Faye Tc perry State ,ollec3iart ralillsbed semi-weelcly during the College year by students 4.. t the Penn's,lvanis State College, in the interests of the College, the students, fdeulty, alumni and friends. TITS EXECUTIVE BOARD Winn en Low, JIE • M. ATKIIMN 'G C. 1 , . 1..11:11; '2B . THE FDITORIAL STAPF WINIFT:PIt DPW, .18. .28 ECNIANIIN KAPLAN TS it. NI. TS VT. S THONIPON '2B 1. SNIAI4B '2B I=l 1, It Hell, Jr '29 11. Plehara '29 11 1: Hallman '29 1. 11119LIfer 22 'ME BUSINESS STAPP P MANN '2B Ilamnegs Manager 12 II 1.111.61". 1,1‘,911,1nr Manager J h i 1,U:4.1111s '29 ahhon 119narsel ASSItiI'AN I It 1191X1itiS MANAGERS 1' I', t 'n1111131;1,, v i .1 II Bea '29 MEM CHEMIN Manarlng lAilt,l Th. 1, , 1te I , lPwl Editor Thi, I,,ue---- TrIrSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, lq2S TIIE POWER OF SUGGESTION Students who bemoan the fact that Penn State ,s the must pootly-equipped ~ tate institution in the Lountry otten tent an innate urge, no doubt, to make themselves usetut aides toward obtaining more. funds for their Mother of Learning BeLathe they :ire powerless to do more than sug gisi, these thinking students often become discour-f aged. Because they have not the means nor the in- Ilticitce to accomplish their common end they feel that their cause is futile Such is not the case, how ever, since an opportunity. one of the golden type,' is about to present itself At the nest November election millions 01 Pennsylvanians will tourney to the pulls to decide, for one thing, the fate at Penn State's pi °posed eight million dollar bond issue _Many vow, nifty treat the issue with indinerence or even cam against it because they have never heard of Penn State, or, it they base, because they are unaware of the financial distress which impedes the progress fil a deserving institution clamoring for recognition among the world's greatest With a few chosen wards, a student may procure more than one vote from friends, companions and relatives He may even make some commits in the same way _ With such an opportunity evident, the Penn State student has an excellent chance to advertise his Alma Mater extensively during the coming Easter vacation And since there are more votes than one which can just as well as not be converted to Penn States, cause, the student solicitor may yet realize his ambi tion to become a valuable instrument in organizing the potential strength that is most obviously required to push through the bond issue. By the power of suggestion lie once deemed so ineffective he may become a beimlactor in helping to improve the la mentable state of affairs now existing Before the Easter session arrives, the advertising organ of the College hopes to prepare every Penn State student for the impending campaign Infor mation will be issued, statistics will be distributed and pamphlets explaining the bond issue and its im portance to this institution will be placed at the dis posal n 1 everyone But the Penn State man who has the interest of his college at heart will study the booklet, learn some salient facts about the issue and irry a message into the home of inure than one vot er from opportunity comes the proverbial knock— and a challenge for you to answer. FOR FRESHMEN ONLY ricshincii who have bottled their excess energy for devotion to an extra-curricular activity which sppeals particularly to than may be interested to the call issued for first-ye:li candidates for the busi ness stair of the Collegian to meet in 322 Old Main tonight livery year this opportunity is extended and scores at aspirants report to take advantage of what is really a valuable and practical course to business training As the candidate piogiesses mihanve in Lim is developed, his leadership is groomed and in valuable eaßtacts are harmed with colleagues and business Mien rieshnicn of business ability or inclination are advised to wasp the opportunity in its youth and to use it to advantage Someone in the class of Mit will someday become business manager of this pun- Lotion It tiny be you The Bullosopher's Chair 114=1!11 lwatd a f nisi• note :0 Inv lambles today, Sunthe,, a very have note" Hnuther: Ito, ho DO N nu' Von must tutor been , noopimr mound the Atubtomum \ha nun Quming? "Don't I. so Metal, Smitheia, I a a,n't near the heaa quartet at the MIS. depattment I was just loitering along the e.unpns wall. in my unolittusoe way, thinking Pleosant thoughts about the apploach of soling, and two of any colleagues on the faculty passed me Nice old fellows, they useie, too of the nineteenth century kind thol still hang on tiying vainly to keep you twentleta eaamy youngster than progicssing too fast Strange ,n't tt, Sinithero, how tenaciously they cling to the ideas of then boyhood, when ',leachers and piofessors one, e looked upon with awe and respect, and they themselves tool, hie so Yon iously and ashen atin might, majesty, do minion and wove', they assumed authority and exercised it, and the humble youngsters of their (lay let them get away with it. They Irene like the Irishman who .... Smithers Ilut yotne wandtnng =emit one, ithat's the ~mint' "Oh, I'm coining to that. This Irishman had always been an undeihng, and one day he got ban an old truth. poise Nest day the neighbois saw hum in the barnyard heating the anneal They remonstrated and asked torn why Ie was so eine! 'lie Gobs,' says Paddy, "tin not that I trite 'tie that I beat but beacuse I've got the :lath or-y-etes 1' Ah, Si,ther.s, too many like him, too ninny. Paddy has counterpart., coon among us: Siithers: Is tint what the old boys stele talking about! Wino you cayesihopping, Bullosopher? "No, nn... . but I bond them saying something of them &clamed, 'I should she to know alio s luting this' college, anyhow. Is it the students of is And I didn't hear the rest But it sl.ts a false note Smatters: Yeah. .lle'd better have asked 'Who's goad- I mg this college?' 'The answer would hose been easy., He's the gentleman alto lives in that big stone house lie-! hind the engineering budding., and he'. doing pletty AN 0:1.1 "Right Smatters, right, as you so often ale. Not rule but guidance tot the twentieth centina youth. lions much sweeter the harmony, that ant Session Tao • President Vice-President .Trensurcr Editor-In-Chief MsMont Editor I.tnagintt Editor \ ,oLlato Editor A,, , , I tie Editor Souther, The gi eat question berm e the student body today, Bullo.oplier, is haw much the screamer s employed by the Kan State 11l ryers are getting; it Is a question that in all duty should lie answered before the nest mystery ;day goes on the hoards. If it is adequate 1 myself may solicit a job as one of Dos id Mason's hued risen 31y falsoltii giggle is one of the best of its land, and my raked gulp is positwily the most demoniacal outside the English devil Went. The ushers, tot instance— " Bunk, Souther, the gulps and giggles and Si ise eracks, I .insure you, Caine from people who had seen the Baum version on the screen and intended to let everybody I know it Since the Oedipus, we have iicternuned to resist the temptataon to step on peoples' feelings, even if I 'they do qtr, w thorn all over the stage. After all, the I Penn State Player; are the best going organization Olt; 010 campus, Wail the exception of the I. acuity Committee on Pablications, look a Ifrofeosional groan, writ bar. Betide the Players, the Thespian, are .t bunch of ! swell-looking featherweights, and this organization. Orel ('alleqimr, can seawely lie held as - indispensable Smithers• But you will grant thi+ inadvisability of pm , milting the ushers' yelling ishenever a my ster ions hand appears at just before it tippers. Those of us who host not seen the play would enjoy being secure in the belief that the rat is on the stage and not in the audience For the performance of "The Cat and the Canary" was clever ly dove, and needed no chearleaders to do the chores of :ma ritally?. The practice, of course, is common; even the great Caruso mien cd a professional chorus to lead shel New Vorkcrs in discreet hand-clapping. But the .kuilitoi-1 nun audience is far abooe the :11etropulitan Opera House I gang 111 intellectual taste; belies e it ,or not. "It would be bard to find niany ;nut plays of the or ganization tint hate ton such,complete success as John I Willard's melodrama 313 story and all the promised sus pease were there: to such an extent, in fact, that the few errors of the actors were ocerlooked or lost in the Omits Some may argue, with considerable pompousness, flint the play is 'light stuf and is to he taken with salt and sneers But Bosh Any author bias the prisilege .of his own theme., any director of Its own effects, and any character of his own impersonations—providing the re quirements of interest and art are fulfilled. A drama purporting to be a profound tragedy cannot reasonably expect to get by as slapstick without detection, nor can a mystery excuse overdoses of degenerate humbug On the other hand mystery plays require no obict, authentic copying tram life a plausible consistency alone is de manded. And Saturday's cast dal all that was expected, --1,. H Bell. J 1 --11 - P. 'Alileham and more. "Thole mas no need for Mts.,: Buckwaher to have Ined Once years with s West Indian voodoo momun to has mastered the dialect In fact, the chances ale that a voodoo woman would never have been able to provide the atmosphere of Impending doom that Miss Buckwalter dad, despite her Aunt JPlnalla make-up. Nor was it necessary, for Mr Morris to have paraded a month in the uniform of the Penn State Blue Rand to have gotten the feeling of being a dog eaktner, or an anneal trainer, or whatet el his costume implied. All that the audience, or the critn fon that matter, can icasonably expect is that the actors, go through mliatever exaggerations the pbty itself de-I mantis Me. Sadd and Mt. Cunningham acre pen feAly tilled In their cancatures, and Aliss Stetter, whose 'belied I, shot t preparation, in her excellent :Mumma, I ties—perhaps one should say not malities "But more effective than all sous Miss Reed's per-1 formance as Annabelle West The play, properly per-1 formed, should early em. back to the days when a mid- night perusal of Sas Rohneer meant a careful calculatton of the distance lietmeen one's bed and the window, In tht I event that a hairy arm s‘otild tots ode at three or tour it the morning. And tins, precisely, as an hat the cast sue. icteded in doing, Miss Reed particitlarly. There mas no overshadowing of one detractor by another, no clashes that tine wind. Mil not call for; the play was has momous, Ouse really mete no 4 rn , not• characters. Mr. llolderman and Mr. Stull were, perhaps, mere melodramatic than the author intended Hairy and Charles to be, and MI, Ilannen ought have been a bit more forceful in lien role. All in alt "The Cat and the Canary" can safely lit 'ale to ha one of the Playirs' happiest cffolts. Cleat crtSßt should beg Wen ,they `citat and ,1-krertar Mason .oul the stage n rem, thoWirk . ttie Third Thitin6'sn;,tltb serif:fog act took =n moat pride effects of his undo !Lodi : sooty v that, he caLrameh Ills ,eyes in adoring: them from ry prominoMt epot, -L I-I 13, Jr. Our Policy: "Good better best, Never let it rest Till the good is better, And the better's best." KONT OMERYS M 1 • — al lannSfate 1-51:1 , r±4 STAB;: coLLaGZiUv ll Letter Box II Editor of the Collegian, Dear Sir , I have Just lead you: editorial en titled "Your Opinion Desired." The 1110. t amine and saddest word., my man ever speak, ale: "I base never had a boss," especially when they arc spoken with the intimation th it lie never will Yet there are Secondly, one of the meatest bmld many young men who are proud to ers of men it their spnit. Find a make this .talement, and a great ma- school or college whine the school amity of them will alwri”,be found, :pint Ind spirit of fan play In dom among the College freshmen Before mont and you ndl always find in that 00 0 OW , 0, woman ran he of anY -M . . institution strict eu , toms Where 1, pi eemble w orlh to the world he or there a college man today who dons -he must learn the meaning of the. not envy the poine and dabber of a weld "Obey" Many young men and West Point m a Virginia Military Special Combination Offer MENNEN---2 FOR 1:--SPECIAL ' , A NEW ONE Shaving Cream ' . . . 50c Introducing Colgates 'After Shave' Shampoo Cream . . . 50c • combined with giant size Rapid' $l.OO Shave Cream. Value . $1.20 BOTH FOR 50c BOTH FOR 51.00 . GIVEN AWAY FREE GREAT .SAVING Full pint ADS Rubbing Alcohol 75c 1 Regular Size,Pkg. MODESS Red Rubber BallrSponge . . 25c With the purchase of 2 pkgs. $l.OO AT 98c - BOTH FOR 59c REXALL DRUG STORE Robt. J. Miller, Prop. NOT ONLY !BUT A MULE( -CIGARETTE. THAT SATISFIES! —reason enough you'll find for CIiES'TERFIELIVS- immense' popularity PORTABLE. TYPEWRITERS Royal , Underwood' Remington We Invite Your Inspection of.the New Royal THE ATHLETIC STORE Oh Co. Op. Corner women have never been 'Taught to obey then parents iron, their infancy until their maturity \\ lime, when and how, is this class of young people to learn to 'obey." Poi this purpose ' if for no othm, I defend stuct en- forcemeat of canton,' I challenge !anyone to shoo me a !owlet of men of this day and age sihn will not proudly state that the al eatest day in his life sing the day he learned that man is and wdl continue to be, twister of man. .000000 u, STATE t 'BS, OUr honest, helief that phaccos need in Chisterftelfi'cigarettes ' 'finer quality and hence of better taste than in. any other cigarette at the price. LIOCCIT a Myra TOBACCO CO. CIH ESTERIFI ELI) Institute graduate, and yet it is a well knonn fact that at each of these institutions the first year rs considered the neatest thing to "hell on earth" that a man can pass through. As an ansner to "Your Opinion Is Defiled" I s.O, let us have strict en forcement of strict customs or let us discontinue them entirely. I person ally went through the customs sihen customs Isere not only suggested but enforced. (1021). The piesent defiant way in uh:ch the majority of the prefent freshmen elm near theii "dints" rs an moult to any true Penn State man. Let us base the "dint." morn on the top of the head where it can he se., or LIU ded entirely. Yours for a stronger and Bette: Penn State Spirit. F. W Longenecker CIGARETTES M. FROMM Socretyanna Clothes Oppn Front Campus_ Same 1913 ASK THE MAN WHO WEARS THEM Johnston & Murphy Shoes Florsheim Shoes Crawford Shoes Stetson Shoes Sterling Shoes Priced from $6.50 to $14.50 M. FROMM Opposite Front Campus Tuesday. Feb' y GAR. lfrinS 7.711:4T1Z/; - Nittany Theatre (Malmo 1).114 at 2:00) GEMS Nintmee at 2.00 Joan Craw ford in "ROSE-MARIE" Added Attract mn: MISS DOROTHY SI:EGAIt (Lute Prima Donna.of the %Inge x ill wing "Indian Love Call" and other number., front the musnid pip conjunction Ulth the picture.) TUESD 4Y—:s:ittany— Irene Rich in , nr.wARE OF 31AIIIIII:1) WEDNESDAY— Regmald Denny m "TH vrs MY DADDN" Added Attrattson: MISS DOROTHY SEEGAII In a complete change of program THURSDAY and FRIDAY— Olathe Morro), George Sidney in FRIDAY and SATURDAY-- Leer Cod). Aileen Pringle in "WICKEDNESS PREFERRED STARK. 13RgS. ,aberdashers ln The Unirersgfy Manner CiTILILVII TILE \ TRE BUILDING Since 1913
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers