Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, October 09, 1934, Image 4
Page Four Connell To Judge Fair William B. Connell, in charge of animal husbandry extension work, is one of the judges at the livestock ex hibits at the Green County Fair in Waynesburg this week. 1:30 am] 3:00 8:30 and 8:30 Matinees at Evenings at A complete show as late as 9:10 LAST TIMES TODAY ‘Judge Priesf’ With Tom Brown, Anita Louise, Da vid Landau and STEPIN FETCHIT. PLUS Pete Smith’s “Pro Football” POPEYE in “Strong to the Finich' WEDNESDAY ANN HARDING. Ilrian Aherne, Paul Lukas, Jean Hersholt in “The Fountain” THURSDAY Star of “Invisible Man” as a crafty criminal lawyer enmeshed in his own cunning! 8:30 and 8:30 . . . 2:15 Evenings at . . . Matinee Saturday at TODAY AND WEDNESDAY 'p? % Otto Kruger, Lewis Stone Charles (Chic) Sale THURSDAY Ann Harding, Brian' Aherne, Paul Luhas. .lean Hereholt in “The Fountain” Watenpaugh To Take Dr. Patrick’s Position Howard N. Watenpaugh, for the last three years extension agronomist at the University of Arizona, will re place Prof. Austin L. Patrick, inter nationally famous authority on soils, it was announced by Prof. Frank Gardner, head of the agronomy de partment, recently. Professor Patrick is now in the service of the Interior Department of the Federal Government in the new erosion branch. Professor Waten paugh is a graduate of the Oregon Agricultural College and also served as a graduate assistant at Montana Agricultural College for two years. 85 Enter Graduate Work Eighty-five students were admitted to the Graduate School between Sep tember 1, and October 5, according to Dr. Carl- E. Marquardt, College ex aminer. The students represent colleges from 14 states. One student is a native of India. The enrollment list is still not completed, Dr. Marquardt said. Will Lead Meetings Prof. Arthur C. Cloetingh, direc tor of the Penn State Players, will lead the meetings of the eastern dra matic groups at the Carnegie Insti tute of Technology in Pittsburgh on Saturday. The conference is spon sored -annually by the Pittsburgh Drama League for the benefit of col leges, high schools, clubs, and other dramatic organizations. CAMPUS BULLETIN Penn State Grange will meet in Room 405. Old Main, at o'clock. Tryouts for girls varsity quartet will be held Tuesday at 7 o'clock p. m. in Schwab auditorium foyer. The student chapter of the Amer ican Society of Civil- Engineers will : hold an informal outing for the fresh men at Holmes Park tonight. There will be a Christian Science meeting in 405 Old Main at 7:15 o’clock tonight. TOMORROW Pi Delta Epsilon will meet in Room 420 Old Main at 7:30 o’clock. Freshmen and Sophomore candi dates for “Froth” editorial and busi ness boards will meet Wednesday at 8:30 o’clock in the "Froth” office, Old Main. An all-frcshman-womcn’s mixer will be held by the Freshman Forum of the P.S.C.A. in the Hugh Beaver Room at 6:45 o’clock. THURSDAY President’s reception will be held in lounge of Old Main ail evening. MISCELLANEOUS The office of the campus patrol has been moved from the Buildings and Grounds office to Room 321, Old Main, and is open every night from 7 to 10 o’clock. The lost and found depart ment is maintained here. Persons either finding or losing • articles should make an immediate report to. the patrol office. Dean Robert L. Sackctt, of the School of Engineering, will give the first of a series of addresses to sen ior engineers in the chemistry amphi theatre at 3 o’clock, October 12. His subject will be "The Signs of the Times.” Classified Advertising Classified advertisements will be accepted only at the Student Un ion Desk in Old Main and must be paid for before insertion. Ads received up to noon on the day preceding publication. For Rent FOR RENT—One desirable double room. 400 West Beaver Avenue. Reasonable rates. Telephone 261 and ask for Adam. 53-lt pd CM FOR RENT Desirable Student Rooms, single and double. Call 741- R and ask for Margaret Barnhardt at Student Cafeteria. 42-lt CW FOR RENT—Room in private home. 512 East Foster. Phone 402-J. 49-2tMP JAM Lost and Found FIELD GLASSES LOST—During Summer Session near- Alpha Zeta, valuable Beiss field glasses Bx3o, Deltrintem model, black, in brown case. Genervous Reward. Merrel, 432 W. College Avenue. Phone 188-M. 38-4 t pd CAM LOST—Waterman’s variegated color ed fountain pen between Mac Hall and Horticulture building on October 4. Notify Jessie Schminky, 429 Mac Hall. Reward. 50-lt pd CAM LOST —Black pocket book at Cath aum Theatre Saturday night. Reward. Call Charles Mascia, 315 Watts Hall. 51-lt pd CW FOUND—Track shoes,, jersey and towel in first floor lounge of Old Maine. Loser maV have by calling at Student Union Aesk and paying for this ad. 461tSULF FOUND—SmaII, greet Parker foun tain pen with clip. Owner may have by calling at StudcntlUnion desk and paying for this wly 5-1-lt SULF Directs ’34 Houseparty Show <3 * J. KWING ‘SOCK’ KENNEDY ’26 • Thespians Combine With Men’s Glee Club To Stage Production for Fall Houseparty Because of the reluctance of the Players to undertake the production of a show for Saturday night of Houseparty, November 17, the Penn State Thespians will combine with the Men’s Glee club to present a rev ue at that’time, according to an an nouncement made by J. Ewing "Sock” Kennedy ’26, director of Thes pians, and Jacob C. Forney ’35, pres ident of the club. The show which will be a regular revue such as presented in Radio City, New York, will be produced under the joint direction of Kennedy and Prof. Richard W. Grant, head of the department of music educa tion. Prof. Hummel Fishburn, also of the department of music educa tion, will aid in staging the produc tion. No Plot in Revue Rehearsals for the revue got un der-way last week when preliminary try-outs for the cast, chorus, and technical staff were held. Kennedy stated that rehearsals will be held through this week until the final cast and chorus have been selected. The revue will probably consist of seven or more scenes, Kennedy said, and will contain no plot but will be of the’ straight revue type, a series of vaudeville skits, and musical num bers. Kennedy emphasized the fact that the revue would not be of the type as have been presented here for the last three years by the Players in colla- ... and while we’re talking about cigarettes a (j&odbUfCitetfe _■ cjiveo you a ooto^ > Olicstcrficld © 1934, Liggett & Mvbis Tobacco Co, Jj->- THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN boration with the Glee club and the Thespians under the name of “The Panics of, 1933.” Technical Staffs Listed The scenery for the entire revue will be designed and executed by Henry R. Porterfield and his staff of scenic artists. • Porterfield's work won much commendable comment both here and in ,|*hilipsburg last May when the Thespians presented “My Stars”. . Forney - announced that the tech* nical staffs - of the Thespian club for the coming year will be as follows: Robert D. Kelso '36, business man ager; Gordon P. Davis ’35, stage manager; C. Lamar Hollar ’36, mas ter electrician; Richard P. Barzler '36,' master carpenter; William B. Edwards '35, make-up manager; Dan iel A. Jones '36, property manager; Vernon D. Cronister '36, costume manager. BALBRIGGAN PAJAMAS EGOLF’S the cigarette, that’s MILDER the cigardtte that TASTES BETTER Hitler Maneuvering To Create ‘Stooges’ Out of Collegians It’s not much fun being a fresh man anywhere. Practically all American colleges believe that the neophyte freshmen must undergo a certain amount of “hazing” and humilation before they can assume the dignity of being upperclassmen. Even here at Penn State the fledgl ings are apt to moan about the abuses which they have to suffer. But in Germany, add Hitlerizing to hazing. The Nazis, with,their re gulations, have even invaded the portals of Old Heidelbei’g. Gone is the care-free, stein-hoisting exist ence so fascinatingly portrayed in the operetta. The University Student’s Union, only university undergraduate’s or ganization recognized by Der Fue hrer and his henchmen, *has decreed a standard uniform which must be worn by all neophytes in all Ger man universities. Outlawed ai*e their brightly colored caps and rib bons so cherished by them. Now they must feel more like convicts than scholars—especially since they, must live in houses which are fur nished in uniform style. These .regulations “to secure the uniform education of our academic youth in the National Socialist spirit” is beginning to brew a revolt among -the collegians of Germany. Speakers Will Address Poultry S h o r t Course Seventeen speakers will appear on the program of the fourteenth annu al. Poultry Short (Jourse, October 22 to 26. The Pennsylvania State Poul try association will cooperate by hav ing its semi-annual meeting at.the same time. Poultry husbandry department staff members taking part include: Prof. Herman C. Knandel, head of the de part; Prof. Ernest W. Callenbach, Dean R. Marble, Robert R. Murphy, and Paul H. Margolf. Dr. Jesse E. Hunter; of the agricultural and bio logical chemistry department, also will speak. One and Two Piece Special at $l.OO College Life . . Several hundred freshmen, stirred up by Friday night’s mass meeting, played "college life” late Friday night whfen they paraded around town and built a bonfire in front of Recreation hall. Clad in pajamas, sweat shirts, the freshmen, led by two cornetists-and a cheerleader, wandered around town and finally up to Recreation hall. There they dragged out a pile of crates which had been used to ship basket-locker equipment and started the bonfire. The only damage done was when the freshmen carried off the borough traffic dummy from the Co-op corner and threw it into the midst of their bonfire. They also ambitiously rolled a heavy concrete paving roller from the vacant field across from the Phi Delta Theta fraternity up the hill to Recreation hall. Legislator To Speak To ’3B Agriculturists Joseph R. Ziesenheim, State Sena tor , will speak to the freshmen of the School of Agriculture on Oc tober 17. Miles Horst, a represent ative in the general assembly and field editor of the Pennsylvania Far mer, will talk to the freshmen on Oc tober 24. Both Horst and Ziesenheim are graduates of agricultural courses from the College. EXPERT SHOE REPAIR . . . J. B. MINGLE (Next to Fire Hall) + Gun Repair Work Our Specialty Open till 10 P. M. Every Evening. Q.,l^ MONDAY WEDNESDAY SATURDAY PONSELLE KOSTELANETZ ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS 9 P. M. (E. S. T.) —COLUMBIA NETWORK Tuesday, October ,9. 1934 University Club Lists ’34 Social Functions A formal dinner-dance opened the season for the University Club on Friday night, October 5. New members of the faculty were in vited as guests of the club. Other October events will include a con tract bridge party on the 19th, and a Hallowe’en Dance on Saturday the 27th. For November 8, a duplicate con tract bridge party is arranged and for November 23, an informal dinner dance. December promises an auc tion bridge on the 4th, on informal dance with refreshments served on the 14th and the usual children’s par ty on the 15th. The new year will be ushered in with a duplicate contract bridge par ty on January 4,-contract on the 19th, and a formal dinner-dance, the'26th. A report of the social- committee shows that twenty-five per cent more people attended social functions of the Club during the second semester of last year, than during a similar period the previous year. Women Assigned Reserved tables in the McAllister hall- dining commons have been as signed to the women students who take their meals there. Women stu dents will be required to sit at the same table- for the remainder of the semester. No freshman women will be allowed to sit at the tables of the fraternity groups. mAll Subjects ymk 'ollegiatel 'ed Dictionary' is convenient for quick reference Uofjcther the best dictionary for »f vliich l know."—PotocU Sfeioart, tjllah, University of Texas. tnd Department Heads of leading agree with this opinion. irgett of the Merrlam-Wcbitcr /fbrWgmcnji ■Wes, Including hundreds of new th definitions, spellings, and correct / zetteer;&BiographlcalDtctionaiv; /< Tl r ord* and Phrases; Abbrevta- jj Puncfnafion, I7se 0/ Capitals. flk Uier features of practical value., 1/m ages. 1,700 Illustrations. •, 1/mi At Your College Bookstore '//wM. •Ite for Information to the //MMA shers. /MmA & C. IMcrriam Springfield,'Mua. MARTINI STUECKCOLD