rage PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Successor to The Free Laver, established 1887 Published semi-weekly during the College year, except on holidays, by students of The Pentetylvanin State College. in the Interest of the College. the students, faculty. alumni. and friends. Kerne . ..Wl:lj FOR NATIONAL A.V•11111111•0 UV National Advertising Service', Inc Collet... Publishers Repre”ntative 420 MADISON ASC. NOW YORK. N.Y. CoOcACO DOSTON SAN PNANc:sco LOS An,cuts - PORTLAND • CHARLES M. WHEELER. Jlt. '3B JOHN C. SAIIELLA '3B Editor Business Manager JEROME WEINSTEIN 'IS JAY IL DANIELS '35 Managing Editor Advertising Manager FRANCIS It. SZYNICZAK '35 ROBERT S. MCRELVEY '3B News Editor Circulation Manager WOODROW W. DIERLY 'llS , CARL W. DIEIIL '3B Feature Editor Promotion Manager SHIRLEY It. lIELIS 'IS ROBERT E. ELLIOTT JR. '3B Women's Editor Foreign Advertising Manager GEORGIA 11. POWEILS '3B KATHRYN M. JENNINGS '3B Associate Women's Editor Senior Secretary CAROLINE, TYSON '3B Associate Women's Editor 'Mom. A. Boni '39 Herbert IL Cohan '39 Dome 31. Trobtae '39 William 11. Joachim Jr. '39 Alan. 0. Mclntyre '39 Dal• 11. Nichok Jr. 19 Salvatore S. Szi In '39 John A. Troanovitch '39 WOMEN'S ASSOCIATE EDITORS Lucille H. Greenberg '39 Florence E. Long '33 Rehr E. She. '39 Ralph IL Cunt'lnch '39 Ciehard W. Rooman ; 39 Pallas R. Loan '39 Jerome Shaffer '39 Francis A. C. Voslers Jr. '39 Mary J. Sample .39 :Humring Editor This Ism: News Editor This 14sue____ 1936 Member 1937 Associated Calle(Siete Press Distributors of Collegiate Digest Friday, April 23, 1937 THE FIRST WEEK IMPRESSIONS of the incoming editor are varied as he writes his first and most difficult piece. In some instances they are already molded; in others they await important events that are dotting the rapidly changing picture of this college. This is the time of year when next year seems the im portant one to consider. This is a week of many prob lems. This is the time when this editor wishes to talk about those vital things for next year that are being de cided now. Perhaps preeminent in the student mind now is 'the campaign for the duos officers to be selected Monday and Tuesday of next week. This campaign is being waged in the spirit of reform; it is different front any yet conducted. All parties of all classes have pledged virtually the same things. The Collegian will view this election impartially, sup porting no one candidate for any position. It will await with interest the fulfillment of the campaign promises of the winners : . It hopes that those persons will further the reform that all have agreed now is necessary Equally important when considering next year is the meeting of the Board of Trustees in Harrisburg this week-end. When that is over, many feel that the status of the college building program will be much clearer. It is thought that the college appropriation will be definite ly settled. The Collegian realizes that this appropriation and the separate funds for buildings will enlarge the enrollment of both men and women tremendously. When that hap penS the Collegian will reach more people, the student officer's will have a bigger task on their hands, the ad ministration' will be.taxed. Will all concerned be equal to the occasion? The Collegian wants to do its part in this. It wants to help Penn State. At the same time it wants to remain a newspaper. Expected, too, at the trustee meeting is a decision con cerning the new dean of the School of Physical Educa tion and Athletics. The Collegian believespatthe dis cussion will: center; about‘Drlgarl ;Schott,'Pi.4selt• dean at West' Viegilia. 'Whether or 1e named for theipost Bqt,,if he is, it will be a definite part of the idealistic" plari of incorporating intercollegiate athletics with phys ical education, intramural sports with health service, and the products of all these into coaching jobs.later. Whether or not one man can do all that is the ques tion. Whether or not Dr. Schott could do it is still an other question. Many alumni feel more for winning intercollegiate teams than they do for physical education. Just how much voice the alumni should have in such a matter is another point. Where does the advisory athletic hoard fit in? It is evident that not many people know just what the score is concerning all this. The whole thing at this point rests on the president of the college. It is his recommendation that the trustees must consider. The student newspaper will watch this situation Yesterday's anti-war strike is the continuation of the ever-surging momentum that the peace movement is gaining. The combination is unusual -when this demon:" stration he added to the Players' "Bury the Dead" and the optional R. 0. T. C. vote on the elections ballot. - It is action coordinated thusly, though by chance, * that will most effectively drive home the fact that Amer icans need not die to be worthy of their country. The realization that It. 0. T. C. hero can be optional without harming the appropriation of the' ollege should convince many skeptics that death, though it strikes from behind, need not be greeted at the front door. The students will be behind this movement for peace, we believe. Thus are the impressions of the editor in his first week. Thus does the Collegian as a newspaper throw its weight. As a newspaper to interest etudeats will it OLD MANIA Writing the traditional dirt column has its prob lems, what with recent predecessors making enemies through mis-statements, personal revelations, and the like. Following the letteuof the supposedly good news paper column, it is the purpose of the Maniac for the coming year to print items in the spirit of good, CLEAN fun. Entertainment will be the end in view Two co-eds were heard talking about the great drinking problem which has the various administra- tive officials keeping posted lately "I hate the way they offer drinks around this town get any at nII." The co-eds are anonymous The Trustees will meet tomorrow in Harrisburg supposedly to name a successor to Hugo Bezdek as Dean of the School of Physical Education and Ath- letics. Can it be a coincidence that the Players are putting on "Bury the Dead?" -William li. Joachim Jr. Thom A. Baal 'Mt The Collegian recently said that Dr. Carl Schott would be the new athletic dean. It seems to he - the general opinion of those close to the situation that the appointment was just a shot in the dark. Jo Hobart saw John Price at the top of last week's Froth, and wondered if the price had dropped from 25 cents to a nickel ... Bobbie Dewalt wrote his I.F. date, Mary, and started off with "Dear Betty." About town and campus—Newell Townsend couldn't get some beer in Clearfield Tuesday with the Thes pians because the waitress said he was too young ... he finally did get some, though ... The group was in vited out to a country club there, but had to buy its own drinks . . . hospitality . .. and what could the chaperones have been doing there? . . . Probably the most rabid peace advocate on the campus is the boy who bribed another gent, a senior, to take a two-hour ROTC class this week . it cost a buck and didn't work anyhow, because the army is pretty smart and while on the army, Gus Para melli, upon coming in late. was asked by a ROTC offi cer if he was Brake ... No, says Gus, I'm Italian. Then there's that southern gal from Georgia named Cohen who was overheard saying "I've just got to find a husband before I get out of here." We wonder 'who the psych prof was who told his class to go home becauie it was spring and he had the proverbial fever . . One of the best answers to an intricate question in a c&f class last week was Jack Reithenbach's "I was just about to ask 'you that." A. Kok answered the recent sign hi Old Main read ing "have you the essentials for a business woman?" No, says A, but Jean Harlow has. A recent Collegian story said that real college spirit :s found throughout our undergraduate centers. So that's where it went. If all the reds on this campus were placed end to end, someone would be bound to put his foot into an other's face. Modern fairy tale—Once there were three beers, a big beer, a middle-siied beer, and a teeny-weeny beer. They lived in a den tailed the Rathskellar. One day an anonimous co-ed walked into their den, drank the • big beer, the middle-sized beer, and the teeny-weeliy . beer. .:Theii she went home, very, very happy. Vagabond Voyages Tramp Trips . across the ocean on a freighter . . . through Europe by bicycle ... by flatboat or automobile ... visit unfamiliar parts of the . country alone or with a congen ial group. + + No charge, of course, for our service + + + HOTEL STATE COLLEGE TRAVEL BUREAU Room 212 Dial 733 State College but you had better tube it that way or you won't THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN 27 Co-Ed Debaters Make Creditable Season Record Women's argumentative powers were recognized in the old days, but Penn State's history shows' that the co-eds' ability to get the last word was not utilized in the college. That, perhaps, was the reason that the wo men's debate squad started at the bottom of the ladder. The men's team boasted quite a number of would-be orators who were encouraged to use what wits they had against numerous schools. Women who were born to be champions of the argumentative field, were thrust into the background.. Their star of dispu tation didn't begin its ascent until 1926, when they were given their first schedule. 1n'1.931 eight women came out to try their ability against nine other teams. Through the years the squad's star rose until it came to its most promin ent position this season when 27 wo men joined its ranks and debated with 36 other colleges such as Dartmouth, Bucknell, Western Maryland, William and Mary, Allegheny, Washington and Jefferson, Juniata, Ursinus, Le high, Cornell, Syracuse, Pittsburgh, Mount Mercy, West Virginia, Ohio State, Cincinnati, and Heidelberg. Coached by Prof. Clayton H. Schug, with the assistance of women's de bate manager Lucille D. Hayes, '37, the largest women's debate , team Penn State has ever had completed its most impressive schedule. - Those who took active pa, in the season's activities are: Helen M. Chamberlain,' '37, 7 debates; Frances A. Duritsa, '3B, edehate; Beulah F. Gerheim, '39, 8; Lillian F. Marion, '39, 7; Martha M. Marusak, '39, 8; Marcia L. Morfing, '39, 5; Harriet A. Ricketts, '39, 8; Marcia L. Morfing, '39, 5; Harriet A. Ricketts"39, 4; Florence V. Watkins, '39 5; Marjor ie E. Witsil, -'39, 3; Ruth H. Zang, '3B, 7; and Julia R..Bubroff, '39, 6. Officers Installed Caroline Tyson '3B was installed as president of the Panhellenic associa tion at a recent meeting. The other officers who were installed at the same time are: Vivian S. Doty '39, vice-president; Georgia H. Powers '3B, secretary; and'Barbara J. Diehl '3B, treasurer. Mrs. E. C. Davis was elected new member of the advisory board in place of'Miss Alice Culnane. The other members of the board are Dean Charlotte E. Ray, Miss Mary Ellen Burkholder, and Mrs. Haller. 3 Attend Meeting Dr. Max - Kriss, Prof. Leroy Voris, and Prof. John W. Bratzler, of ,the animal nutrition. department, are at tending a meeting of the American Institute of Nutrition convening in Memphis, Tenn. _Doctor Kriss will present a paper regarding some phase of his work with the nutrition of, animals. USED CARS priced right 1929 Ford Coupe 1929 Buick Sedan 1930 Packard Sedan 1933 Buick Sedan 1934 Ford Roadster 1V34 Ford Coupe 1934 Olds. 2-door Sedan Clark Motor Co. PACKARD MOTOR CARS 120 S. Pugh St., State College Week - end Special 1 Rack of Dresses ; . . $3.00 Formerly up to $14.75 MOORE'S DRESS SHOP Capital=s2oo,ooo Surplus and Undivided Profits ;$275,000 First National Bank of State'College STATE COLLEGE, PA. Member of Federal , Deposit Insurance Corporation John T. McCormick, President David F. Rapp, Cashier Tennis Team To Open With Penn Next Week With four weeks of indoor practice and a few . days outdoor, Penn State's tennis team is hopefully headed for a tough schedule. Coach Bob Lake's courtmen open with the best in the cast, Penn, one week from today. First singles position has been def initely clinched by Capt. Paul Mass ey, who with Dick Campman,.won the Middle Atlantic States Intercollegi ate doubles title at White Sulphur Springs, N. C. last year. There is a free-for-all fight on for the remaining singles spots between Campman, Sel Freed, Chuck Patt, Paul Perry, and Al Hildebrand, a very promising sophomore. Lake said that the 24 remaining men still out for the team have shown considerable improvement and may break into the opening lineup. If the team makes a good showing this season they will be entered in the annual intercollegiate tournament held at the end of the season. B, C. College To Broadcast June Radio Program Penn State has been selected to broadcast the land-grant radio pro gram over the Blue network of the National Broadcasting Company June I IG. The program, which is a monthly presentation, was started last year as an outgrowth of the National Farm and Home hour. Twelve colleges and universities participated the first year. This year the general theme is "How the Land-Grant College Aids in Meeting Changing Conditions." Edwin H. Rohrbeck, agricultural editor of the College, is in charge of planning the program. The fact that the College will be . closed at the time Will make it difficult to obtain student talent. However, the one-hour pro. gram will be composed of faculty speakers supplemented by the musical selections of a studio orchestra. ~~~~ Complete New Line of Golf Bags v o s c s c ealslinGolf Shoes Tilden Tennis Shoes $3 The Athletic Store College Ave. and Allen St., State College P.S. Club To Sponsur Nite Club' Tomorrow Another "Hite Club," spOnsored by the Penn State Club, will be held in the Old Main Sandwich Shop tomor row night. The W. A. A: will. act as hostess. Heading the list of the evening's 'activities, is.a checker tournament'be tween two teams. Josph J. Folz '3B, "Pop". Garbrick, Vincent J. Masi '4O, and Charles J. Pabis '4O compose the challenging team to . wrest the crown from the defending team consisting of Reardon S. Cotton '3B, Metro 'C. Rost '3B, Joseph ft. Matevish '37, and William R. Pratt '39. Entertainment, including chinning, card games, and bingo, with be. open to those who wish to participate in them. Refreshments will be served. TAM MOORE Special Set All Steel Shaft Irons---1 Wood and Bag For, Men or 4ik 1 5 Women Knobby Golf Balls 3 for $1 Complete Line of Magnan and Bancroft Tennis Rackets Dunlop and Wright-Ditson Tennis • Balls Restringing All 'Types-of Gut-12.hr. Service ,i!l l ulay, April 2,; - 3, 19:_i New Courses Offered Penn State will be the fiist college in the country to offer undergraduate courses in football, basketball, and track which will be held this summer. Coaches Higgins, Lawther, and Wer ' ner, respectively, will be in charge. The emphasis be upon the theo retical side of .the sport and iipon.re search technique which can be used in gaining new information in coach ing. • Richards Club Picks 12 The Ellen H. RiChards club, junior. Home Economics honorary, has pledg ed ,the following members: Helen E. Adams, Doris Blaltemore, Evelyn L. Boger, Ruth E. Barrage, Marjorie F. Davieli, Betty I. Green, Katherine D. Greiner, Janel. Gruber, Phyllis Her aogrDorothy Moss, June C. Price, and L. Jean Stillwell. To he eligible for this honorary it is necessary to have a two average and have at least two activities. . . LOCUST LANE . .Do you want Student Govern ment in the hands o f in-experienced men? VOTE FOR A STUDENT of .goy ernment who under- stands the problems.