~;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ OPEN PlUDAY EVENINGS DiLuzio and Sons ~ FLORIST CARN S· ~r R.qad. of l'lde· (QPper level) frum Rutgers Klngswood 3-0450 ~~~~~~I~IlIIII~m~ln~lIU~IO~I~lIlII~I~DlU~a~u~lnu~u~~ execute a contract and 2507 Chestnut St., Chester TRemont 2-5373 tumiah bonds. the form of whleb. ma, be leen the OffIce of the underaJirned. 'I'be Bol'naenes the right to walve any: informalIties ·In the bids received; to reJect any or all blda: to award the CODfor baby's every need tract only to tbose ezperleneed In this service benefit of claaa of work, and to the bidder whoa~ infant items. propoaal 1B deemed to be the moal ad.vantageous to the public f.n.tereat. ~ar.N"""Oaft - Aled. &eDIt., Cbroalc COD:,ahscent. MeD &ad WODleD B.tceUeal ..... - Spa'" 0 ....... DIu. Cro.. Fonond SADIE PIPPlN TURNER. Proprietor RICHARDSON, Borough Secretary ESTATE NGTICE Estate of LUCY E. HANNUM, deceaaed. Letters Testamentary on the abQ.ve Ea- '0. : § ~~~;'.;;~~~ Jack P.richard ~= _ 'mer or WOl'k. PA I NT I N G ;I"........ 8< EXTERIOR Ii Free Estimates ~ INTERIOR :ro:nnllDg at Studios .the Dance, Swarthmore. Transportation available. Payable lesson. Dial KIngswood 301' LEhigh 2-3959. PERSONAL _ Have a .probleln finding baby sitters? Call Judy KI d 3 5068 sum- Daltry at. FnOgsRwSooAL R - . for r.search .. KJngswood I .x;.~28i2,i~~be~fO~re~41F.~E!~;i!~£~~~~:~~i~fJis, John Edward G. Chipman ~derand Son same. ~~E~~g~~;~~ j tate ~~~~~~~~~~ I,:I,~~:~~e;.of - have granted to the haV!Dg signed, wbobeen reQ.uest all persons claims or demands against of the decedent to make knownthe the Eatate and all persons indebted to the decedent to make payment, Without· detay. to David A. Hannum and. Edward. E. HanDum, Executors. or to Edmund Jonea. E3qulre, Attorney for the FULb Street, Cheater. Pa. Estate, as3t-e-ID East ~ttUIIIIIIIIKDIlwuHfllannuIIIIIIDllllHllUllIlHRIIIIIIITDIIP,,_~ iii DRIVEWAYS and !i 1_=_ PARKING AREAS BUlL f and RESURFAOED !iI ~ General Contractor BUILDERS 'Since 1920' . ~ §= brand n.w and for less than ;So ~ Block Work Siono Worl: § .; Please call Klngswood 3-1808. Doni Rlnoa.bl, 51 = FOR SALE - Empire sofa, good ~ i ~ ho.,se!,old duti.s, one in condition, ;15. Rugs, 100 per iil Call MAdison 6-3675 iii Klngswood ~-87~1 Ii live in. Box R, The Swarthmor.an. wool, reversible, autumn color- = 0 a WANTED - College girl desires 'handmade; braided by Penn- ~nDuallulillmIIlHllllrwnuDuIIllIUIDlIDHJUIIICi~ !!! Ei daytime baby sitting. Call KIngsbraiders (Liebeskind), &n'DlwmumauU)Il111UDnuIIDlIUDlllllllllwallllllll~ wood 3-3263. 9x12 and Hx17. Exc.llent I.II$T AID FOliO Phone LOw.1l 6-7275. LOST - Will the person who picked up short white coat from Established Swarthmore auditorium after Monday commencement please return 29 E. Fifth Street to owner? Mrs. A. W. Lippincott, I Belvedere Convalescent Home person to whom the cootract ta awarded ELLIOTI' pUIIIIIIIDHlmmwnrulllllwIDWWUWI"DlHllagl, 51 . = iii .. squa.re yards ..wc:.~rk'91l1'~'llW accordance· with _I -shall I~ lit Baltimore PIke Sprfndlelcl, DeL Co~ I'a. ~ $0 addlUonlLl ~e iDJme,ddt!.~a;~..~· ::~~~;'~=t1'~ AveauQ tQ Part Avenue surfaces amounUngIn In all to 8] TILE FLOORS· PLAnlC TILE FORMICA IOUITER TOPS ROOFINa and SID II a CUSTOM KITCHEIS ADDITIONS. AL TERATIOIS Fr.1 Eltllla'" 1401 Ridley Avenue Chester, Pa. . ~ TRemont 2-4759. TRemont 2-5689 SWEENEY &. CLYDE 1858 . TReNont 4-631 1 Oldest Real Estote and Inlurance Firm in Delawar~ County Specializing in Prordrtiel in Swarthmore, Wallingford. Rose Valley ond Media Area. CUSTOM IISTALLATIOIS . , J. Ed.ard CI,d. Ho D. CHURCH 5....11 O. Cl,dl, Jr. S.mall D...,tie aeor,1 Plo•••• I PARK AVE.,.sWARTHIlORI 4-2:127 .812 -IIBB . Wlll!th;l~fi~i~~~~~~~; h uIl)dian Prinered r'¥f, named' LOST -Reward. Girl's l\4 bICy'"I., c.ss.' Phone K1nlfSWood 'I~ \.'---1Bo1li,....• • •-...~r--""'; DAY alii! N1GII1' OIL BURNER SERVICE MONDAY TBBU SATURDAY . NOON 81lNDAY8 &IIIlHOLIDAY8 Klngswood .... 1234 ... 1.... SWARTHMORE SWARTHMORE New split level home on established tree-lined street; COLONIAL BRICK Also on drawing board a lovely Ranch Home being Attractive house on Thayer Rqad. Large center hall, living rOQm with firepl~qe, dining· room, breakfast room and ~itc~en Of! first floor; ,3 lorge ~edrQoms, 2 tile ~aths plus maid's room and ~ath on second floor; 2 bedrooms and bath on Jhird. Recreation room in basement. 2-car garage. Beautifully landsc~ped. designed for tre9 lot in established much sought D. PAi." 409 Da.lmouth AvenM aftc~ location. , Police and Fire Ne'ws to hear_ven at their high sobool --------:comm.nc.m.nt- of the financial crisis which has been brought to this community as a result of the To the Residents of Swarthmore edncational system through ""hic!> Rutledite: they have just paased. It also does Your school system will begin not hurt this "captive audience" to another fiseal year July 6, when hear of the problem, to realize that new budget, and tax schedule to a crisis may be at hand and that I 'UIPPOrt I·t, wl·II take effect. II the maintenance of our public· . You may: ·be interested in some 1 schools at even tileir present re a- of the .problems your School Board tive level is not a foregone oConcluI f,.~". in formulating the budget, sion. the policies it follows in me.tYou may recall that my opening ing th.m. remarks-of which you also did Certai;' characteristics of our not approve-were addressed jointare outstanding in this r.Iy to the class and to the audi.nc. . and consumed' a:oo>roximately two 1. Education has well been call~d minutes. I nextspok. directly to only "industry." We' have trathe ~Iass for about two minutes in ditionally attracted families seekcomm.nting on one of the .xcell.nt ing good public sohool. for their points made by Mr. Carroll. From that .point, I sp.nt the next six min_ 2. 'Manufacturing and other po_ utes explaining .the budget. No at-' ...nti.al h sourc.s of tax revenue ave tempt Was made at justification-I I' simply told how the total of n.arIy been excluded. • h 3. Our populatIOn,il thoug DC$1.200,000 would be spent and from. I "IoJJJ'in,A: od t. " homes genera y m es m ·what sources it would come. Final• "'T' n, a high children-p.r" ly, the laBt five minute. w.r. con- I{,.mily . AI II th -'-.1 ratio. most ha I esc ""I sumed in posing the Beriol\s prob- I' lem which faces this ..,bool district lo,·en attend public sc 00 from age tbrough 17. in attempting. to reconcile its eduly 28 4. Assessm.nts average on ..tional appetite with its financial ·~"bilities. N 0 ~ was made for IPElfc,oot of market value. I"h ~ position. No support was solie- Sources of schoo·11revenue te o. er any d ited for School Board or other than real .state ml age areI n ing to I!!\,el. off. or decreas.. neam. vie...... _ - . .. ... .. . . tuition pupils is diminishing iThis is hardly "School Board h I I t· our own SC 00 IPOPU a Ion propaganda." Certainty, it is not I "I'OW'S. The rate of reimbursement sp ecial pleading or party ,politickh.. the State has reac ed Its m8Xline-. ThiB was clearly an attempt to I':;7taunder pres.nt law. Our per bring to tbe attention of those pre-I. and real estate tranafer taxsunlably most interested in the subt th· I I r ·t It· are a elr tegtah [':'" t·h . IS jeot the reason for the sha"P tax I::::'~~ apparen aIDe 1mincrease and the serious chall.ng. future .the real estate tax to our educational .standards thus furnish an incr.asing .percent-r···ted. ' of total revenu•• The Board finds that its finanYou have mentioned and we have long been conscious of the inade.. resource are incompatible with qu"';y of the School Board's public many requests for special school relations. This problem is madel ••,rvic•• coupled with rising costs more difficult by our policy of do- in ev.ry area of our educational ing praetically all our business in Gpen, public meetings, thus making The principles and policies we the prior preparatIon of public adopted to m.et this Bituation statem.nts next to impossible. In .b. summarized as follows: the tim. avail..ble to us, we cer1. W. beli.ve the quality of intainly have demonstrated little to b. of ,first importance, competence in ,public relationB. We apply Our funds accordingly. have relied, probably to too great 2. Buildings and equipment ade• d.gree, on the very able reporting for anccessful teaching must in the .public press -notably tit. made available at low.st pos'jSwQ.rthmor~anJJ--e<)upled with the eost. sYmpath.tic und.rstanding of those 3. Services essential to the basic Who take the trouble to attend our uf our sehools must be meetings. Perhaps tIi. compl.tion of our building programs and the 4. Our entire educational prorelated decline in the Urgency of iB subject to contin.ued critisome of our educational p!'C)blems examination. Sumstions for Will permit us the necessarY tim. changes are. thoroughly considered and .nergy to improve OUr public in th'lIght of th.ir relativ. valueB. relations in the future .. In· the ill6. W. make ev.ry effort to avoid • terim, however, the surest solution unnecessary expenditures and to lies in the poasibility of increased obtain materials and services at attendance at our lneetings by in- minimum ~o.t. terested individuals, like yourself, 6. We establish a budget in acWho have the ability and desire to cordance with these principles to llnd1!rstand the various actions tak.n by tbe Board and to explain those actions to their fri.nds and usa- It would seem that Patrolm.n P.terMcGinnis and Stanley She.panski exercised more than an ounce of prevention when they picked up a youth at the southeast corner of Chester· road and Yale aVenue at 12:60 8.m. Wednesday. Carrying a Buites... containing a 15· h kn.f rifle, rope, ~InC 1 e, saw, screwdriver, gloves, adhesive tape and five box.s Of ammunition as w.1I as a sawed-off shofgun soparately wrapped in brown paper, the youth bore birth certificateB and working papers of Gerry C. Lutz, 17, and Bobby Joe Lutz, 20. He said he was the form.r and the other was his brother. He stated he 'had been living at a Wilmington, Del., hotel for the past six weaks after having lost a job as a labor.r in his home town, Bridgeport, Conn. The lad told polic. h. had walk- am ~ that I ha~ 80_. JY~ Opposite Ioro Hall HOW otRiSTIAN WFIL .... _ II" LII, l1lb:ieet ~.~.~'~ ilandled could betterl!ertainl:r a1thouatahave anyIIeeol at.- I,_~.~~I~I~I=W~~~!n:~~I~I.. I meet the .ducational standards of this District and the requirem.nts of State law. ThiB year a total of 62 mills (an increase of eight ov.r last year) i. required to m.et our n.eds. ()f this, five mills repre... ntB the annual' rental for the re-built high school. We trust the people of Swarthmore and Rutledge will support our endeavor to maintain a superior public school system. The Board of Directors, Swarthmore-Rutledg. Union School District. Donald P. Jones David J. Vint Marion C. Campbell John F. Spenc.r Carl D. Anderson Samuel T. Carpent.r W. N.wton Ryerson DONALD P. JONES my UsedtatYiour finddigniff~tioltn bdy 'robP·:.. on a a . ICU an P en ably disagreeabl. problem to an at.tentiv. audi.nce. I ani also sorry that I may· have caused Your rEiSentment ov.r my opening remarks ?r. pemaps, '1!IY.later ones concernlilt teadteni;-'BaladeS. This latter ·BAIRD and Klnqswood 4:1500 have aggravated your problem (Continued from Page 6) aince it might have extend.d my chall.nges which tfece us; and in I..,m,srl{a to the full thirty minutes IYIY judgment, this is espeeially true which you have so generously actoday. Less than a week prior to me. Commencement the !jehool Board How.ver, after carefully reviewadO'Pted its budget for the next ing the substanc. of my remarks school year including a real estate my own mind, and after receivtax increase of .ight mills. T·his in- ing the opinions of others who atcrease in millage to 62 mills is a Commencement and who matter of vital and justifiabl. con- were also p.rsonally involved in it, cern to many taxpayers in this find little that I would ~hange. school district, including many par- I can only say that i~ w. in Swarthents ,of children .of school age. To have reach.d the point ",here many of our citiz.ns, tbe... conti.nu- we resent being called upon to face ally incr",sing taxes raise the very up ·to the financial problemB rereal question of wh.ther they can from oUr spending of .public afford to remain reBldents of this on the on. hand and on the community - whether the Jev.1 of if we have lost the ability to educational quality achi.ved is laugh at ourselves, it is late inworth the. cost! deed I This may bea matter of small Very truly yours, ciaAtesga.,.n, I • Iternpt to do &0 would probably alm- School BoardSlatement LOwell 6-2176 Sealed bid, wm be received ill couDell Chamber. 121 Park Avenue, 8warthmore. P •. , on July 13th. 1168. at 1:30 P.M.• Leffers to fe/itor . concern to yOU. In my opinion, however, it does not hurt our children InDT.Q'~ STATE .. MONROE ST8. JllEDI& Pormerly 2H-Il ~lIWUUIWaUDIllmllam!U"'n'DruWllWfaululUllllaUllrr ~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~ iiiI " be aeen at the of the Ul1derllg~ed. A certIfIed check or bid bond lor $2OO.oq shall accompany the ble.". and the firm 0" 113:81177. TRemont 2-5487 a -51 iiig Piclure FramiRg REQUEST FOB. BIDS of applylng· a bltumlDou. . .url&ee to the concrete paving the e....t.· of aha ... 2906 Burdon Rood § Klngswood 3-0272 Pa:vUght Saving Tilne for fur. nbb~ th~ mat.eriab ~ eloin, ~ work CONTRACTOR Porbldo. Qate&, _ruJ 8urrolllllllnp W11b El card party at the Woman's Wednesday morning followed July 18, all or luncheon at her home. 'P aJ~~~'~;:c:~~~:u:~~ cottage On Casco Judy Jarratt, who graduated Diningl;'~~~i~~~~~;~~; Gutters Warm-Air Heating Air Conditioning Sheet Metal Work Pap' HORBAN ed around the Strath Haven Inn two weeks ago and had a taxi froin a Chester train drop him in front of the Presb'''~rian Church Tues'~ day ·nlooht, saying he waB goolng to ·0 the Inn. How.ver, the police car waB at the Inn when h. atrived SO lb. walk.d to the corner where palie. Jater observed and investigated him. H. aaid his funds ')Vere getting low and he had been uaable to find work so he purchased the equipment found in ~th'-'sultease, thinking "sOmething !tad to be FOOD MARKET Consumer's Co-Op Ass'n. of Swarthmore, Inc. 403 Dartmouth A~enue Swift's Premium BONELESS Round·Roast Ib.93 c CHESTER ROSE Police also said th<\ boy had load- from where they fo~nd him. Hde said he decided he neeued a car an didn't know how to start one with. th • out a ~y. He did not deny elr Bupposltion that h. planned to commandeer one complete with driver. Be was turned over to juvenile authorities in Media. Chief Thomas B..teman, Sergeant William Weidner, Patrolman P.ter McGinnis, and Ra"dio Operator Joshua Hepburn upheld the borough's part in the successful county-wide police roadblock from 2 to 6 a.m. Saturday. The Fire Companyparticip~ted in a Sixth District drill at the Baptist Church, Brookhav.n, at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday of last week It manned the auxiliary generawr for the police radio when electric ~urrent was iI.isrupted in the central borough area in mid-afternoon on Monday due to a short circuit'eaused by a wind-toas.d hranch rubbing: wires togeth.r in a tree in front of the Frank Morey home on Yale avenue. Fines paid late last we.k were: Leroy O. Tomlinson, Crum Lynn., $10 for violation on FairvieW road ,May 17; Irvitlg Birnbaum, CIIester, $10 for driving too fast ~or road conditions at Baltimore plk. and Swarthmore avenue ·May 30; William Brown, Drexel Hill, for violating tralffic lights at Chester road and Fairview road on };'ebrn18, and James Hlgnutt, N.wDel., for traeovelling !"" fast at Dartmouth and um bla av.nues May 10. k A truck driven by James Broo s Union avenue, backing out of a station, lJtruck *nd bl'fall, entertained the new members of her committee at ,her Ha·rva·rd ave. nue home on June 8. Over coffee the following ladies considered new ideas for the Fair and' formed advance plans for its operation: Mrs. James Nelson, cochairman; M~5. Henry McCorkle, pre.fair; Mrs. William Campbell, fair days; M,rs. David Laird, cash and, carry; Mrs. Erwin R. Schmidt, Ipublicity; Mrs. Frances Bouda, magazines; -Mrs. Marshall Schmidt, encyclopedia. II SPRIIiI RECITAL Piano pupils of Ruth S. Duncan were presented in' their SPring Recital at Whittier House, Swoarth. more Campus, Sunday afternoon , June 14. f In their performance beiGre a capacity audience of parents and d'riends the students rendered a varied 'program of classical and contemporary selections. Those participating in the recital were Patricia Stamford, Beverly Bird, Margy Mclproy,AlJister Bell, Mark Davis, Claudia Coit, TrUdy McInroy, Jeannette Grier, Pat HoGd, Patricia· Wigton, Kathy Knob, Jennifer Bell. Susan Wigton, Joan Duncan and '-'Pessa" Wizon, aU of Swarthmore; David Williams, Victoria For. rest, Jeff Williams, Betsy Forrest . ".nd ,Keener Earle, all of' Jay HIJI WalJingford. ' .' Achievement .awards were· given to students Who fulfill 'certain reo quirements for ·the year~s 'Work. This award was presented to Susan Wigton, Keener' Earle, Tessa Wizon, Patricia Wigton and Mark Davis. PARENTS PLAY, TOO The pupils of Inez Chapman performed in recital on Saturday, June 13, at Whittier House. The following students partici. "ated: Susan Kulp, Gail Aveson, Dickie Daniel, Philip Fox, Debbie Sc~midt, Courtney Thomson, DotLt. Col. Clyd'e B. Pyle of Havertie Daniel, Anne Michel, Andy Sherwood, Betsy Burtis, Martha ford place leaves this 'Sunday for C eight weeks in .the west where he hapman, Larry .Burnett, Janet Fox, Betsey Atkins, 'Mimi Connor, will visit his son and daughter-inTimothy Ryerson, son of Mr. and N ancy Field, Jackie, Scutt', Julie iaw Mr. and iI'rs. Robert S. Pyle ~ Mrs. W. N. Ryerson, 205 Elm ave- Enterline, .Frank Chapman, Andy in Los Angeles. He will then travel nue, received a' degree from Dart- Fox, Marianne Burtis' an.d Patty t~ N.y. Whitney and Yosemite .Namouth College, Sunday morning. Baird. • tional Park where he will join' a Ryerson, a graduate rJf .Swarthmore A I t f h' party for saddle-pack trips. He High School, completed the first nove par 0 t e reCItal were I the duets in which parents played pans to do Half-dome, riding and year of abo t~o.year m~stebrs .pro- with their children. The parents hiking to the top; hiking at Crater gram. com In usmess . t 'mmg courses' 'th . w h a t 00k .par t were M rs. J 0 h n K u Iip, Lake and then on to Vancouver, d mmls a. ration WI Fourses III en- M d Mrs. Ca I r B.C.' Lake (l'HaraI B an ff an d . d"d t r. R'IC hard Sh erwoo, gmeerlUg. He serve as preSI en Atk' M GI ' . S 'D H .Lake Louise" Alts . . ms, rs. enn cutt, r. 0, a n d a t wo- d ay REBISTER FOR SUMMER MUSIC of the AtlPdhah Chhl Rbo f~hate~nt'ty, ratio Enterline, Mr. Fred Michel pack trip to Mt. Assiniboine. Monday, June 22 - 9 A.M. to Noon represen e t e ouse on ... e 10 ra- a d M F k Ch fraternity council, was a member of n r. ran apman. Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. /Taylor, RliTGERS INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL the crew team, the Rowing Club, 515 Cornell avenue, will move the Sessians June 22 • July 30 and the college glee club. RECITAL LISTS ORIBINALS ~atter ~art of this month to reside ROBERT HOLM. reacher Michael HU1'd, a graduate of Piano students of Robert Keigh- m LeVIttOwn, N.J. School Wonders "What Swarthmore High, received a Bach- wn held a recital in his home on 11f-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;;;!;!!!!!;;;!;~;;;!;~!!!!!;;;!;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;~g Wednesday, June 10. (lriginal comPrice Public Relations?" elor "f Arts Degree in History at positions as well as standard class. (Continued from Page 1) Dartmouth College. He was vice ies were included in the program. Ie" York the School Board to discuss ways president of the Delta Tau Delta 'SolveigSeltzel' played the Brahms Philadelphia Su FrlDelleo in which the Association might be fraternity and a four· year mem- Lullaby. Sabbat.hMorn, from Hayannounces its helpful. bel' of the lacrosse team. He is the dn's String Quartet, (lp. 77, No.2, Alfred Boyd and Mrs. Colin Bell son of Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Hurd rJf was performed -by Frankie Carruth. SPECIAL SUMMER PROCSAM reported respectively for the physi- ·Media. David Spackman played ·the Rondo lor adults and stur/ents cal education and art-music sub-. Robert Bailey_ Warden, son 01 from the Mozart Sonata in A Ma.. DEVELOPMENTAL READING committees of the Lay Advisory Mr. and ·Mrs. Warren B. Warden, jor, K. aoo, and Chorale by ,David 731 Yale avenue, received the de- Spackl\lan. Kirk Nevius played a . Committee on Curriclum. Studem Rltl. Read Better •• Flst,r Physical education recommenda. gree of Bachelor of,-Science in Engi- waltz by Schu~rt and Impromptu • Individual- Instruction • Comprehension • Ratio tions, confined strictly to the cour- neering at ,Princeton University's by Kirk Nevius. . • All Laboratories Are • Study Skill. •. Concentration seg held within the formal sellool commencement exercises. Tu~sday The ~onatina in G Major.by LudAir·Conditioned hours included: continuation of the morning, June 16. Be was elected wig Beethoven was rendered by Da~ For further information on -How To Imprpva Your. Re~ding current four ,perioJs per week but w Phi Beta Kappa and received a vid Roberts, who. followed it with Write or Phone ••. The Rladlng Laboratory devoting one of these to be remed- scholastic achievement. award of his own composition, Melody. An2024 Loealt Str•• t . ial work; strengthening the health the American Institute of. ChelJlical other. Beethoven selection was Fur Phlladllphia, Pa, .. Box W program by requiring textbooks and Engine.ers, New Jersey ·Section. Elise, played by E. G. Spaekman. LOeult 8·4481 assigning homework; consideration William Roland Brown, son of ~. G. offered two of her own com"f combining two periods pel' week Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. BroWn, 117 positions, Gesang and Arpeggio in ':~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ for part of .the school year; improve Wallingford drive" Wallingford, D Minor. I drainage and turf of areas "used received -an Associate in Science Mr. l{eighton.cODcluded the pro-. "You Meet the Nicest People at Speare Bros." for p.hysical education, and investi- Degree in General Studies. from gram with six composi-tions by and gate long.term lease of adjoining ·Mitehell ·College in New London, Frankie Oarruth: Invelltion, ArSwarthmore College pr"perty along Conn., "n June 8. p~ggio at .the Sea, Caprice, Fan"They Do Sell Nice Things at Speare Bros." railroad. Martha Calhoun, -daughter of· Dr. tasia, Improvisation, and Scherzo. .. Art recommendations were: con- and Mrs. John Alfred Calhoun of The musicaL program was followed centrate efforts of the' senior high Elm avenue, was graduated magna by refreshments. school teacher on grades 9, 10 1 11, cum laude by Carleton College on ~i"""";~!!!!!!!!!!!!~:,!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!jI and 12, hiring a part-time teacher June 8. ,She. had ,been' awarded a ru for grades 7 and 8, and permitting Fulbright .'Fellowship for one year •• J alneS E. Gainor to function en- of graduate study in German literA non-profit, mutual entirely in the elementsry schools; atUl'e at the Free University of terprise for the benefit of increase 'periods to double the pres. Berlin. She was. recently elEicted families. residing in Swarthent time even if only held every W Pbi .Beta Kappa and is a memo more and neighboring com~;:;;: ~ - SEVEN1B AND WELSH STB.EBT8 other week; emph;'size creative ber of the Mortar Board. She has munities. For information :work more than technicalities and been elected permanent secretary as to lois 'apply to STORE HOURS: Monday thru Th ....day, 9:30.5:30 crafts; utilize the new art room as of the 1959 class. ,She has ·been an ALBERT N. GARREn Friday. 9:30.9:00, Saturday. 9:3015:30 soon and as broadly as possible; in- "fficel' of the Carleton Student AsPresident and Burine.. Mllr. clude in. ,the budget a manually- sociation, the glee club, the ski 228 Garrett Ave. KI 3·0489 operated slide projector and begin- club, and has served as chairman of Swarthmore, Pa. ning aworking library of slides and numerous campus social event5. THE READING LABORATORY Easllawn Cemele • C..... art books. Music recommendations stressed that this subject be regarded as a regular academic part of .the curriculum, be given independent credit and graded separately instead of along with English as currently; that one -period a week be required in grades 7 through HI. mirrored in fashion Bake Sale The Women's Auxiliary of Notre Dame de Lourdes is sponsoring a Bake Sale on Saturday, June 20 be· ginning at 9 a.m. Tihe sale is being held at the entrance to Martel's ~arket on Chester roo·d. Mrs. Paul Duke .of Blackrock Toad, is in cha!ge of the eve~t. Rose Valley Nurseries, Inc. Middletown Road - Media, Pa. Opposite High 'Meadow (between Dutton Mill Road and Knowlton ROOc)) • CUSTOM LANDSCAPE WORK. Friendly Sound Advice - FREE SHADE TREES - • SHRUBS Flowering Trees, Rhododendrons, . ., .. ~ 7:30 A.M•• 5:00 .' - the summer preference for everything cool. the continued liking for ease of care . . . all, seen in the loveliest of lingerie. Choose from our Lauret P.M. Daily' and Saturday .. Sunday: 12:30 - 5 P".M. • *where Are you wondering' to have that /.re- Lingerie Dep't, your summer "pretties." Speare scription compoun ed? May we suggest that you bring it to this profes- , siGDal pharmacy where, cialty? Our ample st~Cks assure prompt s.ervlce. And YGu'\l appreCIate our fair prices. Try us! . Klngswood . 3-0586 .. Bros. prescription! are a spe- CATHERMAN'S DRUG STORE.. Telephone TRemont 2-7206 Ask ,for BEN PALMER the reflection of the !'lew trend to prettiness, • BABY DOLLS " • DUSTERS • PAJAMAS • CAN~CANS • SLIPS • SCUFFS • GOWNS • PANTIES " • PETTICOATS "Summer's Reflections . . - You in Care-Free Lingerie" ( . Many Famous NameS to Choose From Celebrate the 4th of July in Swarthmore , Celebrate the 4th of July in Swarthmore THE SWARTHM ... . , JUN 26 1959 $4.00 PER YEAR- Swar,thmore, Pa., FriclaY, June 26, 1959 Summer School Glasses Lisl High Enrollmenl New T ec;hnique Classes in Reading Skills Early Deadline The Swarthmorean will be publishen on Thursday next wee~, due to the 4th Gf July falling upGn Saturday. The deadline will be NGon, Tuesday. in Effect The Swcirthmore Public library will be open on Friday mGrning, only, July 3, from 9:30 until 12 Noon. The Library will be . ciGsed all day on Saturday, July 4. . The Library's summer hours will go in eHect July 6 tG continue thrGugh Labor Day. Start· ing July 6, the Library will be open on: Mrs. Colin Bell Chairs . Lasl Parents CounciJ Discussion Covers Major Parent-School Problems Mrs. Edward' H. Pyle, 2nd, became chairman of the Parents' Council of the Swarthmore Schools at the annual meetipg early this month' at Rutgers A venue School. The Garnet Canteen will open Mrs. Colin Bell, retiring chair~an. as a Summer Canteen Wednesday presided over the meeting in the evening, July 1, at th~ Tl'inity MGndays. 2·5, 7-9 P.M. lI efficient and diplomatic way" for Church at 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. It will Wednesdays 2-5, 7-9 P.M. which she was commended by the be held every Wednesday evening group at the close of the meeting. through July. Fridays, 2·5, 7-9 P·.M. Mrs. John Carroll was named Those eligible w attend ar~ all vice-chairman,. :Mrs. Robert Grogan members of the Swarthmore High secretary and Mrs. Edmund Jones School, grades 8 to 12, and all ! treasurer. The new officers received high school-age Swarthmore resieXipressions of· goodwill from the dents; all members of tbe Nether members of the council. Providence High School, grades 9 Industrial Relations Prof. to 12; all Swarthmore people that Mrs. Ben announced' the Book Cites '47-'57 Fair COJIImittee for 1959 as follows: are college age besides approved- . by-the-committee friends of these Findings Mrs. John D. deMoll and Mrs. eligibles. Park Ave. Man, Commander Professor Waldo E. Fisher ad- James Nelson, co-chairmen; Mrs. It is a tentative plan to 'have USNR, Was Chairman dressed the 20th Anniversary Com- Jones, treasurer; Mrs. Henry Medancing for the 8th to 10th grad· of Faculty memorative Symposium of the In- CorkIe, pre-fair; Mrs. William ers in the large basement room dustrialRelations Section of the Campbell and Mrs. Charles Gerner, '(8th graders mean this ·past year's Dr. Mathews M. Jopnson, Park California Institute of Technology fair days; Mrs. William McInroy, 8th grader~ and sO 011 through the avenue, has been appointed to th~ last night in Los Angeles. He spoke :post-fair; Mrs. David Laird, cash grades), and to have card table newly-created post of Provost of on the subject "Wages and.IrifIa- and carry; Mrs. Erwin Schmidt games, bridge lessons plus more Pennsylvania Military College, ation:uAn Appraisal". Dr. Fisher's and Mrs. Frank Walters, publicity; dancing for the older group in the Chester. discussion was based on an an alr- Mrs. Francis J. Bouda, magazines: adjoining room, using ,the same As provost, he will he the chief sis of wages, profits' and prices in Mrs. John Espenschade, Christmas amplified music for h<>th. The 11th le(lucati.onal officer of 'the college American industry during the dec· cards ; Mrs. Marshall Schmidt, enand .12th graders would be permitsupervision over h<>th the day ade ending iIi 1957 and considered cyclopedias; Mrs. Daniel L. Goldted to circulate in either room. evening' colleges and the In· '1,"sl;b Foote, Torrey JGh~ still a few vacancies in al~.grouPs .. an~ articl;s left over and un- Mahlon had averaged 70 miles per scholarship w Valley. Fol'It'; Mili- O'Neill, MaI;k Beardsley, Carroll, Those interested m.y regIster at claImed, WIll be removed a~d seD!; day, including'tbe mountain areas tB;ry Schoolbaas a result of his WGrk Russ ;ewis, George Glaesser, Diek WIth the tu • Creasy, Filler, and Plel·son. the school, during recreation hounl. to some ch.. ritable organization. traversed. Draw With the beginning of the' summer season, summer school classes on a limited basis got underway in the Swarthmore-Rutledge Union School this week. Beginning on Monday morning, Robert Holm had his instrumental music classes or.. ganized at the Rutgers Avenue School; Mrs. Erma Foley began typewriting classes in the instrumental music room of the High : School; six rooms of the Junior high schoGI were being used for summer Developmental Reading , Program under the direction of Dr. Ethel Maney of the County Superintendent of Schools Office. An unusually large number of musicians have enrolled with Mr. Holm for the six weeks instrumental music program. So far the enrollment has reached 90 pupils. A number of ·these have their own instruments, but Mr. Holm has ar· ranged for them to rent, for a very nominal fee, an instrument if they wl.h to take beginning lessons and he als<> advises a limited number of school instruments are avail..ble. The enroliment of 80 in the typing classes in t~e three periods each morning have .pressed Mrs. Foley's equipment. It has been nec~ssary for her to arrange to rent addition.al typewriters for the summer so -that all who wish this valuable experience have machines and in(Continued on Page 8) Summar Canleen Will Open Wed. at Trinity PMC Names Johnson To New Provost Post Dr. Fisher Addresses Cal Tech Symposium Have Bass _ No Travel I Have Owners Will Serve vi, , • SVTa r(thrnore Coller,e- Library . INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE THE Page 10 Knee-Hi League Schedule June 19. 1959 ~WA~THMOREAN In Reoital Graduates Committee Coffee Mrs. Jphn de Moll, chairman of the Elementary School Parent Council's Book Fait· due in the .fall, entertained the new members of her committee at ,her Ha'rval'd ave. nue home on June 8. Over coffee the following ladies considered new ideas for the Fair and fOl'med advance plans for its opel-ation: Mrs. James Nelson, cochait'man; Mrs. Henry McCorkle, pre-fair; Mrs. \ViIliam Campbell, fail' days; M,l's, David Laird, cash and· carry; Mrs. Erwin R. Schmidt, ,puhlici.ty; Mrs. Frances Bouda, magazllles;. 1\11'5. Marshall Schmidt, encyclopedia. -, III SPRIIIG RECITAL Emily Terry, daug.hter of Mr. Piano pupils of Mrs. Franklin Piano pupils of Ruth S. Duncan Over the last two weeks the and Mrs. Duane R. Terry, 503 N. S. Gillespie had their final music were presented in their Spring Swarthmore Knee-Hi league has Recital at Whittier House, Swarth_ Chester road, received the bachelor party of the year at her home on been rulling along quite well with more Campus, Sunday afternoon , of arts degree from Lake Erie Col- 'I~al'vard avenue June 15. Her pubut two postponements due to rain. '11e 0 Monday nlOlon 'Plts arc Susan and Peggy Spencer, · June 14. The league this year secms to be Icge, P alnCSVI , ", ing. She spent the winter term of ~at and ~eggy Carroll, Rochelle In their performance before a even better balanced than its iniher junior yeur at the University 1oung, Lo.IS Roberts,. Gene Cour~­ capacity audience of parents and tial beginning last year, and each of CO(Jcnhagen, Denmark. Miss ney, Jamce DetweIler, Connie Ifriends the students rendered a team has shown marked improveTCITY has accepted a position with Chamb~l's, Pat Sheppard and Har\'al'ied program of classical and ment in hall playing ability and Erie YWCA as director of its teen ley Stem. contemporary selections. general know-how. Two games Those participating in the recital have ended in ties and, for the rnost program. PARENTS PLAY, TOO were P,utricia Stamford, Beverly Donald F. Harley, 313 Purk avepart, aU have been closely contestThe pupils of Inez Chapman perBird, Margy McIfll'OY, Allister Bell, nue, l'eceived the degree of B.S. in ed. formed in recital 011 Saturday, ~"lal'k Davis, C1audia Coit, Trudy Business Administnltion from 1'his year, rather than showing June 13, at 'Vhittier House. McInroy, Jeannette Grier, Pat standing of each league division and Drexel Institute of Technology, The following students particiHood, Patricia \Vigton, Kathy PhHadelphia, ml Saturday, June 13. percentages, a point system will be pated: Susan Kulp, Gail Aveson, Sandt'a Jean Milne, daughter of Knob, Jennifer Bell, Susan Wigton, . used so that a tealll will recei ve Dickie Daniel, Philip Fox, Debbie Joan Duncan and Tessa Wizon, all .two points for a game won, one Mrs. Jean Milne, 12 Pal'k avenue, Schmidt, Courtney Thomson, Dotreceived a degree of bachelor of Lt. Col. Clyde B. Pyle of Haver. of Swarthmore; point -for a tie, and no points for tie Daniel. Anne Michel, Andy arts for work in elementary educaford place leaves this Sunday for David 'Villiams, Victoria For. a loss. Sherwood, Betsy Burtis, Martha tion at the. Allegheny College, cumGarnes coming UI) arl' as follows: Chapman, Larr J' Burnett, Janet eight weeks in the west where he rest, Jeff 'Villiams, Betsy }i"orrest, Saturday, June 20: Dodgers vs. m~ncement, Meadville. Fox, Betsey Atkins, Mimi Connor, will visit his son and daughter-in~ Jay Hill ~nd Keener Earle, all of Timothy Ryerson, son of Mr. and Orioles, Rivcrvic\,.... Field: Braves Nancy Field, Jackie Scutt, Julie law :\Ir. and Mrs. Robert S. Pyle Wallingford. 1\1rs. \V. N. Ryerson, 205 Elm aveAchievement awards were- given vs. Indians, Riverview Field. Ent<'>l'line, Fl'ank Chapman, Andy in Los Angeles. He will then travel l\-!onday, June 22: Phillies vs. nue, l'(."Ceived a' degree fl'om Dart- Fox, Marianne BUl'tis and Patty to l\'!,.t. \Vhitney and Yosemite N a- to students who fulfill certain retional Park where he will join a quirements for the year's 'work. Yankees, Riverview Field; Cards mouth College, Sunday morning. Baird. ' RyerlSon, a graduate of .Swarthmore vs. Tigers, College Avenue. A novel part of the recital were party for saddle-pack trips. He This award was presented to Susan Tuesday, June 23: Indians vs. High School, completed the first the duets in which parents played ,plans to do Half-dome, riding and Wigton, Keener Earle, Tessa Phils, Riverview Field; Yankees yeal' of a two-year masters pro- with their children. The parents hiking to the top; hiking at Crater Wizon, Patricia Wigton and Mark gram combining courses in business vs. Dodgers, College A venue. who took part were Mrs.John Kulp, Lake and then on to Vancouver, Davis. adminish'ation with courses in enWednesday,. June 24: Dodgers 1\11'. Richard Sherwood, Mrs. Carl B.C., Lake O'Hara, Banff and gineering. He served as president vs. Tigers, Riverview Field; Orioles Atkins, Mrs. Glenn Scutt, Dr. Ho- Lake Louise~ Alta., and a two-day REGISTER FOR SUMMER MUSIC of the Alpha Chi Rho fraternity, vs. Ca.rds, College A venue. ratio Enterline, !\fr. }I'red Michel pack trip to Mt. Assiniboine. Manday, June 22 - 9 A.M. to Naon Thursday, June 25: Braves vs. represented the house on the intra~ and Mr. Frank Cha'pman. Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. 'Taylor, RUTGERS INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL Yankees, Riverview Fieldi Phillies fraternity council, was a member of 515 Cornell avenue, will nlove the the crew team, the Rowing Club, Sessions June 22 - July 30 vs. 'Orioles, College Avenue. RECITAL LISTS ORIGINALS latter part of this month to reside and the college glee club. ROBERT HOLM. reacher Piano stUdents of Robert Keigh- in Levittown, N.J. ~Iichael Hurd, a graduate of ton held a recital in his home {jn School Wonders "What Swarthmore High, received a BachWednesday, June 10. Original comPrice Public Relations?" elor of Arts Degree in History at positions as well as standard class~ Dartmouth College. He was vice ks were included in the program. (Continued from Page 1) lIew York the School Board to discuss ways president of the Delta Tau Delta Philadelphia Solveig Seltzer played the Brahms San Francisco in which the Association might be fraternity and a four-yeal' mem- Lullaby. Sabbath Morn, from Hayannounces its ber of the lacrosse team. He is the dn's String Quartet, Op. 77, No.2, helpful. Alfred Boyd and Mrs. Colin Bell son of 111 ... and Mrs. M. H. Hurd of was performed by Frankie Carrut-h. SPECIAL SUMMER PROCSAM reported respectively for the physi- Media. David Spackman played the Rondo for adults and students cal education and art-music subRobert Bailey Warden, son of from the Mozart Sonata in A iliacommittees of the Lay Advisory Mr. and Mrs. Warren B. 'Varden, jar, K. 300, ,and Chorale by David DEVELOPMENTAL READINC Committee on Curl'iclum. 731 Yale avenue, received the de- Spackman. Kirk Nevius played a Student Rates Read Better , , • Faster Physical education recommenda- gree of Bachelol' of Science in Engi- waltz by Schubert and Impromptu • Individual Instruction • Comprehension • Ratio tions, confined strictly to the COUl'- n~el'ing at Princeton University's by Kirk Nevius. • All laboratories Are • Study Skills • Concentration ses held within the formal school commencement exerci~es Tuesday The Sonatina in G Major by LudAir·Conditioned hours included: continuation of the morning, June 16. He was elected wig Beethoven was rendered by Da_ Far further information on Haw To Imprave Your Reading current four periods per week but to Phi Beta Kappa and received a vid Roberts, who followed it with W,;t. or Phone ••• The Reading Laboratory devoting one of these to be remed- scholastic achievement award of his own composition, Melody~ An2024 Locust Street ial worki strengthening the health the American Institute of_Chemical other, Beethoven selection was Fur Philadelphia, Pa, _Box W program by requiring textbooks and Engineers, New Jersey Section_ Elise, played by E. G. Spackman. LOoust 8,4481 assigning homework; consideration William Roland Brown, son of E. G. offered two of her own comof combining two periods per week MI'. and Mrs. Harry F. Brown, 117 positions, Gesang and Arpeggio in a:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~ for part of the school year; improve WallingfOl'd drive. Wallingford, D Minor. i' drainage and turf of Dreas used I'eceived an Associate in Science Mr. Keighton concluded the pro"You Meet the Nicest People Speare Bros," for physical education, and investi- Degree in General Studies from gram with six compositions by and gate long-term lease of adjoining Mitchell College in New London, Frankie Carruth: Invention, Arpeggio at the Sea, Caprice, FanSwarthmore College property along Conn., on June 8. "They Do Sell Nice Things at Speare Bros." raill'Oad. Martha Calhoun, daughter of Dr. tasia, Improvisation, and Scherzo. Art recommendations were: con- and Mrs. John Alfred Calhoun of The musicaL program was followed centrate efforts of the senior high Elm avenue, was graduated magna by refreshments. school teacher on grades 9, 10, 11, cum laude by Carleton College on and 12, hiring a part-time teacher June 8. She had bcen awarded a for grades 7 and 8, and permitting F'ulbl'ight Fellowship for one year A non-profit. mutual enJanies E. Gainor to function en- of graduate study in German litel'terprise for the benefit of tirely in the elementary schools; ature at the Free University of families residing in SwarthBerlin. She was recently e}(~cted increase periods to double the presmore and neighboring comto Phi Beta Kappa and is a mement time even if only held every ~iEi:~ (en .. munities. For information } - SEVEN;rH AND WELSH STREETS other week; emphasize creative ber of the Mortal' Board. She has as to Jots apply to work more than technicalities and been elected permanent secretary STORE HOURS: Monday thru Thursdoy, 9:30-5:30 of the 1959 class. She has been an crafts; utilize the new art room as ALBERT N. GARREn Friday, 9:30·9:00; Saturday, 9:3015:30 soon and as broadly as possible; in. officer of the Cal'leton Student AsPresident a.nd Business Mgt'. sociation, the glee club, the ski clude in the budget a manually228 Garrett Ave. KI 3-0489 operated slide projector and begin- club, and has served as chairman of numerous campus social events. Swarthmore, Pa. ning a working library of slides and art books. Bake Sale Music recommendations stressed The "romen's Auxiliary of Notre that this subject be regarded as a Dame de Lou rdes is sponsoring a the reflection of the new trend to prettiness, regular academic part of the CUr- Bake Sale on Saturday, June 20 bericulum, be given independent ginning at 9 a.m. T-he sale is being the summer preference for everything cool, the credit and graded separately in- held at the entrance to 1\rJ.artel's stead of along with English as cur- Market on Chester road. continued liking for ease of care . . . all, seen rently; that one period a week be M 1's. Paul Duke of Blackroek required in grades 7 through 10. road, is in charge of the event. In the loveliest of lin.gerie. Choose from our ------ I 1I i ,I ,I ,I I ;==============; , ' THE READING LABORATORY ,, ; i I I 1 at Eastlawn Cemetery • mirrored in fashion - Rose Valley Nurseries, Inc. , I ~ Middletown Road -Media, Pa. Opposite High Meadow (between Dutton MiD Road and Knowlton Road) • CUSTOM LANDSCAPE WORK Friendly Saund Advice - 2-7206 Ask for BEN PALMER SHRUBS Flowering Trees, Rhododendrons. Laurel , Are you wondering where to have that pre· scription compounded? May we suggest that you bring it to this profes ... sional pharmacy where, prescri ptions are & spe.. cialty? Our ample st~ck. assure prompt s.ervlce. And you'll appreciate our fair prices. Try us! FREE ,Telephone TRemont SHADE TREES - * Open 7:30 A,M. _ 5:00 P.M. Daily and Saturday Sunday: 12:30 - 5 P,M. CATHERMAN'S DRUG STORE, Klngswood . 3-0586 I lingerie Dep't, your summer "pretties." Speare Bros. • BABY DOLLS • DUSTERS • PAJAMAS • CAN-CANS • SLIPS • SCUFFS ·COWNS • PANTIES • PE7TICOATS "Summer's Reflections . . . - You in Care-Free lingerie" Many Famous Names to Choose From 8'lnrthno~'e Celebrate the 4th of July in Swarthmore SVI8 r,thmore Celebrate the 4th of July in Swarthmore THE SWARTHM ~ VOLUME 3I-NUMBER foS' Summer School Glasses List High Enrollment New Technique Classes in Co lleu(!' Li hrr.,ry Reading Skills Draw 'Vith the beginning of the summer season, summer school classes on a limited basis got underway in the Swarthmore-Rutledge Union School this week. Beginning on Monday morning, Robert Holm had his instrumental music classes organized at the Rutgers Avenue School; Mrs. Erma Foley began typewriting classes in the instrumental music room of the High School; six rooms of the Junior high schodl were being used for summer Developmental Reading Program under the direction of Dr. Ethel lIIaney of the County Superintendent of Schools Office. An unusually large number of musicians ,have enrolled with Mr. Holm for the six weeks instrumental music program, So far the enrollment has reached 90 pupils. A number of these have their own instruments, ,but ?tIr _ Holm has arranged for them to rent, fOf a very nominal fee, an instrument if they wish to take beginning lessons and he also advises a limited number of school insh'ument~ are available. The enrollment of 80 in the typing classes in the three periods each morning have pressed M1'5. Foley's «).uipment. It has been necessary for her to arrange to rent additional typewriters for the summer so that all who wish this valuable experience have machines and in(Continued on Page 8) JUN 26 1959 SII' ,\ . , Swarthmore, Pa., Frhtay. June 26, 1959 Early Deadline The Swarthmorean will be publishen on Thursday next weel.;,' due to the 4th of July falling upon Saturday. The deadline will be Noon, Tuesday. Summer Canteen Will Open Wed. at Trinity New Provost PMC wl'n MORE $4.00 PER YEAR' Li bra n/'IIoli Effect The Swarthmore Public library will be open on Friday morning, only, July 3, from 9:30 until 12 Noon. The Library will be, closed all day on Saturday, July 4. The Library's summer hours will go in effect July 6 to continue through Labor Day. Starting July 6, the Library will be open on: Mrs. Colin Bell Chairs Last Parents Council Discussion Covers Major Parent-School Problems Mrs. Edward H. Pyle, 2nd, became chainnan of thp. Parents' Council of the Swarthmore Schools at the annual meeting early this month} at Rutgers Avenue School. :\Il's. Colin Bell, retiring chairman, lu'csided over the meeting in the Mondays, 2·5, 7-9 P.M. "efficient and diplomatic way" for Wednesdays 2-5, 7-9 P.M. which she was commended by the group at the close of the meeting. Fridays, 2-5, 7·9 P.M. Mrs. John Carroll was named vice-chairman, ~Irs. Robert Grogan secretary and 1\lrs, Edmund Jones treasurer. The new officers l'e{!eived Mathews M. Johnson expressions of· goodwill from the members of the council. Industrial Relations Prof. ,M rs. Bell announced the Book Cites '47-'57 Fair Committee for 1959 as follows: Mrs. John D. deMolI and Mrs. Park Ave. Man, Commander Findings James Nelson, co-chairmen; Mrs. USNR, Was Chairman Professor Waldo E. Fisher addressed the 20th Anniversary Com- Jones, treasurer; Mrs. Henry Mcof Facu Ity memorative Symposium of the In· Corkle, pre-fair; ~Irs. \Villiam Dr. 'Mathews M. Johnson, Park dustl'ial Relations Section of the Campbell and Mrs. Charles Gp.rner, avenue, has been appointed to the California Institute of Technology fair days; Mrs. William :McInroy, newly-created post of Provost of night in Los Angeles. He spoke post-fair; n'lrs. David Laird, cash Pennsylvania Military College, the subject U\Vages and- Infla- and carry; Mrs. Erwin Schmidt Chester. ation : Ii An Appraisal", Dr. FishC!r's and I\1rs. Frank \Valters, publicity; As provost. he will be the chief Idiscllssion was based on an analy- Mrs. Francis J. Bouda. magazines; educational officeI' of 'the college·' of wages, profits -and prices in )1rs, John Espenschade, Christmas with supervision over both the day American industry during the dec· cards i Mrs. 1\Iarshall Schmidt, enand evening colleges and the In- ade ending in 1957 and considered cyclopedias; Mrs. Daniel L. Golddustrial Serviees Division as well. the implications of these finding water and ~h's. Bell, book orders. He will be responsible only to the in relation to the major problem Formal expression of appreciation was made to l\1rs. George Shoemak_ president of the college and the of inflation. er for her work as chail'man of the trustees. Dl·. Fisher is Emeritus Professor A professor of business admin- of Industrial Relations at the 'Vhar- 1958 fair. Mrs. Edward Conwell istration for the past 13 years and ton School of the University of and 1\1rs. Goldwater will succeed former chairman of the faculty at Pennsylvania. He has gained wide ~hs. Leroy Peterson and Mrs. PMC, Dr. Johnson assumes his new recognition in the field of indus- Frank Madcl' on the Book Fair disduties September I, when Dr. Clarrelations as' a teacher, from bursements committee. 1\Irs. Maurice 'Vebster, upon inenee R, Moll becomes PMC's first his research, and while serving yitation of the chaitman, expressed civilian president. with the government and in inrlus~ concern for mixing of classes. She Dr. Moll said Dr. Johnson had try. "demonstrated an awareness of the Tomort'ow Mrs. Fisher will fly to listed the following advantages of zeal for educational excellence," where she wiIJ join Dr. this policy: avoidance of social adding that he had been "a force Fishel' in Pasadena. They will cliques; facilitation of unavoidable in the educational growth of the spend the month of July vacation- mel'gel' in the seventh grade i benecollege the past several years." He ing in the 'Vest and in Canada. fits of a new group to shy children; feels that Dr, Johnson has the con- The Fishers live on Guernsey road. stimulation of new groups to frustrated leaders; benefits of frequent fidence and respect of the faculty~ change to new children in the com.. In addition to his duties as major munity. On the negative side Mrs. adviser to students majoring in ec· In reviewing the needs of the \Yebster admitted that some teachonomies, Dr. Johnson also has been High School instrumental music a member of the planning, library Ig:l'OllpS for the fall season, Director ers felt that "intact" groups were and curriculum and 'philosophy com- Robert Holm feels that the major easier to teach by fourth grade than (Continued on Page 5) mittees, and administrative council. recruiting efforts should be in the The Garnet Canteen will open as a Summer Canteen Wednesday evening, July 1, at the Trinity Church at 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. It will be held every Wednesday evening through July. Those eligible to attend a'-e all members of the Swarthmore High School, grades 8 to 12, and aU high school-age Swarthmore residents; all members of the Nether Providence High School, grades 9 to 12; all Swarthmore people that are college age besides approvedby-the-committee friends of these eligibles. It is a tentative plan to have dancing for the 8th to lOth graders in the large basement room '(8th graders mean this past year's 8th graders and so on through the grades), and to have card table games, bridge lessons plus more dancing for the older group in the> adjoining room, using the same amplified music for both. The 11th and 12th graders would he permitted to cil'culate in either rOom. . Admissions will be a quarter nightly with the Canteen member· ship card from this past season. Those without membership cards will sign in July 1. On July 8 all without cards must buy a membel'ship card for a token price to be ,pl-esented each night thereafter, besides paying the nightly fee. This Summer Recreation Staff h; to help 'defray smnmel' expen8e~ Lids Wide Train,ing, for a much smaller crowd and to identify oneself to the chaperons. Experience If there' is a continuing demand The staff for the Recreation fol' this Summer Canteen, it will Association ,pre-school and primary continue in August. program which opened Monday for There will be a need for fans to a six-week session at the Rutgers be brought in for the evening. Avenue Elementary School, is an- Anyone answering this can will nounced today by Mrs. Robblee, di- be admitted free and with great rector. A well rounded program of appreciation. games, music, arts and crafts, and The supervisor will be Anthony story telling is ·being offered in the Pinnie, the music will be handled week day sessions being held from by Rich Kent and Bill Biddle, the 9 a.m. to 11 :45 a.m. admissions by Bill Glaser and Bar_ The assistant teacher for the bara Bernhardt, the lemonade by Dr, Johnson graduated from m'ea of the Bass sections in both three-year-olds is Gretchen Robblee Ahigail 'Yal'nes. The chaperons Temple University in 1936 with a Band and Orchestra. HORNETS WIN 4-1 who attends Centenary College for will be IIh\ and Mrs. John Lorn. (Continued on Page 8) As a result of Sven Borei's gl'adLast Thursday evening the Women. Her high school helper is Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bloom and ,,""nn and Peter Bancroft's transSwarthmore RE':"creation ~ssocia­ Sue Gowing who is a senior at 1\Ir. and Mrs. Arthur Kent. Mahlon Boyer Bicycles' to Maine, the Band will be in tion's HOl'net baseball team won Swarthmore High School. 700 Miles for Vacation of two new Sousaphone play· 'a decisive victory ovel' Lansdowne Teaching the fours is Katherine Mahlon C. Boyer, 15 year old There is even a more acute Park's nine, 4-1, behind the exEaron, a graduate of Millersville son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Boyer of a String Bass player for pert pitching of 12-year-old George State Teachers College. Miss Eaton In the high school cafeteria, of Dickinson avenue, arrived Mon· Orchestra to replace Bette Gelll- \Velsh, George pitched his best has a B.S. in Education and teaches at Sabold School in Springfield. spread out on several long tables, day after traveling on an English mill, "a member of the Class of game to date, allowing few scattered hit.c::. Her helper is Nancy Gatewood, a arranged in orderly array, are bicycle to visit his grandparents, 195£). Holm pointed out that· it is a Fred Braund was the hitting junior next year at Swarthmore many deserted children's garments. Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Boyer, New ,hero, socking a resounding double "~ashington, Ind. He will spend the simple matter for a boy 01' girl I~c1uded are some athletic equipHigh. !;ummer on the 260 acres of farmwith piano background to acquire with the bases loaded, scoring three ment, miscellaneous rubbers, gloves Teaching the pre-kindergartners rudiments of String Bass play- runs. The other run was scored by is Margaret Mills, who has an A.B, all of them possessions left at the land, river, hills and forests which in Education from Catawba College school when the children departed were the original land grant to the ing. 'York during the summer pro- John Pierson after he walked, stole. Bover family from Andrew Jack- gram would equip them to partici- second and third, and came home' and Masters Degree in Social 'Vol'k for summer vacation. so~. Mahlon's joul'ney of 700 miles pate with the groups sometime dur- On a wild throw. Al Torrey, Vinny The custodians have arranged from Bryn Ma\vr. Her helpers are Carroll, Ronnie Hoge, and Rickie J. B. Robblee, junior at Lansdo\yne them in this convenience display led him for 22 miles along the old ing the Fall. The Sousaphone is usually con· Filler chipped in with some good High and Dorothy Prentice \vho so that owners as well as owners' unused towpath of the Chesapeake will be a junior at George School. .parents, may come and inspect the and Ohio Canal where he saw a side red to 'be a man's instrument all-around play. On Monday the team traveled to The post Kindergarten group is items, identify those which are variety of wild life including sev- and young men desiring to evidence being taught by Jeanette Small. theirs and take them home for use eral deer and a lal1ge black snake. such masculinity might find an in- Ridley Park to face the Parker Mahlon's trip rated a front page teresting challenge in this area. nine for the second time this seaMiss Small has a B.S. in Education at another time. story in the Hagerstown, Md., Piano is helpful but not necessary. son. The outcome was sad to the Any children or parents who defrom West Chester State Teachers daily, i:;:;ue of June 20, when he In all cases, the school will fur- tunC" of a 7 to 3 defeat. Despite College and teaches at'the Sabold sire to examine the lost and found School. Her assistant is Susie and to retrieve lost possessions c~n arrived there. E. 1\1. Dale, super- nish the instruments. Interested Wilson Buckley~~ efforts on the lIIarsh who will attend Mary go to the high school cafeteria via intendent of the C. and O. Canal) parties may register for the Sum- mound, the Swarthmore team cou!d the entrance by Miss Allen's office was quoted as commenting that mel' Music program at the Rutgers not get its defense clicking and Washington College in Virginia. had quite a bit of difficulty hitting Teaching the primary grades is any weekday morning between the Mahlon's trip is the first bicycle Intermediate S~hool. journey ever I'eported over that Both the Brass and the String the opposing pitcher. hours of 8 :30 and 12 noon. Because Mrs. Peter Braun, Yale avenue. portion of the towpath (between Basses are alway~ in demand both Hits by Jim Foley, Welsh. Mrs. Braun has a B.S: from Syra- of the crowded conditions due to Hancock and Cumberland, Md.). in high school and later in college Braund, and Buckley went to no cuse University and teaches' at the builders' equipment on the front Parker Farms School, Wallingford, part of the lot it will be necessary The towpath route saved Mahlon life. Both Sven and Bette enjoyed avail as only three runs could be Conn. Her assistant is Nancy Gow- to drive around back and park be- pumping his vehicle up fivp 1ll0un- unusual musical experiences with mu~tered. Others who saw action . the District and State festivals dur- for Horace Renshaw's and Hub , ing who attends Denison Univer- tw~en the gymnasium and the In- talns. Upon his safe arrival at his Ining their high school years and Hartman's nine were Jim Hunter, sity and is majoring in education. dustrial Arts Shop. After several weeks of display, diana destination Monday night'l:c~~~:,;,~:~a~.s~Drecent1y awarded a full Hoge, Bob Foote, Torrey John Mrs. Robblee announces there are to Valley Forge MiIi- O'Neill, Mark Beardsley, Carroll, still a few vacancies in alII groups. any articles left over and un- Mahlon had averaged 70 miles per day, including the mountain areas School as a result of his work Russ ~ewis, George Glaesser, Dick Those interested may register at elaimed, will be removed and sent Cr~asy, Filler, and Pierson. 'he traversed. the tuba~ the school during recreation h6urs. to some charitable organization. Dr. Fisher Addresses Cal Tech Symposium PMC Names Johnson To New Proyost Post Have Bass - No Travel Have Owners --- Will Serve Page 2 FETE TOMORROW'S BRIDE R. Hanna, brother of the bride; Mr.. IJeffrey Wilks, Wayne; M·r. Robert Mrs. Edward M. Bassett, the Berdow Malvern' Mr. RonaldE. Misses Katharine and Elizabeth Onora~, Plainville, Conn.; Mr. lIassett, ~nd ~r. and ~r8. Walter Thomas K. Eby, and Mr. Robert M. SchmIdt WIll entertam at a pre- Creamer, Lancaster; Mr. Howard wedding brunch tomorrow at the B. Cates, Jr., Wilmington, and Mr. hom~ of Mrs. Bassett, North Ches- Robert Jones, Hackensack, N.J. ter road, in honor of Miss Suzanne Mrs. Hanna will wear a pink Harrar and Mr. Rollo Paul Greer, beigelace gown with a small matchwhose marriage will take place at ing hat and a corsage of lavendar 2 o'clock in Trinity Churcb. orchids. Miss Harral' was honored Tues~ Mrs. Stauffer will wear a pink day at a dessert-bridge and perchiffon and lace dress .with a sonal shower given by Mrs. War~ matching hat and a corsage of ren B. Warden of Yale avenue. white orchids with fuschia lips. Miss Harrar is the daughter of A reception will folJow the cereMr. and Mrs. Buchanan Hurar of mony at the home of the bride's Yale avenue. The groom is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Pcter Haston parents. Greer of Elyria. O. McCAHAIL • BAIRD The Rev. Layton P. Zimmer will perform the ceremony. , ' ; , The wedding reception will follow at the Aronimink Golf ·Club. FETE BRIDE· TO·BE Miss Patricia Anne Erb, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. William Erb of Ridley . Park, was honored yesterday morning at a coffee and pantry shower by Mrs. Thomas Moore, Jr., of Guernsey road and Mrs. Lloyd Goman of Wallingford at the Moore home. Mrs. J. Albright Jones of Elm .avenue also entertained for Miss Erb at a luncheon and personal shower on June 15. The engagement of Miss Er·b to Ensign John H. Reohr III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reohr of Union Springs. N.Y., has been announced. ;' MISS HAllAH TO WED ing the University'. Medical Green Golf Club followed the cere-I May, N.J., M. r. and Mrs. Shapley will be' at home at Ft. Benning, School. Mrs. McCahan is a gradu- mony. ate of Scarsdale High School, Mt. After a. honeymoon in Cape Columbus, Ga. Holyoke College, class of '68, and has. been a secretary with Ford Foundation. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 30 YALE AVENUE MORTON, PA. TELEVISION - HOME Ind AUTO RADIO - PHOIIOS SHAPLEY. HAlSEll "Bring It to Us or We'll Come to You" The marriage of Miss Susan DlOK FRANCHETTI - TELEVISION . Mae -Hansell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Adair Hansell, Jr., of North Swal"thmore avenue and Mr. Robert Eugene Shapley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Shapley SWEET CHERRIES RETAIL and WHOLESALE of Fort Wayne, Ind., was s~lemn­ ized at Trinity Church by the CIDER - HONEY - ECCS - POTATOES Rev. Layton P. Zimmer on Saturday afternoon, June 20, at 2:30 o'clock. "TIw Farm 'With tlw Octagottal Barn" Mr. Hansell estorted his daughDIRECTIONS: From Chester north on Edgmont Avenue (Middletown Road) ter to the altar, Her wedding gown 3 mil.. to Knowlton Road. Turn I.ft ~ mile to Orchard. was of Belgian embroidered silk Miss Kathleen Marshall Baird, Ol'ganza in ballerina length ?"ith Open 10 A.M. - 8 P.M. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John bateeu neckline, empire bodice and TRemont 6-9047 Daily aod Sunday Curtis ~Baird of Walworth avenue, short sleeves. The circular skirt Scarsdale, N.Y., became the bride was fashioned wi·th a flo~ ting back .itlQWIIIIHIIIWIBIIRUIDlUIWIUlOIIHIlIUlIIDllmmmttJIIIIIIIIIUlDJIIIUlllhlCllUIIUIIHaUIUIIIIIIDlWWlIllIDUlWIllU"t 1ass., before returning to Swarthmore. niece, Miss Haley Harger to Mr. Fred Bohen. They were accompan- Summer Hours During July and August Monda, Ihrough nursda, 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Rose Valley Nurserl·es Inc Saturday 9 A.M. to 12 'Noon • 8 Park Avenue P.eterson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. • Have You, Opened Your Mr. and_Mrs. Roland L. Coit of • -'.. Ask for BEN PALMER SHRUBS Flowering Trees, Rhododendrons. Laurel !::~:~t~;:e~~~'~:~t~:~, ':r!~~~ • B. 'Irwin and sister, Mrs. D. P. Thompson and her two children, Linda and Deh/>y, all of Oklahoma City, Okla. While here they visited New York City, Williamsburg, Va., and Washington, ·P.C., accompan- ied by Mrs. Coit's family. They are leaving for Oklahoma today. Geoffrey Browne of Park avenue slipped at the swimming pool a week ago last Monday and sustain~d a fracture of his right leg which is now encased in a cast. CREDITJ IME Account? Rev. and Mrs. Ralph Sundquist of Princeton avenue had as their The Buy You've Bean Waiting For - From Delaware County's OLDEST CHRYSLER. PLYMOUTH DEALER '59 PLYMOUTH Open 7:30 A.M. _ 5:00 P.M. Daily and Saturday Sunday: '12:30 - 5 P.M. Savoy 2-Door Sedan • $2175 The INGLENEUK will be ."YlL lSI D&BTIIO"UTB BWUDDlOaB, PA. CLOSED • • " • the new SIMCA brought to you by Chrysler. A real automobile with a real engine (up front ..here it belongs). A Car that is solid os a rock and just ploin sweetness to drive. Prices start at just $1698.00 P.O.E. East_Coast. Stop in and take one out for a demonstrotion ride. • ALSO -=- SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY JULY 4·5·6 • Guaranteed Used Cars Mostly On. Owner. Clean ild Ready to 80. Prlaed to Sell. * * • Porter H.Waite Inc. Yale Avenue and S. Chester Road Swarthmore, P~. Klngswood 3-0240 H. H.who Goodenough ,of a Springfield, S.D., will spend week. with ,.... the Petersons. ' SHADE TREES - Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. ied on the return trip by Mrs. •Il;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FREE-' . whet'e she underwent major surg- ery 10 days ago. WILL CLOSE ALL DAY SATURDAY, JULY 4th mond, N.J., on Saturday to 'attend the wedding of ,Mrs. Peterson's Writ. or Phono ~•• The Readl.rLaboratory • ,2024 Locast. Street Philadelphia, PI. Box W LOcasi 8·4481 ~ Mrs. A. Sidney Johnson, Jr., returned to her North Chester ro"d borne Thursday from the University of Pennsylvania Hospital SWARTHMORE T0G8EIY SHOP of Vassar avenup drove to ·Rich- Your Reading Telephone TRemont 2-7206 I "Scudda Hoo, Scudda Hay" Klngsw~ ... have· been here for two weeks and The World's , Finest Economy Car "SHAGGY DOG" lunday Only-Matinee 2:15 P.M. _ ." Evening 7:15. 9:15 P,M. ' • Ratio • Concentration at Big Savings Walt Disney's iQturday Only-Continuous Performances from II A.M. an How To Impr?ve Frie;;di;~~~;f A.i;ico ~ thru Tues., June 30 Friday Evening Only-3 Shows at 6. 8, 10 P.M. • Comprehension • Study Skill. . AFull Line of Plymoulh Slation Wagons NOWSHOWINC Evening Daily-2 Shows at 7::15, 9:15 P.M. . guest pver the weekend, Mrs. Sundquist's brother, Mr. E. M. Woodruff of Richland, Wash. Rev. and Mrs. T. Royal Scott of Bryn Mawr ayenue are attending a convocation on ~'Youth, the Church and World Affairs" in • Money.to spend anytime ••• onywhere ••• simply by writing a check. • Enioy a "line of credit" equal to 25 tim'lls the amount of money you can pay a month. If you' can pay $30 a mon'h-your credit is $750. Washington, D.C., and New York City. III their absence their son Stanley is staying with 'Rev. and Mrs. Ralph Sundquist of Princeton • You can use your credit oover and over agcinand you don't pay adually using i'. avenue and Shannon and Susan Scott are staying with Rev. and RE-OPEN \TU ESDAY \ JULY 7th / -----------------! 0 penny except when you're ." • Send in the coupon todaY-4!et co,,,,:>le'e details! Mrs. Robel't Otis ,Browne of South AIR·CONDITIOIIED ,Matinee Daily-I PM.-Dcors Open 12:30P .M. < • Individual Instruction • All Laboratories Are Air-Conditioned For further information WORK CUSTOM LAIIDSCAPE n Includes: AUTOMATIC· TRANSMiSSION, turn signals. electric wipers, foam rubber seats, sun visors, heater and defroster, torsionair'; ride, safety rim wheels, arm rests, etc. College Theatre -.- ~;'.' Curdy at their cottage in Ocean City, Md. Courtney Prelltice is leaving on June 30 for Camp Deerwood, N.H., on Swan Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy E. Peterson Raid Batter ••• Falter • a MAGAZINE -SUBSCRIPTIONS - Student btas Middletown Road _ Media. Pa. Opposite High Meadow (between Dutton MiB Road and Knowlton Road) short feta. Her accessoJ;'ies were white nnd her corsage of white phaelonosis orchids accented with blue delphinium. A wedding reception at Rolling , end visiting Dr. and Mrs. Dino Mc- for adults and students DEVELOPMENTAL READINC , Geol'ge A. Hansell, 3rd and T. Stevenson Hansell, brothers of the bride; Ralph B. Adams, Jr., and Roy H. Lockwood, both of Silvel' Spring; John R. Stafford, Elizabeth, N.J. The bride's mother wore a blue silk butterfly print sheath modeled - . ROBERT J. ATZ, Igr. ,Mr. David McCahan attended his s1eeves, a Navy blue whimsy headbrother as his best man. The ushers !piece and a corsage of white :phaewere Mr. Craig Peel and Mr. John lonopsis orchids. Wetlaufer of Swarthmore; Mr. The groom's mother was gowned Frederick Porter, Wallingford; Mr. in white cotton lace over blue taf- with a tight fitting bodice with a John McCahan will be at home in round low neck, short sleeves and Philadelphia in September. Mr. Mca midriff of yellow satin. Her Cahan, a graduate of, Swarthmore waltz length skirt has a panel of High School and of the University chiffon at the back and she will of Pennsylvania· in 1958,.is enterwear a large yellow horsehair hat. She will ·carry a loose rou~d bou- honor's. They carried bouquets of yellow feathered carnations. :Ill'. Alan M. Smith of Silver Springs, Md., was the groom's best man. The us.",hers were Messrs. - THE READING LABORATORY ,. SUMMER DRIVING IS HERE The bride was sttended by her sister Miss 'Mary Jane Baird as Leaman Stauffer of Lancaster, will maid of honor. The bridesmaids take place tomorrow, June 27, 8't were Miss Susan Baird, sister of 4 :30 o'clock in the Swarthmore the bride, Scarsdale; Miss Sidney Presbyterian Church. The Rever- Reid, Scarsdale; Mrs. Trenery Dolend Dr. Evor Roberts will perform bear, New Haven; Miss Betty the ceremony. Adams, Mamaroneck; Miss Laird The bride will be given in mar- Trowbridge,. New York City. All riage by her father and will wear the 'Ilttendants were gowned in a wedding gown of white peau de French blue linen 'with yolks 'of ooie made with a tight fitting bod- matching lace and c;flrried arm bouice, round low neck outlined with quets o~ Rubrum lilies. and gardenias, interspersed I o'clock, Saturday afternoon, June view road and Mr. William Earl Stauffer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul The bouffant skirt has a train. Her fingertip tulle veil will fall from a cap of Alencon lace and she will carry a loose round bouquet of white orchids with pale yellow lips - BEAUTY SALON The marria,ge of Miss Marian She carried a crescent bouquet of more and Mrs. Dan Anderson Daly Gayle Hanna, daughter of Mr. and lily of the valley, stephanotis, and of Summit, N.J., whos~ gowns and headpieces were like the maid of Mrs. J obn Reid Hanna of River- white roses. A.lencon lace and short lace sleeves. Klngswood 4-1028 - I tricia, on Saturday, June 20, at the Jr., who Wedneselay withMr: FItzgerald Mercy Hospital. Miller and hcr children for a three Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Collins of School lane are receiving conMrs. Harry L. Bernard of Union year stay in England. Other pargratuilltions upon \ the birth of avenue and Mrs. S. Francis But- ties for Mr. and Mrs. Miller intheIr fourth child arid first daugh- ler of South Chester road Are the cluded a progressive dinner on a European theme on Wednesday, ter, Marilyn Christensen, who was grandmothers of the new baby. June 17, at which the hosts and hosborn on June 6 in Lankenau Hostesses were Mr. and Mrs. ·Wesley pital, weighing eight pounds and NEWS NOTES Wagner of Michigan avenue, Mr. five ounces. Karen Peterson, Marsha Hunt and Mrs. Stokes Burtis of HaverMrs. Benjamin W. Collins of Hillborn avenue is the baby's pa- and Susan Spencer arl. spending the ford place, Mr. and Mrs. Henry week at Fellowship Farm, near Gayley of Elm avenuc, Dr. and ternal grandmother. Pottstown. Mrs. Robert Walker of Elm avenue, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Linton Mr. and Mrs. ~ilLard Tyson of \ Announcement is made of the birth of a second son, Peter Brown of Park avenue have opened their Guernsey road, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Jennings, to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur home in Ocear, City t N.J' J and Airs. Draper of Princeton avenue and Dr·. S. Jennings of Ohatham, N.J., on Linton and her. four children are and Mrs. James Clark of Sproul June 21. Mrs, Jennings is· the spending the summer there. Mr. road, Springfield. The Presbyterian Chancel Choir had a catered former Miss Jean Brown of North Linton joins them on ~eekends. Mrs. Ben Olcott of Oberlin ave- family picnic in honor of the MiIChester road. Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Brow!! nue and daughters, Marjorie and lers at the Swimming Pool grove of Wallingford I and Mrs. Michael Charlotte left by ,plane for Winter on Thursday, June 18. Betty Ann McCorkel of Pal'k aveJennings of Drexelbrook Apart- Park, Fla., on June 16 where they will stay until July 6. nUe is spending the summer with ments, are the infa!lt's grandparMrs. Edward B. Cornelius and her uncle in Ashtabula, 0., where ents. Mrs. Frank Starrett, Jr., of Mar- she is working in his greenhouse. Mr. and Mrs. R. Heberton But- ietta avenue entertained at a lun- He .. brother, Jim McCorkel plans ler of Springfield announce the cheon a week ago last Wednesday to leave July 1 to attend a work birth of their ·third daughter, Pa· in honor of Mrs. Peter P. Miller, camp in Tunisia, North Africa, and -~'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ in the fall will enter the U ni vers ity .~ of Ghana for his junior year abroad. He will return to Wooster Coneg~, Wooster, 0., where he has Hlw Yorli: Philadelphia San \Franolsao completed his sophomore year, for " his senior studies. announces Its Mr. and Mrs. William Prentice SPECIAL SUMMER PROCSAM of Whittier place spellt th<\ week•• nln;o Chester road. . ,Mr. and Mrs. David C. Hartney, who have been staying with Mrs. Hartlley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Ftansburg of Harvard avenue for the past two weeks, ·are moving to Rochester, N.Y., with their two children, ·Marian and David, where Mr. Hartney has ac- cepted a position with the Eastman Kodak Company in the Production Planning nivision. They formerly resided in Media. Mrs. ~. B.Van Kirk of San Francisco, Calif., arrived Wednes~ day by plane to visit Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rodman Shoemaker of Riverview road through Sunday morning when she will leave after attending Friends Meeting. Mrs. Van Kirk is the fonner Elizabeth Blessing of Elm avenue. Pete Campbell, sophomore at Swarthmore College and son of Mr. and Mrs. Hallock C. Campbell of Vassar avenue, left On Tuesday for Camp Aloha Manor, Fairlee, Vt., where he will be Arts and Crafts Counselor until Labor Day. Pete's mother and hi. grandmothet Mrs. AIlen Hutchinson of 'Winter Park, F1a., who has visited the Camp- I .' .~-------th. D.I....... County Natlonat .Bank 40' . . ."., 1It••t, Che..er, Pa. ......... an .. e ... eppUcatioft for your new ~ f... e,,; CREDITLINE _"I • 1-' eH_ - , ...... borrow ,I .. ply loy , ,i cIItdr, ,~ ~ II I I I .I .1 , LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Mr. and Mrs. Peter P. Miller of . Beverly Smith, dat·.ghter of Mr. Marietta avenue and their three and Mrs. W. Alfred Smith of AmTHE Th. opinions • .,pr••••d bdotD children, Christina, Geoffrey and herst avenue :will enter Chester PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT SWARTHMORE, PENNA. Paul, sailed Wednesday on the hospital for a tonsillectomy to be IIr. tho•• of the indi'llidual writPETER E. TOLD. MlARJORIE TOLD, Publuh.,. Elizabeth for England where performed on Monday. Queen O'B. All letter. to The SWllrthPhone KIngswood 3-0900 morean must b••igned. P.eudb· they expect to live for the next Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Spencer nymns mllY be used ~f the wriw three years. Mr. Miller is employed of Westminster avenue have roP·ETER E. TOLD, Editor is known to the Editor. Lett .... Barbara B. Kent. Managing Editor turned from a two week visit in will b. publuhed only at the du· by the Scott Paper Company. Rosalie D. Peirsol Sonya K. Horneff Marjorie T. Told ",.etion of the Editor. Andy Seybold, son of Mr. and Buffalo, ·N.Y., and in Birmingham, Jealllllltle V. Hawe Mrs. Joh/J W. Seybold of Amherst Mich., with Mrs. Spencer's brotherEntered as Second Class Matter, January 24, 1929, at the Post SEEKS GENEROUS VOLUNTEER avenue left Saturday to spend three in-law and sister Mr. and Mrs. Office at Swarthmore, .Pa., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Dear Editor: weeks at Camp Tockwogh on the George H. Lowden. DEADLINE WEDNESDAY NOON' As director of District N 12 of Chesapeake Bay, Del. the 1960 United Fund, I should THOM SEREMBA SWARTHMORE, PENNA., FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1959 like to appeal, through your paper, UPHOLSTERY Ind SLIP COYERS L~~------------------------~Ifor some civic-minded citizen of 8 Years of Swarthmore References TRINITY NOTES evening. Rutledge to volunteer to serve as Over 30 Vears' Experience There will be a celebration of the The regular mid-we~k cel~bration captain of that borough. PhDn. SHAROI HILL 0134 Holy Communion at 8 o'clock Sun. of ~he Holy Communion ~1I be at This position will involve enrollEstimates Without Obligation day morning and a service of Morn- 7 oclock Wednesday ~ornIngJ an~ ing 20 solicitors as soon as ·posing Prayer at 10. Ushers for the on ~hursday there will be a cele- sibl~, holding a briefing for these latter service will be as follows: bratlOn at 10 a.m. solicitors the last week in SeptemPeter Madison head usher; R. H. her (at which time all solicitation alice Maxwell, alter~ate; C. C. Mearkle, PIIESBYTERIAN 10TES material will be explained and disH. P. Stamford, J. B. Stocker, and Dr. Roberts' sermon topic Sun- tributed), .and finally, collecting t h ' 1 10 Id d WFIL RadlD - 814& A.M. . E. EJ. Wrege. Steve Hansell will day morDlng at e SlOg e contributions and p e ge car s. serve as acolyte at 8 o'clock, and o'clock service will be "Who Am I have made innumerable calls, &--WFIL·TY-'IIO A.I. oldanJC. ui Ins Samuel Clyde and Anderson Hop- 11" The single service schedule a11 unsuccessfully, in an effort to '::::;;:;::::=;:::;::::=;:::::;:~:;:;:::;:~~;;::::::::::--:::;;::::::::::-:::;:::::::::::-:::;::::::::::::-::;:::::::; kins at 10. will continue during the summer obtain a captain, yet I am sure 1 A celebration of the Holy Com- through September 6. there are many Rutledge residents (. munion will be' held Monday (St. All classes of the Church School with both the desire and the time Peter's Day) at 10 a.m. There will Department through the Junior to serve this so necessary drive. be a meeting of the Stewardship",ge levels will meet at 10 o'clock, Thank you. Committee at 8 o'clock Monday eve· 'Only! throughout the summer SunVery truly yours, ning in the Cleaves Room. days. Emma Michael Reynolds A conference of the clergy of A trained supervisor has been (Mrs. Joseph) Swarthmore will be held Tuesday provided for toddlers and infants PRAISES POLICE at 11 o'clock at the Swarthmore during the 10 o'clock summer senDear Editor: ·Presbyterian Church. ices. I know all Swarthmoreans are as During There will be a special meeting The Women's Bandage Group of the Vestry at 8 o'clock Tuesday will meet on Wednesday at 10 a.m. grateful as we are for the wonderful job oUr local police did in apthr<;mgh luncheon. JUNE, JULY and AUGUST prehending the boy who was let out CHURCH SERVICES The Daily Vacation Church " of a taxi-cab near Strath Haven PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH School will meet from 9 :30 to Inn last week. Swarthmore, Pa. 1O~ Park Avenue Dr. D. Evor Roberts. Minlster 11 :30 each week day through July This is an example of the alertMr. Robert O. Browne, 3. Children aged four through 6th Associate ·Minister ness ~f our officers and their effigrade are attending. ciency obviously prevented a dread. Sunday, June 28 ful ex.perience for the occupants of 10:00 A.M.-Morning Worship. METHODIST IIOTES Sermon: "Who Am I?" the Inn Or for others in the 'neigh10:00 A.M.-Church Sehool classChurch School classes and Morn- borbood. es through Junior Department. ing Worship will be conducted on Sincerely, the summer schedule of 8:45 for Week Days Elizabetli B. Plowman 9:30-11 :30 A.M.-Daily Vacation Church Scbool and 10 a.m. for one APPRECIATION Church School. service of Morning Worship. Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Grose METHODIST CHURCH Kulp's sermon topic at the 10 of Amherst avenue have had as We extend our grateful appreci'ster o'clock service will be "Why ChrisMlnl h C K 1• J on.UP their guest for a fortnight, Mr. . t' Jyfl" ation to the thousands of families Charles Schisler lans are au. Grose's mother, Mrs. Arthur Grose Mini.ter of Music The Church welcomes to the pul- who left Tuesday for her home in who have relied on our service. Sunday June 28 pit for the four Sundays of July, Milton, Mass. , 8:45 A,M.-Ch~rch Scbool class- Dr. W. Vernon Middleton, general 1I!8 ., secretary of the Division of N ation- 'Mr. Elwood Garrett of Princeton 10 :oil A.M.-Morning WorshiP. al Mis~ions, Methodist Board of avenue had as his guests ove): the :Sermon: UWhy Christians Are Missions. He has general oversight weekend, his son-in-law and daughDIUCTO•• O. PUHDAU Joyful." of all the home missionary and ter Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Brown and Week Days 1820 CHISlNU' ITRIII church extension work of the Meth- their three children of Harrisonburg, Va. 8:00 A.M.-Daily Vacation Bible odist Church within the United OlIVER I!.BAIa. ' ....lCier MAIY A.1Ala.1\ lUll' School. States, including Alaska, Hawaii TRINITY CHURCH and Puerto Rico. He has had a elisLayton Parkhurst 'Zimmer, Rector tinguished eft,reer in National mis-' sions. He has been executive seeSunday, June 28 retary of the Philadelphia Mission8 :00 A.M.-Holy Communion. • 10:00 A.M.-Morning Prayer. ary and Church Extension Society Monday, June 29 of the Methodist Church, and execu(St. Peter's Day) tive secretary of the Division's Sec10:00 A.M.-Holy Communion. tion of Home Missions. He beld the Wednesday, July I latter position when elected. to bis 7 :00 A.M.-Holy Communion. present post in 1966. Thursday, July 2 Dr. Middleton is vice-ehairman of the Division of Home Missions 10:00 A.M.-Holy Communion. of the National Council of ChurchTHE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY es, an interdenominational organiOF FRIENDS zation of 24 constituent home misSunday, June 28 sion societies. He has visited out11 :00 A.M.-Meeting for Worship. post missions in Alaska, Puerto All are welcome. , . Rico and Hawaii and ,has visited Monday, ~une 29 and studied the religious and econAll-day sewing for the A.F.S.C. omic conditions of American InWednesday, July I dians, ~igrant workers; and- other All-day sewing for the A.F.S.C. minority groups in the United States. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST The Senior Hi Youth Fellowship SWARTHMORE will meet for their regular Sunday Park Avenue below Harvard evening meeting. This will be tbe ••. let you pay bills Suuday, June 28 last until September. in the eomfort of home, 11:00 A.M.-Sunday Sehool. !puring the pastor's absence, in 11:00 A.M.-The Lesson _ Sermon case of any emergency need for passafely and easily, will be entitled "Christian Sci- toral care, members may ·call the enee." ' p a s t o r ' s secretary at the church of~th proof of payment You11 thrill tei the modem wonden of an Wednesday evening meeting each fice, K'Ingswood 4-3121, or at her week. 8 P.M •• Reading Room, 409 home, LEhigh 2-6609. automatic gas range. Many of the new range. Dartmouth Avenue. open weekdays except holidays, 10-6; Friinclude the new automatic·top bumar. You lust day evening, 7·9. CHRISTIAII SCIENCE NOTES clial the temperature you want and forget DEL. CO. UNITARIAN How scientific understanding of Old Marple Road. Sprln~ield God gives new inspiration. and about it. Don't even have to be there wlaUe 'ow Herbert F. Vettel', Jr.• Minister meaning to life will be a theme Sunday, June 28 presented at Christian Science serfoDe! coo.... The top burner Nmperature 11 :00 A.M.-Morning Service. vices Sunday by the Lesson-Sermon controls keep WJdch autonlatlcally for you. Sennon: "The Faith of Frank entitled "Christian Seien\. "'I" Lloyd Wright." An invitation is extend;"; i~ all NOTRE DAME DE LOURDES to attend the services at. Firat Clt_ your 11_ IJCU at Rev. Charles A. Nelson, Pastor Church of Christ, Scientist, 206 your dDCIIDr'. or allY, Parish Rectory- Michigan Avenue Park avenue, at 11 o'clock. and Fairview Road __ 'ltnadelplalG Electric .ulturllan ala_roo-. Daily Mass-8 A.M.-Rectory . Sunday Masses 8. 9. 10. 11 A.M.FRIEIDS MEETI.. ..TES CoJlegc Theatre '.. During the month of J~ Ber- SWARTHMOREAN HOW CHRISTIAN SelENa HEALS bar.b1cf 9 ".a.,1 t S bib Id . CELIA SHOE SHOP Closed Saturday, 12 Noon • THE OLIVER H. lAIR CO. Active in Visiting she will be counseilor for the sum- Mrs. Colin Bell Chairs Se mer. . N unlng rvice' Miss Lillian Roberson of Albany, Last Parents Council Three local women are elected to N.Y •• arrived Friday for a month's ServIce of Delaware County. Mrs. E. Longwell of Lafayette avenue. Francis H. Forsythe is the second Mr. and Mre. Peter Braun arvice-president, Mrs. A. Sidney rived on Saturday from New HavJohnson, Jr., the assistant treasur- en, Conn., to spend the summer with er, Mrs•. Walter A. Schmidt the oor- Mr. Braun's mother Mrs. David responding .secreta'?" Braun and his sister Susan of Yale . 'l:'he Nursmg Se,,?ce fee for home avenue. Mr. Braun, who enters his VISIts. ~as been raIsed from $3.75 third and last year of study at Yale ~er VlSlt to $4, the first raise in cost Divinity School in the fall is taking In sever~l ye~r8, d~spite the re. clinical training work at Byberry co:ded chmb 10 sel'Vlce cost. Mr.. State Mental Hospital, PhiladelEhzabeth Ann Groff. executive di- phia, during the summer. His wife ~ec~:, ,points out ·that families or is a member of the local Summer lOdlvlduals unable to pay the fee, Recreation staff. '11 cont' to b e " · WI. mue . gIven nurslOg ·Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Clothier ?ervlce and charged on a scsle bas- move today from their former CoIS. lumbia avenue home to tiheir new home at 401 'Cornell avenue, reHOSTESS TO CRUM cently owned by Mr. and Mrs. W. CREEK BRIDBE CLUB Thomas H. ,MacNew who have Mr. and Mr". Walter Rodman moved to Rose Tree. Media. Mr. Shoemaker of Riverview road en- and Mrs. Stokes F. Burtis, Jr., will tertained the Crum Creek bridge move next week from their Hav~rclub Tuesday evening at lawn- ford place home to their new home party. followed by bridge. on Columbia avenue, -the former Top scorers were Mr. Arthur Clothier residence. S. Robinson and Mrs. Katherine Christopher Reynolds, son of H. Brownell. In second place were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reynolds of Lt. William H. Webb and Mrs. Oberlin avenue, enplaned last Webli. week for a nine-week trip to' Europe where he will visit Rotary Jeannie Boyer, daughter of Mr. friends in London, England, and ~nd Mrs. Clarence Boyer of Dick... :in Stade and Hildersheim, Germson avenue leaves tomorrow for many. Christopher is a fifth form Camp Kahagon, Quakertown where student at Episcopal Academy. a DON'T WASTE FILM You've been fooling· around with at old camera long enough ~ losing 5 or 6 pictures per roll. Let us take your worries off your hands. Tradein your old camera now on one of our dozens of new roll, slide or 8'-mm. Cameras. Kodak Ansco Bell & Howell Zeiss Polaroid Konica Minolta Revere Lord 'f '............,", Your key to a The Camera & Hobby Shop 4-6 Park Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa. Klngswood 3-4191 more abundant life! • • • at Home .Top Burner Temperature Controls. ra..,. (''''~·':"(.~f''~n-~ftturd'iY. 4~5-:3Q-P.M. h~rt Hu~~ ,viiI "It.., ::!". t.h~ CXH' :Gr "J:"hi g.,. P ?l. ••--'-Rl'ct(lp", 'thO 1- ...., ..... " f ,,~._ ~- __ , ' ,( - ° "'-,c ....... f; .... _ ... go ... 0 .•• I , :'··'l_.C'ul'"',la'r" ... 1 P'I-Rectory .. ... ..... ~' -.~ " . Member r,c'~r.! O!POSii Insuran~ COI'pOTatiolt Memlter Feder.. 1 Reserv. System PHILADELPHIA ELECTIIC CO.'IIY , • • Fri. 9 to 8:30 Enioy the PROVIDENT TRADESMENS "KEY" CHECKING ACCOUNTS PROVIDENT TRADESMENS (Continued from Page 1) offic~s in the ·Community Nursing visit with her sister, Mrs. Alfred uscrambled" grou.ps. , as Guests of the SWARTHMORE .BUSINESS 'ASSOCIATION • • • • See N8xl Week's Swarthmorea. for Delails Comments from Principals Thomas Boyle and Frank R. Morey on administrative difficulties involved and the fact that no school policy discouraged the mixing of classes were followed by a comment from the floor that Swarthmore parents needed to let professional educators run the schools and be wil3ing to ahide by their decisions, at least for a trial period. Parents Council members voting as individuals ra,ther than' representatives of th' 1 elr c ass groups, vote,I to support the administration if it finds it wise to scramble Kinderg·arten through sixth grade classes in 1959-60. Informal agreement supported the administration's judgment on the further question of the possible inauguration of sectioning class groups according to academic ability. Mrs. Henry A. Peirsol was given the floor to express her concern over the inability of many public school children to accept instruction and authority. Consideration of Mrs. Peirsol's remarks was referred to the executive board for posEihIe discussion next year in Parent~s Council or the Educatio~ committce meetings or both. Elementary Grade Concerns The Elementary Section of the Council heard reports from ·Mrs. Borpee Renshaw, chairman of the Bicycle Safety committee listing 105 bicycles licensed and the amount of $26.25 collected. Police ap:proval of the licensing was reported with special mention of its help in returning 76 lost or stolen bicycles this year. Mrs. Conwell win 'head this work next year. The matter of proper school attire was considered, specifically in regard to the wearing of short shorts by older elementary school girls .. The' consensus of opinion was that Bermuda length shorts were acceptable and that parents could raise teacher-pupil morale by paying closer attention to proper school apparel. The possible addition of a dress code to the Parents' Handbook was conside~d, ~ith the suggestion that Bennuda shorts are acceptable gym apparel but should be restricted to gym days and then worn without covering skirt only at the discretion of individual teachers. Mrs. Marion Pierce, school nurse, asked for time to inform lParents that many standards of personal cleanliness (specifically listed were clean hands before eating, toilet flushing after use, etc.), are "a,ppallingly neglected" in a town whose children, due to economic standards, should not be remiss in these matters. She stated that these ~axities gave her ·concern for the over-all health welfare of the entire school population. The gToup was also reminded by Principal Boyle that the problem of stealing and of the rejection of proper standards of conduct is still very current. Mrs. Bell annouJlced that although all groups concerned agreed that the start of a se~ond language program in the elementary school is desirable, the School Board finds it difficult to provide funds for the installation of the program. The possible solution of raising the by subscription was sug- IIEWS NOTES Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Gilcreest of Vassar avenue entertained Mrs. Garner Dunkerley, Mr. Gilcreest's sister, for the last 12 days. Mrs. Dunkerley left for her home in Ennis, Tex., on Tuesday. Miss Amy Ryerson of Elm avenue was feted at a surprise kitchen shower given Tuesday evening by Miss Carol Goff of Haverford avenue. The engagement of Miss Ryerson to Mr. Edward T. Borer of Garrett avenue has been annOUDe:· ed. Mrs. Walter O. Heinze of Strath Haven avenUe entertained on Monday at luncheon and a swimming ,party. Tomorrow evening, Mr. and Mrs. Heinze will entertain at supper and ,awimming: FOOD MARKET Consumer's Co-Op Ass'n. of Swarthmore. Inc. 403 Dartmouth Avenue Oppo~ite Borough Hall Swift's Premium BUTTER BALL Turkeys Ib.53c I ---"=------LECS and BREASTS of Frying Chickens Ib.59c CO·OP RED LABEL TOMATO JUI'CE co-op 46·oz.can 3 for $1.00 RED LABEL APPLE JUICE 46-oz. can 3 for $1.00 CO-OP RED LABEL' PI N EAPPLE JUICE 46-oz. can 3 for $1.00 co-OP RED LABEL GRAPEFRl) IT JUICE 46-oz. can3 for $1.00 CO-OP RED LABEL EVAPORATED MILK 6 cans 7ge PILLSBURY'S BEST ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR 5 Ibc. 4ge - 2 Ib5. 23e ;DAINTY BRAND POTATO CHIPS Ib·59c CO-OP RED LABEL CATSUP bot. 19c fRENCH'S BARBECUE SAUCE 25<: TH RIVQ DOG FOOD '6 cans 5ge 100% PURE PARADICHLOROBENZENE 2 1b• 69<: co-OP BLEACHING FLUID qt. 15e €HARCOAL BRIQUETS 10 Ibs. 6ge - 20 Ibs·$1.29 INSTANT FOAM CHARCOAL LIGHTER BING CHERRIES king size 59 C Ib·39c FLORIDA JUICE ORANGES 3 dOL $].00 • BREYER'S ICE CREAM ~ Gallon - 1•.00 -_. \ Estate of CAROLINE L. BROWNE. la.te of the Borough of Swarthmore, Delaware EXPERT PIAlO· TUIII. Ind REPAIR lIB 47 Yeors of Experience with All Make. A. L. PARKER ESTATE NOTICE County. Pa., deceued. Letters Tel5tamentary on the payment. a.ud those baving legal 1.0 present &he same wlthouL delay WUllam H. oaborne. MUdred R. Osborne, above Swarthmore, Penna., or theIr AttomoY: Reunions .. Picnics, . Outings, Events •• Reverend John C. Kulp of The Swarthmore Methodist Church in .. ~;.e=u~.;20~3;CO=un=':,-,YB=uU~dIn~g. stalled the newly elected and ap· the W;SCS r~~:Jh~av=....;,~b~"~.~.~r"~Ie~d~U'~'~"~d~..~.~..~o~rr~I'~H~.~.... the regular morning service on aU penons indebted to said: Es-- Media. Penna. 3H-26 officers of at KIDPW- 3-1" PERSOIAL PERSONAL - Rave a prOblem finding baby sitters1 Call Judy at KIngswood 3-5068. WilLIAM BROOlS Ashes and Rubbish ReDlOVed Mowod, Oenera! Hauling 238 Bardlng Ave. Morta... 1'&. UlWDS or sitting. References. Call KIngswood 3·2136 or KIngswood 3·6731. I PERSONAL - UPHOLSTERINq & SLIP COVERS. Over 30 yea!s experience, eight of Swar~~~~ .blood used Red genuine leather sWlvel desk chall"." Bank. Will pay regu$25. KIngswood 4·2234. 1ar rate. Blood mwust be eogi'hn in FOR SALE _ French walnut bed· Philadelphia. G. est crane. room suite. Double bed complete. Phone KIngswood 3-4191, 9 to 5. Large bureau with mirror, dres.s- WANTED - Young girl desires Ing table with .mirror and cha'f. work as mother's helper or baby c General Contractor Executors, or to Edmund Janeff. FIfth Street, Chester, Pa, ~ " = .Jack Prichard i PAINTING § Klngswood 3-0450 a I = i'i C ARN S tIIIII Baltimore Pike Spr\DJ:lJeld, Del CO. Pa. :::I ;;:;-.;;;;;:;;: I i ' Fonnerly ~ 'S LANCASTER BRAND, FULLY COOKED .ROGER RUSSELL . ! B YOU'RE .'4l1£AD WHEN YOU SHOP ACME! ELNWOOD Mrs. John Pi~man, publiclt~ ~:~~:~~;;~;nM::rs. George Broadbent, typewriter and ta.lIe, man; 15 in. carriage. $25. Kingschairman; Mrs. Ray. wood 4.3599. P: Wilson, flower chairman; BOX 48 KI 4-1214 FOR SALE - Moving. Lionel Mrs. Otto Kraus, hospital chairsenger and freight train man; Mrs. William Plummer, tele~DllDIallllllllllnaUllllllllllanmIHIIIIDUlDumnDDl!§ gauge; accessories; on table. phone chairman; Mrs. Gerald Green and damask figured Gray,. representative to committee CRESSON PRICHARD foam cushions. Klngswood F()R SALE _ 1952 Plymouth cOil- on education; and Mrs. H. Miller ~ 9 vertible, white, with new black top. Crist, representative to PhiJadel!l ~ Radio and heater, white wall tires, Council of Churches. ~ ~ Language by new battery, all new floor COVel'· Circ1e chairmen are: Mrs. Her. ~~~!d~ teacher. Beginners, ad· ing, new valves, new State Inspec- bert Edney, Mrs. J. Wayne Hamil§ 900 Michigan Avenue i'i groups, indivi~ual. KIlngs- tion sticker. Good tires. New snow wood 3-3329. tires included. Must sell, have ton, Mrs. Ray L. Harlow, Mr.. 5 PERSONAL Roofmg, spouti!,g, company car. $395. KIngswood Charles Hummer, Mrs. William Swarthmore, Pa. ~ gutters carpentry. Recreatwn ~3;-4~0;;4:::2;; . . .-;;--;,":,:::;;;:::;:-7,;;:--;;-;;-;:;:;; Nolan, Mrs. Ralph Sharer, Mrs. ~ ~ rooms a 'specialty. Ray J. Foster, FOR SALE-Looking for a host Lewis Sterner and Mrs. Clarence LOwell 6·6569. or hostess gift? Try a bird house Walton. PERSONAL - Bicycle. Repaired, or feeder. The S. Crothers, Jr., Parts accessories. Milt Glass 435 Plush Mill Road, Wallingford, BEQUEST FOB BIDS Bicyclo:Hobby, Toy-Shop, 205 East LOwell 6-4551. \ Bealed bids wUl be received in couDcll il.IUnaIlUlllllm[lDlllllllllltlllnullnmnlD1llllllalllll~nlllll:~ Baltimore Avenue, Clifton Helghta, LOST AID FOUID Chamber. Park Avenue, Swarthmore. MAdison 6.0713. Opposite Clifton Pa.. 0. July '31b. ,.... al 1:30 P ..... tan) Eastern Dayllght Ba.vJng Time for fur· F .OUND--Gordon (black and Theater: f d' 'nl.,h.,.. the materiala and doing the work . setter, six months old, oun In of applyiDg a bituminous surface to the, Swarthmore. Call Klngswood concrete paving of the east side of Ches~ ~ 4444. ter Road (upper level) from Rutgers GENERAL ~ Avenue. to Parle Avenue and. to additional: LOST - Verl( old Siama.se surfaees In the immediate neighborhood named Sweeney. -Stomach shav .. amounting.' In all to. approximately 26SO c CONTRACTOR .. a -6 ed ·recently. KIngswood 3-0733. aqua.re yards. Work is to be done td Leaman, with specifications which DUI.y ~ 2906 Burden Rogel LOST - Light gray spring coat, accordance be seeD at the once of the undersigned. size 14 %:, labeled "Soreuss." Porbide. Po. 5: It. cerUned check or bid. bond for $200.00. Phone LOwell 6-H33. shall accomplUl7 the bid and, the firm or' a= = upholstering. . = to whom the contract ls awarded "irl!sl'i'.!g. Repairing and LOST Gold rimmed spectacles, ~ TRemont' 2-5487 execute a contract and furolsh ;nd sofa springs tied. R. between railroad station and 336 the form of which may be seen ,§ ~ HUbbard 5-2776. North Princeton Avenue, Monday. the office of the undersigned. The Bor~lnUIllIIIIICllllllllllllauJJlllnlllDIIIIIIIIIIIIDnllllllllUalllllC PERSONAL _ Babysitting, we.ek, :K:;I:.:n::;g::s.::w:,:oo.:..::d_3;,-.0;;6;;;47 ough reserves the right to waive any. . ......______ informalities In the bids received; to reday, morning; reliable h,gh WANTI!D r;.UlUIIIDlUIDIIIIIIIIIIIIOCIUIUIIIIOIIIIIIIUUlUHlIDIIllUOIII'S Ject u.ny or all bids; to award the con· school girl. KIngswood 3-9478. ~ WANTED - Refined cODlpanion trac~ only to those I experienced in thls of work. and to the bidder wbose FOR REIT over 28 and under 45 for elderly class proposal Is deemed to be the most adFOR RENT - Second floor room, blind person for two months. Will vantageous to "the pUblic Interest. in hotel in Chautauqua, N.Y. a,'ry comfortable, reasonable; ELLIOTI' RICHARDSON. , if depatience and tact. 2t-601i extra Borough Secretary , 5 g • 1 C. Williams (1 :82), 3 J. WiIMr. and Mrs. David Bingham of day night in the Borough while en-I visited Mr. and Mrs. John H. Dotlians. Sr. boys: 2 R. Sublette (1: Fairview.road left Friday to week- route from Lancaster where they terer and went "jitter.boarding" on 00.6). Int. girls: 1 B. Breakell end at the Marlborough.Blenheim, had visited two weeks with Mrs. th P to R' .... b th .. e 0 mac ,ver. • • (40.8), breaking the old Swarth- Atlantic City in observance of their BI essm" s ro er and hIS famlly more record of 41.2 which she also 10th wedding anniversary. They lo their home in Waterville, Me. Members of the Young Adults Get Fins in Trim set; 2 S. Wigton. Int. boys: 1 G. were joined on Sunday for the day Anne Blessing was the overnight Group of the Presbyterian Church for Home Meet Boyd (44_1), 3 P. Kent. Jr. girls: by Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Brady guest of BeverlY Smith, Amherst held a picnic Saturday afternoon at 2 L. Zecher (48). Jr. boys: 1 D. of Rutgers avenue and by Mrs. avenue. Tomorrow 25 Amherst avenue in· honor of their Foley (50). Midg. girls: 1 P. Wig- Thomas W. Simpers of the SwarthMr. and lirs. James Connor 'and chairman, Mr. Arthur .Jones, who The Swarthmore Swim Team ton (56.5),2 D_ Torrey. Midg. boys: more Apartments. their children ~Iimi and Jimmy of will leave next week for six weeks journeyed to Ply-Mar Saturday 2 D. Speers (57.6),3 P. Zecher. Mr. and Mrs. George F. Blessing, F~irview road spent the wei$end travel in Scandinavia and the BritDlornlng for its first meet with this FREESTYLE _ Sr. girls: 1 C. formerly of Elm avenue, spent Tues- in Piney Poil)t, Md., where they ish Isles. second-~ear team in the Suburb~n Brodhead (1 :12.3), 2 C. Williams. SwimmlD~ League,. and de&~'te Sr. boys: 1 R. Coles (1:00.9). Int. DOLLAK~ some of ,ts bllst sw,mmers bemg girls: 1 B. Breakell (31.2), 2 J_ absent ~or one rea8o~ or an~erf Espenschade. Int boys: 1 J. Foley and havmg only half ,ts lanes f.lled (28.4) bettering his own previous Famous lor low prices in Borne even~t Swarthmore came Swa'rthmore re