'Semi:lAteekl3/ _. Fic:.; -_, phll4 .5 •,•;•, . , SUCCESSOR # 4(---\`,".) 4 ' 4 READ STORY gr/ 7 3 - 0 1 \r , _ itt Ttittrigi it. Page lon Deans' Opinion To The Free Lance, Web. r• vtrv, - .,'t,.N)? . ill i ci t /in tat ' lished 1887. or Cuts. ' .'.-... "4 " , /856 . , • r 1 . Volume 34—No. 23 PITT OVERPOWERS FIGHTING NITTANY GRIDDERS Student,=War Tie-Up Heads Peace Forum Four Campus Leaders Will Offer Views; . Floor Open Discussion Scheduled For H. E: Additorium The question • of the student's willingness to participate in war will be discussed fully by four student campus leaders in a forum sponsored by the Foren sic council next Tuesday even ing at 8:15 o'clock in the Home • Economics Auditorium. The question of the student's will ingness to participate in war will be discussed fully by four student cam pus leaders in a' forum sponsored by the Forensic council next Tuesday evening at 8:15 o'clock In the Home Economics auditorium. Weston D. Gardner, president of the Penn State Christian Association, will speak first on the resolution of. racial and national antipathies as a long-range plan for peace in the world. Amy F. McClelland, president of W. S. G. A., will support isolation for the United States, 'claiming: that the college Student should 'tight only in North . and South America. '" 56aQcr~Speak~i~fur~~lthlolca<~', The' 1937 Eastern Intercollegiate 175-pound wrestling champion; Ross P. Shaffer, also vice-preSident of the senior class, will claim that nationt should seek to maintain supremacy of international law, and signatories to a treaty. should enforce arbitration, economic boycott, and concerted arm ed action. Under this plan the' col lege student should go to war, if nec essary.• As a policy which will prevent war, Charles M. Wheeler, Jr., editor of the Collegian, suggests the peaceful economic readjustment of the nations of the world, restoring the balance between the "have" nations and the "have-not" nations, .He recommends that if forced to fight, students should fight only in the United States. Open Forum Will Follow An open foruni will follow the dis cussion of the four student leaders, Prof. Joseph F. O'Brien,. of the divi sion of speech, will be chairman. This . is the first time the Forensic council has sponsored a symposium of this kind and is part of their extensive program of the- year, the aim of which is to give the student body good lectures and forums on topics of current: interest. . IFC May Publigh School Magazine Local Fraternity News, Seen As Body Of New Publientiori; To Act On' Rushing" A..plan; formulated, by the liiterfr oa ternity Council, for the publication of an interfraternity magazine of Penn State fraternities, IS awaiting further discussion and approval before being put into operation.' The magazine would be •publiihed with the idea in view of publicizing fraternity activities, and thus, giving prospective freshmen the chance to know at !cast a little about the set-up before arriving 'here. Although no schedule of publiCation has been seri ously considered, the magazine' will probably be, sent to incoming fresh men in advance 'of Freshman Week, much the same as are the Freshman Handbooks. Also to come under action at the next meeting-of the I. F. C. will be the revision of the rushing code'into something more effective than the present much-violated list of regula. Cons. A committee of junior and senior council members will be op. pointed to look into the situation and ,submit revisions. SOME ,FINE HEADWORK BY' ENDERS, WE SURMISE, AND MAD MARSHALL GOLDBERG IS STOPPED-BUT NOT FOR LONG-PETRO (10) RECOV ERED FOR THE 'PANTHERS. NOTICE 'ALTER (17) ICKES (15) ,AND PEEL (13). PITT'S 24 IS PATRICK WHILE GOLDBERG IS 42. Students To Buy Artists Tickets November 30 Dr . : Betts Beads, Reading Project Aims To Correct Visual Faults; Other Education Clinics Will Coordinate To eliminate the serious handicaps in later life rooted in a child's early reading faults is the aim,of the read ing clinic recently established at the College under the direction of Dr. Emmett A. Betts, research piofeS&or in education. The clinic is designed to discover and correct the fault's in children's reading. Dr. Betts stated that between 8 and 25 per cent of the country's total school population has never learned to read properly, and so have been re tarded in promotion, called "dullards" and enter adult life under extremely serious disadvantages. He further' added'that about 80 . per cent of, these children 'who can't pass front one grade to'the next because of their luck of rfading ability are of average or distinctly superior intelli gence. "Half of the adult population do not enjoy reading probably because of their experiences in primary—and secondary schools. Yet, 80 to 90' per cent of study 'activities in high school involtie reading. These and other similar data should provide am ide evidence that all teachers should share the responsibility of improving the reading and study habits of the Children," Dr. Betts said.. Four School Deans Agree To Student ,Council Cut System Eight deans expressed their views on the ouestion of class cuts in a sur i vey conducted b y' t h e Collegian throughout the week following , a pro posal' by the Student Council to the Sadulty suggesting 'a 'more uniform and lenient systerii 'of cuts on the campus: Deans'and their statements on the matter are: Assistant Dean Oscar_ P. , Smith, School of 'Chemistry and Physics: "During the first two years of a stu .dent's college life, cutting regulations are desirable. However; I feel that the attitude a student has in his,last two years will represent the attitude he, will have after. gradating from college. If he is vitally interested in his work, he will not miss any oppor tunities. I do not believe that cuts should be a ddtermining factor in a final grade. Performance is what counts." 1 Dean Charles I. Stoddart, School STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1937 Matrix-Invitations of Way Tickets Available At St lOffice . Today is the day . Ic:henthe - leading women - on campus will receive their invitationalo the Matrix banquet. .Those women, both in the student body and on thelaculty, that will receive invitations are those who have been must active in campus work and in the journalism field. Invitations should be presented at the Student-Union desk Where tickets will be issued. A list of those invited• will be kent at the desk as a check-upi Kennon Will Ask For on those entitledto tickets. :Yesterday co-eds had their last] Mid Semester Holiday chance' to vote for the Quill girl, the most „popular woman among them. The ballots will be counted by two women who are not members of Theta Sigma:Phi, women's journalism hon ory, which is sponsoring the banquet.. The: banquet will be held Monday, December 6; at the Nittany Lion Inn. Women have been chosen to attend not merely for nominal offices, but because they have made definite con tributions to the College. An eminent woman in the news papeK world will speak at the ban quet. There will be' a musical pro gram with representatives from cam pus musical societies as well as indi vidual performers to entertain the guests: ' The' names of the winners of the three awards will remain unknown unknoWn until the night of the ban quet... The Quill girl has been elected by popular vote. The Matrix girl, the one'contribating most to the Col lege, and the Cap girl, the most ver satile woman on campus, will be Zhu- SCII by Theta Sigma Phi. of Liberal Arts: "Some-uniformity in the regulation of cuts for upperclass men is desirable but I believe that during a student's first two years, more attention should be given _to•at tendance: In the upper division I be lieve in as many cuts as there are credits in the course, but those having a '2" average can use their own judg ments. However, I never did believe „flunking - students for absences alone." , . Dean Edward Steidle, - School of Mineral Industries: "A uniform sys tem of cuts for' every school' On the campus is impossible because of the varied nature- - of :the work in' the schools.. Students in the School , of Mineral Industries ore' marked on their work only but cuts invariably affect their grades. ' Good students . have nti` cuts while the' poor ones al- (Continued on page two) A petition for a mid-semester holi day for the first semester of next year will be pyesented.to the Senate com mittee for approval this week, it was announced yesterday by John D. lien non chairman cf the Student Board. Kennon stated that • the holiday would come on a week-end of as away football game in an effort to reduce the number of accidents and cuts cn big football week-ends. The holiday, according to the plan, would begin Friday at noon and end on Monday morning: • The petition asks that the holiday be scheduled for the week-end mid way bet Ween the beginning of school and Thanksgiving vacation. Prof, E. D. Walker of the School of Engineer ing heads the 'committee.which makes up the College calendar. Dean Watts' Son, Gil, 18, Shoots 200 Lb. Bear The hunters have returned from the woods. The result? Perhaps you saw the 200-pound bear hanging out side the residence of Dean lialph L. Watts of the School of Agriculture. But it wasn't the dean who "com mitted the terrible deed," as he de . - scribed it. The proud nintrod is his son, Gilbert S. Watts 'lB. The deati was in the hunting party but failed to snake a -kill. The hear was shot in Potter county, the hunters' paradise in north central Pennsylvania, last Monday. Very few beau• were killed during the three-day season tact week, so the \Vntts family is justly proud of its success. Buses Leave At 12:45 The special Thanktiving Grey- Wound buses will leave from in front of Carnegie Library at 12:95 o'clock tomorrow instead of 2:45 o'clock as was stated in Friday's Collegian. Re servations will be accepted at the bus depot, at the Hotel State College up until 8 o'clock tonight.. Place-Top_,PriCe- For Series At $5 No Written Applications Used; All Sales At A.A. WindOw; Slight Price RiSe Series tickets for the 1.037-38 Ar tists Course will go on sale for stu dents at 0 o'clock Tuesday morning, November 30, at the A. A. ticket win dow on the first floor of Old Main, ac cording to an announcement by Dr. Carl E. Marquardt, chairman of the committee. It was originally planned to have the faculty sale at this time and to have the student sale the day pre vious. Upon the granting of a Thanks giving vacation the committee be lieved that students would need Mon day to readjust themselves and would rather purchase their tickets on the following day. The day of sale will have no' effect on the seating, for al ternate rows arc reserved for students and faculty-townspeople, New Sales Arrangement To eliminate the inchnvenience of the written application for seats used last year, this year the whole trans action will take place at the window. No individual in line may apply for more than six tickets.. However, sub scribers may send a proxy. Absolute 'y no preferential treatment will be , ccorded any individual, and all sales viii be final. Prices this yen' will be $5, $l, and (Continued on patio two) Stylizing Of Glass Garments Threatens Traditional Garb Glass dresses will be the talk of tire campus several years hence and Esquire should think nothing of styl izing glass gloves, scarfs, and other Wearing apparel for men. It's fiberglass, science's recent von tribution to the textile• industry. Such is the opinion of • Dr. Nelson W. Taylor, bend of thy 'department of ceramics, who recently returned from the dedication ceremony of a new Owens-Illinois glass „ company laboratory / where this astonishing new material is .now being manufac r to red. At present, the new material, the ceramics' head pointed out, is being designed and made in fabric form for fireproofing and various chemical re sistance applications. It has many applications where heat resistance is Collegian Suspends Next 2 Issues • Because of the Thanksgiving ,holiday Which beghts:,4 nootto- Arrow', the Collegian will suspend issue until- Friday, December •3. Classes will start Monday, Novem ber 29, at 8 o'clock. The usual hoe-dollar fine for classes cut twenty-four hours be fore and after recess will be en forced, Dean of Men Arthur It. Warnock announced last' week. Anyone. o wishing to place announce ments r items in the next issue of the Collegian should turn them in before Wednesday night, Decem ber 1. Literature Since 1912 On Exhibit In Library "American Literature Since 1912" is the current exhibit at - the College library. Arranged by Prof. William L. Warner of the department of Eng lish literature, the book:;, magazines, and letters on exhibit are from his own collection, with a few exceptions. The display illtistrates various phases of contemporary American lit erature with a suggestion of its Eu ropean background. Some of the spe cial topics in the exhibit are: the World War and literature; the Lost Generation: novelists, dramatists, and columnists of the 1920'5; and litera ture of the depression. A rare first novel by John Dos'Pas- Fes ; a first edition of Sherwood An derson's first mice% "Windy McPlier son's Son;" and first editions of Sin clair Lewis'"Ann Vickers" from nine different countries, are notable items. employed, he added, because it is ex tremely. strong and will not burn. "Fiberglass should displace other organic. filters in the future," Dr. Taylor announced. It can be knitted for gloves, scarfs, and other clothing articles. Tablecloths, curtains, mats, and blankets and additional examp• les:" Peal State's particular interest in fiberglass, the head of the ceramics department - explained, is the face that the products. in its manufacture were derived from research in the labora tories of the Mineral Industries School. A featured exhibit in the Mineral Industries library shows many of the modern uses for fiberglass, such as glass felt for house insulation, fire proof ceiling, filters in air condition ing, and clothing articles. Z 658 PRICE FIVE CENTS Wear Passes To. Alter For Lion's Score Light Lion Team Gives Worthy Exhibition In 1937 Finale Bob Higgins Will Name Game Captains In '3B By HERB CAHA:si They're still a great Huth foam! And Pitt proved that a superb big team can easily beat a great little team, when they pounced on Penn State Saturday, 28-7. It was an exhibition of football that Lion fans, who braved snow , ind cold, will not soon forget even though State was on the short end of the scoring. "Pitt has the greatest football team I've ever seen—and I've seen plenty," was the comment made by Coach Bob Higgins who, in spite of this expected defeat. can still boast of his most successful team in his eight years as Nittany mentor. Pitt Too Powerful Although the Lions played some of the finest football they have shown .his season, they were still not able to tope with the terrific lamer of a grid muchine dotted with potential all- Americans in every position. State Sutherland used: his • highly touted second team, 'an eleven supposed to :le equally as'kcod as the first team. The only Nittuny score came in the third , period after Harry -Harrison nad punted i 7 yardS to Pitt's 21-yard sine, where the bull bounced against Dalle Teem Panther tackle, and the ever-alert, Alex Barantovich hopped on the pigskin. On a reverse from Windy Wear, Harrison was smeared for a seven yard loss. Wear picked up three of the lost seven on the next ,slay when he circled left end. 13=11 Then Windy gave Penn State en hosiasts another great thrill to add to his many gridiron feats. He faded back and let go an expected forward pass. It was perfectly placed in the end zone and Spike Alter, playing in nis hoine town, outraced two Panther defenders to snare the ',ass and rack up six points for State. Up off the bench hopped No. 37 and the extra point specialist, Ben Pol lock, raced on the field. Ile dill the expected, making his season's total eleven out of twelve tries. Both Al ter and Pollock are sophomores, du plicating Harrison's! and Metro's scor ing as sophomores last year. Pill: Scores Early The outcome of the game was ob vious from the very first play when Pitt's Frank Patrick yipped off right (Cootinncd on page four) G. E. $5OO Fellowships Available To Seniors Students in the field of electricity, physics, or physical chemistry inter ested in felliiwships from the Charles A. Coffin Foundation :oust tile their applications in the office of the dean of their school before February 15, The Charles A. Coffin Foundation. established by the General Electric company,, makes provisions fur the award of $5,000 , annually for felkiw ships to graduates of universities, colleges, and technical schools of the United States who have shown by the character of their work that they could undertake or continue research work in educational institutions ei ther in this country or abroad. The committee desires to make the awards to 4nen who, without financial assistance, would be unable to devote themselves la research work. The fel lowships will carry a minimum al lowance of $5OO. This allowance may be increased to meet the special needs of the applicants to whom the com mittee decides to award the fellow ships.