oSemi-wee kl y£ ppitn itatr (p (ttnllrgian. Volume 31—Number 26 Sigma Delta Chi Will Hold Grid Banquet Third ‘Roast’ Dinner To Attract State Political Men Rowles’3s Appointed Committee Chairman Campus.personalities and .promin ent political figures will again be sub jected to'a royal roasting'at the third annual* .Gridiron Banquet, sponsored by Sigma ' Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, which will be held in.the Nittany Lion Inn on Fri day night, March I‘. ' - The Gridiron Banquet, started here two years, ago, is modeled after the famous annual banquet sponsored by the National- Press club and held in Washington a few weeks ago. To Furnish Music An innovation at this years affair will be the use of incidental music to accompany the skits. Music was used for one of the' skits_ last year and proved to be a success, so this com mittee this year decided to use mu sic for the entire program. Besides prominent student leaders, the.better known members of the fac ulty will be extended invitations to the affair. Last year'more than 200 persons attended. Burton Rowles ’35 was named gen eral chairman of'the affair by Wil liam Y. E. Rambo '35, president 'of Sigma Delta Chi. The Roastmaster, who will preside at the - banquet, has not yet been chosen. * , Script Writers Named The members of the script commit tee are Rowles, Harry B. Henderson jr. ’36, William P. McDowell .’36, and . Vance 0. Packard ’36., Tom'J. Nokes . '35. will head the . property conimit ..tee. and .will, be.assisted by'W. Ber nard Preunsch,’36, and John E.-Miller Other .‘committees are, dinner,' Phil lip. W.,Fair-jr.* *3s;.business, John B. ’’ Davis-136,: chairman, and Charles M. Schwartz- jr. ■ ’36; publicity,’ Kenneth C. Hoffman ’35; chairman, and Don ald ,P.; Sanders ’36.. Experiment Staticin Issues 15 Bulletins Fifteen bulletins, comprising a total of 39,000 copies, were issued during the past year in reporting results of research conducted by.the College, Agricultural experiment sta tion, Dr. Steven W. Fletcher, director of research, revealed ’in the annual report of . the station. A wide variety of information is covered in the printed bulletins. In addition .to the "general* summary in cluded in the annual report, the publi cations carried information o n orchard soil fertility, alfalfa varie ties,'electrically heated dairy utensil sterilizers, county - government costs, artificial propagation of ring-necked pheasants, polyporaceae of Pennsyl vania, Virginia pine, baits.for orien ,tal‘ fruit moth, the respiration calori meter, vitamin ‘D requirements .for chickens, lead 'residues on . apples, types of farming, potato growing with tractor .power and linseed meal lor lambs. „ • - The bulletin, on the respiration calorimeter won first prize in the exhibit. of research bulletins at the annual meeting of the' American Association of- Agricultural College Editors.: ' v • • -•••-- In addition to their reports printed in station bulletins, agricultural re search ' ‘workers' have had sixty-nine Scientific-papers published in technical, •jbnrnals 1 during; the year. • - Students, Will Continue FERA During Vacation • 'Students noto working, at F.E.R.A. jobs may continue to" work during the' Christmas vacation, if they de sire. However, since the allotted num ber .of students; 525, have already been , placed on the payroll for • this month', no other additions can be made.. ' Many of the workers are planning to work out their full number of .hours before.the vacation. All'of the money allotted by the Government for; carrying .on the work, which- is not paid out, will be returned to the F.E.R.A. administration. -. » Dr. Tschan Appointed , Dr. Francis J.- Tschan, of the his-: tory department,, has been notified of his appointment.to’ the'’executive com mittee .of the' National Council of the American Association ,'of J University Professors. .Dr. Tschan was a recent delegate to the Chicago convention of the association while he served on the' ‘ Collegian ’ Suspends Issues Until Jan. 4 Because Of the Christmas holi days, the next issue of the Col legian will be published Friday, January 4, 1935. Christmas vaca tion officially begins at 11:50 o’- clock tomorrow and ends at 1:10 o’clock on Wednesday, January 2. The $5.00 fine ruling for cutting classes within twenty-four hours of the beginning and end of the Christmas vacation will be rigidly enforced, it was, announced by Col lege authorities yesterday.. Beaux Arts Ball Set for Jan. 11 Mardi Gras Provides Decoration Theme For Annual Dance • Of Scarab Group Penn State’s most colorful dance, the Beaux Arts Ball, will be held in the Armory from 8 o'clock until 2 o’clock on Friday night, January 11, under the sponsorship of Scarab, architectural* professional fraternity. The committee, after considering such decorative schemes as a Black Forest village and a modification pf last year’s New England village, fi nally chose the Mardi Gras, to en able persons to secure costumes easily. ’ Bottorf To Play The dance floor decorations will follow closely that of the New Or leans streets. Bill Bottorf’s orches tra, which has been engaged to fur nish music for the affair, will be plac ed in a shop window as in the real Mardi Gras. Around the sides of the room will be houses in a riot of colors. All decorations for the Ball will be amateur, .work done by members of the fraternity and several students in the department of architecture. Members of the fraternity have avail able a limited ( number of invitations for the-affair. ’, * • Prizes Offered * l Prizejpviirbe' awarded I6r^he, ; most individual' fJußges; wilf'be chosen.'from the, faculty of "the de partment of architecture. Members of the committee arc Har ry ,J.' ’Hosfibld' ’35, chairman, John Dallas jr. ’35, Harry D., ,M. Grier ’3s,'.Sinclair A. A.dams.’36,' Joseph F. Balis ’36,] J.’ Briggs Pruitt ’36, and Lloyd F. ‘ Hughes ’35, president of Scarab, ex-officio member. . 2 Seniors To Attend Student Conference Paul K. Hirsch .’35 and Lucy K. Erdraan ’35 will act as Penn State’s delegates at the tenth annual Con gress of the National* Student Fed eration to be held in* Boston from December 28 to January 1 inclusive. .More than 200 delegates arc ex pected to attend the convention in an effort to define National Student Fed eration policy, and plan a specific course for the following year. In ad dition N.S.F.A. member-college rep resentatives- from thirty-four States, “observer” delegates from, many oth er colleges have been invited. Four groups made up from dele gates from colleges with more than 1,250 undergraduates, colleges small er than that*, women’s colleges, and co-educational schools will discuss student government set-ups, their du ties, policies, and relation to the fac ulty.- • Other round-table discussions will be -conducted on the. following sub jects: 'fraternity relations, student fi nances, . the honor system, publica tions, and the relative.value of intra mural and intercollegiate athletics. Debate Team To Take Trips Over Vacation ; Continuing 'on annual custom, a Penn State debating team will* leave Sunday on a southern trip which will include debates'with William and Mary College at Williamsburg, Va.y and American University, at Wash ington, D. C. . • The debate with William and Mary College renews a long-standing cus tom of' Christmas vacation debates. James W. Townsend ’35, president of Forensic council, Robert L. Durkee ’35, and Aaron N. Decker ’36, will take the affirmative side of the ques tion, “Resolved: That' the nations agree to international • ship ment of-arms’and munitions.” Prof. Harold F. Graves; of the department of - English composition, will accom pany ttie team. " . The iWilliam and Mfcry college . de bate will be conducted along parlia mentary fortim procedure. The. Penn State team will debate the'same.ques tion -along intercollegiate procedure with : ' the American University,' of Washington, ~D. . C., at.-the .Chevy. Chase high school;' Wednesday, • De cember 19. " STATE COLLEGE, PA.,-FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1934 College Drive for New Students Will Open During Holiday Recess , •• * Publicity Campaign Group Will NamefUpperclass Men To Speak Before Home HighjSchools •The College’s publicity drive for new students for the 1935-36 year will open during the Christmas vaca tion period when student representa tives will speak to groups of high school students interested in a college, education. The committee conducting the drive is making a list of -all the high schools which have sent a considerable num ber of students to Penn State in past years. An alumnus of each high school who is now a student here will be chosen by the committee. These students will be asked to I. M. Discussion Tourney Closes Phi Della Theta Opposes Beta Sigma Rho in Finals; 2 Cups for Winner Phi Delta Theta met Beta Sigma Rho in the Intramural Discussion fi nals last night at ’the-Beta Sigma Rho house, the former by virtue of two victories, the latter through one vic tory and one forfeit. Prof. Harold F. Graves, of the department of Eng lish composition, was the judge and Roy Wilkinson ’37 served as chair man of the discussion. The Phi Delt team, made up of Richard S.' Moffitt ’35, Vance O. Packard ’36, and E. Townsend Swalm *37, defeated Phi Epsilon’s three-man team on Monday night by,one point, 10-to-11, and repeated on Tuesday night to-down the Phi Sigma Delta aggregation by a 9-to-ll score. The judges were, respectively, Prof. Syl vester Kirby Stevens, of the depart ment of history and political science, and * Charles. A. Myers ’34. •. „ ; Beta Sigmaßho Wins ; ,. .- min. ’37, Arthur -E. Pollock ‘?37,-.and Seymour. Wattenbcrg ’37 —w.e r e awarded a 9-to.-12 over, .the Sigma ; Chi’s on 'Monday' night by,. Judge Clayton H. Schug, of the'de partment of' public speaking, and won on -a forfeit] from the Sigma Tau‘ Phi’s on Tuesday. \ Phi Sigma Delta reached the quar ter-finals and their Phi Delt “Water loo” after defeating Phi Sigma Kap pa by the lowest score to date, 6-to -15. Sigma Tau ’ Phi drew a first round bye to enter the quarter-fi nals where it continued their policy of non-opposition by forfeiting to Be ta Sigma Rho. •Winner To Get Cup The winner of last .night’s tourney, unfinished as th*e Collegian . went to press, will be awarded a silver loving cup appropriately inscribed and will also hold the Delta Sigma Rho, de bate society, cup for one year. Three victories are necessary for permanent possession, with the Phi Dolts hold ing one leg as a result of a victory last year and the Beta Sigs none. Curiously, the campus house won its title last year, at the. expense of the same finalist whom they faced last night—the Beta Sigma Rho’s. Both cups will be awarded at the In ternational Debate between the Uni versity of -Hawaii and Penn State to be held on the campus in February. Take Operators’ Tests Gilbert L. Crossley, instructor in radio - engineering,' Henry W. Hawk, graduate ! student, and Robert H. Van Horn ’37 returned Thursday night from a trip to Baltimore where they took radio operator’s tests from the Army Signal Corps. With Clifford B. Holt . jr.,: instructor in ' electrical engineering , and George Hart- ’36 they visited the United States Bureau of Standards and the Army short wave radio station in Washington.- Who ’s Dancing Tonight Lambda Chi Alpha * . (invitation) ' - Varsity Ten . Triangle, , * (invitation) Jess Fithan Alpha Phi Delta (invitation) Nat LaCaycra ‘ • Phi Nu Delta and -Phi Sigma Kappa at Phi Sigma Kappa ’ ‘ (closed) • State SylvanianB Chi Upsilon' (invitation) . Lew Stanley Phi Delta Theta (closed) Dinner-Dance . Bill Bottorf contact all students |n the high school who are planning;io go to college. They may use ariy/Jnethod of contact they prefer, cithe£ singleJy or in groups. ;v* All students, arc .lacked by the com mittee to visit theiryhome high schools and hand in lists' I *# prospective stu dents to the Registrar's office when they return to College after vacation. They will then' information regarding the College curricula, ex penses, and . Faced with a rapidly decreasing number of applicrinjs for admission to the College, Perin'Statc-last year started the, policy'of recruiting stu dents from the ranks of high school graduates. - Last year was the first time that any publicity of this nature was necessary to ''gain; a sufficient number of- freshmen^ , Members of the Cdjlege administra tion staff who are acting in behalf of the school in this matter are Adrian O. Morse, executiveftsocrctary to the President; Edward KjHibshman, sec retary of the-Alumni!association; Dr. Carl E. examin ing officer; F. Dantzscher, .head of the department of publicity; Dean of Women • Charlotte E. Ray; and Dean of Meri.-Arthur R. War mock. •;; Name 13 Juniors To ‘La Vie’ Staff 8 Men, 5 Women Get ■ Editorial Posts; Other-Elections ■ - ~ r ‘ Scheduled. k .Later . Thirteen men' and women were elected to the- junior editorial board of the 1935 La'Vic/Qollege annual, at a noting of .the aenJor iboard in their this -week. - - , ; Eight of the juniors 'named to the board,are. men. - They: are James H. Armstrong,- John K. Barnes jr., W. Bernard'Freunsch, J. Ernest Nachod -Edward- A.,- Novack, Vance O. Packard, Charles' M.-- Schwartz jr., and Charles G. Wiley, Women’s Board Chosen The five- junior women elected to membership on the Board are Jane W. Fernsler, Dorothy F. Hull, Ruth E. Koehler, Elizabeth J.. McKeon, and Eleanor M. Ryan. Elections to the junior and business and art staffs will be held soon after vacation.. These candidates have been vieing for positions since the middle of Oc tober, when work on the yearbook was begun. Elections to the. senior staff will* take place soon after the book is distributed in the spring. Ac cording to present plans,. the book will b<* ready on May 1. Several sections of the now La Vie have already been sent to the print tors, William Y. E. Rambo’3s, editor, said. The varsity and freshman ath letics have been written and most of the social fraternities section is com pleted. Pictures of a number of campus organizations are still being taken. i Clubs Will-Stage Holiday Week Dances Four. College clubs will stage danc es- in various sections of the State during the Christmas holidays. The traditional Intercollegiate - dance, sponsored by the Penn State club, will be held in the Pcnn-Harris Hotel in Harrisburg on December 26. The alumni club in that city is assisting with the affair. Sarah A. McKee ’35 has-been in vited to represent Penn State as a member of an honorary, committee of girls from various colleges and uni versities, who will be present at” the dance. William B. Edwards ’35 will introduce the committee- members. Tentative plans also include musical numbers by members of the glee club who live in the vicinity of Harris burg. The Hazelton Mountaineers club, along with the alumni club and the undergraduate center at that city, will conduct an Intercollegiate ball at the Hotel Altamont in Hazelton on Christmas night. The dance will be by subscription. The Bradford-Sullivan County club will hold its annual Christmas dance at the Community Hall in Towanda on December 27. A Frances Turner ’36 is in charge of- the' committee planning the dance. Norm Parks and his Band from Indiana, will furnish the music for the affair!' The students of the College under graduate center in Pottsville will con duct a formal-! dance on December 20 at the Necho Allen hotel in that city. Os Werley and his •„ orchestra will provide 'the music. Staff Members Will Participate In 14 Conclaves 15 To Attend Meeting Of Pa. Educators In Harrisburg 8 History Instructors Will Go to Washington At least fifty-five professors and administrative staff members of the College will participate in the meet ings of fourteen societies holding na tional or state meetings in many cities during the Christmas holidays. Among the groups.at which repre sentatives from the College will ap pear are: American Association "for Advancement of Science, American Historical Association, American Li brary Association, American Society for Bacteriologists, and American Student Health Association. Others are Association of American Geographers, Geological Society of America, Modern Language Associa tion of America, National Associa tion of Teachers of Speech, Paleon tological Society of America, the Pennsylvania State Education Asso ciation, American Association of Schools and Departments of Journal ism, American Physical Society, and Society of American Foresters'. Educators To Meet ; The State Education Association ipeeting in Harrisburg gives evidence of claiming the most representatives from the College, a total of fifteen having signified their intention of at tending. These inclu.de Dean' Will- Grant Chambers, of the School of Ed ucation, Palmer C. Weaver, assistant to the Dean, Drs. Clarence O. Wil liams, Bruce V. Moore, Charles C. Peters, Frank H. Koos, F.' Theodore Struck, and Prof. Richard W. Grant, head of the department of music, and- Misses Mabel E. Kirk, Mary J. Wyland, Marion Van -Campen, and Anna Haugen, and Robert P. Wray, of'the School of. Education., < r lThe' division of’'history plans a one-hundred per cent attendance at the meetings of the American His torical Association' fit Washington, D. C. Doctors Wayland F. Dunaway jr., James ,E. Gillespie, Francis J. Tschan, Profs, Burk-a M. Herman,. S. K. Stevens, Albert G. Pundt, and J. Paul Selsam have all, signified their intention to intend. Language Convention Planned At least four faculty members will attend the Philadelphia meeting of the Modern Language Association: Drs. Lucretia V. T. Simmons, Harri son'H. Arnold, Prof. Lorrise J. Hurl brink, and W. K. Lcgner. At least ten faculty members will appear at sectional meetings of the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science in Pittsburgh: Helmut Landsbcrg at the meeting of the American Meteorological Soci ety; Donald E. H. Frear, and Prof. Frederick G. Marklc at the meeting of the American Association of Plant Physiologists. Several others will attend A.A.A.S. meetings. At least three members will attend the American Physical Society branch moating: they arc Dr. William R. Ham, L. T. DcVore, and Donald P. LeGalley. Four will -at tend the American,- Society for Hor ticulture Science branch meeting. They are: Dr. Warren B. Mack, Prof. J. E. Nicholas, D. C. Sprague, and (Continued on page two) Survey of Activities Shows Liberal Arts School Has 54 Per Cent Representation What chances have you of "making out’\ in your activity? If you’re out for a managership, trying for publications, in politics, or in dramatics, a lot will depend upon the school’ in which you are enrolled, a recent survey shows. Out of 284 positions in these fields. Liberal Arts furnishes 153 or fifty-four per cent; Education has fifty-two or eighteen per cent; thirty-seven. or fourteen per cent come from Engineering; Ag riculture is represented by eight in dividuals or five per cent. The re maining two per cent are represent ed by four from Physical Education and two from the Mineral Industries School. , While the preponderance of Lib eral Artists is most noticeable in the publication field, they furnish nearly half of those who are -in'the other three activities.. Their leadership is most closely contested in student gov ernment where they fill thirty-four out oi seventy-six l posts. Education furnishes twenty, Engineering eleven, Agriculture five, Chemistry and Phys sics and Physical .Education three each. Student Council, where each school has equal representation, is not included in this number. Forty-six managerships out of ninety-eight are in the Liberal Arts Students May Reserve Artists’ Course Seats Student reservations of Artists' Course tickets may be made at the Athletic office, Old Main, today or tomorrow and the tickets paid for after Christmas vacation, Dr. Carl E. Marquardt, head of the course, announced yesterday. Approximately 200 tickets at $3.10 each remain and if these are not bought by students, faculty, or State College residents, the tickets will be sold out of town, Dr. Marquardt said. Sarg’s Puppets To Appear Here Players To Present Marionette Show on Jan. 11; Will Give 2 Performances ..Tony Sarg’s marionettes will be brought to the campus by the Penn State Players on January 11 after an absence of three years, Prof. Ar thur C. Cloetingh, head of the de partment of dramatics announced yesterday. This is the fourth time the group has played here. \ Two performances will be staged by the puppeteers this year. “Uncle Remus,” a new production this sea son, will be presented at a children’s matinee in Schwab auditorium at 4 o’clock in the afternoon. The., main performance will be given in the aur ditorium at 8:20 o’clock the same night when “Faust, the Wicked Magi-j cian,” will be staged. Appeared Here in 1926 In their first appearance here in 1926, Tony Sarg’s marionettes pre sented their version of Robert Louis Stevenson’s, “Treasure Island.” Two years later they presented the “Ad ventures of Christopher Columbus,”, •and “Spanish Fiesta.” In December, 1931 “Rose and the Ring,” was pro duced. , The puppeteers arc the operators who work behind the scenes, and ma- -order, to-give them a life-Hkc appearance. The p'up pet« , are operated. by a system of .strings from a platform behind the stage on which the marionettes arc seen. ' A specially built stage is required for the proper performance of these humahettes and the group carries its own stage,' properties, lights; and oth er equipment along with it. In other respects the marionette show moves in the fashion of a full sized produc tion. Tribunal Body Changes Freshman Restriction After the Christmas holidays fresh man students will not be required to keep their hands out of their pock ets,. Leo N. Skemp ’35, president of Tribunal, announced at the last meet ing. He explained that the weather was getting too cold to require this custom and that since it did not ma terially benefit anyone, the restric tion would be lifted. Three freshmen were turned in for breaking customs within the past two weeks but since the, Christmas vaca tion was so near and punishment would not have been meted out before the first meeting of next year, the men were excused. They will be ex pected to appear at the next meeting which will be hdld in Room 318, Old Main, on Tuesday night, December 8, at 7:30 o’clock. School. Engineering holds second place with seventeen. Education has thirteen, Agriculture ten, and Chem istry and Physics nine. Mineral In dustries has two and Physical Edu cation one. This is the only activity in which each school is represented. Theta Alpha Phi, dramatic honor ary, is composed of eleven from Lib eral Arts, .four from Education, three from Engineering, and one from Ag riculture. Four of the members are graduate students. The Collegian boards are made up of twenty Liberal Arts students, four Education, and one each from Agri culture, Engineering, and Chemistry- Physics. La. Vic has but three schools represented. Liberal Arts has nine teen on the boards, Engineering four, and Education three. The Old Main Bell includes nine I Liberal Artists, the Agriculture and Education • schools each have two, while Engineering has one student. Froth is composed of fourteen from Liberal Arts, six from Education, and two each from. Agriculture and Chem istry and Physics. On all the publications the editorial boards arc composed almost exclu sively of Liberal Arts and Education students while the representatives from other schools are found on the business and art staffs. COMPLETE CAMPUS COVERAGE PRICE FIVE CENTS Ithaca Comes Here To Open Season Capt. Stocker, Smiths, Fletcher, Hunter May Start Contest Will Begin at 7:30 in Recreation Hall ! An untried and almost entirely in experienced Penn State basketball quintet will take the court in Rec v haH at 7:30 o’clock tonight against a reputedly strong Ithaca College ag gregation. The visitors were stopped by Colgate in their opener Monday night, 35-to-29, in a close contest. Coach Spike Leslie has not an nounced the starting line-up, but as a result of creditable performances m the lengthy practices during the past week and a half, the following may get the call: Captain Johnny Stocker and Jack Fletcher, the two lettermen, at forwards; lanky Jim Hunter in the tap-off post: and two unrelated Smiths, Frank and Jimmy, at guards. Reserves Prove Capable ' s P ike has eight equally capable re serves. Jay McWilliams, at center* Jack Heyison, Mike Kornick, and Van Lmton, guards; and Lefty Knapp, Bar Riley, Bob Small, and Charlie Glennon, forwards, might see action. Ithaca will probably line up with Ken Patrick and Ben Pismanoff at guards, Gid Hawley at center, and Frank Clark and A 1 Kaufman at for wards. This is Patrick’s third year of varsity basketball; Pismanoff and Hawley have each been playing two years, while Clark and Kaufman, two sophomores, are recruits from last year’s freshman team. Patrick is a former Manlius Mili tary Academy star. Hawley played regular three years ago at Cook Aca demy, as did Pismanoff at Allentown P-rep.'j,Clark, -formerly of-Dedn Aca derny, is said to be a shifty forward. The Lions which will bear watch ing tonight are Captain Johnny Stock 'er and Jack Fletcher, long-shot ar tists,' and Jim Hunter, in his first varsity encounter, an expert on the follow-up shot. Hunter will probab ly bear the brunt of the attack, and the outcome of the contest will rest on his hawk-like eye. Smiths Improve Frank and Jimmy Smith have de -veloped nicely since the start of prac tices this season, showing distinct im provements over last year. Jimmy saw action in several games last year, but was unable to turn in perfor mances anywherc’s near what he has been doing in practices this year. Leslie’s proteges plan to remain here and practice until December 21/ returning again on the 26th,’ prepar ing for the Rutgers game in New Brunswick at 8 o’clock, Saturday night, December 29. Plenty of trouble is expected from the Red Roosters. Coach Frank Hill has eight lettermen on his squad, which averages 5 ft., 11% in., and 174 lbs. A big order! Prior to meeting the Blue and White, Sonor Galbraith’s Alma Ma ter will have played Upsala, Prince ton, Trenton Teachers, and Dickin son. It-encounters the latter tomor row night. Last year the ’Red Roost ers barely eked out a 35-t034 victory over the Nittany Lions here in the ■last second of play—the most spec tacular game of the season. Line-up Indefinite Rutgers’ line-up is still indefinite. At center will undoubtedly be Lou Cudlin, 6 ft. 2% in. regular from last season, who is a senior this year. Ed Blumberg, star forward of last season, will be in one of those posts. Ho was Rutgers’ quarterback this year. Lou Grower, only three-letter man at the • New Brunswick institution, and high scoring guard and forward for the past two seasons, will un doubtedly be in the line-up. Moe Grossman, of Brooklyn, and brother of Jack Grossman, Rutgers’ famed athlete, will no doubt bo in as guard. Irv Paul, guard and letter winner for two years, and member of the football and lacrosse squads, will (Continued on page four) Unemployment in Pa. Discussed by Motley Speaking on “Pennsylvania’s Prob lems of Unemployment,” Arthur W. Motley, director of the Pennsylvania State Employment Service, addressed members of the student body and fac ulty, in the Home Economics audi torium Wednesday afternoon at 4:10 o’clock. Mr. Motley spoke under the aus pices of the department of economics and sociology. In the evening, he was the guest of the Economics* club and gave an informal talk.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers