VOL. 26, No. 32 SPEAKERS NAMED : FOR LIBERAL ARTS LECTURE COURSE ■Dr. Alderfer Will Open Program With Talk on President Harding March 4 jDR. FRED LOUIS PATTEE j TO GIVE FINAL SPEECH; (Banner, Stoddart, Dunaway, and, Warner Make Appearance [ ' In Twentieth Series : . Six speakers have been selected to j ifcive the twentieth annual - Liberal; Arts lecture series opening February; ; >lB, according to Dr. Lucrctia L. .V. 1 '.V, -/•Simmons, chairman of the v : • • arranging for the course. - Dr.' Harold F. Alderfer of the his*,; :tory and-political science department in the opening lecture will sneak, on*;- i i ■ Harding." As the second speaker: fAMMITTCp DI ANQ :.->Prof. Franklin C. Banner of the' VvrllliTUlJl lulls l ijililiJ department, -will talk oh;'-: «> 1T V nn/iAn 1 nriAITH S“ !i f 3 • the Newspap,:r :' BALL DECORATIONS • “Pennsylvania as an Early Distri- 5 . '“T r "" loimg eenter Of is Prescnt Honorary Co-ed of tho lecture which Dr. Way-; • , • . -land F. Dunaway, professor-of his- Colonels at Military . tory, will deliver March. 18. Prof./- - THnrn F*»h 91 ‘ L. Warner of the English , ,’ : literature department will speak April ' —r-■ - -f- 0 ? ‘,‘ ! i 0r “, 1 ., Pro ” 5 ' a "‘ l the Ps y ch °-i American flags suspended‘overhead :) logical ISO e. ..will form thc outstanding feature of 1 ■■ . Dealt Stoddart To Speak ', a .novel’ decorating scheme to be used '5.- i 'Dean Charles W. Stoddart, head of jby the Kohl Decorating company, of i-f-'Jjhc liberal. Arts school, will bo the! Kingston, -in. ipreporingKecreation, itl.rtSfth speaker of the lecture series.(Hall for the Military Ball, to be hcldi i-'-kdlM lecture based on contacts with' February 81,.the committee unnounc 'heads of similar colleges, 'is "Sidejc'l yesterday. | M.AUglits'on the Land-grant Colleges”: The fla ß 3 will be Hung in an un : i isjMsd will be delivered April 18. . ibroken line from the orchestra shell! ' . ;'Concludin'; the lecture program, Dr. 1° the top of. the balcony/ the lower Kftid'l: E#tteo, former head of «f which will be covered with SfcSAairlean literature department, hafitWc bpnling. • An. American shield; Ss’*aectcd as the. subject of . his ad-! willbo Pl«»d , m. a* xhYr a ‘ ! merch wiU complete the .program. : | (jAIVIIVIA ALrnA ' ■ Arrangements have been CMnplet ___ :ed to have the Western .Electric com-j lO HOU) DISPLAYS 1 install a new type of amplifier j .• - ‘ : - - . * to improve .acoustics .of the building.! % !lf the .apparatus ,i 3 satisfactory, it! orary ' Architectural Fraternity - will : be’ retained as College property 'rr. «• « *_♦ ' 'for use at all future public Occasions To Sponsor J Art Exhibits ; at the Hall. ', . a Here Nest Semester Robert W. Piersoh/33, and Lee L. ' • -Bender’3l, were winners in the poster , ‘ i' contest sponsored by the ball, com* [iree additional- exhibits will *>2 m jttee, while Miss Dcrthea. I. Newell isored by Pi-Gamma. Alpha, -na- 1 » 32 / received- honorable mention. Post [»} honorary architectural frater- , e rs submitted .for the contest will bs ,‘Qnd by the department of archi-; displayed in a local store today. arc during-the/remainder. of - the 1 ; , • • * ier, according to Prof. Clinton L. . \ risjljead of the. architectural de- 1 1, M.'C. APPROVES n exhibit of the Philadelphia club/ NEW CONSTITUTION Ihe American-. Institute of Archi-; - • ’ s' will be-shown here soon after’ - , .beginning of! next’semester. Council Will t Present Code to Local lay will consist of Work done by . Fraternities—Plan Election of mmnt commercial architects m, . 2 Delegates 1 a travelling exhibit of the Beaux - “ . . s.lnstitutc of Design of New York; . Approving: the ne-wcode proposed f, ishe design problems winning‘by the revisions committee at a meet lest prizes in a competition of the.ing last weeki Intramural council will itute 'wili be shown later in the .submit the new constitution to the teh r./, -iocat fraternities for consideration. . he Association. -of .Collegiate... .Election oi.-two junior delegates to oolsof Architecture .will present \1 : . M.‘ C. instead of One isa' major Exhibit here of the best Work done charge that will be/.considered by itiembefs as. the fast of the dis- local fraternities. Fred C. Schwerer Work of, Peon State students '3O, president of the,.council,, stated msni be included in this‘exhibition. - ‘that an increase-.in the’ size of the; pVPSC WILL an eze- )R CONCERT SERIES cuMvo boafd- wds passed. Local fra .tcroity men 1 , also were granted the '" 0 - . 1 ' privilege of visiting local fraternity Offer 8 Programs'dances oh nights following major Col- College ißadiq SUlkm ' -t'KO functions.' > Claiming tho intercollegiate hitc(v, rived in State Col hjklng.championship, Donald M. Haa;»j ' Las': summer H ’3O believes that hia two with s6o*and travi aro’better'than.the proverbial "col-'land, West Virgil lege man's. thumb,” and presents a• kansas,. Oklahoma, iTecord of 22,920 miles covered since i working in the wl November, 1926, as evidence of the. weeks he proeeedc ■justieo of his claim t 6 the title. 'I 'Meeting'a Pcnr 1 <.“l’have-never hiked'merely to in-' Everett, .Wash., crease my mileage,”. Haag stated, “but chimney sweeps ii have always had a'definite destina- two of 1 tibyi ii). The State-Pitt gamoiHe was recognizi thepbject of myfirat touT in Jo26.'r. ’College penuar [lt was the year they beat us, but my .ped to hia suitcase record’.started with 30p ,miles." ' I "It. isharder.t ' After ,hitch-hiking 2800 miles in;West,” ilaag'rei [j927,. Hqag. added .3860. miles .to his thi»'many IhoJduj total '.the - following year. This. db-long enough.Sor Jtahco !»as, cpvereU. by. vaca-j.will always.come his home*in Greentown,iyoo. a life if youi »Pa.,and jauntito. Atlantic City. and. sentableJ ' v ; 8 ATTENDS MEETING . _ VEWUInLICAI. COimSE Nil,ff,rr - FaU, '> ' ' ”• : have Visited W.' &aman,..«cwtiiy of; OFFE “ .BIBLICAL COURSE * ./rittßtatfifmfr hoUday,. 1028, HaagWry^tWliiofi eY. M. iC»' A-7 attbiided the ;-:'l Anew course; Biblical literature again hiked,to the Pitt game with $3 a cprnmisinen on leadership '2, will bc offered.by the English dt-; ir r his pbckets-vHe left Pittsburgh im- lanih and expcct irk cUy Friday ahd semester.; The cnarse mcdiately kfter the game for New:semesters. My_an, was made.up of :wfl!'inclndc7 the'origtbatfon* of the . York City and witncssedtbc Stanford*' mileage fpJ&jQOO I' faVnity niW education 1 Bible and.its influenceupon secularl Army?game. -Ticket speculation net- boy a iearly?r v ■)logyo, L - -; y.'lilexatum; v 7. -• ■: ted hitn a substantial gnin aml lie ar- ; l!itc!i !ji!^Tj.* v^ DEAN SACKETT ADDRESSES aluminum company heads ti'S£f= ! ho«. of •Beg* radio .tation: : , Engmfmng addr^ed bey musical organizations foremen and executives of the Ahm- 1 to broadcast are the men's: "?"> company of America on the the College orchestra, the "Value of Trained Men in Industry .lee club, the Mandolin club, at Plttsburgl? Wednesday., - .gram censored by Phi flu The address followed a ten-week ■ fraternity. 'course for foremen, just-complctcd by s will continue untll April Jo engnmering .extension department .oncerta wUI be ' held in S- I *' Streeter W w vice-president iditoriunrat 3:80 o'clock.. and general-manager for the alum • - - iiram compayn. • pnm £>tatp (EoUp PROMINENT American Violinist I To Play Here-Thursday Night j ALBERT SPALDING -STATE COLLEGE, PA., .TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1980 SPALDING, CONCERT VIOLINIST, TO OFFER RECITAL THURSDAY Musician Will Present Program Of Classical Selections in Schwab Auditorium INTERNATIONAL CRITICS ACCLAIM ARTIST’S WORK Composer May Use Guamerius Violin in Third Artist's Course Number ; Albert Spalding; celebrated Ameri can violinist, will present a concert pf classical music as the third Ar tists' Course program in Sehwab au ditorium at 8:15 o’clock - Thursday night,.. . Spalding has played in leading cities of Europe and America since de but at the age of sixteen, giving ap proximately one hundred ..concerts, each'year. His tours are arranged i so that he is in the United States' half the-yoar, and appears in Europe, daring the remaining six months; i Offers Classical Program . As the first division fo the program,! Spalding-'will play the “Sonata in; G Major," by Bach, continuing with! the 'Concerto in D Major," one of.] Mozart's compositions. The second , of, the series will ,be Cesar Franck's* in A Major" for piano and ■ violin. i j' The violinist will conclude the re-j cital with a third group of four short, compositions'. Andre Bonoist will nc-‘ Company him at the piano. * . • { . In.hfs recitals both here and abroad. J Spalding has-received the acclaim of, I critics.' Glenn D. Gunn, music critic for the. Chicago Hera Id, states: the sixth *amf concluding' lie- out oil night or cause him"to Senior Candidates : ai,-the presentation of degrees by i i J ‘Albort Spalding Is the equal of the ' course. The tsubjkt of] his i talk is* ,oso . sleep, or any task which .f rater- j n the • ID3I Locust’ Lane - clique, ’ Prudent Ralph tf. Hctsel and deans world's greatest violin artists. Nohc “The Femlrane/Novol-since l < JQo.”‘Dr.' nit >* members realise is • impossible/of Thomas B. EastbunvJqck H.Eiseman °f «»« College will take place. , Ad •of his colleagues of the present day; ,’Dyc. stated that tpere is a possibility '.completion. t - '.‘and Paul A.. Mitten, arc expected l°n" n i musical selections will be fol- -• ; liave a wider range of tone or a great-. ; that Dr* -Pattee 4nay delivor'more, Paddling is practiced by seventeen vio for ’the senior class presidential.iowed-by the benediction and rcces er beauty of-playing.” • /than. the ; .fiYe ; :scheduled lecture 3; ul- .houses and abandoned by thirteen! nomination. the gro'ups'mnnl*, ; : {thougfrnothlng deffitft«''hatf-be^n-'nf^'Twerity-ft , aCernltl?}^.ie^«l-^l«%d»’ ; W?»t>piWre'd~-sbmertwehty''. fraternities/:"' Of the seven.grAfliijlle'students to ••. T- ‘:V ,B w pMfd Wjpiposer . tanged. / errands outside of State - among which are Lambda Chi Alpha. Receive diplomas, four will be allotted • Spalding Is nn exponent of class!-, • • ... o :-—- silencing of pledges' is the.only phase Phi Epsilon PI, Delta Upsiloni, Alpha Master of Arts degrees,- one will rc cal music and has consistently empha- Mp'p/ I TTiDV ! retained by three fraternities. ; . .Chroma Rbo, Alpha Chi- Rho, Delta ccive that, of Science', and one Doctor Bjzed tip value of good music ini cle- x uu Thirtccn traleimes do Sigma Phi, Phi'Sigma : Koppa, Thela ,of Philosophy honors. Another stu v-ating( public tastes.. It is prohublel NEAR ZERO on any, errands “which- may' Kappa Phi, Omega Epsilon,, and Chi .dent will he granted a profcssional' Ithat . the rGuamorius violin, _ -which j■ . iOIW IUMR keep them out aU night or enusfc them Up»U»»- , |dcgroe.. (Spalding owns and uses in his pro- • • ■ ... a. l 0 loso s)ee p.. nd thre< , statcd thnt Sterling ,E. ■ Brpwn, Earle C: ’ The School of Liberal Arts will Igroms, will be used here. The an- Town Remains. In Grasp of J,ast memlici . s o£ the‘fraternity realized ’ Powdrell, ahd J. Cooper French arc, graduate twenty-eight students, while ciont instrument »s ttmous for its as-;, - Week’s Cold Spiel ’ ’ tha’. certain tasks .assigned' pledges aspiring for ’ the Campus . clique: twenty-one will bo presented by'the j sedations with royal families.- . . Sets-New Low Point. : could not be completed.- Informbtlul- • candidacy, according . to. current School of Education. The School of j 'Jn addition to 'his fcqncert work, • • '• \ *.',tiations range front one to ton.fjpys, opinion. Chi Phi, Phi’ Delta Theta, Engineering and the School of Agrl- • j Spalding has written, sixty. ,violin - ,v,„ 0 • the replies indicate, with the average .Phi Gamma Delta, Phi-Kappa, Delta, culture will each recommend ton-stu* i compositions, twenty-five, piano own- * n at four days. One fraternity Jau Dc!ta > Sigma Alpha Epsilon,. Phi dents, and the Mineral. Industries ber* and unmerous songs, arrange, -J”* has no informal.'.. - •■ - f/KaPPa Sigma,, Phi Kappa Psi. Phi school will present four Candidate* mentis ana transcriptions. . 1 week, students hurried along . icy. - Lambda Theta/and Tau Kappa Epsl-; p, M u 0 t f n.» v One one seaeon’a tour hei S Md-idono with “Hdl Week". ktLtfr *»• «J* d ? ™ h ° : ° f - lhc , •""•fc?*** zcl will be at luJL'taS sio! Still! ?ri«Vaui C zhaw It tva/Vt" th i/>-vfiri»S y the coW apdi of tost tuto intensive Instructions fraternity * tne ,5 Vclock Saturday afternoon in order • tod that the uhrMe “You taro week continued to hold swgy, here, history andprinciple,,, hnrmles, elect, o "s , “. t May : ■ that ', members' of the faculty and A!" was originated ’by Sotting a low mark loi the year of or a comninationi of both. National or- / . Junior Aspirants ~. .. friends may have an- opportunity to ■ end-mail hT toe *Frtor’s mtostreT'shtov' (three ■ degrees'ueiow zero-lost of nine P enn SUte ;fra- , Rc^rt3 of , tho rc^aM „g • 193i -meet Dr. and Mm. John M Jhomas.- who addressed Spalding by that title.' da * the mercury failed to climb to J*J n ‘ t,c JL : h S7, c °^ cr ? d f ab °i, clique, which v/as victorious in the No fo ” nal invitations will be Issued. — : • the, freezing point during the rest of Hdl Week am*/mne others hsfo j 0 c i e ctio n . were: singularly lacking. . ' —: RTimPNTS PROM S 7 -STATES the week-and Sunday found it hover- passed definite resolutions it,. Thcre are practicaUy no rumors as TVD W MnT.AITfiPT.TAJ ® vt»?pL wJmiLr' in « >loWthe ' aro mat f Tb«.W»«-'- thc BBTyc » i , . to its candidates for the senior post MCLiAUlylltilJN 13 COUWUtIfcS t,r.KOLL MLKfc. cst itemperature for the week was- 6 . iS Among its members in the junior TA ATT) RtTRNOTrR , „ T .v. | iwenty-nine,degrees. ''n|>T?9liTl •OPT ' .-campaign were' Alpha-ChJ'Slgnw, AI-; uiitasvuiv • Representatives of thirty-seven• College J weahter bulletins■ forecast;T*D ' . i '.- ■ states'and thirteen foreign countries flight snows, for today and official govi’ ore included in the enrollment aternment reports'lndicate” rising'tem- Penn State, reports from the Regis-; perature 1 for Pennsylvania With snow, traps office show. ./ .■ .prohably turning to rain. Every* continent except .Australia; Despite the lo* is represented,' the distribution run- < College health set nfng from Russia to South Africa in [ usual outbreak c the eastern hemisphere, and from i time of year.' j Canada ,to Chile iii the western. , jwere treated at Austria, Czeehoslavakia, [Denmark,*. Thursday to Stir Russia', China, and Japan continue to’which were for send/representatives'-to, Penn State.! ailments. Men from Egypt,' Turkey, and South* Reports .from Africa iplngle with.those, from Can-.show, that ,the ct ada, Mexico, Porto Rico, Santo Do*] dominated, their ,c mingo, and Chile. ttime has departed. Student Hitch-Hiker Avoids f Ti Iff 22,920-Mile Jaunt; Cla> „ PRESIDENTSOF22 l2 FRATERNITIES BACK Following . registration for the • __ 4 __ second semcster'on Monday and . (Iml 1 .Wfißll- RAN Tuesday, February 10. and U, tho ; IJUUlili IfliUl UAll .second semester will begin at eight .■ ■ ■ o’clock Wodnesday’morning, Febru- ' - / TT , ~ . . . ary 12, Registrar Williarii S. floff- 3 Chapter Heads Maintain That man announced yesterJdy.- Rough Tactics Hold Place The Recreation Hall will he open “ _ - _ • . - from 8 o’clock .in tho morning un- ! . , - In Informal Rites ■til 6 o'clock’ nt night during’ the ' ___ n a P flMdt'.«s H ?J!llX-|S: !30 GROUPS MSTED IN-. ’ flicted on students registering lute. INCOMPLETE RETURNS PROF. F, |k PATTEE ■l3 Houses Prohibit Paddling and . WILL SPEAK HERE : To Return ffom Rollins College; - Pnr R l iterature ’Talks'' i Twc " t >'- two fraternity „ presidents for.-5 literature tarns hav[ . expr( .,jeci theii . w uu nKrll , s , t(1 Beginning May 15 join in a move to abolish “Hell Wcek^. . practices, while five believe >hafttiey. - V- ‘ * hold n proper place in fraternity ini -1 DrT Fred Lewis ; Pattee,' who left Motions, incomplete returns from the Penn Stattf a year iigo to devote him- Collegian questionnaire revealed last self to literary work at Rollins Col- nighi. - lege, will,return heyo to give, n series Three fraternity heads* ore doubt [of lectures during the week of May lu’that their houses would join such 119, according, to Dr. William S. Dye r. movement anjl twenty-five. have not ! jr., head-of the .pnglish literature He-' yet answered the letter mailed to Penn' j partment. -•, • State’s fraternities last week. Dr. Pattee will, deliver./Ive lectures Ono questionnaire was returned un jduring his‘visit; to. Penn State. Begin- answered because of .pending; initia ling. May 19, the speeches will be giv- tions revisions, jen eveiy day at 4 - o’clock except Tucs- A summary of. the thirty definite day.- . ■' ••• replies received up ahtii last’ night I The subject matter for .the lectures shows that five houses have ;done ‘will be Uken..'largely from'.the- now' away 'with “Uell Week*’ entirely. Sev-. ; volume on American,literature which ; enteen other fraternity presidents Dr. : "Patteo will'hnve.published in the favor abolition : although some _ob spring. ' ' ■ / • • . jectionable practices are still.retain- In the -four'lectures scheduled in ed by their houses, the: Afternoon he will discuss thb v*r- „ . L .... ious.- phases of., American literature ‘ 13 Conderan Paddling * • since 1900. It is. Expected that Dt. Ir - the quetionnairp “Hell - Wcek"- wil cover.a br<>ad‘‘Acid in. tho. practices included peddling, errands ’study of American literature. outside of State College, silencing of | On- Tuesday' night Dr. 'Pattee tvi!!- errands which may keep the gtatt. WOMEN DEBATERS . . (Con l !nlicwith clique smokers; a mass meeting, plat forms, and speeches. . -Further steps wil be taken in this direction this year, according to Schwerer. ■ While’ most cliques have not or ganized as yet, reports naming, var ious men os candidates for. the senior arid junior. class presidencies arc cir culating; about .the campus. .Rumors have half .'O, dozen aspirants seeking the, 1931 chair. iCoonty Newly Created Senolar&hips IRockview penitentiary, will assume 3JI ' * -jthe duties of part-time physician, at ,e Alice M.-McDowell '3O was award->? nii hospital B. ed the recently established scholar--; p th S | “'™J ™- ,en ship-to be allotted each, year c. senior woman from Waehmgton wffi.dhg. *b. iVsgxrSss l -*’®: ».»?=£«.•* Si SMS d. ~»-!iS?ys“*.'*{Sr-!i»"' ■ during. on y! P a f^ n^J , ' r T r ih—Cot°r KhSrtto University .&,, E.V i? S m en!“r n Ce.k"e of (Fitters h i»i f< Doctor 've board .of trustee... .. “ »f ' orvv ct VTP ri im TO OPEN come an interne in St. John's hospital, et- PENN STATE CLUB TO.UPttr* ! Pittsburgh. He left St. John's. hos m’ SERIES OF DANCING CLASSES pjtat to become ‘a member of the ?***. " ~ -' -- 'medical staff-of the.’Western peni- J“ c Continuing! their, practice of pre- tentiary. After remaining at that, in* * n ° vioUs years, the Penn State club v-'ill - s titution for one year he received an Ut * conduct a series of dancing classes appo intment as physician at Roek= [.under the direction'of Prof. James T. v j eW penitentiary where he is located Larkins jr., starting at 7 o'clock, Feb-present. ,1-unry 14. - i 0 • UP, Clair A. Buzzard, '-71',-social secre; poftMER RUSSIAN REFUGEE . * :tary. of the club, has charge of nr- jnH *. ,y WHITE PRIZE the rangem&nts for the closes, which-will; WINS JOHN W. WMUis uu,ts as be composed of two sections. .One . —“* \ rim class will be for men students learn- Miss Tatiana Proskounakoff 31, iied Inc to daneb, and. the other for those who won the John W. White junior ;.di. desiring to'improve their dancing. ! scholarship, this year, arrived in ~ • . . 'America five years ago as a Russian - TO ACT ON RESEARCH HOARD refugee’unable to apenk a word of ■nti -Prof. Herman C. Knandel; head of JinfrlUh. a report from the Reg.strafs - % »£■■ $S ho-' pmpnm* of fundamental liuc3 of tc *- > search' work in poultry husbandry, years., - . PRICE 5 CENTS Heads Plan Exercises 8- O’clock Friday , In Auditorium DR. JOHN M. THOMAS 1 TO ADDRESS ASSEMBLY 71 Seniors, 7 Graduates Expect Degrees at Seventeenth Annual Program ; Eighty-one students will receive ; diplomas at the seventeenth- mid-year College commencement In Schwab ! auditorium at 8 o'clock Friday night. I Dr. John M. Thomas, president of Rut i gers university and former Penn State ; executive, will address the 'graduating class. ' ! Seventy-four seniors and -seven . graduate students will be granted de crees at the_ exercises. Forty-one of .: the seniors‘will receive-the degree of • Bachelor of Arts, while thirty-three .‘will be awarded the'Bachelor of Sci : :'ence degree. '•[ A' processional to the Auditorium twill* open, the ceremonies. Following ’the invocation delivered by Prof. John H. .Frizzell, acting College chaplain,’ • Prof. Richard W. Grant, director of music, will lead the audience in mass [singing. President ,To Award Degrees • Doctor' Thomas has chosen “The Joy of Battlc'l as the subject of his address..' Either the. iron's glee club.- .or the College' orchestra will furnish | several musical selections during thef [exercises. After the address by. Doctor Thorn*;