Page Two - PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Pulilatth* ’ - imi-weekly during the College year, except on holidays, by student* of The Pennsylvania Stale College, in the interest of the College, the students, faculty, alumni, and friends. THE MANAGING BOARD ROBERT E. TSCHAN '33 RALPH HETZEL JR. *33 Managing Editor SIDNEY H. BENJAMIN '33 ... Sports Editor RICHARD V. WALL ’33 Assistant Editor DONALD I\ DAY ’33 Assistant Managing Editor ERNEST I). ZUKAUSKAS ’33 Assistant Sports Editor ROLLTN C. STEINMKTZ ’33 News Editor W. J. WII.LIA..IS JR. *33 News Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Charles A. Myers '34 Wm, B. Prothero ’34 Wm. M. Stegmotor ’34 George A. Scott '34 Bernard H. Rosenzwcig '34 James M. Sheen *34 ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS Harold J. liatsch '34 1!. Edgar Furman ’34 John C. Irwin *34 Frederick L. Tnylor '34 Francis Wackcr *B4 WOMEN’S ASSOCIATE EDITORS Eva M. Blichfeldt '34 Ruth M. Harmon *34 Mao P. Kaplan '34 Editorial Office j. 313 Old Main Business Office Nittany Printing. Building Phone 292-W Member Eastern Intercollegiate Newspaper Association Entered at the Postoffice, State College, Pa., as second-class matter. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1932 FRATERNITY COUNCIL, or more important, the representatives of the fraternities by their approval of a six o'clock dinner hour have completed the legal part of effecting a change that is of vital importance to the success of the intramural athletic program. All that now remains is for the fraternities to begin operating cn the new schedule as soon as possible. Boarding houses will quickly swing into line if non-fraternity men cooperate and insist that they will be benefitted by the change. Already directors of amusement houses have expressed willingness to postpone opening hours to fit in with the six o'clock dinner hour if the students would make the first step. Apparently there is nothing to be lost and something,to be gained from the later hour. It deserves a fair trial. THE SCHEDULING of Military Ball before Christ- mas is an improvement over the custom of having a socially-jammed second semester. Some dances were certain to suffer financially under the old system. This year Military Ball should capitalize on the socially dead pre-holiday season and the other functions, under aver- age conditions, can expect better attendance. • ONE STEP toward deferred rushing, small as that hifive may seem, is deserving of praise. For a long time it. seemed as if nothing would come from the gales of discussion and argument over deferred rushing. By re- stricting the founding of additional fraternities, the Council is at least keeping in mind the ultimate goal. Apparently the student body wishes for deferred rush- ing. Finances do not permit its realization. It is a case of the present generation suffering on account of the extravagance of the past. At least the present genera tion of fraternity men has shown willingness to cooper ate in advancing toward the only solution of the rush ing problem. . ALTHOUGH NO FLAGRANT cases have been re ported recently it is an established fact that there are some students bold enough to use “pull” in getting fresh men freed from Tribunal punishment. Cases will arise this year unless stopped from the very start. Customs as they now exist are reasonable. The few that remain arc worth enforcing if they are worth retaining at all. By their action last year the students, through their representatives, approved the ■ changes. Why a few should seek to thwart the enforcement of the regula- tions which they themselves have established is a pe culiar twist of the undergraduate sense of justice. The Tribunal is made up mainly of clique representatives and as such they arc liable to receive requests from their constituents. It should be remembered that the Trib- unal is a judicial body in its original conception. If its members, because of campus-politics, are hampered in dispensing justice this year, Student Board has gone on record as favoring the removal of 'Tribunal positions from the list of clique selections. Positions are the life of a political organization. Petty interference with justice will not he worthwhile this year. CONSIDERABLE CRITICISM was voiced after the last home football game because the Blue Band made no appearance on the field but remained rooted to their hard won seats in the stands between the halves. No matter which side was right in the “little battle of the tickets” it must be remembered that the Band is in popular demand.. It has an established reputation that should be maintained. Although there may exist en mities and difficulties underneath the surface, these difficulties might better be ironed out in private—with out being occasion for making bad impressions on vis itors. ,FOR THE FIRST time in the history of the College there has been set up a board to determine the extent of College liability in cases where students have received injuries on the athletic field or in the class room. Pro gress. CAMPUSEER - BY HIMSELF ALFRED W. HESSE JR. '33 Business Manager ROBERT M. HARRINGTON 'B3 Circulation Manager PAUL BIERSTEIN '33 Local Advertising Manager WILLARD D. NESTER ’33 Foreign Advertising Manager ARTHUR E. PHILLIPS '33 Credit Manager MARION P. HOWELL '33 Women’s Editor Isabel McFarland '33 Women’s Managing Editor ELIZABETH M. KALB ’3B . Women's News Edftno What green-dinked, black-tied person, who, when reproached for conversing with several femmes, said, “Oh, these aren’t my clothes they’re my brother’s.”? ... . What couple of sorors have been sneaking out of Art 74 under cover of darkness for some weeks . . . . and were.not a little pheezed when M. Dickson gently closed the door in their respective faces Wednesday (afternoon? .... The press-box in the same class .... 'Our statistical dept, has figured out that fifty million Frenchwomen can be wronged .... What measly soph co-ed is more or less successfully, pulling the sheep’s clothing over the optics of an absent ho-hum? .... What basketball manager went hunting with 12- gaugc shotgun and 14-gauge shells? .... And how did Ray Stein break into the realm of picturesque nomenclature with thp handle “Butt’s Bad Boy”? .... To what extent did Mister Fleming increase his •popularity : by keeping people out of the Frosh foot ball game last Sat.? Have you seen, the new departure in ice-cream .cones at the schnappszimmer? . . egg-cup effect .... There’s a waitress in a soda jernt near the Coun ty Court House who is taking in her seventh house party at the Sigma Phi Sigma’s embryonic Mt. Ver non .... any house can get 'cm, but those boys can " hold ’em .... Add similes: As original as a Thespian show .... ditto: As nervous as a bass violist in the Philly Symphony .... Anenfc the Espenshade atrocity recently quoted here, we donnerwetter we are in favor of such puns upon the language of our forebears .... ever hear the story of Little Goldilocks and the Fore bears? .... Colgate has been accused of making a . mountain out of a mole-skin .... The women of this institution in 1924-’2.7 published a paper called “The Lion's Tale” .... honest.... Did you know that Bryn Mawr College’s con tribution to journalism subsists entirely on cigaret [advertising? .... And that a lot of the newspaper boys watching the Syracuse game thought that the gun was fired before the time was up? .... The gels of immature mentality who insist upon shouting through megaphones out of .Miackal windows a la like high school maidens really aren’t appreciated to any great extent.... The Kappas, occupants of the North L. A. ‘Annex, went solidly into the Hoover column in this sheet’s poll .... Mrs. Hoover’s a Kappa .... Maybe they forgot that Mrs;. Roosevelt edits that charming -b : Babies” .... They had a BTallowe’en party there Monday eve .... at which each Kappa attired herself in two towels .... there was a sign in the middle of their table which read “Just Good Clean Fun’ .... none of the jokes told were repeated to us .... Do they really blow out •fuses to make the Campus Constabulary come in and change them? .... having women in fraternity houses at late hours Is Jesse McKeori married or is he just a resident of the place? dust the shingles, inquired whether he would have to climb out on the roof .... Salt and Sellers sit side iby side in two frosh classes Penrose’s henchmen used to sa£ after an election, “That’s all there is, Boies.” Campuseriously Speaking Gels from Grange Dorm •Seldom come to any horm. The inmates of Women’s Bldg. Are sometimes inclined to be yldg. Co-eds at McAllister v .Are callous and calister. Speed Gardner on a student committee to prevent Who said Jim M)ain was punch- A Beta Sham freshman, when told to SPECIAL Double Decks of Playing Cards $1.60 .Value Now 89c Old Main Seal Stationery' All the latest titles, both fiction and non-fiction, , Also many new titles in the dollar series. KEELER’S Cathaum Theatre Building THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN ‘WHO’S WHO’ LISTS 32 FACULTY MEN (Continued from page one) dard, Dr. Oswald F. Boucke, Dr. Asa E. Martin, Dr. James E. Gillespie, and Dr. Erwin Runkle represent the Liberal Arts School. Dean Sackett, Dr. Pilcher, Prof. Charles L. Kinsloe, and Prof Percy Ash are listed from the Engineering School, with Mineral Industries rep resentatives including Dr. Gauger, Prof. Chesleigh A. Bonine, Prof. Wil liam A. Chedsoy, and Prof. Shaw. Dean Chambers, Dr. Charles C. Peters, and Dr. F. Theodore Struck arc faculty members given recog- SPECIALS! For After the Dance LOCUST LANE SANDWICH SHOP 234 E. Nittany Ave. PLATE LUNCHEON Chicken- a la King In Patty Shells Potato Salad—Buttered Rolls Fruit Salad 35c SUNRISE SANDWICH Hot Chocolate With Whipped Cream 10c Chocolate Milk Shake • With Ice Cream 10c GIFTS THAT SATISFY Come From Old Main Art Shop Dance Game There is still time to order your Corsage ■ and Mum—see us today. State College Floral Shoppe Allen Street Phone 580-J L O OK ! 30c DINNERS t: We Specialize in 5c Sandwiches Varsity Lunch Room 111 South Pugh Street REA & DERICK, Inc. “Where Spending Is Saving” Tons of Candy!!! Thursday, Friday and Saturday we will offer for sale a fine delicious candy—not distress candy—at a new low price Try somfc arid be convinced SEE OUR WINDOWS 18c lb. - 2 lbs. 35c Shaving Needs .. —9——— 50c Old Gold Shaving Cream—39c .33c Gem Blades ' —2lc fs§ J§'».lsSsL $l.OO Cooper Blades (10’s)—59c fl YySSraPply 35c Palmolive Cream —-26 c 33c Burma Shave -28 c ;$l.OO Gueret Lilac _.69c M ''' 50c Mcnnejt’s Shaving Cream—3lc SPECIAL Dental Needs 2iQc 60c Bonded Magnesia Paste 29c ToilfitfioS 50c Dr. , Lyon's Tooth Powder—39c 50c Bost Tooth Paste ! 30c $l.OO Le Pirro Face Powder 69c Pint R. D. No. 3 Solution 59c (Deodorant)- 39c 40c SquibbV Toith Paste. 26c 50c Guaranteed Tooth Brush—2sc sq c Menth Balm Lotion.- 39c 50c Pepsodent Antiseptic 31c $l.OO Ambrosia Cleansing Cr. 79c 65c Forhau's Tooth Paste 42c JJ c „„ H » üb >?“ n t’ s Talcum.—-49c eft tm" a n i. ' Sl.OO Pond s Creams!; 69c 50c Tek Tooth Brush————33c S 1 0 „ Jcrßtn - s Lot i on _ 69c 50c Pepsodent Tooth Paste 30c 60c Pompeian Face Powder 43c •50c Ipaina Tooth Paste 30c 60c Odoroho—; . 39c Well, as Senator nition from the School of Education. The - "Who's Who also includes bio graphies of Dean Whitmore, Dr. Wheeler P. Davey, and Dr. William R. Ham from the School of Chemistry and Physics. In addition, Dr. Fred Lewis Pattec, professor emeritus, and Fred Fuller Shedd, visiting lecturer, are listed. DUNAWAY TO SPEAK SUNDAY Commemorating the 250th anni versary of "Penn's coming to America, Graham & Sons You miss a lot by not visiting Grahams, Always good fellowship there. FOR THE BEST FUEL Use v , Neville Coke ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS COAL.. HILLSIDE ICE & COAL COMPANY Phone 13G-J , Opposite Front Campus Dr. Wayland F. Dunaway, professor of history, will speak on “William Penn” in the Friends Meeting House at 10:30 o’clock Sunday morning. KNEW BARBER SHOP HAIRCUTS 25c East Beaver Ave., Second Floor Across from Postoffico Snyder, Proprietor Established 1896 College Cut-Rate Store Walking Dolls - - - .... . ,98c Mickey . Mouse : Drummer V - - -25 c, Skippy and Mickey Mouse Toothbrush Bolder - ■ 25c Rubber Toys and Rattles - -25 c 1 lb. Alice Blue Chocolates - - - -59 c 1- lb. Alice Blue'Peppermints ~ - - . --39 c Whitman, and Shellcnberger Bos Candy Watch Our Windows for Specials I "IF EVER I SAW a picture, of content, it’s you when you’re puffing on a pipeful of Granger. And I admit I like the fragrant aroma myself.” It is surprising how' much better a pipe tastes when it is filled with tobacco made especially for pipes. And the Granger package is just right, too. .NGER IS AMERICA’S November, 4,-1! GAThalm fjsmfaex '■ * Matinee at 1:30 Evening Opening at 6:00 FRIDAY—- ' Bing Crosby, Cab Calloway and ' Radio Favoritesin “Tllfi BIG BROADCAST-’ . SATURDAY— ;; ; Kay Francis, William Howell,, Aline MacMahon in “ONE WAY PASSAGE” !" MONDAY and TUESDAY— v;; Lee Tracy, Constance Cum mini in “WASHINGTON MERRY GO-ROUND” WEDNESDAY— Irencr-Dunnc in Tiffany Thayer’s “THIRTEEN WOMEN” \ THURSDAY—. Joan Crawford, Walter Huston in “RAIN” • * THE NITTANY FRIDAY— “THREE ON A MATCH”: SATURDAY— “TIIE BIG BROADCAST”-. TUESDAY, and WEDNESDAY— Lillian Harvey in ' “CONGRESS DANCES” THURSDAY— ' “THIRTEEN WOMEN” New Location 142 S. Alien St. Friday and Saturday The. tobacco thal*s right~ and the p'acfc age that*s right ®E TOBACCO-