Page Foui STUDENT UNION BULLETIN All notice+ will ho received of Oa Student Union desk in Old Main until oclock Wednesday afternoon for a Thursday issue, and until Saturday noun for a Monday i , suc. Additional notices map he 'phoned to the Old Main COLLEGIAN ottire on Wednesdny and Sunday night. TONIGHT A. Harold Reedy, instructor in eco nomics. will discuss "Economic Re lations Witt South America" at an open meeting of the International Re lations club in Room 818 Old Main at 7:30 o'clock. l'i Mu Epsilon will hold an open meeting in 101 North Liberal Arts building at 7:80 o'clock. William Wid maier '3.1 and Charles Stevenson 'Bl will speak. TOMORROW' The tiludent-Facblty Fireside' ses sions committee will meet at .1 o'clock in Room 80.1, Old Main, tomorrow. :limbers of the P. S. C. A. cabinet - It - p i,TriAJJ-- .- N , ......4/,„, Mali SHOWS DA I LY—I ::111, 3 :IC ran. 4ao And a Conmlcte SI:ov ns Late as P. M. TODAY AND FRIDAY Dolores dcl Rio. Gene Raymond, Ginger Rogers. Fred Astaire in "FLYING DOWN TO RIO" SATURDAY Adolphe Meajou, Mary Astor, Guy Hibbee, Genevieve Tobin and Edward Everett Horton in "EASY TO LOVE" PIus—POPETE in "Wild Elephinks" Plus—Lila Grey Chaplin in "SEASONED GREETINGS" Complete She After Itunketball Game MONDAY AND TUESDAY Paul Muni, Glenda Farrell and Ned Sparks in "HI, NELLIE" Plus—Eddile Duchin and Orchestra Plus—Chic Sale in "Old Bugler NITTANY George Arliss in "DISRAELI" FRIDAY Irene Dunne, Clive Brook and Nils Asther in "IF I WERE FREE" A Holiday Hit at the .Cathaunt SATURDAY Randolph Scott, Barbara Fritchic in "THE LAST ROUND-UP" , Adapted from Zane Grey's "The Bor der Legion" and Featuring the Bill Hill Song Ifit! will meet at 0:45 o'clock at the Penn State Photo Shop for their La Vie picture. Talks on "Quartz Crystals" by Wil liam S. Frear and "Isotopes" by David Rank, graduate scholars, will feature la meeting of the Electrical Engineer- Ong society to be held in Room 200, Engineering D, at 7:30 o'clock tomor row night. SATURDAY The tenth Saturday evening music hour will be given at the Presbyterian church at 7 o'clock Saturday night. Included on the program wilt be the Overture from "Hansel and Gretel" by Humperdinck, exceypts from "Sieg fried" by Wagner, and "Symphony No. 7 in A Major" by Beethoven. SUNDA'S The Westminster student players will again present "He Came Seeing" in the Presbyterian church at 7:30 o'clock Sunday. night. 1 lON DAY Kappa Phi Kappa will meet in Rooms 417, 418, and 420, Old Main, at 3 o'clock. The Artists' Course committee will meet in the Hugh Beaver Room, Old Main, at 4 o'clock Monday. The Block and Bridle club will meet in Room 109, Agriculture building, at 7:30 o'clock Monday night. Prof. Thomas I. Mairs will speak on "His tory of Agriculture." MISCELLANEOUS The Hon. Henry A. Wallace, Secre tary of Agriculture, and Rexford G. Tuxwell, assistant Secretary of Agri culture, will discuss "The New Deal and Agriculture" over a nation-wide N. B. C. radio hook-up from 8 to 8:30 o'clock Saturday night. All who have been arrested by Stale highway patrolmen - for having stick ers on the windshields of their cars should get in touch with Louis Kreit man '35 at Phi Sigma Delta imme diately. Do YOU Want a Fine Looking and Splendid Conditioned BUICK MASTER SIX • Passengei Coupe' 'Then Cull" Nittany Motor CO. BIRCH R. 'OBER, Proprietor 1000 West:CollCge Avenue PHONE 666 IR. O. T. C. TO DANCE TOMORROW NIGHT Machine Gun Emplacements Will Feature Decoration Theme Of Armory for Hop R. 0. T. C. officers of the College will hold a Cadet Officers' Hop in the Armory tomorrow night. Co-eds have been granted 2 o'clock permis sion by the W. S. C. A. for the func tion. Bill Botto•f and his orchestra will provide the music for dancing from it until 1 o'clock. Admissfon will be strictly by invitation. 275 Couples Expected Invitations have been extended to the R. 0. T. C. of eighteen colleges, and acknowledgements of probable at tendance have already been received from Western Maryland and the Car negie Institute of Technology, accord ing to Harry J. Lavo '34, student col onel and chairman of the committee in charge of the affair. The list of guests includes Gover nor and Mrs.. Gifford Pinchot, Presi dent and Mrs. Ralph D. Hetzel, Col onel and Mrs. Russel V. Venable, Dean of Women Charlotte E. Ray, Dean of Men Arthur R. Warnock, and the deans of the six schools. In ad dition each student officer will be Permitted one extra invitation. Ap proximately 275 couples are expected. The decoration theme will be en tirely militaristic. A canopy, cover ing the entire room, will be of the conventional army khaki. Red, white and blue streamers will cover the walls, while machine gun emplace ments will be set in various places about the Armory. Original invitations in the form of official orders have been issued, which the committee requires as an admission ticket. .One specific para graph refers the holder to the Man ual of Courts Martial for 'failure to repair.' Several novelty numbers have also been planned for the dance. ___, s , PROF. DAUGHERTY GIVES NINTH FIRESIDE READING f Romance Lan Presents 2. Spanish Playlets Prof. Paul R. Daugherty, of .the romance languages department,. gave the ninth Wednesday fireside reading in the upper lounge of Old Main-yes terday afternoon, presenting• two playlets by contemporary Spanish au thors. The first play read by 'Professor Daugherty,' who has' traveled' exten sively in Spain, was a .short 'charac ter sketch' by the, Quintero brothers, "One Sunny' Morning," in which :hu mor and sentimentality are nicely balanced. The concluding selection - was "Idyll" by Martinez Sierra, whose work is prose in style but lyrical in beauty of expression. Sidrra is also the author of "Cradle Song", which was adapted recently into one of the season's most popular motion pic tures. Letter Box (Contim;ed from pope two) has aroused Dean Warnock and mem bers of the student body, and proper ly so. The College has pursued a "Hands Off" policy in regards to the dispens ing .of beer in this town. Its restor ation was with the hope that the privilege would not be abused. This privilege has not been abused; but . those who are drunk in these places give that appearance. The truth is that these persons have become mel low elsewhere and visit these places to show off to the crowd. We have no beer joints in town There is not a place where beer is sold around here in which we would be ashamed to be seen. The first thing we know is that the scandal sheets in Philadelphia, Pitts burgh, and Harrisburg will enlarge on the story of drunken students at Penn State, and . the College will he cbmpelled to act. Are we going to let a few nincompoops spoil our priv ileges? The students who are found under ; monstrous foundations, flushed with hope, and their mouths full of boast ful language, should be at once tripped up and silenced. It might be suggested that the campus but socie ties tube it upon themselves to in flict some punishments on these of fenders. This would add an activity to their existing program of inactivi ty!'' Let's act like men, not babies, in this matter, and get something done among ourselves, instead of hearing again from the administration. —J. Stanley Taylor '35 The COLLEGIAN has received several anonymous contributions to the Let .ter Box ' -recently. These have not been published simply because the writer's name did not accompany the letter. All communications must bear the correct name of the author, .and',the, name will be withheld from /Miblication if requested. Several 'other letters have been withheld from this issue for lark of spare. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN MANY FACULTY MEN SEEM MISPLACED, REPORT SHOWS Hinting that a general shake-up in the all-College academic departments might improve general conditions here, an anonymous report, received at the office of the COLLEGIAN late last night, revealed that most facul ' ty members arc, according to their natural attributes, serving in the wrong departinents. "It is certainly annoying, to say the least," read the report, "to find Watts the Dean of Agriculture and Light and Sparks slaving away at mechanical engineering when any av erage mind can perceive that these three individuals should be in the electrical department." Attention was also called to the fact that Ham and Duncan are in the department of physics, Bacon and Heart in home economics extension work, Cooke serves in floriculture, Broyles in rural education, and Baker and Frizzell hold forth in public speaking. According to the report, it is slightly more than obvious that these gentlemen should be bending their best efforts to the advancement of the cooking division of the home economics department. "It must be shocking to friends of the College," read the report, "to find Seamans in the Christian Association When he ought to be in nautical en gineering, and Waggoner in home economics extension ‘vhen,she belongs in animal husbandry. And what of Learn, School, and Wiseman as a county agent, a chemist, and an arch itect respectively? These inen should be in the School of Education." ICE ANDC_OAL..CO. X33.N..Patterson 5t;.... Get The:.Clissified. Habit! TELL YOUR WANT ADS TO US We Will Tell The Campus The report concluded with a terse list of other suggested changes of which the outstanding were: Butt, of economics, and Tietz, of zoology, to anatomy; Grant, of music, to law; Tanner, of economics, to animal hus bandry; Hill, of botany, Noll, of soil technology, Dale, county agent, and Ford, of economics, to the topograph ic survey division; Church, of chemis try, and Altar and Bell, of physics, to the P. S. C. A., and Hechlar of the engineering research department, to political science. STUDENTS CONDUCT TESTS Fotir unemployed graduate chemists and a helper have been authorized by the Civil Works Association to help analyze the chemical make-up of to. bacco and certain vegetables, and to help with the experiment station pro gress as Civil Works employees. Dr. R. Adams . Dutcher, head 'of the de partment of agriculture biological chemistry, will, be in charge of the work. PADDLES FOR HELL WEEK - CALL RAINEY 134 Looking foi a place to live? Need a part time job? Want to sell anything? Lose anything? Phone 202 - -W College 500 PENN STATE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED BALLROOM DANCING INSTRUCTION Individual nodal dancing inntruction. Call 770. J or MI. Mary Danrahan. Fyn Auto.. 200 W. College Ave. 1.0.1 CL BALLROOM • DANCING INSTRUCTION Individual instruction in social dancing, call Ellen Mitchell, 4684. 11-etnnIVIIS TYPlNG—Themes nnd term papers typed nt rearonable ram. Call 1122-.1. E=l FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for two stu dents. 42.50 ner week. H. B. Weigel, 224 S. Atherton Arent. Phone 167.4 tinIFT. FOR RENT—Larne. well heated rtoons for two or three person,. Free garotte rotten Phone 813. J. hint. It. 0. Groh:lm. 2t S. Atherton street. FOR RENT—Lorne room on second fluor for two student, Plenty of and and lame clothes closet. $2.00 per week ouch. Good location. Apply evening, 113 S. Atherton street. Phone 770. W. LE= Here's the Good News! You can still buy the things you need at the old cost levels because we made our purchases before prices started to advance. Values are now greater than ever and prices lower than they'll be for many months to come. YOU'LL MAKE NO MISTAKE BY BUYING NOW! 25c SAXON, WEAVE AND CAMPUS TOGS SUITS $1 9 .95 The Season's Smartest Styles. S w el I Looking Fabrics—The Finest of Tailoring. $1.95 Arrow Shirts, Fancy Patterns 1 $1.59 $6.50 Stetson Hats $5.00 $8.75 Florsheim Shoes__ _____s7.Bs $7.50 Suede Jackets__ __54.95 $1.65 Mohawk Shirts_ Fancy Patterns :__sl.l9 MOON SILKBLUE 69 HOSIERY - C All Women's $5 Fall and Winter For Women' 25 Regular Price $l.OO SHOES .) 3• ' A Small Deposit Will Hold Any Purchase Until the Beginning of the Next Semester _ 114 EAST COLLEGE AVENUE Thtirsday Evening, January 18, 1934 FOIL RENT—SEVERAT. STU 'PIONS. Gordon U. liminzer Aucncy. Stnt>• Culler° Hotel. Phone 300. WANTED—Position no cook at a fraterniD. Previouo experience and 'mot references. itensonahle onlary deotectl. Write to "E. 14.", c/o the Penn State Collegion. 171.2tpdPSE: WANTED—Ride to Philadelphia, Friday. February 2. Return Sunday night or Mon lay morning. Call Standen, Sr. 173-1 tapRWO. WANTED—Paosengor to Harrisburg l'hlia dolphin. Chester. Lancaster. Leave Sntur • , 1:11 . noon. Call Bud. 833-J. 174-11JJM. NVANIRD—Two furnished rooms and n Bri onto bulb. Second semester for two stud onto. Write W. F. R.. 13os $3. wANTF:D—Work 'in fraternity or prism , home. whole or part time, by capable. c. paricneeti. reliable woman. Write Bon Collegian office. 168-2tneWll LOST , —One black aininne;cll. crested. Elzi lighter. Friday before Christmas enentiot Reword If returned to F. A. Xtoughto Theta Xi. 10.3tnpliW Single Breasted Double Breasted a=l i 62-21.111PCE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers