Summer Edition VOL. XIV, No." 6 EASTMAN TO GIVE TALK ON LITERARY . FUTURES TONIGHT Will Discuss Modem Movements In Schwab Auditorium At 8 O’clock ‘DEFINITION OF POETRY’ IS AFTERNOON SUBJECT Poet, Critic Also Writes About Economic Inequality in l Books* Magazines Max Eastman, poet, editor, essay* ist and critic, will present two lec tures at Penn State today, as the sixth of a senes of visiting lecturers who. have appeared at the College .this summer. Speaking ngc Ihicc) flptm itatr @ Ancient Coral Reef Is Discovered Near Bedford Quadrangle DaVid Carter '32, a geology stu dent at Penn State, while recently working on a geological survey of the Bedford Quadrangle, discovered a coral reef in the mountain side, ac cording to Prof. C. A. Bonine, head of the department of geology. The reef is described as about fif teen feet thick and has been traced .ten miles through the Bedford moun tains. The Lincoln Highway crosses the former sea barrier about four miles west of Bedford Springs. The coral reef, according to Pro fessor Bonine, is probably several hundred million years old, a record left in the rocks of the time when Pennsylvania territory was under the sea. HOMER TO DISCUSS DRAMA ON TUESDAY Theatrical Authority Concludes Series of Lectures Here in Schwab Auditorium Frances Homer, nationally ,known diseuse, wiiT present a series of sketches in Schwab auditorium at 8 o’clock Tuesday night. She will con clude the Summer Session series of visiting lecturers, having ns her topic "Dramatic Sketches.” Miss Homer spent an apprentice ship of five years playing leading roles in the American theatre. She has also written and published several plays. Determining to write and act her own parts, she has turned to sketches. Stresses Imagination Unlike the usual monologist who deals with incident alone. Miss Ho mer contends that action translates character. Her sketches arc called by critics "tiny dramas, some of whose characters are amusingly fa miliar, others whose charm lies in their very remoteness, but nil pulsat ing with life,—a street waif, a debu tante, a South American Tango danc er, a high school English teacher, or an immigrant.” v "With the swirl of a shawl, the an gle* of a hat, the line of a negligee, ■she boldl^ 'depicts a living person—a stool Becomes:a covered wagon, a chair burned about is a steam ship’s rail,” said one reviewer. TO ENTERTAIN ORCHARDISTS Preparations are being made to en tertain several thousand orchardists from all sections of the State at field days sponsored by 'the College in the Trexler Orchards, nine miles from State College on Tuesday. STATE COLLEGE, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1931 ‘WAR SURE TO COME DESPITE PEACE TALK/ SA YS JOHN BAKELESS Disarmament Conferences May Delay .Crisis, But Balkan Rumblings Point Way To Disaster, Editor Thinks "There is no use pretending that there will be no more war,” John Bakclcss, authority on economic causes for war, told a Collegian represen tative Thursday night. Behind his statement was an intimate knowledge