Page Tt7o Penn State (£ollegian Published semi-weekly during the College jear by students of the Pcnn <i>lvnma State College, in the interest of Students, Faculty, Alumni and Fi lends of the College, EDITORIAL STAFF H. W. Cohen ‘26 It T. Kriebel ‘2G A. K Smith ‘2G W. .T Durbin *2G 31. L Kellner ’2G It. A. Shaner ‘2G JUNIOR NEWS EDITORS W. F. Adler *27 G P Fisher ‘27 E II Coleman ‘27 U. W. Ho'.md ‘27 JUNIOR WOMEN'S NEWS EDITORS Frances I. Forbes ’27 BUSINESS ST^FF Bllen A Bullock ’27 T. Cain Jr. ’26 C L Gu> ‘2O G. E Brumfield '2G ASSISTANT BUSINESS MAN YCERS S R Robb‘27 F N. Weidnci, .Ti ‘27 The Fonn State COLLEGIAN invites communication-, on *nj sub.cct of college interest Lettcis must bear the signatines of the \uiters Names of communicants will be published unless icquostcd to be Kept confidenti il It assumes no lesponsibihti, however, for sentiments expiessed in the Lcttci Eox and reserves the light to exclude anv vhose publ cation would be palpably inappropriate. All copy for Tuesday’s issue must be in the olhce by ten a m on Monday, and for Fndav's issue, l>> toil ,x. m on Thu* sdaj. Subscription puce $2 50 if paid befoie December 1, 1020 Entered at the Postoffice, State College, Pa, as secoiul-Lla<-s matter. Office* Nittany Printing and Publishing Co Building, Strte College, Pa Telephone. 292-W, Bell Member of Eastern Intercollegiate Newspaper \ssoci.itton News Editor this issue .. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923 WHY SCHOLARSHIP Great colleges and unive.sitics, gicat to the outside woild. have tallcn by the wayside because they lacked, m an othci wise inn ioundation, a nccessaiv .stone—the scholaislnp ideal Penn Stale. 1 i rot lost sight of this ideal, and will honor those men who hu\e achieved success scholastically at the semi-annual Scholuship Day exercises which will be observed m the Atuh toiium Thuisdaj morning. A season ot athletic and social activities such as that com puting the autiynn months in the Nittanv Valley bi mgs a maiked tendency to give scholarship a second place, each student piori lsmg himselt that he will get down to work "after while.” Weekly we bow to the slnine of physical attainment to do homage to an athlete or team, forgetting tor the moment the othci side of the scale. We would not discourage the support of teams end playeis, such is an integial pait ot the college spmt Rut aftei «'ll, gnehron days soon pass, and then is not the framing which the nnnd has received far more important Many men who have made the venture toll us that the trained mind niles above all else Encouiagcment is the best of incent ives and lealizmg this, the honor iiatcimtics and societies have designated Scholarship Day as a tune to do honor to those who have won distinction in piactical lines, in the aits, and m the sciences Scholarship is vital to the student of today, the man of tomonow But likewise is scholaislnp vital to the Penn Stale ot toclav, the university of tomonow With an engineering school known throughout the country, “(•bools of arts and sciences which are l.ipidly making names foi themselves and a school of agricultuie winch tanks with the best. Penn State is striding towards the leahzation of hei vision. But without the ideal of scholarship m the minds of Nittanv under giaduales, the chief stone is lacking ftom the foundation for a gicat university Let Penn State men and women acknowledge true values on Thursday LIFE AND AMBITIONS Theie was once an architect, a builder of magnificent struc tuies. whose one ambition m ltle was to meet an edifice that would live thousands of yeais aftei lie had passed away and stand as an otei nul monument to his great genius He lived m a land of dreams, diearning day after day ol the time when his ambition would be leali/ed. But he dreamed too diligently and befoie hi. gioat building was begun, the architect was calicd to another woilX Anothei aielulccl, possessing not half of the genius of the formei one, lived Cor today. Every one of his buildings was caie fully planned so that each would stand as a fitting memoual to one vvhose ambitions vveie entombed in each accomplishment He did not plan foi one great building, but cho ,e to make evciv one of his structuies embody an ideal Today beautiful build ings in every country of the world stand as a monument to this aichitect. while the dreamer—nobody icmembers Ambitions are to be encomaged but one should not center his entie life about a single hope—life is 100 short toi that Men and women have planned to become noted lawyers, doctor-, finan cial s, educatois, social workeis and whatnot, but after many at tempts which met with reverses, thev have been bioad-minded enough to change then views and embark upon fields which P*omised more letuins Men who live then whole lives about one single ideal arc in effect mental cowards, foi they aie admit ting an unfoigivable weakness. Colleges and univeisities find many men of this typo. A high school student believes he is destined to become a great engineci, end makes application to the engineering school of a college Adm ttance follows, and he embaiks upon the gieat advonline Ptofes-ois and mstructois mfoim him aftei the hist tow months that lie lacks the necessaiy technical qualities ot an engineer, but! he refuses to listen By dogged studying, he manages to get l through and receive a diploma Ultimate lcsult. The woild ie-' ceivcs another half-iate engmeei, and is picbably cheated of a great financial wizard or physician. : Vocational guidance has helped to a certain extent, but the final choice does and always will rest with the mail himself If student changes courses at the end ot the first oi second year if js not a sign of mental weakness. On the contrary, it is un doub'edly a sign of superior intellectuality. Don’t stand as a pit tul example of one who wants a single thing, thinks ho can get it. can’t get it, and succeeds admirably in failing to get it HATS OFF TO SYRACUSE The Orange attained a double victory on Satui day. It emerged on the long end ot the scores m football and hospitality The Lions, fighting with their backs to the wall against a team that has not had its goal line crossed this season, bowed to the su penoi playing of the Syiacusans It was a scintillating triumph on the guduon, but a much greater victoiy was scoied in the game of “feel at home”. Never hcfoic m the history of the Nittanv institution hao speh a coidtal welcome boon extended to Penn State men on ior cign soil. “Welcome” signs from every building on the campus greeted the Blue and White followers, and the Hill entertained loyally over the entire week-end Such evidences of genuine hospitality cannot help but increase the gieat spirit of friendli ne-s that already exists between those two institutions. Through Ihe COLLEGIAN, Penn State thanks Syracuse. May the rela tions between the two rivals ever be thus. Grid Gossip Well, the returns cost just tifty cents. Nail Notre Dame Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editor Managing Editor .Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Seuunl of the Penn Statois ic nuikod that thev felt right at home in Aiehbold Stadium. The hay on the held n ale them think or the Stock bulging P.mi’on You guessul light—thev weie Agn. Natl Notre Dame It was ro mini at the game that the ko foi mod timing the night melted while the game was in pio gran. giving the Nittanv (and Uso the Swacuse) looters nice wet places or v 'nth to ’it Nail Notre Dame —-- W P. Reed *27 II G Woinsley ‘27 Mniy E Shnnei ’27 Business Manager Advertising Munagcu Circulation Malinger A ichbrld Stadium Miicly is n sun! on saueei but v e couldn’t find the usual ‘heed Change in it. (Laugh tint oir') Nail Notre Dame B C Whni ton ‘27 Tnc laun y culling* didn't have to fumble In fact, thev had \et\ few chance-, to do u*i\ thing Nad Notre Dame —- Don’t let am one tell \ou that the legend of the "Seven-league Booth” is a luiiv tale Red Giangc uses ’em cum Sitmduy. Nail Notre Dnme The last tune a goat pniaded ne.u a Penn State team, we won, 21-0 Let’s nope the nc\t time we see a goat, it’ll again be with Navv Nail Notre Dame Fiom the looks, of the Nittanv team’*, intics when it had the ball, it looks as if Be/ has found the light conibinition but that no one knows how to use it in oidei to open things up 11. G Womslcy Nail Notre Dame Vie tan st*ll talk about Iluny W<l - though He made Aimv’s lone touchdown In uiteiccptmg a pass and dodging foui tacklen dining his eight -fre-\.ml lun foi the s'\- poialer. Natl Notre Dame Tmee female chceilerdeis deco intcd the Oiange stands (Pei«on illv, we know of ibout two thouund, line bundled and cightv-fnui people who would like to see that s ime thing heie Like to see it tiled') Nail Notre Dame Notie Dame had to use its first stiingois to stole two touchdowns against the Geoigia Tech junioi vni »itv Mai hap we'll get a chance to cause anothei of the famous “Eeavci I’uld defeats" on Satuidav—unless someone fumbles Nail Notre Dame BOTANY PROFESSOR VISITS COLLEAGUES IN NEW YORK Pi of E L Nixon, of the Botany Department, who recently announced his investigations and discovciy con coming the "fire blight,” is at present m New Yoik, where he is consulting liof R A, Harpei, of Columbia university Di IHipcr is lceogmzcd •" one of the leading authoiities on the subject of fiuit diseases While there Piofessoi Nixon will icceive the view i and cntiusm o r othci special ists winch v ill be an aid m his Imlhei research Retails of tlmtcen yenis of re «cai<h, ending in the discovery of the life cvelo of the "fire bliglit” bactena, was published in bulletin loim last week ENCYCLOPEDIA CONTAINS NOTES BY FACULTY MEN Foui members of the Penn State faculty have contiibuted articles to “The Book of Rural Life,” an ency clopedia of ruial interest which has tust been published bv the Bellows- Dtirhnm company of Chicago This woih consumes ten large volumes and coveis a total of sixty two liundied pages It contains ex po utions on aguculture, home eco nomics, health, education, general and agucultuial sciences and civics Two hundted and fifty authoutative SHOE REPAIRING Neatly Done at Reasonable Prices Penn State Shoe Repair Co. I’wo Shops—l OS S Frazier St, and Allen Street, under the Peoples National Bank PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS largest selling degrees Superlative in quality, the world-famous copying \/ENUS Ypenols give best service and longest wear. Blty Plain rndi, per do:. $lOO *' Rubber end*, per dor. 120 * Cl e/fl<J lt dealer* \ j American Lead Pencil Co . I dozen 220 fifth A VC, N X p THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN giSSSiS fez n . „ Den Daniel You have biol.en my heart And I have a hmd hemt, too; not easilv broken But, Dan deal, aftei all the lost golf ball- we hunted foi at mid night, m the college woods and down loams' lane last June'—aftei tint— do \ou think it’/ nice to cut me dead m public ' And it was vciy public, Dan deal. you vveie stietched out m the barbel's chan You aie not prettv when the lov ci pait of your face is all flulTv with lathoi, but T was pei feetly willing to speak I sat down in the next ehtm to gut a hair cut, and the bnbci uinicd rev chan so that I watched vou get voai face all steamed up and massaged and the blackheads lemoved You wuc veiv p*cUy when he finished I was quite interested to watch him make vou so beautiful—you must have u new gul I wish I knew hei—l’d fix hei as i-a as you are concerned—l’d like to have hei see vou without join collat and with your face all plastered vv’th lathei oi pink a earn I've been disillubioncd, Daniel, and it breaks, mv heait to think I’m such a pooi judge of horses and men articles have been compiled into n compichensive oigantzation of the broadest knowledge of unal educa tional and social lc.ulei s Dean G L Wendt of the School of Chemistrv and Physics wrote an cluboiation on the genci.d topic of "Gasoline and Motor Fuels ” A dis cussion on the iffaetical applications of chomistiv to the country’ com munity was presented bv Di C W Sloddmt, dean of the School of Lib el al Aits, unde, the subject “Agii cUtuial and Household Chemistry ’’ Pi of F. D Gardnei, head of the de partment of agronomy, wiote a ti ca use on conditions - ©! the soil while Tiof D F McFarland of the School oi 'Mines and Metallurgy contributed an aiticlc entitled, “Metals and Metal lurgy ” iiveiv’s .Shoes iKoonroibiTU wot- ui i vt oir $9 ON DISPLAY j I By j Mr.R.E.McDEEMOND Mon., Tncs., Wed. Nov. 9,10 & 11 Al State College Hotel $7 meix’s-Shoes I)iOOB.POaj.T»9 *—* ILZO US PAT OTP Store* In Kew York Brooklyn, Nrvo-k sod I'hiliJflplil, Addmt lorM*U OrJrn, tfiHudionrt, Now YurkCtty EXPERT Till men aie bcaidlcss— HOLD AOi Are \ou losing oi Gotlmg tiled of ' Then make heultl Keeping actuc ,1 And hold \oi ■ lilt GIMP ut m life'/ woildlv stnfo ? :h a source of \ i”i, and in turn— )u: grip! at you die old, ) i film and bold, ate still a man, in the plan— mi gup! Do not think thr Take voui statio Piove that 3. on .• To reckon with i And hold \oi mdy gup, ist every tup, Do vara of a stei One that will las to do the best, Have the pluck To out-rival all And hold \oui grip' Cull in all the jollj bojs, To share with vou in their jojs, Though \ou ate a little gray, Show them you know how to plnv— iur gup' id clean, inch is mean, and in tiufn, nit life and jouth— nn gnp l And ho’d vot Be optimistic am Avoiding that wl In virtue grow a Tims lengthen on And hold \ot HaveY@iaB©©sa £Ms Feaa Isa CTsss? Parker Pens in Black md Cold w! xnv S) ||p Jf ($3.50 with Jppa' larger Point Jg funl and Gold Ban d^iSSssM Industrial Engineering Department For Quick Service CHIFFONIERS . . $12.50 Student Desks and Chairs Student Tables CHAIRS .... $3.50 DEKS . . - $12.50 to $25.00 TABLES .... $5.00 COSTUMERS . . . $2.00 GATE-LEG TABLES . $7.50 ROOM 106, UNIT B SOCIAL SEASON PLANNED BY PENN STATE DE MOLAY With moie than a bundled men meeting at the Acacia house last Tucsdav night, the DcMnlny Club of Penn Stale foinnilntcd its plans fm the coming season. The oigam/ution plans to lunc a club room foi the use of its members sometime m the ncai futme. A com mittee was appointed to consult Dean j Wninock a* to the advisability of these plans being earned out AiramrcirenN woic made foi u club dance for all Do Slolays m College, to be held at the Ac..cia house Novem ber twentieth An otchestie com posed of mcnbeis n being oigninzed and will be piescnt to fuim«h the ea ten tainment at the coming meetings Di D\e, of the English dcpeilment, : is the iueulh sponse. foi these plans md will aid in canning them out PROFESSOR EVERETT TO AID IN SALVAGE OF OLD . BATTLESHIP, “ALABAMA*’ Prof. II A Evei ett of the Mccn in lcnl Isngmeeimg depuitmcut has been called to Italtin.olo for consultation icanning the salvage of the battle ship “Alabama The Alabama was used as a target m Naval mancuvets in the Chesapeake Bay some ycuis ago where it was sunk bv airplane bomb.. The ship w ill be l .use 1 and cut up foi c cinp metal. Piofecsoi Eveietl vas giaduatcd ficin the Jlaaeachu-etb Institute of Technology m the school of naval en gmeeung Foi a pciiod ol thirteen yens he was nstiuctoi m theimoil.*- namies and naval uchitectuio lie then ti.nsfencd to the United States Naval ueademv v hero he taught foi thice \oais lie left the academy to assume duties as chief consulting en gined with i load.ny Baltnuoie shin EATS FOR THE SMOKER r You name if--- We’ll make it 220 E. College j c. b , ar d OOCOGOOOCOOOCOOCCCOCOGOCCSCSCOCOCCOCOOOOOOOCOCOOOwCCO o o i THE KEEFER-NOLAN HARDWARE 1 O O O €> 8 BOTH PHONES PROMPT SERVICE § o o iKXJCOOOOOCOOCOGCGOGCOCOCCOOCOCGCOCOOCCGCCC-COCOOCCCOCCJ SERVICE—QUALITY—PRICE Society Brand Suits and Overcoats . s4o*oo’’ Statler Brand Suits and Overcoats $35 to $45 Right Posture (two pants suits) . $34=00 Sheep-lined Coats - $9.00 to $14.5® Shelters, Yellow and Olive Drab $s and si.§o mgf —; c Him Gold Point I jJjjj and Rolled Gold ffaj P° c h c t*Clip or Ring* !wj End at the price of Sw mclcel-trunmcd Pens Stetson Hats - $g and $g Schoble and Campus Hats $4.50 to $7.50 Caps (real college shapes) $1 ,7§ to $3.00 SHIRTS Arrow, Eclipse and Eagle Brands $g to $3.50 GLOVES Knitted—Newbucks and Furlined $1.75 to $8 Woolens and Lightweight Dress Hose $.75 to $$ Golf Hose $1.75 to $8 Florsheim Shoes - ■ - $lO.OO Crawford Shoes - $8.50 to SOJO See our English Last Shoe . . $9.00 Opp. Front Campus building company. Aftei solving thiec jioars m this capacity he joined the Penn State faculty RECOGNITION GIVEN TO HIKERS AT LAFAYETTE Thcie's a bed and a meal awaiting at Lafnvetle college foi a student ol any other college oi university whose bumming tup to take in an awav-fiom-hone uthlet’C contest bung* him thump’ll Easton, ny the signs erected at the mam entrances to the town bj the Maioon Key Club, the official '‘welcoming club” Owing to the location oi Fusion, many students fiom othei Pennsyl vania schools pa*s thiough here on tueir way to New York to wntch then teams in iclion and thoio is north and south tiattic when Cornell meets Penn The "li«‘d and meal” idea was adopted this iall after Lafayette students had met with a simikt. welcome lroia Dickmron Col lege fieshmen c’ass \ hen the Ma ioonitcs were tiekkmg in Pittsbmgh scveial weeks ago STfeMißlTfai’f’cClo. Phoki-ibys Gtuahtf jV-i'Sly* TS TuchLj and Wcduesdaj— DOUGLAS FAIRBVNKS In “Don Q, the Son of Zorrn* Matuice Tticsdnj at Two Thursday and Fridrj ADOLPH MENJOU In “The King On Main Street" Our Gang Cometh, ‘Better Movies’ Tuesdaj and Wednesday CONMA’S TE \liu: and AILEEN PHINGLE In ‘The Mystic” Slack Sennctl Comedy—“A Rainj Night" Come in and see our line of CAKES AND PASTRIES ■ HARVEY BROS. “The Store of Service” Having just installed (he finest up 4o date equipment in our large and well stock ed store, we arc better able than ever be fore to meet the requirement of our patrons. You will receive prompt and courteous service at all times. •ALWAYS RELIABLE” E22Z2E! SUITS HATS HOSE SHOES F R O MM ’ S Tuesday, November 8, IISI Phone 211 Since 1913
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers