Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, October 27, 1925, Image 1

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    P—uncil
S—lingers! Join
C—ollegiun
VOL. XXI, No. 14
COLLEGIAN CALLS
CANDIDATES FOR
EDITORIAL STAFF
Freshman Aspirants Will Study
Fundamentals of Collegian
Work for Six Weeks
MEETING OF CANDIDATES
WILL BE HELD TONIGHT
Co-ed Classes Continue During
November—Organization of
Paper Is Explained
All freshmen -with journalistic in
timations, aspiring to positions on the
cditm ml stall* of the COLLEGIAN
will meet m Room 14 Libcial Arts
Building tonight at seven o’clock in
answ ci to the fu st call of the college
yeai foi men icportcr? Those at
tending the meeting will be .staitcd
in a si\ weeks’ com sc of instiuclion
designed to acquaint them with news
paper wntmg
The couisc foi men will consist of a
In lef sui \ ey of the field of joui nal-sm,
with spec’nl attention being paid to
lead-writing, liows-gathcimg and
make-up At each meeting ceitain
points of COLLEGIAN style will be
considered and the cmbiyo icpoitcis
given a chance to put then newly ac
quncd knowledge to practical appli
cation. The chief woik of the class
will consist of the studv and wilting
of leads to be followed by the wilting
of news “stones.”
Co-Eds Take Course
Fifteen ficshman co-cd icpoitcis
have nhcadv met twice in the wom
en’s couisc of instiuction, which will
continue until Thank-giving \acation
A. K. Smith ’it> is conducting the
class foi women, giving them instruc
tion e\erv Monday night
Upon the completion of the six
weeks’ couisc, the ticshmen automat
ical!, become icpoitcis on the COL
LEGIAN statt, wntmg the news
“stones" assigned them bv the juntoi
news cditois until elections shortly
bcfoie Easloi, at which time they as
sume the icsponsibilitics of sopho
more repoiters .Fieshmen whose
work mcasuies up to the standaid ic
quned by the COLLEGIAN will be
zctaincd on the stag dunng then
sopliomore year unless a Luge mini-,
bei lepoit m which case positions will
be placed on a competitive basis.
Senior Staff
Fiom the piesent gioup of sopho
inoie icpoitcis six will be chosen foi
positions of jun'or news editors foi
the year l f »2ts-27 At the same elec
tions, the editoi-m-cluef, assistant ed
itoi, managing cditoi and tluee asso
(Contmued on last page)
ALUMNAE CLUB TO HOLD
BAZAAR FOR LOAN FUND
Women Graduates Arrange for
Get-together for Annual
Home-coming Day
Foi the puiposc of incieasing the
loan fund foi Penn State women, the
State College Alumnae club will hold
a bazuai Sntuiduy, Novcmbet twenty
first During the past two years
the benefits of the annual sale have
been added to the Girls’ Building
Fund, to which it has been credited
with n contribution of more than one
thousand dollais
Because the loan fund was so small
compaied to the needs foi which it
was held, the local otgam/ation de
cided to place the piohts of this
yeai’s bazaar at the disposal of the
committee. At present the fund is
icpicscnlcd bv $llOO in papci but
there is but one hundred mailable
foi cash aids
As fast as the monev is pan! back
it is reloancd so that practically the
whole sum has been borrowed by
those still cm oiled at Penn State
Requests have been greater than it
was possible to meet. The emerg
ency was partially Idled by limiting
the loans to fifty 01 seventy-five dol
lais each
Contributions Sought
Ciuds lime been sent to all the
alumnae asking foi contributions
of ni tides foi sale All articles are
to be sent to Mrs. P II Dale, IJIB
West College avenue, State College,
on or before November fourteenth
In nddition to the bazuai, the club
plans foi a little get-togethei in the
Women’s Building at seven o’clock
Sutuulay evening of Alumni Home
coming dav As stated by the com
mittee m cliai gc “We piosume that
the men will wnnt to appear in the
Aimorv for the cider party at eight-
Unity since they asked us last year.
Me aie theicfoiu inviting all the re
turning alumnae to chop into the
Womens Budding pailoia at seven
(’clock Sntuiduv evening to have n
little gossip-fest of our own before
the big meeting.’'
frtm BtateA
Phonographs Grind Forth Sentiment in
Large Orders as Queens’ Exodus Ends
If all the mcn'Uics of soft and sen
timental music which were played on
phonographs Sunday and Monday
were placed end to end. thev would
leach cleai to Pittsburgh, back to
Philadelphia, out to Pai missus, into
Baltimoie, up to Wellesley and Smith
and back to Stule College, wlieic the
glamor of the housepnrty queen will
be wealing off slowly but suiely by
fust horn this morning Now that
the gills me gone, we can talk about
’em.
As one cellar-digger to another, the
gills this lime weie pictty fair.
Thoic vveien’t any which one could
call—ah—exceeding sharp, but there
were a couple of keen queens fionting
mound Usually, the keen ones weie
w ith somebody else
Eveiybody seemed to enjoy evciy
body else, even at the foimal dance.
No one minded his stiff collai—it left
his tluoat, wilted, at about two-forty
one a m. Saturday rooming. And
the freshmen 1 Did you ever see such
a bunch of dim-wits turn into n
galaxy of “Stepping Stones” over
night’ No—and you’ll not sec it
agum—until next house party
Fiothy’s “Diusilla” was in evidence
everywhere She gets that wav by
reason of hci having been to so many
houscpaitics— at W and J That’s
where the bims learn all their tucks ;
ORANGE HARRIERS
WIN CLOSE MEET
One Point Margin Gives Victory
to Syracuse—Lions Take
First Two Places
CAPTAIN BARCLAY SETS
NEW MARK FOR COURSE
Despite the efToits of Captain Bar
clay and Swede Johnson, who finished
fust and second lespectively, the Penn
State cross-country team went down
to defeat at the hands of the strong
Syincuse combination by the narrow
mmgm of ( one point, the final score
being 28*'to'’27 The Orange team
gained the verdict and maintained its
iccord of sixteen years without defeat
in dual competition when it won all
places from thud to ninth with the
exception of sixth, which was cap
tured by Reis, of tiic Lions
Captain Baiclay, individual vvinnei
of the lace, set a new maik for the
couisc when he negotiated the four
and one half miles in 20 minutes, 27
and 1-5 seconds In the final mile he
passed Bell and Gottlcib, Syracuse
hamers. when they deviated from the
loute and stiode home a winner by
more than a hundred yard-.
Johnson Second
Johnson uncoikcd a beautiful spunt
to overhaul and pass Proudnoek of the
Orange m the final quaiter mile, win
ning second place by a comfortable
maigin He was followed to the tape
by Proudnoek, Ruppcit and Louck in
the oidei named bcfoie Reis, anothci
Nittany lumei, crossed the line.
Gottlieb and Cell of Syracuse and
Fomacre and Guyer of the Blue and
White finished seventh, eighth, ninth
and tenth respectively
At the ciatk of the pistol the hill
and-dnlcis swung into action, lound
(Continucd on last page)
LION BOOTERS PREPARE
FOR LAFAYETTE CLASH
Soccer Team Scrimmages With
Yearling Eleven Several
Times During Week
Taking a much-needed test after
then toil id buttle with the Altoona
Shops team last week, the Nittany
booters remained idle last Satuidny in
ordci to anay then strongest combi
nation against the Lafayette eleven on
Satuidav.
Duitng tire past week the Lion
Vatsitj has encountered the yearling
eleven in several piacticc games m an
effort to impiovc dribbling and pass
ing. Another sciimnrnge will prob
ably be “cheduled early tins week, fol
lowed by conditioning work
Change in Lineup
Several changes have been made by
Coach Leoraid dunng lus last few
(lavs, affecting both the forward line
ami the backficld At the outside
light berth Leonaid has substituted
Michael Gil for Keen, while Cuptum
Ravmond Gil is back at lus old place
at the pivot halfback position.
Handicapped by an inability to
scoie when the oppoitumtv olfers it
self, the team is being coached in this
particular phase of the game in the
daily scrimmages Inexperience
seems to be the reason for this failing
punch at crucial times, accoidmg to
Leonard, and tins obstuclc will prob
ably be ovcicome ns the seuson contin
ues.
STATE COLLEGE. PA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1925
and by the time they leach Penn
State, the<tucks me so old they need
clean shirts.
On Saturday afternoon, eveiybody
we saw was well-soaked—by ram. In
fact, the crowd at the game was “all
shckeied up.” And Satuidny night,
everybody was “nil tangled up ” And
by Monday morning, everybody was
"all wakened up ” Let’s have a “Col
lege Yawn” for the “Queens.”
But to lcmmisce, all a digger had
to do to giab off a date was to show
a hen that page in Fioth which was
so ably conti ibutcd by Eschenbach
and “Doc” Tayloi When that poem
hit the light and the shadows deep
ened aiound the gill’s pictuie, the
only thing that was censored was the
floor lamp, and that went “out” with
one shove.
Well, nnywny, we had a darn good
time, and each and every pcison we
talk to has the same line, even the co
eds—but thej’ll say anything to
1 please We hope that no one was dis
appointed, although we heard about
two boys who drove their fraus over
to Williamsport at four o’clock Sun
day morning That was a tough
break, ’cause we know that one of the
gnl3 had a date for a five-day house
paity in Boston, stalling Monday aft
ernoon. All in all, it was a keenly
contested week-end
Cosmopolitan Club Is
Varied in Membership
Living up to the full import of its
name, the Cosmopolitan club of Penn
State has enrolled among its mem
beis, students who hail from every
distant corner of the earth During
the past two years, the Nittany
campus has been tiod by students
from China, Korea, Aigcntina, Bel
gium, Germany and Japan, while to
day there aie enrolled in the College
register men whose homes are m
i Porto Rico Costa Rica, Egypt, Rus
sia, South America and the Philip
pines.
From this gioup, various commit
tees have been selected and these
men in turn have arranged a pro
gram of the sear’s woik, so that the
organization may use its time most
profitably in bettering the welfare 1
of the foreign students at Penn State.
Moveovei, communication has been
established with the Association, of
Cosmopolitan Clubs of America, an
oigamzation whose principles the
Penn State group is endeavoring to
maintain With the hope of joining
this larger body, the local club will
send a rcpicsentative to the national
convention of the association which
will be held m December
Dr. Butterfield
Gives Talk Here
Addiessing a gioup of students
and faculty Friday afteinoon m front
of the Agucultuie Building, Dr. K. L
Butterfield, president of the Michigan
State College spoke on the subject of
lendciship
The Michigan “piexv” stiessed the
pint that the agnculturnl student
plays in the ruial communities “Ag
riculturists play an important part in
the community itself, through then
participation in rural gatherings, co
operations and the community church
es,” said the head of the mid-western
institution
In commenting on the football
game with his college on Satuidav,
which he witnessed fiom the presi
dent’s box he remarked, “the best
team won and deserved all the hon
ors.” President Butterfield was
pleased with the welcome which was
tendered to the football piayeis and
said that it was his fondest hope that
the team representing the Nittany
Valley institution would visit Michi
gan State in the near future
Comparing the two colleges Di
Butterfield stated that the ages of the
schools weie about the same and that
they were both icgaidcd as pioneers
m the field of education
j 1
| SALE OF NOTRE
j DAME TICKETS j
j Jumois may secure then tick- •
!cts for the Notre Dame game at |
the office at any time today dui- I
mg College hours Sophomores |
may exchange their coupons to- !
i moiiow and the Freshmen 1
! f thciis on Thursday. Otheis |
may secure tickets for the game l
on Friduy To identify the !
classes students aie asked to I
! bring tlicir ticket books with |
them when exchanging the cou- i
pons for tickets 8
YEARLINGS SCORE
LONE TOUCHDOWN
TO ROUT ORANGE
Rain-soaked Gridiron Hinders
Backs on Both Sides as
Fumbles Pro ail j
FORTUNATE BREAK PAVES,
WAY FOR NITTANY SCORE'
Penn Stale Goal Endangered
Several Times in Early
Minutes of Game
Playing on a ram-soaked gridiron
with an elusive mud-covered pigskin
which was difficult for both sides to
handle, the yearling gridmen tumbled
the invading Syracuse freshmen
eleven by a 6 to 0 score last Satui
dav.
Seveial times during the fracas
the Orange eleven threatened to
scoi e, especially in the first canto
when Goldman, the {Svracuse star
fullback had little difhcultv in tout
ing huge gaps in the Nittanv line
Fumbles and blocked kicks also added
to the uncertainty of the contest
Long Run futile
Eaily in the* game the visiting
team made -its* greatest effoit to
score, rushing the ball to within ten
yards of the plebc goal-posts onh to
lose the pigskin to the Lion eleven
A fifty-yard dash from midfield by
Goldman of Syracuse bi ought gloom
to the Blue and White camp again in
the first quarter, but the ball was
brought back when a Syracuse for
ward was discovcied offside
During the second quaiter both
teams exchanged kicks after a few
ti ics to gain, the slippery field mak
ing running difficult The Penn State
plebes had an opportunity to score
as the half neared an end, when eight
and ten-yard gains by Neal brought,
the ball to the Syracuse twenty-yard’
line. In an effort to uoss the line'
bcfoie the whistle blew Wolff at
tempted a forward but was cut down
by an Orange end for a ten-yaid
loss, the half ending a few seconds
later.- -
Syracuse Interference Good
Following Hillen’s kickoff at the
beginning of the second half, the
Orange gnddors urleased an attack
which carried them fifteen vaids
neaicr the Nittany goal before Lliev
were compelled to kick. Good inter
ference was laigeh responsible for
the gains, the backs tearing huge
holes in the Penn State line
Starting from their own twenlv
yard line the plobcs began a du.e
at this time which aided by Wille’s
interception of an enemy pass, placed
the ball within tlmteen yards of the
final chalk-muik After seveial at-!
tempts to break down the Syracuse
stone-wall defense had failed. Neal
dropped back to attempt a field goal
The ball, howevei, soddened with
rain and mud fell short of the up
rights
With the ball lodged in the gnme
on tlie thiee-vurd line, Syracuse
punted out of dangei on the next
plav, Whitmore running the ball
back four yards Four more downs!
followed bcfoie the Lion aggregation!
was put on the defense Syracuse at!
(Continued on last page)
PROF. NIXON DISCOVERS
CAUSE OF FIRE BLIGHT
Thirteen Years of Research
Ends in Success for Member
of Aff Extension
To Pi of i: L Nixon of the Agn
cultural Extension department'' of
Penn State belongs the credit foi
having discovered the life cvcle of
the bacteim which causes twig blight
o r the apple, pear and quince At
a seminar Thursday afternoon Pio
fessor Nixon demonstiated the man
ner m which those factoru woik
around in the coitcx of the plant,
cat then wav into the celN and finally
destroy the cell protoplasm in such
a wav as to make it appear as though
a file had ■scorched the ends of the
twig Because of this scotched ap-
pear ance, this disease is commonly
called “fue blight.”
It is true that for some time bot
nntibts have been familiar with (ho
nature of the bacteria which cause
this blight, but Profcssoi Nixon is
the fit at to have been able to follow
the nme-diiv couisc of the bacteria
as they move about in a gelatinous
substance from an intercellular to an
intracellular state
Tins impoitnnt discovciv is the
result of thirteen yenrs of ic..cnich,
during which tune Piolessor Nixon
has accumulated about tlucc thou
sand different slides demolish!utivo
of his wqck with the “fue blight”
bacteria- Ptofestioi Nixon, too, hue
been very active m connection with
potato disoaccs
(Ejittajfent
FIRST REPORTING
CLASSES TONIGHT
COLLEGIAN announces fust
I call foi freshman candidates for
the editorial stall. All those in
teiested in journalistic woik
will icpoit to loom 11 Libcial
Aits Building tonight at seven
o’clock
'FALL SCHOLARSHIP
DAYDATECHANGED
Annual Fall Ceremonies Will
Be Conducted Thursday,
Not ember Fifth
COMMITTEE EXPECTS TO
SCHEDUIJS SPEAKER SOON
Postponed from November thud,
the annual fall Scholarship Day will
bv observed at Penn State Thursday.
November fifth, in the Auditorium at
ten-thirty o’clock it was decided at
u meeting of the College Council last
week All classes will be excused on
Thursday morning in older to permit
a huge gathering to witness the pro*
giam
According to Pi of R A. Dutchcr,
than man of the Scholarship Day
committee, the reason for the change
in schedule was due to the original
date falling on election day As this
made it piactically impossible to
sccuie a piommcnt speaker for the
occasion, the two-day postponement
was necessitated
Scholarship Day which is obscived
twice during the academic vear is
held foi the purpose of announcing
honor society elections together with
the .rwaiding of various scholarships
to students attaining exceptional
av ei ages The President Sparks
Medal will be presented to the student
with the highest scholastic average
foi the past semester Juniors and
sophomores who have maintained
giades above the standards estab
lished by the Honor Society Council
will be the recipients of medals fiom
i the latter oigamzation,
Award Cups
j A national fraternity, a local
jCicck lettei oigamzation and a girl's
! campus club will each be awarded a
! cup as a reumd for attaining the
greatest scholastic pi oficieney in
then corresponding gioup dunng
the scmcstei just ended Announce
ment of the winners of these cups as
(Continued on last page)
CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
SCHOOL AIDS RESEARCH
Durability of Coaled Steels to
Be Detei mined in Testing
Plant Erected Here
Continuing its steady maich of
piogiessiveness, the division of in-!
c'ustnal research of the School ot j
Chennstiv and Physics Ims undei-j
taken another impoitant o\pciuncnt>
tndei the supei vision of the corosionj
committee of the Ymencm Society
for Testing Malenals Tor the pm
pose of determining the lasting
qualities of various types of coated
steels and luudvvarc, four stations
will be established in the eastern
United States to cariy on the woik
The fust of these testing plants
will be placed at Penn State Some
time tins week a cievv of eight men
fiom the Pennsylvania Railroad
companv will begin the erection of
the station One nue of giound
located on the Hoi ticultui c farm has
been tinned over to the coiosion
committee and laige locks, concietc
posts and steel lacks will be placed
i'eie On these will be exposed gal
vanized non at tides togcthoi with
diffeicnt kinds of metal-coated steel
and linidvvate to asecitain its cndui
nnce to an
W 11. Finkeldev ’l5, giaduatc of
the Muring and Metalluigv School,
now with the New Jersey Zinc com
pany, has dial go of the erection
Qiice a year inspection will be made
by various ofiicinls and committees
(Continued on last page)
PENN STATE BAND TO
MAKE SYRACUSE TRIP
Attired in the full blue umfoims of
the Penn Stnlo Bund, fifty menthol*
of the organization will nuke the
tup to Syiacuse for their fust away
fiom-homc appearance of the year
The unit will leave Bellcfontc shortly
nftei eight o’clock on Friday evening
and will arrive at Syracuse before
noon on Satuiday.
After the game the members ot
the bund will leave with tho team
at ten o’clock. On then arrival in
Slutc College at about three o’clock
Sunday afternoon the Nittuny music
ians will puiadc to the track house
with the gridiron playeis. J
GRIDDERS CONQUER
MICHIGAN STATE IN
MUDDY BATTLE, 13 6
Michalske and McCann Scintillate for
Lions—Aerial Attack Scores
for Western Eleven
Stars Against Aggies
* V,
ERNIE McCANN
FIRST CLASSSCRAP
SLATED TOMORROW
Sophomores and Freshmen Meet
m Annual Sand-bag Tilt at
Four-thirly O’clock
CAMPUS CLUBS TO AID
IN PREVENTING INJURIES!
New Beaver juactice field, the
scene of many a hard-fought scrim
mage, will once more be the battle
ground of a more or less bloody
contest when the sophomores meet
I the ficshmen m their annual sand
bag sciup tomouou afternoon at
foui-tlmty o’clock Although this
paiticulai sciap is of compaiati\el\ i
leccnt ougin, it provokes a great
ntciest on the pait of both spcctu
tois and pat tieipatoi s because of the
not of mirth which is prevalent dur
ing the entire length of the contest
College customs demand that ever}
membei of the pai ticipatmg classes
be on hand fm the snap, except
those who me phvsically disabled
oi those who ate mentioned on ap
proved athletic lists All plnsical
cducition classes will be excused on
that liouis so that each man will
ha\c the chance to attend
In 01 del to guaid against the use |
ol an} questionable practices, allt
campus societies will be out in full;
force As u result of this mcasuici
of piecautum, am possibilities of
dangcious iet.uk-> wl' be lcduced to
a minimum
I As m the tie-up seiap, heats of
lift} men cm a side aie utn oil, the
opposing classes lining up at oppo
site ends of the field In this con
test, the ..ttcnlion of the men is
focused on a gioup of bags placed m
a low acioss the middle of the field
These bag-, mimbeung twenty-five,
ate Idled with sand, and placed in a
line with then necks alternating At
a given signal, the vnuleiclassmen
nish to the rentei of the held, and
attempt to chag the bags to their
respective goals A point is awaided
foi eveiv ten }Jids that a bag is
removed fiom the middle of the held
The committee icqucsls that all
catcieis dcda.v ditinetsfoi the evening
a half hour in oiclci that the seiap
mav continue to full length
J. 11. HALL TO ADDRESS
ENGINEERING STUDENTS
Speaking on the piocess of manu
facturing manganese steel, Mi J II
Hall, metalluigic.il engineer foi the
Tavlor-Whnrton Iron and Steel com
panv of New Jeisev, will address the
engineering students at the regular
lecture held Fndav afternoon at four
llmtv o’clock. This lectuie will lie
accompanied b\ lantern '■hdes and
moving pictuics showing the entire
process of the manufacture All
students iinm the School of Mines and
the School ot Chenustr} and Pin sics
aie muted to bo present It is re
quested that these visitors lake seats
m the gaiter \
Mi Hall is a mouther of the
American Institute ol Mining and
Metallurgical Kngmccis, the British
hen and Steel Institute, nnd the
American Socnct} ol Heat Treating
lie is an author and has wntten sev
er nl successful hooks, having been
awarded the Whiting gold medal by
the Wtoneait Foundi}man’ss asioua
-1 lion.
Pennsylvania Day
Reigned
Long Enough!
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Wallowing tlumigh a sea of mud
and muck, dienched to the skin h\ Hip
pouting inin, grune-bosmeaied but,
fighting indomitable, Penn Stale’i
giuluon machine icdecined foi itself
the lnuiels lost on Mew Bcnvci Field
in 1914 b> cmcigtng victonous fiom
its mtcrscctional battle with Michigan
State by a scoie of K»-G anml tin*
j howling of a \cllow-slickered ciowd of
Pennsylvania Dav enthusiasts
The Xittnm Lions' fust half lead
of thirteen points was thicntcncd
when the Aggies, aftei going scoreless
duung the fust half, launched an
aennl attack which tesulted m the
sconng of a touchdown towaid the
close of the thud qumtci In the
final penod, eight passes were at*
tempted bv the Given and White, but
the Lion defense tightened and seven
of the eight weie left incomplete and
one was intei ccpted
An elusive pigskin dampened l>j the
downpour, pievcnted adept handling
b\ both teams, and man} times the
Penn State attack was halted bv the
jaleitncss of the vr.itois m scooping
|up a loose ball The Lions v ere gmllv
of elc.en ot the clumsy olfcnces, and
of these hut thiec weie iccoveicd by
Bezdek's wamors
Lions Show First Half Drive
Aftei Rummell’s fust kickoff had
been luled out, Dangei field earned
! the secon I attempt se\ en \ aids to the
! twcntj-eight vard line Thiec plats
netted a fust down and on the next
plat. Dangerlield sknted his own lelt
end behind splendid intei fci cnee ami
dashed tlmb-foui yauls to the*
Aggies’ twentv-seton-jatd maik In
, fite plats, two of them being tcn*\aid
; gains bt Dangei field and MichaUkc,
tlie latter went over foi the initial
score, ending the opposing left end
nftei seeing no opening in the line.
Miclirlske’s attempt at a placement
tvas blocked
Following the kickoff, Giaj punted
to Ljman who was dot*red m his
i Hacks on his own thirty-one tauK.
On the fiist plat, the Gicen jiullcd a
hidden-ball tuck and McCo.h
sloughed off a twent.\-\md gain bc
fme lie wis pulled to eaith The ti«
ittng team’s attack was then momcn
taiilv halted and McCosli punted out
of bounds on the Penn State twcnl}-
fne-jaid cli ilkline Aproce-sion bv
Dangei field and Michalske took the
otal to the opposition’s foitv-four
tauls wheic the pigskin stjmrted from
Michnlskc’s aims to be giabbed up by
Boeluingcr
(Continueu on thud page)
DR. SPEER ADDRESSES
SUNDAY CHAPEL-GOERS
Presb.vleri.in Foreign Missions
Secret.uy Gives Sermon
on Trusteeship
Faithfulness in ti iislceslrp w.i. Hip
theme of a seimon dcliveied hj I)i.
Ilobct t Elliot Sped, sccietait of the
Prcsbvtcitnn Boaid of Foicign At is
sions, N’ew Yoik Cttj at the chapel
semce in the Auditouum last Sun
dae
“You can go into any American
communitr and have men divide it fm
\ou into two gioups* the one com-
of people who me absolutely
dependable and the olhci of ones who
evnnot be tuistcd,” haul Di Speer
“To be a financial ti lister one mu.t
keep Ins lulelitj unsullied and un
seamed ”
“But tlieic me otliei than financial
tiustccships on which American life
depends,” dcclaicd Di Spool "Each
man and woman is the tiustec of a
mime which in ninct}-mnc caves out
of a bundled is an honotable one
Each one bv Ins actions taiocs or Jew
els that name. Each one of us is also
the tiustce of the Amoncan nation.
“All ovoi the woild people judgo
Amciicn l>> Amciicans, and they arc
doing it vnuousl}, Thctc me some
who me not keeping the tiukt of thou
countn And the leal tiustces of
State College, said Di Spool, aie the
men and women who go out into the
woild as ginduntco ot this college.
“Not onh me wc the tiustec., of
the institutions ot nut countiv, but
we aic also the tutstcea of its moial
and apintual qualities Fidelity, un
selfishness, patriotism, and so oii have
no existence in themselves The*, ex
ist onlj as qualities in poisons.
“AH the lesouieca of the man ot
woman you me going to be twenlv
vcais 1101,1 now aic in join hands
This you do not slime with anvone
Will von piove faithful'.’” asked Di.
Spceu