Page Two PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Published eenal.weekly during the College year, except on Whim, by students of The Pennsylvania State College. In the Interest of the College, the students, faculty, alumni, and friends. THE MANAGING BOARD CHARLES A. MYERS 'St FREDERICK L. TAYLOR '34 Editor Md..) Manager. GEORGE A. SCOTT '34 HAROLD J. DATSCH '34 Managing Editor Circulation Manager WILLIAM M. STEGMEIER '34 IL EDGAR FURMAN '34 A,sistant Editor Local Advertising Manager BERNARD IL ROSENZWEIG '34 JOHN C. IRWIN '34 News Editor Foreign Advertising Manager JAMES M. SHEEN '34 - FRANCIS WACKER '34 Sports Editor Classified Advertising Manager MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 8, 1934 AN AMERICAN YOUTH MOVEMENT? 1. Present Student Groups (This is the first of a series of editorials on attempts to form a Youth Movement in America.) For some time now, liberal writers have been de ploring the fact that there is no real Youth Movement in America. They point to the traditional apathy of the American college student, his preoccupation with campus lifo and his indifference to events and situations outside college walls. And they contrast this with the interest ml and effective youth groups in such countries as Cuba, Russia, Germany, and Italy. In general, the accusations of these writers are true. It cannot be said with any degree of reality that there is such a thing as a concerted Youth Movement in this country. In spite of the increased interest in .national affairs aroused by the depression and sub- sequent attempts at recovery, a. great many American students aro simply not interested. At the present time, however, there are a number of groups endeavoring to interest students in national problems and to adopt a plan of action along some par ticular line. During the past Christmas vacation, sev eral of these groups held conferences in Washington, D. C. They were the League for Industrial Democracy, the National Student League, the National Student Fed eration of America, and a combined convention of these and nine other organizations meeting as "The National Conference on Students in Politics." The latter was an effort to convene widely-divergent students groups in order to consider the question "Must We Take A Stand?" The National Student Federation of America is probably the most representative of any of the student groups. Delegates to its conventions are usually the student government presidents of the large number of colleges and universities which are members of the Fed- eration. The first concern of the delegates at the con ventions is the discussion of strictly campus problems. At the last convention, however, so many of the sessions wero devoted to national affairs, that the delegates voted to confine their discussion in the future to campus topics in order to have "less sleeping in the sessions." - Contrasted with this group at Washington were the two radical organizations, the student branch of the League for Industrial Democracy and the National Stu dent League: The - Primer is fhe student socialiSt organi zation in America, and is more or less dominated by old er, non-student socialists who are members of the League. Its program is - militant and along socialist lines. Tho National Student League is also a militant, radical group, but it is not officially affiliated with any poltical party. It seeks to interest the student in na tional affairs by a militant approach through student problems on the campus such as R. 0. T. C., educational retrenchment, and racial discrimination.- Other student groups, national in scope, include the men's and women's Christian associations, the League of Nations Association, the Intercollegiate Council on International Cooperation, the American Student Union, the War Resisters League,'and Pioneer Youth. WE ."HASTILY. GENERALIZE" . , . • . An.'thlitorial in Thdrsday's C44mAii on ,scholaiship racketeering is denotth:ed in s thiirlSsue icy hreddei:l . vtio . attempts to give the "truth" in the Letter Box this issue. Although the tone of the letter might .suggest satire, the points listed need to,be refuted lest anyone get the impression that the situation is truly pictured by the letter. The "single case" front which the COLLEGIAN (and the Philadelphia Public Ledger and Record) was "guilty of hastily generalizing" was the conviction of a scholar ship "peddler" who testified that he had sold fifty schol arships at a profit of no less than $3OO apiece. He named two State Senators and implicated eighteen more, over a, third of the total numbers of Senators. Contrary to the writer's emphatic statement, all scholarships are not worth only $lOO a year. They mer ely cover the cost of tuition, which-is $lOO at Penn State but $4OO a year at the University of Pennsylvania. It is in the distribution of these More valuable awards that the racketeering has taken place. There is' no evidence of racketeering in the distribu tion of Penn Slate ,scholarships. But there is enough verbal evidence that some degree of favoritism exists to suggest that a change would be desirable. There are undoubtedly instances of honest efforts on the part of Senators to award their scholarships to needy and, worthy students; the writer cites one touching instance. In contrast, there are quite a number of cases in. which student holders of scholarships here admit that they got the, awards by means of some sort of "pull." •The fact that there are such instances would be enough to merit a change. At least, the Ledger and Record thought so. The former said, "The utilization of 'scholarships to serve political ends must be endel, preferably by the surrender by the Senate of this system' and its transfer to the Department of Public Instruction, where it belongs. The Record suggested; "This 'depart ment is now giving competitive examinations for other classes of college scholarships. It could easily take over the Senatorial scholarships as well." OLD MANIA We've just been having a good deal of. fun glanc- ing through the College catalogue and noting the np- parently,limitless number •of extraordinary courses offered in that volume. For instance the School of Physical Education in addition to its world-renown course in Eurythmics offers six complimentary and successive courses under the title "ACTIVITIES IN HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION." In the first course the student picks an activity, in the second the becomes more proficient in that activity, and so on until when he's finished with all six courses he's a reg- afar whiz Perhaps were not quite clear. Well, suppose a student wants to learn how to run a flight of hurdles In course number one be is taken out on the track and taught how to walk. His instructions would go some- thing like this. "Place the weight of the body on the left foot. Raise the. right foot carefully to a distance opproximately six inches from the ground and ad- Vance it eighteen inches. Place it on the ground Now shift the weight to the right' foot and advance the left foot following the sante procedure that was used in advancing the right. You have now taken a By the end of the first semester the student would have learned how to walk correctly and would be ready to learn how to run. The same methods would be used exespt for the fact that the student would be ex- pected to be more proficient and therefore able to move his feet faster It would be interesting to continue the explana tion of these courses but unfortunately this wouldn't bo ethical for the reason that explanation makes the matter so simple that the College would be overrun with athletes, the Physical Education School would go on the rocks, and the cause of EDUCATION would receive a staggering blow from which it might take years to recover. FLASH! .Prominent Varsity Football Player Married During Christmas Holidays! *** * * * POME Bloomers Prevent Rumors. * Economics professors are always taking the joy out of life. Why just the other day Hawkins made this statement in one of his classes: "The only hope ful aspect of Repeal is that a tremendous investment will be made in capital goods." • • ~* Aw, now! ... Just another page has been added to the Saga of "John Silver" Carr. When the Varsity Ten stopped in Washington during their• recent travels someone in troduced Carr to a' beautiful southahn lass. The, whole band went on a (late at four in the afternoon. At three in the morning the rest gave_up and went - home, but the Redoubtable John stayed on. At nine-thirty, in the morning he showed up at the hotel. At exactly eleven-thirty the gal called the hotel, and.. he went back on duty and stayed on until the dance began that night. Yeah Man! Mania Brave Heart Cutie (Charlotte Rousse) Caterson with Philadel phia Charlie at eleven-thirty Wednesday night . . . Sally Cramer at the Sigma Nu dance ... and Connie 'Glace . . . and Sentner and Boooop Taylor .. . Col legian neophyte Willie Henderson is minus Sig Sig pin since vacation . Prankie (Thesbian)` Peck is back in town ... th - a:geiitWith the.dow!bell at the Susque ihanna game Josh'Kligerinan Sig Tau Phi has the loveliest eyelashes' - ...' . ..The 'two peeping Tom Kappas Who had a bucket of water heaved on them-from 1 1 . 1 atts Hall ... Bhye! Collegian Advertising. Pays I "NO, THIS WAS NOT A. BLINDFOLD TEST—BUT AN. ACTUAL FACT" • For after "Buck" Taylor of the Music Room had inserted an advertisement in the Collegian of.. Thursday, January 4, 1933 he sold six radios in one day to students. "Buck" reported this to the Collegian, and being interested, we impiired further from him. The genial owner of the Music Room. pointed out: 1. "The advertisement brotight the buyers to the Music Room." 2. "The Majestic sets I sold do not require any outside aerial, and permit daylight reception." 3. "The budget plan of - $1 a week Makes it convenient for the boys, to pay." 'IEE PENN STA'il;] COLLEGIAN Letter Box 'Ledger,"Record,' Please Copy To tile Editor: In your editorial column of this is sue; your article on "Scholarship Racketeering" exhibits ignorance of the subject as well as fallacious rea soning on the same. I believe that in fairness to the Senators, their re cipientg of awards, and the taxpaying public in general, an emphatic denial of your exaggerated charges and a clarification of this so-called racket should ha printed so that those who !were unfortunate enough to read your /flagrant denunciation - may know the truth. The basis for the above-mentioned denunciation was the conviction of a scholarship "peddler" in Philadelphia. You have fallen guilty, however, of hastily generalizing from ; a single lease. You do great injury to the names of honorable men who have conscientiously administered their awards according to the worth and the need of the applicant. A true account of the happening would have borne the names of the individuals connected with tits peddler's racket. You may find that doing violence to legislators at random may have far -1 reaching effects. Anyone that makes a statement that the peddler "had received large sums of money for his services" neglects a vital fact. You may be interested in the fact that these scholarships ace granted semi-annually in payments of $50.00. Further, the recipient must prove his worth of the award by achieving a scholastic record of good collegiate standing. Cancellation of awards because of low grades is in the hands of the administrative auth orities. I do not know your source of infor mation on State Scholarships, but in the popular. ,vernacular, "You're all wet!" There are eighty such scholar ships given each year on a competitive basis. The Senatorial Scholarships can and do supplement these eighty in meeting the needs of worthy stu dents. And your statement that "the more valuable scholarships to some of the other State-aided universities were being sold at a profit" is wholly untrue in lieu of the fact that all of the awards of this nature are for 5100.00 per year. The peak of - your misinformation is found in the following: "It is a well known fact to most students here that the awarding of these scholarships has largely. been on a political basis. The student whose father knew the State Senator Was ordinarily in a bet ter position to 'get a scholarship than the otherwisC [ Worthy student who had no political 'KW." Being closelyre lated to and intimately associated with .a recipient ofa Senatorial Scholar ship, I can at._ least state the condi tions under which that award was made. I will not, however, commit the 'unpardonable erior of generalizing. MY friend graduated from a small ru ral high school' With honors: He had competed in !the State Scholarship contest and had placed third in his district. The inadequacies of the ru ral system were, no doubt, largely re sponsible for his failure to qualify. But he was a student of good charac ter and scholarship ; an all-county win ner in oratory,`,a, good debater, a var sity basketball!, player, and a leader in civic and church functions. He as pired for collage training in the sciences in order to teach. Efforts of his father and himself aroused the in terest of his Senator. Upon investi gation, the Senator found through the recommendatiort.of his friends. that fie wash Worthy ;134.. Subsequent . award made college possible for him. AGRICULTURE MEN TO TALK AT SHOW -THE ICVANIAC r ,- Dean Watts•and' Vice-Dean McDowel To Participate in Program Of Annual Affair Members of the faculty, of the School of Agriculture will take prom inent parts on the program and the 'judging staffs of the State Farm Pro ducts Show to be . held in Harrisburg from January 15' to 19. Dean Ralph L. Watts and Vice-Dean Milton S. - McDowell, both of the School' of Agriculture, W. S. Hagar 'lB, and Miles Horst 'l4 are members of the Show Commission which is di recting the program. Governor •Gif ford Pinchot is also a member of the Commission. This is the seventeenth successive year that the Show has been held. It will cover 440,000 square feet of floor , space, and premiums will amount to ' over thirty-six thousand &liars. Thirty different agritultural organi zations are cooperating in the ex hibits. Those on the faculty who are to speak at sectional meetings on the program are Prof. Mark A. McCarty and Prof. William L. Henning, both of the department of animal thusbandry; Prof. Francis d: Doan, of the depart ment of dairy husbandry; Dr. Steven son W. Fletcher,, Prof. Frank N. Fa gan, Prof. Warren B. Mack ; Gerald .1. Stout, and Prof. Charles E. Myers, of th% department of horticulture; Prof. Ernest•L. Nixon and Prof. Henry W. Thurston''.jr., of the, department 'of botany. STUDENT UNI TOMORROW Fraternity house caterers and treas. lurers will meet in Room 405, Old Main, at 7 o'clock tomorrow night. Members of Pi Delta Epsilon will meet at the Penn State Photo Shop for their La Vie photograph at 6:30 o'clock Tuesday nlAlht. A short meet ing will be held following the picture. Candidates for the editorial board of the COLLEGIAN will meet in Room !312, Old Main, at 7:30 o'clock Toes-, (lay night. Additional freshman can didates may report at that time. WEDNESDAY Dr. Robert G. Bernreuter will ad dress an open meeting of . the Social Problems club on "Sex and Sodial Health—The View of Science" in LOOKING OVER THE NEWS . . . According to President Woosevelt's budget message Thursday, the total cost to be incurred by the national government in lighting the depression will be $10,246,773,200 by June 30, 1935, when he says recovery will be achieved. He places the total recov ery expenditures for 1934 at $7,523,- 406,700. • Included in this figure are_the ex penditures incurred by the R. P. C., A. A. A., P. W. A. and other alpha betic arrangements, and through which the ' government at present holds assets of $3,558,516,189 in loans. This money will 'revert back to the treasury in time thus cutting the true recovery cost to just about one half of the announced figures. In general, the criticism that has greeted President Roosevelt's budget announcement has • been favorable. Taking in account work that has been accomplished thus far the cost has not been excessive. Even so strong a critic of the President as Senator Reed of our State has commended the administration's plan and sees no dan ger in raising the national debt to $31,834,000,000 by June 30, 1935. However, the retdrns to the govern ment from the various recovery agen cies, such as the Reconstruction Fin ance Corporation and Home. Loan Board, should greatly reduce the debt by that time. Then, again, the federal• govern ment's loans through the.R.,F. C. may be converted into "real" assets soon, if the banking situation does not clear up. Great help to the administration should be forthcoming from the bank ing interests, - but thus far they hive not swung into line behind Roosevelt with proper spirit and support. At a time when the managing boards of some of our Federal Reserve.branches should have strengthened our govern ment bonds they placed them on the' market for sale. Excessive rates are now facing depositor's in banks throughout the country. Evidently the banks are unwilling to accept their ; proper burden, and the adminis tration already regrets its failure to take over the banking systein follow ing the bank holiday last year. With less opposition from Wall Street, the financial aspect of recovery would be far less difficult. • let'Us 'see in part "just what has been clone thus far in, chasing the big bad wolf from our doorstep• Accord ing to figures released by the Ameri can Federation of Labor last night, 6,400,000 unemployed were given work last year. ` Of this number 1,- 800,000 found jobs in industry, while 4,600,000 were aided in work through the C. W. A., P. W. A., and' C. C. C. Business actiyity wad' increased over 1932 by ten percent, an encouraging repbrt, and the purchasing power of the working classes registered a gain of $543,000,000 per month. The sig nificant and very encouraging item is the laht, showing that the workers' total income has far exceeded the rise in prices: ,—Robert L. Durkee The A. F. of L. report which fur ther states' that over ten million workers are still unemployed and that business is still thirty percent below normal, vividly demonstrates to the administration the need for pushing ahead with the plans it has under taken. The most drastic consequences would now appear ff President Roose velt were to listen to the overbalanced Douglas and his budget balancing. When business normalcy is achieved .in 1935 there will be time enough for bringing the budget to normalcy. There is no sense in persisting to walk about in your raccoon coat when you are sweltering in the heat and everyone is , in his shirt-sleeves. LINGERIE AT REDUCED PRICES ' SLIPS DANCE SETS CHEMISE Your Choice 79c EGOLF'S All notices will be received at the St o'clock 'Wednesday afternoon for a Th for n Monday issue. Additional noti COLLEGIAN °Mee on YlN!mutiny and . The author says it is not all fiction. Ife' claims to have heard dt• from the one hundred, and'ten-year-old lips of Juan -Colorado (The Flame) himself. There is much of history, of the mis sions, of fish and plants that rings true from the rich California country. The author himself is a rich and I mysterious 'character, a man of about eighty who has lived mostly in Span ish America ; and owned many peons and Indians.' Colorado's real name— if he was real—was O'Brien and he was said to be the son of an Irish sailor and a Mexican. O'Brien be. came Obrigon and then from the col or of his hair he was . surnamed Col orado. The journey itself was taken as a boy of. twelve in the train of the Spanish general, Don 'irmin San- I hudo, from the tip of Lower Califor nit to the San Francisco region. Of course, all the Californias at this time were Spanish. The journey was en livened with many a rich and inter esting incident and is so well told that one is intrigued to know more about the author, de Fierro Blanco, or at least his translator, Walter de Stei guer. A new mine of rich historical material has been discovered. The Indian life and customs are graph- , ically described. The Jesuits and their successors, the Franciscians, receive credit for their effoits. "Hell caused the only great rebellion in those days." Father Tamarel preached hell-fire in -B. H. R. N BULLETIN dent Union desk in Old Main until 5 ursday WU, and until Saturday noon rog may be 'phoned to the Old Main I Sunday night. Room 417, Old Main, at.7:30 o'clock Wednesday night. The Social Problems Club will meet in Room 417 Old Main at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday night. The Junior League will hold air im portant meeting in the Gamma Phi Beta suite at 6:30 o'clock on Wednes day night. Prof. Clinton L. Harris, head of the department of architecture, will pre !sent an open lecture on "Wind Pres ' sure on Buildings" in Room 107, Main Engineering, at 7 o'clock Wednesday night. :President and Mrs. Ralph D. Hetzel will resume their Wednesday after noon and evening at homes on Wed nesday afternoon. Candidates for second assistant managers in track are asked to report at Recreation hall. Interfraternity Council will meet in Room 405; Old Main, at '7 o'clock Wednesday night. THURSDAY ' Croups of the Agricultural Exten sion Conference will meet in Rooms 302, 318, 417, 420, Old Main, from 9 until 12 o'clock Thursday morning. ACCIDENT VICTIM RESUMES DUTIES Assistant to Dean of Women Recovers From Mishap at Philadelphia Home Ellen M. Burkholder, assistant to the Dean of Women, resumed her duties with the College this morning after recovering at her home near Philadelphia following an automobile accident ten days ago. Edward R. Hoffman '34 returned to State College yesterday after po lice in Eric had dropped charges growing out of a fatal accident in which an automobile killed a bicycle rider early last week. A verdict of unavoidable accidental death was giv en at the inquest. Another. rider, a man of about forty-eight, is still in an Erie hospital. Student Leaves Infirmary Frederick Doelp '37 was discharged from the College infirmary early this afternoon after receiving cuts about his face when an automobile driven by David W. Wright '37 and one driv en by Dr. Charles E. Myers, of the department of horticulture, collided near Potters Mills Shortly after noon on Friday. Neither Dr. Myers nor Wight were hurt, but Mrs. 4lVers, wife of the driver, received internal . strains and minor bruises about her face. She is recovering at her home. The accident-occurred when the'au tomobile driven by Dr. Myers was sideswiped by d truck, and skidded into the Wright car, according to wit nesses of the accident. Doelp was thrown against the windshield and' four stitelles were required to close a cut in his nose. Speaking Of Books "The Journey of the Flame" by An tonio. de Fierro Blanco. Monday Evening,. January 8, 1934 the coolest weather.' "Father lead us : to that eternally warm placerthe In , diens cried as unclothed they shivered in the chill north winds. But Father Tamarel, incensed by the demand of the, Indian flock for hell-fire, curtly 'refused them the warmth they thought he controlled. Whereupon, rising in rebellion they killed him and others saying "They refuse us their corn fortable hell, why should we servo these cruel foreigners." "Over Here, 3911-1918" by • Mark Allen Nevins says of the author, "ire has brought into American historical• writing a current of such originality and freshness that,his work is likely to, prove more influential than any thing else done in years." Here are the comments and atti tudes of the American man on the street during the Great War. Here are clippings and illustrations from contemporary newspapers and journ als. Here are propaganda, Liberty Loan drives, battle reports and many other seeneS from the days of 1917- 1918. - AT --KA 5 .,,t A I=l SHOWS DAILY—I:3o.. 3:00, 0:30, 0:30 And a Complete Show es Late an 9 P. M. TODAY AND TUESDAY Fredric March, Miriam Hopkins and Gary Cooper in Noel Coward's • Witty, Naughty "DESIGN FOR LIVING" WEDNESDAY Otto Kruger, Ben Lyon, Una Merkel and Roscoe Earns in "THE WOMEN IN HIS LIFE" Note: A Complete Show After Tonight's Basketball Game THURSDAY AND FRIDAY John Barrymore, Bebe Daniels, Dori Kenyon in Elmer Rice's "COUNSELLOR AT LAW" , • NITTANY TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY • Lionel BarrYmore, Alice Brady, Conway Tearle, Mary Carlisle in "SHOULD LADIES BEHAVE" A Sensatiint in its Christmas Holiday Showing at the Cathaum • , You'll Rave About this Hit! THURSDAY THE wtaigN..m.ms JANUARY CLEARANCE. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! _ + $25 Men's Suits $19.50 $2O Men Top Coats $15.00 $5 Men'i Trench:. Coats $3.49 Men's Shoes $7 Shoes $5.85 $5 Shoes , $3.85. $4 Shoes $2.85 Men's Haberdashery - HATS At Greatly Reduced Prices 2-for-If:SALE Women's Dresses Shoes- Not. All Sizes in the Group You Buy 1 Pair at Regular Price—Extra Pair for $l.OO THE HUB EAST COLLEGE AVE.