Page Twg PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Puliltshfti Kcml-«e«kly durinir the College year, except on holiday*, l>y student* of The Pennsylvania State College, In the interest of the College, the student*, faculty, alumni, and friends. THE MANAGING BOARD ROBERT E. TSCIIAN ’33 RALPH HETZKL JR. '33 Managing Editor SIDNEY If. BENJAMIN *33 Sports Editor RICHARD V. WALL ’33 Assistant Editor DONALD P. DAY *33 Assistant Managing Editor ERNEST It. ZUKAUSKAS ’33 Assistant Sports Editor ROLLIN C. STKINMETZ ’33 Nows Eiiitor W. J. WILLIAMS JR. ’33 News Eiiitor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Charles A. Myers ’3l Wm. B. Prothero ‘34 Wm. M. Stegmeler ’34 George A. Scott ’34 Bernard 11. Rosenxweig ’34 -James M. Sheen '34 ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS Harold .7. Batsch ’34 H. Edgar Furman '34 John C. Irwin '34 Frederick L. Taylor ’34 Francis Wacker '34 WOMEN'S ASSOCIATE EDITORS Eva M. Rllchfeldt '34 » Ruth M. Harmon '34 Entered at the Postofficc, State College, Pa., os second-class matter. Member Eastern Intercollegiate Newspaper Association Editorial Office 313 Old Main Business Office Nittany Printing Building Phone 292-W TUESDAY', OCTOBER 18, 1932 DANCE ECONOMY With thoughts of economy influencing all the ex penditures of the College as well as of individual stu dents, it seems reasonable to insist that dances this year ho conducted to conform with the cutting down process last year. . • Although advances have been made in bringing the cost of tickets for all-College dances somewhat within the range of the average student’s purse, further pro gress must be made along that line this year if dances are to be successful both from the financial and from the social standpoint. Perhaps some of this year’s economy can be made along the lines of decoration. Simplicity designed to camouflage the harsh interior of Recreation Hall should be the purpose of decoration, rather than the creation of an expensive fairyland. Although the student body thrills* to the knowledge that a nationally known dance band will play for its functions, it soon forgets this passing charm and looks deeper for more than a famous name. The quality of the music is the deciding factor of a band’s popularity and the success of a dance after the excitement has all died down. Fortunately for the students, uncontrolled checking practices are a thing of the past. The times are gone when a student was forced, by circumstances, to pay exorbitant fees for checking that was very poor. The practice of having regularly employed checkers charging a nominal sum is one of the milestones in the removal of potty graft from student activities. Indicative of the fact that the fraternities know what the present financial situation holds in store is the large number of houses that are holding joint dances at houseparty. At least not every house is going to proceed like the grasshopper of fable and have a pice deficit to make hideous the hours after revelry, ( ,Loud lamentations arise from the office of the keeper of grounds and buildings. For some time this department has been directing the cultivation of the campus that it might lose the aridity that came of ex cavations for new buildings. With the goal of a well groomed lawn almost a reality, misfortune has now struck. Thoughtless students who, insist on playing football on ground sacred to the appearances of the campus and those who must take short cuts across beau- tiful vistas of grass are the cause of the present sad ON LETTERS Believe it or not everybody likes to get mail. That may explain the fact that even such word/y-wjse per- sons as publications editors like to receive comments, suggestions, upbraidings, compliments, and other liter ary contributions besides the stacks of annoying prop aganda letters that request the aid of the editors in sponsoring democratic clubs, republican clubs, birth control clubs, the green shirt, movement, and so on. Letters arc interesting—especially those addressed to a newspaper. They can hurt. They can make warm, happy sensations run up and down the spines of people for whom they are intended. They can teach lessons. But most of all they are a help in giving the editor a well-rounded picture of all the things that are going on about him. * \ Especially welcome are letters of controversial subjects when they contribute something, to the building up of one side or the other. Their appearance in the columns of this paper arc reasonably assured if they fulfill two simple requirements. First of all they should be writton in recognizable English—experience has taught that there are such beings as ignorant under graduates who have thick fingers as well as skulls. The second condition is one of good faith. A signature means a lot these days on a letter even if its exchange value on a check is prnctically nil. Police Car 78 ALFRED W. HESSE JR. '3B Business Manager ROBERT M. HARRINGTON *33 Circulation Manager PAUL BIERSTEIN *33 Local Advertising Manager WILLARD D. NESTER '33 . Foreign Advertising Mannger ARTHUR E. PHILLIPS ’33 Crvdit Mannger MARION P. HOWELL '33 Women’s Editor Isabel McFarland '33 Women's Managing Editor ELIZABETH M. KALB-NJB Women's News Editor Ave. and Allen St. nnd Allen legian is responsible for what appears in this column Once a-punster time a school by the name of Penn State went all the way up to Cambridge to play Har vard at football, and a goodly company of loyal rooters followed .the said team on its journey . . . How sad, how sad that a few of the more wayward souls should partake all too freely of whiskey-sours, highballs, cocktails, gin-fizzes, beer, and other alleged drinks! Well, anyhow one of the aforementioned became en amoured of a winsome lass outside the Hotel Statler and wended his precarious way in pursuit. Lam posts, taxicabs, pigeons, streetcars, all sorts of ob stacles arose to come between him and his find, but grimly he carried on . . . until at last he fell in the street exhausted ... to rise and fall and rise again to fa 11... crying, "I gutter ... I gutter ...” and now he’s going to sewer for damages! , Mao P. Kaplan '34 We spent three hours the other day watching a man giving a manicure. ‘He was standing right across from the Library tenderly coercing slices of reluctant wood from the top of one of the splendid additions in tho line of posts. Oh, there were lots of great big men giving manicures—and boring holes—and putting tiny chains through the little holes. And when they finished they all joined hands and rather boisterously, we thought, sang "Wring around the wrosy” ... and mamma, bimeby some other men in pretty blue uni forms came and danced and sang too , .really, Augustus, it was splendid entertainment. Oh, quite. Did yon go to the mass meeting? Did you see the Chi O's with Helen (call me Franklin D.) Hoover at the head make an entrance? And Johnny McAndrews dirty-looking the Frosh? And didn’t you think that Woody did a nice job of it, until that last, dulcet phrase which swept out over the hushed crowd, that whispered, that single Vallee-Crosby-Columbo-Dot Johnson word—"Goodnight'. . .” Now we know who really did the announcing for the local station! Here’s one we bet you hayen’t heard. There’s a Freshman in town who likes Spanish. He thinks it's great, and gets all he can from it. He has it so often that he dreams about it. His whole future is built around that, one thing. Yessir/he. told: a-pal of ours that he liked Spanish—-because -.there was iron in' it. Steel our stuff will you! Nuts.''.- He bolted ...! ' Famous last ones . r . "He-.was a great speaker ' but he talked half an hour overtime” . . . "D. U, im bibe?” ~. "Beta make up your mind” .. . ”Auf Wie dershen Mateer.” What's”become of: Ruth Bartels, last year’s best dressed man, the Fink Elephant’s Seal, various and sundry pledges, Joe filler, lost winter’s derbys, Angie (play girl) Bressler’s modesty, the Kappa's incognitoes, prosperity, and the dances just around the crooner, the girl with Doggie Alexander in Horyard 5q.... we were only kidding ... we know where Ruthie is! ... Nate CartmelFs boys run around a lot (at night) , , , And then there’s the one about 1 the State student who planned to eat at the Boston Commons! ' OLD MANIA Edtrl. Note: "Calling Police Car 78 .. . Calling proceed to the corner of College proceed to corner of College find the guy who said that the Col- find the guy 4c * * * * * >*.*.* * * * ****** ****** * * * * * -* For the Swine Sport Jackets ‘ Zipper Front $5 TURTLE NECK SWEATERS In Blue, Gray, Tan, Green, Brown, Canary, White $2.95 Merton Sport Sweaters $3.00 and $4.95 H Montgomery’s at Z&rfW THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Library Officer Willard P. Lewis, College li brarian, was elected vice-president of the Pennsylvania Library asso ciation during its convention held at the Nittany Lion, on Thursday, Fri day, and Saturday., C. Seymour Thompson, librarian.at the Univer sity of Pennsylvania, was named president- of the association, and Miss Harriet T. Root, of Bethlehem, was re-elected treasurer at the same time. <, Speaking Of Books "Red Smoke,” by Isaac Don Levine No less an authority than President Hoover says that there are more min erals in the State of Montana than in the entire Soviet republic. "Red Smoke” portrays tho tragedy of the Five Year Plan—the tragedy of try ing to make a vast industrial state out of with a lack of raw ma terials and transportation. “The Fortress,” by Hugh Walpole This is, the third volume of a quar tette picturing an English family from the early eighteenth through the Victorian era. More romantic than the Forsytes—the Herries were yet a part and parcel of England and Judith was more Herries than gypsy. “Josephus,” by Lion Feucbtwanger One of the most widely read novels pi the nineteenth century in - the Unit ed. States .-was Lew Wallace’s "Ben Hur” perhaps because of its pres entation of biblical scenes. "Joseph us” —part novel and part history— goes back to biblical times in pre senting the life of the Jewish his torian of bible times, against a color ful -background and bringing out the for existence of the Jewish people. ‘‘Owen DeYoung,”' by Ida M. Tarbell A writer in, a current journal won- LOCUST LANE SANDWICH SHOP v 2l4VEa*t. Nittany Avenue HOFFMAN’S ICE CREAM . A National Dairy Product Pint* 15c Dixie Cup* 2 tor Gc You’ll Remember / • The Corner unusual DER MANIAC Be Up to Date Have Beautiful Waxed - Lenoleum and Floors Without Subbing or Polishing ' Use Johnsons Glc-Coat The Makers of JOHNSON WAX Gallon $4.00 HARRY J. SEHRER Hardware 180 East College Ave. Co-eds To Voice Uncensored Opinions Of Men Students in Alumni ‘Froth’ . Penn Skate co-eds,-long the object of sarcastic darts hurled ‘by the male gentry of the institution, have broken precedent and will voice their uncen sored opinions of various and sundry men students in the Alumni Day issue of Froth t the campus humor mag azine, which will be on sale Friday. Revenge would be sweet after fifty years of grinning and bearing it. So thought the co-ed itors of the funny magazine when they asked seven prom inent fraternity and unaffiliated co eds to list the defects of .Penn State Adonises. Nearly fifty men, who % are promi nent on the campus, have been stung ders how. long we. can continue to draw on public spirited men of ability to leave their private positions of re sponsibility for the public good. Mr. Young is a striking example of this for he has spent weeks and months of his time both at home and abroad solving public financial problems. “Through the Hawse Hole” By Florence B. Anderson One of America’s lost industries —, whaling—is pictured at a prominent center, Nantucket, in the .life story of Captain Seth Pinkham. A bit of the briny deep, too. “Beveridge and the Progressive Era,'’ By Claude G. Bowers American history from Roosevelt to Coolidge is enlightened through a carefully -yet interestingly written life of the former senator from In. diana who was at the 'same' time a biographer of .note. Greetings - Alumni A Welcome Awaits You at TheßlairShop of Gifts ALLEN STREET Nerhood’s Garage West College Avenue Phone 405 Quality Service At the First Sign Of a Cold ' Get a Box of HENEPH COLD TABLETS \ SAVE, with SAFETY at T/k*?qkcJL DRUG store ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF THE STATE ROOM • Sea Food, Freshly Shucked Oysters, Served in All Styles Crab Cakes and our Own Make Frankfurters, Sausages, Baked Hams and Baked Pork Sandwiches—Deliciously Different Special Breakfasts Frozen Custards "MADE IN SIGHT BY MEN IN WHITE” 200 Allen Street ' j , . ■ A. NASH CLOTHES Made to Your Individual Measurements—sl9.so to $89.60 ) C. W. HARDY, Tailor ■ ' Oppoifte Foatafflce - Phone 24 by the caustic comments of the curt and conyulsive co-eds. Uncensored, the essays were sent to the printer in sealed envelopes, without even, the editors having read them. : • A second feature of the current is? sue will be a vigorous exposure 'of turtle neck- sweater scandles.*..- Inven tions for man or beast will appear on a “mail order page” which is appear ing for the first time, • Drawn in blue and silver, the cover design will express an appropriate: Alumni Day theme. Four pages of: the Mug and Jester column, instead! of the usual two, will also appear in' the magazine. TO HOLD ORCHESTRA TRIALS Tryouts for both old andnew mem bers of the women’s symphony -or chestra will be held in Room 401, Old. Main, at 7 o'clock tomorrow night, ac cording to Charlotte L. Summers ’33, president of.the organization. Schlow’s Quality Shop Displaying the Newest in EVENING STREET SPORT . APPAREL SCHLOW’S Quality Shop FOR ALUMNI DAY . ' Look Your Best Let Us Reblock, Your Hat And Shine Your Shoes Our Work Speaks for Itself : Morrell & Company . 153 South Alien St— tyoiflhAv AN INCUBATOR IS SOMETHING'YOU BURN RUBBISH. IN’ TSK! TSK! Isn’t it too bad! Boner thinks a blizzard is'some* thing you find inside a fowl!. Why, doesn’t somebody give him a - -tween bis teeth, good, pipe and some tobacco? For a Buy Edgeworth anywhere. iri tWo pipe helps a man to think straight, Of , f o hhs - Edgeworth Ready-Rubbed course, it’s got to be the right tobacqo. Plug Slice; • All sizes But any college man can guide him pocket package to‘pound; hu in.that. A recent inveetigatidn showed . It you’d like t o try before Edyewprlh to be the.favorite smokiny\ buy,, write for a free sample tobacco at 42 out ofSl leading colleges, -packet.. Address ■Which is only: natural—for In all Larus & Bro. Co., tobaccodom tliere,’s'no blend like the • 120, S. 22d Street, mixture offine Qld burleys found in Richmond,‘ Va, Edgeworth. In that difference there's, a new smoking satisfaction, a new comfort," for‘.the man who'likes to EDGEWORTHSMOKINGTOBACCO Tutesday, October 18,1982 GOVERNOR APPOINTS .WEAVER _ ,Prof.‘ Frederick P. Weaver, of the agricultural economics department, has' been “appointed"as a' member of the Mineral and Forest; Land Tax ation committee by Governor Gifford Pinehot. '' .T/ A Matinee at 1:30 Evening Opening at 6:00 TUESDAY — ■ Jimmy Durante, George M. Cohan, Claudette Colbertiri VTHE PHANTOM PRESIDENT” WEDNESDAY— Walter Huston-, Kay Johnson in MADNESS” Masquer's Club Comedy THURSDAYS- ' ' ‘ ■ * •' Dick Barthelmess, Bette Davis in . “CABIN IN. THE COTTON” 1 .. ' Charley Chase Comedy . FRIDAY— - -Jack Oakie, Marian Nixon in . “MADISON SQUARE GARDEN” Slim Summerville Comedy SATURDAY— . 1 Lee Tracy,' Evalyn Knapp in “THE NIGHT MAYOR" THE NITTANY TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY— - Return Showing of Frank Buck’s , “BRING ’EM BACK ALIVE” THURSDAY— “AMERICAN MADNESS" FRIDAY— “CABIN IN THE COTTON" SATURDAY —^ "MADISON SQUARE GARDEN" think- and :dream -with- a-pipe- be*