t T? 73 PENN STATE COLLEGIAN PoblDhtd iml-wecklf florin* the Collrze rear, except on hatldcZ*. I bf etodente of The Penniylvanta State Collrge, In the Intcreet of the Cotlere, the atudent*. faculty, alumni, and friend*. THE MANAGING BOARD WILLIAM K, ULERICK 'Bl ALAN B, COTTING *Bl Editor Buxine** Manager ROY E. MORGAN 'SI ALGERT J. MILESKI *3l Managing Editor Circulation MonoEer WILLIAM C. MeELVAIN '3l HARRY C WOOD 'SI Sporta Editor Advertising Manager JACOB L. COHEN '3l WILLIAM 13 HEILMAN 'SI New* Editor Foreign Advertising Manager CHARLES A. SCHMIDT ir '3l JANET L IIROWNUACK '3l Newa Editor Women'* Fditor E LOUISE HOrFEDITZ '3l Women’* Managing Editor NORMAN B. SOI3LER *SI New* Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Hugo K. Frear '32 Hugh R Riley Jr *32 Stewart Towniend '32 William H Irvine 'B2 Theodore A Serrill '32 Edward W White ’32 ASSOCIATE DUSINTSS MANAGERS Lin Y F.rb '32 J<«e C McK.-on ’32 Samuel Sinclair '32 . Collin E. Fink ’l2 Wendell L Rdim 'S* Edward S Sperlng *32 WOMEN'S ASSOCIATE EDITORS Lonl«e Marouardt *32 Margaret Tiiehnn ’32 Mary M. Wright '32 Entered at the Pnutofflee Stale College. Pa . an Kecond-elaxa matter. TUESDAY, MAY 2G, 1931 FRATERNAL ERRORS With the geneinl development of fraternities hete, as evidenced by the numeious organizations eitliet build ing new houses or planning to do so in the near futuie, it might be well to leiteinte several remaiks made by Piesident Chase, of Illinois, m an addiess to students of that university President Chase hands the Gieeks scveial pietty haul \eibal slaps He cites pai ticulurly the “ovei burden of eNpen.se caused by the building of palatini living quaiteis with lunuuous mtcriois,” and the “in ternal piessure towaids umfoimitv of pattern and type, instead of the ci cation of an atmosphere conducive to the foiming of individual peisonalitics ” Fiatermtics have been accused of many things, but seldom have they been accused of placing undue emphasis on the intellectual side of college life Piesi dent Chase made it very plain that he believed fia teimties exhibited an intense fear and aloofness to waids anything intellectual. The Illinois president, m plain language, condemned the tieatment of fieshmen m a niannei “so baibaious as not to be tolerated in any other communities in the civilized world” Paiticulaily lofernng to this last citation, fin termties here are not liable to so much cuticism. With out doubt, “loughhouse” initiations aie on the wane Howevei, on the other counts, fiateimties at Penn State can come in for a goodly share of cuticism. In build ing, the Greeks often neglect the fact that their houses should possess some evidence that they are still “homes.” Father than possess this ntmospheie the main idea seems to be to provide moie space foi dancing and caul play- Thcre is nothing paiticularly* original in the above facts. They have all been piescnted before, but it has seemed that the fiaternal oigamzations have not taken theii faults to hoait. They have been content to let matters stand and allow the pioblem-s to icmain unsolved It is high time that fiatcrnities recognized these deficiencies and took definite steps towards ob literating a common feeling that seems to e\ist in their midst—a lathei nonchalant attitude toward any educa tional advance Although the lemaiks made by Piofessoi Fuzzcll in today’s Collegian aie significant, showing that Penn State students aie not altogetliei forgetting the vvoiTh of chapel scivice, it might he well foi students to loalize that non-compulsoiy chapel at Penn State is still on tual. It could be pointed out that although at tendance has been fauly satisfnctoiy it has noaily keen cut m half since the compulsoiy seiviccs weie rbandoned. This fact, hovvevoi, should* not be cquso- for any gi alarm.; ,There ir every .Veason ito< believe that the attendance will Increase next year, and that students vill continue to realize the woith of chapel and appre ciate the fact that the College secuies the sen ices of the finest theologians m the countiy CO-ED ATHLETICS With the advancement of Penn State women in many lines of woik it might be well foi the co-eds hcie to take moie intcicst in the work of the Women’s Ath letic Association, an organization which fills a veiy definite need on the campus. Outside of the compulsoiy work in physical education it seems that at Penn State the women are prone to treat spoits ns if they were something to be ignoicd. Although there would be many difficulties to over come if this suggestion weie followed, a plan that might somewhat rectify the situation would be to sched ule contests foi the co-cd athletic teams with teams of other colleges in the vicinity’. Thcie are quite a few colleges near here which could be visited by the co-ed Uams without much expense and which would piolmbly ho glad foi the chance to come to Penn State. Intiaimual spoits among the women here are ap parently not enough stimulus to develop interest in co-ed athletics. Woik on the various teams is earned on by a comparatively small gioup of students whose in terests are varied, ami not ducctcd tovvnids any pai ticular end. If just a few engagements in each spoit were sched uled for the women with teams from other colleges, interest in athletics among the co-cds would soon in crease. It might even be possible for Penn State to spon sor a state-wide field and tiack meet for college women At least it would inject mote life into women’s spoit-s heie, develop College spirit, and allow the spoitsinan ship of Penn State women to manifest itself on the field in intercollegiate competition. CAMPUSEER by HiMsnr.r It seems thnt vou can create a lot of commo tion aiound heie just by uding niound in a car that backfires Earnest students will immediately drown out jinn noise in lolling you to keep quiet, people will come out to <-ee what all the yelling is all about, and then if one of the Ardewin twm«, m somebody like that, is atouml vou can have a pyjama paiade In geneial. wo don’t like pyjama par ides because they give the local meiehank-. an oppoitunity to pie sent the College with bills, thereby lessening the amount of money which could he appiopriated for Penn State in China and things like that. Neveilhc lo«s wc'ie sony to piophesy that futuie parades will be pietty dull Probably you didn’t yvatch the people y\ho put the lights out Weil, tlicv didn’t go aiound tin owing stone* at each and eveiy globe to put them out one bv one as the fellets tued to do Nothing of the soit. Thev simply got at the works of one light, pioduced n shoit encuit and had all the lights out in one fell swoop We’ie nfinul that ne\t time evoiy thing will be atranged like that Somebody will just tlnow a switch somevvheic anil all the lights will go out, the fire snen ywll shuck, plate-glass windows yvdl fall in, signs will collapse, the Semoi Class Piesi dent and the football captain y\ill make .speeches by radio, and eveiythmg yyill be oyer in three minutes and .six seconds Anil thcie yvon’t be a thing to do but go out and look at the spoils, which yyon’t be much fun. Mi It. G Beyei and Mr J. D. Strickland yvere kind enough to yvntc us a lettei lepoitmg that “a poison known to his peisonal friends as ‘Sonny Boy’ has hail one bundled and ninety thiee (I'll) dates since the beginning of the school vear" They hold that thi-> beats anv co-ed recoid. and add “the amaz ing pait of it is that all of these dates have been with the same gul” We ically don’t think that pait is amazing, but, of course, we don’t know the gul. Two co-eds weie stiolling down Allen Sticot when one of these student officer felleis thumped by “Do you know anything that looks more useless than the spuis on those clumsy boots?” asked the fust obseivant female “Yes, I know several officers,” lopltod the other In a Philadelphia garage there is a sign which “We wash cais and Dunk Austins’ We want to call to the attention of the local gienadiors the fact that the College has at least one esemplaiy cadet The Old Main clock commands at tention and then maths tune —all without a hollyer, captain. About Town and Campus It is rumoied that Anne Buihc will ho the June bnde of a Piofessor of Agnculturc fiom the University of Minnesota . . . Bill Diament, who wants Ins name in this colyum, plays golf in the tall glass ... a diament in the lough . . Pud Good, Russ Blacken, and Mr. Shloss, of the History Derailment, huteheted each othet’s ban that way when thev weie in the in firmaiy with scarlet fevei . . . That S. A. E Foul that yvon’t even lun down lull . . . Allic Morrison, the Phys Ed. mstructoi nndfoimer Olym-, pic wicstlej, has a baby daughter .... Iley, will you people please leave the ping-pong balls alone’’ CASH PAID for SECOND HAND Text Books at THE ATHLETIC STORE Y-ttE PblNlN jaTAiiii CULutt-OIAIN Soviet ‘Dumping’ Menace Exaggerated In Newspaper Articles, Claims Hasek Although chnractoi using n 3 oxng- tiado m Western Europe if we did fMiuted the warning in II R Knickei- not do something about it. Emojionns bockei's nietiopohtnn ncuspapei ai- are strongly opposed to Amciica be tides that Soviet “dumping” of goods cause of oui high tin iff law- and menaces the Etnopeun trade of the would tathei tiade with Russia, es- Untted States, Di Call W Ilasek, of pecially if she could chaigo them the economics depaitmciit, said ves. cheapei juices than we ask Foi this terdav that we would have to adjust reason and also because of the o\ist , oui solve.-to Russia’s mcieasing tiade I mg differences among most of the importance inAtestem Euiope m suf- Euiopean countries, an economic un der a decline in oui selling to these[ion to boycott Russia between the I countries. i United States and Euiope, such as • ,jMi- v—»• • “Whcthet it is tiuc that Russia is[ Mu Kmckcibockci foresees, seems to Mumping’ hoi goods on foreign mai-j mt L almost an impossibility." k-'ls, as the lecont Pulitzer pi 170 win-1 When asked whether a lowering nei claims )n |m ‘Fighting the Redl ,n the P losont tanff lates would hdp Tiade Menace’ ai tides, must depend ; ou *\ •situation m Western Europe, the lon what nricc- she is getting at home i nu^lol ltv answered that it might and 'l peisonally doubt that she is, a i.i leveled that many business men are though she is able to sell many ar . J clamoring for a reduction in the lates tides chonpei than the puce at which nn ticipated the question of what I the home pioduceis a ie willing to efToct sucl ) a nin ' e % ' oul(1 luuo on , our !maiket then*-,” Di. llnseh said. homo raalkut bv explaining that theie m i . . . could be no damage to home indus ,Jl, P r. .T J »«> tho .mail amount of com ,™ral>le state at affair. «.,t s at pi w- mod,tic* no impart ft am Rna.in at lent, the economist displated figures », lo sejtt ” inoditie. 110 pointed .out that th» buy r mnll|lfactolcd rt , f Xm . , l"” ?'? ”?* '<■>. and there n no leawn why, inth , oi than feai the aaject of he, mc.eaa " J e * mir tiadinn: magnitude, we should Of COUI3V’Di Hasek said, “theie I not take advantage of her gtcil«r is a veiy greit powbditv that Russia, position by selling more and mole to would bo able to steal much of ouijhci in ducct trade” HOLDS BANQUET, INITIATION Gamma Sigma Deta, honoiary hr-i j cultuic frateimtv, hold its annual bnnqust and initiation Thuisdny night ni tin* Piesbytonnn chuich. Pi of. John A Feiguson, of the foi csti y dcpai tinent, pi ended The epoukci was Pint William F Gibbons, of the dcpai tment ot journalism Prof. Hemv W Popp, of the botany department and Piof. Chailes D. defines of the autonomy tlepaitmcnt, weie the initiates. ARCIIOUSAI ELECTIONS (Senior Women's Soclet>) Elizabeth C. Bell ’32 Muriel E Bowman '32 Dorothy W Cummings '32 Anne A D’Olier '32 Elizabetlf Eveiett '32 Rosemary Forbe3 ’32 Miriam E Gaige '32 M. Lydia Haller '32 Eleanor M. Hill '32 Marie E McMahon '32 H Louise Marquardt '32 Mary M Wnght '32 42 out of 54 colleges choose this FAVORITE pipe tobacco and Yale agrees , lOGK UP at the windows of _/ Harkness to find out what the Yale man smokes. In the spring* time you’ll see htm sitting m his window scat with a pipeful of Edgeworth between his teeth. On Chapel Street... out at die 80w1... everywhere the Yale man goes, his pipe and Edgeworth go with him. And at 42 out of $4 of the leading colleges and universities Edgeworth is the favorite tobacco. A tobacco must be good to win the vote of so many discriminating smokers. And Edgeworth is good. Toconvmceyoursclftry Edgeworth. You can get it wherever tobacco is sold ..is)Jatm.Or,foragcnerous free sample, write to Larus & Bro. Co,, 10$ S. 22d St., Richmond, Virginia. EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO Edgeworth is n blend at (tno ol, nisi ", ‘Tuesday, May logo, four students, each lepresenting a class, will tell what college means to them. A familiar essay by George H. Young M 2 will also appear in the publication next week cv.^y. l ' ftrofoysThMUe,.' .'-A. TUESDAY— Matinee at 1:30 World’s Premier at Popular .Prices of Jack Holt, Ralph Graves, I Fay Wray in ' “DIRIGIBLE” [WEDNESDAY— ] 'William Powell, Kay Francis in “LADIES’ MAN” I Added Attraction i BOBBY JONES uses “The Niblick” .THURSDAY— . i I .Charlie Chaplin in l, “CITY LIGHTS” FRIDAY— Tom Meighan, Dorothy Jordan in "YOUNG SINNERS” SATURDAY—(MemoriaI Day)— Vic McLaglcn. Eddie Lowe, El Brcndcl, Greta Nissen in “WOMEN OF ALL NATIONS” The Nittany TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY— For all who liked "Trader Horn’ “R\NGO” (Bj the Producers of “Chang”) THURSDAY— “LADIES’ MAN" BOBBY JONES and "The Niblick’ FRIDAY— ‘Cm LIGHTS’ SATURDAY— "YOUNG SINNERS’