Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, January 08, 1935, Image 1

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    ESTABLISHED
1904
Volume 31—Number 28
Baseball Card
Of State Nine
Lists 18 Tilts
Schedule Has 10 Home
Games; Bisons Will
Open Season.
'35 Program Larger
Than Previous. Year's
A Blue and White' 1935 baseball
schedule featuring eighteen games, in
cluding four trips—the largest Penn
State has ever had—is nearing com
pletion, Neil M. Fleming, graduate
manager of athletics, announced yes
terday. Ten of the games will be at
home, although all arrangements are
still in a tentative state, Mr. Fleming
explained.
The salient phase of this new sched
ule will be 'a week's Southern trip
during which Navy, Washington Col
lege, of Chestertown, Md., and one
other team will be met. Negotiations
are still in progress regarding this
game. Possibly two more will be
signed, Mr. Fleming said.
Eastern Trip Planned
An Eaitern trip to play the Uni
versity of Pennsylvania and one oth
er team will also be made, while a
Northern trip to engage Colgate and
Syracusb has also been scheduled.
Syracuse will also meet the Lions on
Beaver Field in the Commencement
game. The fourth trip is the second
part of a home-and-away agreement
with Bucknell.
The Bis;ins will open the Nittany
'Lions' home season. Other home con
tests are scheduled with Susquehanna,
Juniata, Lebanon Valley, Gettysburg,
Western Maryland, Dickinson, Tem
ple, Muhlenburg, and Syracuse, in
that order.
This year's eighteen-game card'con
trasts considerably with that of 1934
in which there were thirteen contests
played, in eight. of which the Lions
were victorious. In 1933, with twelve
.games scheduled,- Penn -State won
four, lost five, and three 'were called
3 P.S.C.A. Trips
Attended by 35
Students View Social, Industrial
Conditions in Chief Cities
During 1 Day Tour.
Three inquiry trips, affording
glimpses into social and industrial
conditions existing in Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg, were
sponsored by the C. A. over the holi
days. Harry I. Gilbert '36 was chair
plan of the committee arranging for
the trips, in which nearly fifty stu
dents from Penn State and other
Pennsylvania colegels participated.
Speakers from each group will pre
sent a repOrt at a meeting in the
Hugh Beaver Room, Old Main, to
night at 8 o'clock. An open discussion
on the best methods of alleviating the
conditions observed will follow the re
ports.
Nearly thirty students from this
campus and other eastern colleges
were in the party that made the Phil
adelphia trip, with Horace Rodgers
jr. '35 in . charge. Robert Tabor and
Dr. Carl Dcschwcinitz, of the Penn
sylvania School of Social Work-,ar
ranged the itinerary.
Among the high spots were visits
to the-House of Detention where sev
eral preliminary hearings of Juve
nile Court cases were attended, and
to the State Employment agency. A
luncheon was held at the Graphic
Sketch Club, . the center of an art
colony founded by a Philadelphia phil
anthropist for the purpose of giving
free. instruction in the fine arts. The
Shelter for the Ilbmeless was also
visited, where n4arly 4,000 men are
lodged nightly in an unused locomo
tive works.
Dorothy P. Fish '37 headed the
group which observed conditions in
Harrisburg, including trips
,to the
Bethlehem Steel Works, Welfare Sta
tistical department, Harrisburg State
hospital, and a tour of the welfare
agencies of the city. •
dCatherthe B, Humphrey '36 was
chairman of the Pittsburgh delega
tion, which .was joined by a number
of students from the University of
Pittsburgh. A home for . transients
and congested living conditions were
observed..
Doan Receives Honor
Prof. Francis J. Doan, of the dairy
manufacturing staff, was elected na
tional vice-president of Gamma Sig
ma Delta, honor society , of agricul
ture, at a meeting of the legislative
Council of the fraternity in Chicago,
recently.
iws,
run
;• , ijita i tr
ntirgtatt4.
••
Association Secretary
CLIFFORD C. WOOD '35
150 Will Attend
Convention Here
Representatives of 30 Colleges
To Arrive for Conclave
Friday Morning.
More than 150 students from thirty
colleges will meet here Friday and
Saturday when the convention of
Pennsylvania Association of College
Students opens. Executive Secretary
of /he association, Clifford C. Wood
'35, announced that subsidization of
athletes and the extent of college stu
dent interest in public life would be
the principal subjects discussed.
Delegates to the convention will rep
resent student government in their
respective colleges. In addition to the
two main subjects they will take up
a general consideration of student
government, publications,'and financ
es. Wood also stated that the major
business of the convention will center
around the formal adoption of a con,
stitution for the association.
To Register. Fridayl Morning
Registration from ,9:30 . to .1:30
:chick on. Friday will open . two-day
AMong' the
speakers' . of ' , the convention 'will he
Rostand 'of ithe . .BlOornsbnig
State Teachers College, and president
of. the 'association, Dr. Francis 'B.
Hans, president:of the...Bloomsburg
college, and John Lang, ex-president
of National Student Federation of
America.. Dean Of Men 'Arthur R.
Warnock will also speak.
Dr. Haas will address the plenary
session of the association Friday af
ternoon. After his speech there will
be a panel discussion on student or
ganizations. Dinner in the Sandwich
Shop will be followed by further dis
cussion on the honor system, coopera
tive savings groups, athletic subsidi
zation, and participation of day stu
dents in college life.
The Saturday morning program will
open at 0:30 o'clock with discussion
among the delegates of the various
types of schools, such as co-educa
tional schools, professional schools,
and men's schools. The delegates will
go to various fraternities for their
noon meals. The last discussion ses
sion of the convention will be held
Saturday afternoon when the topic,
"The College Student Looks Toward
the Futurer will he discussed.
The delegates will attend a banquet
at the Nittany Lion Inn at 6 o'clock
and 'will be the guests of the College
at the Juniata basketball game. New
officers will be elected Sunday morn
ing.
Prof. Grant Honored
By Education Group
Prof. Richard W. Grant, director
of the department of music, has been
notified IA his election to the-presi
dency of the music department of the
Pennsylvania State Education Asso
ciation for 1935. .
in his - new office Professor Grant
will represent all phases of music
education in secondaiy schools, high
schools, and colleges in cdnnection
with the association's activities.., He
will automatically become a member
of the executive council of the associa
tion and a state delegate to the sum
mer convention of the National Edu
cation Association in Denver next
June.
Professor Grant will leave for Har
risburg Saturday to attend a meet
ing of the executive council called by
Dk. Ben G. Graham, newly elected
president of the association, because
of a meeting of the state legislature.
Journalist Will Speak
Vernon Bartlett, diplomatic corres
pondent for the London News Chron,
kle and British radio commentator on
world affairs, will speak here Feb
ruary 7. He is being brought to the
campus by the lecture committee of
the School of Liberal Arts, and is the
iecond in the list of speakers which
the school is sponsoring.
STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1935
Most Extensive
Debate Schedule
Lists 52 Meets
6 Week-End Speaking
Tours Arranged
For Squad.
Two Radio Arguments
Feature New Program
Fifty-two scheduled debates, thirty
two for the men and twenty for the
women; two eastern trips, one for
each team; six week-end trips, four
for the men and two for the women;
four 'feature' campus debates; and
two radio debates are included in the
most extensive debate schedule ever
undertaken at Penn State.
Several of the, dates, according to
Angelo N. Berbatis '35, debate man
ager, are stilt tentative, but, with
the possible addition of a few con
tests, these are the only changes that
will be made. The question to be
used on all the regular debates ,is
"Resolved: That the nations should
agree to prevent the international
shipment of arms and munitions."
Adopt New Policy
A new policy this year will be that
only outstanding home debates will
be held on the campus while the oth
ers will be held before nearby town
or high school groups in Bellefonte,
Altoona,'
Tyrone, and Pine Grove
Mills. In addition certain 'feature'
debates will be held in Schwab audi
torium. .
The first of these was the Oxford
debate in November, the next, a par
liamentary debate with the Univer
sity of Pittsburgh men's team on Feb
ruary S. This debate replaces the
previously scheduled international
contest with the University of Hawaii
which, according to a letter received
two days ago, was cancelled because
the university authorities would not
allow the team to make the trip
through the United States this year.
Split-Team Debate Planned
On February.2B will' be held a split
team, debate with a man:woman team
from the Urdiersity of Pittsburgh.
In this.contest•one man and one WO7ll,
an . from ;each college will team up
with the other team's representative
of the - opposite sex. • The question
will consider early marriage at a low
salary.
The feature for March will be an
Oregon style contestwith Wayne Uni
versity on the munitions question,
and in April the men will meet a
team from Bryn Mawr, Wilson, or
one of the other women's colleges.
This will be a conventional style de
bate on' the advantages of co-educa
tion.
The first radio debate will be an
(Continucd on page two)
Olbrich 'l5 Gives $5OO
To Engineering School
The School of Engineering has re
ceived a gift of $5OO in memory of
Emil Robert Olbrich 'l5 from the es
tate of his-sister, who died recently.
Olbrich was graduated from the
civil engineering curriculum in 1915
and was employed by the Philadelphia
Bureau of Highways from 1915 until
1917. He then transferred to Pitts
burgh, where he had charge of the
treatment of about a thousand miles
of Pennsylvania highways.
He taught for a while at Oklahoma
A. & M. College and later was a con
struction engineer in Raleigh, North
Carolina.
Second Sartorial Survey Seeks
For State's Smoothest Savant
The Penn State professor will
again take the spotlight as the COL
LEGIAN opens its second annual poll
to determine . The Best Dressed Pro
fessor on the campus.
Inaugurated last year, the poll
proved such a success that it has
been decided to make it an annual
affair.
Ballots will be circulated tomor
row and Thursday by the COLLEGIAN
and the name of the winner of the
poll will be announced in next Tues
day's issue. •
Last year's poll ended in a sweep
ing victory for the conservative ele
ment when L. Tremaine Dunlap, of
the department of mathematics, was
chased home into first place by Dr.
William E. Butt, of the department
of economics and sociology, both re
actionaries. •
Mr. Dunlap was a true cquus nigra,
coming from behind to win the ephem
eral trophy. Another strong contend
er was. B. Kenneth Johnstone, pride
and joy of the department of archi
tecture. A newcomer to- the campus
last yinr, he is again expected to be
Harlow Replaces Casey •
As Harvard Grid Coach
Richard C. 'Dick' Harlow, former
Penn State football coach, was
appointed head coachl at' Harvard
early yesterday. Harlow had
coached at Western Maryland
since 1526.
In appointing Harlow to sue-
ceed ,Eildie Casey, who resigned,
Harvard scrapped 60-year-old
policy of having only men with its
degree as head coach; of football.
Harlow, who was graduated from
Penn State in 1912, was an All-
American linesman in 1911.
Since he served as; coach here,
Harlow has tutored at!Colgate and
Western Maryland. Shortly after
his graduation front:the College,
he coached at Virginiil Polythech
nic Institute.
Players To Give,
4th Play Jan. 25
Elmer Rice's 'Counslot at Law'
Selected as. Production;'
Swart Takes Lead.
"Counsellor at Law," by Elmer
Rice, will be presented as the fourth
production this season. by the Penn
State Players in .Schwab auditorium
on Friday night, January 25, at 8
o'clock. Frank S. Neusbaum, of the
department of English composition,
is directing the play.
Virginia Swart '3B makes her de
but in. Players' casts in the leading
feminine role, Regina Gordon, under
standing secretary. of George Simon,
counsellor-at-law. This part will be
taken by C. K. Lucas Brightthan '36,
whose most recent performance was
in the part of King Herod, in the
York Nativity Play.
Yanofsky '35 Cast
As Cora, Simon's ariStocratic wife,
Mari S. Yanofsky '35, takes'the other
leading feminine part. Simon's part
ner, John Tedesco, will' , be taken by
Al G. Schwadron '3B .while Ruth A.
Goodman '37 will appear in the role
,of the telephone operaOr.k
. ;Betty M. Lenzen '36 , takda the part
- of , '-Simon's, -mother; arial,ClaYton ,
Page '34 will be seen .as his shiftless
' brother. Other members of the cast
of twenty-eight members- portray
I character - parts and depict the vari
ous types of persons that frequent
the office of amattorney.
These parts are taken by. Theresa
C. Mravintz '36 as Mrs. Becker, who
comes' for help in securing the re
lease of her communistic-minded son,
played by Herman Kail '3B; Robert
G. Dickinson '3B, as Baird, blue-blood
ed attorney interested in the downfall
of Simon; John S. Turner '3B, as Mc-
Paddhn, Simon's righthand man; and
Joseph W. Bernstein '3B, as a young
law student in the office:
In the other character parts, John
E. Binns '36, Anna D. Gleason '36,
Beatrice Conford '37, Alma J. Shenk
'37, Wayne W. Blcakley '3B, Isidor Le
vin '3B, William L. Orris '3B, Charles
H. Robbins '3B, John R. Sholly '3B,
and Irving Tersuhow '3B have been
cast by Mr. Neusbaum, Herbert L.
(Continued on page four)
Burkholder Will Speak
Discussing the problem of extra
curricular activities, Ellen M. Burk
holder, assistant Dean of Women, will
address the women's freshman forum
in Room 302, Old Main, at 6:30 o'-
clock tonight. Using the same theme,
Dean of Men Arthur It. Warnock
will speak to the men's commission
in the Hugh Beaver room at 7 o'clock
tonight.
well in the running."
Ballots will be circulated in the
men's and women's fraternities. All
other students may vote at, the Stu
dent Union desk in Old Main. Abso
lutely no faculty members may vote.
Any male member of the faculty
or administrative stafFs is an eligible
candidate in the poll, be he dean of a
school or the lowliest graduate•assist
ant.
The conductors of the poll are de
termined to keep dirty work out of.
the voting. At the completion of last
year's poll certain members of the
department of English composition
made charges of vote buying against
John S. "Beau Brummel" Naylor.
Such tactics will be strictly guarded
against.
It cannot be stressed too strongly
that voters should bear in mind that
the poll is meant to bring to light
the consistently best dressed profes,
sor. It is hoped that students will
not be influenced by any sudden blos
soming forth of Christmas cravats. It
should also be remembered that the
bizarre is not necessarily the taste
ful.
Hirsch, Erdman Hold Dissimilar
Viewpoints on Value of N.F.S.A.
W. S. G. A. Head Thinks Federation Not Worth
Cost; Class President Favors Plan.
Dissimilar opinions as to the value
of the National Student Federation
of America to local student govern
ment were expressed yesterday by
Lucy J. Erdman '35, president of the
W. S. G. A., and Paul K. Hirsch '35,
senior class president, who attended
the twelfth congress of the Federa
tion held in Boston from December
28 to January 1 as delegates from
this College.
"The Student Federation of Amer
ica is not worth enough to the worn
en's student government here to send
delegates in the future," Miss Erd
man declared. "The main reason is
that local women's government is
probably ten years more advanced
Carnegie Library
Will Close Later
Plan To Stay Open Until 11 P. M
For Benefit of Students
Composing Theses.
An experiment in library-student
cooperation will be inaugurated Mon
day; January 19, when the reference
room and the current and bound per
iodical rooms will be left open an ad
ditional hour, until• 11 o'clock. The
custom will be continued until the
Saturday before finals, January 26.
The plan is to 'accommodate those
students working on term Papers who
find time pressing at the close of the
semester. It will be continued at the
end of each semester, only if justified
by the previous attendance. As usual,
no reference. books or periodicals may
be taken from the library during this
hour.
Faculty Shelf Started
. Another library innovation is the
new faculty reserve shelf 'at the right
of the niain desk which will contain
books and pamphlets of special inter
est
_to faculty, members. These. vol
ttmeswill have• a limited circulation
and will include a few of the great
est books of all time. on ancient and
modern thought, history, art and sci
ence, some books on college teaching
and a few of general current interest.
When questioned as to why the ag
ricultural library •was 'not kept open
on Sundays, Librarian Willard P.
Lewis explained that none of the
school or departmental libraries are
open on that day, that it is a tradi
tion for the library to remain closed
and the faculty favors it, and that it
is not essential that it be open be
cause there is not enough pressure of
work on the students involved.
Artists' Course Sale
Continues at Reduced
Rates for Final Week
A final opportunity to obtain tick
ets for the Artists' Course series at
the reduced rates afforded by the se
ries tickets will be given students, fac
ulty, townspeople, and others as the
ticket sale continues this week at the
A. A. windows in Old Main, Dr. Carl
E. Marquardt, chairman of the com
mittee, said loday.
Tickets for individual numbers pur
chased separately will cost nearly
twice as much as the series tickets,
Dr. Marquardt said, in announcing
the scale at which seats for individual
numbers will be sold, if any remain
after the completion of the series sale
this week.
Series Tickets To Be $3lO
Series tickets are on sale at $3.10
per series of six numbers. If pur
chased for individual numbers, they
would cost $5.00, as follows:
Thursday, January 17, The Viennese
Choir Boys, $1.00; week of February
18, exact date to be announced, Green
Pactures, $1.50; Thursday, March 7,
Budapest String Quartet, seventy-five
cents; Tuesday, March 19, Humphrey
and Weidman and their modern dance
group, $1.00; Thursday, April 11,
Raymond Ditmars, curator of the
New York Zoological Park, seventy
five cents; Tuesday, April 30, Grate
Steuckgold, Metropolitan Opera so
prano, $l.OO.
In making public the scale deter
mined by the committee for the sale
of individual numbers should any
scats remain over, Dr. Marquardt
urged prospective buyers to take ad
vantage of the saving afforded by
buying a series ticket.
The cost of seeing "Green Pas
tures" alone will be $1.50, lie pointed
out, which makes available through
the series privileges five other high
class numbers at an approximate cost
of thirty cents apiece.
More than half of the tickets that
remained after the initial window
sales were completed, were sold be
fore the Christmas vacation, Dr. Mar
quardt Said. About a hundred tick
ets are still available.
than those of most other schools."
"I'm not so sure; I haven't quite
made up my mind," declared Hirsch.
"The Federation has several obvious
faults, but I believe that if they were
ironed out it might offer something
constructive to this College. •
"Men's student government at this
College also probably is ten years
ahead of the most of the other mem
ber schools but this is mainly due to
the mediocre character of most of
them," Hirsch continued. "None of
the leading men's colleges with the
exception of Princeton and perhaps
Columbia are represented in the Fed
eration. Too many teachers' colleges
and women's colleges are represent
ed."
Miss Erdman also believed that the
character of the membership was re
sponsible for the worthlessness of the
organizaton but for a different rea
son. She believed that there are too
many women's colleges and not
enough co-educational institutions
with conditions and problems similar
to those of Penn State.
"I believe that there are other or
ganizations, such as the Intercollegi
ate Association of Women Students„
1
to which it might be more profitable
for the women of this College to be
long," Miss Erdman suggested.
Both representatives agreed that
too much time was spent in discussing
national and international affairs and
not enough time on practical campus
problems which might help the indi
vidual colleges. Both believed that
what discussion there was was too
general and the questions taken up
not very important.
Hirsch suggested that if the opin
ion of the colleges was wanted on such
questions that it could be secured
through a questionnaire without
lengthy discussion at the convention.
He thought that members would bene
fit if more practical problems, 'such
as freshman orientation, were chosen.
(ConOnucd on page two)
Nichols,Fishburn
To Give Lecture
Series of Liberal Arts Lectures
To Open With 'Clinic On
Jazz.' January 15.
Announcing the twenty-fifth series
of the Liberal Arts Lecture Course,
Prof. David D. Mason, of the de
partment of Romance languages, made
publicly recently the program of six
lectures to be given this year by mem
bers of the College faculty.
The opening number will be a
"Clinic on Jazz" by Prof. Edward J.
Nichols, of the department of Eng
lish composition, with Prof. Hummel
Fishburn, of the music department,
at the piano. It will be given Tues
day, January 15.
llernrcuter To Speak
Other lectures on this year's pro
gram arc: "This Business of Per
sonality," by Dr. Robert G. Bernreu
ter, of the department of education
and psychology; "Lloyd George,
Demosthenes of the World War," by
Joseph O'Brien, of the division of
public speaking; and "The League
of Nations and the Present World
Crisis," by Dr. J. Paul •Selsam, of the
department of history and political
science.
The two remaining lectures will be
"Behind the Roman Looking-glass,"
by Prof. Franklin B. Krauss, of the
department of classical languages;
and "The Development of the Liberal
Arts School at Penn State," by Dean
Charles W. Stoddart.
The Liberal Arts Lecture Course
was initiated by that School in 1910
and has been continued yearly since
then. The lectures are open to all
students in the •College and generally
comprise popular reports on investi
gations pursued by members of the
faculty.
Alpha Phi Delta Holds
Services for Member
Memorial services for Jacob Russo
'34, who died December 18 in an Eas
ton hospital after an accident in a
silk mill wliich 'mutilated his body,
were held at the Alpha Phi Delta fra
ternity last night. Russo was a mem
ber of the fraternity.
Russo was graduated here last June
in industrial education and failing
to obtain a position as a teacher, got
a job during a silk mill strike for
the strike's duration. He had only
a week more to work when he met
with the fatal accident, in which his
arm was torn loose.
While in College Russo was a mem
ber of the Interfraternity Council and
participated in intramural athletics.
COMPLETE
CAMPUS
COVERAGE
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Wesner Given
$2OO John W.
White Award
Banner, Derr, Lazier,
Fink Gets Carnegie
Scholarships.
Kirnak Receives $100;
$l5O Won by Rodecker
Mary A. Wesner '35 was named
winner of the senior John W. White
scholarship for the current year,
Lawrence A. Rodecker '36 won the
junior John W. White scholarship,
and Alex W. Kirnak '37 was award
ed the sophomore John W. White
scholarship, it was announced last
week, after the approval of President
Ralph D. Rebel and the ratification
of the College Senate.
• Thirteen Louise Carnegie scholar
ships were also awarded, with Wil
liam A. Banner '35, Willard A. Derr
'35, Ralph W. Fink '36, and Nancy
Lazier '35 winning the senior awards.
Juniors winning Louise Carnegie
scholarships were Russell B. Alder
fer, Ruth E. Kauffman, Morris
Mogerman, and Frank T. Rudiak.
Five Sophomore Awards
Because of a slight surplus, five
sophomore awards were again made
this year. These went to Charles
11. Griffin, Wade B. Johns, Harold
A. DeVincentis, Paul L. Fisher, and
Daniel D.. Brubaker.
The John W. White senior, junior,
and sophomore scholarships arc for
$2OO, $lOO, and $lOO respectively,
while the Louise Carnegie awards are
for $lOO 'apiece.
M=!l!9
The John W. White scholarships
arc provided through a memorial
fund, the annual interest making pos
sible the three prizes. The recipients
of these awards are chosen from
the three upper classes on the com
bined basis of need and scholarship.
Interest of approximately $1,200
annually is drawn from a $25,000
fund to supply the awards for the
f.ouis_Carnegie_scholarships:_An,ad-,
ditionar surplus again permits the
award of an extra scholarship in the
sophomore group.
Winners of these scholarships are
selected from students in the upper
tenths of their respective classes, by
a joint committee composed of the
College Committee on Academic
Standards, and three members repre
senting the Student Board.
Prof. Harold A. Everett, head of
the department of mechanical engine
ering, is the chairman of the Com
mittee on Academic Standards, which
includes Dr. ,Joseph E. DeCamp, of
the department of education and psy
chology, Dr. Stevenson W. Fletcher,
Vice-Dean and Director of Research
of the School of Agriculture, and
Prof. David L. Markle, of the de
partment of electrical engineering.
Student Board representatives are
Thomas E. Clough '35, Emma J.
Dossier '36, and William R. Cullison
'37.
Schadt, Bachman '36
Married in Elkton, Md.
Marian R. Schadt, graduate stu
dent, and daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
D. P. Schadt, 1221 Walnut Street,
Allentown, and William F. Bachman
'3l, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Bach
man, 1230 Tilghman Street, Allen
town, were married in Elkton, Md.,
on December 20. Rev. J. W. Harring
ton, pastor of the Methodist church
in Elkton, performed the ring cere
mony with Mrs. Harrington, his wife,
standing for the couple.
Mrs. Bachman matriculated here
this'year for graduate work in home
economics after receiving her bachel
or's degree at Cedar Crest College
last June. She was an officer of vari
ous clubs during her undergraduate
career as well as a member of the
costume committee of the Greek play.
Bachman is enrolled in the School
of Chemistry and Physics and is ma
joring in chemistry. He will be a
candidate for pitcher on the varsity
baseball squad this spring as he has
participated in this sport for the past
two years and saw service in the box
last year.
Agricultural Engineers
To Attend Farm Show
Members of the student branch of
the American Society of Agricultural
Engineers will leave Monday, Janu
ary 21, for Harrisburg to attend the
Pennsylvania Farm Show.
The students will devote feast of
their time to visiting the various ex
hibits and observing the farm ma
chinery and meeting the representa
tives in charge. In the evening they
will hear John M: McKee, executive
secretary of the Pennsylvania Rural
Electrification Commission, speak at
a dinner at the Y. M. C. A.