Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, October 20, 1933, Image 1

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    COMPLETE CAMPUS
COVERAGE
•Vol. 30 No. 12
DANCE SUPERVISION
COMMITTEE NAMED
AT I, F. C. MEETING
Group Appointed to Investigate
Advantages of Buying
- • Cooperatively
COUNCIL CONSIIiERS NEW .
RUSHING SYSTEM RULES,
Under Plan Rushee Would • Use :
Preferential System in
Choosing House
Appointment of two committees;.
one to supervise the scheduling of so
cial 'fraternity dances with a view-to
better, distribution of the affair's, and
ono tos investigate the advantages' of
coopetative buying among . local :or;
ganizations featured the meeting' of
Interfraternity Council heltr
night. •
in addition to, the appointment, of,
`thn.two new committees, the' Council
ilia, temporary suggestiona..a,
the rghiiiig .committees' of' bah the
frateWiiiivisors-council, and 'orln:
--,,terfraternity Council. The major sug
[.zgestion of
. the draft is to find-: a,
' system ,whereby the freslima*,niay
date.thefr'iOrnity, as well as.the.fra—
ternity,driptg, the freshman. '-,•
~•
.6 Ciiiiid : i'ledge 'at Any Time
the plans advocated by the
.tvg*roups, the rushee might at any.
tine during either the first.or! second
period notify a central board of the
fraternity which he desired
Tho house, if it agreed to 'accept: bhp, I
could pledge him immediately, and.he
could move in. On a regular date`fOr
'organiied bidding, the rushed...Wcild
use the preferential. sy s te.m 1 in
choosing the house to which he yds)*
to go by • signifying • two. or .thiQe
houses which "he' would' join if !•;45F
.'.:A.:Tirst:lear. man who •had•
two or three houses to which hewciuld
bid ; . would be:Considered
-tornatically accepting the bid of the
house giving, him one, if, he 'reeleved
only ono bid. If' none of the.houses
which he desired to join gave him,
bids, he could report to any houSe• to
which ho was invited. However,. if
he did not wish to remain' there ..the
bid would not be binding. Diseussion
of the major alterations in the: code
• Will be taken up by the committee . o
length..
Wayne P. Varnum '34 was 11PM:tint
,cd head of the , student comniittee
which will arrange dance (bites by
consultation with individual
. fratei;-
pities, while Theodore S.'Rogers.'34,
'Leonard Bowers '35, Robert Gra
ham jr. '35, A. Kenneth Maitre ."35,
and John S. Rineheimer '35 Will serve
as committeemen in charge of the ar 7
rangementwork.
Men working on the committee in
vestigating the possibility of a co
operative buying enterprise, . espec
ially among caterers here include
,Donald G. Brubaker '34, . Cleo. N:
Bushey '34,Edward R. Foster '34; Phil
F. Hines '34, and Ralph E. Furman
'35. Earl B. McCaleb '35, George H.
Milligan '35, William Parrish '35,
Vernon D. Platt 1'35, and Clifford C.
Wood '35; arc also committeemen.
:7j Ono member of the cooperative buy-
Zing is yet to be appointed.
BLUE BAND GIVEN
2 FOOTBALL TRIPS
Wilt Go to New York on October 28,
Philadelphia Novembei 18,
Fleming Annomiees
. Trips to' New York City and Phila
delphia for the Columbia and- Penn
games have been arranged • for the
Blue Band as the two away -from
home appearances of the grchili this
year, Neil M. Fleming, graduate,.man
ager of athletics ; announced yester
day. .
. The first trip will be made to Hew
York City for the' Penn State-Colum
bia , game -Saturday October 28. The
band will leave Friday morning frdm
Lewistown by ‘ train, returning Sandi) ,
morning, and the group will stay at
the Hotel Lincoln over the zmeelcerid.
According to tentative arrange
mentS, the Philadelphia &if), Novem
ber 4.8 will be made by' bus,. leaving
Friday and returning Sunday.' The,
band will play a concert at the annual
Penn , Athletic Club smoker the night
'before the game.
. .
. The band will :continue with the , let
ter formations and drills Which' were
started this year, according to.'Frof.
Richard Wl. Grant, head of the depart
ment of music, who has boOn directing:
tlie, work: He declared that the 'or-
ill -
. , . Ar t l.4 % .
______) t t
41 ,
. run #tatir : mt „,,,_2 izaurgia tt
4. ESTABLISHED
1904
• -e.
, , -
. . •
... .-,., •
Seeks Alumni Aid
• • Edwar d . - Hibshman; alumni
setretory;' Who is cooperating with
Collcge . administration by en
support of the alumni in
''cottOeting a State=wide campaign
for ;Ithe' . jittasige •of Amendment
Nitintiir . : 8: • - •
P. S4'. 4 : ',:. TO. 'BEGIN
: : bRIYE; FOR-:52,600
42 . StOdent; 8. Faculty Leaders
Will* Conduct All-College
" • Dr ive for Funds
• . With-42,600 .set ai-,the goal to be
reaqt,ted' through' student subscriptions
and, Preciges,,,s9,oo to:be received from
raetph . Frs of, -the• faculty, and $6OO
set
. .as::the. -goat for. women leaders
td.vitiseo forty=twc student. and eight
fieuttiVP.! . 5... p„ A., finance campaign
illiPrsicie , leader are organizing the
gpriupb:alt:callegClcantrasS,...to raise
~' 1- ,
tp_is in charge of
the .canvass. Of.. men :ittidati, while
Dorothy' I: Mergenthaler '34 will so
' Pervisd,ivork among the women. Prof.
J. ' . of ,the-. engineering
extension • department,. heads the;
facylt3i 'committee, .'assisted by Dr.
Andrew,A. porland, head of the dairy
departMent.,...
'Division Leaders Named
• Eleven htudentS•.have been chosen
to,crincitia work among the , fraterni
ties. '...lber , ;inelude :Jahn' F. Beth
-Carson' '34, Charles
A. , Myers: Bernard H. Rosenz•
weig•l34,•Richni'd , .C.:-.Smith '34; Fran
cis', Wacker 'and, Edward W.
Yorke, - 14.1 -Tarry A'. Lehman '35,
'3s,,Thilip M. Smith
35, and ;Richard H. Mbureeq36, con
clude hC ,. .frafernity drive section.
• *ark ~ a rilOng non;traternity, men
will beconducted by William E. Bell
'34,'Dbugla's R. Borst '34, Henry F.
Boyer '34,, George W., Brown '34, Lee
N: Page '34, William A. Parsons '34,
Strikler '34 and William W.
Wilson .'34.`
Jtiniors•in 'the non-fraternity work
group' include Manlio F. Dc Angelis
'35, James A..Gaiser, '35, Robert L.
Gran !35, :Henry F. Nixon '35, Robert
K. Paxton '35 and James W. Town
send' '35, John E. Binns '36, J.
Francis 'Gehr, '36, Chester W. Moore
!35 and .Charles'H: Salt.'36 arc sopho
inereS' completing the non-fraternity
work.' • . •
Three men, Peter Lektrich '35,
Stephen A. Gehey '36, and W. Dean
Struble '36.1011 cover Watts, Varsity,
arid. Freer. halls respectively. .Doro
thy..l.• Mergenthaler '34, as head - of
Work with wonien students will be as
sisted:, by Cartyn V: Manifold '34,
Betty B. Springer.'34, Louise A. -Hal
bach
,'35; Katherine B. Humphrey '35,
Margaret Kinaloe '35, Claire W.
Lichty '35, Frances T. Paschall '35,
and Selma A. Wunderlich '36.
• Robert — A. Higgins,' Sylvester K.
Stevens, .Anies• E. 'Neyhart, 'and Ar
thiir%R. Warnock are , faculty men
Working 'directly ' under Professor
Keller - ii - the faculty 'drive, while
OsCii4. Smith, Adam L. Beam, Pal-
Mer C. Weaver, and Chesley A.
Boiline!aii 'working 'under Dr. Bor
land. • •
HEPBURN INVITES STUDENTS
:TO PHILADELPHIA NAVY. YARD
Penn• State students have been in
yited.,to attend the:annual Navy Day
serVices.tU beheld in he Philadelphia
Navy:Yard on October 27, according
•letter. received by President Het
let this :week from A. J. Hepburn,
Coffirriandint of the Fourth Naval
Hiatt-let
•The, ; program will be featured by
the laying of the cornerstone of the
new ,United' States Naval Hospital.
Adinission and parking are free. The
NevyYard and aircraft factory,shops
will lie openertO . thi general public!.
STATE COLLEG
AGRICULTURE DEAN
URGES PASSAGE OF
AMENDMENT NO. 8
Watts Declares Failure of Bond
Issue Would Be Severe
Blow to School
STATES RURAL PEOI'LE
IN NEED OP LEADERS
Federal Appropriation Must Be
Matched Dollar for Dollar
By State Treasury
Additional significance was at
tached to the necessity for passage
of Amendment Number 8 when Dean
Ralph L. Watts, of the School• of
Agriculture, yesterday described the
curtailment of work in that school if
the $25,000,000 bond issue fails to
win the voter's approval on Novem
ber 7.
"The School of Agriculture is now
operating on a minimum budget
which is much below the budgets of
recent years," the Dean stated.
"Courses have been dropped, person
nel reduced, and projects discontinued
so that any further curtailment in
funds would be destructive to the en
tire program of the School.
• Federal Funds Threatened
"The rural population is• looking
to the College for the development
of leadership, for the 'solution of im
portant farm problems, and for the
continuance of the extension service
in agriculture and home economics.
There can be no further reduction in
funds without seriously affecting the
welfare of a large proportion of the
population of the State," Dean Watts,
added.
Supported to a great extent by
federal appropriations which must be
matched with state funds dollar for
dollar, the School of Agriculture
steeds
the
...sitiTer..an_ extremely ,h e a v y
loss,' the Dean' revealed; 'bailing that
some . money •is matched by' county
extension associations with money ap
propriated by the county commis
sioners.
Referring to. the county organiza
tion of the School, Dr. Watts showed
that all but two counties of the State
have exension service and home eco
nomics demonstrators. As the Col
lege has the only experiment station
in the state, he continued, the ser
vice should not be dropped as, the
result would be disastrous.
Lowering consumer costs through
the protection of farm p l roducts by
research and experimental• work
throughout the State, the head of the
school cited an instance in which the
institution saved thousands of dollars
in future costs by eradicating a po
tato disease Which' threatened the
entire crop.
Calling attention to, the fact that
the majoriy of students in the School
of Agriculture are from the rural
sections of Pennsylvania, the Dean
pointed out that thousands of . farm
people over the' State will support
Amendincint Number 8.
300 Freshmen Will Attend '
First I. F. 'ge Banquet
Tomorrow Night N:
Reservation!
'Approximately 300 pledges to
State's fifty-four social fraternities
will inaugurate the first Interfrater
nity Pledge Dinner at the Nittany
Lion Inn at 5:45 o'clock Sunday night.
Tomorrow night has been set as th
last time, at which reservations am
payments of the fifty-cent fee will b
accepted.
"Penn State Men—Yesterday an
Tomorrow" will be the , subject
"Bill" Wood 'l5 who will give tic
principle - talk of the, evening. Pres •
'dent Ralph D. Hetzel has accepted
invitation to be 'present, and will d
! liver a few words, while John T. Ryl
'34, president of the senior class, a I
Heiman C. Brandt '34, president f
Interfraternity Council, will '4l
speak.
Entertainment following the tal s
will be furnished by members of t -e
pledge group. Donald Dixon '37 wII
play the piano, while an instrumen 1
and vocal trio composed of Norm n
Holland '37, Isadore Levinson '37, a d
Ira Sandroff '37 will sing "The La t
Round-up," and other popular son
Other entertainment will be provid ,
by Head Cheerleader John T. Davi s
'34, *who will lead singing and eheeis
at the dinner. •
Seating at the dinner is to be ar
ranged by means of placecards, which
will later serve aS name cards so that
, PA., THURSDAY - EVENING, OCTOBER 20, 1933
`Collegian' To Issue
Anniversaiy Number
Celebrating the advent of the
thirtieth year of publication of the
COLLEGIAN, a special Alumni
• Day and anniversary issue will be
published Saturday; morning. In
cluded in the issue will be last
minute news of featUres of Alumni
Day, including the final line-up for
the Lion-Lehigh grid battle in the
afternoon. Featurci outlining in
teresting events •in the history of
the COLLEGIAN will;' , 'he included.
All mail subscribers will• receive
the issue, which will also be dis
tributed to all' local subscribers.
In addition, papera uivill be sold on
the street and at - the game in the
afternoon at the . usual price of
five cents per copy.;.
HETZEL TO GREET
FACULTY TONIGHT
700 Members of College Staff
Expected To Attend Annual
Reception in Old Main
Over 700 people ; members of the
College staff and Laity, will attend
the annual reeeption,of,Przsioent and
Mrs. Ralph D.' Hetiet tonight from
8:30 to 11:00 'o'clock i,;in the second
floor lounge of Old
•
On the receiving lin ,
President and
Mrs. Hetzel will be assisted by Mrs.
Henry D. Brown, Williamsport; Mr.
and Mrs. John C. Cosgrove, Johns
town; Mr. and Mrs. George H. Deike,
Pittsburgh; Mrs. Clara C. Phillips.
Washington; Dr. and ;Mrs. James N.
Rule, Harrisburg; andi , Miss Florence
M. Dibert, Johnstown.l,
Entertainment Pro ram Listed
Over sixty members of the faculty
will act as ushers for t e occasior, for
which the etnire persol nel of the Col
lege will he present. • he reception is
one of the outstandin ,events of the
During the evening's entertainment,
refreshments will be served in the
Sandwich Shop in the basement of 01<1
Main, while the guests will dance in
the first floor lounge to 'the musk of
a campus orchestra. The building
will be decorated with autumn flowers
and leaves.
This is the fourth annual reception
to be held by President Hetzel in the
present Old Main building. Four
years ago, the President's reception
marked the formal operiing of the
then-newly-completed structure.
JUNIOR, SENIOR ART STAFF
OF 'LA VIE' TO ➢FEET FRIDAY
There will be a meeting of the
junior and senior art stair and the
La•lric in room 315 Old Main at 7:00
o'clock Friday night, according to
Howard T. Maynard '3A, art editor.
At this meeting special assignments.,
will .he made•tO the staff members. A
temporary art motif for the
_annual
haibeen made, to be used throughout
the Imok.•
s Closing Time for
finer Sunday
from each fraternity will be
'seated next .to men from another
houie, in Order that the first purpose'
of the affair, that of getting better,
acquainted, will be achieved. . •
Although this is the first affair of
any magnitude ever to be held at Penn
State, similar dinners for fraternity.
!pledges have been held at most of the
leading colleges and universities of,
the East. Included among the insti
tutions at which such a dinner is an',
annual affair are the University of .
Pennsylvania, Bucknell University,
and the University. of Illinois.
Because of the necessity of making
definite seal 4 - and catering arrange
ments with the Nittany Lion ; all•fees,
in cash or check made out to the Nit
tany Lion Inn, must be in without
fail by tomorrow night, either to the
I. S. C. A. office, or to John E. Ryan
'34, chairman of the committee on ar
rangeMents, at the Phi Kappa Psi
house. Tickets will be mailed early
Saturday morning, and admission to
the affair will be solely upon presen
tation of these tickets.
interfraterriity Council at its meet
i last night urged all house presi
its to guarantee a large represen
on from each house, in order that
meeting should not only prove .a
ess this year, but should become,
it is elsewhere, a College institu-
de
tat
th
Sc
More Than 1000 Alumni Expected
To Witness Lion-Lehigh Grid Tilt
Engineers Hold Weight
Advantage of 16
Pounds to Man
CONTEST TO START AT
2:30 O'CLOCK SATURDAY
3 Players Will Fill Varsity
Positions for First Time
In Lion Line-up
With over 1,000 alumni and friends
looking on, the Nittany Lions of Penn
State will resume athletic relations in
football with the Brown and White of
Lehigh University on New Beaver
field at 2:30 o'clock Saturday after
noon.
The game Saturday afternoon will
mark the' thirteenth Urea that the
Lions have met the Engineers sine,:
' 1888, when the rivalry first began. It
also marks the first time that a Le
high team has played on New Beaver
field since 1921. In 1931, however,
Oa Brown and White met the Lions in
Philadelphia in an unemployed bene
fit game.
Line-up Shuffled
Lehigh will invade the lair of the
Lion wtih a huge weight advantage,
outstripping. Captain Tommy Slusser
and his mates.sixteen pounds to the
man. Both the backfield and lines
men• will be outweighed to the same
degree.
'But such a handicap by no means
has given the men of Coach Bob Hig
gins an inferiority complex—a defeat
ist attitude, as . it were. Every last
man realizes whht a• proposition 'he
faces,'and Lehigh
- will - leave - New - Beaver field rehliziiig
that they have been through a gruel
ling battle.
Short Rated as Triple-Threat
Encouragement to the Lions comes
lin the form of news that Dick Wool
bert, out since the week before the
opining game, and "King" Cole, hurt
in the Lebanon Valley fracas, will
both bo available at the tackle berths.
Although the Nittany mentor has not
decided on a starting right end be
cause both Bucky McKee and George
Douglas, 170-pound sophomore, arc in
jured, Captain Slusser is definitely
slated for the other wing position.
Dave Sloan, who has been in plenty
of action since the infant season open
ed over two weeks ago will start at
left guard.
Captain Paul Short; 170-pound vet
eran quarterback, is rated as the hos
tiles' chief threat. He is responsible
for Lehigh's kicking; passing, and
running game and does the thinking'
for the team. Right Halfback Harry•
Ock, 180-pound .junior paves the way
for Short's running gains, while Neil
Robinson, left guard, is another po.
tent factor in the hostile ground at
tack.
TRIBUNAL CLEARS
HOUSE DANCE RULE
Declares That Freshmen May Not
Attend Fraternity Dances
At Other Houses
"Freshmen may not attend frater
nity dances other than regularly
I scheduled affairs at their own houses.
Violation of this rule in the future
will lead to certain punishment," de
clared C. Willson Anderson '3t, tem
porary head of Student Tribunal, af
ter two cases before Tuesday's meet
tn g had hinged upon the point that
the plaintiffs were in ignorance of
this fact.
Two men were sentenced at the ju
dicial session. James Plummer 'B7,
was convicted of smoking a pipe at
the .Muldenberg football game, and
will wear for two weeks signs read
ing, "Tribunal is no 'pipe'," and "Re
port all cases to Tribunal."
COnvicted of going to a football
game without customs, Richard Rob
erts '37 will clarify any doubt as to
the fact that "I'm a Big Noise on the
Campus," by carrying a sign stating
that, and by hauling behind him three
number ten tin cans tied to each
ankle.
Five men were fouhd not guilty
of charges, preferred against them lit
the meeting, while two were released
from customs after the end of the first
semester. Signs clarifying all doubt.:
ful points in the customs rules as out
lined in the Student Handbook ; will
' be posted on all school bulletin boards
within the ne:ft week.
Returns to Line-up
DICK WOOLBEICI":35
ALL-COLLEGE PEP
MEETING PLANNED
Student Body Will Assemble in
Recreation Hall To Hold
Football Rally
"Beat Lehigh!"
That will be the slognn when the
entire student body of the College
gathers at Recreation hall at 7 o'clock
tomorrow night for a mass meeting
preparatory to the LThigh game Sat
urday afternoon: Thomas' J. Harper
'34, president of the Athletic Asso
ciation, will be in charge of the meet
ing, which will last about an hour.
At ten minutes of twelve tomorrow
noon Sherman Lutz, airplane pilot. will
appear over the town and give a fif
teen minute exhibition of stunt fly
ing, and will then drop handbills an
nouncing the mass meeting. Two free
tickets fonairplane rides. wilralsojai
droppdd; and handbills Will
out at the • Corner during the' noon
hour.
Rally Speakers Named
. .
. .
The fresh:min and sophomore R. 0.
I'. C. bands will parade through the
fraternity section/starting from the
! Delta Tau Delta fraternity house at
6••30 o'clock. The Blue Band will be
present at the mass meeting to give
a program of.music.and to provide the
accompaniment for the College songs.
' All freshmen will be required to oc
cupy seats on the main floor of the,
hall, while upperclassmen, alumni, and
townspeople will sit in the balcony.
Fraternity presidents have been re
quested to urge the upperclassmen to
attend the meeting, and it will be a
Tribunal offense for freshmen failing
' to attend the rally,' Harper declared.
Among the speakers will be - Burly:
Watson, president of the Alumni asso- i
ciation, and Pete Mauthe, of the Ath
letic Board of Control.
The rally will be featured by talks'
by Bob Higgins and other members of
the coaching staff, as well as by Cap
tain Tom Slusser and members of the
varsity squad. The Athletic Associa
tion urges the attendance of the en
tire student body, and extends a spec
ial invitation to the alumni, towns
people, and in2mbers of the faculty.
DR. CLARENCE BARBOUR
WILL, ADDRESS CHAPEL
Brown University (lead To Speak On
'The Test of the Long Road'
'Dr. Clarence Augustus Barbour,
president of Brown University, will
be the speaker in chapel Sunday mor
ning. He has announced that his sub
ject will be "The Test of the Long
Road."
Dr. Barbour graduated from Brown
University with an A.B. degree in
1888. Graduating from Rochester
Theological Seminary in 1891 he has,
sinco then, received the degree of
D.D. from the University of Roches
ter, Brown University, Williams Col
lege and Colgate University; the de
gree of S.T.D. from Syracuse Uni
versity and the degree of LL.D. from
Denison University.
Ordained into the Baptist ministry
in 1891, Dr. Barbour was pastor of a
Rochester church until 1909. Ile has
since served as International Secre
tary of the Y. M. C. A. of North
America and as President and Wyc
koff Professor of Homiletics at Ro
chester Theological Seminary. He has
been president of Brown University
since 1929.
sAcKErr -NAMED CHAIRMAN
Dean Robert L, Sackett, of the
School of Engineering, was appointed
chairthan of the Committee on Student
Selection. and Guidance at a recent
meeting of the Engineer's Council for
Professional Development.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Graduites' Meetings to
Stress Importance of
Amendment No. 8
REGISTRATION TO BEGIN
TOMORROW AFTERNOON
President Hetzel Will Address
Visitors on Problems
Facing College
With, more than 1.000 alunthi
peeled to return for the fourteenth
annual Homecoming this week-end,
'the program of, activities, featured by
'the Penn State-Lehigh grid contest,
will open with a mass meeting in
Recreation hall' tomorrow night.
Tho importance of graduate support
for 'the passage of Amendment. Num
ber 8 will be emphasized in the pro
gram which has been prepared by the
Alumni association. Edward K.
Hibshman, alumni secretary, has an-'
flounced that a thorough explanation
of the situation will he given at the
meetings scheduled for the week-end.
Registration of alumni will open in
the first floor lounge of Old Main
tomorrow afternoon and will continue
until Saturday afternoon. Following
the mass meeting tomorrow night, the
annual Varsity Club smoker. will he
held at the Nittany Lion Inn,•inStead
of at the Centre Hills Country Clugtio
was previously announced. .
• Chairmen To Rep047,VA.:41: 1 e4
1••:'•*--
• A golf tournament in charge.6ll .
P. Mali, is scheduled for Sal, 6,Y"
\morning, and students are requested
to refrain from using the course.while
the tournament is in progress. The
regular alumni meeting will he held
in Schwab--Juiditttrlum. at 11 o'clotik,
'with President Ralph D. Hetzel speak,
ing on Amendment Number 8 Mid*
its importance to Penn State.
Alumni chairmen from the various
counties will be 'asked to report the
progress of the bond .issue campaign.
The meeting will be followed by an
informhl luncheon in the Old Main
Sandwich Shoppe.
The week-end's sports program will
be opened when the freshmen grildera
oppose Villanova, with the kick-off
set for 12:30 o'clock. The Penn State-
Lehigh encounter will begin at 2:30
o'clock, and a cross-country meet with
Lehigh is scheduled to start during
the second quarter.
Invited To Cider I'arty
The alumni will he entertained at
dinner at their respective fraternity
houses, and the alumnae will be the
( guestsof the senior women at dinner
in Mac Allister hall at 5:A5 o'clock.
Both alumnae and alumni, as well'as
members of the College faculty, Ml
hors, and guests are invited to attend
the annual cider party in the Armory
at 8:30 o'clock.
Since the party is %intended to be
informal, no prograM has been ar
ranged, and members of Lion's Paw,
senior honorary society will act as
hosts. They will be assisted by mem
bers of Blue Key, junior honorary
society.
Tho week-end's activities will be
brought to. a close • with the chapel
(service in Schwab, abdaorium at, II
o'clock SundaY.,ntorning., Vr., : Charles
A. Barbour, Dean irt Students at the
Union Theological Seminary, New
Pork City, will be the speaker.
The Interfraternity.Council, in co
operation with the Alumni association,
is sponsoring a contest for fraternity
house decorations. More than twenty,
houses had signified their intention of
entering the competition, according to
Nelson Thomas chairman of the
contest committee:
The contest, is intended primarily
as an outward gesture of welcome - to
the visiting graduates. Although not,
included in the contest, the WOlll2ll . ti
fraternities are preparing to exhibit
similar decorations.
Alumni and faculty members will
compose the committee which, will
judge the displays. A loving cup will
be awarded to the winning house.
Notice
Students holding receipts for the
second-hand books that were left in
the defunct Penn State Co-opera
,tive association store last spring
may redeem them in one of the
offie:s of the P. S. C. A., Old Alain
either Tuesday or Wednesday.
The books were 'obtained at the
public sale held yesterday by the
trustees of the organization for
$2.50. Only five bids were made
on the lOt which consisted of about
235 volumes.