COMPLETE CAMPU COVERAGE Vol. 30 No. 30 This Year's Calendar Retained. for 193435 Approved by Student Board, College Senate WORK DURING SUMMER EXTENDED TO 12 WEEKS Length. of Vacations Identical With Those Provided For This Year Adopted by the College Senate Thursday night, the College Calendar for the regular .1.934-35 terns will be identical in nearly every' respect with the calendar which is being followed this year. The only difference will be the ex tension of both the pre-session and post-seSsion periods from two to three weeks' duration. The 'change will provide twelve weeks of,snmmer work instead of ten weeks allowed in the past. Before it was submitted to the Senate, the calendar received the, approval of both Student Union 'and Student Board. Longer Holidays Retained The single holiday at Thanksgiving and the longer Christmas and Easter recesses were retained because it was maintained by the authorities that students would be benefitted' by the numerous opportunities for employ ment during the Christmas and East er vacations. With only one day be ing allowed between semesters,: the recesses are' identical With those pro .vided for this year: Because of the difference in dates, school 'fall 'and - 'ar (Wye - earlier hi June. 'Folloiving-the registration on September 17 and 18, classes for the first semester will begin at 1:10 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, .Sep tember 19 Alumni Homecoming Day has keen set for Saturday, November the Thanksgiving. holiday will 1* ob served Thursday,. November. 29. Christmas recess.will .begin,Saturday noon, 'December /5, and, will end at Wednesday •noon, January 2. •I • College To End June 7 The mid-year- commencerrient exer cises will be held Friday, February 1, while the first semester wilt end the following day. Registration for the second semester is scheduled for February 4 and 5, and the second semester will begin Wednesday, Feb ruary 6. • ' The Easter recess will continue from April 17, tb April 24,"and Men•i oriel Day, May 10, has been designat ed as a holiday. • The second semester will end Friday, June 7, with com= monument . day set for June 10. . Pre-session will open on Tuesday, June 11, and will continue for three Weeks until Monday,. July 1. Sum mer Session will begin the following dey, and .will..and August 9, with the post-session scheduled to extend from August 12 to August 30. ZOOK WILL SPEAK HERE ON MAY 12 U. S. Commissioner of I'ducation To "Give Principal Address on Scholarship Day . . • George Frederick Zook, United States Commissioner of Education, has accepted an invitation to be the principal speaker at the Scholarship Day exercises to be held here en May 12, administration officials announced late last week. After canvassing the nation for a successor to former Commissioner William J; Cooper, a committee ap pointed by Harold C. Ickes,, secretary of the interior, selected Zobk, who was president of the University of Akron, for this present poetic Roosevelt's ad ministration: Zook taught modern 'Kuropean his tOry at this College and at the , Uni versity of Kansas and Cornell Univer .sity. He was graduated from the . Uni versity of Kansas,' after . having Avork ed his way through the college by driving a hearse., During the war e die waS a Propa gandist under the diVision thief, George Creel, of the Office of *loca tion. . Dr., ZOok was - dolled. "Poker Pace" at 'the University of Akion, where he never revealed 'how lie ',voted and managed to keep free of 'omit Ulu niEipal =OM • , A.. 1. • ~. . . ; .--:,,:ii - A - -- s -,, 4, , i• . „4.; \ .. . 4, . ' - trill" _.4. ? :• -is,.. • 0 r g ian , I ESTABLISHED 1904 '''<,,,\ ": L.-2.1-71;'/' 4 . • , 1934-35 Calendar Sept. 13-18—Freshman Week Sept. 19—First Semester Begins Nov. 29—Thanksgiving Day (Holiday) Dec. 15 to Jan. 2—Christmas Re- • cess Feb. 2—First 'Semester Ends Feb. 6—Second Semester Begins April 17 to 24—Easter Recess May 30—Memorial Day (Holiday) June 7—Second Semester Ends BOARD MAY ALTER MEMBERSHIP PLAN Student Union Considers Adding Juniors—Proposes Checkers, Chess, Pool Tourney Possibility of the election of juniors , to the Student Union Board in order to create continuity of membership was the chief feature discussed at a meeting of the Board-Saturday after noon. A committee was appointed to make an investigation and recommen dation at the next meeting for the plan which is popular in many mid western colleges. Consideration of the extension of a financial plan for all student organi zations which would be similar to the recent repc;rts given by the Inter- Class•budget and publications was al so discussed. A committee in charge of the proposal will make a report at the next meeting. Junior' Committee Named Manlio F. DeAngelis '35 was . ap pointed , to investigate the desirability l of starting indoor tournaments in Old • Main. _ The:games, would-ineltide rbonfesth - lis h &Eke Fifa? and chess; Recent appointments of junior rep resentatives to the Student Loan Fund , committee selected under a new plan by a senior member in each ac tivity, include Alan R. Warehime, representing Men'S Student Govern ment, Katherine B. Humphrey, Wom en's Student Govenment, Irene R. Gobel, Women's Athletics, James A. Hannah, Inter.°Class budget, A. Con rad Haiges, publications, M. Eliza beth Diffenderfer, °Panhellenic Coun eil,' and Willard F. Rockwell jr., In terfraternity 'Council. Stephen A. Geney jr., P. S., C. A.; Harry D. Grier, Honorary Society Council, Philip 0. Grant, music and dramatics, and F. Lynn Christy, non fraternity unit, conclude the selec tions. No appointment was made for the Men's Athletic Association. The committee chairman,•Carson W. Culp '34, will call a meeting for Thursday afternoon to formulate plans for an other Loan Fund dance to be given next month. WINDSHIELD SEALS ILLEGAL Persons, placing stickers, such 'us College seals, upon the windshields of their automobiles will be prosecuted, according to a warning issued by the State highway patrol this week. An effort will be made by the patrolmen in this section to stop this practice and .a fine of five dollars will be placed upon the offenders. `We Can Never Abolish American Individualism, Initiative'---Sackett ','Wo can nevor do away with native initiative and American individual ism," said Dean Robert L. 'Sackett, Of the School of Engineering, in critic izing a speech by David Coyne, a New York engineer, made before a recent meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. In this speech, Coyne said that there were •two ways to meet the present economic situation, the first of which was the restraint of credit. The sec ond •called for old age pensions and subsistence for the physically disabled so that 'need not save Tor the proverbial rainy day. This plan also called for the taxing of incomes so that full public administration prog rains should be,carried on at the same rate as they are today. "This second plan is far from prac tical," Dean Sackett declared, "This administration or any other adminis tration cannot remove initiative and individualism fr o m the American makeup. IL is too fundamental 'and too, innate in American life." The governmental authorities will never be able to prevent individuals from perfecting inventions which in turn will produce returns for the in ventor, lie believes. In his .upinion, STATE COLLEGE ELIGIBILITY RULES FOR ATHLETICS AT COLLEGES DRAFTED Delegates of Thirty Colleges ' Within State Decide Upon Intercollegiate Body COLLEGES WILL VOTE ON PROPOSED CHANGES All:lnstitutions Ratifying' Code ,/ To Be Charter Members Of New Conference Nine regulations governing athletic eligibility and a tentative constitution for a proposed Pennsylvania Inter collegiate Athletic Conference were drafted at a meeting of representa tives from more than thirty colleges in this State held in Harrisburg Sat urday. ' Formal ratification or disapproval, of these regulations and the constitu tion must be made by the represented institutions before June 30, at which time every college willing to abide by the documents will become charter members of the new athletic confer ence. Heteel Calls Meeting Called by President Ralph D. Het zel, head of the Pennsylvania Associa tion of College Presidents, who acted in accordance with a resolution pass ed at the last meeting of the associa tion, the meeting convened with Dean Robert L. Sackett, of the School of Engineering, as the Penn State dele gate. While the proposed regUlations cov er many of the controversial matters, the questions of pre-season training and use of the training table were not considered. The nine rules drafted are as follows:, •.1. Participants shall ..be..carrying, ..an:Ardinarnsfer':iirinworC; , ascle'- , fined ,by , the curriculum , of the col lege. 2. Residence as a bonafide student for one year shall be required, sub ject to exceptions permitting fresh men participation approved by two thirds of the members upon applica tion. 3. Participation for three years is th 6 maximum, subject to exceptions permitting four years in the case of colleges under Rule 2. 4.. Transfers 'shall. be eligible after one year'S residence for three year's participation in any sport, less' the number of Ydara 'of inirsity participa- : tion in their sport before transfer. 5. There shall be no athletic schol- (Continued on page three) HIBSHMAN TALKS TO ALUMNI , CLUBS .IN NEW YORK STATE Edward K. Hibshman, secretary of the Alumni Association, spoke at a meeting of the alumni club in Buffalo on the subject, "College Traditions," Wednesday night, and on the work of the Alumni Association before the members of the Rochester club on the following night. At the meeting in Buffalo, the sec retary of the class of• 1889 was pres ent. Arrangements are being- made for a.. series of alumni meetings throughout the State during the months of February and March. this is one of the ways in which an individual may best advance himself. "This country will not become less mechanical," he declared. "In the fu ture it will develop into a more highly mechanized system, and that will call Tor more. machines which will be the result of individual ability. No gov ernment can retard this certain prog ress." However, we may approach a more perfect system, Dean Sackett tadieves, through the adoption of an old age pension, workmen's compensation, em ployment insurance, and similar de fenses against want. A certain amount of individual incentive and initiative will be retained despite this, he thinks. "It is: easy for me to remember what happened directly after the panic of 180:1P the engineering Dean continued. "People advocated new systems, but as'soon as industry and business revived, they soon reverted to the Old state of mind. "In 1007 there were the same diu in business, the same revival, the same thoughts of change, and then the same' return to individual activity," he con clUded. "I look for. the, same thing to happen again. The profit motive cannot he eliminated." • PA., MONDAY: ; EVENING, JANUARY 8, 1934 Dates Set : ; Cap, Gown Measurements Measurements ;:'and orders for caps and •gowns for .students grad uating in February will be taken at the Student. Union desk in Old Main beginning'', tomorrow after noon and concluding Friday after noon, according to!.Richard H. Shan amen '34, chairman of the mid year caps and :Owns committee. A deposit of .five dollars will be required at the time measurements , are taken, part cif iWhich will be re turned when the 'gowns are turned in. Orders for .invitations and an nouncements ' for the ceremonies will be taken,• at the same time. Prices for - the . invitations and an nouncements :Probably will be twelve cents' - each, although the charge has not , heen definitely de cided upon as yet; Shanaman. said. DR, OWENS GIVEN SABBATICAL LEAVE Mathematics: Department Head •To Make Insiiection Tour Starting febitiary 1 Dr. Frederick, , W' Owens, head of the department .of 'mathematics, has been granted Sabbatical leave of ab sence for the second semester, accord ing to announcement released by the President's officu.: ~The leave will ex tend from February 1 until June 30. He plans. to motor into the South And then to the m'estern part of the country. . While on: leave of absence, Dr. Owens. will visit,several state col leges and universities ,to study their methods and obtiiit s suggestions for carrying on his work here. Plans To Write Book During the '"first three or four months of the trip . :l›. Owens expects to do some studying in mathematics at some of the Western universities where* ,cian.fiirl:,4''oimaterjal;,which hi - desires. In addition;.lie is planning to - write:a hook . some time within the next seven or eight months. .• Dr. Owens received' his 8.5. , and M.S. degrees • from the University of Kansas in 1902 and was granted his Ph.D. degree at the University of Chi cago five years later. In the summer, months, Dr. and ..Mrs.•OwenS, who will accompany him on the trip, plan to visit several . of the national parks and to take a gen eral sight-seeing trip. Dr. Owens Will return in time for the opening of College . next September. P. S. C. A. CONCLAVE TO OPEN SATURDAY Union Theological Seminary Dean of Men To Speak—Dinner, Hike To Cabin Planned Including on its schedule three ma jor sessions, to be addresssed by Dr. • A. - Bruce Curry, Union Theological :Seminary ; Dean of Students, and A. R. Elliott, of the National. Student Council, New York City, a Student Christian association-Conference spon oared by the P. S. C. A. will open here Saturday morning, and -continue un til Sunday night. Registration fee for the conference,. which will be attended by men and' women student and faculty. delegates from %Bucknell University, Juniata. College, Susquehanna University, and! possibly Wilson College, and Blooms-i burg, Mansfield, and Lock Haven State Teachers Colleges, will be sev-: enty-five cents for delegates. Local students who contributed to the P. S.l C. A. canvass will be charged only, twenty-five cents. The first session of .the conference i will open at 2 o'clock Saturday after • -. noon, following a luncheon: Regis-1 tration of delegates will take place at the P. S. C. A. office Saturday morn-I ing. Dr. A. Bruce Curry will address! the first session on "The Bible and' the Quest of Life," while at '.the sec ond session Saturday afternoon, Mr. Elliott will speak on "Principle of! Program Building." A Student Movement dinner will be held Saturday night, followed by al hike and nine o'clock hot-dog roast l at the Andy Lytle cabin in Shingle town gap. Invitations for Penn State! students to attend the conclave are being sent out from' the P. S. C. A.' office, where those interested should register immediately. SCORERS' WAGES DELAYED According to a statement recently released by the officials in charge of the scoring. of the examinations for positions in the State liquor stores, it is indefinite when the markers will be paid by the State for their work. 1,034 Majority Polled By Lawrence Tibbett Rogers, Cleveland Symphony Receives 1,133, 1,045 Votes in Artists' Course Selections for Year Polling over one thousand votes and the Cleveland Symphony Orches the two-day student and faculty vote Course conducted by the COLLEGIAN Fi Lawrence Tibbett won with a tote Will Rogers was • selected by 1,133 v Orchestra received 1,045 votes. Contrasting sharply with the vocal, symphony orchestra, and speaker categories, the instrumental selections ran the closest for preference, with only eighteen votes separating first and third choices. Albert Spaulding, violinist, was high with' 923 votes, while Jose Iturbi, pianist, with 911, and the Roth String Quartet, 'with 405, were second and third, respeC tively. In the dramatic classification, the Little Theatre Guild was selected by 713 voters, while Cornelia Otis Skin ner, impersonator, was second with 667 votes. Votes received by' all• the other groups that were listed on the Artists' Course ballot polled only 1,- 1- 1 048 votes altogether. 1 Sr. all, 1,449 ballots were cast, ' amounting . to 7,440 selections. Voters failed to mark thirty-five selections, while forty-seven ballots were dis carded for improper marking. Thirty-seven ballots contained the name of Dr. Leon Sachers, of the University of Illinois, for inclusion in the speaker classification, but no other addenda reached so high a fig ure. Among them were the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Rosa Ponselle; Yehudi Menuhin, and Heifetz The National Symphony Orchestra, with 393, and the Minneapolis Sym• phony Orchestra, with 177 votes, were second and _third .choices of the vot ers; reipectiverY7: the'sYMPlion'Yeiii chestra classification, while Zimballst; violinist, received 242 votes in the instrumental category. . Richard Crooks was second high in the vocal classification, with 182 votes, I, while John Charles Thomas was third, with 87, and Dusolini Giannini, third, [with 49. In the dramatic classifica ,-tion, Dorothy Sands, imitator,,receiv ed 101 votes. Although Will Rogers received a landslide vote of 1,133, William Bee be, scientist, was selected by 187 vot ers, while Frank Buck, of "Bring 'Em Back Alive? fame, received 130. ( 'COLLEGIAN" WILL CONTINUE INSTRUCTION OF CANDIDATES Classes for freshmen editorial can didates for the COLLEGIAN will be re smiled at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow I night, the meeting to be held in the COLLEGIAN office, ROOM 312, Old Main according to Bernard H. Rosenzweig 34 news editor, who is giving the preparatory talks. ' Additional candidates for the edi torial board of the paper may report : at this time, Rosenzweig said, in an-1 nouncing that actual reportorial work will begin soon after the beginning' of the second semester. Until then, the weekly instruction lectures, dur ing which the freshman candidates study the style and requirements of the paper, will continue, he said. Passage of Child Labor Amendment May Result in Abuses, Says Tanger "Passage of the proposed child la bor amendment to the United States Constitution would doubtlessly open ,up iossibilitiCs for legislative abuses i by Congress," Dr. Jacob Tenger, head of the department of history and pol !Weal science thinks, "but the people land public opinion will have to check abuse in the use of this power as in other congressional powers." During the past month, an increas ing food of criticism has been heaped upon the state legislatures of the country who have been reversing their original vote on the Federal Child Labor amendment, making its !ratification likely within the year: ' The question has been raised as to whether or not such a reversal of op inion is legal. "There is nothing in the Federal Constitution which would prevent a state legislature from changing its negative vote to a positive one on the amendment," Dr. Tang3r stated; "pro vided no time limit has been set. But' no state may change its positive vote to a negative one. "I believe that it is only right that the , parents should have the assist once of their children in occupations which are by no means harmful," the political science head continued, and the state should have 110 newer' to each, Lawrence Tibbett, Will Rogers, ra rolled up the largest majorities in on the selections for the 1934 Artists' •iday and Saturday. al of 1,216 votes, a majority of 1,034. .oters, while the Cleveland Symphony PLAYERS TO GIVE SHOW ON JAN. 20 'Whistling in the Dark' Chosen For l'roduction—Richards, Ross, Norris Cast "Whistling in the Dark," a melo dramatic mystery comedy, .written by Lawrence Gross and E. C. Carpenter, will• be presented by the Penn State Players in Schwab auditorium on Jan uary 20. The play is under the di rection of Prof. Arthur C. Cloetingh, of the department of English litera ture. The leading characters In the play include Kutzer L. Richards '36 as Wallace Porter, the author of crime fiction novels; Betsy P. Ross '36 as Toby Van Buren, Porter's fiance; and James S. Norris '34, as Jake Dillon, the leader of a gang of criminals. 'Concerns Life of Fiction Writer Members of Dillon's gang are C. K. Lucas Brightman '36, who is play ing the role of Herman Leibowitz; Walter Bell '37, whose stage name will be Joe Salvatore; . and Alex E. •Fegal '37, who will portray the char acter, Charlie Shaw. Additional 'al - embers' the next'week. • The story of the'p;ay concerns the life of Wallace Porter, a well known writer of ci•iine fiction who is asked by the 'gang leader, Jake Dillon, to evolve plans for a perfect crime ,for. him. Dillon is desirous of getting rid of some of his competitors, but is afraid to make his own plans for fear he will make sonic slight slip and cause the police to bring him to jus tice. Porter evolves the plan as wanted by Dillon and it is around this situa tion that the main part of the play is built.. What comes of the entire affair is revealed in an unusual manner. In 1932 the play ran for a number of weeks in ,New York City and was lAter given u screen version. BERNUEUTER TO GIVE TALK ON SEX WEDNESDAY NIGHT Opening a series of two lectures on the question of sex, Tr. Robert G. Bernreuter, professor of psychology, will address an open meeting of the Social Problems club on the subject of "Sex and Social• Health—The View of Science," in Room 417, Old Main, at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday night. The second. lecture will be delivered by Prof. Russel B. Nesbitt on the sub ject "Sex and Social Health—A Moral View" when the club meets for the second time later this month. control or regulate such a procedure. "The amendment as originally con ceived was to make it possible for Congress to have uniform regulation throughout the United States, so that industries in one state could not hire boys and girls at a low wage and thus compete unfairly with industries in another state where child labor was forbidden," the professor concluded. With the recent ratification of the. amendment by this and other states,! a storm of objection, led by Alfred' E. Smith; Nicholas Murray Butler and others, has brought the question! to the foreground. The objections arc based on the ground that such a meas ure would be "An unwarranted en largement and extension of the juris diction and power of Congress." I Claiming that it is not limited to' the prohibition of the labor of young children• in factories or sweat-shops: under unhealthy conditions, but that' it includes all the children underj eighteen years of age and brings their I labor, whether in the home, the farm, or elsewhere, under the supreme con-' trol of Congress "to limit, regulate, and prohibit" as it sees fit, the lead ers of the opposition want either the. amendment revised or desire the pow er be left to the individual states to legislate as they see fh. PRICE FIVE CENTS REVISED SCORING SYSTEM ADOPTED BY I. M. COUNCIL Individual Champions in Boxing, Wrestling Tourneys To Receive 15 Points' RUNNER-UP TEAMS GIVEN PLACE AS POINT-WINNERS Points Allotted for Champions Of Soccer To Depend on Number of Entrants Revising the scoring system to be used in 'selecting this year's Remick , trophy winner, the Intramural Coon rcil has added the individual cham pions of the boxing and wrestling tournaments and the runner-up teams in all the intramural tournaments to the list of point-winners. According to the revised scoring system adopted last week, fifteen points will be awarded to a fraternity or non-fraternity unit securing an in dividual champion in these tourna ments, while fifty points has been al lotted for the unit winning the tour nament championship. The other change proVides that the runner-up team in each sport receive two-fifths of the number of points awarded to the championship team of that tour nament. Soccer Awards Changed As was the case last year, each of the teams winning the football, has !ketball, and mushbal tournaments will receive one hundred points, while 'seventy-five points will be awarded to I the winners of the track meet. Forty points will be given for the volleyball championship, and thirty-five points will be allotted for the cross-country, .golf, and tennis trophy-winners,.with the handball and . horseshoes chaM nionsto:receive,twentyAve points. In the soccer _ tOiti7Anictit ttic win=' ning team will receive seventy-five points, provided thirty teams have been entered 'in the competition.' If the 'number of entrants falls below thirty, the Winning team will receive only fifty points. 5 Points Given Each Team The system a l lso provides that five points be given for each team entered in competition. In the football, soc cer, volleyball, and mushbnll tourna ments, five points will be awarded a team for each game or event won. Twenty points will be awarded for i each league winner in the basketball tournament, while the first five men to place in the track and cross-roan ; try events will receive a designated number of points. • In the other tournaments only two I points will be allotted for winning a ' game or event. A team receiving a forfeit will be awarded a number of points corresponding to the number allotted the winner of a game or ev ent in the tournament, with the ex ception of the cross-country, track, and basketball tournaments. Each fraternity or non-fraternity unit will be allotted thirty-five points for each letter man or manager in the major sports and twenty-five points in the minor sports. Twenty-live points will also be allotted for each member of the Intramural Board for this year, with intramural tourna ment managers receiving twenty points. First assistant managers and num eral men in intercollegiate competi tion will receive fifteen points. Ten points will be awarded for second as sistant managers and varsity squid members who are not letter men. FIVE PRINTS I'RESENTED TO SACKETT BY ARTIST American Locomotive '.bevelooment Shown in Prints by Kuhler Five prints tracing the development of the American locomdtive from its early inception to the' giant "icon horses" of today were presented to Dean Robert L. Sackett, of the School of Engineering, by the artist, 0. Keh ler, recently. Kehler, who began his career as an engineer and later changed to paint ing, is the consultant engineer for several large steamship and locomo tive concerns. Included in the series now in possession of the School are color prints of the Pioneer, the Stev ens Crampton ,the DeWitt Clinton, and Ross Winan's Camels. The fifth print, a black and white etching, depicts three huge locomo tives prepared for the day's work and awaiting the signal• to start. The.pic tures will be hung in the hulls of Main Engineering for several months and later placed permanently on the walls of the engineering library.