Page Four ISupports Bezdek To the Editor This letter carries with it a sup port of the Bezdek side of the recent upheaval, if it may be called that. With the hope that this letter may at least stimulate a reconsideration of the matter, it is submitted for publica- As is generally campus-wide known, the Cartmell side of the situation has linen strongly supported by a major ity of the students in the . College. Per haps this may be partly due to an inclination to look at the controversy from the track mentor's side. Let us turn to the viewpoint of Director Bezdek by due respect of an old adage "there arc two sides to every ques tion." If a member, or more than one member of a faculty, does not favor the program administered by the head of a department, what is to be dbne? There are but two logical actions. They might try to get into the system the practice of their ideals, or second respond favorably to the require ments of the department and adjust themselves to fit into the program at hand. Was the Director not right in his action in view of this statement? Is not cooperation a fundamental function of every organization? Was this factor not ignored by the of fended member of this Bez4ek-Cart mell controversy? Should the Direc tor have closed his eyes to any non cooperation perceived? In considering the problem of intra mural or intercollegiate emphasis, who is right and who is wrong? Per haps we cannot or had better not try to answer the question. It may be true that the new athletic policy is the basic reason for the decline in Penn State athletics, but do not fail to con sider "yourself," student of State. At the completion of your school years, or during your stay in school, are you satisfied to boast of - the wonderful athletes here at State? Or would you rather have a fair amount of ability at this game or that game? Which appeals to you? Perhapi even if you answer this question, it may fail to even slightly alter the thought of big ger and better teams at State at prac tically any expense. What conclusions do we reach by this questionnaire-type letter? Per haps none at all, so why not drop the matter, entirely, students, and let the problem rest in the hands of those more responsible persons directly con cerned? Sincerely, J. E. F., A STUDENT Elections TO Honoraries PURPLE 'QUILL ELECTIONS (Literary Guild) William M. Stegmeier '34 Maynard P. Wood '34 , James B. Beatty jr. '35 Rose K. Braunstein '35 Emma M. Herbst '35 Ellen K.• Roberts '36 William A'. Shannon '36 - ALPHA THETA EPSILON' (Women's PrOfCBSiOII6I Journalism) Marcia B. Daniel '35 ;Mimi E. jicineinan '35,, Catherine M. dermaic - Margaret A. Minnig '35 Romaine R. Seebold '33 E. Marion Tomlinson '35 Florence M. Zerby '35 OMICRON NU (Honorary Horne Eronomiee) Margaret E. Borland '34 Phyllis I. Chumard '34 Lucille B. Lavo Eva M. Milicr '34 Lena A. Tomaselli '34 SCABBARD AND BLADE u s (ooon‘rr Military) William A. Abbott '34 Wayne S. Bitting '34 Joseph IL liartswiek '34 George N. Manukas '34 Harry J.. Lavo '34 A. Milton Miley '34 Wilfred Rader '34 Edward J. Rhoad '3 4 Kenneth N. Stead '34 Arlan L. Wentzel '34 TAU BETA PI ELECTIONS (Honorary Engineering Society) . Charles C. Cooney, jr. '34 Robert W. Fatzinger '34 Walter C. Johnson '34 .Daniel V. McCarthy '34 Henry S. Millington '34 James V. Ralston '34 Lawrence W. Smith '34 John K. Walter '34 DELTA SIGMA RHO ELECTIONS (Honorary Debating Fraternity) Anna L. Miksch '33 Karl li. Strohl '33 Morton S. Freeman '34 Ernest C. Miller '34 Gertrude Tulin '34 ETA KAPPA NU ELECTIONS Olonnrery Electrical Engineering Society) Charles C. Cooner jr. '34 David S. Dietz ''34 • David M. Hutchison '34 • Edward W. Osterhout '34 Arthur It. Swanson '34 If it's to be Properly Laundered It Will Be Done At PENN STATE LAUNDRY Phone 124 • 320 West Beaver Avenue Rainfall Here During Month of May Promises To Set All-Time Record Rainfall during May this far is in afternoon, the gauge showed. Last a fair way to establish an all-time Tuesday sixty-two hundredths of an high. Up until early yesterday morn- inch of rain fell. ing 5.44 inches had fallen, 1.35 inches The average rainfall mark of 4.00 inches for the month was established over the normal May rainfall mark, by averaging readings taken since according to Prof. Clinton 0. Cromer, 1880. Formerly under the sole direr- College weather man. tion of the department of agricul- Every day since the first of the tural and biological chemistry, the month, with the exception of Thurs. station and statistical reports are now day and Friday of last week, an d under the supervision of Professor Sunday and yesterday, at least Cromer, of department of agronomy. "traces"—less than one hundredth of an inch—'of rain have fallen. In all, State College suffered seventeen straight days of rainy weather during the first of the month, exclusive of the last week in April. The highest rainfall for a single day was recorded by the rain gauge on May 2. when ninety-nine hun dredths of an inch fell. Seventy--eight hundredths of an inch of rainfall were recorded on May 6, while seventy three hundredths of an inch fell on May 10. Sixty-seven hundredths of an inch fell during the rain squall Saturday DR. THOMAS G. SPEERS TALKS IN SUNDAY CHAPEL Stresses Inescapable Force Exerted By Religion of Present Time "Religion is a force as inescapable and as ever-present as the•atmosphere which weighs upon us whether we desire to acknowledge it or not," was the summation of the sermon.deliver ed in chapel Sunday morning by Dr. Thomas G. Speers, pastor of Brown Memorial Presbyterian church, Balti more, Maryland. Selecting as his topic, "What is Vital in Religion?" Dr. Speers gave three answers to this question, out lining them as a correct perspective in life, aiding an individual to be at peace with himself, and teaching the cardinal virtue of unselfishness. Casting aside what he termed as the "superficial aspects of religion," Dr. Speers advised the chapel audi ence to recognize its innermost needs in life as solvable only in responding to higher instincts. "Only in this way," he concluded, "can we feel that we are living according to a correct standard and consequently, feel at peace with ourselves." PI. GAMMA MU ELECTIONS (Honorary Social Science) Faculty • .Thomas K. Cowden George , W. Hartman Kathryn M. Stanford rani Wueller Graduate Students Oscar G. Darlington jr. George B. Mclntire William K. Schmelzle Phillip W. Wion: ,Undergraduates - - Fahringer •'33 '- Margaret E. Fahringer '33 John Q. Rodgers '33 Louis Rubin '33 Charles W. Shaeffer '33 Marlin C. Shinier '33 Walter J. Gerborn '34 No V. Giannini '34 Edward A. Gordos '34 Archibald C. Kantner '34 Andrew B. 'McNulty '34 Lee N. Page '34 Phillip S. Princenthal '34 Bernard H. Rosenzweig '34 Kenneth M. Stead '34 SIGMA XI ELECTIONS (Honorary Scientific Fraternity) Active Members Raymond M. Bell Lloyd T. DeYore Clifford 'O. Jensen Oscar A. Knight William M Lepley Raphael M. Ramos David H. Rank Elden E. Stably Associate Members Phillip L. Harris Thomas K. Cowden Lawrence J. Lennon Chapter Papers Fraternity Stationery Nittany Printing and Publishing Co. Between the Corner and Movies Phone 85 SOCIETY TO MARK TRAILS FOR HIKING Physical Education Group Sponsors First Move in Developing Complete System To make more complete use of nat ural facilities which the surrounding country offers, Discobolus, physical education society, sponsored the first of a series of trail-marking hikes Sun day afternoon. Jesse H. Brewster '33, committee chairman, was in charge of the work. • The organization nes planned the trail-marking hike as the first step toward developing a program similar to that which is now in effect at Dart mouth College. A highly-organized system has been instituted there which enables students to work off credits in physical education courses by hiking. Hugo Bezdek, director . of the School of , Physical Education, suggested the plan several weeks ago and the first step in carrying out the work will be made Sunday. The organization plans to mark out further trails early next fall, with a possibility of con structing cabins or lean-tos to make the program more complete. Prof. Eugene C. Bischoff, of, the School of Physical Education, is su pervising the work, while Brewster is chairman •of the Discobulos com mittee. Others assisting with the work are H. Thompson Dale '33, W. Earnest Brown '34, Louis Kreizman '35, and George D. Douglas '36. MP I IP7I 6001) TASTE IN A CIG ARETTE COMES FROM I FINER, MORE EXPENSIVE . TOBACCOS. THAT'S WHY I SMOKE CAMELS.TRYONE. r WHY NOT? THEY SAY MY KIND [TASTES BETTER, Avg AN THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN On Other Campuses Headline on front page of Cornell Day Sun: CORNELL WOMEN TO PLAY CHESS WTH HUMAN MEN. We trust that the Ithaca co-eds, de spite their associative experiences with Cornell male undergraduates, will meet the new type of contestant gracefully and without surprise. Twenty-six percent of a represent ative group of Vassar alumnae have married' men with whom they were acquainted from childhood. The per centage of those meeting their future husbands in church work declined from 14 percent in the '7o's to two percent in recent years. In line with a custom established last spring, track officials at Alle gheny College wear tuxedos while of ficiating. A gallon of the new legal brew is not sufficient to produce intoxication, according to reports from Stanford University.. After downing eight bot tles of 3.2, a Stanford student passed the Palo Alto police department's so briety tests. • ' A complete skeleton of a whale has been placed in the geology building at the University of Oklahoma. What a boner! The Mothers club at the University of Utah, according to reports, is con ducting a fierce campaign against stu dent hazing. Paddling on a new spot or something jibe that, we presume. Four University of Wisconsin pro fessors have filed petitions for offices in the Madison municipal govern ment, all listed on the Socialist ticket. Has Norman Thomas spoken there, too? =TM Out of 1.,240 student autos inspected at lowa. State College, seventy . -live percent failed to meet state motor -re quirements. 's4' Nriia ,7 i „ s ''4 ~' ' 111211 ,0 ,; K h st ' 'N. , AREN'T YOU CLEVER !. \ THE TASTE OF , WILL YOU HAVE 4\ ' THAT KIND. t CIGARETTE GTE ? , ~,,, \,, . ~',,s,' 01/111111";‘*;s4i.• ,V6;t: . ..g:Wr, 0k.k , 14‘; - ;::•,-N.:. 1 y , , i ethv.r` 4 ~,,‘ r \,...,.. 14 ..._ ,p,',.:7 - . • ) •-/ . 1-- , . ' L ~,,,,,,,..,,.,........,. \ ,„,,.,,„, ~......,,..,,,,..„ V -- - , 4 5 mon E r $. ... .......,,,,:.,...., .. . FRED,I DO LIKE ,t "ITS FUN TO 13E • 1, ' , , .. - .. ..4...K....Z.,7: 5:>:::„.:-.. ROM YOUR CI ; C : i si G vE ' I , BETER7, W M H E A LS :r 44 IsT:: IT. K :4 : ;; : f Ai s:ED F ' I O . : , .:T II: O :: , , 16‘ ' I C° —ll •' llt AlNF ilhg . 0 w in.: til ‘ .... ; ,,,- ",..4.451,*;,„,..... : .' t: 1 1 :' ,...... ''..........:::, wfl y ;\';' IT THAT THE ADS \ \(.:-:, ..., PONE . SAY ' PCB ‘ l ' ,':.:•';. Alliik?,' Caniels are made from finer, .....,. 4 .. , . ARE.TTE. MAGIC? ~ . : .s., ~ ~..„ , , , ~ ~..,„,:: ~..,;,.: ; ~ ~... MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos „ i ict , .. . .-,''.., i , ''''"''' than any other popular 1,... ‘5 ,..„ .... ,, : ,.. 5 ...„ e 7 , v..., 111".• ' .; , ;‘ , ,A, ~ 4 •-•_. 4, i t - , ‘10% ,,, ,5 1',\': - ','... ..,,,--."'' - - .1 , • brand TryCamels.Letyour .3 ''=', - • ' , . , K ' 'IC ~ i ... r., , .1 ' ''' , N s l / 4 :4-‘ tviV , .. '. , r . • ^,.:,•= , ~- I, ox. - .:- 1 5 \ ^ V. , ';‘o ‘oo, Ad...N taste respond to the flavor :.-.? • .... ". , , .., f.• 4 $ 40 ° '''...'i , . , ,'P. , /,e‘','‘.. --...• ''/ '• . - a r i y ou ','''.:' •;, ' ".- 1 . 0 !! • : . , :i i,, , 7.... , ,.... ,,,, , -- ~,/ .. . w of x rea h lt e o g b in acc t o o qu tee 7y me . the ..,..,. ... z..... ft,,, 75,., g 4„:, „ IA " ~•,, ,-, 7 ~ , : "9.,S't :111t• ' • truth of the saying: "It's the t ai, , Z.k . :- ..A , , ~:. u , , .. , • . '-..' • N .. ,.N..._ 1 ,-"•-.. '.- 1.„„-:: . y • tobacco that counts!" . *4, -__•••-... - . s,-''.‘ - - 9 '''‘ f — '... • ILL REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY. DEPT.IO4I. WINSTON-SALEM. N. C. " l `,.. 170 money.. FREE. 36• PAGE • IILUSTRATED MAIL BOOK CONTAINING 23 MYSTIFYING CIGAKTTE,CARD,AND COIN TRICKS.YOU CAN fOOL THOSE "WISE GUYS THAT KNOW IT ALL, WITHOUT SKIU-OR PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE. MAILTHE MEP BLANK ATRIGNT WIT+I Ti-IC fRONTS fRON) FIVE PACKS Of CAMELS. Statements Show Co-ed Opiniort,on, Government Merger Equally Divided Opinion on the proposed merger of men's and women's student govern ments seems about equally divided among women students, statements by representative women-reveal. Eva M. Blichfeldt '34, president of the Women's Student Government as sociation, said in giving her opinion of the- proposed system, "Theoretical ly the plan is good and with the care ful designation of powers, neither men's nor women's - rights would be trampled upon by . a government mer ger. At the same time, general ob servance of combined student-made laws or propositions would result in some more tangible and mutual in terest in the institution than the 140 MEN ATTEND. CONFERENCE HERE Representatives From All Parts of Country Hear Lectures On Industrial Subjects Ono hundred and forty delegates from all parts of the United States attended the Industrial conference held here recently. The same number were present at the annual dinner, at which Ray H. Smith s College comp troller, and W. S. Finley jr. gave ad dresses. "Industrial Stability" was the topic of a lecture given by L. -W. Wallace of the American engineering council. Mr. Wallace reviewed the causes and possible cures of the present economic depression. Prof. Magoun, of the Ma - ssachusetts Institute of Technology, offered a dis cussion of the fundamentals which lend to the development of strong in dustrial leaders with his talk on "Training for Leadership." Leo Henderson, director of the Rus sell Sage foundation, concluded the series of addresses by prominent State and national industrial leaders with a talk on economics from the view point of technology and its influence on society. The annual conference was termed the best of the fourteen held by the group since its formation. OLEDNOW PLAYING-- Tough Tongue Threads Razor Blades present weak element of college spir it." In agreement with her views were those of A. Elizabeth Preston '33, this yeai's secretary of the Women's Sen ate, and Harriet R: Henrie '33, for mer president of the Women's Ath letic association. Both were very op timistic concerning results and felt that although program may be slow at first, it will later be significant. "Women will lose out because they lack experience as clique members," said Lucy J. Erdman '35, newly elect ed vice-president of W. S. G. A. "I am opposed, to the merger because I do lilt think it will be a success since it is so little understood." Ruth Crowthers '33 ; National vice president of Cwens, agreed with Miss Erdman's views, believing that aboli tion of the already useless class of ficers was the only good feature of the merger plan. Selena A. Wunderlich '36, newly elected president of the sophomore class, also opposed the plan and sug gested that public discussions be held as an effort for better understanding. OFFICERS ELECTED FOR YEAR In the final meeting of the year ; Pi Mu Epsilon, honorary mathematics fraternity, held elections for officers for the coming year. .Those elected were Dr. Charles C. Wagner, director, Frank Brink !34, vice -director, Walter C. Johnson '34, secretary, 'Miss Gladys Quigg,. treasurer, and Henry I. Her ring '34, librarian. CLASSIFIED BALLROOM DANCING INSTRUCTION—In dividuaI instruction for beginners. Phone 7794 or sec Mrs. F. J. Hanrshan , Fyn Apartments.- _ etch INSTRUCTION—SociaI dancing Instruction: Individual and group lessons. Call Ellen J. Mitchell, 468-.1. Etch PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER—Typing of re ports. themes. theses. and tom letters on short notice. Reasonable rates. State Col lege Hotel. Phone 300. Etna PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Typing of themes, theses, term papers and form fit ters at reasonable rates, phone 565-11. • IendWAIS WANTED—Married couple desires work in fraternity house. Call 146 and ask for the chef. 2556ehDHE !culotte fronts!ram 5 Camel packe,E4sd patpald Free slngto Hook, ; I '/ Nam ..4 0. Strmt gkA Tuesday, May 23, 1933 Campus Bulletin Final distribution of graduation in vitations and announcements will be mado in Room 302, Old Main ; this af ternoon. Anyone failing to claim his order at that time will lose his de posit, as well as the invitations or announcements. Senior women will hold their annual formal dinner dance at the Nittany Lion Inn Saturday. All senior women and their guests are invited, it was announced by Mary B. Laranty '33, social chairman of the senior class. All sophomore and junior women COLLEGIAN reporters will meet in Room 312, Old Main, at 6:30 tonight. La Vic may be secured at the Stu dent Union desk between 11 and 12 o'clock. every day until next Wed nesday. Extra copies will be $5 each. Freshman and sophomore COLLEG IAN candidates will meet at the Phi Kappa Psi house at 7:30 o'clock to night. All sophomore and freshman busi ness and editorial candidates for the Penn State Froth should report to Room 309, Old Main, between 4 and 5 O'clock any afternoon this week. DRESSMAKING— Gni' Mrs. Dora Meredith. 121 S. 'Atherton SL 81164. ItnnJW NOTlCE—Clearfield Taxidermy otters fur atormge,. repairing. cleaning and glazing. Phone 228. R. tnpJM ItZSEILVE NOW—Lorne comfortable rooms with big closets. hot nod cold running water. mid new single beds. Only $2.30 weekly. Herter Club, 48. J. Ask for Joe Gifford. FOlt SALE—Franklin touringc model 1921. four tires In escullent condition. ion. Call Evers 298. ltpdCAR WANTED—Passenger tu- Philadelphia; leav ing Saturday. Return upon agreement. 1082 Chrysler sedan. Coll yin Karp. 62-W. LOST—Log-Log Dindex slide rule. Edward it returned to Paul Blerstein. 'Triangle House. call 5711. lthompPli LOST—Marigold's Social Pathology. 'Return to G. W. Goodley. 122 N. GM St.. 'or call 636. Reward: Itnp.lW LOST—Yellow tilipuver swenter, probly on W. Beaver Ave., Saturday mornin ba g. Call - Morgan at IPS. ItcumpßET. LOST—Black leather coin puree • containing sum of money and key.- Finder call Agri culture Economies' Dept. LOST—Pair of glasses in cream colored ease in And. Finder please call JOOOO }lye, ItinlKL LOST—Green fountain pen between Foot Of fice 'and Poch, St. on • My. FL Finder• ' please call Thomns mt. 254.. ltpdFT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers