"FOR THE GLORY OF OLD STATE" VOL. 27, No. 27 SOCIAL PRIVILEGES UNDERGO REVISION IN CO-ED SENATE W.S.G.A. Considers New Rules Extending Dating for Juniors, Freshmen DEAN RAY FAVORS CODE UNDER CONSIDERATION Women Leaders Believe Change Will Not Affect Regular Study Hour Period Ettension of women's social privi leges by permitting juniors to appear in public with men until 8 o'clock during weekdays and allowing fresh men to attend all five of the big dances Man considered at W.S.G.A. Senate meeting last night. It is the belief of a number of up perclass women that the proposed change would cause u more uniform graduation of social privileges among the four classes. Under the present regulations senior women are permit ted to be w ith men at any time during weekdays until 10 o'clock, while both juniors and sophomores may date dur ing the week only from 4 until 8 o'- clock. estunen may bane only two dates a week-end with eight social functions first .semester and ten second semen tet. Of these, the picsent ruling de mands that the first year girls use the social functions for only three of the five big dances. The proposed change would not Incense the num ber of social functions for freshmen but would enable them to use them according to their discrinnnations Lenders Sanction illme "I ens certain that such a step is a natural tendency," thelared Dean Charlotte E. Ray. "The women stu dents seem ready to assume mote re sponsibility and, therefore, have reached the point where they do not I need unnecessarily strict regulations." Miss Ray also stated that since the purpose of a co-educational college is I two-fold, namely that of education and the furthuring of social relations,. the suggested col icon would enabled both the men and women students to . enjoy more recreation and sport to gether. Miss E Louise Hoffeditz, presidentl of the senior women's class, favors the proposed privilege for juniotx since they 101 not interfere with the; regular 8 o'clock study hour owed,' while bliss M. Isabelle Yael,el '3l, representing women's fintermtles on the Student Union, believes that it will mate the relationship between nwn and women students on the campus more natural Miss F Romayne Chapman '3l, president of the W A.A., and 'Miss Mary Davenport '3l, president of the Y.W CA , explained that by the time Icemen have teached then. junior year they should know how to budget their time and assume some self responsi bility, while Miss Marie I. Keeports '3l, membet of the Senate, and Miss 11111 lam Mendelsohn '3l, of the House of Representatives, corroborated their opinions explaining that it Was one more step toward the gradual abolish ment of all unnecessary regulations. ANNUAL FARMERS' WEEK CLOSES WITH CONCLAVE Will Address Seniors in Aftcrooon Fr.limn at 7 O'clock The annual Institutional Faimers' Wee), of the Pennsylvania State Col lege, held in Old Main, was concluded Thursday, after a two•day conclave Sponsored under the joint auspices of the Department of Agriculture and the State Department of Public Wel fare, the assembly seas designed es pecially for farm superintendents and stewards of state nelfare institutions. Prof. Frank D. Cardnei, head of the agionomy department, had charge of the College part of the convention. The main address was given by Mr. S C. Corsline, of the National Can ners Association of Chicago - COMMONS CLUB DELEGATES ATTEND ANNUAL CONVENTION Keimit P Rledy '3l, and Kenneth L. Faust '33, delegates of the local Common 4 Club, attended the tenth an nual convention of the American Asso ciation of COIIIIIIOD9 Clair! at Denison I.ntvet.,ty, Glanville, Olin, December 20, 10, and 31. The local delegates attended the conclave with the purpose of petition ing the organization for a nationnl chatter. Although the charter is pending no dellnite notion has yet been talten is favor of the local club. • irt4, ,, 44 A -- -!qc. r t i 4t . , 55 , . • .• , . Skill in Scrubbing, Dusting Win Jobs A well-developed technique with sciubbing brush and dust cloth IS a Naluable asset to the student who is trying to earn part of his c‘penses while attending Penn State, an an alysis of calls for student help re ceived by the Y.M.C.A. reveals More than half of the jobs listed by tire employment semice are for house work, according to Mr. Harry W. Sessions, general secretary of the College YM.C. A. Scrubbing floors, scouring woodwork, washing windows, and general houseclean ing ate the nay these part time Jobs are described when calls for student help ate made "While a considerable number of part time employees want ashes taken out, walks cleaned, or snow .shoveled," said MI Seamans, "the steady run of requests is fur men w h o can do housework" DR. FITCH SPEAKS IN SUNDAY CHAPEL Presbyterian Pastor Declares `lmportant Questions Are Confused Issues' "Although - the philosophy of roll- i mon has changed because the content of goodness in iambic, the obligation , to make moral changes is constant," Dr. Albert P. Pitch, pastor of the Park Avenue Presby tenon choieh of Nose York city, declared m an adds ess at the chapel ours Ice in Schwab au ditorium Sunday morning There is a desire to be good in every stage of life, according to Dr Fitch, and the area of sportsmapship and !fan play shows how the moml obli gations of youth are evident. IS ith out character thole is no spiritual in sight into life, oas his contention. Atbir,es Logical Thinking, That abuse to laws brings a menace to the state, was the speaker's idea He stated that lot every definite ac tion which takes place there is an equal reaction Whether the oncom ing generation will enjoy dancing, card playing, and theaters depends on our actions, which, if in modera tion, vs ill grant the same privileges to our offsprings. "The primary purpose in attending Penn State," Dr. Fitch asserted, "should be to gain accurate informa tion and learn hop to think. If a moral insight is not p•vvaleat, one is not a scholar. We ale a sentimental people although an extiaordinanly ig norant group• Logical thinking will enable us to overcome this obstacle," Di. Fitch concluded. MECHANICAL ENGINEERS HEAR ENOWLTON, CURRY Electrical Experts Discuss Turbines At Senior Meeting esterda) P. 11 Knowlton, of the General Eleetaic company, and Samuel M. Curry, of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company, address ed senior mechanical mimeos on the dt;velopment of ste un tin hint, in 200 Engincei mg D testmlay morning and Thuyalay morning, respectively. - Explaining the !mum tenuireinents of design and operation, Mr. Knossl ton, a tin bore engine specialist, also %hewed the development in bln of tor bloc units in their i elation to efficient steam oycles Mr Curly lectured on the giowth of pen, plants in the lost thirty years and the application of steam turbines. Both lecturers pointed out the dif-I Denn Mss. McCann, of Lehigh uni- NAVAL LIEUTENANTS STUDY (lenity of using high pressures and sity, spoke here yesterday to stn- I ECONOMY OF DEISEL ENGINE temperatures with the piesciit metals dents in the School of Education on I available and predicted that some" Life, Liberty, and Education " The y medium other than steam, such as Lehigh dean has written several hooks , Lieutenants John F. CI onm all and muicury vapor, may become mole{ on the fame of higher education in Merv, in M. Stevens. naval off testi s en- I common in the future 'America. gaged in graduate work in the de partment of mechanical engmeering, aro conducting them them work in a 8-Hour Day for Students Receives istudy of economy to lie obtained froml Joseph r O'Brien, instruttoi in et sts on the Hill Dorset engine. public speaking and coach of the Approval of Edison, Prof. Ferguson! to Ono of ol t ij h ec , ts o c r ;! e t t he f r es i e. fr ach e, i , s t I , i n i e e , n n 's ber , tr . ?! t ti, de , bat) nt t • , tcanl „ , i us a , humidities the ' oper ation ' of ' r: E c hi ' isel ', a hullo., of t . :l"' ",' ,:sy e l (- I.a l l ' il ' a :11::; . - engine. In connution mall these ins roaches association, the-hi.t copy Thomas A. Edison and Prof John ' the present freshman enrollment is A. Ferguson, head of the Forestry fifty students while. . additional 1 a study a the ac- I The booklet contour, articles stim.; speed en ion, mg to incik.a,e almost in debating, genes Before coming to Penn State. Cop,. will be sent to all colleges, . ' of which null h ; issu. tests, GloNer I. 51Itchell, graihnitt as-t 1 Thursday. school 41. t. Mont Alto, have one own- twenty-live are registered in the two-; mst " t • ' mulang ion, at least, m common. Both the year foresters course. Members of curacy of mthcat , ng hu s h invent. and the professor believe I both these groups spend their Ili& Mrtchdl designed and do.cloped , each county seat 'ugh school, and key theta 'fondant, in college should Tel year, at Mont Alto beforeenrolling , NI; ,an optical indicator at lowa State public. Illnaries of the state. Bibb from ourht to t. bows a daY ;at Perm State ographies on tuo glit.stlonb jam been Pointmg ' to the higher scholastic j In the program lard out for the y ca/Ia ge• . —0 coax ibuted to the first Issue by Penn average a students enrolled et illo 1 students about half them work is; forestry school as comPnred 11l i done out of doors either in the State N tVY DONATES COMPRESSOR Stat. , . o those in attendance at Penn State, 'Forest or Nursery. The mastery of ; The Etated Stale ,, naVy recently plc rtaossol Ferguson offered statistical ; Ind, and shovel molding as well as 'vented the inechanrcal engineerrng de-1 TO ADDRESS PHI SI(IMA 101'.1 perusal of technical works is part 'pertinent a ith an electrically driven, pp gr. i,,,k, 51 Barrage will spook ; o evidence of the success of the system I the; D ; IletAd oil) 1., I,t , ,O 1 al Lilt at Mont Alto, where freshmen are oc- lof their curriculum. ;compressor capahle of 2500 pounds per on th o t 0,,,, ..i.,,,„ it raolots ,. , a HETZEL El,E(ircii To COUNCIL dedication and int, rids to 4iii al, il operates on direct meet i ng of phi Snout lota, national President Ralph II holed coos cove.' othin irk i.lrg, irclirdnig th, copied from 8 o'clock in the morning The fi eshinan year at Mont Alto, ; sal. ro Inch. It until 4 o'clock in tile afternoon. In however, is not all wort., Professor' current and hoc a .10 foot capacity- honorary Impanel: language frater- ch..ed a member of the division of Dan men', banquet Duet Ralph f. addition t o tins a I,i, °Shorn study per-IFerguson stated. Athletic tennis, a, The machine, ~h .Ch cons donated nay, at 8 o'clock ton ig; ht at State Relations of the Amer ican lie- Watt. 4 of the sc Imo) of Agi li 'tame rod Is held every ought with the cc- : glee club, dramattc society, and a through the bur eau of Or dnanCe, con tht home of Dr Carl If Marmon dt, ',conch Council at a imeting lest and pro' 11 di on S, 51,Di moll. nit,' ceptlon of the week-end, i twelve-piece symphony orchestra are be used for star tins a Deisel engine 103 South Atlantan street. Miss 1.11- Mon th . De. Frank C. - Vlntmore, of dean, me members of the Siam Fain 'With two applicants for every among their extra-eutticulat activi- ' and for opoomi a ork Inquiring high lion Fisher '3l will give illustrative the School of Chemistry l 1 I am. 3 sacs, Products Shen Conlon, on, much il place open at the forestry school, i ties. Iprtssule. loadings on the subject. lis also a member ol the council. lin charge of the entire e.,,lnbition. STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1931 SOCCERMEN DROP PENN STATE FROM NEW ASSOCIATION Intercollegiate League Forms Separate Middle Atlantic, New England Bodies CREATION OF 2 GROUPS ELIMINATES LION TEAM Geographical Position Advanced As Reason for Omission During Re-alliance With the disbandment of the East el n Intercollegiate Soccer League and the formation of the New England and Middle Atlantic Leagues. Penn State was dropped from any organiz ed group in that sport, according to Neil M. Fleming, graduate manager of athletics, mho aith John W. Gm can '3 l , manager of soccer, attended the Association meeting in New York Saturday. Penn State seas not entered in ' Hermon of the method of electing I either of the two leagues because the i all class officers was discussed at a College is not situated in either geo-1 meeting of the junior rromen last graphical district in which the leagues , meek, when it sons proposed that nom-; mere formed In addition to Penn 'I matrons and elections should be eon.l State, Syracuse and Navy, league , ducted in a -shorter pound than is 1101, I members, and 'Western Maryland, as- possible. somata member, are not affiliated with ! At present the junior class cumin the new associations , stem at a meeting one smock before The Lion team will continue to en- , the election, while the sophomores gage members of both the New Eng- !elect one week later and the freshmen land and Middle Atlantic leagues to- : two weeks later gether alai non-league teams, al-[ Adrinate Balloting though they will not be eligible for! Miss E. Louise HolTeilitz, president' championship in either association. Arrant Triple Tie of the senior class, suggested that the i four classes nominate in their sena- In commenting on the change Mr rate meetings, setting a definite date 'Fleecing ststed. 1 for a general election by all classes "Penn State will benefit by being, one day. To nominate and elect able to meet representative eleven+ at the same meeting seas the content throughout the East and North East. of another proposal which also mo- Howerer, there mal be some dificulty ( sided that a second electing be held in arranging future schedules because to vote on the two candidates with the of the necessity for all league mere- highest number of ballots hers to compete against each other., Anothei plan called for nomination "This rearrangement is the out-' In meeting and el,r,ine Inter by bat growth of a suggestion to disband the lot, meth a second voting in case no league because of its unwieldiness ; candidate receives a majority rote I made by Canard representatives at ' This suggestion also included election !the association meeting last year. At , by all four classes on one day. [ that time there mere thirteen regu- ( The float proposal provided for i tar members and great difficulties hod nomination by balloting during one [to be met with to decide the league , day in McAllister hull lobbl, with I championship." I the election one sleek latm, and with I The assoc,ation was unable to do-, all classes nominating and electing I cide the outstanding team for the (on a definite date set for this action 11910 season and awarded a triple tic , for league honors to Penn, Yale, and FIELD TO ADDRESS '}Larval d Included in the Middle Atlantic, SENIOR ENGINEERS glom, are, Penn, Princeton, Cornell, Ilaverford, Swarthmore, and Lehigh. The New England league is composed of such teams as Yale, Harr and and Dartmouth, ENGINEERING PUBLICATIONS TO CONVENE HERE IN FALL The elm enth annual conclave Of E, ' gmeeitng College Magazines Associ ation will meet here this fall, accord ing to a decision of the association ex ecutive committee, received by Chalks If. Hertlick '3l, editor-in-chief of the Penn Stato Ent finco , yestetday. Averaging too members each, twenty-three colleges from every sec tion of the country 'will be remesent ed at Penn State During the meet ing last November at Ors Unisersity of Colorado, local representative', Chalks K. llertrick Arthur C. MORI '3l, and Roland C. Cersen''3l, extended an invitation for E C. M A. to convene here this ymi. LEHIGH DEAN SPEAKS HERE Predict Cold, Clear ' -Senior Ponce Night A two-inch snow fall Sunday night and yeaterdet morning has caused weather official, to media a cold and cleat Senior Ball night. The prophets have atomised snow and a north wind, dui mg the mid part of the week, and as a result guests of Penn State students for the dance may find it difficult to drive over the Nltany Mountains But as a prel.aution they are urged to equip then tires huh chants and their radiators with alcohol. Weather prophets although pre dicting a cold night for the upper class function, believe that the sky will be clear with stars much in evidence. WOMEN PROPOSE ELECTION REVISION Junior Co•eds Suggest Shorter Period for Nominations Casting Ballots Corporation President NVill Deln er Lecture Fridai Afternoon in Chernistr% Annes Crosby Field, pie•dent of the Flake Ica Corporation, vise-president of the Brillo company, and format engine°, ling manager of tin National Aniline: and Cheranal company will speak at, tthe regular 'Male for senior earl ' neers in the Chena,try Annex at 4 10 o'clock Friday aftei noon i A graduate °I nn Yoilc unneisit,t, Cornell, and Union university, Mr Field has made Inn greatest contubu ; bona to Indust,' in mechanical, elec-i ,trical, and chenatal engineering lie is a major in the ordnance depart-I ment of the Undid States Army and ' a member of both In Kappa Alpha and t Phi Beta Kappa. Mr. Field will al , o address fresh 'men mechanical engineeis on the ' "Value of an Enginceiing Tiaining" in 107 Main Engineering building at 7 o'clock Friday night Tottrgiatt. Students Receive Nominal MIAMI PRESIDENT $3 for Each R.O.T.C. Hour; TO GIVE MID-YEAR GRADUATION TALK Captain Ifollyer's Military Department Survey Eircloses $6OO Savings in Fees That esei} student of Penn State receives nominally $312 for each hom of basic ROTC sei ice was reseal ed by Captain Wintlitop A. Holly,' In a survey conducted recently for the depaitment of militaiy science and tactics. Captain Holly ei has discrneicd by un exhaustne research in the offices of the College, tieasuier and College examiner that by matriculation at Penn State, a student saves a total equivalent to $6OO in reduced fees. "This is made possible," chums the captain, "because the College receives approximately a half million dollars in interest on the sales of federal lands and in federal appropliations each year as compared to about one tiro hundred thousand dollars given by the state" Benefit SOD 1,3 12.0.T.C. By this federal grant, Captain Holl yer revealed, each student ben Alts $75 a semester or 5000 during his four year college course In return, the student is asked to take a basic course in ROTC three hours a week, man ty-six hour, a yeas, or 102 hours fps two penis In thus manner, each stu dent leech, $ll2 for each hour rr a It O.T C class It seas further revealed that Penn State has the cheapest tuition of ens college in the state and is $73 theapei per semester in fees and intidental than the second cheapest, which rs r school of an enrollment of approxi mately 1200 and which is probably highly endorsed This difference i Captain Holly., claims, is money en the pocket of the Penn State student Bound T. Accept Obliga'ion Howe‘ei, he pointed out that there is no requirement nom the State for On money received except that it 1 , required to fulfill its. pledge The state act of Arm' 1, 1863, accepting the giant of public land by the United Stcto.. states. "the , aith of the state Is heichy pledged to cony the same into effect" Although It isconstn ha, abolishce ORATORS WILL FACE URSINUS FEB. 20 Debaters To Discus, International Free Trade Question—Meet Diskioson Nest Month "Iles°hod, That the Nations Adopt a Polio of Free Thule" mill be the question of a dual debate betmeen the I.l, , inus and Penn State teams Febio my 20 Continuing its oldest foren sic relationship by ai going fly. same topic, the matois mill meet Dickinson college at Carlisle February 26 Following those engagemenlv, the team plans two hips One ti iii odl be made thioughout the state doling the fast meek in illareh, and the nth°, linear), the South dming Castes %n -eaten. On the foot tip the men's team will probably engage NVii,hington and Jeffe,on college and Uniseisity of ' PittAmigh on unemployment incur-, once A tentative debate with &ton 11,11 Women's college is also planned mith the question of the emergence' of women from the home The latter engagement will pi 0,11,4 be II split team debate Debate. with` William and Mai v college at Williamsbmg, Vnginia, nail ith Not th Carolina State at Ralmgh, Noah Cmohna ate proposed on the Easter t acation flip. The team will visit about eight schools and may go an fat south us Univet say of Flinala at Gainesville, Flutida DEBATING COACH ASSISTS IN PUBLISHING BOOKLET 1 compulsory II 0T C and still contd. , nes to recm‘e federal apprommtionq, Captain Holly. believes that "it , a moral obligation which the student, ate bound to accept, in return for m Melt they mceive in nebula of $OOO la veat." Furth°smote, he continued, the fast Year after compulsory It 0T C uas dropped at Wisconsin, there onus a masked drop in the ensollment in mili tary limning. Each yeas after the nuances has incleased steadily. Tin, is insolubly an indication, the captain concluded, that students ale repukne to almost any thing compulsory re gardless of its importance. NOVELTY PLANNED FOR SENIOR BALL Committee Selects Morris '3l As Master of Ceremonies Fel 1931 Formal Flank F Moths ' has been se lected by Sernoi Roll coinmittce to act as master of celemonies Inc the upperclass function uhich mill be held Fliday night in Reel cation hall, Chairman Raymond E Be.t '3t an nounced } estetday. The, selection of Moto, manager of the Penn State Vai-ity Ten and prominent in libelous Thespian Pro ductions, scan the result of soinal smeks deliberation on the pint of the committee Ilis position at the Ball mill be similat to that of a tom,tnup,- ten at a banqact. Mow, unit be in change of the for mation of the grand march and la,t Senior dance. There syill be a "Paul Jones" and the smiling of a few dear th., by tine guest. ander his dilu tion "The .election of a inastea of cere monies on ill sgse as a chsersion front the type of College vances that base been in esalent hole in the past En :AA taininent at class dances has been .olel3 in charge of the oiclig,tra," Cost stated "Thu° mete ro &Aim ice nov-altics to distingmbh one Col lege dance from another eseept the name of the mchcstra Booth that, ings mill be held float S o'clock 10 o'clock tonight at Stank BiothelN and 1-11upei 'ticket sale still be hgld Finlay aften noon at the 1 asuioi office in Old Main Favors and programs will he gistn upon pur chase of the ticket P.d REVEALS 'Y' Ralph liadclia 81, Sinc).len 'l2 ORGANIZAI lON IN 1875 Will E. la I,e.uling Rol , , in " ous or Bone)" Ilecentl, Found Booklet Includes, That the Penn State 1 51 C A lending 'oleo. the Pun State Plat eth was 0: ganized in 1875, making it now ,will stage "Tone 01 Monet," a tin 00- fiftw-so. t em., old, was tutealed in a net farce, in SthNN ab aUlill.olllllll at dated 1877 found recently 7 15 o'clock Sated. y night in the college !thinly. Radcliffe, pi nt of t h i Platen, The booklet contain, a nenort of the %ill impel snonte n oro—a tv-at Klan tAN enty-,mond annual tont coition or,,nventok p,th lid, 0 Lill himself the YMCA on the United St,nns and then letun ns nun and nilt3,ll plot Incas, at Loan, ale, on under to Insole the .1111e111.111lt Kent lel, a fen tune Mr, Swahlon trill non- The Penn State otgameation in 1877 tray Louise Alb:Igloo, oife of tai. cons:stet] of twenty-five membee, and sentm sues headed by too students, prose The plotting butte, cull be p a,y dent, G A Laml•s and col teYponchng IA by .Jo•use EI MlChllll.rili 31 '3l, Paster It consist.] and Alice D. thei stein 'll, r nco of a bilk study gi oup, and a cultural t mew to the local stage, mill ad- as id lit., hes parlor man] ac,o,nola, Of the ten ant) -.six College "I's" t 1,11 enact th, i ole of in the United States, only tin ee stele coined.. Pento,3lv,nna. The othez hto Were The scones v, of Tut] n at 11 a,haattan and Jefferoon and Al- .t 1 le, mns doogned by the down Intent Icgheny college if an eluteetut e, and Vril, 11014 ht II ci man IL Broady. Th Pin,,, • THOR 'lO I.I:CTURE BEFORE !....s t „T AU v CULLUM I'RENCII INSTITUTE awl allot popnl.oNte with onangement by Donald 1 Shdley l'11:11p Soupaull, Flench poet, °32 e,t, .3nd not oust, m. 311 be vi Wing lee tine! front he. countlt for the eighth Dlt. HETZEL. 30 1 3 1101135h01334 annuli Fieneh In.titute at the Col- 11.1., NI"IT.:‘D 1 \R\I SHOW legs Juno 29 to Augied 7. As "do eLteur litteini," of the m e,al4. at Ralph D. 1 leldel, togell Pi ouch publishing house of Simon , o , toiro Mom memben of tl" Dan, M. Soupoult lona berm in clone roan State contact, with litorm and at annual Pone, Is sinio Pun on SI s to to tostoi movement 4 developed since the lucid co , uou tout „cc in the no; Wm Id War. Luddinu in Ilan rdng, no St wick • ESTABLISHED 1904 PRICE 5 CENTS Dr. Alfred H. Upham Will Speak In Annual Ceremonies On Januar) :JO COLLEGE MAY GRANT 120 DEGREES AT EXERCISES Unisetsity Head Is Author of English Literature Text, College Histories Di Alfied II 11.1111, picsiJent of Afisno Mill at Olt - , at o.fold. Ohio, will be the speaker at the nod-year commencement. °semis, to be hel l January 30 in Schwab auditorium, President Ralph D Ift.t>el announce! yesterday Approionmtely &glee, Will I e conferred b e the Coll,gc at the core. loonies Mee{ -one s' vies ate a - peeled to fulfill impalement, tot bachelor's deglee, by that tone, while se,eral candid itts fm decimates mill be presorted and one or two technical plobably giant d In addition, twente-seven gi unloose stu dents will he a,aide I mastcis' de eeS The commenceireit speal,ei gladuated in 1807 firm, the nutilution iihith he now heads F.Honing- hi, giadaation he taught Latin and Greek at the Ohio sehool and in Inol tiC2ll ed he 4 molter of alto diem, nom Halyard university, and in luoB a 41:- glee of doctor of Oilt,oehy floin Columbia After soloing as pi ofessot of IloW bah at the Agancoltuie college of Utah and at Bran Mawr ht was ap pointed president of the Unnoetsit, of Idaho in 1 1 120, a position ohich he held until 102 S who^ he ',signed to become president of his Alma Mater Dr Upham n a tiontrnbutor to null- CIOUS macctunnes no the educational field Alllollg the book of o huh he is the author are "fhe neneh Influ ence ttt latinattur from the , Accession of Elnzaboth to the llsstrit ation," "To pied Puns of English lat,rature," "01,1 Melon," and "'I he , Ink of the Eat ly Wrist " Althoutch the mogiam Mc, not bun completed, an atadcont poteddon of faculty and graduating semots flout Old I‘lant to the auditoi nun will pre cede the te r,,,,,met Deettot rttth eel W. Giant to tom the ge of the MU.SIL at the corm entenumt et.d.c `ACTORS TO STAGE FARCE SATURDAY With Thilph Itsuithtl .1‘ ",, Florwice• E tineJdon matting the