Page 'MU PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Successor to The Free Lance, established 1887 PuWished ennti•eeekiy during the College year. except on holidays, by students of The Pennsylvania State College, in the interest of the College. the students, faculty. alumni. and frieede. NATIONAL. ADVERTISING SERVICE. INC. Chientro--Ilorton—San Pranclsco--Los Anneter--Portland—Senttle Applied for entry ar rect.! clam :nutter at the State Collate. Port Office, =l= THE MANAG .1011NNON BRENNEMAN '37 E. TOWNSEND 5WA7.37 '37 31onattins Editor EMU!. S. HEISLER '37 News Editor W. ROBEKT GRUBB '37 Simms Editor RICHARD LEWIS '37 r ...more Editor MARION A. RINGER '37 Women's Editor M. WINIFRED WILLIAMS '37 Wornett's Man:minx Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Woodrow W. Hierly '33 Stephen Campbell 'la? Franeia H. Sarmeank Frank 11. Titlow '3B Jerome Weinstein %Pi Charles M. Wheeler Jr. '3B I=IEMMI:==I , . • Jay IL Mullet+ '3B Edward 11. Elliott '3B Robert F. Filtott jr. Kathryn M. Jen°lngn '3B Robert S. McKelvey M 8 John G. Sub..lln '3B VOMEN'S ASSOCIATE: EDITORS Shirley R. Helms 'llB Gem;4la 11. Powere %IS Caroline Than MS Ilaiuminie Editor This Issue._ Ns,.litur This Issue Tdesday,Mayp,l936 CONTEST WINNER NOTE: In a contest sponsored by the Committee on Militarism in Eincation, the following essay by Rogcr E. Chase, of Columbia University, 'was awarded first prize for the best editorial on the subject: "Why Congress Should Pass the Nye-Kvale "Intendment." "We won some things from the war, that were not on the program. For example, we had a complete dem onstration of the fallacy of the old tradition that'pre paredness prevents war."—George H. Dern in an ad dress at Riverside, Calif., December, 1931. In December, 1935, Mr. Dora, as Secretary of War, is busy spending the largest peacetime military appro priation in the history of the United States, making capital of "the obi tradition that preparedness prevents war" to hasten the drive toward a bigger and better The patrioteers--including, we trust, Mi. Dern— have not forgotten the institutions of higher learning. To date more than two hundred campuses have found a place for the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. An other hundred are expected to add Military training to their curricula in the near future. In 118 institutions of learning drill is not only offered but required. Senator Nye of North Dakota and Representative Kvale of Minnesota have introduced a bill intended to eliminate conscription from American education. The bill would amend the National Defense Act of 1916 with the stipulation that no R.O.T.C. unit be approved at any school or college "until such institution shall have satisfied the Secretary of War that enrollment in such unit (except in the case of essentially military schools) is elective and not compulsory." Mild as it may appear, consonant with the democratic idea as it is, the Nye. Kvale Bill is by no means assured of passage. No sooner did the campaign against militarism in education begin to assume formidable proportions than spokesmen fOr "national defense" rushed forward with euphemisms and counter-charges. The R.O.T.C. was a higher form of "physical education;" the goose-step was "character education ;" compulsory drill was "citizen ship training," an antidote for the subversive agitation of students who felt, and said, that was unnecessary and futile and they would have nothing to do with it. means little to the defenders of the A.O.T.C. that the best minds in the field of physical education have characterized as a hollow falsehood the claim that drill "builds men." It is irrelevant to the apostles of chauvinism that the kind of "character" developed by the corps is other wise known as the "military mind" which—Professor Reinhold Niebuhr once stated—"makes unthinking obe dience the summum bonum in - the hierarchy of virtues." It is not at all alarming to the super-patriots that "citizenship" as promoted in the R.O.T.C. has meant the negation of science and democracy, that the training corps 'have been as culpable as any other group in the revival of American college vigilantism. What that "citizenship" implies was once illus tratedlin'an,'official R.O.T.C. manual (withdrawn from cireulatiop;,Jhanks to student protests, ten years.ago) One passage read: "This inherent' desire. to fight lira kill must be carefully watched for and encouraged by the student ...." And further: "To finish an opponent who hangs on or attempts to pull you to the ground, always try to break his hold by Ilriving the knee or font to his crotch and gouging his eyes with your thumbs." "Citizenship," indeed. As it berpmes increasingly apparent that the na tion's military machine is being geared to the inevita bility if not the early desirability of another war, stu dent protests against militarism and the society which breeds•it will be increasingly vocal. At the same time, R.O.T.C. units will crop up on campuses which never had military training before. The corps already estab lished will emerge more clearly as stormtroops of bogus "Americanism," intolerance, anti-intellectualism. They are strongholds of reaction today; they may be the van guards of fascism tomorrow. Wide public support for the Nye-Kvale Bill may not signify the beginning of the end for the R.O.T.C. But it will prevent further expulsions of students who, on religious or political grounds, refuse to submit to compulsory drill. More important, it will attract pub lic' attention to what has long been an anti-social fea ture of our educational system and today is an incuba te• of forces which may some day destroy our civili zation. The campaign should not be confined to those schools where compulsory R. 0. T. C. exists. The men ace of jingoism cannot be isolated. Every senator, ev ery representative in Congress should be , notified, de luged with petitions, hounded until such time as he places his influence behind the bill. It is encouraging that the tremendous growth of the R.O.T.C. since the war has not occurred without artificial stimulation. Although the cavalry went out of style and utility after Appomatox, thousands of horses have been provided as sugar-coating for the pill of compulsory training. Fortunes have been spent on flashy uniforms. Pretty girls have been recruited as "sponsors." The enemy has been resourceful. There is going to be a fight to the finish between a strong student peace movement and a highly-subsidized regimen of training for slaughter. The outlook will be ING BOARD ALAN L. SMITH 'l7 Bustneo Manager KENNET:. W. ENGEL '77 Advertising Manager PHILIP A. SCHWARTZ '77 Promotion Manager GEORGE W. 111110 'l7 Circulation Manager IRWIN ROTH '37 • Foreign Advertising Monnn•e JEAN C. HOOVER . 37 Sorrel/my REGINA J. RYAN 'l7 Women's News Editor .Jerorne * Weinstein 'as —Frank 11.•Tillow 'aft OLD MANIA A Kingdom Totters: "Oh my goodness!" breathed Fran Turner, Penn State's smiling, May Queen, as she caught her heel in a wire mat on the porch of Old Main Saturday afternoon. Things looked pretty dark for Fran, the May Day prc;cession and the month of May in gen eral but for the timely assistance of Art Fisher, one time editor of the COLLEGIAN, Profit, and La Vic. Leaping from the crowd to Miss Turner's side, Mom zer Fisher ('10) grasped Miss Turner about seven inches above the securely wedged heel, and with a tremendous heave released the Queen from her en chantment. The sun shone brightly once more and the procession resumed while• Mrs. Fisher spoke in an undertone to triple-editor Art. On Coming of Age: Paul Langdon Cax jr. known affectionately as "Eagle" to his intimates out at Sigma Pi, is prob ably the only youth on record who has actually come clean from Pittsburgh. All year the Eagle has been one of those pillars who believe that nicotine tears out the lungs, alcohol sure plays hell with the lining of your stomach, and girls—well Eagle actually blanches with terror at the mere thought of talking to one of the critters. Last Saturday night the Eagle went berserk. Dropping the training of- a lifetime from his shoul ders he stormed into' the Sigpi boarding. house and gave a pretty authentic imitation of a bachanalian ftenzy. He raved, ranted, whined; even swore a lit tle, softly. Finally, as the piece de resistance, he called Dory Becker on the phone and dripped senti ment into her not so unresponsive ear, begging for a dale. Amazed and not a little alarmed the worthy byes, who have good reason to know the effects rf ethyl evanescence when they see it, went into action. After much investigation it developed that the Eagle had, inadvertently, downed two ,(2) beers. Scavenger Scrapings: As everybody knows who ever dated a Theta, they don't fool. When they do a thing they do it in a big way. The other night they pulled off a scavenger hunt over at the Stone Pile and the sistern really took it serious. When Chaperon Joey Wardell's list called for a real live cow, that meant a real live cow had to Le got. - Up to the Dairy barns in the dead of the night marched our Joey with the result that for several hours some close relation of the deceased Penn State Jessie grazed contentedly on the Theta house lawn. The sisters offered Bovy a bid but the cow turned it down preferring, she said, the more pleasant atmos phere of the dairy barns. Arid though she, doesn't know. it, Skippy ; Baxter- Bailey's wedding certificate, uilcin which the 'ink is hardly dry, was on view at the same little soiree' ... Item to End All Sam Breene Items: Somewhat put out by this ! department's buildup of the Ted Phooey-Rito hucksters, a while back our Mr. Breene descended upon Willy Skirble, the then Bus. Mgr. of this sheet, and in no uncertain terms stated that jr prom would pay not one cent for the legitimate advertising which it had run in these sa cred columns—which was all well and good, except that good Mr. Neil Fleming had paid us off in full only the day before. Trivia: Design for living: Lucile Giles and Luke Bright ner and Bob Morini (alphabetical order) ...Nancy Fletcher eating an ice cream cone in ICalin's . . . Ceo. Doverspike skiing down stairs in his apartment SOCIETY NOTE: Among the many person's' of prominence who visited the campus over the i•ceett . - 'end were: Kay (where's: Shirbla?) . Geise '35;:'4- rnartia6 . .ltiMC;s SeattY^ , ls, Tiger Joe Lockhare,:arid somebody's mother ... —The Maniac x . EA. • X 7.1 • • •:,..;0 dpi 4 , - rV PALM BEACH SLACKS The Summer's Smartest Trouser for the Sportsman who seeks . . • COOL COMFORT $5.00 ;AU • STARK Bg9...S.IYHARPERD HATTERS HABERDASHERS TAILORS 'M PEN} STATE COLLEGIAN Faculty Members Hit Fallacy of Estimates (Continued from. Page One) to thousands who would otherwise be in competition in the labor market. Thus crime indirectly contributes to the financial welfare of those who supply' it with equipment and those who benefit by the spoils. "If it were somehow possible to eliminate all crime suddenly, the ef fect on our entire economic system would be as disastrous as the col lapse of any other industry of simi lar magnitude," they say, foreseeing the repercussion to be similar in kind, if not in degree, Its that which typic ally follows a great war. However, they do not believe that. such a thing could happen completely and rapidly enough to cause a serious dislocation of industry. Professors Hawkins and Waller hold that it is possible to measure some elements of the cost of crime but not the cost of crime. The ques tions that interest them most arc: What is the effect of crime in redis tributing the national income? What are roots of crime in legitimate busi ness?, and what unintended conse quences for the large• social order have such crimes as bank robbery, embezzlement, counterfeiting, and racketeering? Racketeering, the co-authors show, has been, deliberately invited and fos tered by big business who seek to pro tect their investments from the on slaught of the small businesses. They point out also that the consumer rare ly pays thcf cost of the racket, but in stead it -falls upon the merchants themselies. Campus Bulletin i TODAY Chess ChM will meet in Room .121 Old Main at 7 o'clock. Senior class meeting in chemistry amphitheatre at 7 o'clock. All seniors should attend. TOMORROW FreAmen women candidates for The editorial board of the COLLEG. lAN will meet in Room an Old Main at 4:16 o'clock. Important. All candidates for the 1938 La Vie staff will meet at 4 o'clock in Room 412 Old Main. Plans for the 1937 book will be outlined and the next senior staff will be introduced., Alpha . Pi will meet in Room 318 Old Main at 8 o'clock. Attendance compulsory. THURSDAY ImPortant meeting of, the Camera club in Room 321 - Old Main at 7 o'clock. Dr. White will give an illus trated lecture on color photography. Everybody, welcome. Last day. for orders for graduation invitations,, announcements, and pro grams. All orders taken at Student Union desk. Nitlany Stamp club will meet in the Sandwich Shop at 6:30 o'clock. MISCELLANEOUS Tickets for the. Penn Slate Day dance are now on sale at the Student Union office, Senior downtown women who wish to attend the senior dinner dance at the Nittany Lion Inn, May 22, should make reservations immediately with Anna Mary Soisson, Women's build ing. The names of all newly-elected of ficers of all organizations should be left at the Student Union office. Old Main, immediately. S.U. Names Champions In the tournaments conducted by Student Union, Harry H. King '37 bectimo • allege : pool 'champion and Richard SOCiman '39 IVon .the. ping pOng chamPioashili:, : ; La Vie Will Have Campus Views With, Buildings Not Predominant An outstanding feature of the 1936 La Vie will be the section including various campus views. Being thor oughly convinced that the beauty of the campus does not belong to the buildings, the staff has organized a section that shows various scenes without buildings being predominant. The section is laid out with a bleed off on three sides and a one-inch mar gin, on the inside of the page. The views are printed on a special paper stosk known as Skytone. The ink used is double-tone green and the combina tion produces an exceedingly pleas ing result. There will be a second section of views. It'will show typical Pennsyl vania German scenes. Each view will be titled in language character istic to ifs vicinity. These titles will be supplemented with translations in HAVE YOUR SHINGLE , .FRA.MED at The MUSIC ROOM Crepe and Batiste Pajamas EGOLF'S FOOT LIGHTS "Ah, Wilderness!" a three act play by Eugene O'Neill presented by The Finn State Players under .the direction of Nellie Gravatt, Friday and Satur day, May SO and 9th in Schwab auditorium. The Cast _ .. Tommy—A Son Johnny Moffit Mildred—The Daughter c . _Jane Gruber . Arthur—Another Son William Cnris Elsie Miller—The Wife Beatrice Conford Lily hiller—Nat's Sister Sid Davis—Elsie's Brother Nat Miller—Owner . of the "Evening Globe" _ Richard--Another Son David McComber—A Dry Goods Merchant _ Nora—The Maid Wint Selby—Arthur's Classmate at Yale _ Belle—A Chorus Girl Bur tender _ Salesman Muriel MeCamber Stage Manager Fred Hoffman Assistant Stage Manager Alvin Ncwmyer Electrician Conrad Zierdt Property Manager _ Dorothy Fish Assistant Property Manager _Jean Burkholder Costume Mistresses Ruth Brandt, Laura Kirk Lodge For her excellent direction Nellie' Cravatt deServes more tribute than the spring bouquet which was pre sented to her on a darkened stage Saturday night. Working with a good 'though long play and with a young but not over-buoyant cast, Miss Gravatt was successful in eliminating a good deal of the draginess that has marked most of 'the Player's produc tions, The sets were admirable as they have been all year but the orchestra was exceptionally bad sounding very Co-Edits June C. Price was elected president of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman wanton's scholastic honorary, at a meeting of the the new initiates and former officers, last Thursday. Oth er officer elections were: Prances J. Keeskr, vice-president; Muth V. Koch, secretary; and E. Ruth Breit wieser, treasurer. Edna ➢f. Bruno '3B, Alpha Chi Omega, was awarded the fraternity honor ring for having shown the greatest improvement in scholarship, activities and fraternity leadership within the past year. Rose R. Nude '37, was installed its president of Theta Phi Alpha at a formal banquet in the State College hotel. Other officers who were in stalled are: Gelsie R. Ferdinand '37, vice-president; Margaret M. Waters '37, secretary; and Dorothy L. Val lish '37, treasurer. Astriad initiated Marthamne Co hen, Lucille B. Greenberg, Cecile G. Metz, and Joan C. Sperling '39,, at a formal initiation in Grange Play room, Thursday night. BLUE KEY (Junior Activities 'Honorary) John D. Brisbane Thomas W. Brown Bernard J. Burkett Charles R. Campbell Harold N. Finkel Harold L. Gordon jr. ' George C. Harkess George - L. Harwick George W. Jordan William E. Lindenmuth Graham Luckenbill John A. McLaughlin Robert S. Mechling Thomas H. Moore Robert Morris jr. Charles M. Robbins John G. Sabella Jack E. Saxer Robert S. Sigel ' George K. Stroupe William• G. Thomas jr. Merlin' W. Troy Chailes M. Wheeler the glossary. • The main dividers this year will be five-tone pictures, printed on a rough stock paper. The drawings and de tail were completed by Amelia Brooks, art editor, under the supervision of Prof. Andrew W. Case. These divi ders, used to identify the various books, are the meet colorful works to be found in any edition of La Vie. The book will be bound with a cov er designed to he a nearly exact replica of the Bibles printed in Penn sylvania during the latter eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The two major characteristics of those books will be reproduced perfectly—the peacock frontal design and the cord ed back. A balanced book has been the aim of the staff in its work through the year. Previously the interest dwind led off toward the end of the issue and the latter part was little noticed. This year the last major section shall be that of the athletics—a well-read part of the book. It will be followed by a views section. It is hoped that this will afford a greater cover-to cover interest. Margaret Gillen Morton Wolovsky Thomas Francis Harvey Levin Silom Horwitz • Harriet Bartges __Edward Birins _Hermione Hunt _Jerome George _lrving Telsuhow __Frances Keesler Technical Staff like something from a small high school. Harvey Levin gets three stars for being a natural as the Oscar Wilde bitten youth as does Frances Keesler who switches with Jane Gruber. Jane has possibilities' in smaller shoes. But for his voice, Which verged on being just a little too senile, even for a newspaper man of that age, Tommy Francis deserves at least a good cigar on which to learn. Beatrice Conford slipped a notch (going out of charac ter several times) and did not give Francis the support he deserved. An other ale for Wolovsky who was Sid Davis was not the over-drunk drunk who usually flounders into plays of this kind.' Silom Horwitz, the man with six ty-three stage voices, used voice num ber 16, the oboe to get across the kind of neighbor of which you have at least one. He also used facial ex pression number• six throughout with two much verve which made .for a stereoptye rather• than a character. Eddie Binns was brief but brilliant as the corrupter of youth from Yale. llermione Hunt loosened up and gave her beit performance of the year. Johnny Moffit is a good actor and during the water-closet episode added as mudh color to the play as George Jerome the bar-keep. The characters net mentioned gave the spottiest performances. The play as a whole was successful. Architecture Award Won by Briggs Pruitt A scholarship was awarded to J. Briggs Pruitt to attend' the an.: noal meeting of :the Association of. Collegiate, Schools of Architecture being held at Williamsburg and Rich mond, Va. Prof. James B. Helms, of the de partment of architecture,•also attend ed the early part of • the meeting which was held in conjunction with the American Institute of Architects to celebrate the completion' of the restoration of Virginia's former cap ital, Williamsburg. The Rockefeller Foundation is responsible' for the re construction. . Printing for Student Societies and Fraternities Chapter Publications Nittany Printing and Publishing Company 110 West College Avenue A Satisfactory Service by a Modern Sanitary Plant Penn State Laundry 320 W. Beaver Ave. Phone 124 Hillside Ice and ,Coal Co. Hehlers in the Highest Grades of . • Coal and Loke Call Us for YourSapply of • FIREPLACE WOOD - Phone 1364 Tu6sday, Wray 12, 1936 CINEMANIA Following H. G. Wells' "Things to Comer which closes'at the Cathaum today, that theater will show a pic ture with a new angle on the "shady lawyer•" plot., This time the lawyers are played by Margaret Lindsay and Glenda Farrell. The former is in love with Warren Hull, the district at torney, but he has belittled her abil ity and so shh accepts an offer from a local racketeer to help him in some crooked deals. For quite a while she succeeds, but at the denouement in a stirring courtroom scene at the close, she agrees with 'Hull that the laiv is a man's profession. . Another film dealing with-a lawyer who 'uses his ability in' behalf of a gangster will be shown at the Nittttny tonight and, tomorrow. In "Special Investigator" Richard Dix serves in this capacity' until his, brother, a G man, is shot down by racketeers. Seeking revenge Dix goes to ,Nevada and discovers the hideout of a gang of gold robbers. While trailing them he falls in love with Margaret Callahan, the sister of the head of the gang. But a typical whirlwind finish removes, all com plications. The story . is written by Erie Stanley Gardner, who is well known for his mystery stories. Although it lacks `.'big" names the picture at the Cathaum Thursday looks like , good entertainment if you like thrills. "Speed" is the name of it and it-features Wends Barrie, Una Merkel, Ted Healy, James .Stewart, and Ralph Morgan. Stewart is a test driver• for one of the large automobile companies whose job •is to "crack-tip" cars at high speeds in order to see how they will damaged. He is also, at work on a new style carburetor and in order to test it he enters the Indianapolis Speedway race. Ills car crashes, but through the aid of Miss Barrie he gets a new car which he runs over the Maroc Lake testing ground in Utah, where Sir Malcolm Campbell recently set a new world's record, with more thrills and more success. A return showing of "Rose Marie,' musical show starring Jeanette Mc- Donald and Nelson Eddy, will be at the Nittany Thursday. MORNINGSTAR. BREAD • Baked •Home-like Bread" MORNINGSTAR BREAD is fine for every purpose. It makes sandwiches that are pleasing in taste and at the same time nourishing. And if you want crisp toast that fairly melts in, your mouth, this is the loaf for you MORNINGSTAR SALLY ANN AND PURITY BREAD Approved by • American Medical Association