Tuesday, May 1, 1928 r-- BUREAU ANNOUNCES RHODES STANDARDS Will Select Two Students Prom , Pennsylvania Colleges In December AI LOW PENN STATE FIVE CANDIDATES FOR AWARDS Announcement was tecently re ceived by Registrar William S. Holt man ft om the National -Bateau of Education, setting forth, the 'mine inents incident to the selection of Rhodes scholars and stating that too students Dom Pennsylvan a colleges and universities will be the en lot thig honot December eighth The Rhodes scholarship, which is tenable only at Oxford, cantos with it an annual stipend of four bundled pounds, in approximately nineteen handled doll= a yea,. This study privilege may be held for three years, subject to the continued approval of the Oxford officials Fite Representatu es Institutions with more than too thousand students, according to the selection requirements, are privileged to recommend five representatives for =election, which includes Penn State, and It IS possible that the faculty will choose several outstanding students in the near future to represent the College Candidates may apply either in the state in which they have their ordinary private domicile, or in any state in which they have received at least two years of their college educa tion before applying. A candidate must be a male, unmarried citizen of the United States, must he between the ages of nineteen and twenty-five and must have completed at least his sophomore year at a recognized de gree-granting institution by the first of October of the yea, for which lie is elected Bars of Selection In that section of the will in which ho defined the general type of scholai he defied, Mr. Rhodes mentioned foam groups of qualities, the first two of which he consideied most important Mr. Rhodes desired that the candi date should show mailed ability along literary and scholastic lines, should embody qualities of manhood, truth, courage, devotion to duty, sympathy, kindliness, unselfishness, and fellow ship, should evinbit maul force of character and of instincts to lead and to take an intei cot in his school mates, and lastly must be physically vigorous Choice of Stud) No restriction is placed upon a Rhodes scholar's choice of stud.es and he may lead for the Oxford Bachelor of Arts degree or any of the advanced honors Courses of slid Include lit mac humanm es, mathemaric all of the noun 11 sciences It rispruileuce, modern 1.t0r.., theology, or 'onto! tiubjects, Engl,h hangs rge rind lit erature, nli..osophy, pohtr •s and coon- WWI and modern languages. Infoneation concernivg the scholar ship M3Y be obtained front President l'ianl: Aydelotto of Swmdh'mm•c American secretary of the Rhodes Trustees, Swa.:thinore, Pa Pennsylvania applications should he sent to G E Barnes, Line avenue, Philadelphia. Nittany Trackmen Win Titles at Penn Relays (Continued from first page) contest tepresented Penn State's only individual title gained during the cal meal. i North Caro/tha Take, Fourtile• Leading lions the stunt the North Cat ohne distance men dashed through lain and mud to finish ahead of the call& cntiies and annex the four-Hole baton-passing content one minute and twenty seconds behind the record foi the event. The Southern anchor man (aimed the finish line mole than one handled yards ahead of his netnevt opponent Bill Cox, inteicollegiate one-mde champion, Sias unable to make up the mound lost by his piede consols in the lace and finished twenty ysids behind the last Michigan State iunner. North Carolina's time lot the lengthy competition Sias nineteen minutes, foul and tino-fifths seconds. Al Bates, Penn State's inteteolleg mte bioad-jumpei, was forced into thud place in that event at the Quak er. City games Hamm of Georgia Tech spanned a distance of tnenty three feet and eight glebes to gain first honors and let= his position as reigning minim! champion, while Stuait of the Arniy ranked next with a record of twenty-thice feet, four and one half inches Melnmery, Kan sas iepresentative conic fourth on the list. Ohio Annexes Four Titles Besides winning the hundred-yard lash, half-trifle relay and the foul iundred and eight-yard shuttle hurdle ALBERT DEAL & SON Heating AND Plumbing 117 Frazier Street Henderson, Weems Stage Impromptu Battle of Music for Prom Patrons "Which hand do you like best" , So suns the query altos every 'col lege dance. Only this time the ques tion is considetod very pertinent. Sel dom, if ever, did the aged walls of the Aiinory sesound with such beauty of musical tone and,shythm, venture the Piom-goers, as on Friday night when Ted Weer.' Victor recording artists and Fletcher Henderson's syncopators engaged in an impromptu Battle of MUSIC. Blazes of brass and tippling ivoties, made impiecsive by the capers of a hot claronet and esclusive Hendeison oichestiations, introduced the dusky musicians to a representative all-Col lege throng shortly altos Old Main clock shuck eleven. The orchestra was iniukeitently delayed by the heavy snow fall. Until the assival of the "stamped eta," smooth, melodious rhythm, the lace Ohio State annexed its fourth fast place through the efforts of Ras mus who threw the discus one han dled fluty-foul feet, two and one half inches to emerge the victor in his faemite competition. The flashy ar ray of Westein spiinteis and lird leis earned off the major honors in the relay championships George Simpson, ace of the Scarlet sminteis won the century dash and lead the Ohioan half-milers to ',aim) , or er Penn State. As a result of the contest for de cathalon honors among the foremast tract, and field peifoimeis of the coon lay Anthony- Plansky won his third championship in four years Thum.- ing the athantage which he held at the close of the fast five events, the one-tone track and football hoe at Georgetown university achieved the all-mound title by a margin of one fondled points and thereby qualified as a member of the American Olympic team to uphold the honor of the Unit ed States, at Amsteidam this sum mer. Ptansky's closest competitor was Kenneth Doherty of the City Col lege of Detroit. Churchill, of the Un ivetsity of Oklahoma, placed thud while Vogd Kennedy, winner of the decathalon clown last year, and Ray Mentes, of :slew Mexico, ranked fourth and fifth, respectively ,Paddock Shatter , . World Record Charley Paddock declared by track authorities to be the "fastest human," covered the one hundred and seventy five sand distance in seventeen and too-fifth seconds, harming by two fifths of a second his old record which he established at Salt Lake City last. year The California flier finished six yards ahead,of his nearest competitor, Polwell Scull, captain of Penn's track team. Yale's hauliers shattered the four hundred eighty yard shuttle mark in the winning heat with a time of one minute, three and two.fifths seconds The Eli quartet, hewer., was two seconds slower in the hnuls and lost to Ohio State. IHar2.land Camells Meet The dual meet scheduled with the University of Maryland foi Saturday on New Beaver Field has been can celled, according to Coach Nate Cant- Alien The annual interscholastic track and field meet, including most of the high schools of Pennsyltama will be held on that date, however The fol- Issuing Saturday the Lion varsity and I freshman teams will encounter the Pittsburgh vat sity and plebes on New Beaver Field. GRANGE ORCHESTRA WILL PLAY HERE FRIDAY NIGHT Playing undo the auspices of the local Grange lodge, the Grange or: chest= of Blair county,. - under; .the direction of Mr. Ray Bartges, agrrcul ture teacher at Mar tinsburg vocation al school, nail present a concert in 100 Horticulture Friday night at eight o'clock The orchestra is com posed of high school students. College students make big money, easy, settling the Badman Brushes doling vacation time. Wilt°, phone 01 call in poison —The Heitman Biush Factory, Hughesville, Pa. What Shakespeare _____--,------------------' says about Coei.COla -al Drink A; IAI tei '--- , o r ..kwb , ..,. ~ , ,•.- „, , , • , ,4, fe „ I ~ i • ~. r. ~....6 , ... I.•-•It4 ~"" It ~' S'Z ' I ~ '4 , `'l• 4 ' ' I Delicious and Refreshing, `ti s s - 4-N ' sf • 'r\ ‘' L k . , "Your name is great . ...1 , :i `.. 1 I , ~, • • %., 4V, ,setk, in mouths of wisest ~ ~ ..;- ~., ,4,?. , ~ ,, A censure" ....:-;,. , /v. ‘.. v., , .., , 1 ,„, ,R- '1„ 3 Othello had his faults . But we can ' 4 h. , `s ... forgive him everything because he g.I . W ' , : f1 4 ~ , ,... .,a . ~, , 4,, „. i s.,.( f 4,... .. m r. :..1 gave opinion n s t;icil e j r n fe t c e r d caption states s u fo r r em a n 1 : li ,':-. ~ .'''' /4 , t ,42% - .4.0),.. . 7 1 AA., Court p was one day to hand down on e ' , 4 hi - ' i P;.! Ao-t..... , ' ~. 's- 4 Coca• Cola "The name now characterizes a ha -lid r , , e ,,r , ,, -1 *: ..... ,i. t erage to be bad at almost any soda .1, .48,0 ~.. lIA 4 0-'1 :,t .' I ' -!4 1,..t fountam. It means a single thing 77 vni1L0 4 1.,,,,„ .. - ,•!, -... combs, from a single source, and :AH014114,..414. 1.1 ' • ~,": orn , Lo well known to Nye cOninitilitt)." "0.7....M.'') r.. 14.2.. t•h...;_ Act II licene 3 Tlic [Alcatel.. [map, Atlava, C. 8 milliou c t rla —IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GrT WIIEIII. LT IS product of Ted Weems and his musi cians, entertained the student revel lers Strains of harmony, brought forth by Ted's magic baton, and mark ed by a foot-moving trombone and a moaning saxophone, dress vociferous applause from the pleasure-bent danc ers Henderson offered a variety of Jazz numbers, interspersed with "blues," while Weems alternated with fast moving fox-trots and smooth waltzes. The Victor recording artists also play ed "Victory" and "Nittany Lion" dur ing the progress of the annual Prom. Student opinion Is divided. No de cimon could be reached by the mum loving frolickers as to which orches tra was superior. Requested encores were ce en and neither band could clam, a triumph through popular ap plause The Brittle of Music was de clared a stalemate pending further hearing. GRANGE OFFERS COMEDY AS SPRING PERFORMANCE Selects "The Easy Marls" for Final Product:on—Critics Praise Presentation "The Easy Malik," a play by Jack Lame, is the title of the play to be inoduced by the Penn State Grange May nineteenth in Schwab neditel runt. Portraying the leading character of the three uct comedy soill be Miss Glace Glom '3l, v,ho filled the - piemiet role of "The Family Upstans," production of the Penn State Play ers. She moll be supported by Fm iest Steele '3O Inclyded in the suppoiting east are Janet Burns 'JO, Witham Hammler '3O, LaVerne Saphore "10, David L. Smith '3O, Meitin • Shingledeelset '3O, and Kenneth Hood '3O. The play enjoyed a year of success in the Thirty-ninth Street Theatre of New York city before the producers scheduled it to appear in other cities of the country New York critics praised the play saying it was a "sure fire success." LOST—On Pugh street, two Loys on sem. Call Plain, 157. . RELIABLE TIME PIECES Veliabili9 You might just is 'ivell be without a watch as cares one that does not 4 ~......., keep good time. We have watches Air' lli '—l ' S, that we gumuntee to be depend ,'o 12 1 , able and consistent time pieces, e „ ;1 p . 2. i a n n and mostth es ea attractive e t s e v a n s t e c s hes % a v r e o lIIN 111 Ilk .9 , ' ''" 4 ' - ` , 31 I shall be glad to show you our new ~ rrrr 4 ' line of watches and any other form - • ..>..,.., ' of 'jewelry in whit), you are mt..- ested, and quote prices. ' HANN & O'NEAL The Jewelers GERNERD'S ... , ~ ( . 1 eni 1 Dm TOPCOATS' ‘v . , '' , r.'o: :') 1 ' • .1. k COIN ROSE •fg - t: , •" 0. :, I $1:50-43.50 . ;":' 4§:: T . 5.4 .1-3% ' ''- ;5. SWEATERS Styled for -,,Young.nin EIME!EM SUITS'. : T . Pants & Kmeket s CLUB CLOTHES :P. + Pressing Cleaning :-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:••:-:-:-H-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:•+•:-:-:-x-x-x-:-:-: Ti, PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Courtmen Will Oppose_ W. and L. Thursday (Continued from first page) Celayshing and Franklin and Marshal for Am II twenty-first and twenty eighth, respectively, woe canceled be cause of inclement weather. Harne W Stover has been appointed varsd tennis conch to succeed William 1 1111111. L. A. SCHOOL ADDS TWO PRELIMINARY COURSE The Liberal Arts School, accoldin to Dean Chasten W. Stoddart, add two new courses to Its curricu lum next year introductory to th• studies of socsology and mathematics Dji. Cotswold P. Marche, who ha desoted much time and study to so cal science, has arranged to person ally conduct one of these courses whit the other kill be presented by Prof Prank W Owens, of the mathematic department. Whitman's Mother-Day Candy Place your order now and we will wrap for shipment RAY D. GILLILAND Druggist :-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:»x-.-,"»,K-:-:-:-1-1-t• EMI its Rale RALEIGH'S definition ofeourtesy was apparently to care for the needs of the other person. Today the same practice is observed by the tele phone business; but we call it service. To men in telephone work, ser vice is a matter of looking ahead and preparing ahead—and when a need arise',, to be ready. This point of view Mimes the research engineer, the BELL SYSTEM na.zunt-,41t J . pttr. 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