Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, September 13, 1934, Image 8

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    Page eight
GlThaum
A Wjrncr Brother Tbwtie. ™ |
Matinees at . . . 1:30 and 3:00
Evenings at . . . 6:30 and 8:30
A complete show as late as 9:10*9:30
on Saturdays
AJ Greolett of oil Warner
Bros.* mutical wonder
thewtl .* T** 1 V.” •
t RUBY KEELER
__ t DICK POWELL
WkM JOAN BLUNDELL
■H ZASU PITTS
■VP GUY KIBBEE
HUGH HERBERT
ond 8 Other Great Fa*
Hpmggg vorlteil Hundredi’of
Bothy Berkeley** Glorl*
' ■HHg| fj*d Beoutieit A. Mile
el Velvet —a B*A«re
S Stage-10$ Camerat
te make the matt lump*
tuoue thow al all timel,
plus '. ■
Walt Disney’s.
Silly. Symphony
*Qld King Cole*
SATURDAY
. LEE TRACY
Helen Mack, Helen 'Morgan in.
“You Belong to Me” ■
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
NORMA SHEARER.
Charles Laughton, Frcdric March,
Maureen O’Sullivan in.
‘The Barretts of Wimpole Street’
PLUS
A Pete Smith Novelty “Pro-Football”
AND PLUS
Popeye in “Axe Me Another’?'
WELCOME TO PENN
“YOU CAN GET
TEXT BOOKS SS STUDENT SUPPLIES || GET A FREE DESK BLOTTER at our st(st
OFFICIAL GYM UNIFORMS
PARKER FOUNTAIN PENS
AND PENCILS
The Choice of Students
Everywhere
Penn State Seal Stationery
39c and up
COMPLETE LINE OF ATHLETIC GOOD
Special Reach Irons, 98c
TENNIS RACKETS
Repaired and Restrung
2 to 24-Hour. Service.
The New SINU Strings
Made from Exploded Animal Tendons
$3.50—55.00—56.00
College To Stop
1 [ldea ‘Pirating’
Research Corporation Formed
To Protect Public Tiy
Holding Patents
Steps have been taken at the Col*
lege to protect the general public
against the possible pirating ,of in
ventions and discoveries which the
College intends shall be available to
the people of the Commonwealth and
of the nation without profit to itself,
President Ralph D. Hctzel announced
recently.
To achieve this protection the Penn
sylvania Research ' Corporation has
been formed. The purpose of the cor
poration is to hold, under agreement
with the College, all patents that may
be obtained by the College as.a!re
sult of research projects carried, on
by its staff members under regula
tions laid down by the Council on Re
search of the College.
The corporation will be managed
by a'board of,ten directors, who will
serve without remuneration. Six of
these were elected at a' recent, orga
nization meeting. The original board
includes four members'of the College
Boat'd of Trustees, the dean of its en
gineering school-; and the* chairman!
of the research-council;
With several hundred research pro
jects continuously in progress at,the
College, some of which give indication
of -being of immediate and practical
value in industry and commerce, it
was felt advantageous -by the College
administration to centralize authority
and responsibility for the manage
ment of patent rights in a separate
corporation; •
- As n state-supported institution,
the policy of the. College is to apply
for' patents soleiy to protect itself*
against parties who might appropri
ate for private gain discoveries on
which 'OoMege scientists may have
been working for many years.
The-College believes that projects
for which the state has supplied
funds should necessarily . accrue to.
the benefit of the-citizens of the state
without-profit to itself.. . ,
Since the charter of the-new cor-
Nit t an y
• ;.ft!Watnet'BfOG Theatre
! Evenings at' . < . . 6:30 and 8:30
Matinee Saturday Only.at . 2:15*
Children’s Matinee Saturday, at 1:30
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY .
Fredric March, Constance Bennett,.
Frank Morgan, Maureen O’Sullivan
- in , ,
. “The Affairs of Cellini”'.
SERVING PENN STATE STUDENTS SINGE 1913
poration provides that any and all
moneys received as royalties or li
censes to the patents held by the cor
poration will be used to further sci
entific research, the intentof the Col
lege in this respect is amply- provid
ed for.
By ballot at the recent organization
meeting of the Research Corporation,
the following were elected officers of
.the corporation, Dr. Hetzel announc
ed: President, G. H. .Deike, Pitts
burgh, member of the College board'
-of trustees; vice president, R. L.‘
Sackett, of State College, dean of the
School of Engineering; secretary and
treasurer, R. H. Smith, of State Col
Gala Re-Opening of the
T AN
■■ ' '.A Warner 1
FRIDAY NIGHT, September 14
opening attraction for
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
> : JOSEPH M. SCHENCK preienli ■
MARCH
~>=> /WO" FRANK MORGAN ~
Schedule'- ) Evenings at .„- 6:30 and 8:30
V Matinee . . . 2:15
. . 01, Shows.- ) Children’s Matinee" Saturday at .. 1:30
- - - '• • • ' 1 1 - - • ~ •
STUDENT DESK LAMPS
$l.OO and up - ;
All Styles and Prices . .
Westclox and Ingersoli
Alarm Clocks and Watches
$l.OO and up
Re-washed and Re-enameled Golf Balls, 20c to 40c U. S. Tiger, 25c; Nobby, 3 for|>j|;
Complete Line of
SMOKER SUPPLIES ~
PLAYING CARDS
MAGAZINES
RENTAL LIBRARY FICTION
THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN
lege, Comptroller of the College.
The following are the incorpora
tors who constitute the initial board
of directors which will- be augmented
by the election of four additional di
rectors at a subsequent meeting of
the board: W. L. Aflelder, G. H.
Deike, and James Milhoiland, all of
Pittsburgh, and all members of the
College board of trustees; Henry D.
Brown, of Williamsport, member of
the College board of trustees; R. L.
Sackett, Dean of the School of Engi
neering, and Dr. S. W. Fletcher,
chairman of the Council- on Research,
both of State College.
STATE . .
IT AT
DESK BLOTTER HOLDERS . . 60c to $1,50
Parcel Post Laundry Cases
Fibre—Gives Years of Service
Penn State
N.
Pennants and Novelties
STICKERS
Also- Assorted College Stickers
Eastern Western Southern,
- •>- I 1 ■ •
1881 College Catalog
Discloses Freshmen
Regulations, Customs
The Penn State campus of 1881-82,
with all its class rooms, laboratories,
the library, the chapel.hall, and nu
merous dormitories in Old Main, pre
sented a vastly different picture than
the campus of the present.- A de
scription of the College at that time
is given by the College catalogue for
that year.
The catalogue or calendar was a
sixteen-page booklet, three by five
and a quarter inches. The faculty
consisted of thirteen men and two
women, headed by James A. McKee,
■M. A., Acting President. Miss Anna
M. Cooper, B. S., was “Lady Prin
cipal,” while Miss Hattie .1. Foster
was “Instructor in Music.”’
In its description of the campus,
the calendar says that the main
building “contains the. public -rooms,
such'as chapel, library, cabinets, la
boratories, class-rooms, and .social
halls, and a large number of dormi
tories ... . The' other • buildings - are
professors’ - houses, barns, engine
houses, etc.” •
At that ,time, the College provided
a bedstead, mattress, -washstand, and
a chair for each student who roomed
in Old Main. However,'all other ar
ticles such as’bedding;.wash-bowl,
pitcher, l mirror,.and'lamps had to be
furnished by the student himself.
. iThe, College provided no - boarding
facilities' at that.time, 'students being
obliged to' eat -in. town. - However,
meals' were. served at ’ half' the
present rates,--the schedules i in the
bulletin show.
At that time, all 'students .wore re
quired to take military training three
times' a‘ week, .but seniors and‘juniors
had to attend only half the .classes
assigned to members of the,two low
er classes. The uniform was’made of
cadet gray cloth in a standard pat
tern.
The-semester type of-college year
was not .in force fifty years ago. The]
year was divided into a fall., session
of sixteen. weeks and winter and
spring .sessions of twelve weeks each.!
; According to the catalogue,'Gener
al Science. was . probably the most !
popular course, embracing German!
and French, mathematics and an out-’
line of the natural and metaphysical!
sciences. The Classical ; course_ cpm
bined the components' of an ‘ old-fa
shioned "college course” with,a large,
amount of scientific knowledge' and s
practical training. ■ - - - i j".! ■ |
. CLASS OF 1938
METZGER’S
$2.50 and $2.95
Other Cases $1.19 and up
Freshmen
Needs .
*
.:..m
. ... . . . . $m
Shop Coveralls
Sweat Shirts
Black Socks 4 prs. $i:00 ;
Black Ties 2 for ft
Gym Shoes .... . . . . $l.OO to $|
Wool Gym Socks .... .3 prsi sl'
R.G.T.C. SHOES f/
None Better—“ Dayton Made” '
FREES
A Pair of R. 0. T. C. Shoes Given .
Persons Guessing Nearest Correct height
and Size of Our Giant Shoe. ! '■
FREE!
GET IN YOUR GUESS!
The llu
Department StorpJ
E. COLLEGE AVE.
Mechanical Drawing Supplies!;
Dietzgen, Keuffel and Esser-
Post—Tech '
LOG-LOG AND DUPLEX ?
SLIDE. RULES VS
Loose Leaf Note Books
All Sizes—All Prices -
Fillers, 10,15, 20c
500 Sheets Good Paper
only 79c
Hammermill Bond-sl.oo r
_'_L ■ ’ -
Thursday, September 13, ;;1!
0 0
NEAR EAST G.
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' ' ‘l' 1 ’
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