Brown and White Vol. 64 no. 15 |
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lehigh university bethlehem pa tech succumbs 26-6 to lehigh mudders john carradine carradine casual calm likes college audiences a determined carnegie tech eleven out to avenge repeated set backs by lehigh's football team tried to take advantage of taylor stadium's mud which helped to equalize the two teams saturday however a tight engineer defense hard-driving runners and long passes pounded the tartans into submission once again despite the sloppy conditions 26-6 as lehigh notched its sixth straight over carnegie lehigh sewed up the game in by bill latshaw i trembled as i approached the door marked visiting team dress ing room for i knew that within its confines resided temporarily the renowned shakespearean actor john carradine after a pause to bolster my spirits i knocked tim the first few minutes with a pair of scores withstood a second-half tech rally and closed strong with two more td's tom gunn howie schaeffer george o'brien and marty maurer all hit pay dirt with fumbles pass interceptions and the mud stalling several drives deep in carnegie tech territory and preventing the score from go ing higher for the second straight week lehigh's offense figured promi nently in the victory schaeffer and maurer paced the ground attack which churned through the mud for 202 yards while tom gloede and john conti passed for 91 more yards each throwing a long touch down pass gloede once again did a commendable job as quarterback running the team well and handing off the wet pigskin with a mini mum of fumbles see 202 yards page 5 29 seniors selected for 1952 who's who twenty-nine lehigh seniors have been named to a ppear in this year's who s who among students in american universities and colleges a student faculty committee chose the 29 from a list of the 60 most active men on campus who met the scholastic requirements of at least a 2.0 average in most cases a 2.5 scholastic average was re quired the selection of these names has been confirmed by the national who's who committee those named include arcadia president john p arnesen michael arra who has been active in arcadia and the political science assembly lawrence e collins a member of arcadia and delta omicron theta debating society ifc president william j davis others are john c diercks treasurer of apo and officer in several engineering honoraries william farkas member of cyanide and head of the town division of the campus chest committee nicholas s gentile jr president of the senior class mark j given treas urer of the campus chest and ac tive in the music festival and ar thur p goldenberg member of arcadia and the student activities committee and manager of the swimming team peter k huester senior class treasurer president of apo and a member of cyanide charles hull has been end on the football team for three years and is vice-presi dent of the senior class samuel s johnson president of idc mark s kaufman co-chairman of the campus chest committee and for mer president of cyanide and the inter-faith council william kitsos football captain james p kressler psa and christian council member william a latshaw jr managing editor of the brown and white vice-president of odk and publi city director of the campus chest see who's who page 8 frosh pull easy victory at tug cast off dinks trembley gets baptism at snake feast snakes were food for thought and food for supper last night in allentown and lehigh was repre sented at the table and on the speakers platform ecology prof francis trem bley was the principal speaker on some fallacies and habits of snakes after the speech dr trembley one of the leading herpetologists in the u.s and 115 others sat down to this menu at the hotel traylor mock turtle soup followed by the main course of broiled rattlesnake or smaller snake patties dr trembley could not be carradine artistic but fascinating by harlan m kelly see scl page 6 " the time has come the wal rus said to speak of many things although actor john carra dine in no way resembles the wal rus from carroll's timeless piece of inanity he too spoke of many things before his small lehigh au dience he started with the bible closed with lewis carroll and in cluded shakespeare as well carradine does shakespeare in a very fascinating though at times idly no response i knocked sug gestively no response i knocked bravely angrily pleadingly force fully and hopelessly i was at the wrong door rattled i walked down the hall to the next door and knocked resolutely a commanding voice answered and asked me to enter there sprawled on the benches in complete repose lay he looking more to my avid imagination like ophelia on her death bed than i imagined carradine would look he looked me up and down as i mumbled through a self-introduc tion with a hopeful gleam in my eye the expression on his face was more one of pain than eager ex pectation but after impressing him with the fact that i simply had to interview him or lose all hope for a pulitzer prize he agreed to let me pump him for info on his long ca reer as i pulled out my pen with bruised knuckles my mind was see carradine page 7 see snakes page 8 by dan klein apparently the lafayette fresh i men have gotten completely out of jhand lehigh's frosh earned the right to discard their dinks last elcars to jacis we vary in drive see cars page 6 variety seems to be the spice of drive on campus where an xk-120 jaguar a 1929 model a ford an elcar and a packard of 1920 vin tage top the unusual in automo biles according to an itemized re cord made last november there were 1,194 cars registered with the office of buildings and grounds of these 242 belonged to freshmen 315 to sophomore 340 to juniors and 297 to seniors the three most popular cars on campus are ford plymouth and chevrolet in that order following close behind are dodg buick oldsmobile and de soto the annual over-crowding of the parkfffjf spaces provided oh cam pus is becofriirig ever greater thds report shows for example in dor mitory parking lots there is space for 267 cars however parked in these lots are 357 cars the report failed to explain the geometrical inconsistency by bob morgan friday by winning their third straight tug-of-war from the leop ards while sitting in the taylor stadium stands lafayette just didn't show up calumet lafayette honorary had attempted to recruit 56 of their rebellious freshmen to oppose the lehigh team two busses were standing by on friday to bring them to bethlehem only 20 men put in an appearance john woolford president of calumet made the trip from eas ton to concede defeat by default while he was here he complained about the apathy of the students and the administration according to ted scheetz and ron madison of cyanide freshmen at the easton school openly defy regulations laid down by calumet and the deans have refused to give the honorary the power to enforce these regulations scheetz said in addition he con tinued the upperclassmen are apathetic about enforcement of the regulations lafayette frosh had previously earned the right to shed their dinks by defeating the upperclass men in a tug-of-war cyanide wishes to thank the freshmen of lehigh for showing more spirit than their lafayette counterparts sckeetz said the old and the new in lehigh automobiles are shown above being checked by their proud parents bill locke 53 on left displays his 1927 elcar which cost 4500 new and has made two trips to indi ana in last two years john west 53 in center peers into inner workings of 1951 mg which makes 32 miles per gallon of gas on right ray stern 53 shows confidence in 1927 buick with only 37,000 miles and 4,300 since july it cost 2375 new and has been clocked at 65 mpr top speed lehigh university brown and white volume 64 — number 15 tuesday november 18 1952
Object Description
Title | Brown and White Vol. 64 no. 15 |
Date | 1952-11-18 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 18 |
Year | 1952 |
Type | Newspaper |
DPIX | 400 |
DPIY | 400 |
Source Repository | Lehigh University |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Lehigh, South Bethlehem |
LCCN | 07019854 |
Source Repository Code | PBL |
Digital Responsible Institution | Lehigh University |
Digital Responsible Institution Code | PBL |
Issue/Edition Pattern | Semiweekly |
Title Essay | Published twice a week during the college year by the students of Lehigh University |
Description
Title | Brown and White Vol. 64 no. 15 |
Date | 1952-11-18 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 18 |
Year | 1952 |
Page | 1 |
Type | Page |
DPIX | 400 |
DPIY | 400 |
FileSizeK | 2638451 Bytes |
FileName | 195211180001.jp2 |
Source Repository | Lehigh University |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Lehigh, South Bethlehem |
LCCN | 07019854 |
Source Repository Code | PBL |
Digital Responsible Institution | Lehigh University |
Digital Responsible Institution Code | PBL |
Issue/Edition Pattern | Semiweekly |
Title Essay | Published twice a week during the college year by the students of Lehigh University |
FullText | lehigh university bethlehem pa tech succumbs 26-6 to lehigh mudders john carradine carradine casual calm likes college audiences a determined carnegie tech eleven out to avenge repeated set backs by lehigh's football team tried to take advantage of taylor stadium's mud which helped to equalize the two teams saturday however a tight engineer defense hard-driving runners and long passes pounded the tartans into submission once again despite the sloppy conditions 26-6 as lehigh notched its sixth straight over carnegie lehigh sewed up the game in by bill latshaw i trembled as i approached the door marked visiting team dress ing room for i knew that within its confines resided temporarily the renowned shakespearean actor john carradine after a pause to bolster my spirits i knocked tim the first few minutes with a pair of scores withstood a second-half tech rally and closed strong with two more td's tom gunn howie schaeffer george o'brien and marty maurer all hit pay dirt with fumbles pass interceptions and the mud stalling several drives deep in carnegie tech territory and preventing the score from go ing higher for the second straight week lehigh's offense figured promi nently in the victory schaeffer and maurer paced the ground attack which churned through the mud for 202 yards while tom gloede and john conti passed for 91 more yards each throwing a long touch down pass gloede once again did a commendable job as quarterback running the team well and handing off the wet pigskin with a mini mum of fumbles see 202 yards page 5 29 seniors selected for 1952 who's who twenty-nine lehigh seniors have been named to a ppear in this year's who s who among students in american universities and colleges a student faculty committee chose the 29 from a list of the 60 most active men on campus who met the scholastic requirements of at least a 2.0 average in most cases a 2.5 scholastic average was re quired the selection of these names has been confirmed by the national who's who committee those named include arcadia president john p arnesen michael arra who has been active in arcadia and the political science assembly lawrence e collins a member of arcadia and delta omicron theta debating society ifc president william j davis others are john c diercks treasurer of apo and officer in several engineering honoraries william farkas member of cyanide and head of the town division of the campus chest committee nicholas s gentile jr president of the senior class mark j given treas urer of the campus chest and ac tive in the music festival and ar thur p goldenberg member of arcadia and the student activities committee and manager of the swimming team peter k huester senior class treasurer president of apo and a member of cyanide charles hull has been end on the football team for three years and is vice-presi dent of the senior class samuel s johnson president of idc mark s kaufman co-chairman of the campus chest committee and for mer president of cyanide and the inter-faith council william kitsos football captain james p kressler psa and christian council member william a latshaw jr managing editor of the brown and white vice-president of odk and publi city director of the campus chest see who's who page 8 frosh pull easy victory at tug cast off dinks trembley gets baptism at snake feast snakes were food for thought and food for supper last night in allentown and lehigh was repre sented at the table and on the speakers platform ecology prof francis trem bley was the principal speaker on some fallacies and habits of snakes after the speech dr trembley one of the leading herpetologists in the u.s and 115 others sat down to this menu at the hotel traylor mock turtle soup followed by the main course of broiled rattlesnake or smaller snake patties dr trembley could not be carradine artistic but fascinating by harlan m kelly see scl page 6 " the time has come the wal rus said to speak of many things although actor john carra dine in no way resembles the wal rus from carroll's timeless piece of inanity he too spoke of many things before his small lehigh au dience he started with the bible closed with lewis carroll and in cluded shakespeare as well carradine does shakespeare in a very fascinating though at times idly no response i knocked sug gestively no response i knocked bravely angrily pleadingly force fully and hopelessly i was at the wrong door rattled i walked down the hall to the next door and knocked resolutely a commanding voice answered and asked me to enter there sprawled on the benches in complete repose lay he looking more to my avid imagination like ophelia on her death bed than i imagined carradine would look he looked me up and down as i mumbled through a self-introduc tion with a hopeful gleam in my eye the expression on his face was more one of pain than eager ex pectation but after impressing him with the fact that i simply had to interview him or lose all hope for a pulitzer prize he agreed to let me pump him for info on his long ca reer as i pulled out my pen with bruised knuckles my mind was see carradine page 7 see snakes page 8 by dan klein apparently the lafayette fresh i men have gotten completely out of jhand lehigh's frosh earned the right to discard their dinks last elcars to jacis we vary in drive see cars page 6 variety seems to be the spice of drive on campus where an xk-120 jaguar a 1929 model a ford an elcar and a packard of 1920 vin tage top the unusual in automo biles according to an itemized re cord made last november there were 1,194 cars registered with the office of buildings and grounds of these 242 belonged to freshmen 315 to sophomore 340 to juniors and 297 to seniors the three most popular cars on campus are ford plymouth and chevrolet in that order following close behind are dodg buick oldsmobile and de soto the annual over-crowding of the parkfffjf spaces provided oh cam pus is becofriirig ever greater thds report shows for example in dor mitory parking lots there is space for 267 cars however parked in these lots are 357 cars the report failed to explain the geometrical inconsistency by bob morgan friday by winning their third straight tug-of-war from the leop ards while sitting in the taylor stadium stands lafayette just didn't show up calumet lafayette honorary had attempted to recruit 56 of their rebellious freshmen to oppose the lehigh team two busses were standing by on friday to bring them to bethlehem only 20 men put in an appearance john woolford president of calumet made the trip from eas ton to concede defeat by default while he was here he complained about the apathy of the students and the administration according to ted scheetz and ron madison of cyanide freshmen at the easton school openly defy regulations laid down by calumet and the deans have refused to give the honorary the power to enforce these regulations scheetz said in addition he con tinued the upperclassmen are apathetic about enforcement of the regulations lafayette frosh had previously earned the right to shed their dinks by defeating the upperclass men in a tug-of-war cyanide wishes to thank the freshmen of lehigh for showing more spirit than their lafayette counterparts sckeetz said the old and the new in lehigh automobiles are shown above being checked by their proud parents bill locke 53 on left displays his 1927 elcar which cost 4500 new and has made two trips to indi ana in last two years john west 53 in center peers into inner workings of 1951 mg which makes 32 miles per gallon of gas on right ray stern 53 shows confidence in 1927 buick with only 37,000 miles and 4,300 since july it cost 2375 new and has been clocked at 65 mpr top speed lehigh university brown and white volume 64 — number 15 tuesday november 18 1952 |
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