Semi-iiirOekly 7i 114 \ SUCCESSOR - 0,-..- - t4 ---- v., ,. , , , ; FRESHMAN To The Free Lance. natal,- '' rut " ii „ i t ztit Dating s C e tt:t;: a m g s e rroved. Baled 1887. 1116 ' s''' - i"- - ',) ' 0 7: ' , 10ttrgi _ . Volume 34—No. '24 Plan Finished For Phi Beta Kappa Group Dr. Frank Graves Will Induct New Lambda Chapter Tuesday Ceremonies Will End With Mass Meeting Plans for the installation of Phi Beta Kappa , oldest Greek letter society in the United States, here on Tuesday are rap idly nearing completion, the Committee on Arrangements announced yesterday. The Penn sylvania State College chapter of Phi Beta Kappa will foficial ly be known as Lambda of Penn sylvania. • Dr.. Frank P. Graves, presi dent of the University of the State of New York and Commissioner of Education for that state, will, as president of- the United Chapters of fratern:ty, conduct the installation of the College's chapter. Membership to Phi Beta Kappa is regarded by un dergraduates as the highest honor college students can attain. Ceremonies Begin Tues. Afternoon Present arrangements• call for the ceremonies to begin Tuesday after noon at 4:80 o'cicick when the induc tion proper will take place in the Alumni Association offices where aca demic gowns will be worn. A. formal dilater in the Nittany Lion • Inn at 6:45 o'clock will follow and the exer cises will ,be concluded with. an open --meeting .',Seliviab, auditorinni . at: 8130 ,, o'elock •••.,4a-. • The • , Committee . on' . .Virrangenients has, extended' a 'special invitation 'to , honorary and: sccial fraternities to be represented; on the platform and in the audience, at the open meeting. Students, faculty, and townspeople are also invited to attend the mass -meeting at which Dr. Graves will ad dress the congregation on the evolu tion and aims of the society. Alumni Officers franslferred • Members of the Phi bettr 4 Kappa Alumni Association, which functioned Ideally in the absence of a chapter, voted to transfer their present offi cers to the same offices in the newly installed chapter. The officers are:. .Dr. Carl E. _Marquardt, College' ex aminer, president; Cyrus V: D. Bin sty; secretary; and Charles J. Row land, professor of economics, treas urer. Dean Frank C. Whitmore, "School of Chemistry and Physics; Roy D. Dengler, - professor of pomology.;_and Robert S. Dengler, profeSsor of clas sical languages, were named as mem bers of the executive committee, petl lug installation. t The stated objectives of Phi Beta Kappa are to encourage scholarship, culture, and liberal education. .In its first four years at William and Mary . where it was founded Dec. 5, 1776, the society formulated the essential characteristics of what ,were to be- (Continued on: p)tgo two) Harvest Queen To Reign At Ball Ai;• Student Council Dance Will Feature Rural Decorationa With Modern Music The identity of the Harvest Queen, selected by a poll of the Agriculture and Rime. Economics . students, will bd made public at the Harvest Mall tomorrow evening in the Armory. Two .attendants were selected in the same election. The dance, sponsored by the Ag Student council, will take place in a rustic, atmosphere. An old-fashioned rail fence, evergreens, and bales of bay will combine for a rural setting. The rural costumed dancers will dance to the music of Bill Bottorf. The Harvest. Queen will be 'crowned during intermission , and her atten dants will be made known at that time. George L. .Settlemeyer '3B is chairman of the dance committee. Both and Neiric Oglevee were crowned, co-queens at the Harvest Ball in the,Armory last year. Fiftieth Anniversary - ,,0f colleke,N?wspaper—.2-m'A"D 800-Queller JOHN ECONOMOS '3B Aiming to quell possible booing at iridoor athletic contests during the winter, he called a meeting of all campus hat societies Wednesday night to discuss solutions to the pro- African Designs Chosen For Hop 'Congo Drums' fo Be Motif For Dance Next Friday; Booth Drawings Monday A caged jungle lion will roar your welcome to Soph Flop next Friday night, and you will thus be transferred from the wide open spaces of State College to the dense jungle atmos. pnere of darkest Africa. This was revealed yesterday by the dance chief. talus, F. Richard Bloom and Irwin R:_SupOw, .when they heat their tom; I.lolo,AililgOK.ihg. , :tio,tic:. ; l9,r,,,, - ke) They,%also- tittered sortie deep gut terals that . Were interpreted as meam ing.. that fraternity booth drawings will be field nth' o'clock Monday after noon. and that the deadline 'for hand. ing in the live-dollar booth deposit was set an any time up to the hour for the draw, Monday. Rec hull will be decorated in' the manlier of African savagery, lav,ish in deep blues, yellows, oranges, and greens. The entrande will be furnish. ed with a cage and lion in paper macho composition, and , decorated with panels of 'primitive deSign. , The band stand for the "Mr. and Mrs. of Swing," Red Nary°, Mildred Bailey and their orchestra. will look like a native -hut with thatched roof, and .flanked by two small huts and palm trees. The center electric fixture will be designed to represent un Afri can tribesman, and six Congo' drums will be suspended at InterVals in the ceiling and lighted within each drum with entered lights. Bnlarged shields and heads of jungle tribesmen will be hung on the balcony railing and zebra sklds and spears with colorful hangings will be used. thus resembling a head-hunter's para dise. The two chieftains also announced that two =axons have been added to the flop tribe. They are Mildred L. Long '4U and Marguerite R. Scbeaffer '40. , These appointments wore prompt ed by the recent W.S.G.A. request for representation on'clance committees. WSPA Makes Awards Rose Kozak '4O and Lois I'. Myers '4O have been awarded the annual W. S.' G. A. scholarshla for the women students with the highest average In the Freshman class. They each had an average of 2.79. ' Peace Fo Group Decides Isgue Referendum Law Is Best Idea 13y a vote of. 86 to 26, the peace forum conducted by Forensic council went on record Tuesday night as fa voring a popular referendum on the Issue- of mitering n s war 'before the college student should be willing to participate in war. The motion was one of eight pro posed measures that pissed tne group after an open sythposium discusalon of the question. "When Should the College' Student 'Se Willing To Par ticipate In War?" The discussion fol lowed four, panel speeches by Weston D. Gardner, president of the P.S.C.A., Amy F. McClelland, president of W.S. STATE COLLBGE, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1937 Players Will Give Pulitzer Prize Winner `ldiot's Delight' Chosen For Production On January 21 Monday, Tuesday Set -- As Cast Tryout Dates The Penn State Players will present the recent Pulitzer prize winning play, "Idiot's Delight," by Robert E. Sherwood, on Jan uary 21, according to Director Frank S. Neusbaum. This pre-' sentation is in keeping with the Players' endeavor to give to the campus the -best that is avail able. It' will be the first non professional production of this Broadway success. Mr:Neusbatim also announced that appo!ntments for tryouts may be arranged by signing up at the Players' office in 413 - Old Main between 3 and 5 o'clock Monday and all day Tuesday. Rehearsals will be gin as soon as possible since "Idiot's Delight" requires a cast of over 30. To Give 2 More Plays At the same time, it was revealed that the Players have arranged for the presentation of two more plays. They. will give "The Dybbuek" by S. Ansky on March 18-19. This is a very unusual Jewish folk legend. The oth er :production will be presented:. for Moth&S' Day, and .it is Helen Je yomels-..laiaous. dramaEiiation7:ef;:the Tiovel,'"Priceand Jin't Austen. '"ldiot's Delight" takes place in u mountain resort in the Italian Alps On the borderof Switzerland and France, and near an Italian flying field. During the play the "next war" is started by a surprise 'ltalian bomb ing flight over Paris and the play ends with the hotel, tottering under the bombs of the French counter at tack. The leading characters, among which were the Lunts during the run in New York, are an American vau devillian louring cheap European the atres and cabarets with a bevy of blondes, a mysterious white Russian, "noblewoman"—who looks strangely familiar to the American—and a sin ister munitions magnate with finan cial interests in several warring coun tries and loyalties in none. . Frosh Dating Rules Lifted By.' Tribunal ; Others Still In Effect Freshmen will no longer have to abide the dating custom law, the Men's Student - Tribunal announced yesterday. In other words, the Board Dr. 'Abram Hirschberg, rabbi or said, the freshmen men may now date Temple Shot= or Chicago. will he the within the three-mile limit without • guest speaker at the Hillel services in fear of being court-marshalled. - Old Main tonight at 7 o'clock. The At' the same meeting, Charles W. services are open to all. Eigenbrot was tried for not wearing The title of Dr. Hirschberg's discus his dint:." Found guilty, he was sen- sion is "Facing This World." He will teneed to wear a farmer's straw brim- deal with various problems arising med hat and two .signs. One sign from inter-group relations. His visit reads: I violated customs twice. The here is part or a speaking tour that other: 'Customs have not been lifted.j takes him through the northeastern The penalty will be lifted Tuesday. ' states. um Favors War Vote G.A., Ross P. Shaffer, wrestling cap. taro and vice-president of tile senior class, and Charles M. Wheeler, Jr., editor of the Collegian. . Prof. - Joseph F. O'Brien, of the div ision of speech, presided at the forum.' symposium. Gardner advocated no participation in any war whatsover, claiming that the supreme value of numan life out weighed any charges of cowardice for non-participation on the, part ,of the coleige student. Gardner insisted that the key to peace was the breaking down of traditional antagonisms by combined efforts toward international kinship. Miss McClelland upheld an Isola tionist 'policy for the United States, declaring that the territory in which a student should be willing to fight be confined to North and South Amer ica for the purposes•of protection, Sne College 7 Town Plan Housing CanvaSs Here 2 . 0-Mile Radius To Be Covered By. N.Y.A. Data Collectors Census To Determine Total Available Rooms An extensiveliousing survey, conducted jointlity the College and borough, ill begin early next week, it was announced yesterday by Bijisess Wilbur F. Leitzell and G4rge Lucas, di rector of the ca i vass. The sur vey, which is to be conducted by N. Y. A. studentS, will make a house-to-house 'canvass of all homes and fermi in a twenty mile radius of Stete, College. . , The• College, rdalizing that the ;building prograrM--,will mean a "business boom in ;the locality, has 'asked the authoritie'S- and townspeo ple to cooperate with the students, who will have sheit. 'questionnaires to be filled out. Fifteen hundred men are expected to be "'imported" as la borers for the erection of the new buildings, which are scheduled to start around the middle of February. The survey will lie:useless, it was said, unless a complete census of rooms available to laborers is taken. Should a . householder:', not want to board outsiders, he 'should designate it cn the card haniiiili,:to him. • , Oarraekstrnsuited lli k ''lis" -1 ' ' '' *tele,wlP - _ at lid-t•zalofn-tte:clwoA Len an ,ijlthen nozwhatthey wish. - Information "sought is: name and' address' of home owner, number of men the party-can room,• whether Or not a party can room a man and his family, other. facilities, price of room and: board, moms available for 'housekeeping,' and. distance fro m State College. . • "Erection of barracks for housing the workmen would be entirely unsat isfactory," Burgess.Leitzell said, "as it would mean much more trouble in keeping the men in order than 'if they , were scattered about the town." Oth er problems, brought about by the large number of men brought here, will be discussed at later meetings of , College and borough officials. As an added precaution, borough authorities plan to add another officer to the 'police force beginning Janu ary 1. Realizing that the men brought here will be in an entirely "foreign" atmosphere, and that the townspeople will he in the same position, matters of public nature will be made more complicated, College and borough' heads believe. Chicago Rabbi Speaks Before Hillel Group Campus Leaders Give Opinions Before Group Of 110 said that the failure of world confer ences, boycotts. and tarp made an isolationist policy the only practical one today. Shaffer, pleading the cause of inter national law, advised that war on the part of the college student is justified 'only for the maintenance of the un written law governing international relations. Ho said that "the United States is doing China the greatest injustice in the 'history of man" by allowing war materials to be trans ported from this country to Japan. (Continued on page three) Yeckley, Hoot, Cross Selected Managers Of Football, Soccer, Cross Country For 1938 Season Successor To The Free Lcince State Collegian. EMEME STATE'COLLEGE, PA., +904 to give a which will ha Innitil in another column. SATURDAY, OCT. 1. no P. M.—Allegheny ~.le The choir appented mach deplet. ed. Inn i• now in a healthy and flonrithing condon. So rte start in another year. Po fgood many it will he the loot lap. or many other, the beginning. Let tto all get together, however, and ...et If we cannot make this col lege yen reven more sinvecatil than ever before. 81,12,V, Lk, 2. moo A. Nl.—Chapel. Sermon by Prof. Benj. F. UHL 6:30 M. C. A. in Old Chapel. Subject. BibleStmly. Address by J State Student Secretary. Alommv. Ocr. 3. 7mo P. M.—C. li. Soddy i: Room :to Engineering Iluild• The annual reception to nn• atm ghetto wits given in the College Ar mory Friday evening, September trith, by the Young MetdsChristion 4emeintion. .The drat half-hour o ut gieen to handahaking and gen. teal greeting, among the (dime: after which the following short pro. gram was.rendered: OPENING OF COLLEGE. College opened .Thurcilay morn. ing, Sept.; IStb. with chapel core. claw of eight o'clock, The regis. tration tip to date had been a little below that of last pear at the mine dm, but this uncommitted for by the large muter of old litre (MUM conditions. The incoming clewe manila about two hundred mid fifty tom, considetably leas than bad been anticipated. President Atherton welcomed the old and new men pith his usual felicity and gave the latter sonic good advice nu their future conduct ideollege. After theesCrcises, the rat of the day VMS Vent in the usual organimtion of classes. Looking about for familiar (aces. guile a number are found missing. The Senior class numbers about ninety,' the Juniors. one hundred and ten, and the Sophomores, one hundred and seventy. Among the facultyaud instruct tors there, are quite a number of new. harm. We• havei'endeavired a tr... Although Gen. Beaver was re. watering front a moat illness he 5.111 ed to have lost none of hisold• that force, which he melt no ever, in vigoromsopport or the incoming chi.+. A reception would hardly be complete without the General., Ile brought with 'laitn ant hatermt. ing talker,Rev. Wilcox, a graduate of blarieti;• College. The program no, supplemented by refrerhotent. consisting of ice cream, cake, and coffee:,' Everything contributed to ...• , on or-about September 3( issue uncertain. 0, 1904. A delay in printii Collegian Marks 50th Year Of Campus News Publications Founded In 1904, After 17- Year-Old Free Lance . Failed 'Because State Has Technical And Practical Atmosphere' - Marking the 50th year of Penn State news publications, the Collegian proudlY presents this anniversary issue. In it, we have tried to cover not only the growth of the Collegian, b ‘ ut also the development of the College, its sports, its customs, and even its idiosyncracies. Thirty-two years after the found ing of the Pennsylvania State Col lege, the first news publication ap peared on -the campus. The Free Lance, as it was called, fought a losing battle from the time of its first issue in April, 1887, until • it "expired with the stroke of Number 1, Volume XVIII (April, 1900," as the first editorial of the State Col legian put it. The'Free Lance was a supposedly monthly news magazine, but the first issue 'stepped out on the wrong foot, being a few days late, and successive issues followed alm6st the ame path until the final edition, dated April, appeared in May. • It was this among other things that led to , its failure. The news maga zine predicted its own death in the last trip to the presses. An editorial said, "Students know ten lines to el,r ery on'e printed in the Lance." A few words of editorial comment in 'the first issue of the Collegian in 1504 explains fully the diseases fatal to -the •Lance. "The case (of the Lance) could not have been pronounced other than an incurable one when such alarming symptoms as a very irregular publi cation, weak storks, and an almost complete 'disintegration of the board, a very delicate organ, appeared. The publication might have recovered had there been a change of literary cli mate, but under the existing state of ffnanc!al collapse, this was, impossible.! the•Lanee failed as literature because State has a practical and technical atmosphere rather than. a literary one. Fact and not literary effort is to be the basiS of this pub lication." And with the premature death of the Free Lance—exactly 17 years af.: ter its founding—came the birth of the Collegian, now in its 34th year and celebrating the 50th anniversary of campus news publication. make it one of the nuot and enjoyable reieptions ever given by the V.M. C. A. of this college. SOniOMORLS WIN , The Inm-deferred anntml wrest ling snatch between the Sophomores and Freshmen finally occurred on Wednemlay evening. Sept. oath. The whole student body assembled on Beaver field to see the chain pions of the two classes tattle on the mat. The wrestlers and their weights were as follows: Kunkle easily watt the first two heavy weight bouts for the Sopha and heathen as easily won the middle weight point Par the Fred,. men. notwithstanding that Mumma put up a game fight against his heavy opponent. The first bout of the lighhweiglits was the thief hvent of !bevy:ling... It lasted one our and a quarter mad finally re. suited in a draw. In the other two • trial, .I.orith seemed to lose cow fides.. mid Smith won thepoint for tgoy. Very little science was din. played except in the light-weight bouts. Tke fur tyoi Rainey. Stood, Towne) and li c it. son and for rgoti, Van Iluro, Bow. dioe and Finkle...rein. No College mon should allow h ,tvilies to interfere vlth his edu ikgraittit — wit'slitilitisit • ng Imade the exact date Ink-Minded Women Began Collegian Work In 1927 Women with "Ink in their blood" were first lured to write for the Col. legion on September 25. 1927, in all appealing, call for freshman condi. dates. Five days later Katherine Rol. brook was elected to edit "The Wein. en's Corner," a column which chided the women for using careless table manners, and urged them to read the bulletin board in Mac Hall. M. Ellen Burkholder '2B, president of W.S.G.A., was interviewed on the advantages of a it ollege education. When Grace Woodrow was elected women's editor in tile Spring she start ed "Co•Eil Chats" which once warned against the pitfall of self pity. fur -ling Miss Woodrow's editorship Dean Charlotte E. Ray supported Dean Stod dart's plan of unlimited cutting of I classes if the student's average was above 1.:5: - Editorials and news articles were written explaining W.S.G.A.'s (Esau proval of smoking in public. A strict campus was given for this heinous offense, which was declared to be against the ideals of the American girl. Society frowned on smoking. A Senate Meeting which was culled to discuss this moral porblem was "shrouded in secrecy." Tile co-ed had to be reconciled with a front page story announcing that W.S.G.A. had moved telephone permission from 8 o'clock to 10 o'clock. . Although there was only on occas ional women's column from '32 to '34 news stories announced that the Thes pians lid' broken their memonly tra dition by giving loading roles to Mur iel Bowman, Dorothy Johnson and Grace Baer in '3l. The co-ed colonels were excluded from Military 13011 to save, expenses: Z 658 PRICE FIVE CENTS 44 Win Varsity Letters, 27 Numerals Given To Fall Teams Freshman Managers Named In Three Sports George W. Yeckley Wil lard D. Hoot '39, and George J. Cross '39 were elected managers lof football, soccer, and cross country, respectively ; for 1938. They succeed William E. Lin denm.uth '3B, present manager of football; William G. Thomas, Jr. '3B, soccer; and Merlin W. Troy '3B, cross country. Alvin E. Fletcher '4O, W. Jerome Howarth '4O, and Hugh F. McKnight, Jr. '4O were named first assistant managers in football; Sey. moor S. Epstein '9O became freshman manager; and numeral sweaters were also awarded to three alternates, Howard G. Anderson '4O, Henry L. MeKown '4O, and Harry C. Strewn. '9O. John bl. Metzger '39 and Wilmer K. Rockmaker '39 were elected associ ate managers. Soccer Firsts In soccer, V. dePaul Cavanaugh '4O, James F. Malley '4O, and F. Dunning Rupprecht '9O were elected first as sistant managers; ,and following. the successful practice used in football, the first alternate, Louis G. McAfoos, Jr. '4O, was named freshman map ;l4er"; sen second alternate::: Richard Crem ents, Jr. '39 and Herman D. Imber . '39 became associate managers. Frank C. Anderson, Jr. '9O, Leonard Cooper '4O, Mark H. Vinznnt, Jr. '4O were elected first assistant managers of cross-country; Howard C. Dick '4O was Chosen freshman manager; and Stanley J. Brown '39 and David L. Swank, Jr. '39 were named associate managers. 18 Football Lettermen Eighteen members of the varsity football squad were awarded major letters; four seniors were given spe cial awards, also major letters, inas much as they did not rAy the requir ed amount of time; and four sopho mores won special minor letters. In soccer there Ivey° 11 varsity and two senior awards given, while five hill-and-dalers won varsity, letters. Twenty freshman gridmen were awarded numerals, and seven '4l cross-country men won their numer als. Varsity football lettermen: Sidney S. Alter '4O, Ales: J. Barantovich '39, Bernard E. Briggs '39, Dan A. DeMa rino '3B, Co-capt. Sam J. Donato '3B, Co-rapt. Mho J. Eeonomos '3B, Wil liam T. Ellwood. '3B, Paul S. Enders '3B, Anthony J. Giannantonio '39, Dean H. Hanley '39, Hurry S. Harri son '39, Lloyd B. lobes '4O, Joseph P, (Continued on papa two) Plans Completed For Court Clinic Opening Experiment Tomorrow Covers 16-Point Program; Lions Face Bisons Featuring an all-inclusive 16-point program, the lint basketball clinic hi the history of the School of Physical Education and Athletics will be held here tomorrow. Sponsored for the past few years at West Virginia University, the clinic will be introduced us an experi ment here by Dr. Curl P. Schott, new dean of. the School of Physical Edu cation and Athletics. Highlighting the program will be the demonstration game between the Penn State and Bucknell varsity bas ketball teams. Running comment on play situations, rule interpretations, and other clarifying announcements will be issued over the loudspeaker during the entire game. The clinic will officially open at 9:30 o'clock tomorrow morning, with registration in the lobby of Recrea. (Continued on page eh)