Pago Four INTRAMURAL HIGHLIGHTS By VANCE PACKARD Harriers Shaping Up Students drafted to run on their lodge’s cross-country team are Ve porting somewhat spasmodically and puffing around the golf links in prep aration for the classic. Thursday aft ernoon at 4:30 o’clock. It is re quired that every runner report for practice at least five times before the event. Manager Gehr stated that attend ance thus far has been rather low, but is expected to pick up rapidly from now on. He also cleared up several questions which are perplex ing the entrants. He says that the first ten freshmen on the yearling cross-country team will be ineligible to run this year; that any man hav ing numerals in either track or cross country is ineligible; and that any students who are out for varsity fall sports do not have to train, but only report to be checked off on the at tendance record. + ,-t- + Horse-shoe Tosscrs Quarter-finals in the intra-mural horse-shoe tournament will be played off this week. Struble, Sigma Pi, is still- pitching a stellar game and shows promise of repeating his per formance .of the past two years. His mate, Bar Riley, is also slinging a mean horse. Clubs still in the contest are Phi Psi, Sigma Pi, K. D. R., Al pha Zeta (two teams), and Phi Dolts (three teams.) + + + Pigskin Jugglers Touch footballers continued their onslaughts with unmitigated fury with seven congregations being drop ped from the tourney last week. Man ager Jacobs requests that when two tennis decide by mutual consent that they don’t want to play, they should report such matters to him before hand, and he will schedule another game instead. Results of games are listed below. + + + Thursday Sigma Pi (5; Phi Sigma Kappa G (7 first downs to 4) Delta Tnu Delta 8; D. U. 0 Theta Xi G; Triangle 0 Friday Sig Phi Sig 7; A. G. R. 0 Future' Games Tuesday Lambda Clii vs. Chi U! Alpha Chi Rho vs. Betas 'Phi Kappa Tau vs.fPi Kappa Phi Wednesday / Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Kappa Sig . S. A. E. vs. Beta Sigma Rho Student Union Bulletins TUESDAY Non-Fraternity men in the fresh man class will meet to discuss polit ical alliance in the Chemistry Amphi theatre at 7 o’clock tonight. Charles Rosenthal ’3B will aet as chairman of of the meeting. WEDNESDAY Members of the newly formed As tronomy club and all others interest ed will meet in Room 30, Physics building at 8:15 o’clock tonight. George R. Dean and Charles F. Mey-j er, graduate students, will speak on ‘‘An Outline of the History of As tronomy,” and “Various Branches of Astronomy.” “Our professor is all wet.” Such was the written sign which greeted a geology pr&f at Oberlin on his re turn from buying a new pair of trou sers after falling into a quarry while collecting fossils. CAthaum A Wither BtolhctiThcalto • . Matinees at . . . 1:30 and 3:00 Evenings at . . . 6:30 and 8:30 A complete show’ as late as 910. LAST TIMES TODAY f. B, DsMILLE’S A Ptumsunl Piclutt with CLAUDITTE COLBERT WARREN WILLIAM HENRY WILCOXOH JOSEPH SCHILDKHAUr WEDNESDAY 'lt will uivinu uon ulony with its liltiny rhythm! Your heart will beat time! Your feet will keep step! Your eyes will glisten at its lavish splendors! CARAVAN ■whu CHARLES BOYER LORETTA YOUNG JEAN PARKER PHILLIPS HOLMES • LOUISE FAZENDA EOCENE PALLETTE - C. AUBHEY SMITH CHARLEY GRAPEWIN • NOAH BEERY JESSE CRAWFORD "Pod of the Or (jo n." MRS. CRAWFORD at the “Ttviii Consoles." THURSDAY 'lid n iX'h //AHERNE; / / M A DOB ‘ EVA.NS , * miuw; pills : Freddie Rich and -Orchestra in ‘‘MIRRORS” Women Make Changes In Way of Handling Organizations’ Money Recent changes • in the financing system of the women’s organizations places their money matters in the hands of Neil M. Fleming, Graduate Manager of Athletics. Greater effi ciency and more coherence are ex pected from the innovation. Bills contracted by the Women’s Student Government. Association and the four classes will be checked through Dean Charlotte E. Ray’s of fice. Miss Marie Haidt, director of women’t athletics, will check on the Women's Athletic Association bills. Signed orders for checks are to be sent to Fleming who will take charge of the remainder of the transactions. Fees for all women’s organizations were collected by the College at reg istration. For this reason the Trea surer’s office is assuming the man agement of the money. No restric tions about the spending of the money will be placed on any of the groups. Indorsed by - the W.S.G.A. and W.A.A. last spring, the plan.was ap proved by . the Board of Trustees , at their June meeting. Ellen M. Burk holder,.- Assistant Dean of Women, Eva M. Blichfeldt.’34,-Neil Fleming, and Raymond H. Smith, Comptroller of the; College, were on the commit tee which.organized the plan. . • ... TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY ■EJgBHMj WJITTaiSIY ]■( vlj iVjrJier i&p&S'Mif. :Wtt* s MONDAY g?Ssit ROSA PONSELLE fei ___ « « v^ KOSTKLANETZ ORCHESTRA AND CIIORUS 9 P. M. (E. S. T.) —COLUMBIA NETWORK THE PENN'STATE'COLLEGIAN University Women To Hold Conference The Penn State brhnch of the American Association of University Women will act as hostess to the members of the Pennsylvania-Dela ware Division at their Fifth Bien nial Conference at the Nittany Lion Inn Thursday, Friday, ami Saturday. This conference will bring to State College many distinguished speakers from Washington, Philadelphia, and Harrisburg, in addition to several jects, who will represent the College ,on the program. More than '40,000 women belong to the A.A.U.W. and all are graduates of the 350 eligible colleges. The Penn State branch was founded in 1916. Membership in this international organization, with its branches in ev ery 'country from South Africa to Iceland, carries with it privileges in the A.A.U.W. offices in the larger cities in America as well as in al most all the foreign capitals. The primary purpose of the orga nization throughout the world is to foster 'educational activities and in terest. . From * Brooklyn comess the news that the student activity fund «t .Brooklyn Polytechnic. Institute last year had a surplus of $6,000 and there 1 was no legal way to spend it. < $ s WEDNESDAY NINO MAItTINI The Third Straight! Penn State ' Lchiyk 11 First Downs 5 220 Yards Gained, Rushing 116 7 Yards Lost, Rushing ID 213 Net Rushing Yardage 97 9 Passes Attempted 10 4 Passes Completed 2 4 Passes Grounded- G 1 Passes Intercepted 2 28 Passing Yardage 23 Penalties Horst ’l4, To Address ’3B Agriculture Class Miles Horst ’l4, prominent Lebanon County farmer, legislator, editor, and farm organizer, will address fresh men of the School of Agriculture Wednesday morning. Horst was graduated from the School of Agriculture in 1914. He is a member of the House of representa tives from Lebanon County, and field editor, of the Pennsylvania- Farmer.. CLASSIFIED WANTED —Students’ Laundry. Will call for and deliver. Phone 355-M. 62-4 t np CM FOR RENT:—Double Room , Watts . Hall.- Two closets, two bureaus. $4.00 per week call Pisklak, '319 Watts Hall. 80-ltpd.CW LOST Brown wallet containing driver’s license, matriculation card; with "naihe' Frank Warrington. Re ward if returned to S. A. E. House. 77-lt-pd-CM FOR RENT Two-room student . apartment, nicely furnished, con veniently located. Phone 739-R. 78-lt-pd-CM WANTED—Passengers to St. Mary’s or points en route via Dußois leave Friday at 4. Call Allen at 779-W. 79-lt-pd-JAM. WANTED—Student to take room 201 Varsity Hall for rest of the semes ter at $2.50 per week.- For “informa tion" call “Chuck" Grater at the Hall. 59-lt-ACH-Comp WANTED—Students to sell Christ mas cards in Fraternities and pri vate homes. Twenty-five percent profit; bonus. Call Fred Gerber at 67. • 64-4 t pd CM WANTED—Passengers to Columbia game leave Friday at 3 p. m. Re turn Sunday, round trip $7.50. Call Frank Charles 412-J. 74-lt pd DW FOR SAtiE—'Tuxedo, size 40. Call Fred Gerber, at 67. 75-lt pd, CM WANTED Rides for- two for Columbia game. Call Kay Garber or Helen Kozak at Grange, 73-lcpdDw LOST—Knights of Templar pin, slipper shape, blue and gold. Re ward. Call Mac Hall, Room 426. 76-2 t pd TJ- : , ' •“ l' ' \ -s ' -"" % j - 1 / :■ - ' •%■ : /." V . - - :: :: : >;'ri' ■aw always me same : s * 4 t/ ✓ > „ . - v '' ■'.; ■-'■ '*'. W-V; ' ,> v ',' / - i s ' \ - ; ' . "'* ' < * <\ -<■ < y<j <• ~ r , ' ~ ' ' ' ' '' f •- - ' N ' ' V - % % OrAl V '••• ' '/ The Chesterfields you’r( smoking now are just lik< they were last year or an; other year—because we al ways buy the right tobacco; —uniformly ripe and mild, Who said girls' rules were strict? All students at Beloit college, KV- Only last year the trustees of Musk- ing within a radius of thirty miles and ingum College abolished a 97 year more than five miles, have the gas old rule prohibiting dancing and card used in transportation paid for by the playing. Probably'another new deal! institution. Not bad at that. COLUMBIA BROADCASTING SYSTEM, Inc. presents for HOUSEPARTY Charles Barnet and His Orchestra. One of radio’s youngest maestros, Charles Barnet, is a perfect ex ample of youthful originality and flexibility. His music sparkles with brilliant arrangements and fluctuates between the soft, velvet smooth type of interpretation and the hottest of Harlem-style syncopation. A specialist in the American brand of dance music, Barnet believes most dancers prefer domestic tunes to Continental waltzes, and trop ical tangos, although his repertory includes many foreign numbers as well. Charles Barnet, has been heard over the Columbia Broad . casting System from such prominent New York locations as the Park Central and Paramount Hotels. Enoch Light and His Orchestra ■ . . were chosen to follow Paul Whiteman on his tour of Europe four years ago. They proved -a - sensation . . . being headlined at the Winter Garden in Berlin, Ritz in Paris,, the Casino in; Cannes and the Casino in Biarritz. Enoch’s* ban'd scored the first musical pic ture made in France, and. played at .a‘specialperformance before for- * mer President Doumergue. The foreign influence finds expression in Enoch’s trick of interpolating popular American song hits with tune ful lyrics picked up abroad. Vocal solos by Enoch, .alternating with “cuto” numbers by lovely Mary Danis, are a program highlight. This orchestra has been. featured at the Governor . Clinton Hotel, New York, and the'. Shelbourne Hotel, Atlantic City. It is. also a Victor Recording unit. • Sam Robbins and His Orchestra . . are a band with a distinct flair for being original. Their tuneful novelties, however, are always super-imposed’on a background of con sistently smooth dance rhythms.’ .Restless, dynamic Sam Robbins himself, former vaudevillian, maintains the music at, an ever lively pace, using all his old stage, tricks and directing with all mobility of an acrobat. Robbins intersperses his novelty arrangements of popu lar dance tunes with vocal specialties by June Joy, personality vo calist. This orchestra has been heard extensively both on the radio and in vaudeville; and has acquired a nation-wide following. also available Ted Black Doc Hyder r— Paul Sabin Gene Kardos Julian Woodworth and many others. These Orchestras May be Secured Through SI Ralph StToHl Y‘ : ' ' ‘ STATE' COLIEGE AGENT Phone 146 • t • ' __ : 1 Tuesday, October 23, 1934
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers