Page Two PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Published nemi*w«k]y during the Colics* year, except on holiday#,' hy ptudentu of The Pennsylvania Stale CoUese, in the Intercut of the College, the students, faculty, alumni, and friends. THE MANAGING BOARD ROBERT E. TSCHAN M 3 RALPH HETZEL JR. M 3 Managing Editor SIDNEY H. BENJAMIN M 3 Sports Editor • RICHARD V. WALL M 3 Assistant Editor DONALD P. DAY M 3 Assistant, Managing Editor ERNEST R. ZUKAUSKAK M 3 Assistant S ROLLIN C. S'. W. .T. WILLIAMS JR. M 3 News Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Charles A. Myers M l Wm. 11. Prothcro Ml George A. Srott Ml Bernard H. Rosenzweig Ml James M. Sheen M 4 ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS ( Harold J. BnUch M 4 11. Edgar Furman M 4 John C. Irwin M 4 Frederick 1,. Tnvlor M 4 Francis Wacker M 4 Member Eastern Intercollegiate Newspaper Association Entered at the Postofficc, State College, Pa., as Second-class Matter TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15,. 1932 NOT IN BOOKS Sometimes it happens, though not often, that two such well-known persons as Edwin Markham and Mts. Sanger lecture in this locality during a single week. Also it happens, and this is more often, that from two tc five bluebooks occur during the same week. This s leaves the student who is interested in learning on the horns of a little dilemma. If the student goes to hear both these lecturers, ho doesn’t give his bluebooks the proper amount of at tention. If ho gives his bluebooks all his attention, he has the vague feeling that he is missing something he ought not to miss. In this last he is light. It is rare in this secluded mountain village that the student has opportunity to do more than to read about his subjects. He has plenty of time to read about his sociology and his American literature, but his chances of seeing and hearing the persons who are forming the •modern sociology and who are making American litera ture are unusually rare.’ Now if the student 'is genuinely interested in learn ing, as ho sometimes admits himself to be, he will .prob ably find that the two lectures offered this week will be immeasurably more vivid bits of knowledge and stimu lation than his text hooks. This, of course, is hot because the lecture material will necessarily be arranged in a more scholarly fashion, but because there are vital per sonalities tied to this material to make it live. • Expediency may try to: dictate that‘the student keep himself handcuffed to the/texts during the week, but intelligent judgment dictates that he "shall avail himself of something more rare and living. 1 'By the very nature of her crusade, Mrs. Sanger is hindered at every turn by the prejudices and ingrained superstition of reactionaries. ‘ She will probably not be greatly disturbed by the fact that there are persons hereabouts who object to her tenets. However, the stu dents arc disturbed to learn that there are persons on tho campus who have protested against allowing stu dents to heUi and weigh her presentation. Students want tho right to judge for themselves the worth of her cause and they resent the efforts pf some who try to gag any ideas and social doctrines which originated' later than the Civil War. Some students even believe that it ir. moro harmful to be suppressed by reactionaries than to believe in something a little new or different. READING PAST INTO PRESENT It is true that recent years have witnessed a change in undergraduate attitude. Whether this change has been an improvement few persons are able to judge. The graduate of twenty or thirty years ago can justi fiably shed tears over the difference that time has wrought. But the student of today can defend his posi tion. The fact that the College has grown to' large scale proportions in recent years is an influence that mado change inevitable. What is the change that has come over the student body of this generation? 'No longer does the old grad see th'c mass cheering and enthusiasm, of his college days. "College spirit is gone,” he says. The student ' has become conservative in his outward actions. He has trained his nervous system so' that his enthusiasm does not come out in cheering and in yelling. The lack of intimacy and personal friendship with the-players makes present day rooting, at best, mechanical. And' so it is that only under unusual strain will the majority ( cf college men today express their emotions in cloud uispelling cheers. They look upon this expression of spirit with much the same attitude that makes them scorn tho picture of college youth on the screen and in litc magazines. But is .this apparent lack of physical spirit a true indication that the student body of today does not have the interests of the team at heart? The teams of today are as much'the topic for student interest and discus sion as those of the past. They are followed in all stages cf hope, despair, disappointment, and success. To the person in the thick of things collegiate today the pres ent attitude of undergraduates seems an improvement over the past. To the graduate of the "old school” this change can never be presented in exactly the right light. Most of us, after all, can think only in terms* of- our own experience. Between election bets and 13-to-12 football games we’ve just about reached the,state of being convinced that this Maniac business is far too realistic to be funny. Ah well, even Sadie (Joan Crawford) Thomp son got a break in the end so we’ve decided to bear up and give you what’s coming to you-aw 1.... We’ve become firmly convinced that theres only one" medium of expression for us and thats verse and as were a past master at it here goes and dont look for commas or punctuation or capitals on account ;of thats passe in this type of art anyhow .... how do you like this .... something there is that doesnt like us all it sits silently on little cat feet like spike xiollins and \vatche3 the kappa that only god . . . . yes we think betty bryce is ok isnt she. and it was plenty cold riding the rumble back from the game ALFRED W. HESSE JR. M 3 liusinvs# Manager ROBERT M. HARRINGTON M 3 Circulation Manager RAUL BIERSTEIN M 3 Local Advertising Manager WILLARD D. NESTER M3' Foreign Advertising Manager ARTHUR E. PHILLIPS M 3 Credit Mana'ser MARION P. HOWELL M 3 Women’# Editor Isabel McFarland M 3 Women’# Managing Editor ELIZABETH M. ICALB *33 Woman'# New# Editor Wm. M. Stegmeier '34 .... it really takes a master to write this on the road that comes up like thunder .... whod turn down an empty glass .... hot diggity dawg for east is east and thats why we cremated dan oshea can you sea .... again for the call of the gypsie life is like the ymea only moreso and wed like to see some beaded bubbles winking at the brim but keats will be keats you know .... and the eve of-st agneS' was not spoken of*the solo coed who stayed in town over the week end ~ yes it sure is great to be an intellectual genius who can write really modernistic stuff even if its stuff on the rest of you lugs finis and may there be no moan ing of the czars to he or not to be ... . at least this isnt vice versa. Well we certainly feel better, now that we’ve worked a bit of that Philadelphia frenzy out. of our soul. By the way of course you’ve heard that the boys who- stayed behind had a football game at the junc tion of College and Allen, Friday night, and that two familiar gentlemen, Maynard (vice-editor) Wood and ■his pal Crew (Croohc, Crue, & a la N. Y. Times) were right in the pink of it, bah jove! Three jolly Kappa Sigma knaves, Meredith, Rite nour, and an unmentionable, journeyed to Tyrone the Sother evening. Alighting .from their 1 chariot, what should they see but a Pop-Corn Shop containing a lovely gal, and a flower shoppe next door. Temptation was too much for Rit, so the lad bought a knickle posy and presented it with a long-winded harangue and his compliments. Heigh ho! The life of a rover ....! Laatu's company three’s a crowd, and that brings to mind a Penn State romance- that surely is worthy, of mention. Couples meet and part again, but this pair, like bridge, go on forever. All’s Caum with Eddie folks, let’s give this combination a great Big hand C’mon .... who knows who may be next? No we don’t mean Lee Houck ... . 'but we could make our old pal Mahatma tear his- hair . ... Chuck - Landis and Bill Lenker- went riding re cently in an automobile. They were, cleverly dis guised in Blue Key hats, and while speeding merrily along, what should they spy but a [collection of pottery and such for sale along the road. , Being .naturally honest, the boys didn’t swipe anything hut a.couple of beer mugs for their sentimental value alone, you un T derstand. But what we’re interested in is • what was the duet, doing all by their little selves in : an auto mobile? * Pearls: No Johnny Keech didn’t connect with a train .... it was touch football.... the lads who stay ed behind;to study, had a hard time getting dates as most of the ladies went the way of all fans .... we’ve just got to mention this Isabel person that bothers Bottorf’s sax player . . THE MANIAC : For Results ADVERTISE With ' . The COLLEGIAN ' OUR CLASSIFIED ADS Are also Go-Getters OLD MANIA ****** ****** ****** ****** THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN The Letter Box To the Editor: Dear Sir, ' I was amazed and disheartened as I watched the Sewanee game a week ago at the. apparent'lack of interest and appreciation of the Penn State team "on the part of the student body. Tho exhibition of interest that the students displayed at that game makes me feel that Penn State students have absolutely no college spirit. I am a graduate of Penn State, of ‘the class of 1910, and can truthfully say that the attitude of the students toward their'teams has undergone a great change since my.last visit here in 1912, a change, to my mind, for the worse. During my college days, we had a student body of only five or six hundred, yet five or six hundred students had more pep and made more noise in one minute at. a football game than the present undergraduates did in the entire Sewanee game. You have a team to be proud of this year. While they haven’t won a great many games, yet the boys on the feam are out there doing their best, work ing their hardest simply for the glory of Penn State.. No matter what its record, the team is at least deserving of the whole-hearted support of the student body, and it < is inexcusable that it isn’t getting it., I consider the 1932 team all the moro remarkable when I realize that the squad from which it is selected doesn’t have a real training table nor do the players live--together, two thingsv which I believe necessary to maintain a. real spirit of team play and cooperation. I played fullback on the Penn State, teams of 1906, 1907, 1908 and 1909 and our squad lived to gether and ate together in the Old Track House. „ . Although we lived together, the ath letes were not, as. many contend, an isolated group, entirely apart from the general student .body. Every ath lete . knew nearly every student by name and evei’y student knew each athlete.. . At that time we were subsidized by the college to the extent that we re- ; ceived our ; room and board, which* amounted in. those days from 150 to 200 dollars. No. scholarship man con- 1 sidered'asking for more than this, and every one accepted the aid in order to I i. i>r> /'ii'TjA Speaking Of Books “Voltaire,” by Andre Maurois No new facts about the celebrated French cynic and philosopher, but rather the more important parts of his life story in a new and unusually in teresting presentation. Mr. Maurois is probably the most popular current .French author among American read ers. . • “Sons,” by Pearl S. Buck The character and scenes which made “The Good Earth” so widely read reappear ’in this continuation which traces the descendants of Wang' as they gradually return to the soil, j “The Gods Arrive,” by Edith Wharton Miss Wharton is writing a trilogy devoted to the life of an artist and his | inspiration, of which this is the sec-1 o'nd volume. During the course of the story she makes full use of her op portunity to satirize modern society with her usual skill and while this ‘does not measure up to “The House of Mirth,” it is weir done. “Geography,” by William Van Loon As Mr. Van Loon made history live by. his simple illustrations and allu sions in “The Story of Mankind,” so the'new volume pictures rivers and mountains, empires and republics— the whole epic story of bur world in a form whichvis both novel and un forgettable. ' . secure an education. 'Athletics were secondary, t’o education in our minds, a statement which is proved by a sur vey of that group today which reveals that every athlete has made good in tho line of work he.studied in college! I have visited nearly every large col lego and university in the west dur ing the past twenty years and this is the first institution at. .which I have found absolutely no college spirit. Penn State , has innumerable traditions worth preserving, why let .them die out together with your college spirit? Respectfully, " . C. H. HirtSHMAN ’lO 4mmS itty No raw tobaccos in Luckies —that’s why they’re so mild TV7T buy the finest, the very finest tobaccos in all the world—-but that does not explain why folks everywhere regard Lucky •Strike as the mildest ciga rette. The fact is, we never overlook the truth that "Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild” —so these fide tobaccos, after proper' ROHRBECK RECEIVES HONOR Prof. Edwin. H. Rohrbeck, director *of publicity for’ the School of Agricul ture, was elected vice-president of the' American Association of Agricultural College Editors' at a recent meeting. Professor' Rohrbeck, formerly held a position on .the executive committee of the association. DEAN ATTENDS CONVENTION •• Dean of Women Charlotte E. Ray, and Miss Mary E. Burkholder, assist ant to the dean, attended a conven tion of the Association of Deans in -Harrisburg Friday and Saturday. Between Glasses The ' Corner . . r unusual Ladies’ ScarfsmdSsocand $1 EGOLF’S QnPPtfll JTwo Boxes Kotex and) rQ OJJCC-ICll fOne Box 25c Kleenex. ) ** y aging and mellowing,.are tlien given the benefit of that Lucky Strike; purify ing process, described by the words—'' It’s toasted’.’. That’s why . folks in. every cify, town and hamlet say; that Luckies are such; mild cigarettes. ■■■ ■/ “It’s toasted" That package of mild lackfos Tuesday, November 15, 1932 • • : •" : : mk (Matinee Daily at 1:30 O'clock. Evening Opening at 6:30 Complete j Late Program After 9:00 p. m.) J TUESDAY—. „ Clark Gable, Jean Harrow in “RED-DUST”.. ; WEDNESDAY— Clive Brook, Ernest Torrence in “SHERLOCK HOLMES” • THURSDAY— .. - • Will Rogers, Dick Powell in “TOO BUSY TO WOIJK” FRIDAY— Robt. Montgomery, Tallulah Bankhead “FAITHLESS” SATURDAY— ' Victor McLaglen in ■ “RACKETY RAX” ' Special Added Attraction Penh State Foolball Victories Of the Past i Action Pictures of .Games with[Nav,y t Notre Dame andjOthe’)' Teams NITTANY TUESDAY-antl VfEDNESDAY— Bela Lugosi in “WHITE ZOMBIE” ’ THURSDAY— “SHERLOCK HOLMES” FRIDAY— “TOO BUSY TO WORK” SATURDAY—' “FAITHLESS” , por» N. C. O 'amous . in the s . 1c07t5 i the :-x-j [film ' iZdoni' . >:& have. xv no place in c igarettes.