Page Four’ The “Y” Supplement -Published b\ the Penn Slate COL- Ll'GI \N, Under diuetion of the Sinim Cibinet of the Younjr Men’s ( In tstiuii Association at the l'cnnsyl \:mui State College, m the best »n -li i«“,U of students, huilr., alumm and fuen'N oi the Collrp-e A FEW WORDS MORE Sineo the fnancml c imp.ujjn of the V "\I C will he maufiunnted to* monow ami s.nce llu> is the fir L .ippo u ince «l this Supplement it rooms litlirc pejlniv*. that those edi- I State and National Y. M C. \ i Maintenance u»l Equipment—(llul. .nito. etc ) , Ueneial and unclnsMlicd J< Bus nejs Secictnn - —r— laud.up* ihe \*<nk *ml i«ents of the J ('ii.ni’is should be ucwotcd to rilin': li-uj ,tiß<j !{'[• iaivpaii;ii or to 'V " lint tliii su]t|iosii.’( n, if it does r isl, i, ‘ ill- wiomr” Instead. the ediloi of this little public ition wish to pen .1 ' Inn t mos.'-jj'c about- this < lu>i\e ‘ Collrce Sjmil Tint spn,l is w.'Tinj 1 - no one will quo ilmn Kneads of tho Collew, duntu .ind ur.deigindnates me all .1 pined mid me '•citing foi definite lonciete 1 crons fo> die tumble. Lack of thus in. I y, Ink of tho old bough .’U.I-iendi” .pint, ,i ti.n pin- pinsivo faculU ’nd m’mmisti iti\fc 1 odv, .mil too 1 n -v G t student both Whether tho> aie or aio not has >et One of the most common and ac cepted loasons is tint the fault ically lies m a combination of HI of these Vue -o Ui m air* of the olhon does this scc'i plausible lint iftei hi.u ni}; the talks on this same “Spmt” at the ri .ss mcitmj; |j--t week uiolhm < 'l'nl'.il clement sjems to hue hoer f< uotton Celtun .t .■> that c\ei\ I‘enn State man and woman who at tended ti.’t mectim; v deeply af ie.te! b\ t u e l.'lk. YV'lh tins n mind it is piopci foi the «mto’ •» to put thin pioposed i|ue,‘.ons to tho loudtMs V/hnt do ' ■ui t''mk is lacl iit; at Pe”n State to < ni-o this los, of nt' P: I >OU tike roWc wk.it 1 mil of talk., wene lUltM'mi .it tiic * . in-tin*; fon' ( 'i im i„* tins Ik'-'- > An.! t'i n v I to be ’ eo common ole- incut in the' - • l th it affected tho inf!' ’ And 111 -t this, element jiiic,hl Ip lelijiion mil ti'ucfoie one of the leasons foi tnie Penn State SENIOR “Y” CABINET NOW HAS NINETEEN MEMBERS (Iroup Meets Every Tuesday Ni«rht at Sctcn-tlmly—B. Butler *2(> Is President Ineionstnp in si7e cveiy year, tho Penn State Y M C. \ Cabinet now consists of nineteen student mem hn •» The cabinet is the guiding body ot the "Y”, selecting the work to be done lluoughout the jeai, as v< 11 as lending their efforts to other c impus actiuties The gioup meets «\ei% Tuesday night in Seeictary W. T Kitchen’s office on tlie fouith floor of Old Mam foi weekly discussions. Heading the cabinet is Biuce But ler ’2G, with a, R Dunlap ’2G and 1C B Bmolav ’2G assisting a p vice piesidents S L. Recdei ’27 is scc ictaiy of the gioup and W J. Duddy “Y” President BRUCE BUTLER ’2(3 is the tiensuiei. Talcing that go of the deputation tups is F. A Ray maley ’2b, while C. M Bauchspics ’27 is publicity chairman D. Wyman ’2O heads the Discussion Groups sec tion and W E Baer ’27 looks arter the business <nde of the cabinet As tho leprescntativc of the Young Peoples Union, the cabinet has M W Segnei ’2G. W F. Seeg nullcr '2B is the Sophomore Cabinet vepiescntative, with J. P. Dickcrhofl ’2C> taking charge of Y M. C. A. meetings E Wilson '2B, with It. D Dundoie ’27 as advisoi, will have charge of the freshman cnbinet to be rignmzed. D George ’27 will look aflei the social side of the “Y” and B. Coniad ’27 is in charge of the tabm work and the Older Boys Con feience. G. Strunk ’27 is in charge ol the Christum World Education wo:k and L It. Plotts ’27 is manag ing the entertainment com sc affairs W. J Durbin ’2G is in charge of campus sei vice work. ACTIVITIES BUDGET 1D25-2B !| ITandbuuk—(the balance of tho total cost of $5.82 paid by j; 1 mliei Using) $ 200 CO Ij L\tle Cabin—for all Penn State students (uvl i emst-ue- j lion m Shingletown Gap on lot donutjd In “ '••d »’’) “00 00 *' rreshmnn Cabinet Wmh "a 7 00 j . Campus Sen ice—Fiashman jcceplion, etc 200 00 , Books, papcis and magazines (includes mar tenure.' of loan , * librni v) - 200 00 ; J Oflice expenses—(supplies, postage, pr.nluig, telephone, etc ) .ISO CO I Intension woik—(luirl Sunday School®. deputaWm , Older | Boys’ Conference) 5300 00 I Speakers and Campaigns—(The host a’ nlable c.n th” relic -1 tous proLlems of students) —Gilkcv, S'»’ft. eu 500 00 : Mission woik m the South—(Penn Stat.’s oh! fueud, I II j McGrow) 500 00 | Educational activities—(Christian Wo*hi‘Education, confoi* 2 cnees, etc ) 5150 00 ! Confeienee Loans 280 00 - SbOOO 0(1 l‘ Other items, such as salarv am' cert un 'rculent.il:, .ire pi o\ tiled j fo bv drifts of ftium'b. patents, thrum raid t.usteei. Silver Bay Conference Pronounced Success by Penn Slate Delegates G itheied together with repiescntu- number last June was slightly t tives ftom most of the leading than it had been n previous; cin Collettes, Penn State delegatesl '“ r *' Thcte ttcic npp.ouniately; . ~ . 1 ioJ student delegate-, at the confei •.pent a tciy profitable Meet- at the c „ c(! thn summol Flom t]loS( . lhor(! annual "Y” ronfeience held at Sil\ci*-.unc foi t\ Bible studs gioups made Bnj last June. ] up The pin pose of this gatheimg is, The leadeis at Sihei Bav weienot to discuss student pioblems and to'all Y T*l C \ men. the> came tion i be instructed m Chustian leadership! all walks of life There ueio Clms- 1 bv competent men who themseh es, tian business men who talked about; have been long m the held Penn j patting Clnist'an pimciples m mod-. State has been sending ropresenta-1 ci n bjsness; there \as one man 1 tives theie eveiy yeai, although the who h..d been ‘down and out” most BEAUTIFUL SCENERY IS PREDOMINANT Employment Bureau Supplies Work For Many Penn State Students! Forty-two students with an ap- i the flisl few days of school th-s year. Cui l J’ 10 December, the ’ will proximate > rally earning of six tliou-J r.nd ate now ncimanently located with , -'Kma take up the discussion of live sand dollars—that is what Ims al-l good job- * j campus topics in a manner similar to icady been accomplished bv tliQ hm-j Milm b !ennc , ls con „, t n u, O i th " p,0 “ 111,,s tast >'car ployment Bureau of the Y J 1 C A. foi spnie-timo woik, such as* A hst of ten questions weic chosen this year This woik has all bconj j louc . c c i ol -iung, lawn and garden I nfter vaieful deliberation'by the “Y” supplied m the past foui weeks. |\.oik an! office v.oik These jobs j chiefs arc! submitted to the students It is often found that student' , irst eilhci afi v houis oi «omc times popular vote to select which six leave home with only enough money half a day The earnings of students U-ey '•houla most like to hem discus to pay their fees, trusting that they ■ cent out bv the Buieau on such jobs l ‘•'d At the same time they might will find waiting foi them a position j this fall amounts to more than s>oo vnte in questions which they would which will pioMdc* loom and boaid. i 0 ! ) have added to the list of ten issues It is in helping these and other needy | tijtjt p STUDY ARRANGED > Leaders were selected to take men that the Employment Buieau —JIT* r' l -brrxT'ri/v r'urr iiottv vhaigc of the vaiious gioups which lenders its best work. There aie t’vtt t_.UUr-.lKi t_rilLL»Kt*<i\ i «i, ou ] { j nt . C( i heads, both m the fratei about .100 stuclenls who earn their (Continued fiom preceding page) ! mties* and among the non-fiaternity board by waiting tables oi washing ULuLn d nislon of the extension!™ 11 Tlus group met once a week dishes. About twenty otheis aie COUICC to o . ffam « junior projcct-P* lol to tllc consideratin of the.ques located with pmate families Jm t!im j JOS>? am | CJ ,j s B 0 I tion by the sub-groups. Here the is tliey earn then bo.ud and loom foi ! n L j osol le 'ationxhip will exist **uc "as thoroughly thiashed out and tending furnaces and assisting about i j )etwcon t j lCi , o lurt j Jn( | t j le conflicting ideas biought to a coti the house .Thcic are still others p g ulo y JI C A Thcie is- of opinion for procedure who woik for then loom rent only*. sl -,n r p. rea t need for new and inter- Although nothing definite has been Most of these jobs are reserved csted woilu-rs in this phase of Asso- settled and no action will be taken fiom year to yeai by the students cintion endea\oi It is the request until the arrival of the noted leadci who are foitunate enough to hold ( ,f \y \y Hockenbcny ’2B, m cliarge oi the discussion groups, it is likely them, and it is therefore difficult for n f t i„ s diMsion. that any men inter- that this year the organization will new men to find such work. How- L ,<tod in the woik give then names to follow that of last year with a fe v c\ei, many of these wcie sent out } mn or leave them at the “Y” Hut. collections This Doparlmenl 220 00 000 00 r.o oo 1200 oo VIEW OF SILVER BAY “Y” Employment Bureau if Annunllj Aids Several Hundred Students j-iji THE PEIIH STATE COLLEGIAN- “Y” Secretary W. J. KITCHEN of his life, thcic were Clmstian lead eis such as Hairy Emeison Fosdick, Edwaid W Bok, Ralph Petty and Dr. Tweedy of the Yale Divinity school All of these were big men in then lespeetive lines , * Peisonal association with those and olhci very powerful men brought about excellent results. The leal value of the whole confeicncc, ac io! ding to one who attended w’as that “eveivone was thinking If a fellow was skeptical and wanted to talk with someone well versed in the sub ject, he could sign, up for a personal inteiview with any one of the speak cis oi leaders. Th*s was one of the big assets of the conference—the per sonal mleiview " ' DISCUSSION GROUPS WILL BEGIN EARLY IN JANUARY 1 Shortly’ after the senes of lec ' tuics which will be given by Bruce REINSTATE MEN : GOINTO'T’V/QRK More Nitlany Graduates in Ac tive Y. M. C. A. Service Than of Any Other Institution ALL SECTIONS OF GLOBE ARE NOW-REPRESENTED More men go into active Y 31 C A woik from Penn State than fiom any olhei college, according to \Y B Tinkei, secictary of the 31-d.Ue Atlantic student board of the Na tional Council of the Y. M C A It might be accredited to Penn State’s geographical location oi it might be due to Penn State Spirit However, tlieic is moic than either oi both ol these back ot it all The “Y.” as it is popularly called at Penn State, makes men During the fom years of college life, a con slant association with lcadeis or this oigani/ation bungs one to the icali <.ntion that there are thousands ot openings for men and women m the ichgious held Again, theie is no better place than Penn Statp foi thought and meditation, and the “k” festers tins thought, a-* well as to put it into actual practice on the campus Oldest Worker Pei haps the oldest Penn State alumnus conducting a inissionaiy enterprise is George A. Landis ’77 Knteimg the College in 1870 after a \aned career of teaching and at tendance at prepaiatoiy schools, he majored in Latin-Amoncan studies lie spent tlnee years doing post graduate work at the Princeton Theo logical Seminniy. Aftei-lie was or dained. in 1880, the Pie3bytciinn Board of Foreign Missions dele gated him to go to Brazil. For the fust year he had charge of a mis- sionary station at Rio do Janeiro and *ii 1881 went to Botucntu, an inland tov. n Gilbert Bcnvei ’OO has achieved singular sjcccss in the field of m tcmat’onai peace He is chan man cr the Fellowship- of Reconciliation, an organization for the promotion of woild-wide understanding of nations The society’ originated m England and was biought to the Urnted States by Benvci He ia also a n-ci.i -bei of the editorial stair of the "World Tomorrow” “New Vcntuies of Faith” is the title of a book vvhicn he has already written. He is pre : paring another for publication, called “Spintuul Resources,” which is the tcxuU of an intensive study ot the New Testament “Daddy” Groff Not only one of the oldest but also one- of the best-known persons to Fenn State students is "Daddy ” Groff 'O7. He came %heic to tak; preparatory T.ork when the College was much smaller than it is at the present time Entering as a horticul tural student, he immediately became one of the outstanding student lead ers in the Y M C A. His fiist four ycuis m China weie spent in guidon work. In 1911 the Canton Christian college secured a farm and he took charge of it Since that time lie has had pronounced success in advancing Chinese agri culture. At present lie is visiting Penn State to/see what can be done to raise funds foi fuiUieiing the work begun at Canton “Pete” Weigel W II “Pete” Weigel is an exam ple of the whims of fate During his first two years as an underclassman he gained the icputation of being the original “hard guy” on the campus In Ijis sophomoie rear John R. Mott came to .Penn State to' conduct the evangelistic campaign “Pele" was oidcrcd out with the rest of the band members for the first evening He lesolved that it was all “bunk” and put cotton in Ins cais to pi event dis tiubance. Some one remarked to him the rext dny that he had better lay in a supply of cotton for the week After the addicss of the next evening, there was a changed man who from then on became an active worker for the “Y”. He spent most of Ins time m deputation woik, where he accom plished some outstanding results vnth boys of the Huntingdon Refor matory When graduated he was sent to China Rev. V G. Burns One of the younger men and one more familiar to tlio present student body, is the Rev. Vincent G Burns *IG, who spoke at Chapel exercises last year Ills undergraduate career included debating, vaisity baseball, junioi oiator, La Vie staff, diamattes and Y M. C A. After seven months of overseas service in the World War, he entered Union Theological seminary, and was graduated with honois in 1922. His first pastorate was the Citv Park Chapel of Biooklyn, N Y While there ho was .engaged in wel fare work among the poor in the slums. From this post he went to the South Congregational church of Pittsfiold, Mass. 110 is the author of “The Flora of the Hackensack Marshes,” and “Fosdick and the Fundamentalists”. lie is also a con tributor to the “Homchtic Review” and the "Christian Herald”. "Herm” Lum Success and achievement have raised H. 11. “Herm" Lum ’l3 Horn his secretaryship of the Y. M. C A. at Wesleyan university, Connecticut, Master HAROLD ARTISTS BOOKED FORT’COURSE Seven Attractive Numbers List ed for Year—Whiteman Brintrs Orchestia Here SERIES TO BE OPENED 1 NEXT SATURDAY NIGHT Booking an anay of artists that pionuses to surpass those of other vens, the Y. M C A has arranged n exceptionally attractive enter tainment couise for the cm lent Following another coloiful year of a careei aheady lepletc with illus tilous achievements, Haiold Barer, super-piamst. ''will come to Penn State to present the fust number of the “Y” entertainment course on Saturday cvemng, Octobei seven teenth, in tiro Auditorium Mr Eiuei. n his nppeainncc hcic last ‘•prlng, thrilled a capacity house Second on the list will be the musical and dramatic production of Robert Bums’ famous poem, “The Cottei’s Satmdny Night” It is a musical pi ty enacted by six of the leading Scotch singers in the East. Probably no greater group oT en leitameis could be obtained foi the “Y” corn so than Faul Whiteman and his oiehcstra, which will play light music at best, light looted, light handed, light hearted, giving an ex lul anting tug to the nones of the ears and the toe. Decembei eleventh will find the Penn Slrto Glee Club under the dhcc tion of Dueclor Grant ready to enter tain their host of admners in the Auditoi uini Little need be said concerning tins gioup of Nittany stngeis—they have pioven their to the office, of home secretary of the American university of Cano, Egypt Ills duties consist of procuring funds and lecruilmg teachcis to cariy on the instruction at the missionary in stitution. He is also prominent m the affans o r the Penn State Alumni n e sociation As president of the “Y," W. E “Bill” Kroll ’l7 gained great popu lutity among the students Follow ing his service in the aimy, he suc ceeded “Herm” Lum as secretary at Wesleyan university “Heim” en i oiled at Union Theological seminary the same year that the present secre tary of the Penn State “Y”, W J Kitchen ’2O, cntcicd Together they served as secretary of the “Y” at the City college of New York for the first ycat At the present time Kioll is assistant to Robert Wicks in tne Congregational church at Hohoke, Mass. “BtH” Wood In the position of secictary’ of the Y. 31 C A. and conch of the football team at Gettysburg, college, W. W. Wood ’JB has mentod considerable commendation foi his achievements At Penn State ho is icmembcrcd as enptam of the grid team in the fall of 1917 In the same year he was selected as All-American contcr Woik with foreign students through Ins position m, metropolitan secietary of the city of Boston has gi\cn J. B Watson cveiy opportunity tu put into practice the principles and theories which he learned when he was an undergraduate at Penn State. Pi oof of his success is ample
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