Page Two PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Successor to The Free Lance, established 1887 Published 361111.1 w. ell y during the College year, except on holidays, by students or The Penns,.lvanin State College, in the interest of the College, the students, Ineulty, alumni. and friends. Applied fur entry ai second claw matter at the State College Post Office. State College. re. HARRY 11. DENDERSON .111. 'l6 WILLIAM IL SKIRBLE '36 Rditor Business Manager DONALD I'. SANDERS '36 ROLAND W. OBERHOLTZER '3G Manat.ing Edit. Circulation Manager W. BERNARD FREI/115CH '36 WILLIAM D. HECKMAN '36 Snorts Editor Advertising Manager VANCE 0. PACKARD '36 PHILIP G. EVANS '36 Assistant Edit. Leval Advertising Mnnoger JOHN E. MILLER .111. '36 LEONARD T. SIRS? '3G Assistant Managing' Editor Credit )tanager CHARLES M. SCHWARTZ JR. '36 L. MARYBEL CONABEE '36 Arafat.' Snorts Editor Women's Editor WILLIAM P. McDOWELL '36 RUTH P•. KOEIILEIt '36 Neon Editor Women's Managing Editor JOHN K. BARNES nt. '36 A. FRANCES TURNER '36 News Sditor 'Women's News Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Johnson Orennemon '37 W. Robert Grubb '37 Philip S. Heisler '37 Richard I.eveD '37 E. Townsend Swaim '37 George W. 111 rd •1; Kenneth W. Engel '37 Jam C. Hoover '37 Philip A. Sehwarts •17 Alan L. Smith ' . 17 Robert .T. Siegler 17 WOMEN'S ASSOCIATE EDITORS 3lnrion A. Ringer '37 Regina 3. Rynn '37 M. Winifred Williams '37 Solo and exelugive National Advertising Roprostntativet NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE. INC. .120 Madison Ayes., New York City Chicago.--)lo.ton—San Franrica---Lov. Angeles—Portland—Seattle 1935 Member 2936 Rssociated Gollefsiale Press Distributor of Collegiate Digest tdonaaina Editor This Issp News Editor Thi Issue.-- Friday, November 22, 1935 THE ATHLETIC POT For the past few weeks the COLLEGIAN has said nothing about the athletic situation. And no doubt many of our readers think that we have ceased our ac tivities along the lines we pursued earlier in the season. This is to contradict that feeling. Our investiga tions have gone on steadily since Alumni Day and will continue until we feel that the athletic situation has been completely cleaned up. Each day brings some new angle and some new fact never considered before. Since Alumni Day in formation which formerly was unobtainable has been volunteered. People who previously wouldn't say a word have talked, and talked freely. • One of the most surprising developments which our investigations have led to is the fact that the foot ball coach has had little or no choice of his assistants. We are not complaining about the present assistant football coaches. But we feel that any coach should be given a free hand in selecting the men who are to assist him. + + + PROGRESS NOTE President Ralph Dorn Hetzel appoints Prof. John Prizzell chaplain after ten years' service as acting, chaplain. + + + AND NOW ENFORCEMENT During the recent campaign of the COLLEGIAN to retain the retail sale of beer in State . College, one ques tion which was canstantly asked was, "Well, the law may be enforced now during the campaign, but what's going to happen after the election?" Student Council does not feel that it can object to a student's taking a glass of beer. However, whenever a student shows that he cannot conduct himself in an orderly fashion without disturbing other persons and causing a bad reflection to be cast upon the entire stu dent body, it is the duty of Student Council and Student Board to step in and discipline that student severely. The student government bodies have performed ex cellently along these lines already this fall, with good results. Their work should continue, since the retail sale of beer is definitely assured for the next four years. The COLLEGIAN and the student government groups cannot enforce the law as far as selling beer to minors is concerned, aside from asking that the beer garden proprietors make "a real effort to find out whether they are selling beer to minors or not. It is up to Burgess Leitzell to enforce that part of the law. The COLLEGIAN agrees entirely with the Centre Daily Times in asking that the beer garden proprietors clean up the appearances of their establishments. Several of the local "gardens" have the appearance of a shady waterfront dive. A few bright lights and clean windows would add a little more respectability. PERSONAL Will the person who sent us the anonymous letter concerning certain educators please get in touch with the editor immediately. The COLLEGIAN is interested. + + + KEEP OUT OF THE OLYMPICS! On December 6 the Amateur'Athletic Union of the United States will meet in New York City to decide whether or not to uphold a resolution adopted in No vember, 1933, whereby the A. A. U. is bound to refuse to certify athletes for participation in the event that Nazi Germany shall have been guilty of discrimination in sports. There have been reports circulated by the press agents of Herr Hitler that the discrimination against athletes in Germany because of their religion has ceased. These reports are untrue. • The Nazi government has not only violated their own pledge not to discriminate against the Jewish peo ple, but they have also violated the Olympic code. And the Jews have not been the only people who have been discriminated against by the Nazis. The Protestant and Catholic athletes have also been the target of the Nazi government. At the time that Hitler took over the government there the youth of the country was organized. in Protestant and Catholic athletic clubs. Hitler immediately started a warfare against them that has never ceased. The Nazis have forbid these confessional groups to engage in athletics and have re stricted them to religious and cultural activities. It is, therefore, impassible for Catholic and Pro testant athletes to engage in sports and athletics in Germany except as members of the Hitlerjugend or Nazi sports clubs. It is the duty of the representative of Penn state at the A. A. U. convention to vote against the United States' participation in the Olympics in Germany in view of the fact that the Nazis have broken their pledge not to discriminate against athletes on religious and racial grounds; that they have broken the Olympic pledge; and that their tactics do not lit in with Penn State's ideals of good sportsmanship and fair play. Clipping Bureau: Those on this campus who are disposed to brood darkly and at great length about the local athletic situation, if any, may be more generous in the future if they only consider the tremendous problems that Bob Higgins has to face. • The clipping below from Wednesday's Philadelphia Record is an example: "The problem of the Nittany mentor is to raise the morals after the Penn defeat, and he believes that hard work will accomplish more thananything else." We've heard that's a good remedy, Bob + + + Here's one from Wednesday's Centre Dnily Times. It has a Lewisburg dateline and is an interview with Sitarsky, captain of the Bucknell team. "Penn burst the Lions' bubble and the Bisons are going to trample it here on Saturday," Sitarsky de clared, as he arched his left foot several times to test its strength. And so we have positive proof of the truth of one of two conditions: (a). You don't have to speak English to play football at Bucknell. (b). Arching the left foot causes one to mix his metaphors. With the price of tickets for the Bucknell. fray listed at $2.28, we are .disposed to recall with interest the strategy that some of the local lads used to get in the game last year. They bought tickets issued for Lewisburg high school students. _Philip S. Heisler 17 _E, Townsend Swaim 17 Honky Tonks Paul Tonks, Froth moneybags, and his date were lost Saturday night in a Philly beer garden. During their cruise they ran into Lefty Knapp. Tonks in troduced his date to Lefty, but with the blare of the band and the screams of Bacchanalian revelry the southpaw didn't catch the name. He asked to have it repeated. Paul, thinking it was his own name that Lefty didn't know, replied, "Tonks, pal, TONKS!" "Gee, that's swell. Congratulations," Lefty cried, pumping his hand. Then he disappeared in the crowd. Several hours later the full import of Lefty's misunderstanding dawned on Tonks and he began to worry about it, especially that it would get back to school, or maybe even the column. Thinking himself fairly safe, he walked into class Monday morning. Jackie Howarth ran up to him with: "What's all this I hear about you getting mar- Campusettes: Three of the lads on this rag who stopped in an' Illinois grocery to buy Dean Warnock a sack of his. favorite white corn meal were surprised to learn the clerk's comment on the purchase. "It's mostly the colored folks who buy white in stead of yellow," he sad. Add pin -snatchers: Dottie Hull a D. U. piece of hardware from Jim Armstrong. Louise Dimpfl a Sigma Pi job of Frankie•the- Pooh Hillgartner's. What Theta Kappa Phi named Corny Carney had himself a free taxi ride with two dolls in Philly last week-end when the driver went into a store to get change? Theta Chi's Henry Dodge has finally bereft him self of the luxuriant foliage that he vowed to wear until the Penn game. Incidentally, he's a forestry student. Sammy` McKee and Joe Rubin . . . Should you need information as to the best way home for Thanksgiving vacation, may we remind you that the Hotel State College Travel Bureau can give you information on schedules and sell you tickets. IT you are thinking about a Bermuda cruise this Christmas vacation, remember that the Travel Bureau is the agent for the principal lines for this service and can help you on all details. Have you seen that little window with the green shutters right beside The Corner en trance? There's a telephone in there for your convenience. It's available day or night. CAMPUSEER - +++ +++ + + + THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Studies Latest Dances Mary lianrahan, -local teacher of ballroom dancing, has returned from New York City, where she has been studying the lateit dance steps at the Chalif School of Dancing under the perscnal direction of Louis 11. Chalif, director, of the school, and Prancis L. Chalif, specialist in ballroom done. ing. The .director of the school is past president of the Association of Dancing blasters of -America. CINEMA NIA A return engagement of "Broad way Melody of 1936" is the attraction at the Nittany l today, witht Jack Ben ny headlining a competent cast. "Mary Burns, Fugitive" will be the 'show at the cathaum tomorrow, with Sylvia Sidney its the title role. She is supported by Melvyn Douglas and Al an Baxter, with Pert Kelton, Wallace Ford, and Brian Donlevy in minor roles. The story is. thtat of an innocent girl, hounded by the law, declared guilty of a crime„which she (lid not commit. Because 'of her association with a college-bred gangster, whom she knows tallies a football hero, she '•is convicted on circuntstantial evi dence. She, in: _company with Pert Kelton, escapes and finds a place in a hospital, where she falls in love with Melvyn Douglass; a temporarily blind ed young scientist. Baxter, as the gangster, tries to kidnap Miss Sidney, but she escapes and flees to Douglass' home. Just as she is about to be married to Douglas ; Baxter crashes in to provide a thrill ing climax. You can spend "A Night at the Op cra" at •the Cathnum Monday and Tuesday, and we predict that you wil' get much more fun out of it than if you went to the Met. That's the name of the new Mar:*;brothers opus, and it has everything. :Zeppo has been left out this time, Which in our estima tion improves the .fun-making poten tialities many times. The story—and it isn't really es sential to your enjoyment of the film —is all about the scheming efforts of Groucho to get his fingers on the mon ey of the wealthy woman for whom he is business manager. There is also a backstage intrigue in which Walter King, Alan Jones, and 'Kitty Car lisle form a rointintic and musical tri angle. All three' possess fine voices, being well andfavorably known on the BileadwaY •stage. Miss Carlisle had the lead iii? Rio Rita's" revival. The story gets kicked around and nearly lost in the shuffle, it serving principally as a .peg on which to hang the antics of thOlarxes. The climax comes at the opera's opening night and here is the beginning of a series of hysterical episodes that are leaving people limp from Nantucket to Pine Glove Mills and return in thirty days or well.— Anyway, Chico and Harpo disrupt the orchestra, Graucho pan ics the boxes, the theatre catches fire, the villain is proved a four-flusher, the true loves ace 're-united, and all ends happily on a note of insanity that surpasses everything these wags have ever done before. The play was done by those crea tors of hits, George S. Kaufman and Morris Ryskind, with the pincipal song, "Alone," being written by Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed. In ad dition some well-knoWn operatic se lections are sung in direct contrast to the general nuttiness of the pic ture. Among These are "I Pagliacci" and "Il Travatore." SAVE 10% Buy Christmas Cards Before December 1 Old Main Art Shop 134 East College Avenue Johnston's Motor Coach Line, Inc. SCHEDULE • STATE COLLEGE-WILLIAMSPORT • THROUGH EXPRESS SERVICE DAILY Read Down Read Up AM PM . PM - A'3 PM 8.00 2.20 • 7.00 STATE COLLEGE 11.10 5.45 8.15 2.35 7.15 Rock View 10.55 5.30 8.20 2.40 - 7.20 Pleasant Gap 10.50 '5.20 8.30 2.50 7.30 BELLEFONTE 10.40 5.15 8.50 3.10' 7.50 Hublersburg 10.20 4.45 9.15 3.30 8.15 • Mill llall 9.50 4.25. 9.30 4.00 8.30 LOCK HAVEN- 9.40 4.10 9.38 4.10. - 8.43 • McElhattan 9.26 3.57 9.40 4.12' 8.45 WOOLRICH X ROADS 9.25 3.55 9.45 4.15 8 4 50 Avis 9.20 3.50 10.00 4.30 9.10 JERSEY SHORE 9.10 3.40 10.30 4.95 9.35 WILLIAMSPORT 8.30 3.00 SUNDAY SCHEDULE USED ON ALL HOLIDAYS Ouch! Helpi—l have a pain, Used. Radio- It's my detector tube again. • Bargains I screech and squeal—holler and crack; My boss says I'm. all out of whack. $5 and Up . Now The m don't worry, Room boss , bee,theybe tteral ways d thannew o ; will fix me, Co-Edits Evelyn M. Girard has been appoint ed chairman of the committee to ar range for the annual Christmas din ner to be held In McAllister hall on Tuesday, December 17. Margaret E. Laramy '36 will arrange far costumes and Ann F. Wilhelm '37, the music. Seating_ will be planned by Ruth B. Evans '37, and Margaret A. Gilliland '37 is head of the invitation commit• tee. Florence E. Reek '36 will direct the Christmas Project, a plan lo aid deserving, families. The Chi Omeka alumnae held a luncheon for active members at the French Grotto in Philadelphia on Sat arday of Penn week-end. Alpha Chi Omega will give a tea for transfers Sunday. The 'pittron eses, Mrs. Morris„ Mrs. Reist, Mrs. Gager, and the alumni . advism', Miss Anne Hangen, will pour. Library Honors 100th Carnegie Anniversary - In honor of the 100th anniversary ,3f the birth of Andrew Carnegie, No /ember 25 1935, a special exhibition will be heist in Rolm K, Carnegie li brary building, from November 20 to Deember 5. The Carnegie anniver sary is .of particular importance be cause of Mr. Carnegie's gift of the College library, one of the few such 1, donations he made to colleges. • William G. Murtorff, College trea surer, has contributed pictures, pho tographs, sketches, account books, and specimens of ore from Carnegie's.Sco tin mill near State College for the exhibit. Included in the exhibit will be a portrait of Carnegie from the Carnegie corporation in New York, photographs and pictures loaned by Mrs. Eugene Lederer, pamphlets and articles by Carnegie, photographs of various Carnegie gifts, and reports of the Carnegie Hero-Fund Commis sion. All are invited to the display which will run during the regular li brary hours. Phi Sigma lota Elects Marquardt Treasurer Robert E. Dengler, head of the de partment of romance languages, Wil liam S. Hoffman, College registrar, and Carl E. Marquardt, College ex aminer, have recently returned to school from Blocimington, 111., ,where they attended a national convention of Phi Sigma lota, national romance language 'fraternity, held -at '. Illinois Wesleyan University.' At the meeting, during which Alpha Zeta Pi was absorbed by Phi ;Sigma lota, Dr. Marquardt was elected na tional" treasurer.... Prof. Dangler, who in conjunction with Mr. Hoffman has designed insignia for many fraterni ties, will, work Out the design for the new key, of Phi. Sigma lota. Chemists Hear Gauger Professor A. W. Gauger, director of Mineral Industries research, deliv ered a lecture on '(The Physical Coal" before the Northern West Virginia section of the American CheMical So ciety at Morgantown, W. Va., last week. Professor Gauger gave the same speech at Charlestown, W. Va:, Tuesday night before the Kanawha Valley section of the American Chem ical Society. • . Prof. Stevens Speaks At Public PSCA Forum Prof. S. K. Stevens, of the depart ment of history and political science, led the discussion of "The Policy and Responsibilities of the United States in the Present European Crisis," in Mineral Industries auditorium last night. • The discussion was held at a public forum sponsored by the Penn State, Christian Association. Members of ;he faculty, students and townspeo ple made up the audience. The University of Buffalo School of Dentistry A four year curriculum completed in three years, by means of the quarter plan. _The dental and medical divisions are closely affiliated. Dental students have two years of basic medical study under the direction and supervision of the medical faculty.' Clin ical practices of dentistry, in all its varied aspects, is supervised by the dental division and is connected twith the clinics of several hos pitals. These combined institutions offer an unusually helpful ex perience in clinical obscrintion,.diagnoSis, and treatment of dent al conditions. The next regular session. will open July lot. 1936. For further information address School of Dentistry, 25 Goodrich Street, Buffalo, N. Y r . - At Thanksgiving . PLKI - Time . . . - N 4 One of the few occasions dur ing the year that the family circle is renewed ... if you are going home or the gathering is here, you will. wish to pre sent the best appearance. Under the Corner FIRE SALE $12,000 WORTH OF MERCHANDISE - Slightly Damaged by Water Suits Topcoats Overcoats Sweaters Neckwear Underwer Shirts Socks Hats Prices Slashed Sharply Sale Starts Friday, Nov. 22, at 9 . A.M. Harry Sauers On Allen St. Used Radios on the Budget Plan BUCK TAYLOR Friday, November 22, 1935 BUSINESS, SCIENCE COURSES If Toihnical 'Training for . I -allege Men and Women.- t , • Mid Term Registration. • . • Counsel in the selection I of courses. • Placement Service. PEIRCE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION I=l Gaiments sent to us now will be returned in plenty of time before the holi days. State College