Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, October 11, 1935, Image 4

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    Page Four
Dean Attends Meeting
Last week, Dean Sackett attended
a meeting of the Council of the Na
tional Collegiate Athletic association
in Now York to prepare a program
for a convention during the Christ
inns vacation
~~~r~~~~ ~~:Y
;~ wu6e 0 o ib ue:
Evenings at . . 6:30 and 8:30
Last Complete Show Starts at 9:10
TODAY ONLY
A RETURN ENGAGEMENT
'JOE E. BROWN in
"BRIGHT EYES"
with Patricia Ellis. Ann Dvorak
SATURDAY ONLY
MONMY ONLY' I
'WHEN YOU CALL ME
THAT . . . SMILE!"
COOPER, HUSTON
liichard Arlen
Mary Brian
A VICTOR FLEMING
production
4vTHAIIii
Wamcr Nothus Tluatrc,
Shows al
1:30-3:00
6:30-8:30
LAST' lIMES
TODAY
SATURDAY ONLY
0 06: -
( 7 :
—PLUS—
' Hal Leßoy Comedy
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
All Hands Surrender to Dick and Ruby
and Uncle Sam's Midshipmen as. Warner
Bros. Great Romance of Annapolis Bom-
bards the Town with Laughs and Thrills!
DICK POWELL!
RUBY KEELER in " Shipmates Forever ,
Annual Collegian Dance
Scheduled for Tonight
With Lynn Christy and his Penn
Statesmen furnishing the music,
the annual COLLEGIAN dance will
be held in Recreation hall tonight
from 9 to 12.
Ten campus patrolmen will be
stationed at the entrances to pre
vent anyone but subscribers from
entering. No subscriptions will be
sold at the door. Persons desir
ing to subscribe may do so at the
Student Union desk in Old Main.
CLASSIFIED
INSTRUCTION
BALLROOM DANCING INSTRUC
TION—IndividuaI social dancing
instruction. For appointment call
779-J or see Mary Hanrahan, rye
Apts., 200 West College avenue.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
LISTEN—to the games this Satur
day with a new 1936 Crosley ,Fiv
er. Perfect daytime reception. Reg
ular $19.99 set, only $17.99. See or
phone Bill Heckman at 971-R.
LOST—Bracelet 'with carved silver
links, green turquoise settings.
Please call at 134 South Frazier
street or Phone 8034. 22-I.t pd GD
LOST—tight gray topcoat in SLA
basement Thursday between 10 and
11 o'clock. Reward if returned to
Student Union desk. it co. DPS
BOARD—Four and five dollars a
week. Zerby Club; 234 South Allen
street. Please phone 66. 23-3tpd GD
H 0 ilI E COOKING=Why not try
good home cooking at Waddle's,
240 East College avenue.-24-2t pdGD
COLLEGIAN Classified Ads bring re
sults. Whatever your need let a
Collegian classified help you. The cost
is surprisingly low. Inquire at Stu
dent Union Desk in Old Main.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—C Soprano saxophone.
A-1 condition. Reasonable to quick
buyer. Phone Grubb at 175. ltcRG
FOR SALE—Four tube Phileo jun
ior, radio cheap. Good condition.
Owner forced to sell. Call Swaim at
793. : . . ItcETC
4111MMMI
PROPOSITION—An interesting pro-
position for some live-wire who
wants to get into a good field. Com . -
plete equipment for a pretzel bakery
at a sacrifice. Inquire at Student Un
ion. 2tch WBH
WANTED
WANTED—A: ride to Philadelphia,
Saturday, October 12. Please call
Smith at A. G. R. House. Phone 21.
25-1 t pd GD
WANTED—Two students to take
room in Watts hall for remainder
of semester at special rate. Call
"Obie" at Delta Chi, 175..
It whip. R.W.O.
BRIAN AIIERNE
JOAN CRAWFORD
"I LIVE MY LIFE"
with FRANK MORGAN, . ERIC BLORE
Co-Edits
W. S. G. A. has appointed Mary E.
Dougherty '36 as publicity chairman;
Mary J. Reese '36, activities chair
man; Antoinette M. Remzura '36,
chairman of Hallowe'en dance; and
Marion A. Ringer '37, publicity
chairman of HallOwe'en dance.
Bernice E. Zwald , '3B has been
awarded the $5O W. S. G. A. scholar
ship for the highest average of all
freshman women. Her average for
her freshman year was 2.84.
Kappa Kappa Ganuna was enter
tained at dinner by Delta Tau Delta
Thursday night.
Kappa Kappa Gamma gave a tea
for transfers on Thursday afternoon.
The engagement of Margaret M.
Campbell, ex '35, Kappa Alpha Theta,
to Thomas E. Marshall II '34. Beta
Theta Pi, has been announced.
L'Amitie is holding a house-warm
ing dance Saturday night. Two rep
resentatives from each of the wom
en's fraternities have been invited..
Mrs. Paul McGarvey gave a din
ner at the Tallyrand Inn, Bellefonte,
Thursday evening in honor of her
'daughter, Jean, class of '39. Guests
included Alice Parkinson '36, Rae
Phillips '36, and Margaret Beaver,
Jane Curtin, Elizabeth Long, Made
line Purnell, Jean Rountree, Jean
Summerville, Betty Stead, and Ruth
ldin, all members of the freshman
class.
Dad's Day Program
Announced Completed
(Continued from. P«ffe One)
es will be given by Ruth Makcus '39,
Ted Smith '3B, and Barbara Ann
Wood '39. Mike Zelezpock '35 will
sing.
The feature event of the evening
will be the presentation of "The Last
Mile" by the Penn State Players in
Schwab auditorium at 8:30 o'clock.
- W. & .1. l'resident 'l'o Speak
Ralph Cooper Hutchison, president
of Washington and Jefferson College,
will deliver the Sunday morning
chapel address, taking "Life and
Death" as his subject. Born in Flor
risant, Colo., February 27, 1898, Dr.
Hutchison is a graduate of Lafay- ,
ette College, received his master's de
gree at Harvard University, and did
graduate work at Princeton, Theol
ogical Seminary.. He received his Ph.
D degree at the University of Penn
sylvania, having teen ordained as a
Presbyterian minister in 1922.
Hutchison holds the honorary
degree of Doctor of Divinity from
Lafayette College. He served as an
aviator in the World War and spent
one yebr in Constantinople, Turkey.
as first , city director of athletics for
the Y. 11. C. A. Later he served as
i director of publicity for the inter
; national committee of the Y. H. C. A.
in Turkey.
He has served as director of reli
gious education of the First Presby
terian Church, as professor of
phil
osophy and religion at the American
College of Teheran, and is the author
of numerous magazine articles.
CAMPUS BULLETJN
TODAY
An officer of the Penn State Club
will be at Student Union desk from
4 until 5 o'clock to take in new mem
bers and to supply information about
the organization to those interested.
The first of the !fillet Foundation
fellowships will Meet 'in Room 405,
Old Main, at 7 o'clock. The topic
for discussion will be, "Who was the
Greatest Jew of Modern Times?"
Complete
show at
9:10
SUNDAY
Succoth services will he held for
students and their fathers in Rosin
XnterUeVen
Fetki
35c, 50c, 75c
~i l ~ I
MEN'S APPAREL
116 S. Allen St
THE PENN . STATE COLLEGIAN '
Petroleum Refining Laboratory
Gets International Recognition
One of the least known units of
this college among' students is one
of the best . known to the industrial
world. 'Enclosed in the small wooden
structure, the old powerhouse, south
of the Main Engineering building,
the Petroleum Refining Laboratory
has for the past few years been one
of the foremost authorities on petro
leum in the world. Although the av
erage student knows nothing .of the
laboratory, industrial magnates, re
finery managers and research direc
tors are 'constantly going there for a
solution of their problems. The labor
atory shares the distinction with the
United States Bureau of Standards
at Washington as being the only re-
search organization in the world seek
ing the answer to: "What is petro
leum?"'
The laboratory contains tall ex
traction columns and fractionating
and distillation columns that are the
most efficient in the United States.
Most petroleum refining research is
conducted with small quantities of a
quart or less. Here the staff handles
barrels of oil, gasoline or naphtha . in
columns, forty or fifty feet high.
Solvent extraction has been thor
oughly investigated for the past two
Anyone wishing to report violations . of freshman customs may do so
by telephoning or seeing personally anyone of the following members of
the Student Tribunal.
Elwood 111. Douthett . Nittany Apartments 300
Philip G:.Evans Delta Upailon 134
S. Ettirry.Hick; _
John H. Calvin Kappa Sigma I°o
Donald H. Newcomb ' Alpha Chi Sigma 57
Fred L. Young jr. Phi Sigma Kappa - 670
Committee Announces
Rules for Scholarships
(Continued from page one)
Senior scholarship of $2OO, assign
ed on the•.basis of the applicant's
standing atthe end of his junior year;
the junior', scholarship of $l5O, as
signed on the basis of the applicant's
standing at the end of the sophomore
year; the 'Sophomore "scholaiship of
$lOO, assigned on the basis of the
applicant's standing at the end of
his freshinhn year.
The Spanish:'s'eholarships of $lOO
each, arevaided -to two undergrad
uate students; who are . residents of
the United States, for proficiency in
Spanish, and a third to a student
from a Latin-American republic for
proficiency., in English. These schol
arships sea awarded chiefly on the
basis of'linguistice attainment. One
of the two undergraduate ',choler
ships id awarded to a sophomore or
junior in engineering of mineral in
dustries and , the other to a sophomore
or junior in any other school, of the
College.
405, Old Main, from 11 to 12:15 o'-
clock. ,
MONDAY
Varsity women debaters, and all
upperclass. and transfer women in
terested in debating, will report to
Room 1 NLA. at 7:45 o'clock for. a
brief meeting.
Delta Alpha Delta will meet in
Room 1 NLA at 8 o'clock.
The Block and Bridle Club will hold
an open meeting and "get-together"
for all agriculture students at the
Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity at 7
o'clock. _
MISCELLANEOUS
The sales force of the Beaver Field
Pictorial should report to the Stu
dent Union - office between 10 and 11
o'clock Saturday morning for the
Western Maryland game issue.
You Can Get It at Metzgers
40%-REDUCTION on TENNIS RACKETS
• SAVE 20% on GOLF BAGS
A LARGE SELECTION
Retail Value $7.95
4 CLUBS and BAG . . special, $5.95.
COMPLETE :GYM OUTFITS
• Football—Soccer—Track—Basketballßowling Shoes
New, Used and 'Rebuilt TYPEWRITERS
DESK LAMPS . . . $l.OO and up
DESK BLOTTER PADS . . 45c. to $1.25 ,
A NEW LINE . OF ANIMAL SOUVENIRS,
BOOK-ENDS, PLAQUES, etc. •
Slate College
years and is now a major research
problem sponsored by the Penn Grade
Crude Oil Association: New methodS
for testing oil have been developed,
most noteworthy' being the modified
Ostwald pipette for viscosity mea
surement. Before this was invented,
it required from three minutes to one
hour for a viscosity determination;
by the oAtwald pipette the time has
been reduced to five minutes and the
possible error lowered from two per
cent to 0.2 percent''
Organization for this research in
petroleum refining began in 1929 un
der the direction of Dr. Merrell R.
'Penske, and since then the staff has
grown; steadily until the present time,
when twenty-five person's are engaged
in active ITSCerh: Dere students.
either those working toward advance
degrees or undergradUates receiving
their first training .in *search, are
instructed in chemical engineering as
well as petroleum refining: There is
a small group worliing on fundament
al research and a larger body con
centrating on practical and theoret
ical problems sponsored by outside
organizations, such as the Penn Grade
Crude Oil Association. -Practical and
applied problems are constantly be
ing solved for the industry.
Members of the Student Tribunal
_Delta Tau Delta 199
Western Maryland's
. Terors To Play Lions
(Continttha front page• one)
sistently against Villanova, is also a
southpaw passer of no mean ability,
Benjamin, lanky end, was usually on
the receiving end.. This combination
gained 108 yards alone in passes
against the
,Wildeats.
The probable starting line-up for
the Lions is:• Smith and Fry, ends;
Schuyler and Weber, or, DeMarino,
tackles; Economos and Barth, guards,
and Cherundolo, center.. In. the back,
field, o'Hora is back at.his old posi
tion of
_quarterback; liornick• has
been' shifted back to halfback, and
Sheridan, Yett, and Donato will have
to fight it out for the other wing po
sition. Cooper will handle the punt
ing from fullback.
Western Maryland's line-up will .fie,
Lassahn and Benjamin, ends; Cap
tain Campofreda and Pontecarvo,
both 210, tackles; Ortenzi and Mc-
Pherson, guards; and Rieth, center.
In the backfield are Bret an and
Campbell, both sophomores, and Lath
rop and Woodbury. • • ,
Rabbit Wear, who led the scoring
attack against Lebanon Valley, may
be counted upon to 'see action at op
portune moments. Bill Miller,• who
was originally a center and then
shifted to tackle, is now using his
height and weight to advantage as
an end.
Charlie Havens, who replaced Dick
Harlow as football mentor for West
ern Maryland, has the Lest material
in years, the scouts report. The Ter
rors outplayed Villanova is every
thing except scoring goals. Their su
perior punting will keep the Lions
well back in their - own territory and
once again the Lion forward wall will
have to bear the brunt of the attack.
Agriculture Students hold at :the Delta -Theta Sigma fro-
ternity, Wednesday night 'at 7:30. '.
• To Hold Open Smoker. Dr. John L. E. McCord, of the ag-
Dean Ralph L. Watts, of the School rieulture economics department,-,will
of Agriculture, and Prof. James F. give an acCount of his experiences in
Shigley, of the animal husbandry de- Puerto -Rico. •Both men and 'women
partment, will be speakers at the all- agriculture students are invited to at;.
agriculture :student smoker, to be tend. . . .
...
Tentative Line-ups
To Use Substitutions
Now is the time to buy. your fall
Suit and Topcoat featured in our
NATIONALLY
•
ADVERTISED
. „
CLOTHING . :WEEK. •
"Know us l by the company we. keep'.'
•
The SAXON-WEAVE SUIT - - $•A'
of Wearlong Worsted . 4111 ,
An unusual fabric that is extremely ,
smart looking, as well as rugged. •
.'
. . THE FAMOUS . . $"
WORSTED-TEX SUIT' . • iD-..
The TOWN-WEAVE SUIT. •
by the maker of IVorsted 7 tex
The KNIT-TEX .TOPCOAT. . . • $25.
ANGORA KNIT-TEX ~ $3O.
Exclusive styles and patterns
are featured in our
SOCIETY BRANDSUITS e 35
The Rumbly by Society Brand : . s'36
A Topcoat sensation. at
CAMPUS TOG'S -
"Better than ever," we say, at. . . .
. . Extra . pants $5.00 .
- • • • •• .'t•••".•. • • '
• FROMWS . :' - •
114 E. College Ave. ' State. College
' Don't forget to come in' and get your football
scoring blanks for this Week's game ,
THIS WEEK'S PRIZE . . . A SCHOBLE HAT
Friday, October 11,,1935