Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, September 24, 1935, Image 4

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    Page Four
Standing in
The Wings
-By NENNEDY
Broadway will be rudely awakened
from its five-year nap this week with
an opening scheduled for every night
in the week, including Sunday. The
fare will be strictly dramatic, the mu
sical revue, "At Home Abroad," hav
ing got away to a grand start last
Thursday night.
Sunday—"A Touch of Brimstone," by
Leonora Kaghan and Anita Phillips.
Monday—"lf This Be Treason," by J.
IL Mimes and Reginald Lawrence.
Tuesday—" Blind Alley," by James
Warwick.
Wednesday—" Winters(," by Maxwell
Anderson; "Remember the Day," by
l'hilo Higley and Philip Dunning.
Thursday—" Paths of Glory, by Sid
ney Howard.
Friday—" Othello," staged by henry
Herbert.
Saturday—" Dear Mr. President," by
Doty Hobart.
"The Great Waltz," after playing
32 weeks, closed its New 'York run
last Saturday a week, will spend two
weeks reconstructing its scenery, and
open in Boston the third of October.
The reconstruction job will cost Mr.
Max Gordon a mere 50,000 bucks, all
because the theatres on the outskirts
of Broadway cannot handle the ma
chinery used in the Centre theatre. As
it is, the production can only play. the
largest auditoriums, such as Syria
Mosque in Pittsburgh. The show will
travel in -ten gayly pointed cars, and
will play Boston, Philadelphia, Pitts
burgh, Cleveland, Mul Chicago..
The Federal 'goVernment will pro.
vide' het:Ween seen and a half and
ten million dollars to put the estimat
ed twenty thousand jobless actors and
technicians to work this winter. Hallie
Flanagan, former head of dramatics
at Vassar College, will be the big boss
of the project.
Billy Rose, the producer of "Jum
bo"—the new musical comedy-circus
rehearsing at the Hippodrome, has
painted, in, screaming letters opposite
the stage entrance:— "THROUGH
THESE PORTALS' PASS THE MOST
BEAUTIFUL. HORSES , IN. WE
MiOßLD.iii , i ir.
. .
•.i ip , ?.ift,r*.o
inetlinF crack abotit
•• •
FticiNEl;c° l( 9)!! , ! . .F0 'T. L 1 11 :?Ii!!!
T/Pf. ll lo. 11F1411 1 F.F.4h! 1 !
ITY I Y,Veo t n!P
Yeitiget4Ffit ,"Pi°ll l .nl a lili e l Pg ' Ng L f
1936" at the *Cathatim illontiny anti
Tuesday night of this week—if so you
Catiisee her in. person:;in 'tAt home
York 'any night be
tween'Bc4s and 11:10.
Julie Epstein, former Thespian and
intercollegiate boxing champ, has
just finished "Stars Over Broadway"
for Warner Bros. Julie crashed the
golden gates. of Hollywood with
"Twenty Million Sweethearts," then
added "Living 'on Velvet" and "In
Caliente." Phi Ep Julie turned out
some very swell lyrics for the Thes
pian "Reoly and Truly" of 1931.
'•`Jubilee," the newlSam Harris mu
sical., had to postpone its opening in
Boston from Thursday to Saturday.
'Ev'ery one of the three new musicals
this season has had to postpone its
opening—a bad omen in the theatre.
This one was due in New York Oct.
s—new opening to be announced later.
"The Night of January 16th," which
opened in New York last week, has a
new angle for courtroom melodrama.
Shortly after the curtain rises twelve
people are picked from the `audience
to conic up on the stage and act as
jurors. The only sure way to get back
stage—if you can arrange to be one
of the twelve. Jack Dempsey was
picked opening night—buy then.
A nice big licorice gum drop-to the
person who can decipher this headline
appearing in Variety, the show biz
weekly, last week:
CHI PALACE NIXES "DIAMOND
JIM"
H. 0. DESPITE WOW IST
WK. GROSS
• Dave Mason and Collegian reporters
and families not allowed in this.
Course Offered Here
To Heads of Company
An advanced course in personnel
problems will be offered for the first
time this year to 100 department
heads and executives of the Alumi
num Company of America who have
taken the courses of instruction of
fered during the last seven years.
Prof. Amos E. Neyhart, of the de
partment of industrial engineering,
will meet this group of executives at
its first meeting Monday, September
30. Alternate meetings of the group
STUDENT UNION BULLETIN
TODAY
All freshmen who failed to attend
the library tour during freshman
week will be given another opportun
ity to do so at the library at 8 o'-
clock.
Tryouts for the Men's Glee Club
will be held Tuesday and Wednesday
in Schwal auditorium at 7 o'clock.
TOMORROW
Christian Science meeting in Room
410 Old Main . at 7:30 o'clock.
THURSDAY
Skull and Bones meeting in Room
407 Old Main at 7 o'clock.
Freshman and sophomore music ed
ucation students are invited to attend
First Male Enrolled
In Home Economics
A freshman has opened the way for
a new field of study here. He is Wil
liam G. Slocum,. who wants to pre
pare for hotel and institutional man
agement, and who is the first man to
matriculate in the department of
home economics.
Each year, about 270 girls are reg
istered in the home economics course,
but until Slocum's matriculation, no
man has ever concentrated his study
in this field.
Deviations from the regular home
economics curriculum will lie neces
sary to round out a course which will
prepare Slocum for a career in hotel
management, but no .new courses will
have to be added to the College cur
ricula, according to Miss Edith P.
Chace, director of home economics.
Slocum will try to shape his course
similar to the curriculum in hotel
management. offered by Cornell Uni
versity. In addition to the nutrition
and institutional management work
offered in home economics, which is a
department of the School of 'Educa
tion, the course outlined for the pio
neer student will include foods and
marketing, study of electrical appli
ances, lighting, ventilation, and re
frigeration, as well as several econo
mics courses.
We
for
CHESTERFIELD cigarettes
upwards of 350,000 bales
of Turkish tobacco .. .
a meeting of the Louise Homer Club
in the foyer of Schwab auditorium at
8:30 o'clock.
FRIDAY
Dr, E. C. Fischoff will address the
HillClNu:dation in Room
. 405 Old
Main at 7:30 o'clock.
MISCELLANEOUS
Greek 2.3 classes will meet as sche
duled this 'week. There will be no li
brary lectures.
Frear, Worthley Find
Way to Remove Spray
Apples can be washed with a dilute
solution of hydrochloric acid to
move spray residues, Donald E. H.
Freer, of the department of agricul
tural biological chemistry, and Har
lan N. Worthley, of the department
of entomology, have found in experi
ments conducted here.' '
Results of their work on 500 samp
les of Pennsylvania apples last year
have been published :in Bulletin 318,
Removal of Spray Residues froei Ap
ples. This bulletin is available upon
request.
Freer and Worthley say that the
fruit should be washed .at harveit
time instead of when it is taken - from
storage. They recommend a home
made flotation washer for Pennsylva
nia conditions; although the more ex
pensive undef-brush machines '"! are
somewhat more efficient.
Hydrochloric acid, at 1 to 2 per
cent concentration by weight, is used
to get maximum residue removal
Wortliley say..„.
. .„
puu aiu'i,lll.l.l6ud ptiu::.9u!pu.a
spin au!4p. , ..u:o . iasit '4ant sapid*.
2upliuct Ici , p6:”udtui aou sc qp.tj
aql. Jo ifilluith .9u!daa4 apqm.
•meu saaual
au enema a;
. 41rias tagsnq trauu
to; aeludu. esuls jo suonu2 g oI g
Rum eau sapid° au,' *sauna Isom
uc opu;spus sc .lOILLSIIAI 1.1014i40U
13 uognios ppu aansodua
atzo •Iplas alp oa. Aanfuf quogapu.
=MU
\\.
; • ' '
v: .V• \, , , , 1 , V. O , S. N'.:.',''. 1 . %. 1 . 1 ~:11i
\y , ,•.V.k) 'll.c. t(I.v,VAI ',":,,.. 'c;l',
• he leaves of Turkish . tO
bacco are strung one by one
like beads (see how it is done
in the picture). lifter the
leaves are strung they are
packed in bald (see picture)
sometimes as many as
80,000 leaves to the bale.
have. on hand' at,''alttinz6.
The pleasing, aroma and flavor of Turk
ish tobacco is almost necessary if want
a good cigarette.
Turkish. tobacco is More costly when
you take into account that you have to
pay 35c a pound duty, but we have to
have it to blend with our mild riPe.home
grown tobaccos.
.• • •
It helps make Chesterfields 'milder, it
hetps give them better taste. Just try them.
THE PENN,'-:STATE COLLEGIAN
Co=Edits
Sammy McKee, a Kappa graduate
from last year;- is taking work for her
master's degree this semester here.
Dorothy Perkins '35 and Kathryn
Hertzler '35 were at the Kappa house
this week-end , before starting their
extension work.
Four Phi Mu marriages have been
announced. Janet Cope '35, now Mrs.
Bob Abrahamsdn, is living in Johan
nesburg, South Africa.. Mr. and Mrs.
Harold t E. Rudacille (Anne Madden)
are spending the winter in thi Glenn
land apartments, here in State Col
lege. Marge Folk, now Mrs. Ray Burn,
is living in Pittsburgh, and Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Mesimer live in Bedford.
Mrs. Mesimer was the former Ber
nice Allen, ex-'37;
June Brown '34, Sue Allen, and
Kathryn Shipman were week-end
guests at the new Phi Mu suite in
Grange.
Edith Cottom '35, .Alpha Chi Om
ega, is taking work for her master's
degree here.
The Gamma Phi Betas *recently
pledged Patricia V. Jonkus '3B, and
Ruth FiGlenri'''37.
Emily Kona:Lasky spent the week-
SPECIAL for this WEEK
Menis Suede Jackets
. .
, Made"' with knit collar, ~.: • n . 5. - ,
cuiTS7Aand:.w a i's tb an thkli I' .
1 :• , •
. ; ,Int -1. t0 14 n and' Zip per - f r on •' ts.
%-r .•
Grey :and Reindeer. . ~
...
- 'Regular prices $7.50 and $8.50
FROMM'S
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'6 "' , IA kii"l, I , ii.:
' ''''l'flgi Ylil'llvrli
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Irins_ ~r"'
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end at the Cantina Phi Beta suite in
Woman's building.
Two Delta Gamma graduates, Ar
lene Searfoss and Peg Mclntyre, were
in town over the week-end. Tip Reese
and Betty Balderston spent two days'
of last week in Philadelphia. Ginnie
Werden '35 is attending the Pierce
Business School in Philadelphia.
Two Thetas, Peggy Campbell and
Jane Towne, are also attending the
Pierce School, and Connie Russell is
taking secretarial work in Philadel;
phia. The Theta graduates back for•
the week-end were Helen Hinebaugh,
Dot Anderson, and Georgette Purnell.
Grace Baer '34, of Thespian fame, is
taking graduate work. here. Libby
Shaffer '36 Was recently elected presi
dent of Kappa 'Alpha Theta. Jean
Kriebel '37 is the new treasurer.
CLASSIFIED
WANTED—Passengeils to Easton,
Allentown or Bethlehem, leaving
Friday at 4, returning Sunday. Call
Grubb at 175. • •
LOST—Cubberley History. .Education
. containing valuable envelope. .Re
ward for return. P. b.- Evans, Cor
ner Room; Phone 300.
114 E. COLLEGE *AVE
.. 111 t 1 • • 1 1 11 1 1,
• .-s-t117.,11.13.1;,
"2: ':
Collegian Dance: e c c t Ht.
1 1 1 zt
-..., .44
for mildness
.. for better taste
Tuesday, September 24, 1935
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