Page Four WARNER BROS LOST AND FOUND SERVICE Girl's Woolen Cap Song Book Man’s Gloves Ladies’ Gloves Tab for Woolen Coat Inquire at Box Office CcdhoMM a it n js' rjl a;i »>•! Shows at* 1 30, 3.00, 6.30, 8 30 Complete Show as Late as 9 05 TODAY AND WED THURSDAY FRIDAY WHAT DO TODAY'S SCREAM ING HEADLINES MEAN? AT LAST— THE UNCENSORED VERSION of “ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT” with | LEW AYRES From the Book. By Erich Maria Remarque \JifiitcLiti4 wm :a vvAftNus-kiua .: hi m. Shows at • ■ * - 6.30, 8:30 Complete Show as Late as 9:05 Last limes today JOHN GARFIELD , PRISCILLA LANE 1 In “Dust Bo My Debility** Wednesday and Thursday SPENCER TRACY 14 RICHARD GREEN , in STANLEY AND LIVINGSTON’ Friday Only "BACHELOR MOTHER" with GINGER ROGERS . DAVID NIVEN THESPIANS-GLEE Schwab Auditorium Local Artist Gets College Showing An exhibition of the uoik of a local paintei, Mibb Lucie M Alan* lej, sponsoied by the State Col lege Woman’s Club, is being shown In the College Ait Gallen, Room 303 Main Engineeiing. until No vembei 4 DRESSES FOR ALL OCCASIONS • Sweaters and Skirts for Campus Wear • Formals for Big-Dance Week-ends MOORE'S DRESS SHOP ARRANGE A SWIMMING PARTY the ideal evening for any group For Groups Less Than 60 In Number the 2 hour tfFf A pool rental is only SIV Pool Available Mor , Wed, and Thurs Evenings GLENNLAND POOL GLENNLAND APTS 3 Murals By Edmund Ashe Installed In MI Art Gallery Three muials, unique in the ait world and cunently receiving na tional lecogmtion, have been installed in the rotunda and lobby of the Mineral Industries Budding The murals, depicting Pennslyvama in dustual scenes, aie'umque also because they weie paid for not by a ► College appropriation nor by a i class gift, but entirely by alumni The woik of Edmund M Ashe, a well-known Pittsbuigh aitist, the vividly coloied imuals show the romance and panoiamlc di'ania of everyday life of a million Pennsyl vanians in mineb, mills, and ,01l wells Ablie was a long list of artists' by, tlie alumni committee because he has*! been bi ought up in the ,environment which the murals depict. t - The muials ate the latest and hugest single addition to the,Min eral Inilustiies Ait Galleryipf 107 pointings of Pennsylvania 'lndus tiiai scenes Tlie only one, of its kind hi the world, the Ait Qalleiy is made up entitely of pictuies painted by Pennsylvania ‘ai lists and donated to the Gallery by tlie aitists, alumni, and friends All Mie paintings, valued at $4j0,000, are on display In the Mineml Indus tries Building , Alumni who undeiwiote -the costs of the murals weie L C. Campbell, Pittsburgh, C E Cow an, Gieensbuig, H. D Easton, Slneveport, La , W A Maxwell, Denvei, Colo, D R Mitchell,’>head of tlie department of mining here, Dean Edwatd H Steidle, L P 1 Teas, Houston, Texas, J B War linei. Philadelphia, Paul Weir, Chicago, M J WJlson, Philudet phia, and W P Young, Peking, 111 November 3 and, PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Pictuie-d is one of the three m.uraJs painted for the Min etal Industries Build ing by Edmund M Ashe of Pittsburgh on the commission of an alumni commit tee The murals aie the only ones on,the campus and the first of their type ever painted. The muial repio duced at left poi trays the “change of shift” at a coal mine, with the miners "rea dy to leave the cage elevator at the top of the shaft. The sec ond, not pictured here, shows iron woi kei s' tapping met al from* the nace at night. The third depicts a drill er and tool dresser of the oil and gas‘fields working on the der rick floor of a drilling Film About Student Air Training Course Will Be Shown Here Today America’s eyes aie on them—as the college youth^of thy nation, thousands strong, take to the sky* Eagei for action, ready for dan gei, the students of today are the an men of tomorrow, and J then* ttoiy is told in the Cosmopolitan production for 20th Century-Fox coming tins Thursday and 'Friday to the State Theatre, “20,000 Men a Yeai.” The original story by,,Frank Wead, lenowned author of avia tion fiction, was inspired by the year-old Civil Aeronautics - Auth ority progiam for training civilian filers in the nation's colleges and universities ' ** BULLETINS THURSDAY Freshman Independent .Cliquo, Room. 1-1, Home Eo 730 p. m Society' of American Military Engineers, 107 Main Engineering 7 30 p m. Open to all interested West Virginia University ' pro essors have developed a new Bprny that Will make apples red "- / - Soccer (Continued From Page Three) point was registered as a melee of Tech players added to the State total by accidentally knocking the ball over the line Ernst was the last State man to touch the ball Hitting then stude in the third quarter, the Lions uppled the net loi live goals Einst tallied his second, Walt Hostcrman shot a long boot from his halfback post, Bigott collected two and King “rang the bell for his second cigar" befoic the amazed Tartans could put a stop to the Blue and White onslaught Schuler Moves To Forward Going into the final penod with a nine-point lead, the State lineup took a weird appearance. Schuler, the biggest man on the squad, was at center foiward and practically evciy othei man was trying his hand at a new position The re vision, expected to affoid Tech a scoring opportunity and make the game a little more closely contest ed, only brought on the “Schuler bombardment ” Bob Ernst, dependable Lion foi ward, managed to squeeze in his third tally within the last two minutes of play And with that last point the 1939 Penn State contingent established a new Lion scoung record by suipassmg the 12 points run up against Western Maryland last ycai Score by peuods Penn State 2 2 5 4—13 Carnegie Tech 0“ 0 0 0— 0 Goals Schulei 3, Bigott 3, Ernst 2, Hostcrman 2, King 2, Hartman * Referee—George Giandy, Chai lcioi. HERBERT HOOVER OUTLINES PROGRAM TO KEEP THE U. S. OUT OF WAR. From his experience in the last war, Herbert Hoover speaks out in this week’s Post with an‘authority in many ways unrivalled by any living American. Read his five pointprogramfortheU.S in WeMustKeep Out . “COO!” SAID THE SUBSTANTIAL BLONDE, ACCORDING TO P. G. WODEHOUSE. When Freddie \ Widgeon took Bingo’s baby to the beach to get a whack of ozone ... When the well-nounshed blonde with golden hair flung her arms around Freddie... (It’s no ( use! We defy anyone to describe this plot! It’s 99-44/100% pure Wodehouse!) • • • DETECTIVE IN A WHEEL CHAIR. Rather odd that Aunt v Sue was giving the detectives precise instructions for finding the kidnapers of her nephew. But even from her wheel chair she had a hawk-eyed way of noting trivia others overlooked. Read Miss > Useless and the Underworld by Almet Jenks. s v • STEPHEN VINCENT BENET BRINGS YOU A MEMO RABLE SHORT STORY.. . Daniel Webster and the Idea of March, a simple, moving story of how the History of the United . States was changed by one casual visit of Mr.*Webs tor’s with a-*, hermit in the New Hampshire mountains. > GRANTLAND-RICE INTRODUCES THE WORLD'S GREATEST GOLF TEACHER: Hera he is, duffers, The 1 Malignant Momson, who has the whole exasperating game boiled down to eight simple words! ALSO... stones, editorials, ~ v cartoons—all in'this week’s Post. !nt SWING _ \r (Houseparty Week-end) All Seats SOc Writer Bares Demise Of ‘Play For Pay 9 At Pitt The stoiy of football subsidization at the Univeisity of Pittsburgh “supplies a labointoiy case history of what has happened, oi what is happening, or ,w hat may happen, wherever there is play for pay” Francis Wallace, noted sports authonty, says today in The Saturday E\ening Post The climax of play for pay'at Pitt, Wallace says, was a clash between Chancellor John G Bow man and Dr John Bain Sutherland but it was also a clash between the stadium and the Cathedral of Learning, Dr Bowman’s dream univeisity building, a “conflict be tween academic ambitions waids and athletic ambitions and rewaids—the old business of brain vs brawn, in shoit.” “Football subsidization began at Pitt for the same reason as at othci colleges—the game caught on,” the article says “In the first test, the esthete gave w f ay to the athlete, the cath edral bowed to the stadium It was agreed that the stadium was to come fust, to be financed by u bond issue Dr Bowman, however, went light on' with his campaign for the cathedral which was to be erected on a pay-as-you-go-basis* And he privately decided to ic captuie the powerful athletic de partment as soon as his opportun ity came “The athletic problem was again (hopped in the chancellor's lap at a time which was, for him, piopitious” when Sutherland and Don Harrison, athletic directoi, clashed after the 1937 Rose Bowl game At that time Bowman “had seen the fulfillment of his dieam” MMIIMEI of the cathedral building” and was in a position to lclieve his *unex picssed discontent* and the prac tical idealist was free to work on the problem of subsidization “The Pitt athletic policy was coldly lealistic. To pay off the stadium debt it was necessary to schedule money games* To play money games it was necessary to -AT PENN STATE Ofoloma! • 123 W. NITTANY AVENUE ML ROOMSWITH RUNNING'WATEK Thermostatic Heat, Quiet Atmo sphere and Scrupulously Clean FLORAL FANTASIES Corsages'Whose Beauty Will Do Justice to Any H. P Q. ’ ORCHIDS , $2 00 . -U "'GARDENIAS ' , . 150 * ROSES _ . .. 1 125 ’ * Order In Advance RASSMUSSEN and NAGELBERG , | Theta Nu-Epsllon HOW MUCH ARE COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYERS PAID? r ; ' \ 0 And when pay gets so high tho blow-off comes, '’ ' - what happens to the school? Francis Wallace, sports *''' authority, takes you through the complete cycle' of - pay, bigger pay, championship teams,, then school - explosion—as it happened at .tho University of • burgh Uncovering actualfinanciafrecordsforyou, he ’ reveals startling facts. In two parts—bothplentyhofc! Test Case at Pitt . by FRANCIS WALLACE - l 1 . ' . .. . 7 -,\r, -; i - r -'.y r 1 Mmmmm Tuesday, October 24,1939 get Giadc A material Pitt went out, and got them with a high pressure oigantzation,” Wallace writes , iP* ' ‘T io) i-^kf^Somance) ' 1 •' '■ > r *: Chech your glamour crctlcnllals jour hair jour sLln jour nails Do they enhance jour charms? Male sure —indulge in our completely flat tering services and enjoy a perfect PaBsport to Romance! ' _ 1 ® /l M fil BEAUTE t> SALON "K phone 2071 ■ ■ A GLENN LAND BLDG. Phone 3112/ H'kt^rilS^ t, £s£ 4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers