Page Two PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Published serofsseekly during the College Year. except on holidays. by students' of The Penn'Oran!. State College. in the Interest of the College. the students. fssufty, alumni, and friends. =ARLES A. MYF.RS '34 FREDERICK L. TAYLOR 14 Editor Buainese Manager GEORGE A. SCOTT '24 HAROLD J. lIATSCII '34 Managing Editor Circulation 31 anger WILLIAM M. STEGMEIF.R '34 11. EDGAR FURMAN '34 Aestutant Etlitor Loral Advertteing Manager BERNARD If. ROSENZWEIG 14 JOHN C. IRWIN '34 Nova Editor Foreign Adveriiiiing Manager JAMES M. SHEEN '34 FRANCIS WACKER 14 Snorta Editor Chi:Wiled Ailvertieing Manager 'tutu N. D'ARMON '34 MAE F. KAPLAN '34 Women's Editor Wornen'u Managing Editor • EVA. M. RIACIIFELDT 14 Woolen's Nev. Editor MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 26, 1934 VERBAL BAFFLERS BAFFLED The debating team here is confronted with a prob /cm. They've been trying to get students to come to their meetings, and the students persist in going to the movies. They've tried signs, pastern, COLLEGIAN stories blazoning their appeal to "at limst'drop in on the way to the matches." The stud , tmts don't [lron in. Rather obvlously, with everything except an audi eneo taken care of through student funds, the problem is a x4ery real one to the squad. "Students aren't inter ested," they wail, and the students blithely reply, "Why should ire be?" People outside the oratorical world have:often remarked the pzeuliar aversion students pos sess for things intellectual. The orators have a point in their favor there. In this instance, however, it ap pears that the points for the disinterest'ed student more than justify his position. Students don't avoid .dcladcs because of lack 'of in terest in the efforts, anMeurish though they may be, of their public speaking fellows. They probably go ...Ise where because the verbal battlers delft put on a show that will interest them. The chief difficulty seems to hi in the matter of subjects. This year, for instance, the first few debates on the NRA question attractzd con siderable interest. However, regurgitation of what was at best second-band matelial week-end afbcr week-end certainly ()Ailed to get student support. Students can't be criticized there. The inahility of the debaters to cover more sub- . jests seems to lie with thc intercollegiate organization, •Which limits the topics for the convenience of arranging schedules. Thbaters here aren't alone at fault, but be .fcra increasing complaints are heard, it might be well .for them to look to their association. In actual form, the debates, as run off this year, •seem to be some improvement over the more old-fash ioned, "canned" style of judges deeiston affair. The Oregon style at least offers to the speaker some spirit of conMetition. Its most freqUent criticism is that it leaves ,the audience in a quandary as to just who did the best piece of work. People have a natural desire for a fight to the finish, and without some form of decision, :audience or judges, the idea 'of competitions at least as far as the audience is concerned, is la . eking. Without real controversy, the term "debater'? is farcical. Unless tho teams as sponsored here now can come back, unless they can get students to show More inter est in their oratorical work, there seems to be no jus tifiable reason why registrants should: be forced to con tribute fifty cents apiece, well over fifteen hundred dol lars a year, for the subsidization of Penn State's public speakers. The debating team must make a real &fort to put on a show that will interest the "public" or prepare to face increasing student demands that the subsidization of pub lice speaking he either reduced or cut off cornpletely. —J. B. Wt "THE DARING YOUNG MAN . . " ,Secretary of the Commomeealth Beamish's advocacy of enfranchising voters in Pennsylvania at the age of nineteen is not particularly new. From time to time during the last decade the Wen has been suggested, chiefly' from the classroom But it is the first time that any ...1-xemitive, so high in the State's officialdom has broached such a plan in recent years. Coming as it does with a turn=over of tuhninistra- Worts in less than a year, it slay not atean very much as far as having Oho Slate Constitution amended intmedi- ately. But, at knit, it is a definite indication that those who hold public trust are giving some consideration to the merits of Youth's fovesight. Not since the frontier days has American youth been brought so close to realities as today. Pour y.mrs of de pression have taught him, it not to think, to wonder "Where tal I fit in?" and "Why are they doing it that way?" The tightness of money has taught him to watch closely over economic, political, taut social progress, and even, in Come instances, to demand sonde part in winking decisions. There is no doubt, then, that he is ready for the responsibility. The original age prerequisite of twentyone was only an arbitrary decision. Only a State amendment—voted upon by an electorate older than twerity-one-- - -would be necessary to modify the set-up in stalled in 1873. If n. Stale Constitutional Convention sixty-one years ago could write in a twenty-one year age voting requitannent,then reducing that limit by two years yearn would not endanger the goal of intelligent voting or sane .government by admitting "rattle-brained" adol escents to the executive council of the country's govern mental machine. " Men in Pennsylvania colleges and universities would create tho ieast,par , t of the problem of , zducatin2, , voters up to "unemotional standards." Just what those stan- datds are, no they exist mow, remains to be defined. Gaining an intelligent vote is not something that can be atfaircznl through legislation. Certainly "immature" Minds could not make More blunders than have been made in past elections. College' and university students would have .had the benefits of the elements of an educe tien and instruction in the theories of economics, pol itical; and social questions. The mass of high school graduates or less could be instructed toward intelligent OLD MANIA Shoot If You Must Penn State drama reached new heights last night and no mistake. You remember the scene front/"Uncle ,Tom's Cabin" where Liza crosses the ide, followed by a pack of yipping pombranians? Well, that wasn't in "Redemption," but at one spot in the &ow, this col umn thought they'd run it ill as urn• "out front" bit. It would have. been oil right, we guess, if the script hadn't called for Kutzer Richards to shoot himself, a thing he does in princely fashion. Tolstoi would have ,tnjoyed tine shooting scene, else he would have rushed .to the nearest exit and poisoned him'self. "Redemption" got up to Kutner and six-shooter in line style, but that's another stay, 'handled by the Footlights guy. Stiff-legged, resigned nobly to his fate, Kutzer leveled the gun next his s'olar plexus and made ready to end it all. Ife snapped the trigger,- horror of horrors, he was going to kill 'himself for weal. "Click," gent the deadly.instrunknt,and rclick-elick-click" it went some more. Now Elsie Eouthett had eharge of the ofT,stage .noises. Elsie had done her ddoty all right, but the cartridges she bought, at the last minute, were rim fire, and the gun wanted center-fire. If all had gone well, there would have been explosive noises similar to a gun shot when Kutzer pulled the on-stage trigger. You, dear reader, know well enough what happened. Put yourself in the gun's place and devise tt way out ; if you think it was easy. Nothing to do, then, but die somehow, said Barry kutzermore. Ile died, all right. Ho made out as if 101.3 gun were a stiletto 'and rap himself through, groaned, folded, and was •no mbre. Bravo! He died with his gun loaded, amid the frantic "clicks" of the backstage mate to his weapon. But after all; it's for Ithc , best that things turned out as they did. Think bow his friends would feel if he actually had shot himself! IliM:MM:fl:1 Later, in the place unusual, three witnesses avere commenting on the brain-blasting scene. "Lousy." "Lousy." • "Lousy." Over the top of an adjoining bo'oth popped 'Cut zer!s devilish mop of stage,hair, and down it popped again. He had heard all. 0, Fate is erool. * * * NOTICE ,the slug who filched the ex _Maniac's over coat and the Maniac's hat rilease get tint'Of tcnvnin; a heap of a hurry? Pinkerton and his entire; force are, this very minute, combing the sewers foe Yoa. Any way, how did you get into n publications dance? I:M=M=M3 Wild westerners aren't the only people who speak to strangers. An inno. cent male was nibbling a bite in the Oh Mane Santwhich Shoppe 'when QM heard the drawling voice of Co-ed Dagmar Hansen; the, gal who wore the cellophane gown-at.ll,. , eent poyertg:Drutee up oh the =mous. - ' , "Hay neighbor, got a eigaretite?'!. she soothed.— A little 'surprised, becalm ihe .didn'.t. know the girl, the man fumbled for a fag; produced one and tossed it over the flower bed to her, them turned back to his food. "Say, neighbor, Otto. match?" fli - igrnhr again. W' can't go on. She got 'Ora snatch, but dear goodness, isn't it awful? Much as wo hate to tell you, Operator No. 6 of the night squad for .the College switchboard, that heckler who bothers you every nightis'a curly-headed Sigma Chi, which makes you the far-famed Swett heart of Sigma Chi, doesn't it ? _ voting as easily and successfully at 'nineteen as at twen- The Penn State campus might become something besides a center of mere dabbling with undergraduate playthings that sumac" .of "theory, training, mat eperl ento for the future." Pennsylvania, backward in. Blue Law and child labor legislation, would bein the vanguard. And a voting franchis'e to idealists' of nineteen Would go a long way toward stamping out the evils of vote control which gains its opening thothold among the pseudo-cynics •of twenty-one.—F. W. W. ANNOUNCING INTERCOLLEGIATE EASTER BALL SATURDAY, MARCH 31 9:00 P. M. featuring TED WEEMS ZEZ CONFREY Hotel William Penn, Pittsburgh $4.50 Per. Couple $ 1 , 50 Pre S?le Plus Government Tax Pre Sale Ends March Thirtieth Purchase Tickets at William Penn, ScijeFleYv Roosevelt Hotels Sponsored by the Aragon Club THE PENN. STATE COLLEGIAN "Redemption... Enhinted from mfhe Live Come"' by 'Leon Tolstoi. and presented by . the Penn State Fleeces under the dime dun at Sir. Fronk Nensbaurn. Faterdo night,. Meech 24. TIES CAST . Anna Peg Grionitt Samba _ —hot nits Someno Victor _______ . Aloe Segal Lieu Protogovii— _Kohl Stage Fedor Pernonn , titter Uighur& Alnxhu Roth (lemlnto 'Sophie Koreninn.....--__Therem Alriteimg. PITLe Segstius..... Brig/Amen Ivan Alexandrov— ------ .Itiehnrl Allen The Magistrate Roger ILOtel 'rwenty minor character, it Grimy ..hom on; policemen; 01111 men ;Ind wom,” in the dloc. The Gyp,. (Morino directed by Ilelen Alusie . by the Penn State Little Symphony Oreheotrn. diceenn by John K.' Ryan. When .the curtain dosed after the last of the ten scenes in "Redemption" on Satuiday niglht, the audience wait.- 'ell a inoment and then began the. usual .desulforY amount of handclappinz Af ter a minute of this, the applause sub- Isided. Then, as though they had ben lin another world and were just corn ing back to State College, they re 'sunned the applause. This time it was 'louder and muse insisicut. The audi , enee had seen a good, entertaining, well-handled show, and they were just beginaingla realize it. The Players' version :of the Tolstoi pi ay was of such calibre that the aud- New Library - - - This is the first of a series of letters by Willard P. Lewis, Col , . kjje librarian, on the need for rt new central College library build ing. One day last week Professor Hunt er of the. faculty in lowa State Col lege; taking special graduate work here in .Industrial Education, came seeking library privilege' and parti cularly a library faculty study or locked stack cubicle where he might keep the bOoks with which he was working and his papers. This was a privilege . to which he was accustom ed is his own library and which fac ulty members in many institutions enjoy.. Scarcely a week goes by but what we are obliged to deny a simi lar request from members of our own or other faculties because this crowd ed. building possesses neither faculty studies nor stack cubicles nor other space available for' such purposes. Such facilities are essential for re search work; particularly in the hu manities, social sciences, languages, literatures; edUcation and psychology: Willard P. Lewis, Librarian. FOR YOUR EASTER TRIP Buy This Studebaker Touring Car . $37.50 CLAM( •SIOTOR CO. 120 S. Pagh'St. Phone 590 SPECIAL SALE ON TIRES -THE MANIAC Footlights Of this pure-to, acco cigarette; its ience scoured to live, along with the cast ; back in pre-war Russia. The ex cellent and numerous stage szttings may have had something ,to da with this. At any tate, the scenery was so well-executed that no imagination was needed to visuailizo scenes of the Rus sian period that Tolstoi meant to por tray. There was a huge cast, thirty or forty in all. However, only the leads fiend be discussed. Miss Stage as i Lisa would pfzeive prat: from most lan)* critic. Although her enunciation was not always of the best, she ac- Jcemplished the 'difficult task of play ing with ease and naturalness an ex tremely emotional part. As in previ lous productions, Kutner Richards (Fedor) was superior to most collegi ate player. . ;Alt once again he had a ttnzlency to over-act, thus jading those of his scenes which really called for intense, dramatic acting. Quite a few 11111112 S apneared, we he 'Hem in a Players' Dramatis Per scnnae fcr the first time. Half of these newcomers were unworthy of m'sniton; 11,3 other half we consider as definite Mark" for. Messrs. Glee tingh and Neusbaum. Alex Segal as DADDY' GROFF TO RETURN FROM CHINA THIS SUMMER George W. "Daddy" Groff will re turn. from China early this June, to visit the College, according to Dean Ralph 1.. Watts, of the School of Ag riculture. The botanist will study citrons planks here. The rest of his time will probably be spent visiting his par ents in California and, at Washing ton, D. C. GLEE CLUB ELECTIONS 11E1,1) Anna C. Strong '35 was elected president of the WiJneen's Glee club and Mildred F. Nieman '36 was chosen vice-pree:dce in the elections held :ass week. The pest of secre tary-treasurer will be held by Enid A. Stage '35. ANNOUNCING OPENING • of COLLEGE- CLEANERS Cor. Beaver Ave. and Allen St. Telephone-Connections DELIVERY SERVICE Tune in on Ten Fran:TWA sensat lonnl Hollywood Orchestra every Wednesday night—Columbia Ch4n AMERICA'S S -' 9n6I6ZX,Mt . CIGAWETTE Victor• Karenin handled his part just about as intelligently as , it could' he I handled. For thiS reason, we humbly offer. him first honors in the made div ision. Theresa MraVints (Sophia Kar enina) and Ruth Goodman (Masha) were also new to our eyes. Both gave performances whirls we flattlningly term, "sensible," for lack of a better word. . The phoney shooting, incident in the last scene was unfortunate, but thanks to Mr. Richards' spd2dy presence of wind in thinking *of another way to die, it was not particularly noticeable. Perhaps a repetition of this could be avoided if the Players at their next Have Your Plumbing done by 808 TAYLOR Phone-1066 I . ..ypy..xy.antpxtra ,r • dollars i for your Go By Greyhound Take a Greyhound bus this va cation . . ..you'll save precious dollars and have a comfortable, time-saving trip. • Round Trip Fares- CIIICAGOSI9 00 CLEVELAND 9.00 GREENSBURG 5.70 HARRISBURG 5.43 NEM YORE 0.00 PHILADELPHIA 0.50 SCRANTON 0.75 SUNBURY 3..00 BERWICK 3.50 I* . BROOK PARK 2.65 STATE COLLEGE HOTEL .... i College Ave. and Allen St. Phono 300 RED 1 Nr Monday Evening, March 26, 1934 ;show would hand out guns and cut Pheets to the audience instead of pro grafts. One out 'of a couple !hundred should surely give the desired effect: WITETHER you're laic fiorn.ti night out or cramming for . gniqes:— a midnight snack is gOOd.' Kellogg's PEP:satis fieS that:empty feeling. But PEP doesn't burden the body or interfere with sound, rest ful sleep. Delicious flakes of-wheaf. Nourishing. Easy •to digeli. Plus extra bran. Mildly laxa tive. Ready to eat with milk Or =M. SOld at cainpus lunch counters and canteens. PEP is always fresh in the individual packages.. Enjoy it for breakfast too—with sliced fruit or honey.•• Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.