. - . • . .. , . , ... . • . ..... ..... ...._ ESTABLISHED T ' 4r . .i . 4 -_•-',A• - 1904 ' •\'%, - ---,..) .. ' • ;..---.. s Volute 33—No. 57 KENNON,i : PRI,.. HOWARTH 'NAMED - CLASS '. LEADERS Students Favor Optional ROTC, Reject Blanket Fee Vote 3 to 1 For Elective ROTC Plan 2 To 1 Majority Asks Repeal Of 25-Cent Debating Fee Proposal For Blanket Activities 'Fee Beaten • Optional R. 0. T. C, repeal of the 25vcent semester debating fee, and disapproval of tlie pro posed 7a-cent blanket fee for all college extra-curricular_ activi ties marked the results of the three-day student voting, which ended Wednesday afternoon. By an overwhelming vote of more. than 3 to 1, the students went on record in favor of an option al R. 0. T. C. program here. A total of 2,228 voters registered their opin ion on the question. Only 518 asked for retention of compulsory military training, while 1,712 cast their bal lots for the optional course. Two. ether issues, inserted on the ballot by a last-minute decision of the elections committee, were, both voted Debating Vee Defeated Almost as convincing as the R. 0. T. C. result was the student expres sion on the retention of the debating fee, which was defeated by approxi mately 2 to 1. A total of 1,242 stu dents fai;ored the repeal of the fee, with only 683' asking for its continu ance. Meanwhile, the blanket fee, included in practically every party platform, was;defeated by a margin of 205 votes. Recorded in favor of the amendment were 838 ballots, with 1,- 3.33 against. The result of the R. 0. T., C. poll will be presented as the official opin ion of the student body to the" Board of Trustees next June for final action on the question.. A similar vote has been taken among the alumni, and a faculty poll is scheduled to start soon. Added Personnel Needed--Ritenour Health Head Claims New Wing To Infirmary Unnecessary At Present Time . "It really does nota l matter so much whether we get the new wing on the infirmary or not, but of more import ance, we need additional perionnel for a more thorough administration of our College Health Se vice." • This was the reaction of Dr. Joseph Ritenour, College physician, when he received the news that the proposed addition to the Hospital bud been placed last on the list of new build ings approved by the Board of Trus tees last week. Ritenour pointed out that statistics, show that it is necessary to have only ono bed more than the year's daily average hospital patient census. 3lore Beds Than Needed Figures compiled by the Health Service show that the present daily census at the (hospital is 6.7. This will probably be reduced by the end of the semester to about six since hospital "business" usually drops about this time. "There are 29 beds available in our hospital, and 'Statistics show that we really need no more than seven , or eight,- the additional 21 or 22 taking care of times of, emerge:fey," Ile said. Ritenour will leave next week for Bryn Mawr College, where the Penn sylvania-New Jersey division ,of the American Student Healtili Service is meeting. This branch was organized here in 1992 by Ritenour. Physical Education Dean Schott Regards Post Opportune `Excellent Chance To Give Best Ideas Fullest Application,' He Says In Statement By DR. CARL I'. scnorr Special to the Collegian MORGANTOWN, West. Va., April 30 , -=.lls"thia, - my firaf - pUblighed - stat&_ ment following my appointment as the Dean of the School of Physical Edu cation and Athletics at Penn State,-I wish to say that I regard my new position 'as an excellent opportunity to give the fullest .application to the :best ideas governing physical eduCa tion, athletics, and recreation. . Tam deeply impressed by the co-op erative spirit displayed on the cam pus, as well as the very evident loy alty of the alumni. Both are deeply gratifying to me.. Any changes in' the policy of the School of Physical Education and Athletics 'will be determined only af ter extensive observation and confer ences with associates. expect to visit the College this week-end, and am looking forward to more contacts with the students, fac ulty, and administrative officers. The above statement is Dr.'Schott's 'answer to a Collegian query concern jog his views and contemplated chang es of policy in administering the Sdhool of Physical Education and Ath letics here. He is at the present time directof of the division of physical education at the West Virginia Uni versity. Dr. Schott was named by the Board of Trustees last Saturday upon the recommendation of President Ralph D. Hetzel to replace Hugo Bezdek, who left active - duty last fall. Schott was chosen from a field of fifty candidates for the post and was predicted to be the choice by the Collegian ten days before his appointment., - His appointment is effective July 1, Catalogues, Reports Found In Cornerstone of Old Main What's in the A:omen:tone of Old Main? . ' According to, , past beliefs of ThiS Collegian reporter, the laying of a cornerstone has always been the occa sion for a speech by some important personage, and the cornerstone has contained a small cavity in which some thoughtful person has, put a gold-coin or twomnd perhaps a toad, just to see if thalamr creature would live. Now this Collegian reporter,• curl °us. and more ambitious than usual; journeyed, to the "resident's office re cently to find the truth about corner stones. However, to his dismay, four typewritten pages were found to list the contents of the Old Main corner stone. And the small cavity appeared to be a small cavern. The cornerstone, which was laid on January-9,'1930, contains twenty ar ticles under the topic, "The College Today is Shown in Catalogues, Bul letins, Reports" innlndine n ropy of Plans Altered fiir Program At Graduation Cla s s Day Exercises To Take Place On Sunday, June 6 Changes in the arrangements of the .77th annual Commencement pro 7 grain to take place from June 4 to IJune 7, have been announced by Prof. Richard W. Grant, chairman of the committee en public occasions. Under the new arrangement, the Class Day exercises will beheld Sun day night, June 6, in conjunction with the annual ,Blue Band concert on the front campus. The spoon man, the barrel man, cane man, class donor,' 'and pipe orator, the traditional honor men of the graduating class, will take part in these exercises. The Commencement exercises will be set forward to Monday morning according,to the new plans. This will mean that the program will. be com pleted by noon, leaving the remainder of, the day for visitors and students to trayel to their homes. In previous years, the Class Day exercises were held on Monday morn ing. After investigation it was de cided that more would attend the pro gram if - held Sunday night, and that moving the . Commencement exercises upliorirtMoriday'afternoon -would be mere convenient for all concerned. The week-end program will get un der way Friday, June 4, with the Thespians presenting "Pardon My Glove" in Schwab auditorium, and fraternities holding housepnrty danc es. Trustee elections will take place in the afternoon. Saturday is the annual Alumni Day. Alumni meetings will be held Throughout the day, with reunion din ners preceding the Players' show "Boy Meets Girl," to be held in Schwab auditorium. Houseparty danc es will be held Saturday night also. Baccalaureate Day exercises will open with the Senate breakfast and the Alumnae breakfast. Dr. Edwin Poteate Jr. of Raleigh, N. C., will be the speaker at the Baccalaureate service to be held in Recreation hall. Class Day exercises and the Blue Band concert will close the day's pro gram. '37 Invitations, Caps, Gowns To Go On Sale Sale of caps and gowns, as well as invitations and announcements, will begin at the Student Union desk Monday morning. Seniors will be required to.pest a $5 deposit in order to get a cap and gown, $3 of which will be refunded upon' the return of the garments. George. M. Hacker '37 is chair man of the cap and gown commit tee, while Howard A. Downey '77 is head of the committee cn invita tions and announcements. the address of President Iletzet_ on I the occasion of the laying of the yor ' nerstane, a bound volume of '"ln Memerian: Edwin Erie Sparks" (who incidentally, was president of• the col lege from 1908 to. 1020), newspaper articles, and catalogues, Under a second topic, "Early Cata logues and Reports," there are cata logues and reports on the early 'col lege established here, The Agricul tural College of Pennsylvania. Another page lists the "Publica tions" buried there. Six publications of the College and five of the student body are included, ameog which are two numbers of, the• Collegian and cne of Froth. "PhotograPhs" number twenty, and include important state, College, and student personages. There are pic tures of the presidents of the College since its founding, of which there are ten over a period of seventy-seven years. STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1937 New Senior, Junior, Sophomore Class Presidents JOHN D. K Pa. H.S. Editors Meet Tomorrow Convention Expected To Draw More Than 350; To Pick Contest Winners The annual State high School I Press convention will be held here tomorrow, opening- with an informal receptlon,fOr high_schnol editors and newspaper ,advisors in the student lounge of Old Main at 10 o'clock in the morning. The convention last year drew over 350 'high school editors and their newspaper advisors, and is expected to draw even more this'Year. So far, all of the large high schools in the state have indicated their intention of sending delegates.' Outstanding among presentations will be the .Sigma Delta Chi 'certifi cates' of merit to outstanding high school publications of the year. The winners in the State High School Re porter's contest will also be awarded prizes amounting to $5O. Alpha Delta Sigma, advertising fraternity, will present a loving cup to the high school paper in`which the best "ad" of the year is adjudged to have ap peared. Announcements of the names of the winners of the five $l5O schol arships offered by interested publish ers will also be made. After the informal reception in Old Main, there will be a general meeting at 11 o'clock, followed by special for ums at 11:10 o'clock for the advisors, high school editors, and business man agers. There will be a luncheon in the Old Main Sandwich Shop at 1 o'- clock, and a tea for the faculty wom en from 3:30 to 1 o'clock. Traffic School Opens; 50 'Students' Enroll Fifty "students" have enrolled in the Traffic' Officers' Training School being conducted here for two weeks, beginning last Monday, under the sponsOrshin of the College extension services and the Institute of Local Government. Police chiefs, patrolmen, and other traffic officers have conic from Penn sylvania and surrounding states to attend the course, which is the first state-wide attempt to reduce the au tomobile accident toll through an in telligent attack by the police upon its Causes. Upon the successful completion or the course on 3lay 7 the traffic of ficer "studimts" will be awarded dip lomas. Col. Lawrence B. Tipton, head of the Northwestern University Traf fic Safety Institute, is director of the school. President's Son 11l Ralph D. lietzel, Jr. is under'obser vation in the Johns Hopkins hospital in Baltimore, it was learned Wednes day. President Hetzel left immedi ately Wednesday morning for Balti more. Ile said that he had received word that his:Son was suffering from a liver and stomach condition. JOSEPH .1. PEEL '39 Scholarship, Mother's Day Programs Again Combined The 16th annual Scholarship Day exercises will again be held in con junction with the Mother's Day chap el service in ReCreation hall Sunday morning, May 9, it was announced to day,by Prof. Richard \V. Grant, chair man of the committee on public occa sions: President Ralph D. Hetzel will pre aide over the program. ,He will make the :Wards . "in" connection With scholarship exercises. Prof. John H. Frizzell. College chaplain will conduct the chapel service. The combined • exercises in Recrea tion ball were started last year in an effort to acconiodate the large num ber of mothers who wish to attend. The success of the arrangement prompted the committee to make it an annual affair. Scholarship Day was officially started here in October, 1922, when it was held on a Saturday night. The procedure was changed the following April to Saturday morning, and con tinued in this manner up to last year. Students will find much in the way of entertainment for their visiting mothers over the week-end. Saturday afternoon the co-eds will present their annual May Day festival on the front campus. May A, Dunaway '37 will have the feature role of May Queen. The Glee Club and Thespians will bring back their January success, Gil bert and Sullivan's "H. M. S. Pina fore," to Schwab auditorium Satur day night. Champlin To Study Abroad This Summer Dr. Carrell D. Champlin will sail June 10 on the Europa with the Sher wood Eddy Seminar. The Seminar consists of a group of 50 men from ecclesiastical centers and universities. Champlin plans to study the educa tional programs of foreign schools and discuss the subject with foreign educators. his trip will include Ger many, Poland, Russia, 'Finland, Nor way, Sweden, Denmark, England, and France. Champlin is particularly in terested in the educational program Glee-Thespian Group To Give `H.M.S. Pinafore' on May Day The Glee-Thespian troupe's contri bution to the celebration of May Day will be another performance of the Gilbert and Sullivan's satire on naval conditions, "H. 111. S. Pinafore." At its first showing on January 15, the operetta was well-attended and well-received. The men's 'ensemble lived up to "Sock" Kennedy's predic tion that their work would be compar able with that of the D'Oylc Carte Opera Company of England, the orig inal group that featured Gilbert and Sullivan operas. Prof. Richard W, Grant and Ken nedy, directors of the show, will use the same east as in the first produc tion. James P. Unang,st 'BB will play the part of the three-cornered sea man, Dick Deadeye, who doesn't like anybody-or anything. The supporting comedy roles will be played by C. Ed- an. Students Smile Again— It's Payday for N. Y. A There are smiles on the campus tclay despite election disappoint mants. No, the fencing team didn't win a meet. The football team didn't wallop Penn or Pitt. The baseball team I'M, out five 'hits. NOr was the admission price, to Junior Prom slashed to 50 cents. Then, why all the smiles? Well, today is April 30, and— Students are,urged to get their N. Y. A. cheeks immediately at the Bursar's office. Kenworthy Appointed Executive 'Secretary Wilmer E. Kenworthy has been ap pointed executive secretary, President IRalph D. Hetzel announced today. Adrian 0. Morse, who held that of fice, together with the position of as sistant to the president, will continue as the president's assistant in charge of resident study. Kenworthy, n graduate of Earl , barn College, class of '29, will assume his duties tomorrow. He was assist ant to the executive director of the Oberlaender trust an d the Carl Schurz Memorial foundation in Phil adelphia. Ile has been associated with these international and educational philanthropies since 192 , 1. Ile was also employed with the Tex as Oil company, the American Friends Service committee, and with Conrad- Pyle company, rose growers of West Grove. War Dept. To Inspect The' annual inspection of the IL 0. T. C. units at the College by the 'War Department will be made on Mon day and Tuesday, Lieutenant Colonel ,H. IL Stiekney will inspect the En !Once'. unit, and Major Joseph Church I the Infantry unit. ward Leitch '39, the First. Lord of the Admiralty Who never had been on a I boat, and Joseph E. Cock '3B, the Boatswain. M. Donald Dixon '37 will again por tray the Captain. One of the roman tic leads will be played by Bess Ede]. blute '3B. the Captain's daughter, and Frederick H. Serif '3B, an ordinary seaman named Rafe Rackstrnw. But tercup, the woman who sells novel ties to the crew, will be played by Margaret R. Gil Ten '37. J. Lloyd Larkins '37 is in charge of the costumes. which will be furnished by the Van Horn company of Philadel phia. John E. Thompson '37 is stage manager, while George A. Downs '37 and Jack M. Raimer '37 are in charge of the stage and set. Tickets will be on sale at the Stu dent Union i'office beginning Monday, _COMPLETE CAMPUS COVERAGE PRICE FIVE CENTS Independent '39 Victory Ist Since 'l2 Campus TakeS 0 the r • 2 Classes in 3-Day Old Main Poll Shaffer, Welsh, Beale Named Vice-Presidents For' the first time in a quarter of a century, an Independent student won a major class office, as the 1939 ticket of Joseph A. Peel and Charles S. Walsh squeezed through to a close vic tory in the class elections, end ing Wednesday. The last non-fraternity stti dent to be elected president of his class was the father of one of this year's candidates, Louis W. Sid ! lenberger, who came in last. David C. McLaughlin '3l, who was elected senior class president seven years ago as a member of an "Independent" clique, was a fraternity man. Peel and Walsh amassed 348 votes, just 25 more than George W. Yeckley and C. Allan Tapman, Campus can didates for the presidency of the in coming junior class. • Shollenberger and his running mate, Sever Toretti. Locust Lane, totaled 210. John D. Kennon,. the Campus clique's dark horse candidate, romped off with the presidency of the 1938 class, compiling a vote total of 323. Ress P. Shaffer was his running mate. Thomas 11. Mocre and Bernard Bur kett, Locust Lane, came in second with 252. Richard E. Heyl and Vic tor P. Buell, Independent, finished last with 212. 10 Campus Clique Wins The Campus clique candidates also swept the 1010 presidential race, as William J. Howarth and Morris It. Schaffner came in first with :144 votes. Paul L. Beale and Martin \'aleri, In dependent, were runners-up with 269. Fletcher L. Byrom and Daniel Hess Jr. finished last with 169. Buried under one of the greatest landslides in campus history, the Lo cust Lane clique failed to reap a single major office and won only two student council races in the 1928' doss. The official count for all other of fices fellows (legend: C, Campus; 1, Independent; L, Locust Lane): CLASS OF 19,38 Secretary: Ralph R. Ise (C) 312, *Paul J. 'Tarnish (I) 239, li.;:bert Blum (L) 2:19. Treasurer: Emmett I E. Rhoades (C) :121, Tack Blades (I) 240: Victor L. Grieve (L) 192. Stu dent Council, Agriculture: Ray 0. Brooks (C) 124, Francis M. Alexan der (I) 85, Frederick C. Edgerton (L) 78. Chemistry and Physics: Da vid S. Weddell (L) 49, Robert C. Brawn (C) :16, Alfred A. Albert (I) 25. Education: Joseph P. Proksa (C) :15. Francis 11. Szymezak (I) 25, Joseph P. Adessa (14 21. Engineer ing: James 11: Apple (14 55, William M. MeGrocken (I) 29, Robert .1. Wal lace (C) 32. Liberal Arts: Adolph 11. Marcus (C) 72, John W. Igoe (I) :12, James L. Bond (14 27. Mineral Industries: Robert L. 11eCornick (C) 211, TIIOIIIaS L. (; :lbert. (1.) 19, Win ston A. Shoenberger (I) G. Candi dates-at-large (three elected): Dan A. DeMarino (C) 267, Joseph G. Km , (C)_ 251, John 1., Reichenbach (C) 2 , 14, George W. Jardnn (I.) 191, John IL Hetrick (I) 11 10 , Morgan Wright (L ; ) 188, Theron C. Ileyt (I) 187, J;Edward (141 (1) 170, Charles 11. Teller (L) 172. CLASS OF 1939 Secretary: Joseph C. Disquc (C) 317, Harvey 11. !man Jr. (I) 399, J. Nelson Darby (L) 211. Treasurer: John C. Rex, (C) 337, Robert C. Ha mer (I) 291, John .1. Roberts (L) 22G. Student Council. Agriculture: Charles E. Schanck (C) 171, Frederic E. Criest (I) 148. Charles I). 'Zimmer man (L) 97. Chemistry and Phys ics: Robert IV. Schitssler (I) 49, Harry P. Hoffman (L) 36, William D. Scheifley Jr. (C) 34. Education: Victor E. Gentilz»an (I) 26, Dean H. (Conthuwd on page two)