Page Two PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Successor to The Free Lance, established 1887. Published semi-freckly during the College year, except on holidarr, by students of The Pennsylvania State College. In the interent of the College, the students, faculty, alumni. and friends. TIIE MANAGING BOARD JOHN A. BRUTZMAN 15 Editor JACK A. MARTIN 15 Business Manager FRED W. WRIGHT 'B5 GEOTgE cul t io ß n ULL n E . D g y '35 Sports Editor KENNETH C. HOFFMAN 5 35 B. KENNETH LYONS 15 Managing Editor Local Advertising Manager JAMES B. WATSON JR. 'B5 HARRY J. KNOFF 15 Assistant Editor Foreign Advertising Manager PHILLIP W. FAIR JR. '35 JOHN J. 'MATTHEWS '35 Assistant Managing Editor Asst. Foreign Advertising Manager A. CONRAD HAUTES 15 EARL C. KEYSER .15. '35 News Editor Asst. Lood Advertising Manager JAMES 11. BEATTY JR. '35 MARGARET W. KINSLOFI '35 News Editor Women's Managing Editor MARCIA B. DANIEL '35 ELSIE M. DOUTHETT '35 Women'a Edlthr Woman's News Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS John K. Barnes jr. '36 W. Bernard Frennsch '36 Vance O. Packard 15 Harry B. Henderson jr. '36 William P. McDowell '36 John E. Ittiller jr. '26 Donald P. Sanders '36 Charlet, M. Schwartz jr. '36 ASSOCIATE. BUSINESS MANAGERS Philip G. Evans '3G R9llhum li. Beckman '36 Leonard T. Sin .313 Roland W.'olirrlsoltner jr. MG William 11. Skirble MG Manntrine Editor ThLs Issue_-- _Sohn E. Miller jr. %It dews Editor This Issue. Voile° 0. Peekord Thursday, April 11, 1935 THE WAR PROTEST Tornorrow at 11 o'clock, the student body will have an opportunity to show its determination not to par ticipate in another imperialist war. In connection with this strike, students here have an enormous responsi bility on their hands. In the first place, the stage has been set by a most cooperative administration for as genuine and en thusiastic demonstration as the students care to make it. If anything constructive is to be done in making protests from year to year, a solid foundation must be laid this year. If the entire College turns out for the mass meeting, and the administration realizes that the protest is a sincere one, it should he much easier next year to arrange something more pretentious. It may be generally thought that college is a place in which may be found liberal leaders of thought, but the past week has shown that reactionists, too, have their place on a college faculty.- There is the case of one professor who attempted to extract a promise from his class to make up the hour at 4 o'clock should the demonstration he held. As a matter of fact, it ap pears that there are several with the same calibre of progressive thinking as was portrayed by the president of San Jose College in the last issue of the COLLEGIAN. There are a great many students in this institution who are. genuinely interested in this problem of war, but have very little information on the subject. They will have their opportunity to broaden their outlook at this time. It might be well, too, for some of the more ardent militarists if they attended. The majority of thinking undergraduates are sin cere in their convictions not . to take part in another war, which will be meaningless after US completion. Tomorrow, they may express their sincerity. It would be tragic if a great many did not. ,• A SLIGHTLY JARRING note was struck in the elections when the Chemistry and PhyBles School de- clined to cooperate with the elections committee. It has been a custom that if a voter has lost his matriculation card, he may go to the Dean of his School and get a note certifying that he is a student in good standing. The move is an economic one, admittedly. It costs fifty cents to get a duplicate card at the Registrar's office. Evidently the Chemistry and Physics School is not interested in the welfare of its constituents, because yesterday they not only refused to issue one or two such notes, but added sagely, "If it's worth fifty cents to the Registrar, it ought to be worth fifty cents to us. How ever, we won't do it." Close cooperation between ad ministration officials and "student leaders" is such an aid to understanding. MUSICAL ADVERTISING Penn State has the best college glee' club in Penn- sylvania and has proven the fact so consistently dur- ing the last five years that it was asked this year not to enter the State contest. After intensive rehearsals under Prof. Richard W. Grant, director of the depart ment of music, the club won the Eastern Collegiate Glee Club Contest-Festival on March 12. The unfor tunate thing is that the organization has not been ex tended a helping hand in the excellent bit of adver tising for Penn State that it has been doing. The Glee Club unlike athletic teams, the debating squad, and other representatives of the College in the public eye, is not subsidized either by the College itself nor through the department of music budget. The cost of the trip to Pittsburgh was earned by the club through concerts. Recently the thirty-five members of the club sang in Huntingdon where they built good will for Penn State by singing for a concert there, proceeds of which went for a loan fund for needy college students. While the benefits derived by the individual mem bers of the Club are more than enough to justify its existence, it seems lamentable that the College cannot take a sum from some other fund to be used to help the Club finance trips to sing before high school audi ences throughout the State, and place Penn State before the eyes of thousands of prospective Penn State stu dents who will be unable to attend Penn State Day. Why not take, for example, a nickle per student from the debating lee of fifty cents? This would amount to .approximately $225 per year and' would be ample to enable the Glee Club to make concert tours . to the larger Pennsylvania high schools, when added to the funds that the club would earn giving paid con certs en route. Let's put our championship Glee Club to work! There was a gent in publications alley who in fested the La Vie office for the past year and covered its walls with meaningless messages initialed W. Y. E. H. His name, in case you haven't guessed, was Rambo. He was really a great little boy. Last semester he had a little girl on the staff that he liked pretty well. She was graduated at mid-semester, so W. Y. E. R. bought her a swell A. 0. Pi ring on the installment plan. As time went on he became pretty jittery about how he was going to psy for the ring, but, being a clever little boy, he figured out a way. There was a sports editor who got hack a little late and there was a managing editor who was a fairly smart guy. It is pretty well known that W. Y. E. R. doesn't hit it off well with brainy individuals. Any how, he killed the two birds for the one stone by utilizing a negligible clause in We constitution to rob the two staff members of their cuts. The fact that the managing editor needed his sixty bucks to pay his fees didn't move the lordly W. Y. E. R. He was for efficiency. Just to prove it, he is send ing the departed lady all• of her cut .. . As we used to scrawl on your lousy bulletin: Nutz to you, W. Y. E. R.! It seems as though the Players wanted some rifles for a window display of "Peace On Earth" and picked Kerm Gordon to approach the worthy Col. Venable as to borrowing a few of the blunderbusses in the Armory. 'Well,' said Col. Venable, 'there's an army regu lation, ah, serial numbers and all, you know ... I'm afraid it's impossible unless you get special permis sion from the Custodian of Military Supplies.' The way the Colonel talked, this functionary was as'far removed as President Roosevelt, and of about equal rank. Mr. Gordon hesitated about ask ing. From the solemn title he thought he would be tray colossal ignorance if ha admitted that he didn't know whO the Custodian of Military Supplies was. Could it be Gen. Pershing 7 Could it lie 'Col. Lind bergh? Finally, he decided to give his all for the Penn State Players. 'Err, who is the Custodian of Military Supplies?' He noticed that he faltered a little as he inquired. Col. Venable sighed wearily as if he were just a bit disappointed, 'The Custodian of Military Sup plies is S. K. Hostetter of the Grounds and Build ings Department,' he said. Sam, the old clothes man, recorded one of:the fastest deals in his career at the A.T.O. house last , week. He ran upon the boys engaged' in a little session with the pasteboards: 'Any old clothes?', he asked.- ' Without missing even one de'al, Geo. Slobinlian slipped out of the suit he was wearing, passed it over'to San'', grabbed the two bucks, and continued his quest of straights, pairs, and flushes. SHARDS—Anybody who doesn't 'turn out for the Anti-War Strike is in a class with Burgess Leitzell, the Old Soldier Who Never Died . .. that is, phys ically . Nan Robinson cried all night because Bob Hughes went away ... Helen Heinbach picked that nasty Al Warehime for the Wissga Dance ... This is our last night as a columnist and really has been huge . . . we beat the Editor of this rag at ping pong . . . one of our life-time ambitions . . . and might we add that writing this thing made us pretty cynical and unbelieving, but we still think Ruth the best waitress in the Place Unusual and Frothmen the worst she has to wait on ... See you in front of Old Main, Friday ... And, oh, yes, it's been fun panning Hotel State College TRAVEL BUREAU Here is an attractive thirteen day stopover trip to Bermuda over the Easter Holidays using two fam ous cruise ships . . . the Georgic from .New York, April 15th and the Carinthia from Bermuda, April 26th. Contact your Bermuda prospects for these attractive sailings. All type of space available. (for further information, call the State College Hotel Travel Bureau, above The Corner. Phone 300.) —W. P. McD CAMPUSEER I=l TO YOU, W. Y. E. R FUNCTIONARY MEM +++ VIA WESTERN UNION Cunard White Star Ltd: + + + THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Letter Box To the Editor The implication of Loyalist, in the letter printed Thursday, that if one opposes war One automatically be comes a dirty Red ,is very interest ing, but my purpose in writing is to assure L. and his ilk that the Penn State Players are producing "Peace on Earth" because it .is a dramatic ally stirring example of the modern American social drama currently re garded as the most promising and vi tal force in the theatre today. It is an experimental venture, offering new problems in staging and acting, that broadens their own scope as a •pro ducing group •and gives local audi ences their first glimpse into a 'new' theatre. The Players, from a pro fessional standpoint, share the senti ment of the leading character in "Peace On Earth" when he declares that he "holds no brief for Commun ism." Incidentally, the play was se- SPRING DAYS ARE KODAK DAYS USE YOUR KODAK -The DEN N b 3 TATE HOTO HOP 212,East College Avenue State College • GET ONE TODAY! • !11,. ( ' ''.. N) 01 • ‘ l Ol 412i!iiiiiiii'ii;;iiik:;: I .. ...*:iiiiilifiiiiiiiiiiki!iiiiiiiiliilliii , iiiiiiilE • • THE 27 4 oataitl cilc&l - -Y I ,'SALON'FACIAL PACKAGE''..'. 1 - 2 , ..., . .. •..: ~.. Dorothy 'Gray lin sent us jtist enousti•of tlieus ,"' c...•::...f;1) packages : for each_ customer.to boye• one. Here is . Oil Opportunity to try at hole her.faiiind .4 .l.24 •''''''. ' 1 „ Satan Facial" treatments ...- to experience Whitt . . , . ' lovely things this famous'method will do for your . . skin. The preparations in regular sizes coses3'or $4. ' i Each package contains three Dorothy GraY,etep..... : !, •, ' orations in generous sizes. With them you can refine skin texture . . . correct dryness . . . smooth out '. • , wrinkles .. . bring out all the healthy glow that's . so vital in the springtime. Two packages ... one . ; for Dry Skin, one for Oily Skin. , Rea & Derick, Inc... 121 SOUTH ALLEN STREET NEXT TO THE PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK lected for production before the stu dent strike was announced. • For The Penn State Players (M. T.) Dutcher To Give Talk Prof. It. Adams Dutcher, of the department of agricultural and bi ological chemistry, speak before the Pittsburgh Dairy Council Wed nesday, April 17, on "Milk as a Food." WATCH CLOCK JEWELRY REPAIRING CRABTREES ONE-THREE-TWO ALLEN ST PENN STATE SHOE REPAIR SERVICE 208 S. Allen QUALITY soisays Tokyo Translating the symbols, the Tokyo telephone operator says, "The connection is made—go ahead, please." Meaning that now you can talk to Japan from any telephone in the Bell System Interestingly, Japanese was the first foreign language ever transmitted by tele phone—When in the winter of 1876-77 three Japanese students at Harvard visited Alexander Graham Bell in Boston These men have lived to see the day when they can talk with Boston from their homeland! Seeking to put the whole world on such easy speaking terms, Bell Systeni service now enables you to reach more than 93% of the world's 33,000,000 telephones HELL TELEPIIONE SYSTEM GI;EN,',GRAY Leader of Casa Loma Orchestra One Word Describes Both SW 00TH! "The' Smoothest 'Dance of the Year" with CASA LOMA THE SMOOTHEST BAND OF THE YEAR JUNIOR MAY THIRD FOUR DOLLARS PER COUPLE Thursday, April 11; 1936 ••• : '',!-VC/hy tjot drop in7at•home • ...„. ~., F ar''.2a;tot','•cif 'pleasure at •••iiastgain,‘iptaW.Cp'll • by rf•t . numbee tt!fter-8,i3.0.; ~ , ~,,;.. . .~~ .b .I4A PROM