University Daily Kansan Page 7 Princeton Students Riot On Campus PRINCETON, N.J. — (UPI) — Some 1,500 Princeton University students howled and cavorted in the streets of this university town for $2 \frac{1}{2}$ hours early today in a wild, old-fashioned riot that included: - A panty raid on a women's dormitory at a nearby Choir College. * An impromptu fireworks display. - A bagpipe symphony. - A train "holdup." - And, an assault on the Governor's mansion. The demonstration left streets strewn with wreckage and landed 14 students in jail. At one point, state police were called in to help Princeton police control the chanting, shouting mob. AT 10:05 P.M. YESTERDAY, about 100 collegians massed in a court yard of a dormitory area, splitting the cool night with the sounds of drums, trumpets and bagpipes. The students set off fireworks and a siren before college proctors momentarily broke up the gathering. But by 10:15, a bigger mob assembled on Nassau Street, the main section of the Princeton campus. Traffic stopped as the students, now swelled to 500 in number, set up barricades of bicycle racks and trash cans. A small foreign car with driver and passenger inside was picked up and deposited on the sidewalk. A FEW MINUTES later the crowd surged to the Princeton railroad station where the Pennsylvania railroad's 10:17 was preparing to depart. But it ran into an unexpected half hour "holdun." Students set a bonfire on the tracks in front of the train. Others hurled rocks that shattered about a half dozen windows. At 10:45, the mass of students, now estimated at 1,500, returned to the campus and formed a human ring around Prospect, the home of Princeton President Dr. Robert F. Goheen. Goheen did not appear. The students trampled flower beds and tore down an iron fence. From there, the riots headed for the home — about a quarter of a mile away — of Gov. Richard J. Hughes, at Morven. There, the Dewar to Speak At Dains Lecture The Department of Chemistry and Alpha Chi Sigma will present the annual Dains Memorial Lecture Thursday. Dr. Michael J.S. Dewar, chairman of the Chemistry Department at the University of Chicago, will speak on "New Heteroaromatic Boron Compounds." Dr. Dewar received his doctorate at Oxford University in 1942, and has since had a distinguished career, in both research and education, in the fields of organic, physical organic, and theoretical chemistry. A banquet will be held at 6:00 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union, followed by the lecture in 411 Summerfield at 8:00 p.m. The public is cordially invited to attend, and tickets may be obtained at the chemistry office, 224 Malott Hall. crowd hurled a salvo of cherry bombs at the home. There was no damage. THE RIOT REACHED its climax when the men marched to West-minister Choir College, about a half mile from the Princeton campus. Hundreds of students vaulted over a six-foot high wall and swarmed into a courtyard. From one of the rooms came a barrage of potted plants. Several of the men opened windows of a women's dormitory and hopped in. But they came scurrying out just as fast. The riot continued for another hour before proctors, police and fatigue managed to put an end to it. 'Elijah' Recording To Be Presented The recording of Mendelssohn- Bartholdy's "Elijah," sung by the KU chorus May 26, will be played tomor- row and Thursday at regular chorus rehearsal time (3:30 to 5 p.m.) in 328 Murphy Hall. The performance was conducted by Clayton Krehbiel, professor of choral music and associate professor of music education. Soloists were Marva Lou Powell, soprano, Topeka graduate student; Sharon Tebenkamp Sooter, mezzo soprano, Lawrence senior; Edward Sooter, tenor, Lawrence special student, and James Ralston, baritone, instructor of music education and choral music. WHAT'S NEW IN THE MAY ATLANTIC? Barbara W. Tuchman: "The Anarchists"—an Atlantic Extra. An unusual account of the advocates and the history of the idea of a stateless society here and abroad. ALSO "John L. Lewis and the Mine Workers": New York Times writer A. H. Raskin looks at a "skeleton of a union" thirty years after its heyday. "A Rough Map of Greece": Adventures in the Greek island of mykonos by The Atlantic's Phoebe-Lou Adams. "Sunday Evening": A poem by Ted Hughes. standing staff of editors sets out to produce a magazine of the highest academic and cultural interest? You'll know when you read The Atlantic. In each issue you'll find fresh new ideas, exciting literary techniques, keen analyses of current affairs and a high order of criticism. Get your copy today. What happens when an out- Which Twin Moved By MAYFLOWER? Ask your neighbor—find out about Mayflower's famous services complete, courteous, careful. Lets you relax on moving day. Moving? Call for our free estimate. LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 Mass. Final Humanities Talk Scheduled for May 14 The Humanities Lecture Series for this year will close, Tuesday, May 14, with a lecture by Dr. Edward Lowinsky, University of Chicago musicologist, on "Musical Genius: Origins and Evolution of a Concept." He will speak at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall; the School of Fine Arts will give a reception afterward in Murphy Hall lounge. Tuesday, May 7, 1963 During his three-day visit at KU he will speak to classes in music history and history of art, and will have luncheons with faculty members in those fields. Two years ago, Dr. Lowinsky was appointed the Ferdinand Schevill distinguished service professorship at the University of Chicago; he left the University of California to accept the Chicago chair. His special field is Renaissance music, and his current research is in the relation of that music to other humanistic fields. He was the first music history scholar to win a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the first invited to the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. He was born in 1908 in Stuttgart, Germany, received the Ph. D. at the University of Heidelberg, and taught piano and theory in Stuttgart Conservatory and in Holland. TODAY Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Official Bulletin Tau Sigma, 7 p.m., Robinson Gym. Methodist Community Worship, 9:15 TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11-40 a.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. El Ateneo se reunira míercoles, el 8 de mayo, a las 4:30 de la tarde en la sala 11 de Fraser. El señor Rodolfo A. Suárez dara una charla acerca de la novela del mes pasado en el castellón. Se tocarán canciones de las zarzas del mismoismo. Todos están invitados. German Soundfilm, "Rosen Für den Staatsanwesen" 3:30 and 8 p.m. Fraser Taylor, 9:15 a.m. Room 2. Balley. English subtitles. Everyone invited, no admittance charge. THURSDAY Student Peace Union meeting. 3:30 Pan Pan American Room. Student Room. Mathematics Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. Thursday, May 9, 103 Strong Hall. Coffee at 3:00 p.m. in 119 Strong. Professor M Breuer, University of California "The Variational Property of the Parameter - Invariant Multiple Integral." An Old Tradition Survives The association of silver with marriage was a natural outgrowth of the change in the manner of acquiring a bride. When men began to buy wives rather than capture them, the price of the wife was often measured in silver coin. JRP Saves 11,130 Packages, Wins TV The smoking habits of Joseph R. Pearson Hall residents have won a color-TV set for the hall. The hall won the TV in a contest sponsored by a tobacco company. The winner was determined by the number of cigarette packages saved. Only those brands manufactured by the sponsoring company counted in the contest. JRP residents saved 11,130 packages. 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