Page Two PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Published sentbneekle durlne Mateolleze peer. except on halide, be students of " The Pentis.lvonia College. In the Interest et the Cenci,. the students. family. alumni, and friend, Tur MANAGIhG BOARD WILLIAM R. I.ILrRICII . 11 Editor ALAN DCUTTING 'll liminess Mano,er ROY E MORGAN '3l ALGERT J MILESKI 'II Manan.lnc Editor Circulation Mana.r V. ILLIAM C MeFIXAIN 'M Stlortr Editor HARRY C WOOD '3l Adeertiein¢ Manager JACOB L COlll, 'll Mu, Editor CHARLES A SEHMIDT, JANET L BROWNIIACK .31 NORMAN II SOULT2 II Ims a IMLIor MARY S ADAMS '9l Momen a Neue IMllor F LOUISE HOFFEDITZ •Hl Women a Manuel.. Fdltor llmo E Frenr 12 lltn.h It Riley Jr 12 Stewart Townsend 12 Wllllam II (nine 12 Theodore A Senile 12 Edward W White 12 ASSOCIJA,TE ee , BI) , SINESS 3tA AGCRS 13 IV,netll I `11;.7.1 N= l ,, '" SvcrlnG 1 Lin 'V r 1, Colon r 11, Umber Easter n lain collegiate Near paper Association E11:01=T!13111:1 Edtotal Office 313 Old Main Business Office Nanny Printing Co Bldg. News Room 312 Old Mom TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1930 That the success of the parade Friday morn ing is considered x dal to the College is shown by the message fi em Dr Hetzel appearing on the front page of today's COLLEGIAN. Sel dom, does Penn State's president request specific co-operation from the students, seldom does the administration entrust such a 1 esponsibility to them Penn State's undergiaduates dare not be found wanting when such an opportuhity pi e sents itself. WHAT'S THE MATTER? What has happened to Penn State spirit? Many !orisons may be adsanced to explain the very evident decline in that College feeling about mhich alumni save and of mluch the student body sees so little. Dui mg the autumn months it is natural to turn to football, if not Pc an example, at least as an indication of this loss Theic is a certain something, difficult to define, v birth is noticeably absent at Penn State football games. Pcihrip, it is this much deplored lack of spn it; more it is merely ignorance of mob psychology on the part or those in charge. Cheese alone will necer saise a es ov.cl to the frenzied madam: necessary foe a colorful football contest. Even aeequato chaos ing, ho, ever, is sometimes lacking. Op poi tuna moments slip through the hands of cheerleaders, momentc that, if properly utilized, might stork ,ondets vath a discouraged team. Whole is the spontaneity so necessary to a football Owning section' Where is "Victory," the song that has fin filed countless Penn State enthusiasts and has sent teams to touchdowns against ovelponming odds? Tho Clue Mt!, admittedly ono of the finest college musical organizations in the East, seems to be saved for tunes ts hen it is necessary to make an impression on visitors Even when it does appeal, the band seems prr fectly content to sit quietly in the stands playing Schub°, t's "Serenade" or "Romona," rather than the "Nittany Lon" Are pep songs too liglht fa the College band? Arno snake dances betmeen the halves gone for e% ci ^ Is that too much to ask of the ultra-sonnisteated Pcnn State student Fortunately, there are still a few iootec•i who think enough of Penn State to risk the ignonn* of being termed "Rah, Rah, Boys" by cheer ing. Somewhere something is wrong. Cheers from the top , of Schwab auditonum or from the Thick House bri'com, after the game once left n good taste in the mouth , of spectates whether the result was victory or defeat Showmanship is as necessary at a football game ns in a cocas Perhaps it isn't the magnificent Penn State spirit that has gone. It may be that these smaller thing, have been forgotten, allowing smut to wane, not die. The death of Di. D Crockett brings to an untimely dose neaily a num ter of a century of faithful seri. ice to Penn State. Respected by students and fac ulty alike, Dr. Crockett neiec faded to win the esteem and admiration of all those with whom he came in con tact Dis passing on the roe of Penn State's seventy fifth anniversaly must necessmily sadden the celebra tion of a happy went LOSING GROUND In a letter sent last ;Neck to fraternity presidents Dean Wm nod; deplores the unfavorable reaction of stu dents to voluntary chapel attendance. To maintain Sunday chapel sets ices on a volunttay basis, a better attendance must be forthcoming from the student body, the Dean maintmns. Whether the present arrangement Null mime satisfactory on not lemains in the hands of the students In meeting this privilege the Board of Trustees 0-Tressed the faith which they had in the student body to maintain a high religious standard without College supervision. If the return of compulsory chapel is necessitated by lack of interest, the student body will lose not only a long-sought privilege but the confidence of the Board of Trustees. If these is one organization on the campus that at sonic time or another serves every Penn State student, it is tho Y. M. C A. Today that association begins its annual finance campaign and it will be possible for every ono to repay the "Y" in some small measure for that THE CAMPUSEER Hasa you eves spent a night browsing about the Maass' Last aeolt I shopped in of an e‘ening, bas ing nothing el-he to do. It sins quite a pleasant escapade. ON er in one col net sat a seemingly scholarly chap . He appealed thoroughly engrossed in hiv big thick book. Until I noticed that right on the other side of the book time Imo cute freshmen Nemby a debonair Juniot and his co-ed flame talked not, I feat, of their lessons. The Lamm} , might be mote appropriately called Cat negie Social Hall, I discovered And so it tan throughout the loom here a glow, discussed Lion football hopes There another set debated the tel.trtne merits of needle and lager Leer. It's not the worst place in the molld to go when one is in need of a date, either. Like Diogenes with his lamp searching for an honest man I, ton, have taken up the soma. Some night, when you'ie passing the Library on your way home to a comfoi table bed, if you notice a light flitting about inside you'll know it's the r estley; Campuseer on his eveilasting hunt foi ,mone chidying in the Library. !=tl Despite the fact that Shorty Smolt is a good friend of mine, I should be violating my duty were Ito suppi ass the huth. Last meek Shinty sins seen on Co-op Corner pushing a baby carriage. Louise Marquardt has attained some degree of success at Pcnn State, being piesident of the Junior class and a COLLEGIAN editor It mas not until ie. cently, however, that 'he scaled the heights of suc cess. The fieshman co-ed chore she "Big Sister's" finally admitted that Louise had possibilities, From this time on shall Bill Kern, out net n base ball managei, he known as "The Barefoot Boy" For I understand that Bill heeded Natme's call in the stands at the game Saturday and removed the of fending shoes No, AbsoOuse ji, , I have not yet heard whether Bill suffers float "athletes foot" Speaking of athletes teminds me that they cutely aro a cantankerous lot Last week the Varsity Hull steward., cnculated a notice asking the boys to path then gum on the cutlery or ehinattate Those lads arc always up to some trick, by gum! Quoth Johnny Ryan, 0 E. pledge, on leasing fot class with his task undone "Don't ho alarmed if you nonce a quadrangle of leaves in unfinished symphony on yon font lawn" Heinle Miller says the 0 B's ale going to execute the "Symphony in Black and Blue" by Paddle fm Johnny very shortly. Seel , and 'Heald About the Campus Bill Lem lung, the Beta Bad Boy, makes his debut lot the Fs elk Best Sti essed Man contest in shit tsleeves on the Cm net . . . Ruth Bartels' baby stale is just as effects, as ever . . . Jimmy Bombed:, the Alpha Chi Rho poems - 11, looking the co-eds up and down . . . Len Stein, smooth Phiepet, was dubbed "Baby Face" under vet; questionable circumstances this past week-end, I hear . . . Ilugh Williams, who instructs the boys in figures, waiting on the Corner for a lift up to Old Main . . . Kenny Pnge, notorious Theta Chi, is standing guard at the Delta Gamma house—Do you happen to knov. Myrtle Webb, Ken? . . . Hugo near, COLLEGIAV Don Joan, boasts of a remit] of fifty-thine slates on fifty-three consecutive nights . . . 4 i A irr if I Top coats 4.1-,ii. / r f 111 1 ' 4 11 111; 1 1 l' I k-=1 F '''''' . . . for distinction in your appearance Thir(yfiye Forty-five Fifty E=il MONTGOMERY'S Ell FENN STATE COLLEGIAN IDr. Pugh's Pioneer Service 1 Results in First Old Main (Continued f; oni first page) of Dr. Pugh that the College received any income from the sale of lands un der the Morrill Act. The ti ustees of the Farmers' High school mere nano and influential in securing the pas,age of the Lnnd Giant act, has tog on one occasion gone to Washingtim in a body to wolk to its behalf It suns undoubtedly with a slew to qualifying as a land grunt institution that in May 1862, the name of the School wa, changed to the Agi =Um al College of Pennsylvania It may be that the more dignified tem "college" had a salutary effect upon the conduct of the students since in the President's iepoit I'm 1802 we !find this statement, "Pot the first ',time an entoe session has passed a about any expulsion front College" In his fight to keep the entire land scup for the Agraultuial College, Di I Pugh ss as indefatigable. While per forming his duties at the College us pn esident and mu rymg a full schedule I as a mofessm, he found time to per sonally appear.befoie legislative com mittees and to place before the people of the State by minings and lectures the chums of his institution At one tune during the Cml War the College was practically without students. When Lee invaded Penn- SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE RETAINS HIGH RANKING Dean Watts Announces Enrollment Of bOl Regular Students Seventy-five years after it was founded as the Fat nut's High School, Penn State continues to rank high as a school lot agiicultutal students, a - Lenart issued by Dean Ralph L. Watts, of the School of Agiiculime, shows In compai,on with the sixty-nine students who reported for the open ing of the first classes on February IG, 1859, courses in agriculture now hate an enrollment of 718, the dean announced There are 605 students in four-eat courses, 113 in the two heat courses, and fom are moiled for special stock With 129 students registered, in cluding forty-nine freshmen located ut Mont Alto, forestry leads the other departments in entailment. Dairy husbandry is nest largest with nine ty-six enrolled, while agricultural ed ucation , s third with sixty-four A pipeful of good tobacco is the real smoke TODAY, tomorrow, all the rest of your life, you can en joy and keep on enjoying good tobacco in a good pipe. "How can I pick a good pipe, and how can I tell good tobacco?" you may ask. Who but you could answer? You'll know your own good pipe when you bite down on it. Edgeworth may be the tobacco you're looking for. It has the dis tinctive flavor that men like, the slow-burning coolness; and it is rich with the aroma of fine old burley blended just right. A pipe fulof Edgeworthis therealsmoke. Why not try Edgeworth? You can buy it anywhere in the 150 tin—or, if you wish, write for a generous sample packet free. Address: Larus & Bro. Co., 105 S. 22d St., Richmond, Va. EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO FJgevnnhko tom!, on of good salamis. sslessed nerefully Weeded especially pipessasalanq luau, andfinnariieverilan Buy Lelgesuorsis a Owns in nag Pim ^livaslysllulsbesl" gAtk Lle posies pound humidor tin Una IP Dm Colt saandi sylvanm, nearly all members of the first and second clam°, volunteered for the emergency cm pi and mereab sent from the institution neatly three month, In the summer of 1863 Dr. Pugh began the erection of the President's house and on Februmy I, 1864, was married to Miss Rebecca Valentine, of Bellefonte. However, this couple was not destined to occupy the new house By April of 1801 the limit of Dr Pugh's physical endurance had been reached. On the twenty-second of • that month while at ‘l,olk at his desk in the chemistry lecture room in Old 1, Main, he was soured with a s relent chill and his pen slipped away in a scrawl—the sentence remains unfin , ished Ile never renewed his work, pass ! ing away on April 2q, It A little wonder that in the dchrium which Immediately piccedorl his death lie imagined himself arguing before a legislate, committee in support of the College Dr Evan Pugh was a martyr to Penn State When, during the dark est days of his administration, he was offered a position in the United States Department of Agriculture, he de clined preferring to fulfill bus "duty" to the College 1.1 TAU SIGMA ELECTIONS (Mechanical Engineer ing) John R Avery '3l Ron land C. Golsen '3l Gail Rolle '32 .4 4. Plgi • ,_ ..-'''•l3 STARK BRDS D ' irARPER, n 71,thenlaxliera Next to the Movies BELLEFONTE'S BEST HOTELS The Markland Spring Street The Broekerhoff Cot. Public Square Noted for Good Food and Ser. lee M. A. LANDSY, Prop When in Bellefonte Meet Me at The Russ-Bell Soda Fountain Light Lunch 1 . 4 4* 'Ell 1 1 1 4 * -k Ell W N-.;.%‘'':,.i.i::;-11,,e, l''r-s' -..; :1 ' Ig' ii:l'';j47l.';'''-tt ',. r- :1 , .• / - ...vas -..)- Alb If als.a, 1 1 '(OrIL le. 1.. • 9 s '',.... 0I r , A 1 , ilf.l - )10 hili N. 11.,. # v ,A, iti , i ~,,,,,z ls ........ } STYLED IN A DISTINGUISHED MANNER AND GIVEN A DEGREE OF INTENSITY AND CHARM IVIIICH DOES NOT EXIST IN ANY OEHER lIA7 ACCESSIRLE TO DISCREET AND STYLE-CONSCIOUS YOUNG MEN. SECURADI F. IN COLOURS CAPTIVATINGLY DEVISED fir FIACIII EY TEN DOLLARS OTHERS FROM SEVEN TO TWENTY AGENTS IN THE PRINCIPAL CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES ' • 1 . _. ct in- - ~,,t_f,Ok , THE FINCHLEY HAT ,e,„,,„ WILL BE FOUND HERE EXCLUSIVELY ......: , --(4 4g,,‘1 k- a. t,,,,,4 •'.k,..,P1`.---' thfl.', LA VIE WILL DISTRIBUTE STUDENT ACTIVITY CARDS Editor Sets May 1 for Distribution Of 171-Page Senior Annual Student actnity cards for the 1931 Lamm will be sent out next week, while the toting of ftatcrnity gioup pictures will he started at the same time, Harry J. Poorbnugh, editor of the senioi yearbook, stated last night The complete make-up for the book has been planned and sell contain 175 pages It will be completed about Starch 15 with its distribution begin ning the first of May, according to the editor. Under hairy S. Ruthiauff sr., art director of the La Vie, much of the nrt mork has been done mink the cla, section is almoSt finished. All of the scum, class pictures have been taken and made up, having been I,CCIVC:i from the studio lust meek. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS WELCOME CO-EDS Schlow's QUALITY SHOP Old Main Sandwich Shop IN THE BASEMENT OF OLD MAIN Continuous Club Service on Week Days From 7:30 a. in. to 11 p. in. - Sundays-3 p. m. to S p. m. Including Soups, Salads, Sandwiches, Pastry, Ice Cream and Bevel ages With Special Menus for Breakfast-7:30 a. in. to 10:30 a. in Luncheon 11:30 a. m. to 2:00 p. at Dinner 5:30 p. in. to 8:30 p. In A dining service with club environment planned to meet individual desires at reasonable chaiges with adequate facil ities and appropriate menus for luncheon and dinner parties, club meetings, committee meetings, mixers, smokers and similar occasions. Use Stairways Just Inside the South and and North Entrances to the Building Tuesday, October 21, 1930 (No Matinee an Saturday) EMECISiaI (31tatnerat-1 .30) Eddie, cn,n, tor in "WHOOPEE" WEDNESDAY—„„ , Conrad N.igel, Generic', Tobin, fool Rathbonc, Rose Hobart in "A LADY SURRENDERS". THURSDAY— John McCormack and Star Cast "SONG (Y ❑Y 11E11a" FRIDAY— Bert Wheeler, "HALF SHOT tT SUNRISE" SATURDAY— Joe E. Brown, Joan Bennett in "M AYISE IT'S LOVE" The Nittany lIJESDAY and WEDNESDAY— Mar: Nolan, Omen Moore sn "OUTSIDE. THE 1,11‘"' TITURSD AY "A LADY SURRENDERS' PRIDAY "SONG 0' HY HEART SATURDAY "HALF SHOT AT SUNRISE"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers