Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, March 04, 1930, Image 2

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    STATE COLLEGIAN |
daring the Colteee year, except nn liiiHdae*.
he i > ennßyl*anla State College in the interest ot the
tnts, faculty# alumni, and friends
THE MANAGING BOARD
>gan jr. '3O Russell L. Hehm ’«()
n-Chiet Itualnenx Matmcrr
ensch ’3O Calvin E. Barwis '3O
t Editor Advertising Manager
evenson ’3O Henry ft. Dowdy jr ’3O
I'dllor Circulation Manager
Quinton E. Bcaugo ’3O
Sports editor
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
en ’3l Charles A. Schmidt jr. ’3l
IcElvain ’3l Norman B. Sobler '3l
an ’3l William K. Ulerich '3l
ton Intercollegiate Newspaper Association
Pnxtoflice. Slate College, Pa . as aecantl-etaga matter
lESDAY, MARCH 4, 1930
JEKYM. AND SIR. HYDE
ie two sides to ovoij stoiy, apparently.
.Plough, theic are two sides to the stoiy o£
defeat at the hands of Navy m the Re-
I ung Satuidav night The two sides to
c*i aio concemed, (1) with the lenetion of
s to the decisions; and (2) with the justi
iv, for such conduct
ite Spmt, if it enfolds all the cardinal vir
spoitsmanship, was sadly lacking Saturday
•r the decision went against Stoop in the
t bout—fiom then on, every adverse de
oundly abused by so-called enthusiasts m
The climax was, icachcd m the last bout
n MeAmliews pleaded with the ciowd to
ig lest the lefetee stop the match The out
entire affair will be a flood of unfavorable
oughout the college woild, foi the infla\
quailed, if not exceeded, tr numbers the
he inteicollegiates last yeai While a laige
ppeiclassmcn joined in the demonstiation,
(so the ushers attest) weie in the majon
t makes the situation all the .more alaim
piacticc is not nipped in the bud, it will
ie incoming genciattons Then the cause
and Penn State Spirit will be a giaml and
nd Then we will wish foi the old Ainioij,
t was sacrificed for Spmt
thei hand, peifect behavioi on the pail of
iody was perhaps too much to ask undei
wees, Aftei Stoop clemly nutpunched
thiee rounds, it was a distinct shock to
e judges wanted an extia round The de
end of thiee iomuls was downught lank,
I foi the two judges, Mi Levy and Mi.
Ii of Pennsylvania The Stiuble-Swan bout
doubt, but theic should have been no ques
ho won the Stoop-Fitzgeiald match after
n thiee lounds. That decision set the
nd eveiy veidict theieafter, howe\er just,
to stienuously The decision against
; next to last fight was just like thiowing
blazing fire. The ciowd knew no other
i its pent-up feelings than a notous vocal
e the facts. It would be extiemely difficult
lopulai decision now, because feeling still
be student body Howcvci, it may be noted
ie laige numbets of looters who kept then
round at all times, taking evety blow on
their Xavontc That is plain evidence that
to take defeat, howcvci huit one may feel
ul consideiatiun, each student feels that he
thing—whatevei he did—he stands aequit
othci hand, if he did wrong, he should le
•tter next time.
HAT THE PUBLIC WANTS
lctiopolitan dailies in this State last week
repoits of Intoifiatcinity Council’s action
penly foi the abolition of “Hell Week’’ at
x’ot a few of these newspnpcis commented
ion in then editonal columns To uidi-
:’s icaction to the movement, an cditoiial
buigh Post-Gazette of Febuiaiy 25 is le-
It follows.
ENLIGHTENED INITI \TIONS
soi able lesult of the campaign foi the
of rough and humiliating initiations into
at Pennsylvania State College is no
;he public has a light to expect. The in
ty council there has acted against the
ugh jinks," which, when not physically
the candidates, weie nevei woithy of
ms of the college oi the oigunization
, 11 of the undcigiaduutc gioups tliem
incliVulually banned the practicesand the
ate that all the fiuteimties on the lam
entually take the «.ime stand
oung men leach an age when they can
site lank in a modem college bettei
lowdyism or ciuclty in the name of fun
1 of them It is not to be ovei looked
.latois aie members of the uppei clnss
sequently ate oldei men who have ic
enefits of cultuied expenence. Exhibi
int must be leguided as hysteua and
not befitting either the pnitieipnnts or
itions to which they belong
tnter-pioposol at State College that in
: the form of inculcation of the ideals,
usefulness of each fiatcimty among its
mends itself.
The Show Window
While walking out of Recreation Hull Sutuulav
night we heaid someone singing the Navi/ illuvn in a
sweet, temlei voice suggestive of a conciete mixei m
full blast and suddenly-applied butkes Losing
thoughts of mnvhem, niscmc, and blunt instiuments
welled up m our minds and we inude a silent wish
that Penn State should foie'er hue hoi boxing judg
es fiom the ianks of the cx-Uimcisity of Pennsvl
vania boxers and her astute lefoiees fiom the Uni
voisity of Michigan and points west Handsome new
yo-yos will be piescnted to the judges to play with
while the fights aie in piogiess and
ten decisions will be bended to the lefe’ee at the be
ginning of the fights. The lefeiee will be given
.stereoscopic mov s of Niag.u.i Falls along with \ain
and knitting needles It was suggested that a lock
ing chan be added but the College did not feel that it
was able to hem the added expense Besides it might
prejudice the judges oi the lefeiee
At last we ha\c good news foi those fiaterm
ties who aie a bit hnckwnid and do not icceive iceog
nition of then sterling woith Come out of \om ob
livion and become famous’ Modish ‘ Hell Week" and
get \our name on the tiont page of the Coi.iu.ivx
This stoiy conies fiom one of the fiateimties out
Locust Lane way It seems lh it one of the biethten
had wntten down the name of his Hellefontc 1 uly lose
in pencil on the walls of the house telephone booth
Imagine his surpuse when one morning he woke up to
find that the booth had been painted and the nll-irn
portant numbei had been obliterated Lacking in
genuity to lemembei the numbei oi the initiative to
tediseovei it be was foiced to date i co-ed the m>\t
week-end and consequently lose his social piestige m
Bellefontc It’s just one of life’s little jokes Nun*-
bei 157,200,701
Thu. story comes fiom the Collegia's' office but is
neveitlieless tiue and will be vouched foi b> manj
esteemed journalists Oui sedate contempoian, the
State College Times, punted a stnij in its columns
stating that a tablet marking the exact googiaphicnl
center of the woild wns*to be erected in the new Old
Main building The news icachcd the enis of certain
official- on the Collkgias and a lepoitcr was almost
sent up to get the stoiv fiom Dean Wainock
About the campus Russ Rohm, who gathers in
the countless shekels tins paper -.ells foi Bud
Ilollni of the Beta’s, who sells ifv-utantc just for
something to do Stan Bun owes, captain of the
iifle team . Thej say he hasn’t missed a taiget
since 1910 Doc Piitham, fiom the T N E’s, an
othei man who we wouldn’t like to have shooting at
us Someone lefeis to Aichtc Holmes as the Vag-
abond Lovei That icfuse can is still standing be
side the Old V illow monument . . They don’t even j
paint it in the attempt to beautifj the campus We
have the shell-tom battlegiounds here, lots of ufics, ,
and a bunch of guys i utmtng .uound m soldici suits ,
. All wo need now is a wai Theic has been an
abundance of anti-R O.T C liteiatuie about the cam- 1
pus lately . Somebody thinks we take that stuff in |
earnest, evidently A well-known mdividaul calls ,
foi a young lady at the Mac Hall Institute and finds j
that she has been campuscd . Imagine his enihar- |
lassnient! We might add that wh.it he said cbuldn’t ;
be printed even in tins column
We baited a joung lad> on the stieet the othoi
dav to inquue if she were the gul v ho woio the ex
otic giecm pajamas to the Ilc-She shindig She clev
eily squelched us b> asking if we weie the one who
diopped the bottle at the Senim Ball The nerve of
some people’s childien’
THE C \MPURI3ER
IN THE VNI V E PS 1 T
Y V A N iV H II
JtnlievWiOfvrii,
Oocand secl
jS&O'ri^
New Spring Patterns
50c to $l.OO
Stark Bros. & Harper
NEXT TO THE MOVIES
THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN
DR. PATTEE HEADS
SPEAKERS’LIST AT The steps taken at last night’s Sen-
ENGLISH INSTITUTE: ** * «&£
AMU A i A U iLi j change to the women of Penn State.
The uiles now up foi tiinl aie all
nieaures which if lived up to bv the
gnls will aid matenully in model ni„-
ing student government
The suggestions foi fuithcr changes
that have been submitted manifest the
mteiest of the guls m this attempt to
improve their conditions, and Senate
has piomised that if these pioposa’s
piove valuable they may be employed
at a later date It should be lemeri
beied, however, that the ability of the
, Visiting Lecturers To Assisi
' In Conducting Session
During Summer
1 ZONA GALE WILL VISIT
COLLEGE SECOND TIME
Courses Start June 30, Close
August 2—Contemporary
Writers Scheduled
Hi Fied Lewis Pnttcc beads the
list of si\ visiting lectuieis who will
tonic hcie this summer to assist in
conducting the weekly sessions of the ■
Institute of English Education. 1
Other prominent literary figures!
selected to speak this summer aiei
> fconu (Sale, Percy MacKayc, Robert!
Flos*., Eunice‘Tietjens, ami Padime I
Colum Tho senes will begin June’
'»<’ and continue until August 8.
, I)i Patteo, fm many years head of j
the* English depaitmCnt heie and now!
, lecturer on Amencan liteiatuic at'
Rollins college, will conduct the open-'
,mg sessions lie will speak on “Some i
! Phase* of Contemporary American'
Literature,” a subject upon which he
is an authority ;
Zona Gale To Appear
( Eunice Tictjcns, poet, traveller, and ,
.journalist, will Iccluie at the Institute i
I'lulj 7 to 11 on poetry of the Orient !
I “The Renaissance of lush Letters,” is
tho title of the thud senes to be con-,
I ducted by Padrmc Colum, lush poet
and diamatist
Zona Gale, whose play “Miss Lulu
Bet!” won the 1921 Pulitzer pnze foi j
j drama, will lcvisit the Institute the'
1 following week to discuss “How Fai i
Must Novels Reflect the Cuuent'
Taste’’” Miss Gale came here pie- 1
' uouslj to lecture at the fust English i
! Institute !
Percy MacKaje, diamntie cntic ami ,
instructor in plajwntrng at Rollins'
college, has been engaged to conduct 1!
the fifth of the senes on “A Folk-1
Cycle of the Kentucky Mountains ”
Concluding the session, Robert
Fi ost, outstanding Amer ican poet, will
lecture on “Who Owns the Poc*tiy , ” l
1 “New Hampshire,” one of his caily l
1 volumes oT \eisc, was selected as the
jwinnci of the 1921 PuliUei pri/e foi
i American poetry
j \DDRESSE| COSMOPOLITANS !
Di Fiank D Kem, Dean of the
1 Gwidunto School, addressed a meeting!
*f the Cosmopolitan club Fuday night '
tfanuel K Andujnr ’SO wns elected 1
ae-piesident of the club
EYES EXAMINED
All Kinds of frames, & repairs
DR, EVA B. ROAN
Registered Optometrist
OFI ICR HOCUS
State College
Wed 2pmlnll pm Monday, Tuendaj',
Sot 10 a m In S pm Thursday, Friday
(•nrhrirk ISuitdirj; 421) Past Cntlrgt
Opp Court Ilnuno A\rnue
It. F. Stein Motor Co.
Stoiagc, Gas and Oil
24-Hour Service
Phone 252
ALBERT DEAL&SON
Heating
AND
Plumbing
117 Frazier Street
GET YOUR HATS CLEANED
AND RERLOCKED FOR THE
STRING SEASON
at
JIM’S PLACE
South Allen Street
Co-ed Chats
FOR RECREATION
BLUE AND WHITE BOWLING ALLEYS
GOG Zi West College Avenue
Why Waste Time Hunting A Good Place To Eat
When You Can Get What You Want at
Laird’s Tea Room
Phone BIG-J
Special Rates to Suit Everyone
HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED
at
MORRELL’S BILLIARD PARLOR
Newest Patterns in
Spring & Summer Samples
NOW ON DISPLAY
_ at
Balfurd’s Tailor Shop
Cleaning Pressing Tailoring
UNDER TIIE CORNER ROOM
Which
Pen
Do Most
College
Students
Demand?”
College Humor Magazine
Asked 137 College Pen Dealers
4||o/W
larker
Vutfbld”
In a recent nation-wide magazme a Pocket Duofold to a Desk Pen.
TS=a 94 - 72 * ° f -
In the new census of 137 college set. A tapered end comes free. You
pen dealers, 45.1 1 say Parker is save the price of a second pen
the official college pen-more than See Parker’s new streamlined
.to 1 the favorite over the next two shape that sots lower in the pocket
nearest makes. because the clip starts at the top—
One big reason for Parker Duo- not halfway down the cap. And see
fold’soverwhelmingpopularityisits the name, “Geo. S. Parker—DUO
convertible feature— like two pens FOLD,” that guarantees it for life!
s°udy^tesk”. e AttacTihlg’a taper coil- w£.'lSPn%S N .Kb.7dTi , d , :ri!l , £
verts the Parker mioseconds from
gills to cooperate with the rules now
effective will determine whcthci or
not any further revision shall be
made.
In seeking more ficedom, however,
the women of Penn State must not
lose sight of ccitmn slnndaids which
society demnndi, of college women. In
uddition, they must not foiget that
theie aie some conditions existing at
Penn State which make it diffcient
from othei colleges. With these con
suleintions fumly m mind Penn State
women can, if they will, take n foi
'waid stude by cooperating with W.
‘S G A
“That which man chnnges not, turn
will change," an histouun has penned
.Taking this as a coiollaty, and keep
mg it cleaily in mow, we believe thn 1
228 West College Atomic
Tuesduy, March 4,198 U
a rate opportunity is piesented fjj
Penn State women to fiustiate wlfj
maj later piosc’to be the mexorabl
stepr ot Time We welcome the mar
mado changes To make them pei m
nnent should lie oui aim
theatre! I
TUESDAY—
Dick Hartlielmesq, Constance Ilcnnc
in Ke\ lloach’s
“SON 01' THE (SODS”
WEDNESDAY—
Lionel Barr) more. Llojd Hughes
Jules Verne’s
THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND*
THURSDAY—
AH Star Cast in
“MEN WITHOUT WOMEN*
Laurel ami JLnd) Cornell)
FRIDAY—
Joim Crawford, Ernest Torrence
‘•UNTAMED”
Nittany Theatre
TUESDAY—
Conrad Nagel, Kaj Johnson,
Louis Wollienn in
‘THE SHIP FROM SHANGHAI
FRIDAY—
All Star Cast in
‘MEN WITHOUT WOMEN
Laurel and Hardv Cnmed\
A /
V
The more active the
foot, Ihe more impor-
tant the fit. Hence
we're not a little proud
of our success in ftting
college menl
$7 and $9.
MEN’S SHOES
Inspect these fine snocs at
Montgomery
and Co.
iR9 Your Packet
linS "
Ilikß FotirHesA.
tnpr*.*
moSgii
Isa
: 1
PsItIIE SAME PEN
I
mm
Like 2 Pens
for the Price of One
Itcmounr ,/m laix-reit ,*- (1
rni/ rmiAc] Unl'Lckrlbo
/Vn^TAf" “»!•/.«/*,“ ‘/on.
/iricc of a
?5 57 510
GUARANTEED
FOR LIFE
17.4'%
grcnlcnnl, rn/mctly
llutn uvpTapvi