P 1~ J „ PCIIII ...tare ,otlec.3lan nat. st„,ipiih,. Although this represents only ionc department in the School, the project points Pubiiihed se:al-week::: during the Ccliege year by stu-!tOwart. l an All-Liberal Arts paper as a goal. The dents of the Pennsylvania State College, in the best inter- initiative has been taken by the fraternity with rots of the College, the students, faculty, alumni and out the prospect or aid from the department or friends. from the outside. The possibilities for bettering the Depart : meat through the medium of this Bulletin are - President ' great. Perhaps the greatest is the attaining of a Vice-President coordination Between the faculty and students Treasurer, and within the student group itself which has never properly existed. We hope the publication proves successful and extend to Delta Sigma Pi our best wishes. The fraternity is to be congratulated for undertak• lug. without financial assistance, the publication of a Commerce and Finance ME EXECUTIVE BOARD W. P. REED '27 - 11. G. WOTLEY '27 S. 11. Ron '27 - THE Eurrotti.t I. STAFF IV. P. Tte.r.rl '27 Wrr.ls:.E - k - '27 (;. P. FIFIIFIZ '27 - FRANCES 1.. Po;: =3 '2 N F.w.g EDlToits W. 1.,r41. .Ir. '2B I'. IL Snuiltz '2B W. S. 'Thornton 28 WOMEN'S NEWS EDITORS linaarine I!Obrook :,13,1r0l A. ‘Vthb '2B :-I. Att . ;”..n IL IL Fl , ,lelvor '23 Kaph,:i '24 1::•11 THE ;::"FINESS FTAFF S. It. Von B. C. WIIAI:Ti.S F. N. Wr.n,:.:l:; ASS:S7 J. Feritr,,n '23 C. P. I'llrm '23 IT EMITTERS L. 11. 11-11. Jr.. '29 T. E. L. Ni..mnn W. IL c..r. hr '23 .1. 1 rir.l 11. W. A. *23 11. P. 3.1.1. , hin. '2l, S. it lb, '23 L. Mit:1;11, '2i P. F. IL F« 1191.'nmn '23 It. f:. Try rom.mlinieut iorl. ..n am .4- . 5.41 of C 0171.1., 1:1111 , -1. c• nva Ira Int: nal Inc t wrofit.," and ho• out at 1.1. tr rairat i•str. IL. roan rn v: 4 ,11, 44 p.o— 110 life.vever. for 1, 1,1, 1:rot. Ali ropy for Toe , lay'm I , ,ae moAt be in the "IE, w by twelve r• nigh!. ,pd for Fr::ny'A bit:, by twelve 0 . 11/01:11 Wednesda y' high, Cherk. nbal money or.b , ri namiro, pay., oilier than "The Peon will Lo t to a,cepted for :a-count:3 dde Ibbi now. Srib , erirotion prire, r.nynl.l.• 1.1e.r0 1. 192 G. Entrn4l nt Stsrt.. na ...c0m1....1v:4 muff,. (11Tire: NW:my 1 . 41,1im: nri.l rubli-Jiing Co. 11111:1!ita. Sent. IN. 1 , 1! , Pa. Tel.thon, 14.11. /Cline 11.kurA: 11:60 n. m. in 12:40 rn: \cu• F:ditor This Issue FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1927 LOOKING AHEAD President Iletzel, in his address before the cmening convocation of the annual State Farm Products Show, struck a cord that should warm the heart of every Penn State student. During the course of his address President Iletzel expres sed himself as being deeply conscious of the fact that Pennsylvania "has fallen sorely behind in the devidopment of one of her most vital institutions," this; in reference to Penn State. fe went on to state, "I have no word of ad verse criticism. 1 have only hope that soon the Commonwealth will awaken to her error and rem edy if in the interest of her own true well-being. .1 hope that the time has conic when considerable progress can be made in this direction. T hope we have reached the point where .we are begin ning to see that money put into the work of insti tutions of higher learning does not represent pub lic expenditure but rather public investment." Penn State's capacity to impart learning and training to the youth of Pennsylvania has been scarcely sounded. Hundreds are turned away each fall because of inadequate facilities for pro viding the necessary equipment. - More class room spate is needed, more instructors are required. With a president like Dr. Fletzel at the head of Penn State's administration bur present capac ity must soon become all too inadequate. Expan sion is the only solution. But, expansion is costly and the Commonwealth must be made to realize that money used to this end is not a "public ex penditure but rather a public invesment." President Ifetzel has taken the first step in im pressing this fact upon one group of Pennsyl vania citizen:• and Penn. State students may justly rejoice in the hope that better days are coming. CONCERNING ETIQUETTE rotind the room My silent servants wait, my friends in every season.'bright and Such vans Barry Cornwall's definition of a library. Penn State has a library, it has many good-books which'. are the servants of the students. but un like Cornwall. the masters of these servants are cruel and thoughtless. The treatment which the books, both on re serve and in circulation, receive is little short of disgraceful. Pages are 'dog-eared.' passages are underlined, margins are disfigured with notation.% Books, plainly enough. are a mark of inteii4rene2. Why. then, do students who are e::pected to rea lize their value and the privileges attending to their use, gressly violate common decency by wil fully disfiguring volumes which do not belong to t hem. The argument that the value of a book in creases with the number of underscored passages tarries no weight where the volumes concerned are for public use. To the student who appreci ates reading and tries to formulate his own ideas concerning the author's trend of thought, a mark :lt passage is quit 6 annoying, if not actually in sulting. The books placed in the Carnegie Library are for the use of the students and it is only right that each student remember this fact. Consid eration for the next fellow is no small virtue, and forgetfulness and carelessness rarely proclaim the true genius. A COM) START The School of Agriculture has its FARi\IER; the School of Engineering has its ENGINEER; to date the School of Liberal Arts has had no news organ. For a long time the publishing of a Bul letin ha.s been considered by members of the Lib eral Arts School. but until recently no definite steps have been taken to materialize the publica tion. Now, under the direction of the local chapter of the professional fraternity, Delta Sigma Pi, a Bulletin will be published for copnnerce and fi Eilit , t 'in-Chief AFFi=tan t Editor 31:inrifzint; Edit;: V." , intiin'ei Editsa Each year as the winter sports swing into ac tion comes the rumbling complaint of students who are fo•cedl to crowd into as little space as possible in order to permit others access to the Ar mory. 'rimy light to get in and they fight to get out. - I:IIFifICRS }tanager - Advertising Nanager - Circulation Alanager ENS IL It. I:ilborn W.. 1. McLaughlin '2,1 Granted that conditions are bad; granted that thp Armory is too small to accommodate all those wishing to cheer for Penn State's teams. But the fact remains—we have no other place to which we cap go. A new recreation building has been prom -1 ised, but that cannot be built at was Aladdin's pal ace. We must have patience and make the best of what; we have until the time comes when the sit uation can be bettered. At present grumbling server only to make others dissatisfied and gets us nowhere. Penn State spirit must not suffer be cause of cramped quarters. The Bullosopher's Chair "No. I refer to day dreams: building castles in the ni?, if you please. but at least giving vent to the little of poetry that remains in most of us! the ecstasies and the dreams of youthful love that can even transport man out of the realm of selfish reeking." "You know. Smithey, in this age of inti-sentimental ity—when to suggest that one enjoys Donald G. Mittiell, or even Longfellow, produces a laugh of dirisive scorn— we are apt to hill;r our dreams, feel ashamed of them, and slinl into the rear of the loud-yelping crew which de nounces. eenrns, derides, scoffs, decries, and sneers all the habitudes of sentimentality into a sneaking self-abase ment! --P. IL Similtz "But you know, Smithers, sentimentality isn't such a weakness, that wc need cast it from us altogether! In its nal:lest form—expressions of beauty, love, dreams—it is n means of transportation from the sordid, materialistic, eel -centered philosophy which seems to have pervaded even, nu• idealized college atmosphere. "We need poetry, Smithers, poetry in our lives, po etry in our thoughts, poetry in our dreams! "Great art looks to find the possible perfect in our human life." And if American youth needs one platitude to swallow with the dope of materialism it is fed upon daily, it is an ad monition to get our vision—if we have any—oir the en redien.z, and focused upon a possible perfect! Life is not a matter of Poor Richard almanacian aphorisms, but rath er n matter 'of LIVING in its fullest sense: a sensitMty, not to physical opportunities, but to beauty, love—a shoot ing at the stars in human relationships. "American virtues: plumbing and saving the world! Put it is time we inject a third maxim in our code: saving ourselves—from slavery to materialistic goals and aims, ry to the warld and its acclaim of success on foun dations of Sand, slavery to self interest, and its insidious power to blunt our appreciation of the truth, and arrest cur reaction to a realization of life's significance, and blot out altogether the promised land of true happiness faintly seen front afar. "Smithers, when the poetry in the soul of our youth dies. their soul is a chief mourner who shall wither and fade from sheer grief and lack of sustenance. The donk eys who drown out the harmonies of life's chords, with their braying at sentimentality mid manifestations nf•the winged sonk.havc their day! But n ! niglitis• to folloW--- and without the liglited'hMtVCa'Of drit4iAVi; et in sur e to grope helplessly in the'darh." WANTED: PATIENCE SESSION ONE "Do y u ever dream, Smithery? " ' SAIITIIKIZS:—Vou mean at night? ANNOUNCING LATEST ADDITIONS TO OUR Rental Library `7IIE BLACK KNIGHT" Ily 1:•rultl. M. 0511 "I'IIE DEAD RIDE HARD" Ih• LOUIS .101111191 VANCP: "THE DELECTABLE, MOUNTAINS" - • By nitimms BURT "THE JOYOUS CONSPIRATORS" fly 0501105 GIRDS " THE MISSING CHANCELLOR" a, .1. S. FLETCHER PLUTOCRAT" nownt TAIINDurroN "TOMORROW MORNING" Ily ANNIi PARRISH "YOUNG ANARCHY" Hy PHILIP (:111115 • Due to popular demand we have also added extra copies of "REVELRY" Ily SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS "SUMMER BACHELORS" Iq• WARNER FABIAN "GALAHAD" Ity 301 IN ERSKINE NEW BOOKS ADDED FORTNIGHTLY: BEST 1100 ES OF ALL PUBLISHERS BOOKS KEELER'S STATIONERY STUDENT SUPPLIES Cathaum Theatre Bldg. ii 71 1 7; PZITLT STATE CI37ALEGIAN Thespian Comedy for Coming Season Named (Continued from first' page) and reconstruct the plays that he used hitherto aril he knows exactly what Thespian audiences want," said .1. V. Ingham '27, production manager, commenting on the choice of this year's show. Ingham has arranged the schedule for the road tour in April. The first performance will be given before a Bellefonte audience on April nine teenth. From there the east moves to northeastern Pennsylvania, ap pearing in Scranton on April twen tieth and in Wilkes-Barre the fellotv ing night. Philadelphia will be play ed on April twenty-second. On the twenty-fourth it is undecided wheth er the show will appear at Joluntown or Altoona. Greensburg is definitely billed for April twenty-fifth and the road torn• ends with a presentation' of the shoo: in Pittsburgh on April twenty-sixth. With these preliminary Terformancea the Junior Prom audience is aimed of a near-perfect showing when the production is given here a few days later. The comedy tells of the complica tions entering into the lives of Ahree friends, ..lack Foster, it statistician, pessimist and coniirmea woman hater; Jimmy Culver, an author, very sus ceptible as far as the fair,sex is con cerned,. and Dick Temple, fiance of Jimmy's sister and very eager to get married, .but portrait commissions ome in very slowly. As a means of advertising', Temple spreads the rows that he has possession of the famous Romanoff necklace. The plan is successful—as fe u • as Hoover and Smith Co. 712 Chestnut Street Philadelphia Fraternity Jewelry "Permanent Satisfaction" MR. READ ITYNSON ... .....;a..;.g... . HAROLD P Special Representative New York Life-Insurance Co. Phone '294-W :~:~:x-~-:++:~±: KNOX CAFE Open. till midnight For your convenience Sandwiches. Dinners 1927 - .. .!'''''Me4ii:for..You? Send for Will it be your last year in college? • 'Booklet Possibly it is the year you have•planned • to 'enter' , businese —and prove you have the ability to make good! But are you prepared for busi ness? Have you a thorough knowledge of the fundamental laws of Finance, 'Management, Production and Distribution? Your college training would prove an excellent foundation for the intensive nine months busi ness course given at'the . Babson Institute. Men may enroll-at the begin ning of each' term. Entrince dates this year March 211; June 27, and September 21. Regular:courses may be continued thiough , sum. mer if desired. Babson, Institute. Organized. o t ig s ouff t o l tr fi trat . egurational 332 Wellesley Ave liabiari Mass. commissions go—but he is embarras, sed to find one of his rich customers insists. upon wearing the necklace. In the meantime Jimmy's sister brings a girl friend to visit with her and! .fack, the confirmed woman hater falls—and falls hard. A crook, posing as a secret service man is found trying to steal the im agined necklace and the buys threat en to expose him but—well, from that point on things become funnier and more complicated until the show cabs with a surprise finish in a comedy At present Mr. Darcy is in New York; but will come to State College on March twentieth to begin ceiling the following day. Any one who desires to submit lyrics and music for the production urged to get in communication with .1. V. Ingham at the Chi Phi frater nity not later than February first. CLASSIFIED FOR RENT—Front room double, 82.50 per week for one, $2.00 apiece for two. 700 College. MIDGE PART) . Girrs of distinc tion priced from 50 cents up. En tirely new selection. Tallies, plae2 EIME SALESMAN—Man to sell line of one'prieed shoes in State College. Inquire box No. U. Coltegion of fice. Photograph of Junior Class Now on sale At the Penn State Photo Shop 212 H. College Ave. f Expert Shoe Repairing Neatly done at reas onable prices Nelo's Shoe Shine. Parlor AND REPAIR SHOP GRIFFITH STATE COLLEGE, PA. What Will It explains' in - detail the work gwen and the unique features `of , our intensive bitsiness course. It shows haw, by following business methods; our students are thoroughly trained for kadershiP. Fill 'in attached coupon. ussssussonssmsssissussussusssossus sss Babson Institute E Wellesley Avenue. .• Babson Park, ME.B. k: Send me, without obligation. I g "Training for Business Leader. E ship' and 'complete particulars about Babson Institute. ;Name 2 Class ' - • a Addraas ; Slate Etummtmonnummituommminummummtmmimi VALENTINES for everybody priced : LOST—Leather bound copy of Shel- - from one rent to one dollar. Also ley's poems. Finder please notify an excellent selection of gifts suit-! S. IV. Greer, Phone 115-3. ltp able for the Valentine season. Old Main Art Shop. 110011 FOR RENT-2 roomers want al beginnjng with the seeoml seines ter. Sleeping room separate from study room. J. A. (Pop) Earrisonit 121 S. Bu rowel. Phone 1125-W. Jan. 21-1 1. yards. and other party items. Val entine and Washington'. birthday FlUDAY— favors. Old Alain Art Shop. WANTED—A position as helper in kitchen or maid. Will work in fra- SATC,RDAY— ternity house or restaurant. Can ' furnish good references. Inquired Norma Shearer and Conrad Nagel 722 E. Beaver Ave. 2t-p. FOR RENT—One single and one double room. Quiet, and plenty of heat. One block from Co-op and facing front campus. Possession at once if desired. Call Jan. 14-It. SSM:SIONMASNIV4WO.IO:4IO;!O; E r d i ROWLAND NICHOLS 0 •i V Representing 2, v 0 L. G. BALFOUR CO. 'i• e • HERE THIS WEEK 4 A *IiICIitWONSVViViVorNM:WiIIoi Rent a Car DRIVE-IT-YOURSELF MOTOR CO. "See Your Orders Cooked" -AT CLUB DINERS, INC. Cleanliness Courtesy Excellent Food OPEN ALL NIGHT A BETTER: POSITION • It's easier to get a good position if you have a little money saved up. One reason for this is that when you have money, you never have to accept a position that is riot suited to you. You have the wherewithal to wait until you can establish a satis factory connection. Money also gives you more confidence in yourself. Save regularly here for a better position in business and in life THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. DAVID F. KAPP. Cashier. - Important To Our Customers The prices show the saving in our Clothing and Shoes !JANUARY CLEARANCE NOW) Lots of our suits will be suitable for all season wear; colors are light and dark in Society Brand, Hart Schaffner and Marx, Kirschbaum or August Bros. clothes; the styles are the best of the current season; sizes for every man. Priced as low as $21.50, $32.50, $34.50, and $46.50. Every article must be as represented or money will be refunded. SHOES---Florsheines $8.85, Craw ford's $7.95, Sterling $5.40 M. FROMINI Opposite Front Campus Friday, January 2i, 1927 711ELITly; (Matinee Daily at 2:011) Lon Chaney THE P EN.I. LTI ExCUSE 311 i and Harold Lloyd %MOM; MOSE PIZESENI 3IONDAV and TuESDAV- Lon Chaney TELL n"ro TIIE NIARINES" Also On the Stage ' , AVILES and 31.1A1/3111E1Z Late of "Gay Paree - Special Prices: ldult rine. Children 25 Nittany Theatre FRIDAY and SATURDAY— (Evening Showing Only) .1H Star Cast THE .1117rITINEElt TUESDAY- Mary Brian in lIER FATHER SAID NO: e STARK. — 13Rgo S, L ,,crberclashers PHONE 9480
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers