Friday, January 19, 1923 SCHEDULE for nittany boxers nearly filled (Jjach Houck Has Cut Ring Squad to Twenty-Eight Candidates Heavyweights Needed Further d.-.V.oi.m*nts of the sehed and the reducing of the number of rtßdUw* lh *-' aro lhe laleSt Mppenliish in Xi.tany boxlint circles. AUhoJsh . U'-iftit.. list of Wines has " antioun. v.l Navy still comes first. February ».-v.-ut*-enth (instead of February sixteenth, as announced by mistake'i" tl« h* ‘ ,nd C <“ eh Houck still ! ‘o|«s that graduate man er Fietnlns ami liis siutlent assist ...-ill lie all’.** to arrange a meet aith a 1--S' formidahle contencter lie fore tackling the mitlshi|imen. is the Itiue ,ind White flstic sched ule now stands. I'eiiu state will meet the -Savr here on February seven teenth. Penn her.-, February twenty fourth, Army at West Point. March third. V. 1. M- at State College. March tenth, and will .-liter the Intercollegi ates on March sixteenth and seven teenth. at Philadelphia. According to his last announcement. Coach Houck cut the boxing squad to twenty-eight men, as follows: Bordner, Black. Cimbcila. Kisler, Pried. Fritts, Gerhardt, Hagenbuch. Hanna, Irving, Johnson. Koehler. Krnmrlne. McCler man. Mean*. Milburn. O’Donnell. Reg ister] Rothrock. A. M.. Rothrock, H. A, Sieg. Tate, Weiss, Williams, Wert, Young. Zerbe, and Zimmerman. These candidates will continue on Intensive practice from now on. Coach Houck U still hoping for some more promis ing heavyweight candidates. MENORAH SOCIETY TO HEAR DR. ISAAC HUSIK Other Speakers Scheduled to Ad dress Meetings During Coming Semester The Penn State Menorah Society baa secured as the speaker for next Sunday Dr. Isaac Huslk, of the Department of Philosophy of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. Dr. Husik’s subject is of interest, as he is going to speak on "Jewish Philosophy". He will address the Menorah Society meeting to be held in Liberal Arts Building. Room 25 on Sunday, Janu ary twenty-first at 11:00 a. m. Doctor Husik comes to Penn State highly rec ommended by the Intercollegiate' Men orah Association of’ New York city and promises a most interesting talk. Menorah meetings are open to mem bers* and others interested, and lec tures by scholars or laymen, Jewish and non-Jewish. on current Jewish questions as well as on subjects in Jewish history, literature and religion are given. The Menorah is a move ment to study and advance Jewish cul ture and Ideals and to prepare uni versity men and women for intelli gent service to the community. Tho Menorah Society appeals to men and women of various kinds of religious belief and brings them together upon the purely intellectual basis of study and impartial discussion, no religious 'qualifications whatever being made. Speakers scheduled to be here in the future are: February 25, Itabbi Ira E. Sand ers of Allentown, Pa. April 22, Dr. Halper of the Drop tie College. Philadelphia, Pa. May 6. Rabbi William Rosenau of Baltimore, Maryland. - A Silverman, Head of the Depart ment of Chemistry, University of Pittsburgh. Abraham A. Neuman, of Philadel phia. Dartmouth adopts a new SYSTEM FRATERNITY "BUSHING** "Rushing week" at Dartmouth col lege will have an unusual feature next year. By order of the Inter-fraternity Council, a period of silence shall exist to which there shall bo no visiting, com munication, correspondence or contact °* any kind between freshmen and up- Per-claasmen. Immediately after the conclusion of this period uniform Invi tation* to Join tho several fraternities **• to be deposited by members of the •weral fraternities In the ; rooms of the freshmen. The. freshman then makes Sis own choice, of the fraternity, he dfe to enter. Zalatla §7 } L. K. METZGER L. K. METZGER TOHN WARD men rraKm- “The Fafrteist Growing Store in State College" I ber when the standards of 1 ■ ■ ■< " . ■ •t# dress at leading Universities SaSSteS'fES Don’t forget to take “Blue Books” to your exams wS3"sqteTd wiTmeof 6 leaves - 3 for 5c 8 leaves - 2 for 5c theJohnWardbusinessptoveit. _ - _ _ 16 leaves • 3 for 10c “Die John Ward repccsentitiv . displays in: Text Books for all schools for the state College Hotel Second Semester Jan. 19 —r*. Tr ~ All makes of Fountain Pens repaired —. _ : jjroit.‘Always 1 rying to Make Our Store t-or You Address forMiilOrders u. s .n».-KovV«ltCi v -r rr •\,fr?'Tiry/-vr-,Tj ... L. xv. MmXiUCiXV, lxi-xio Alien St. PITTSBURGH ENGINEER COMES TO PENN STATE Percy Nieholls of Pittsburgh. Engin eer at the Research Laboratory, Amer ican Society of Heating and Ventilat ing Engineers, has been appointed a consultant in Heat Transmission at the Engineering Experiment Station of Penn State. Mr. Nieholls was born in London in WO. He attended the Northern Con gregational School and the University of Leeds, graduating from the course ‘ji Civil and Mechanical Engineering at Leeds, with the degree of M. Sc. After serving his apprenticeship in the shops, he won the Whitworth Scholar ship. of which there are but four giv en each year in the British Dominions. Nieholls came to America in 1597 and served with the Weslinghouse. Western Electric and General Electric Companies, and later joined the Frank lin Manufacturing Company as Plan ning and Research Engineer. He spent the summer of 1921 at Penn State with the Engineering Experiment Station and impressed his associates as being a man of high scientific attainments. Mr. Nieholls will come to Slate Col lege once or twice a month to confer; with the station staff in matters of heat transmission investigations and in other ways will keep in touch with the tests as they progress. PLAYERS TO STAGE “A SUCCESSFUL CALAMITY” Play Comes to Penn State After a Successful Professional Tour of Country The Penn State Players, under the direction of Arthur C. Cloetingh, will ..resent as their next feature produc tion “A Successful Calamity," a clever comedy in two acts by Clare Kummer. x his play enjoyed a very successful road tour and comes to the Players with high recommendations. There is .10 doubt but that this presentation will be one of the most popular that the Players have ever oflered. Truly American “A Successful Calamity" is truly an American play from the opening line to the closing one. It has to do with the Miltons, a very fashionable' New York family who are living at break-neck speed for fear that their neighbors will out-live them. The family have come to such straits that the members seldom see each other, even at meal time. Mr. Milton is a member of the old social school and he is sick and tired of the social lunacy with which his family is stricken. A chance remark from the butler one evening, -that only the poor have time to rest, gives Mr. Milton food for ample thought. It seems to have come to him ut the psychological moment." Accofdlngly a calamity overtakes Mr. Milton and overnight—so he tells his family—he finds himself a financial ruin. Things In the Milton family suddenly change and almost before they know it each one of them is trying to adapt himself or herself to the dire circum stances to which they find themselves reduced. It Is a period of radical re adjustment. The young wife that Milton thought unfaithful turns out pure gold. It wers in its cast: Zama —Elsie Kohler "23 Ohunn Rutharinu Sharpless ’2:l Nijo .r.i..'.;..Phil Stanley *23 This last play will be the final ap pearance of - Miss Sharpless in the University Club repertoire, as she Is being graduated in-February; FRESHMAN CLASS HOLDS ' ELECTIONS AT MEETING Yearlings Elect Class Managers and Hear Talks on Customs— Invited to Soph Hop A meeting-of the freshman class for the- election of the- frosh basketball manager was held In the Bull Pen last Tuesday night. There' . were eleven nominees for the' office and Leighton Davis was elected manager. The meeting was called, to order by “Mike.Palm"/24, who acted as presi dent pro tem. Palm introduced M. E. Buckley '26 who presided over, the meeting the remainder of the time. Buckley. E. R. Servlck, C. H. Moore. \V. E. Shipley and.F. H. Onyx hud been elected at a previous meeting ns the five trial presidents of the class. Each will be given a chance to con duct one meeting,, before the. elections for president will be'held. - After Buckley had taken charge of the meeting. President Ed. Kerr of the sophomore class announced the Soph omoro Hop and invited the freshmen to attend. He said that, although no class ;iK< rich., enough..-.to .conduct a dance for another class without charg ing admission, the subscription for the freshmen will he iow’er than those for tho sophomores. Cheer-lender Dolan then gave a few reminders to the frosh concerning customs. He em phasized the fuels that the freshmen are lax in saluting “Prexy” Thomas and Dr. Sparks, in greeting each other in attending athletic meets, and in walking more than tw*o abreast. Do inn also warned the frosh that if tnciues are put on now they must be worn until the end of the winter. H. Zlmmerling the freshman cheer leader. announced that the college yell when given at freshman games should not.be followed by the word "team”. Nominations were opened for basket ball managers, after which the meet ing -was adjourned. The frosh in accordance with cus tom gave their class yell after their meeting, and also gave the Junior yoll for Palm and E. E.*Helni, secretary of the Junior class, who had organized the freshman class. Shoes at a Real Reduction See our stock before buying elsewhere. February Dance Records \ Eleven of them Four of them by Isham Jones -AT GENTZEL’S the home of the I -42 S . / COUNTY AGENTS STAGE ANNUAL CONFERENCE Discussion of Agricultural Prob lems and Social Events Fill Program The annual get-together of the County Agents and other Agricultural Extension men »»f Penn State started list Friday. January twelfth, and will close today. Seventy-five County Agents and forty extension specialists are attending the conference. These men represent sixty-three of the six ty-seven counties in Pennsylvania. The first two days were spent in talking over the projects that have been planned.-ami the experiences that the men have had. Some new plans and problems were brought up but most of the time has been devoted to "old business” and the revision of old projects, and everything is being con sidered that will promote agriculture in the Commonwealth. New Feature A new feature was inaugurated this year. Dr. E. G. Xotirse. head of the Department of Agricultural Econom ics at lowa State College, gave a ser ies of talks on “The Essentials of Ag ricultural Economics." Ho has. taken up such subjects ass price making, the factors in price making, the conditions that make a farm profitable and the conditions stirrounding agricultural markets. He pointed out particularly the course that farmers, individually or as a group, should take to improve farming and marketing conditions, lie said that most farmers were in terested in gaining a high price, and that they were forgetting that a low ering in the cost of production means more than a higher price. He laid great stress on this lost point because he felt that the farmers could do in finitely more by intensifying their production than by clamouring for high prices. Dean R. L. Watts. Dean nf the School of Agriculture, likewise sj>oku along this line, and he .said also that the'Agricultural School will, with the support of the legislature in stitute a course in Agricultural Eco nomics at Penn State. . Monday evening the County Agents met with the Short Course men and women who ’were interested in the work that would be undertaken in their counties.during the coming year while the extension representatives were glad of the chance to meet the men from their own communities. “Set-up” by “Newly-Weds” A regular part of the program is the ‘set-up" •by the "newly-weds." The treat this year was donated by the largest group ever, and during the Tuesday afternoon session those men. who had married during the last year, served Ice cream and cakes to all of the others. Tuesday night, the men in the field Joined with* the Agricultural faculty in an informal gathering in the Stock: Pavilion, everyone being dressed in some comical way. One of the cos tumes was that of Dean Watts who impersonated a freshman, while M. S. McDowell. Director of the Agricultur al Extension service, was cleverly dis guised a "hum." Ladies were pres-' cut at this gathering and their favor-’ he regalia seemed to be that of a small girl. WANTED FOR. RENT—4S.OO will 1m? paid to the person who-ivili tell me where I can rent an acceptable me dium sized house before March first. Phone 242—R. »2t ( CRYSTAL CAFE |j good eats:: C. N. FISHER. SIGMA OF KAPPA DELTA PI ANNOUNCES INITIATES In a recent issue ’of the COLLEGIAN an article appeared concerning the in stallment of Sigma chapter of Kappa Delta Pi. honorary Educational frater nity, the initiates comprising members of the Education Club. Following is a list of names of students and faculty who were admitted to membership in Kappa Delta Pi. Adams. D. K. Pharo, C. L. Aiken. .T. W. • park, J*. b! Alien t I. M. Rand, M. A,. Baudot*, D. V.. Reiter! c!, Black. B. L.. Rhoton, P.. Bohn, J. Romlg, W. E. Browning. D. E. Rogers, d! R. Carmody. G.. Ramsay. L.L.. Cleaver. H. E. Saylor. D. E. Dennis! L. I. Smith. E. L. Everett, H. A. Williams, E. H. Ely. J. O. Wilson. A. d! Frear Mary Reno Whitehead L. Gill, M. A, P. Zeiders. L. 12. Gault. G. G. Graser. O. T. Hartman, S. A. Hotter. K. M. Huguet. C. M. Kapp, R. I. Keller, Mrs. E. H. McCalmont D. E. MrCune, S. C. MancUl. M B. Anderson, D_ a. Dennis. W. V. Graham. R. E. Parkinson, H. G Turner, L. G. Chace. E. P. DeCamp, J. E. Moore B. V.. Rhoton, A. L. Wilson. S. M. PROF. SI.OMAN RESIGNS FROM SCHOOL OF MIXES Professor H. J. Slomnn, Assistai Professor of coal-engineering, handed in his resignation at the School of Mines last week, and has entered the employ of the Cambria Steet Mining Department, at Johnstown, as Mining Engineer. The Department regrets the loss of Professor Slomnn, but wishes him success at his new position. The Laundry of Service and Accommodation Collection and delivery every day Penn State Laundry 320 West Beaver Ave.] Phone 124 January Gearance $7, $8 and $9 Values Men’s Oxfords $5.95 Sizes short, so come early 20th Century Shoe Co. 121 Allen St. Page lime PRE-LEGAL CLUB WILL HOLD MEETING TONIGHT Will Register and Make Plans for Banquet—Faculty Members to Address Club An imiKirtant meeting of the Pre- Legnl Club will be held at the Theta Kappa Phi house, seven-thirty o’clock tonight, when students in the Pre- Legnl course will attend in order that they may be registered, as well as help plan for the banquet which the Club will hold the first week of the second semester. All persons taking either Option I or II are eligible to take part in the activities of the or ganization. This evening’s program is made doubly attractive in view of the fact that Dr. Tanger and Dr. .Martin, both •>f the college faculty, will speak. The plans for the work of next sem ester wiil be outlined tonight, most prominent among which is the effort to get prominent legal men. jurists, and judges, to come to Penn State and speak to the student body. Arrange ments have been made thus far for Judge Mitchell of Pittsburgh, and Judge Quigley of Bellefonte. to speak at the banquet. "The Club will have a very active semester." are the words of the president. J. S. Dolan ’23. Other officers at the present time are vice president. G. A. Barnett ’23: and sec retary. j. J. Geise *25. ■ C / dpi fuM \J. ' w THRILLED? bethc ia» Hs’s ißiklr.g a tr„- Jfmcndous hll She 1,.* just told u:ra that he hts hiir like Uudj* Valentino's. But hedoesn't know whetlnr to pretend that it came that way ur corf«-s that h«> did It with his little bottle of “Vaseline" H-.ir Tonic. Ho owt« n ot of h!s manly beauty to chat buttle. '*V’la-Isne" Hair Tonic Cromnips the growth of the hair and eips the se.Vp n the heahhiiat con dition. At ulitiniß s'nr.s and student barbershops. CIIESEItitOt’RII MFC. CO. )Cnn»olidaltd> State Stmt New York Vaseline *ro u.s FAT.cfr. HAIR TONIC I Oitlinf" Prtdt't it rrtemntmJtJ retry* xhntbframt D. J. Lehman, M