.7216 Vi, ISB7 Women's Fraternities Start - 7-Week Open Ru i shing Season By C•IROLINE TYSON. Pres., Pun-Hellenic With the beginning of open rushing season on .Wednesday, the frater nity women are polishing their best manners and exhibiting their foremost ability in giving unusual parties on little money. .The matter of "best manners" is of primary significance, or should be, to the rushee. The-most important qualification of any-group is congeniality. In rushing, it is the goal of every house to make its rushees feel at home, just satiny hostess would. 'Therefore,' •the rushees feel at home, just as any hostess would. Therefore, the rushees are now on the lookout:for congenial women whom they -believe will enrich their college life on this campus. The.-rushees should consider the cleverness and handicraft Vinvolved rather than the amount spent. They must realize that every -party is be ing budgeted from a: 20-dollar allow ance covering the entire season. This money must account for - .every cent, spent from nowAintil .February - This year Pan-Hellenic council will have the.authority-to fine any frater,, nity • which violates rushing regula tions. Heretofore the - Tule has been that any violation penalty will . be ef fective during the following season: Because there may be some .misun derstanding as to. the meaning of "open rushing," . a brief explanation will be given next Tuesday at the reg ular meeting of the Freshman coun cil. At. this time, any questions . con cerning - rushing will - be - welcomed. Fair Damsels ,To Play Grid Cuties Today Our boys are undaunted! • . They will .meet - the foe tomorrow!, And win or lose' yo'n can -be sure they did their very ;Vest But, oh dear, we're afraid to say it, they ate such cuteleviis—silver pan ties and all. You will. - never guess-:—Penn State's "he-men'" of the gridiron will play the women's hockey team this after noon at , 4 o'clock on Holmes field. It seems that the fair 'datuseliiare the challengers. Come out and cheer vociferously! They will play hockeyof course! Pi Lambda Sigma, pre-legal fra ternity, will hold an organizational meeting tonight at •8 'o'clock at. the .Theta Kappa Phi house. Sex Machine Featured At Electric Show Ottlaried Exhibits Wed. Night ~ _ • ' This uneri, , often heird:in maternity yards, Mit a'nuestiou',Mi yet unfamil iar in the local collegiate:moutli, may be answered now. for. Once and fofall. In . the exhibit put ink.bY,the electrical engineering departinent Wednesday night in Engineering Wend E was a machine to: end all inaChinesa sex machine: This - machine deilsed., by two ex perts on the subjeet,'Robert ll.,Ernest '3B and RobertCleaVes will instantly tell, the_ ot, any subject who, simply inserts hie or her hand before a 'beam of .light,. If he 'is a male, the. Mae light: , gpCs on; If she Stlident - Co-4eration Asked By :Post Office . , • -Proinpted' , bk coin pla*.cOntinuotisly. ~into. the Poit*Me ckialie,iia#4.stuill.Sta for -Postmaster Robert •J. Miller, in a .`striteinelitt - inade yester day, :urged . - the. 'Cooperation of stu den'ti ta_hisure , tha limier handling and delivery:of • Miller stated that the biggestprob lem presented to the office is the ten dency 'of students niove without leaving a forWardihg:addiess, and the carelessness. 'with return and fOrWarding . addresseal.are placed on theenveiopea. TFie pasthaster pointed out, that the large.number of mail thefts and losses in boarding houses and dormi toriea. is the result of failure on the part of the students to file a change of-address form at the office. when they : move. lifiller,also said that a great deal of delaY in delivery is caused, by such inadequate addresses on envelopes as "John. Smithi State College, Pa." Congratulations on Your Fiftieth Anniversary Warnock To Try New Excuse Plan Optional Absences To Be Left To Instructors; Office To Give Special Excuses Experimenting with a new method of treating absences, Dean of Men Arthur R. Warnock announced yes terday that class . excuses issued' by the central college offices will be lim ited to cases having emergency or un avoidable excuses for the absences. Cases in which the absence may be optional will be left for the individual instructors to handle;with any special informatiOn concerning the case for - 1. Warded to tne instructors by Dean Warnock. The full text of Dean Warnock's message states: To the Faculty anti Men Students: - Members of the men's Student - Board are making an effort to obtain -more uniforMity of practice, than no* exists in instructor's treatment of absences from' class. They have made several suggestions to - deans and departmental heads. They have also suggested that rec ommendations for class excuses is sued by central college offices ,be limited to cases having emergency or unavoidable causes for the ab sences, and that cases in which the absence may be optional with the student be left to the instructors concerned for handling. As an ex periment my office will adopt tnis suggestion for an indefinite period ' beginning Deceinber 7th. In optional cases any special in formation - which my office mayMave that would be useful to instriictors . concerned will be communicated to them on memorandum slips of, blue paper. A. R. WARNOCK, Dean of Men tireftaitrtiit . r i'M'llg'fit s ge es on t 'if; he . or she is neither, it white light ini• the middle goes on. The inventors claim that the machine wells by the different texture of the skin, but both have a long record for palling similar "fast ones" in the past, It was learned. Other-exhibits illustrating the won ders of electricity ,•included an egg that spins on one end, a machine for testing the horsepoyier or people,, vari ous machines producing myriads-of different sparks, an •electrical ping pang game, a dismantled street-car, a device for casting the waves of one's voice on the screen, and many others, some of a very startling nature. Fellowship Group To Mold Tea Next Sunday The third annual international Tea sponsored by the World Fellowship Group of the P. .S. Sunday, from 3 to 5 o'clock in the sec ond floor•lounge of Old Main. While over 100 private invitations have been sent out, the tea is open to gm faculty, students and townspeople. The object of the tea is to promote in ternational good-feeling with the for eign' students on the campus as the guests of honor. Jean Stillwell is the chairman Or the committee. Congratulations on. your , fiftieth anniver sary and best of luck for the next fifty. HHAND SHOP D. J. Lehman Launderers and Dry Cleaners Dial 3771 220 1 / 2 S. Allen St New College Diner Press Columnist To Appear Here Matrix Group To Be Addressed • By Florence F. Parry At , Monday Banquet Florence Fisher Parry, columnist of the Pittsburgh Press; will be the speak en at the Matrix. Table banquet Mon day night at the Nittany Lion Inn. Mrs. Parry, who has bad many years of experience in the theatre and in jour nalism, will talk about "Interesting Personalities I Have Met." At present, Mrs. Parry writes 'two daily columns, "I Dare Say" and "On With the Show," for the Press. She played on the stage as leading woman' with Alla Nazimova, Walker'White side, Otis Skinner, and others, attend ed Wheatcroti Dramatic school in New York City; and' studied journalism at New York University. A Hindu theme will be carried out in the decorations foi• this banquet which is being held to honon leadink women on campus. Three Hindu daft:: ing girls, portrayed by women ntu dents,: will spin the "Wheel of Fate". predicting, tne fortunes of individual guests. Because of the complications-in curred by the sale of Artists Course' tickets at the same time as' those for the banquet, sale of Matrix Table tic kets has been extended until Friday at 5 o'clock. According to Jean L. Lyman -'3B, president of Theta Sigma Phi, wom en's journalism honorary which is sponsoring the affair, any woman who does not accept her invitation to the banquet will not be invited to the Matrix banquet of next year or any subsequent year. Co-Edits Delta Gamma : Delta Gammas will dine at the Delta Sig house Friday, night. Kappa Alpha Theta: The Thetas will entertain the Delta Tau Deltas Saturday afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock. Gamma Phi Beta: Pearl Gwin '36 returned Wednes day. She was, married November 27 to Robert Horripion '36, a Pi Kappa Alpha. ALPHI Chi Omega: • Mrs. Adams, a. national councilor from Detroit, visited the chapter from Monday until Wednesday. Theta Phi Alpha: Polly Lou Beacon '35 visited friends over the week-end. . _ — Locuit Lane l Lodgegirla Will hold a Christmas formal Friday, with Jo Condrin in charge and Lenore Ben nett as her aide. Tuesday night the girls held a party for their 'big sis ters." House dances will be held by ;427 West Beaver and 129 South Miles dorms Friday night. - At Vocational Meet Dr. William A. Broyles, Dr. Clarence S. Anderson, and Henry S. Brunner, of the department of rural education An the School of Agriculture, left on Tuesday to attend tile American Vo cational Association convention in Baltimore, Md., from December 1 to December 4. Congrafi'llations on your. Golden Anniversary Blair Gift Shop Allen Street THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN More ROTC—V oodring; Crush Militarism—Nye Aimed to-strengthen the army in an effort to guard more effectively the 'peace and security" of American citizens, increased federal appropria tions to provide for 120,000 reserve officers who would be .obtained through the increase in R. 0. 'P. C. units in colleges was asked by Secre tary of War Harry Woodring in an 11-paint program submitted to Presi dent Roosevelt Sunday. Woodring'exmlained that although the Officers Reierve Corps had 96,545 assignable officers on June 30, the en listed reserve "has only a nominal strength at present of 3,189." Stresses Need,for Officers Stressing future officer personnel, Woodring said: "The principal . source for officers of the regular army is the United States Military:" Academy at West Point. The Congress recently autho rized an increase" in 'corps of .cadets at the Military: Academy from 1,374 to 1,960. Theie are now approximate ly 1,900 cadets. , and by next year it is probable that the number will be close to the authorized 'enrollment. "Tlie number, of graduates from the Military Academy each year is scarcely more than sufficient to fill vacancies in the existing strength of the officers of the army. Hence, any additional' commissioned personnel that Might' be authorized would come from other sources, principally from graduates of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps of our colleges." ECKLEY'S GARAGE 116 South McAllister Street CONGRATULATES THE COLLEGIAN ON ITS 50TH ANNIVERSARY .. . .. . ..110PIEME. 111 .. :OR 110 . ' 1,0P1M 111 : 1 .pl . . .... ••• ease gel 1-14-v /rad' er. . . • CHARMIN G gla stowaway in his siiitcase,r an d ~. .._ trailer, $25,000 in her Ts, strange peotleiloarindh,se Claence new novel this weeks newest character, the al . Bunbury Parsloe, and ) f crooks, and trailentes 1 11 seasoned with InY st F rY d hadreading "Sta n - inYrnew Kelland novel at ' to d a y. Fair warning! Can you figure out this DIPS( GOO ousAstiencio? Starting with a razzleAlazzler tamest as di dirzY is, Coach Spaulding, of U.C.L.A., shes as th facts for armchair quarterbacks in ire Have No System page 24 of , on up a few fl. .•4 Also five other special' Yes, V humor. "America ought to be striking most forcefully at . anything and everything these days resembling compulsory military training." Thus' remarks North Dakota's dap per Senator Gerald P. Nye, chairman of the Special Committee, Investigat ing the Munitions Industry. and one of the nation's lending peace advo cates, in a recent letter to John A. Troanovitch, associate editor of the Collegian. Commenting on a recent Collegian editorial, Senator Nye says in full: John A. Troanovitch, The Penn State Collegian State College, Pa Dear Mr. Troanovitch : I have read with deepest inter est'yOni: editorial, entitled "Betray ing the Dead" which appeared' in the Penn' State Collegian under date of Novenhei . 12. I am most happy to see the. con tinuing interest in this subjcct.and want.you to know that it is effort of this kind that is definitely further ing the cause which will lead ulti mately to enactment of the Il'ye- Kvale Bill. America ought to be striking most forcefully at .any thing and everything these days re sembling compulsory military training. Sincerely` yours, • (Signed) Gerald P. Nye 110 Hear Peace Foruni. Tuesday (Continued trim rage one) He said that war should be the last resort used in the enforcement of in ternational law, `with arbitration and boycott as -the primary tools to be used in its enforcement. Wheeler urged the student to be willing to fight only in case of in vasion. He •outlined the background in Europe that has led to the develop. ment of Fascism and the egression of the commonly referred to "have not" nations, Italy, Germany. and Jap an, outlining the economic problems. He advocated a fairer system of trade and the regulation of tariffs to permit freer trade. In the discussion after the speecnes, seven motions were made and defeat ed before the referendum decision was reached. They were: "The college student should be will ing to participate in war"— . 1. Under no • conditions whatsover. Defeated 71 to 44. 2. "In a war involving land action only within the 43 states. De• feated, to 33. 3. •"In a war involving land action only within the' boundaries of North and South America and of the U.. S. possessions., De footed 104.4. 4. "In wars on other continents for the purpose of defending demos. - If You Like Quality Meats and Groceries at Reasonable Prices Buy at NITTANY MEADOWS FARM STORE GUERNSEY MILK AND CREAM Corner Allen and Beaver Dial 2611 out 0 Beginning a new novel FUGITIVE FATHER b CLARENCE BILIDINGTON KILLAND 1==t11!1!I racies against dictatorships. De• feated vocally. 5. "In wars on other continents for the maintenance of international peace. Defeated vocal l y G. "In any War, at any time, in which the United States be comes Involved. Defeated 93 to 7. "In an effort to establish an eco - neonate system which would abolish all future wars.' Defeat ed vocally. The successful motion: "Congress should enact .a law for• bidding the declaration of war without a referendum." Passed 325 to 25. College journalism originated at Dartmouth in 1880 with Daniel Web ster as one of the editors. In 1809 the "Literary Cabinet" was started at Yale, followed shortly after by the "Floriad" at Union, and the "Har vard Lyceum" at Harvard. Hot Soups Shndwiches at _ Lan - Turn Inn Opposite East Gate _ Congratulations to Col legian on its Fiftieth ' Birthday.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers