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Tuesday October 13 AV3IA3H NI1H330 3HX Page 4 Folk Dance Club To Hold Biweekly Dances Festiva A Yugoslavian Gola accompanied only by groupsinging and the beat of feet will highlight the allCollege folk dance 830 pm Friday in Warner gymnasium This will be the third folk dance sponsored by the newly organized j i r Folk Dance Club Under the lead film UeDICtS Lite ership of Marty Johnson this jf group is currently making plans Jf orOa Wildlife for an international folk dance fes tival which it will sponsor in con junction with the Physical fcduca unction witn tne rnysicai u rngbt in Hall tion Department on Nov 13 and J 14 Marianne Herman director oi ra the Folk Dance House in New York City will lead the two day allCollege festival The club will continue to hold open campus folk dances onalternate Fridays throughout the year in an effort to widen interest in this area of folk art They hope to present informal lectures at these dances in which foreignstudents describe and demonstrate the folk dances of their particular countries In addition to the allCollege dances members of the club will meet in a smaller group every other Friday night to study and perfect some of the more advanced dances Annex CONTINUED FROM PAGE I Construction of the second story walls is now beginning Theprocess of tearing out the back wall of Hall in order to join the two structures together will not begin until the initial enclosedstructure has been completed This will be in late November or earlyDecember The completed building will have the same exterior brick veneer as the present building The method of building being used in the annex is reinforced concrete construction No steel beams are used instead the whole structure is formed of cementreinforced with steel rods Thecement is shaped and held bywooden encasements during theharding period One fortunate result of this system is that the building program has not been affected by the steel strike Salzburg CONTINUED FROM PAGE I proach to musical training He welcomed the idea of a possible Salzburg student in Oberlin when students discussed the possibility with him As soon as the students secure pledges for tuition and livingexpenses they will notify DrPreusner of the materialization of the plan His faculty will choose astudent from a list offered to them by the Conservatory students who were in Salzburg Final approval of the student will rest with the admissions office of theConservatory Dr David Robertson Director of the Conservatoryenthusiastically received the suggestion of bringing a Salzburg student to the College It will be beneficial to us and will create a closer tie be tween Salzburg and Oberlin he commented River of the Crying Bird will be shown by the Natural His The movie filmed in color by naturalist Allan V Cruickshank is about Wakulla a Florida river of wildlife wonders and the natural habitat of the wailing limpkin a large loudvoiced wading bird whose Indian name meansmysterious waters Tickets for the film second in the Audubon Screen Tour series may be purchased at the door Stewart CONTINUED FROM PAGE I of the West African which seen in contrast to the European iscertainly a unifying force The Afri cans activities are similar to many westerners their emotions could be described with European names yet the point of view is different African life has been romanticized to the ludicrous by many western writers but its appeal has yet to be understood Future Articles In the coming series of articles I will attempt to deal topically with some of the problems diver sities and similarities I have men Letters to the Editor Zener Says Codel Bases Article on Misconceptions To the Editor ThB article in Fridays Review entitled If Peace Breaks Out by Mike Codel is a plea against peace but its argument is based on misconceptions The assumption cannot logically be made that a cririan rhrtnue from tension to peace would cause a stock market crash and unemployment for elec tronic engineers If an agreement f nparoful coexistence were made countries would not cancel all orders for arms out rawer a ararinal nrocess would have to de velop This lapse would allow am ple time even for overseas amine to revise their schedules for any nhanefl takes time for adjustment Do integration and automation just break out Thp article assumes also that our whole society is geared to war that in peace there would be no electronic engineers or scientists sending rockets to the moon and that religion would crumble from lank nf fiar Rut the aim of a sci entist is to increase mans knowl edge thus he hopes bettering mankind Research will not stop searching space will not stop For the quest for knowledge isendless and wasting scientists oninventions for war only slows real progress Secondly will religion really decline True religion is built on faith and love not fear What then would a peaceful world really be like People who now exDcnd their energies on wartime activity could be striving to preserve life rather than to wreck it The United States would tioned The obvious danger in the be freer to help impoverished whole rep program as well as in countries ana generally tne fciuie tne articles is oversimpimcauon oi mina oi me wuuu wumu ut Generalizing about large catc more at ease than it is today IIow gories of persons under suchcollectives as administrators missionaries and nationalists gives the incorrect impression that all these people are alike in tneir acts and motivations Evaluating the present bycomparison with the past raises the onpstinn of the value of ehanffe and it is not useless to ask whether or not the past might have been better Change is inevitable pro gress is not I do not intend a general cynicism for is it notpossible to feel attached to a people and still be afraid ever this fact does not imply that competition will be lost Actually competition should increase not only in the United States but throughout and among thecountries of the world Certainly we should not take the disprovedattitude of We must do as we have always done in the goodoldfashioned redblooded American tradition This feeling will never lead a people anywhere Rather we must hold the ideal of peace before us always striving to make life better for us and posterity Tom Zener VVNV ONE DAY SERVICE Fit CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 and slightly infantile gameCertainly at the present state of space travel the cost is fantastic and the commercial prospects nil but let us consider the benefits tohumanity which will come from a greater understanding of the space around us As in many other areas the US and Russia have basicallydifferent approaches to the subject of space exploration For Russia space travel is largely apropaganda tool a symbol to bemanipulated carefully to achieve the desired impression in the minds of the people of underdeveloped nations For the US spaceexploration has been from its start a careful scientific andnecessarily slow process of learning more about the spnee surrounding the earth American spacevehicles gathered so muchinformation during the InternationalGeophysical Year that the evaluation and publication of the final results will take several more years The next time you hear someone sneer at an American 150 poundsatellite in comparison with a Russian 2500 pound Sputnik consider that the American satellite can in its 150 pounds gather Information from two or three times as many instruments as the Sputnik can and send this information to earth as useable solid data This isscience not propaganda What would happen to the peaceful exploration of space by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration if peace breaks out It would wither and die as its budget slowly dwindled The civilian spaceprogram is technically andscientifically supported today by thematerials men and knowledge gained through the great military space programs II total disarma ment is accomplished it would take the best economic andintellectual support possible tomaintain the role of NASA in space And this support would not be forthcoming largely because many Americans are apathetic to the challenge of space It was this apathy which relegated space travel to the realm of sciencefiction until Sputnik I orbited and it is this apathy which cancripple or halt the peacefulexploration of space today That is why I take exception to the idea that the exploration of space is a childs game with sinister political over tones Thomas M Conrad IN BY 10 OUT BY 530 GOO LAUNDRY DRY CLEANING Wash and Fold Shirts Included O 13c per lb 16c per lb O loenng CONTINUED FROM PAGE phies from which the student chooses his own reading He is judged only by his mark on the final exam Although this system is not favorable to students who do not take tests well a highrecommendation from ones tutor carries a great deal of weight Miss Floering observed Compulsive Studying Miss Floering commented on the awful compulsion under which College students seem to work She contrasted this withCambridge where students frequently participate actively in four or five clubs She learned judo while at Cambridge She noted that We had a gaier life at home and still got an education Like other foreign students have done in the past she mentioned the Colleges exceptionally large library attendance Although this would seem to indicate that stu dents study harder here anevaluation must consider other factors such as dorm study conditions the compact campus and fewer ac tivities She criticized the great amount of literal work we have on the grounds that students feel that once their reading assignment is finished they have completed their work it also keeps them from participating in club activl ties Miss Floering majored in geography at Cambridge She ex plained that this field also includes courses in economics and history thus compensating for Cam bridges lack of liberal education She is receiving four credits in the College for work on her MA thesis Greek Revival Architec ture from 1820 to 1850 in Ohio FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY PEERLESS LAUNDRY INC 27 East College Street Phone 56034 LOST Comparative government notebook 3ring size ordinary cardboard cover Its desperately needed please call Toni Bur bank at French House 49421 if found 6d2 O AWS Approves Open Lounges Begins Plans for Cooking C I ass mav nnw he nermitted in the lounges of Barrows Burton and Embassy dn J certain hours of the weekend upon the decision of twothirds of the men in the hoj innovation was made possible when OAWS legislature yesterday passed the 3 Xllio i r J U Ul i Ul wit i J 1 The hours of the open lounges are 711 pm Friday 15 and 71230 pm Saturday and 25 pm and 711 pm Sunday Mens Board passed the proposal a week ago and referred it to OAWS for approval Suchapproval was necessary because it was actually a womans rule that pro Free Tickets To Go To College Students For City Concerts Free concert tickets for per formances of the Cleveland Or chestra and outstanding guest art ists now are offered to College as well as to Conservatory students Roundtrip bus tickets to the free Saturday night concerts at Severance Hall in Cleveland are available for 150 apiece in room 108 Warner Hall Free tickets remain for the fol lowing concerts Cleveland or OAWS CANDIDATES Candidates for two positions on OAWS judicial board to be elected one week from today Tuesday Oct 20 are MarciaOlscn Dascomb Jane Mclsaac Noble Marcy Shulman Keep Sue Davics Tank Mary Evans Johnson Anne SouthworthAllcncroft Penny Peterson French House Lois Fclson Sliurtleff chestra Oct 17 Gina Bachauer piano Oct 24 Itey de la Torre guitar Nov 21 ClevelandOrchestra with chorus directed byRobert Shaw Dec 5 ClevelandOrchestra Dec 19 ClevelandOrchestra Dec 20 Josef Gingold violin Jan 12 Theodore Lettvin piano Feb 20 Erica Morini violin Feb 27 Eunice Podis pi ano March 5 Arnold Steinhardt violin March 12 Cleveland Or chestra April 2 and Rudolf Ser kin piano April 9 Buses will not be organized for concerts given during vacations Transportation tickets for allconcerts must be purchased now Program Notes FACULTY RECITAL Fenner Douglas organ assisted by Mrs Nancy Dalley flute De Vere Moore oboe WilliamBerman viola and Peter Howard cello 8 pm tonight WarnerConcert Hall Buxtehudes Prelude and Fugue in D Major Bachs Trio Sonata in G Major no 6 andPrelude and Fugue in B minor Mozarts Adagio and Rondo K 617 Messiaens Messe de la Penl tucotc GUEST RECITAL Stanley Quartet 830 pmFriday Warner Concert Hall Haydns Quartet in G Minor op 74 no 3 Ravels Quartet in FMajor and Burtuks Quartet No 6 hibited women in the loung mens dorms The Mens Board proDowi J included a provision that Tw and White House which do have house mothers could y open lounges if a house unar ously applied for them to u Duaia xnis section oi the proa was tabled by OAWS until next meeting with the reqy that Mens Board discover a br way than unanimous consent make the men in these houses sponsible for the open Ioucr Representatives of the two bod Dean Dolliver Dean Holder and Dean Dixon will confer abj the proposal this week i OAWS is launching a progj of seminars for senior girls seminars are conceived as iny mal meetings in Metcalf or Bi win covering such subjects overseas opportunities for wd and study teaching opportunist graduate school for women nsj riage and the collegeeducj woman and the adjustment college graduate to noncollege ciety Classes in the cooking arts is J other project getting under irf J WOSOCOCCCCCOOOOCOCCCCCOCC000505COeOCCC050M9 PERSONALIZED Y VESrERS COMMITTEE An opening meeting of theYVespers Committee will be held tonight in Harkness lounge All students are invited to attend LOST Stratford 17jewel watch with black band betweenCranford and Quad Call PeggyChilman 47561 7cl MUST SELL 51 Studebaker convertible light blue excellent transportation very sharp 175 or best offer Call 46731 Oberlin 7cl mi See our Christmas 59 olbumi of exceptionally beautiful greeting cards the kind on which you ike to have your name imprinledl So easy so smart so relaxing to select cards nowl PRESS OF THE TIMES 60 SOUTH PLEASANT sccocccccccccoccccccoGCOSCGCccccosccccceeeoceos W1LDR00T CREAM OIL KEEPS HAIR GROOMED LONGER MAKES HAIR FEEL STRONGER Surface Hair Tonics i Penetrating Wildroot CreamOil Surface hair tonics merely coat your hair When they dry off your hair dries out But die exclusive Wildroot CreamOil formula penetrates your hair Keeps hair groomed longer makes hair feel stronger than hair groomed an ordinary way Theres no other hair tonic formula like it MAKE HAIR OBEY ALL DAY WITH WILDROOT CREAMOILI mm TANG WW tik MM New breakfast drink you can keep in your room EARLY ELLEN I get Up SO early to study that a glass of TANG tides me over until breakfast Its delicious and wakes you upbetter than a cold shower ALWAYS HUNGRY HAL Im a bc foreandaflermcal TANG man It really fills in where fraternity food leaves off Iiuy two jars Your friends need vitamin C too LAST MINUTE LOUlEi A fast TANG and I can make it through class til I have time forbreakfast Fast All you have to do is add to cold w ater and stir NEW INSTANT DEAD BEAT DON I have to put in a lot of hourB on my Lit Hut since I have TANG on mybookshelf it really keeps me going even through the longest hours MORE VITAMIN C THAN ORANGE JUICE Jutt mix with cold watarl t L h A l I I GET TANG FOR YOUR BOOKSHELF SOON TANG has real wakeup taste more vitamin C than fresh or frozen orange or grapefruit juice Plus vitamin A TANG keeps without refrigeration so you can keep TANG right in your room AproduotolSnnlFood Ktohn VlVY J JIKmISis Dfrv ST TANGcs 0ike Addres9 tang cikKe cntMt grm w Bae ej I ANG W 11 pay 25 for every entry used Creek Mich Entries must be postmarked before Dec 15 1959
Object Description
Title | Oberlin Review (Oberlin, Ohio), 1959-10-13 |
Description | vol. 88, no. 7 |
Subject | Oberlin College--Students--Periodicals |
Date | 1959-10-13 |
Type | text; image |
Format | newspaper |
LCCN | sn78005590 |
Source | Oberlin College |
Language | English |
Relation | http://obis.oberlin.edu/record=b1749264~S4 |
Reel no. | 13020702145 |
title sorting | Oberlin Review (Oberlin, Ohio), 1959-10-13 |
Description
Title | Page 4 |
Transcript | Tuesday October 13 AV3IA3H NI1H330 3HX Page 4 Folk Dance Club To Hold Biweekly Dances Festiva A Yugoslavian Gola accompanied only by groupsinging and the beat of feet will highlight the allCollege folk dance 830 pm Friday in Warner gymnasium This will be the third folk dance sponsored by the newly organized j i r Folk Dance Club Under the lead film UeDICtS Lite ership of Marty Johnson this jf group is currently making plans Jf orOa Wildlife for an international folk dance fes tival which it will sponsor in con junction with the Physical fcduca unction witn tne rnysicai u rngbt in Hall tion Department on Nov 13 and J 14 Marianne Herman director oi ra the Folk Dance House in New York City will lead the two day allCollege festival The club will continue to hold open campus folk dances onalternate Fridays throughout the year in an effort to widen interest in this area of folk art They hope to present informal lectures at these dances in which foreignstudents describe and demonstrate the folk dances of their particular countries In addition to the allCollege dances members of the club will meet in a smaller group every other Friday night to study and perfect some of the more advanced dances Annex CONTINUED FROM PAGE I Construction of the second story walls is now beginning Theprocess of tearing out the back wall of Hall in order to join the two structures together will not begin until the initial enclosedstructure has been completed This will be in late November or earlyDecember The completed building will have the same exterior brick veneer as the present building The method of building being used in the annex is reinforced concrete construction No steel beams are used instead the whole structure is formed of cementreinforced with steel rods Thecement is shaped and held bywooden encasements during theharding period One fortunate result of this system is that the building program has not been affected by the steel strike Salzburg CONTINUED FROM PAGE I proach to musical training He welcomed the idea of a possible Salzburg student in Oberlin when students discussed the possibility with him As soon as the students secure pledges for tuition and livingexpenses they will notify DrPreusner of the materialization of the plan His faculty will choose astudent from a list offered to them by the Conservatory students who were in Salzburg Final approval of the student will rest with the admissions office of theConservatory Dr David Robertson Director of the Conservatoryenthusiastically received the suggestion of bringing a Salzburg student to the College It will be beneficial to us and will create a closer tie be tween Salzburg and Oberlin he commented River of the Crying Bird will be shown by the Natural His The movie filmed in color by naturalist Allan V Cruickshank is about Wakulla a Florida river of wildlife wonders and the natural habitat of the wailing limpkin a large loudvoiced wading bird whose Indian name meansmysterious waters Tickets for the film second in the Audubon Screen Tour series may be purchased at the door Stewart CONTINUED FROM PAGE I of the West African which seen in contrast to the European iscertainly a unifying force The Afri cans activities are similar to many westerners their emotions could be described with European names yet the point of view is different African life has been romanticized to the ludicrous by many western writers but its appeal has yet to be understood Future Articles In the coming series of articles I will attempt to deal topically with some of the problems diver sities and similarities I have men Letters to the Editor Zener Says Codel Bases Article on Misconceptions To the Editor ThB article in Fridays Review entitled If Peace Breaks Out by Mike Codel is a plea against peace but its argument is based on misconceptions The assumption cannot logically be made that a cririan rhrtnue from tension to peace would cause a stock market crash and unemployment for elec tronic engineers If an agreement f nparoful coexistence were made countries would not cancel all orders for arms out rawer a ararinal nrocess would have to de velop This lapse would allow am ple time even for overseas amine to revise their schedules for any nhanefl takes time for adjustment Do integration and automation just break out Thp article assumes also that our whole society is geared to war that in peace there would be no electronic engineers or scientists sending rockets to the moon and that religion would crumble from lank nf fiar Rut the aim of a sci entist is to increase mans knowl edge thus he hopes bettering mankind Research will not stop searching space will not stop For the quest for knowledge isendless and wasting scientists oninventions for war only slows real progress Secondly will religion really decline True religion is built on faith and love not fear What then would a peaceful world really be like People who now exDcnd their energies on wartime activity could be striving to preserve life rather than to wreck it The United States would tioned The obvious danger in the be freer to help impoverished whole rep program as well as in countries ana generally tne fciuie tne articles is oversimpimcauon oi mina oi me wuuu wumu ut Generalizing about large catc more at ease than it is today IIow gories of persons under suchcollectives as administrators missionaries and nationalists gives the incorrect impression that all these people are alike in tneir acts and motivations Evaluating the present bycomparison with the past raises the onpstinn of the value of ehanffe and it is not useless to ask whether or not the past might have been better Change is inevitable pro gress is not I do not intend a general cynicism for is it notpossible to feel attached to a people and still be afraid ever this fact does not imply that competition will be lost Actually competition should increase not only in the United States but throughout and among thecountries of the world Certainly we should not take the disprovedattitude of We must do as we have always done in the goodoldfashioned redblooded American tradition This feeling will never lead a people anywhere Rather we must hold the ideal of peace before us always striving to make life better for us and posterity Tom Zener VVNV ONE DAY SERVICE Fit CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 and slightly infantile gameCertainly at the present state of space travel the cost is fantastic and the commercial prospects nil but let us consider the benefits tohumanity which will come from a greater understanding of the space around us As in many other areas the US and Russia have basicallydifferent approaches to the subject of space exploration For Russia space travel is largely apropaganda tool a symbol to bemanipulated carefully to achieve the desired impression in the minds of the people of underdeveloped nations For the US spaceexploration has been from its start a careful scientific andnecessarily slow process of learning more about the spnee surrounding the earth American spacevehicles gathered so muchinformation during the InternationalGeophysical Year that the evaluation and publication of the final results will take several more years The next time you hear someone sneer at an American 150 poundsatellite in comparison with a Russian 2500 pound Sputnik consider that the American satellite can in its 150 pounds gather Information from two or three times as many instruments as the Sputnik can and send this information to earth as useable solid data This isscience not propaganda What would happen to the peaceful exploration of space by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration if peace breaks out It would wither and die as its budget slowly dwindled The civilian spaceprogram is technically andscientifically supported today by thematerials men and knowledge gained through the great military space programs II total disarma ment is accomplished it would take the best economic andintellectual support possible tomaintain the role of NASA in space And this support would not be forthcoming largely because many Americans are apathetic to the challenge of space It was this apathy which relegated space travel to the realm of sciencefiction until Sputnik I orbited and it is this apathy which cancripple or halt the peacefulexploration of space today That is why I take exception to the idea that the exploration of space is a childs game with sinister political over tones Thomas M Conrad IN BY 10 OUT BY 530 GOO LAUNDRY DRY CLEANING Wash and Fold Shirts Included O 13c per lb 16c per lb O loenng CONTINUED FROM PAGE phies from which the student chooses his own reading He is judged only by his mark on the final exam Although this system is not favorable to students who do not take tests well a highrecommendation from ones tutor carries a great deal of weight Miss Floering observed Compulsive Studying Miss Floering commented on the awful compulsion under which College students seem to work She contrasted this withCambridge where students frequently participate actively in four or five clubs She learned judo while at Cambridge She noted that We had a gaier life at home and still got an education Like other foreign students have done in the past she mentioned the Colleges exceptionally large library attendance Although this would seem to indicate that stu dents study harder here anevaluation must consider other factors such as dorm study conditions the compact campus and fewer ac tivities She criticized the great amount of literal work we have on the grounds that students feel that once their reading assignment is finished they have completed their work it also keeps them from participating in club activl ties Miss Floering majored in geography at Cambridge She ex plained that this field also includes courses in economics and history thus compensating for Cam bridges lack of liberal education She is receiving four credits in the College for work on her MA thesis Greek Revival Architec ture from 1820 to 1850 in Ohio FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY PEERLESS LAUNDRY INC 27 East College Street Phone 56034 LOST Comparative government notebook 3ring size ordinary cardboard cover Its desperately needed please call Toni Bur bank at French House 49421 if found 6d2 O AWS Approves Open Lounges Begins Plans for Cooking C I ass mav nnw he nermitted in the lounges of Barrows Burton and Embassy dn J certain hours of the weekend upon the decision of twothirds of the men in the hoj innovation was made possible when OAWS legislature yesterday passed the 3 Xllio i r J U Ul i Ul wit i J 1 The hours of the open lounges are 711 pm Friday 15 and 71230 pm Saturday and 25 pm and 711 pm Sunday Mens Board passed the proposal a week ago and referred it to OAWS for approval Suchapproval was necessary because it was actually a womans rule that pro Free Tickets To Go To College Students For City Concerts Free concert tickets for per formances of the Cleveland Or chestra and outstanding guest art ists now are offered to College as well as to Conservatory students Roundtrip bus tickets to the free Saturday night concerts at Severance Hall in Cleveland are available for 150 apiece in room 108 Warner Hall Free tickets remain for the fol lowing concerts Cleveland or OAWS CANDIDATES Candidates for two positions on OAWS judicial board to be elected one week from today Tuesday Oct 20 are MarciaOlscn Dascomb Jane Mclsaac Noble Marcy Shulman Keep Sue Davics Tank Mary Evans Johnson Anne SouthworthAllcncroft Penny Peterson French House Lois Fclson Sliurtleff chestra Oct 17 Gina Bachauer piano Oct 24 Itey de la Torre guitar Nov 21 ClevelandOrchestra with chorus directed byRobert Shaw Dec 5 ClevelandOrchestra Dec 19 ClevelandOrchestra Dec 20 Josef Gingold violin Jan 12 Theodore Lettvin piano Feb 20 Erica Morini violin Feb 27 Eunice Podis pi ano March 5 Arnold Steinhardt violin March 12 Cleveland Or chestra April 2 and Rudolf Ser kin piano April 9 Buses will not be organized for concerts given during vacations Transportation tickets for allconcerts must be purchased now Program Notes FACULTY RECITAL Fenner Douglas organ assisted by Mrs Nancy Dalley flute De Vere Moore oboe WilliamBerman viola and Peter Howard cello 8 pm tonight WarnerConcert Hall Buxtehudes Prelude and Fugue in D Major Bachs Trio Sonata in G Major no 6 andPrelude and Fugue in B minor Mozarts Adagio and Rondo K 617 Messiaens Messe de la Penl tucotc GUEST RECITAL Stanley Quartet 830 pmFriday Warner Concert Hall Haydns Quartet in G Minor op 74 no 3 Ravels Quartet in FMajor and Burtuks Quartet No 6 hibited women in the loung mens dorms The Mens Board proDowi J included a provision that Tw and White House which do have house mothers could y open lounges if a house unar ously applied for them to u Duaia xnis section oi the proa was tabled by OAWS until next meeting with the reqy that Mens Board discover a br way than unanimous consent make the men in these houses sponsible for the open Ioucr Representatives of the two bod Dean Dolliver Dean Holder and Dean Dixon will confer abj the proposal this week i OAWS is launching a progj of seminars for senior girls seminars are conceived as iny mal meetings in Metcalf or Bi win covering such subjects overseas opportunities for wd and study teaching opportunist graduate school for women nsj riage and the collegeeducj woman and the adjustment college graduate to noncollege ciety Classes in the cooking arts is J other project getting under irf J WOSOCOCCCCCOOOOCOCCCCCOCC000505COeOCCC050M9 PERSONALIZED Y VESrERS COMMITTEE An opening meeting of theYVespers Committee will be held tonight in Harkness lounge All students are invited to attend LOST Stratford 17jewel watch with black band betweenCranford and Quad Call PeggyChilman 47561 7cl MUST SELL 51 Studebaker convertible light blue excellent transportation very sharp 175 or best offer Call 46731 Oberlin 7cl mi See our Christmas 59 olbumi of exceptionally beautiful greeting cards the kind on which you ike to have your name imprinledl So easy so smart so relaxing to select cards nowl PRESS OF THE TIMES 60 SOUTH PLEASANT sccocccccccccoccccccoGCOSCGCccccosccccceeeoceos W1LDR00T CREAM OIL KEEPS HAIR GROOMED LONGER MAKES HAIR FEEL STRONGER Surface Hair Tonics i Penetrating Wildroot CreamOil Surface hair tonics merely coat your hair When they dry off your hair dries out But die exclusive Wildroot CreamOil formula penetrates your hair Keeps hair groomed longer makes hair feel stronger than hair groomed an ordinary way Theres no other hair tonic formula like it MAKE HAIR OBEY ALL DAY WITH WILDROOT CREAMOILI mm TANG WW tik MM New breakfast drink you can keep in your room EARLY ELLEN I get Up SO early to study that a glass of TANG tides me over until breakfast Its delicious and wakes you upbetter than a cold shower ALWAYS HUNGRY HAL Im a bc foreandaflermcal TANG man It really fills in where fraternity food leaves off Iiuy two jars Your friends need vitamin C too LAST MINUTE LOUlEi A fast TANG and I can make it through class til I have time forbreakfast Fast All you have to do is add to cold w ater and stir NEW INSTANT DEAD BEAT DON I have to put in a lot of hourB on my Lit Hut since I have TANG on mybookshelf it really keeps me going even through the longest hours MORE VITAMIN C THAN ORANGE JUICE Jutt mix with cold watarl t L h A l I I GET TANG FOR YOUR BOOKSHELF SOON TANG has real wakeup taste more vitamin C than fresh or frozen orange or grapefruit juice Plus vitamin A TANG keeps without refrigeration so you can keep TANG right in your room AproduotolSnnlFood Ktohn VlVY J JIKmISis Dfrv ST TANGcs 0ike Addres9 tang cikKe cntMt grm w Bae ej I ANG W 11 pay 25 for every entry used Creek Mich Entries must be postmarked before Dec 15 1959 |
Date | 1959-10-13 |
Format | .jp2 |
Source | Oberlin College |
title sorting | Oberlin Review (Oberlin, Ohio), 1959-10-13 |
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