Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, March 26, 1935, Image 1

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Volume 31—Number 47
Professionals
Will Arrange
Revue Music
Scorers Hired To Write
Orchestration for
`Don't Let On'.
14 Numbers Composed
For Thespian Musical
Taking an ultra-professional turn,
the Thespians have hired "Jimmy"
Warren and "Bill" Schollenberger,
who write the orchestra arrangements
for "Ozzie" Nelson's and other
"name" bands, to compose the orch
estra arrangements of the music for
the coining Thespian show, "Don't
Let On" by John S. Naylor, of the
English composition department,
which will be presented here Satur
day night, April 5, Interfraternity
Ball week-end.
The two musicians, who have spent
the last four days here watching re
hearsals to get a slant on the type
of orchestration needed, will write ar
rangements for a total of fourteen
numbers.
Thinking of Road Trip
Added to the work of these musicans
will be the special lyrics which
"Chang" Smith '27, ex-Thespian, has
written of his top-noteher "Winter
Wonderland" for "Don't Let On." Ohe
entire set of the show has been built
around this number according to J.
Ewing "Sock" Kennedy, Thespian
director,
Kennedy and Hummel Fishburn, of
the department of music, also a
Thespian director, said today that the
a member of the Thespian orchestra.
The Bassett-Naylor compositions in
clude "Love Has Come to Stay,"
"April's in My Heart," Mussolini
Says. No, No,' "Road of Dreams,"
"I'll Go to Town with You," and
"Love Trouble." , Bassett and Naylor
first , s-.4.EPIPB,Iviit4g-frkuolkerssiPr.the
Thespian Shows this fall' when 'they
wrote seVeral numbers for "Bargin'
ArOund," - including "I've Got a Week
end to Share" and "The Song Of . the
Wheel."
Nevi Songwriting Team Contributes
A new, team in lyric and music
club Mt, it was making a, big step
forward in bringing these arrangers
here to write orchestrations. ''We're
very likely to go on a road trip with
this show and we want to have the
best musical 'arrangements we can
get. These boys know their stud' and
they'll do a real 'pro' job on these
numbers.
Bassett, Naylor Do 7 Numbers
T. Robert Bassett, of the English
composition department, has written
the music for seven numbers while
Mr. Naylor, the author of the show,
has written the lyrics for all of them
and aso for a number entitled "I
Crave A Lyric", the music for which
was written by bleary K. Beard '36,
writing will present"Talkin' Through
My Hat". The lyrics of this number
were done by 1 , . William Stoe '3B
and the music by A. Theodore John
son '37. This is the first number of
this team which has been presented in
a Thespian production.
Mr. rishburn himself has written
an Italian folk song for the show
and will possibly do another. James
W. Minium '37, campus orchestra
leader, has contributed a chorus
routine.
Donald ii. Dixon '37, who wrote the
theme song of last year's show My
Stars,' has again written the words
and lyrics of a number entitled "Sea
faring." As a part of that number,
lie has also written the music for a
chrous routine and in addition he
has written the music for a minuet
chorus number.
Bridge Tourney Begins
2nd Round Tomorrow
The second round of the bridge
tournament sponsored by Interfrater.
nity Council will be played off at the
Nittany• Lion Inn at '7:10 o'clock to
morrow night. Mrs. Helen Hawke
.and John P. Lee are in charge of the
competition.
In the first round last week, nine
houses survived. They arc: Phi Kap
pa Psi, Mu Kappa Epsilon, Sigma
Chi, Delta Chi, Phi Kappa Sigma,
Phi Gamma Delta, Triangle, Acacia,
and Pi Kappa Phi. The five teams
with the highest scores will Meet
again next week for further elimina
tion.
Society To Hold Dinner
The Penn State Forestry society
will hold its annual dinner in the Nit-
tiny Lion Inn Thuisday night at 6
o'clock. The dinner will be given as
a farewell entertainment to forestry
students of the senior class.
Nittany Lion Chosen
For Publications Hop
The publications dance, original
ly scheduled for Recreation . hall
Saturday night, has been transfer
red to the Nittany Lion Inn,
George H. Britton '35, chairman
of the dance committee, announced,
yesterday. The regular Saturday
night dance at the Inn has been
suspended and Bill Bottorf will
play for the publications affair.
Tickets for the dance may be
obtained any time this week at the
Student Union office in Old Main
or from any member of Pi Delta
Epsilon, sponsors ,of the dance,
the chairman announced. This is
the first year that the publications
dance has been made an all-College
affair.
Chairmen Chosen
For May Festival
McCaughey '36, Wevill '36 Are
Appointed as Co• Heads
Of Annual Ceremony.
Anne M. McCaughey '36 'and E.
Virginia Wevill ''36 will be co-chair
men of the annual May Day festival,
according to an announcement made
by Elizatieth K. Barton '36. Doro
thea Ruth '36 will. have charge of the
ceremony.
M. Elizabeth Springer '3G is chair
man of the entertainment committee
and Ruth P. Lonberger '36 and Anna
C. Strong '35 are "also on the com
mittee. Ruth E. Koehler '3G is chair
man of the publicity committee, and
A. Frances Turner '36 and L. Mary
bel Conabee '36 will assist.
Wardrobe Committee
The chairman of the wardrobe for
the queen's part will be Bernadette
M. Heagney '36, and her assistants
are Ruth E. Kauffman '36, Jean R.
Bennuf '36, Mary Louise D'Olier '36,
and Margaret Bretton '37. Ruth
B. Evans '37 is head of the informal
wardrobe committee. Other members
of the committee are Gelsie R. Fer
dinand '37 and Evelyn M. Girard '36.
The properties committee is head
ed by Bertha : M. Cohen '37 and. her
assistants, are, Genev . ra• C. Ziegler '!37 . ,
'etidiS: - i • Eliiabeth"'gliiitTer - '36. • giielia
BrOoks:'36 has charge of 'decorations
and she will be aided by Mary'Fran
cos :Pomeroy '37 and ' Virginia: W.
Lewis '36. M. May Dunaway '37 has
charge of the Cwen breakfast.
Two Students Married
During Past Week-end
Elbur 11. Richards, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Richards, 7723 Parkview
Rd., Upper Darby and Emil 0. Schott,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer S. Schott,
101 Bridge street, Mifflintown, notifi
ed their fraternity brothers at Theta
Nu Epsilon fraternity this morning
that they (were married in Harrisburg
during the week-end and . were spend
ing their honeymoon there.
The men left town Saturday sup
posedly on a trip home. It was not
until this morning when the telegram
was received by Robert Edwards '3B,
a friend of the men, that it was
known what had happened.
Schott is enrolled here as an archi.
tectural engineering student while
Richards is preparing himself in
mechanical engineering. Both are
candidates for the business staff of
the Penn State Froth.
Freshmen Revealed as Capitalists
In Survey of 'Corner' Prosperity
In a financial survey conducted by
a COLLEGIAN stall member Sunday
night in tile Corner Room the sur
prising fact arose that "Prosperity
is just around the 'Corner'."
Fifty-seven students, when ques
tioned, admitted that they had, alto
gether,. $369.23. The freshmen, most
of whom had just been home over the
week-end, led the upperclasses with
the sum of $192.42. One:of them con
fessed he had fifty-one dollars along
with him while another reluctantly
admitted he had forty-seven. At the
other end of the scale were two fresh
men with a total cash complement
of twenty-three cents and one who
showed four cents.
Or all the upperclassmen who ask
ed in what booth these affluent fresh
men were sitting, the junior seemed
the most interested. The third year
men, seven of them, had only sixteen
dollars and ninety-three cents. This
was better, in proportion, than the
seniors, thirteen of whom had but
twenty-eight dollars and six cents.
You can compare these thirteen sen
iors with the nine freshmen who had
nearly two hundred dollars, and the
fourteen sophomores with $125.55.
The eleven co-eds questioned were
only able to raise five dollars and
thirty cents. Three of them were to
gether, no men around, and these had
three dollars and forty-three cents,
STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1935
Author of 'Lathe
May Attend P
Fred Ballard, author of -"Ladies of
the Jury," will be in the audience
Saturday when the Penn State Play
ers produce his play, according to a
letter receiTed here yesterday.
Ballard, the author of six Broad
way hits, wrote from his home at Pe
terborough, New Hampshire, com
mending the Players on the quality of
their productions and promising to
attend the performance of his court
room comedy hit.
"I am glad the Penn State Players
are going to produce my 'Ladies of
the Jury,'" Ballard wrote. "I have
heard many fine things about the
Nixon Advocates
3-Point Program
Speaker Suggests Acceptance
Of Life, Positive Faith,
Work as Creed.
"I will accept life as I find it and
make the most of it," was the first
article of a creed suggested by Dr.
.Tustin W. Nixon, pastor of the Brick
Presbyterian church, Rochester, N.
Y., in his chapel address, "A Work
ing Program for Living Today," in
Schwab auditorium Sunday morning.
Dr. Nixon divided people into those
who accept life and those who run
away from it. These latter, he said,
are divided into the romahticists, or
those who live in the past, and intro
verts, or those who indulge in ex
cesses to escape realities. There is
also another group, he said, who re
fuse to face the problems of life, and
they are the idealists, who live in a
world of make-believe.
In his second article of faith, Dr.
Nixon said, "I will do something use
ful and .well. There is something
useful for each of.us to do. We must
respect ourselves and respect our
work. Lord Salisbury said, 'Find the
biggest thing..in your .generation ,and
line up with, it.
Tl r will,le a man , of % positive.faith
Weiirlo:4
' t ower." If yetfhiiiie doubts; remein•
ber that doubt is the pFeliminarS ,
state and faitli the ilrivinenower."
Concluding his address, Dr. Nixon
'said, "Go out into the world of men
and women, with faith. And You Will
make the world of our children a•bet
ter world than we have inherited
trim our lathers."
College Offers 2 New
Engineering Courses
At the requests of .the Pennsylva
nia Sewage Works association and
the Pennsylvania Water Works, the
department of civil engineering will
open two new short courses in the
chemistry and bacteriology of algae
control, and hydraulic measurements,
which will be held from April 1 to 6.
Because of limited accommodations,
cnrollinent will not exceed fifteen in
each course. Applicants who are not
accepted this year Will be given pref
erence next year. The work is •ex
pected to be of service in assisting
plant operators. to meet the increas
ing demand for higher standards of
water sewage treatment., in the in
terest of public health.
which leaves one dollar and eighty
three cents for the eight escorted.
The. individual averages for the
freshmen ran to twenty-one dollars
and thirty-eight cents. The sopho
mores averaged eight dollars and
ninety-six cents. The juniors each
had two dollars and forty-two cents.
The seniors finish it with two dollars.
The all-class average hits six dollars
and sixty cents.
What causes the drop in cash on
hand between the freshmen, sopho
more, and the upperclasses can be ex
plained in several ways. One obvious
one would be that the juniors and
seniors are nearing the bottom of the
pocketbook after their three or four
years here. A less obvious one and,
likewise, less logical, is that the up
perclassmen have become more sen
sible. Too many people know them
and would be more than willing to
touch them for practically any sum.
This is an explanation given by one
of the seniors who had himself about
two dollars.
• Just for the sake of comparison the
COLLEGIAN staff was canvassed and it
was found that six juniors had ten
dollars and sixty-five cents, and six
sophomoreti had three dollars and fif
ty-four cents. The lone senior had
a dollar fifty and a phoney check
from a friend,
.which doesn't count.
Neither did the postage stamps and
the debts to be collected.
of the Airy'
ayers' PrOduction
Players and I'm sure they'll give the
play an excellent „Production. That
play has been done by more than fifty
'colleges some of` l the biggest and
best in the countr y— so the Penn
State Players will have something to
shoot at.
"I should like to 4oe 'Ladies of the
Jury' at State College and will make
every effort to do so. I hope to go
into a huddle with tuey Long March
28th. So IT I donVahow up in State
College on the 30th4ou'll know Huey
is still talking. •,!,
"Meanwhile, good luck and best
wishes to the PentiState Players in
'Ladies of the Jurrr--and out of it."
Among Ballard'k. successes have
been "Believe Me," "Xantippe,"
"Young Anierica,"'lTho Curb Cruis
ers," and "The •: - .Sandy Hooker,"
which he wrote in #llaboration with
Charles Bickford..-i i 'Ladies of the
Jury" enjoyed a long run•on Broad
way with Mrs. Pis* in the leading
role, and was later4produced in the
movies, starring Edna May Oliver.
Anti-War; Strike
Set for April 12
Plans for tocall Participation
In Protest Against Jingo
Activities. Tentative.
Plans for local pirticipation in the
nation-wide student, strike against.
war on Friday, April 12, at 11 o'-
clock are still nebul us, although cer
tain campus group are reported as
preparing a orogen in denunciation
of Fascism, hnperittlism, and com
pulsory military ti lining.
The date, April ltas been chosen
by those organizatio s in charge of
the strike because it;js the eighteenth
anniversary of America's entrance in
the World War. The strike, which
is to take the form.. 4 non-attendance
at 11 o'clock classeslon that date, is
expected to take piaci in high schools,
preparatory schools, colleges and uni
,yersities,M...thitisomfdry, and possibly
inTottMr.countries on the American
continents.
In a similar strike last year, 25,-
000 students in American colleges
pledged support to anti-war agencies,
and this number is expected to be
quadrupled this year: American im
perialism is to be the particular ob
ject of attack in the demonstrations,
which last year resulted in bloody
riots at some of the eastern schools,
including New York Univeriity.
William Randolph Hearst has been
selected as a: focal point fou the at
tack because of his jingoistic activi
ties and his attacks on student or
ganizations and professors urging
pacifism. Other points to be raised by
strike leaders concern increased mili
tary budgets, including a $4,000,000
appropriation for R. 0. T. C.; recent
decisions by the Supreme Court af
fecting conscientious objectors, and
the possibility of universal military
conscription.
The organizations which are spon
soring the strike are tha National
Council of Methodist Youth, the Mid
dle Atlantic division of the Inter-
Seminary Movement, the National
Student League, the Student League
for Industrial Democracy, and the.
American Youth Congress.
Groff Returns From
Study Trip in Florida
Dr. G. Weidman "Daddy" Groff
'O7 returned to the campus last week
and made a favorable report of his
activities in plant propagation in
Florida.
He reported that he had found a
great variety of useful trees and
shrubs which would be suitable for
cultivation at Lingnan University at
Canton, China, where he is dean of
the agricultural school.
"Daddy" Groff also mentioned his
plans to install a plant receiving sta-
Lion'at Lingnan, which would include
areas for the propagation of plants
and the erection of .greenhouses and
laboratories.
The
.work that Dr. Groff has been
doing in plant research has been
nanced chiefly by faculty and friends
of the College through the Penn
State in China committee. Up to the
present time more than .7750 has been
received.
Women To Hold Sing
Six women's fraternities have defi
nitely entered the Interfraternity
Sing to be held in Schwab auditorium
Sunday, April 28. The remaining
four fraternities are expected to en
ter, according to Geraldine Broberg
'35, president of the Louise Homer
club, women's honorary musical• fra
ternity. Each fraternity will select
a representative who will take charge
of the musical program of that house.
Women Will Vote
On WSGA, WAA
Heads Tomorrow
Turner, Wunderlich Vie
For Presidency in
Co-Ed Elections.
Beman, Lewis Named
Senatorial Candidates
With the chief interest centered
around the contest between A.
Frances Turner '3O and Selena A.
Wunderlich '3O for the presidency of
W.S.G.A., women will hold their an
nual elections tomorrow. The voting,
which will be held in the lobby of
McAllister hall, will begin at 9 o'clock
in the morning and continue until 12,
will begin again at 1 o'clock and
close at 5:30.
Candidates for W.S.G.A. senatorial
positions have been announced by
W.S.G.A. Janet M. Beman '36 will
oppose Virginia W. Lewis '36 for the
senior senatorship.
Senatorial Candidates Listed
For the junior senatorship the
nominees are Ruth B. Evans '37 and
Rachael M. VanArtsdalen '37, and the
candidates for the sophomore sena
torial post are Annette A. Judd '3B
and Georgia H. Powers '3B.
The nominees for the town sena
tor's positions are M. May Dunaway
'37 and Emma Jane Foster '37. Can
didates for sophomore representative
on senate, which were chosen at the
primary election last Wednesday, are
Olwen W. Evans '3B and Ida R.
Rainey '3B.
All the W.A.A. officers will he
elected Monday as well as the May
Queen and her freshman attendant.
M. Elizabeth Springer '36 opposes
Catherine L. Wagner '36 for the
presidency of the W.A.A., and the
candidates for May Queen arc Mar
garet R.' Mclntyre '35 and Jane M.
O'Connell '35.
Honors Awarded
To 5 Foresters
Elected Members of Sigma Xi;
Mclntyre Reads Paper
On Soil Erosion.
The election of L. F. Smith, instruc
tor in forestry, and Albert A. Downs
'3l, graduate student here, to senior
and associate membership respective
ly in the Yale University chapter of
Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society,
was announced last week by Dr.
Joshua L. Deeni, of the forestry de
partment.
Arthur C. Mclntyre, instructor in
forest research, now on leave of ab
sence from the College, presented a
paper at a recent meeting of the Alle
gheny Section of the Society of Amer
ican foresters. He discussed various
phases of the problem of soil erosion.
Doctor Deem also announced the
appointment of Robert Moore '22 as
forester for the Northwestern Lum
ber Manufacturers association. He
will have charge of the sections of
the Northeast lumber code which deal
with conservation.
W. J. Quick '24 has recently been
elected vice president of the Alle
gheny Section of the Society of Amer
ican Foresters, Doctor Deem said.
`Women's Pseudo
Affected,' Ps
By a Staff Member
"'Young women students proceed
on the theory that men like them
dumb,' declared J. B. Morgan, emin
ent psychologist of Northwestern
University," according to Elizabeth
Walker, Pittsburgh Press Sunday
supplement hack.
The women play dumb to make the
men feel superior. For so long had
this been a courtship pattern that it
is amazing the flood of indignation
this roused on the part of co-ed. Per
haps it is the national disclosing of
secret each woman holds fast,
thinks it is her own device and ap
plies it.
The editor of The Daily North
western doesn't believe that the aver
age college man is intelligent enough
to appreciate an intellectual girl and
Miss Isabel Mulligan, the 1934 beauty
queen of Northwestern is of the opin
ion that if women play dumb it is
because they don't know any better.
If the theory of Professor Morgan
holds, the co-eds here must play
pretty dumb to be dumber than the
Men on this campus. Then again,
they may not even get a chance to
display intelligence or dumbness.
Bohren, Locust Lane Clique,
To Oppose Pruitt, Campus,
For '36 Presidential Post
Campaigning for Class Official, Student Council
Position Will Begin at 5 O'CLock
On Monday Afternoon.
Ilerbert E. Bohren, Locust Lane, will oppose J. Briggs Pruitt, Campus,
for the presidency of next year's senior class in the elections Tu2sday, Wed
nesday, and Thursday, April 0, 10, and 11. Campaigning for class official
and Student Council positions will• begin at 5 o'clock on Il.londay afternoon.
Candidates for the presidency o
Hacker, Campus, and J. Franklin Smi
Locust Lane, will run against Rober
Air Reserve May
Enroll Graduates
Bill Now Before Congress Would
Provide Training in Naval
Aviation Corps.
In the event that certain legislation
pertaining to Naval Reserve student
training is passed by Congress, the
Navy Department will desire to en
roll a quota of student reserve avia
tors from the senior classes and al
umni of the universities and colleges
of the country. Students here who
are interested should get in touch
with Prof. Harold A. Everett, of the
department of mechanical engineer
ing.
About forty-two candidates will be
selected for the elimination training,
which will be given at the Naval Re
serve Aviation unit, Navy Yard,
Philadelphia on May 15. The candi
dates will• be chosen from residents
of the fourth naval district, which in
cludes Pennsylvania, Southern New
Jersey, and Delaware.
Candidates selected for training
will be .enrolled as second class sea
men and ordered on active duty to
one•of the reserve- bases, where they
will commence elimination flight
training. After completing a month's
training, the candidates will receive
full course in flight training at Pen
sacola, Plorida. After graduation,
they will serve with the aircraft
squadrons of the U. S. lleet.for three
years, at the conclusiOn of which each
will be eligible for the commission' of
ensign in the naval reserve.
Kirkpatrick To Speak
On New Dam Project
Sponsored by the Schools of Min
eral Industries and Engineering, R.
A. Kirkpatrick, of the Union Pacific
railroad, will lecture on "Boulder
Dam and the National Parks" in the
Chemistry amphitheater Friday af
ternoon at 3:10 o'clock.
Both slides and motion pictures
showing Boulder Darn construction
and various national parks will be
shown to illustrate the talk. Mr.
Kirkpatrick has presented this lec
ture in colleges and universities
throughout the West.
Rotarians Hear Selsam
Prof. J. Paul Selsom, of the depart
ment of history and political scienue,
spoke Thursday night before a din
ner meeting of the Rotary and Ki
wanis clubs of Sunbury on "The.
United States in World Affairs."
Ignorance Only
chologist Asserts
Most men arc blessed with a dubious
gift of gab. The girl has to mutely
nod her head, now and then add a
yes or no—and shut up.
What can she do? If she voices an
opposite opinion, he thinks she is
overbearing. If she calmly acquieees,
she is playing dumb to satisfy the
suspecting male. If the man doesn't
talk and she tries to keep the ball roll
ing, she is professing to be intellec
tual. An intelligent, that is, truly in_
tellectual girl cannot play. dumb. Is
it dumbness to listen? That, accord
ing to many speakers I have heard
on personality, is an ability acquired
by a person who is intelligent.
If a girl tries to flaunt her intelli
gence, then do as Mr. Morgan has
suggested, give her an I. Q. examina
tion. It is only a dumb man who can't
appreciate an intelligent girl. If a
man is dumb, the co-ed, if she likes
the man and she is sensible, will, out
of politeness, play dumber and ten
chances to one lie is so dumb he
won't know the difference— I have
yet to meet an intelligent woman who
will hide her intelligence before an
intellectual man. But, if she does and
he likes it he is what I term u foul,
not an intellectual.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
the class of '37 will be George M.
th, Locust Lane. Frederick L. Young,
t V. Donato, Campus, for the presi
dency of the sophomore class.
Running mates for Bohren and
Pruitt will be I). Lee Backenstose,
Locust Lane, and John T. Herman
sen, Campus. Candidates for the mi
nor posts in the senior elections are
Peter Lektrich, Campus, and Fred
erick P. Davis, Locust Lane, who
will oppose each other in the race for
secretary; and Herman A. Schmidt,
Campus, and James L. Smith, Locust
Lane, who are competing for thu
treasureship.
Candidates for the vice-presidency
of the junior class are Louis J. Rit-
Zie, Campus, and Henry H. Bell, Lo
cust Lane. Thomas R. Brislin, Lo
cust Lane, and Levan Linton, Cam
pus, are the candidates for the sec
retaryship of the junior class, and
Robert E. Morini, Locust Lane, will
oppose Walter S. Wiggins, Campus,
for the post of treasurer.
Sophomore Candidates Named
Ralph W. Apgar, Locust Lane, and
Wendell W. Wear, Campus, are run
ning with Young and Donato for the
vice-presidency of the sophomore
class. Minor candidates in the soph
omore class are John D. Kennon,
Campus, and. George C. Harkess, Lo
cust Lane, who arc running for the
secretaryship;, and.. John . S.-Moeller..
Campus, and Ralph B. Raphael '3B,
Locust Lane, who ore running for
the treasurer's post.
With nine Student Council posi
tions open, the following seniors will
oppose each other: Robert H. Rumler,
Campus, and William H. Meyer, Lo
cust Lane, from the School of Agri
culture; Ralph T. Irwin, Campus„
and J. Jack Weiss, Locust Lane, from
the School of Chemistry and Phys
ics; Joseph W. Bielicki, Campus, and
John G. RenaNo, Locust Lane, from
the School of Education; N. Ran
dolph Cressman, Campus, and War
ren W. Skew, Locust Lane, from the
School of Engineering.
'36 Council Candidates Listed
Other candidates for Student Coun
cil posts ore William A, Koster, Lo
cust Lane, and Alexander G. Mor
ris, Campus, from the School of the
Liberal Arts; William Bellano, Lo
cust Lane, and Richard A. Munro,
Campus, from the School of Mineral•
Industries. Candidates for Student
Council representatives at large are
John Cessna, Thomas W. Eaglesham,
Raymond W. Kohler, all representing
the Locust Lane clique; and Elwood
Douthett, Jos;iph F. Lamina, and
Thomas J. Silvan°, all of Campus.
Candidates from the class of '37
for Student Council positions are
Floyd B. Fischer, Locust Lane, and
Lee M. Poorbaugh, Campus, from the
School of Agriculture; Donald S.
Newcomb, Locust Lane, and Jackson
D. Leonard, Campus, from the School
of Chemistry and Physics; Charles J.
Cherundolo, Locust Lane, and Fred
erick W. Salisbury, Campus, from the
School of Education.
'3B Council Aspirants Chosen
The other candidates for Council
posts from next year's junior class
are John B. Ferguson, Campus, and
John 11. Calvin, Locust, Lane, from
the School of Engineering; Harry R.
Cromwell, Campus, and George W.
Haines, Locust. Lane, of the School of
the Liberal Arts; and Joseph B. Mer
ritt, Campus, and Dowell S. Jobbins,
Locust Lane, frmn the School of Min
eral Industries.
Members of the class of '3B who
are rivals for positions on Student
Council are John 11. Lob:, Campus,
and Frederick C. Edgerton, Locust
Lane. from the School of Agricul
ture; John H. Smith, Campus, and
Robert A. J. Filer, Locust Lane,
from the School of •Chemistry and
Physics; and John .1. Economos, Cam
pus, and Parke B. Eshbach, Locust
Lane, from the School of Education.
Daniel R. Orandy jr., Locust Lane,
and Frederick J. T. Horne jr., Cam
pus, from Hie School of Engineering;
Charles. R. Campbell, Locust Lane,
and Stanley Schneider, Campus, from
the School of the Liberal Arts; and
William I Cleveland, Locust Lane,
and Robert H. Eschbach, Campus, of
the School of Mineral Industries, com
plete the list of sophomore Student
Council aspirants.