rage riNT,) Perm State ,©lle tan Published semi-weekly easing Um Sunup yea: by students of tho Pennsylvania State College, m the interests of the College, the students, faculty, alumni a-d frterds W. P. REED '27 - H. G. Womsi.Ey '27 S. R Ron '27 - THE EDITORIAL STAFF W. P. REED . 2.7 - - H. G. Womney '27 - G. F. PIENFR '27 - FRANCES L FORBES '27 11. M Atku '2B B. Kaplan '2B lE= WOll C.\•9 NE". S EDITORS Katherine MO, ,I 24 Mildred A. Webb '2B ~.19i . I 0,11 '2B TIIL BLFINL,S s'r.tiT S R Ronn '27 - 13 C WHARTON '27 1•'. N. Winomat '27 ASSISTANT BUSINESS M INAGERS J. Ferguson '2B C. F. Flinn '2B The Penn ntnte COLT rcIAN intttn ennnnunttotlono on nny stn. Joon of ( ollehe intent All t untnnunh Mien. tn., to the ylnietture of the wetter. titul the n inter 3 11 0 11. pulth bed le hoe 11.4 tom tnunientlon th it MIIIIIIIII., 1011 I+ rnnol Laths of r Ii Minn The COl.l rCIAN ntsuntet rt,unnlahlt. %nue, fur ran..nettle "pressen In the LW, Pos All copy for 0.....10y a (+nun ~ e t. one t ~Ice °Mort n al , sly nli.lit, land fl) min> °dud, V:etlncult , ) n ts7.. i :;t7.; t!TT.,?:u h t ‘ :L Vont, Subscription ❑ri.e :50 /mold/. before ,o/ember I 19 9 6 nt the Postorn, S ttti t 011/te t st./ on/I,lPs/.matter Nlttuny Prenttop and PA/11/111m Co 11/ wp .1/1/1, :Into Col lege. Pa Telephone 212. W, Bell uppe Pour. 1t PP a m to 03 r I nn 00 p m FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1927 UPWARD AND ONWARD A year has passed since a radical, but uelcome, procedure took place in Penn State customs Prior to that time, lieshmen v.ere ti mane!' 17 om September to June, sophomore, weie lust that the yetu mound, iumen sumo. not allowed to discard the burdensome hat until at the final exam had been endured—apil semoi uric. , emors until they had been granted a tolled-up pal chment tied with a blue ribbon Such were cla-,s tiaditions un tibjust one year ago. PION ,only, customs might have been likened to the temperetm c in the ti op us: never vaiying throughout the year Then someone, or mm e than one, announce , ' a plan of shortening the College year—as far as class cus toms were concernea. (The NVOI d 'announced" is used in place of devised—the same plan had al ready been in lot cc fot years ai a number of other progressive institutions of learning) That plan entailed a "moving-up" clay on a designated date Freshmen would become sophomores, sophomores assuming iunim standing able the Juniors nose to senior dignity The genun s, not to feel slight ed, threw oil serum um ries to don the min e non known as Lion Suits The plan wes immediatel3 accepted and one yea' ago tomorrow it will have been put into elect Marc-up Div at Penn State IN a , recened with enthusiasm It uas agi eat success. All this happened ore year ego Tomorrow Penn State w ill observe its second an nual Move-up lloy eel elm:rues. Everyone will take a step forw aid. even the institution itself, tot it will fin thee inti ench itself within a tradi tion that is and will become mme and more, the hub of Penn State spn it On no other day, per haps, 1 , so much spa ,t manifes,ted toward mu Alma Mate• occasioned by the love for the new togcthe, w ith deep sentire nt fot the old. EN m one welcome:, the new the changing. yet it is with a tinge of i egiet to !eat e lot °Am that to which one has been accustomed The College. undergraduates, and all, move along the line tomon ow' F . c eshmen toss gi een head cove] mg, epos a pp e and immediately. or soon after; assume the sophomm lc air: of second-. yeas men to aw act the an ival ot the Class ot 1931 in September. At the appointed time on the morrow, the yea - flings w ill have faded into mem ory. Ile must mme-un. At noon tomm tow, the festit ties begin. The "day ot all days" at Penn State, will 11:t LIMO fad into the night When the shades of dm kness en shroud the Nittan3 Vellev the Armin y wiii be the seem ot an all-College dance„ff whidh members, of all four classes will aqSCTIINC foi participation what is without a doubt the largest and most important Infoimal dance on the College social calendar So infra mat is the four class Conical affair, that semms null be Aimed in newly-donned Lion Suits, tuned, will spoil, official class blazers, sophomores will ,'ppeai bedecked in le, kins slipoveis while fieshmen will be no longer in dan ger ot losing valued lock; as payment for escorting a fair guest. TN% o plomment orchestras have beer engaged assuring continuous music for the expected multitude. When tweh e o'clock, alone forces a cessation of revel , y, it will mask the official end foi Penn State's second annual Move up Day. Out Mot emit Day was not the only tiadition that was Intl educed on the Ndtany campus by the 1925-26 Student Council A promam was also rn epared for by Day followed by Sonic)] Sings and this innovation was accepted with the same zest apparent in Move-up Day On Mondat , the seniors will gathers within the shadows of Old Main, where simultaneous with an addles:, by one M. the membei s of the class. ivy—symbolic of im mortality—will be planted that in years to come will play its part in beautifying the exteran walls ot Old Main. Monday night, the serums will as semble on the front steps of Old Main whole their voices will blend forth in strains of harmony as "Alma Mater," "Victory," and "Nittany Lion" float over the campus at twilight Tuesday, at the same houi, the wearers of the Lion Suits will again convene on the Omit steps while the follow- • tug \ ...all*. again at sunset, mambos of the jun ior class %Nil! be nu it'd to tern mith the members 01 the outgoing class m a combined sing. OMOIrOIN will he a memorable day for °rely Penn State undo gi adonte. Slay each pat ticipant find time to ponder in the gieatness of his Alma Mau.'today p the thnty-hrat ot December in the calendar of the respect i‘e class customs. but tumor' on r anothei day: a day on which Penn State mos es, hand in hand uith her loyal sons and daughters. tiimai d and onuald - President Vice-President - Treasurer DRINK A DIGHBALI College men do dunk—and quite extensn ely. College is the place when a stumbling number of! collegians m t in cpece then first swallow of an al coholic brn ei age But then aga,n, college is also the place where a man either "made" or "in ok- ' en." Blame, thei aim e, cannot be placed at the gate' of colleges Bien if the students within are confi soled with bottles that, contain their shale of ',tuff with a kick " At the recent comention of the Eastern Inter collegiate New ,papei Association, the question of ch mkt% among andel g.aduates (college men) was discussed Representath es of the vatious college newspaper publication, went on record as helm, decidedly opposed to student drunkenness Drinking among college men, while undesn able. um show r to be only a man pi oblem compaied to drinking among men in genet al The minor problem would imam until the maim problem wir sob ed, it was pointed out. Let u- suppose. very ethnically. that the two groups—the college (Minkel s and the men-m-gen mal drinkers,—should decide to cons cue Natut all. vll those assembled being ' wet" the convm - satin: , would turn to liquor. if it hadn't started with that subject in the hilt place. Various Wands of ' e-wat liquids" would be mentioned as well as the high pi ices. The discussion ii ould lead nowlim e, except that the pones of suggestion might make a few of the assembled multitude rathei the sty tic good would come out of the imaginary meet- Inc Maybe a few of the trathei mg would imbibe so freely. and become so chink, that they would Ist% eat oft "the rotten stuff" for hie. A few of the original few weld keep tine to their word and abhor liquor but the rest would find that as difficult a feat as a visiting American expel iences while eating spaghetti in a native Italian testi-nu :int All of which means thrt prohibition seems to have defeated its purpose. Drinking is on the inci ease .me in no more noticeable place is that fact as 'dent, than in the colleges throughout thr land The !release might be attributed to the pit chological effect of In olubition on the youngei generation: what one. can't get readily, one wants That i eason, however, can lie shot full of holes in else that quern-looking man is not a bootleggei Any number of words that may be set down heic will not cause lh Volstead to regret that he dker inti minced the idea for which he has gained nation-wale fame. (That same idea has pi obably also caused many uncomplimentaty epithets to be hulled in the general du cation of his fan name but then he can gain solace in, the fact that he is championing a rather schsible cause, however, im practicable it may be). A sham vote, taken in many colleges, has dis close l the fa.:t, that undethraduates,favor the re tur of light w Ines end beer. This is a compro mise. Some clay the lettnn of light wines and been may be a i entity We hope it is. We also hope that the gone-but-not-forgotten'"free lunch" also makes its triumphant return alongside the thirst-satisfying light wines anti beer Three up, Julius! Edite.th-Cilief Assistant Editor Managing . Editor Women's Ed for IV. Lord. Jr '2B P It. Snratz '2B Business Manner Ads ei tiling Manager Cu eu , ation AI nnagLr It B lillbarn W .1 I%l:Laughlin '2. MR. SCHWAB. WE WELCOME YOU . distinguished visitor ;mires on the campus today as a guest of the College in the poison of Chaff les Al Schwab, nationally-known steel mag nate. A life of Mr Schwab would fill several hooks with intei est-ift ipping experiences His path to success and fame was by no means easy. Hi , opportunities and athantages were made by hs peisonality. not bestowed from the efforts of edecessorb ,I‘ll Schwab is mole of the, type onc encounters 'as a book-hero but ;rarely' sees. The'entire'College extends the hand of welecline to its distinguished guest, to a man who has shown a deep inteicst m the welfare of Penn State. LINEN KNICKERS White and Black SWEATERS Fancy and Plain GOLF HOSE Attractive Neckwear Patterns Merton Caps Mallory Hats at THE FASHION SHOP of State College PEITX ST.ATE COLI,EGL9I , 7 Dogs" is Froth "Beware o And Histo What lrothy knows ,eepted vs Nery Intl .Aso-ion cal toonists , hoi.1(1 attempt to tits :-too to forts pages len at.e.ll Pet haps mg np fat final °sant En7ased. (it should green, blue and b the humble humot Ist, I eighth tomtmy taxlea! of t castle which set tptmn ' (font-tout ' Ft othy thought it app . "Bea ale of the Dog' allow ed" but ti uthful to him who e.tl thinl But del, nog into of the antiquated pe jabout lustol} 'le but ohs the and rhyinsters ',lay their wai f impel is arab- I hey me blush- be entombed) in ack pasteboard, 1 tie depicted an packed in float beats the n ut-may-pence" opt lately meant 01 "No bums 1 it means "Es 11 the hidden nooks ;hodical so found at:ons of what go Washington , ame %taltn; low happened ‘‘ , len Gee s was making love t I Jnrette Cathy and an unruly satJetv pm suddenly messed up c' inything Ft othy Lays ). that Gem g.e, of Neiry lice fame, lisped the famous ',mull "I cannot tell a lie." Maive ~us, 'lnimically spoak.ing, Frothy ,s fam.l.m with that lair damsel of Pil grim fatale Pi iscilla Kennicot. Psi ! elk's suam, Johnie Alden, got peev ed bczause Johme Smith would not ell a pint of lub.ipting oil and to make Mattel's NVO,C, the gracious daa'orol gas/. him the dickens for not Ms rung his own spcakeas3, And so 1., goes l j Wait' Frothy might move that Caezai was a hootleggei. Such nit-nits , Ficth out todly—Giahams —five Jaz' Thirty-two Teams Will Play in Tennis Tourney Thnty-two teems have legi9tereo for the mtei-flatenuts tennis tourna ment Alt games will be played ac cording to the schedule now appealing in i earldom, of the Athletic Stoic Each frateinity will be reptesented in two men who nill each play match of singles. If the matches me divided, both icon will ploy as doubles team to decide the winner All pro tium:li% games are supposed to be plaveJ ott by May fifteenth The le cults of these matches should be turned in to J. L Cc-inel '2B it the Phi Gamma Delta-house Atte). five-tha ty o'c , oek m the evening the courts on New Bennet field mill he available for the games natmuttes havutg,a match scheduled pill have the tight of pay ' ANTED—Position as a maul or beton in kitchen in Fraternity or restaurant at work by the da3. Phone 181-R ' 2tp next day—instructors who are likable but enacting. x.4 'o,' > > ` ~0.~ li l~ ~~ ■! To get the most out of college you must be full of vitality, must have every nerve and muscle working full time. Right food is the key to it. The Shredded Wheat habit will help you to make mind and body alert and throw off the poisons that bring sluggish ness. You'll like it, too. It's appetizing eaten half a hundred ways; smothered in fruit and cream or toasted with butter and hot' milk are just two of them. THE SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY Niagara Falls, N. Y. f.' f' • 7 . ~, . k .• , , 1 • 9 . 1 .1 , p, 4 1 A k 14_ ,-,... , * or., ,- e, a • .. .S. 1: `' :',I ,',7 •••t ,; .; .',•l t;' , ' ' •, .',.. 1 ••• . / i , : , ~t . . ~, .. .-<4 j., Charles Schwab Talks At Industrial Meeting (Continued from first page) Seats lute been reEmed in the flout of the Auddctlum, the lye died for delegates at the Confetene, The membe, of the Blue Nov So,ett mill act tic tatters. Began Career as Stake Drncr Mr. Schwab inieets into his speech c- 3 5013 of luram consisting p utly of stones stout himself which have been dawn from his caned ev-ieu once He began his calm as I :take diloor in the mg:m...lllg coins of the Edgar Thompson steel walks at 1 he ion to Llnef eogineri and assi , tont manago of that connmnv. nom 1887 to 1889 he wan supeimtendent or the Homestead steel stocks and - Nom 1392 to 1807 lie was gene, al caret inter, tot of both the fleme-tc.,l v d the E. al Thompson steel moil, Director of Mai, Companies iS97 he became pi e.,alent of the Cal neg. Stool company, kit , and a om 1901 to 1903 I•e NI as pleaident of the United State, Stool co-po,ation Ito a nom charm in of the board 01 th rectoes of the Bethlehem Steel cm po•at ion the Bethlehem Steel coin . pan, the Chicago Pneumatic Tool eon pant an,l he a also direetne in nnmt othet industi ml and commercial enterprises Poultry Department Appoints Directors For Annual Exhibit Sr Penn State poultay stude-tts nSe t.teen apitotrite I to tesponsthle t.csitions .n the man teentent of tbe Pith tinnual State Standat d Produc tion Poulhr Shoo to be held lane rest Oadttet, ace.: log to 11. C Knanttel head of the C poultt.t, depnrtment FORD SPEEDSTER rOR SALE—M tot in eseellelt condtt , nn Cal Hoffman . 0 . 15" Jewelry Gifts Commencement HANN & O'NEAL ~'~'' "" f College Senate Grants Holiday on Thursday (Continued from first page) of the State Unisersity of loon sshele he recened his A. B degree in 1809 and his A. M degree in 1904. He has dale graduate stork in Columbia uni sersity and has attended Coe college and the Unit eisitv of Mississippi • , kt the Mississippi institution he earned on L L D degree. After some experience in the field of journalism, he tought English at Columbia, and in 1911 accepted the piesidenev of the State Unixersitv of I•m a Ile has also eel veil as score tary for the Caine= Foundatiol lot the Advancement of Teaching in New Yolk. Latei he became director of i the Ametican college of surgeons. The Chancellor ,s popular net only in educational fields but also in esclu .4lse club elides Armory Roofed, Renews Life With Clean Slate (Continded from first page) acce-s to it proh•bited Succeeding classes turned tossaid the Armory, than •roily erected, and placed then nurcials upon its roof Still suintuer aftei summer the decoration would he imnoved. One class near the beginn ing of the picsent century did not ancient itsell. with placing its insignia upon the Amory roof but painted it about campus, torn and countivside to such a degice that the College aatliorities called a halt A:nettlingly a compromise mos et futed NOieleby tho freshmen would cm fine Inca numeral painting to the Annoy toot and for its part the Col- Fire Insurance Eugene H. Lederer MOVE-UP and try a good home made Ice Cream or Sherbet. There's a Difference. GREGORY'S CANPYLAND x-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:•.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-H-t-t-:-:-:-:•,:-:-:-:•+. Industrial Engineering Department Student Desks and Chairs, Student Tables :;:, CHIFFONIERS $12.50 ••!.. tk•..r trYPEWRITER ,TABLES $4.06, tle.sB:so CHAIRS - r =A' - -•-, $3.50., DESKS - : $12.50 'to $25.110' STUDENT TABLES $5.00 ' COSTUMERS , $2.00 GATE-LEG TABLES - - • - $4.50 to $9 DRAWING BOARDS • - $1.25 to $3.00 SWINGS - - - - $5.00 to $lO.OO PICTURE MOULDING - 3c to 20c per foot MAGAZINE RACK - • - - - - - $1.75 BOOK SHELVES - - $3.50 to $7.50 CEDAR CHESTS -- - • $3.00 to $25.00 All kinds of special orders and repairs in both 5: Wood and Machine shops. ROOM 106, UNIT B WATCH THIS AID »•..~.•~..G{W, ~~hh1,J,..i..:•{..:•:^i j^!•:^[..~»l✓u~»•f'j'.~'{~:«/{'YYyYCt•~»M.•{.tdyr~~lj•M'~'Y¢ MOVE-UP DAY See Our Display of Sport Clothes KNICKERS SWEATERS BLAZERS- , 1 GOLF HOSE TIES _ SPORT SHOES AND SPORTOCASIN SHOES F IR. () IVI IVI , S Opposite Front Campus Friday, May 13, 1921 lege would not remove them. This seemed entirely satisfactory, the tra dition took a firm hold on succeed ing classes and for a while classes with even numbers ending their num el als would re-tint all even numbered numerals already on• the roof. With the odd numbered classes doing the same thing, the numerals on the Arm bry,retained a freshly painted appear ance Connected with the Armory, is the inlmeating fact that it was originally intended to face Ohl Main. The plans were prepared with this intention in mind and when President Atherton nest to •Europe he left them in the hands of the College treasurer. The plans were misinterpreted and upon his return, President Atherton found the Ai =ay °calving its present posi tion. He was provoked to say the least. • 771EATR15,-; Nittany Theatre METZ All Star Cast tn "TOO MANY CROOKS" Alsp Charley Chase Comedy PRlDAY—Natany Lois Wilson, Sam Hardy M "BROADWAY NIGHTS" SATURDAY— (Matinee in ease of inclement) weather) Lois Moran in I'llt WHIRLWIND OF YOUTH" SATURDAY—Nthany— "TOO MANY CROOKS" AN) Charley Chase Comedy =EMS Clara HIM in 'ROUGH HOUSE ROSIE" IBEEZEM Alberta Vaughn AIN'T LOVE FUNNY TUESDAY—Nittany— "ROUGH HOUSE. ROSIE" ‘V-4. SrARx. Br s, gherciashers" F .. ,4 . gcyvoqji smoking is a part of college education
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers