Page Four Warner Bros. Lost and . Found Ser\ice » ~2 Men’s Hats 3 Umbrellas Girl’s Raincoat Man’s Covert Cloth Raincoat Ladies’ Gloves 2 Coin Purses Nittami Shows at - • • - 6 30, 8 30 Complete Show as Late as 9 05 Today and WcdvcKduy y JUDY GARLAND ‘.‘WIZARD OF OZ” with Jack Haley Bert Lahr Ray Bolger Billie Burke the Munchkms only {' GINGER ROGERS ? DAVID NIVEN “BACHELOR MOTHER” 'Shows at-1.30, 3 00, 6 30, 8 30 Complete Show as Late as 9 05 TODAY AND WED. 'She called it —pretense He called it nauit »»*ci» LORETTA YOUNG-WggD^NIVEN THURSDAY FRIDAY ADDED THE MARCH OF TIME ‘INSIDE THE MAGINOT LINE' ESSSS322I Shows at• 1:30. 3.00, 6 30, 8.30 Complete Shovy as Late as 9 05 TODAY AND WED i i lidded: A-Walt Disney Cartoon 4 "The Autograph Hound” Refugee Flees Germany To Study At Penn State Safe in the United States, fai from Nazi teuonsts and scenes of stnfe and stifling prejudice, Biuno Eisen, Czechoslovakian refugee student, can look back on his life in Nazi Germany as a hideous, yet authentic nightmaie + """■ “ Less than a yeai ago. Biuno ' was a pre-medical student at Chailes- Umveisity in Prague Then came Hitler's invasion of Czechoslovakia and the end of Bruno's college days in Euiope Study in Plague or anywheie in Germany was' impossible so Biuno applied foi and received a stu dent’s visa to entei the United States foi stpdy j Aftei weeks of waiting, Biuno embaikcd on the Goiman linei : Hansa fiom Hamburg on August ?4 Thiee days latei the Hansa j vas returned to Hambuig because i of the outbicak of wai He was | given 72 houis to lea\c Germany i oi be sent to a concentration camp Huiriedly wning an uncle in I Anienca, Bruno leceivcd the ne- 1 ccssary passage money and "es caped” into Holland only houis before th£ deadline Thiee weeks latei Bruno enteied Penn State as a foicstiy student "Too many doctors- in America,” sums up Biuno’s change in courses fiom pre-med to forestry. A ‘Gamma Sigma Phi pledge, Biuno daily finds new wondeis to amazd him at Penn State Notic ing revived interest m knitting, he expressed the desire to be tn tioduced to "some nice girl who might knit me a sweatei " (Hit, size is 40, in case some nice gal is inteiested ) . Women In Sports (Continued From Page Three) Jo Wetnei, and Veia Neal, and sophomoie substitutes weie Mar joilo Rosenberg, Jean Babcock, and Bee Baumaunk The Modified Round nitheiy match was won by Helen Diivei with Bettv Puck and Ellen Moore tying for second place and'the Co lumbia Round was won by Louise Hack with Belt* Bei toilette uud Mai ion Owen second iamce Fleming will pUrv Maige King aftd Dot Pieite, Viiginia fibikhousc in tile semi duals golf matches The Aimoiy lollei skating sea son begins Satuiday at one The pi ice is 20 cents foi two-hour peiiods but the fhst 25 coeds will be admitted free Sunday’s hike along the Pine Giove Trail is spousoied by the WRA Outing Club and Men’s Stu rt ent Rccieation Association Tianspoitation to Pine Giove Mills and fiom Shlngletowu Gup will be piovided by the Joimstown bus at 25 cents Don’t forget to register at Student Union befoie Sutuiday at 12 and we’ll meet at West Col lege and Frazier stieets Monday, Tuesday, and Thuisday at 4. and Tuesday, Wednesday, Thuisday and Satuiday ut 7 30 will be swim practice hours Sign up now with senior munagei Louise Bieuninger, junior mating eis Mtniel Engclke, and Leuore Hein a sophomoio liiunugci Bevei iy Wilson oi freshman mutiagcr Puuline Ciossmuu, foi the medley, coik sciamble, 25 yd free style, plunge for distance, 25 yd back, <l5 yd. breast stioke, ping pong ruce, and relay Front, back and fiont jack arc compulsory diving events in uddition to one optional Historical Society, Will Hold Annual Convention Here The Collego, itself a storehouse of much histoilcal information concerning the Commonwealth, will play host to next year's an nual meeting of the Pennsylvania Histoilcal Association. The selection of Penn Slate us the site was made at the 193 D veoting held recently at Bethle hem. Dr J Paul Selsam, asssitant piofessor of history, was reelected secretary of the oiganizatlon Seven other members of the Col lege’s history faculty are active in tlio association, one of them. Pro fessor W F Dunaway, being a member of the executive commit tee The state association has moie than 500 active members, includ ing a large college his tory instructors An entire col lection, of books, in the College llbiary Is devoted to Pennsylvania PENN STATE COLLEPIAN M. I. MINING MURAL Pictuied heie is, one of the tin ee_m ui als in the walls of the rotun da and lobby of the Mineral Industries building The muials, the only ones on Campus, aie the woik of Edmund M. Ashe, prominent Pittsburgh artist, and were pre sented to the College by an Alumni commit tee The mural lepro duced here shows coal miners changing 'shift, just as they leave the elevatoi cage All three aie Pennsylvania indus trial scenes Endowed Schools In Danger, Says . Chicago President The endowed universities in this country will have to go out of bus iness Dr Robert Maynard Hutch ins, president of the University of Chicago, declares today in The Sat uiday Evening Post "unless they face their financial situation frank ly, set tlielt house in older, devel op a clear and defensible idea of vvliat they aie Dying to do and make the public understand it’} The position of the endowedJini versities. he~ points out, is precar ious because of the economic situ- Uon und the low interest yield on investments while the institutions supported by taxation ure continu ing their advance on all fronts - Endowed universities, he says, might as well forget their endow’ ments us the futuie of these funds is so speculative that no piogram can be based upon them As a re sult of "going tluough the wi ing ot ” of economy from 1931 to 1935 it is unlikely that expenses can be cut much moie, the article says Consolidation Advocated Consolidation of institutions is advocated as one possible step, while Dr Hutchins also suggests that smaller annual contributions might well be built up to take the place of a few lurge endowments, oi that in some cases it may, be necessaiy to use capital, l instead of relying on. interest, becuuse it would be a wiser investment to meet the need of the generation of youths now piessing for education than to tiy to consetve assets for an unpredictable future CLASSIFIED Typewi iters—All makes expert ly repaired Portable and office machines foi sale or lent Dial 2342 Hatiy F Maun, 127 W Bea ver avenue 10-Sept TENNIS RACKETS lestiung— Armour’s tennis strings; 2-24 hour service Lowest puces in town All work positively guarair teed The Restringer, 20G v W Col lege. Dial S3CO. TWO ROOMS—WiII rent single or double, 172 Haitswick ave. Dial 2244 Desnable district. - , 100-2tpuGD FOR RENT—Clean, warm roomß, ' single or double Near Campus at reasonable rates 122 S Ather ton street 102 ltp GD FOR RENT—Two single rooms, vvaim, comfortable, reasonable rates 423 Pugti street. 101-ltp-EK FOUND —Fawn coloied toy terrier, black face, picked up on Campus Thursday morning Phone 3185 mmm Uresore RUMOR FACTORY Dick Hallow ’l4, head coach of football at Harvard, last week de uied that he was planning to leave Harvaid at the end of this season “I am not negotiating with any olhei institutions and 1 shall coach ut Harvaid next year,” he quid No college administiation wants Or John Bata (Jock) Sutheiland as a football coach these days, iu* moi has it he’s too big Aflei his showdown with Chancellor Bow man at Pitt when it became a question of eithei the Chancellor or the'* Coach leaving, no college piesident is ready to take a chance on him Over-emphusis of chaiucter butlding at the University of Chi cago and a few plenty to 0 lickings have started a move to oust the University of Chicago from the Big Ten Fiutc! nities here weie pussing aiound the tumor last week that Coach Catl Suavely will leave Cor nell this year According to the Stoiy Snavely believes hi quitting one job when his reputation is sky-high and going somewheio. else to sign a new long-teint con tract at the best pi ice his soaring stock can command Fia-nk N \\folf head coach of footbali and athletic director at Wayensburg College, is'repoited non-commital on a lumoi that he will get some soil of a football couching position at- Penn State next yeai Wolf, a State graduate,, has eained a reputation at Waynes burg as one of (he nation’s leading small college coaches, and is noted | foi an ability ,to pioduce good teams with comparatively poor material Schott To Address Alumni Dr. Call P Schott, dean of the school of physical education and athletics, will address a smoker to be held in Lancaster next Thurs day night by the Lancaster Coun ty Alumni Club /I&Ti&w find t/dwj \III!IIIIIHT /JAMES PRMM HALL ‘ Authors of MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY, TOE HURRICANE and THE DARK RIVER VICIOUS CIRCLE: Introducing the happy-go-luclty Tuttles'of Tahiti, who couldn't go fishing without gas for their boat Couldn't get gas Without money. And couldn’t get money without ' 1 THEY COULDN’T EVEN DIE SUCCESSFULLY/ Pastor Tearo held memorial services for four Tuttles lost at sea. . but he talked too soon! ARE ENDOWED COLLEGES DOOMED?*'' IN THIS SAME-ISSUE: A new big game fish- * Arc colleges like Harvard, Columbia and Uni- mg story by Philip Wylie, about an overstuffed . versity of Chicago on the way out? With mil- > ' politician who goes after newsreel-sized fish , honaires vanishing, taxes rising, investments'' and pulls a trick no sportsman could stand for ; dwindling, how can these schools compete with ' —bribes or no bribes! Sec There Heßlows! ' .state-supported universities? RobertfM.' - AND .; a live ly football story about the great' Hutchins, President of the University of Chi- t Packy Farr and how ha played A Sail " . week’sPost.(Requiredreadingforallstudents.)' PLUS a‘yam by Harry Klingsberg in which v ‘ , __ - J ‘ , I* r * »r 1 7 Ch Liquor Sales Opposed By Students, Survey Shows A baic majouty of students Jieie oppose the sale of liquoi in State College, uccoiding to a lecent cioss-section sumy. Of those interviewed 5G 9 peicent said “no” to* the question, “Do you appiovc of the sale of alcoholic beverages othdr than beer in State College 7” Those who answered “yes" constituted 43.1 peicent A total of 216 undergiaduates weic leached by the poll, includ ing 54 fraternity men and women and 162 non-fraternity men and A slight majority in favor of liquor sales was registered by fiu ternity men and women, 55 6 pei ccnt of whom supported the pro posal Strongly opposed was the , non-fraternity group, only 38 9 percent of which* voted for alco holic beverages other than beer Also revealed by the survey was the, even division of the student body into dunkers and-non-drink ers Of the 216, 109 said*they drank alcoholic beverages, while 107 professed to abstain. , • Some of those contacted believed that liquor should be sold in State College if it were not sold m a bauoom, that is it should be sold at state liquor stores Ward Scholarships Won,By Students , Ten students have diawn a total of $446 this semester fiom the Montgomery Ward Scholarship Fund, College auditor James A. Hanley, newly appointed-counccloi foi the Montgomery Ward Schol arship Fund, levealed yesterday According to the plan of the mail order house, students, re ceive a commission on all ordeis jsing special older blanks stamp ed with the student's name This plan is no longer open to appli cants Hanley succeeds Piofessoi Will iam V Dennis, department of ag ncultuial economics, as counselor for the fund PUZZLE: The,Tuttle boys caught a for- < * |fj THIS WEEK'S POST ; tune in fish—and then discovered they * - » ■. ( didn’t know howto get it homo!, 1 . Maps In Armory Only Reference To European War Under Wa*r; Department orders not to discuss the Euiopean War, the department 1 of military science and tactics makes its only refer ence to the conflict on large maps posted inside the Armory showing the day by day progress Any persons interested' in the' stiuggle are welcome to see the maps which me kept by Maj Donovan P Ycuell They show the various fronts and the direction and extent of all the military drives Information used in keeping the to date is gathered from the daily piess and from a semi official Army and Navy magazine which carries accounts of the war written by military experts The maps and explanatory sta tistics arc on the south wall of the Arrnoiy just* inside the en hance to the main floot No com ment accompanies them Discussion of the war hus'Ulsu been baned fiom all ROTC classes New] Lowjin Deferments ‘ As -a t n indication s of improving business conditions, the Buisar's office lius announced theie wet'e 300 lets defeiments Hum lust-year Since the deferment of fees system i\as Inaugurated here, the number of defei meals issued and national business conditions % have closely correlated mu /a4itfr ; “THE MORTGAGE LIFTER.”. ~ On this bird the Tuttles gambled their , last stack of furmturo but nobodyknewifthocockcouldfigbtl , BEGIN T HIS NEW NOVEL; W#- , - i i j*' ' . 1 the assistant District Attorney has a hunch : that astrology might sometimes be spelled f .Read Remember Galileo .:. a romantic story. The Crusaders by James ’ Street, , „ ' - ;' J ''i ALSO'... Helen Hayes’ unique story. Second i part of eight v . .'A timely article,'Lei Thef- Nettfratßmirg,..editorials,poems, all in thisweek’sPoat. J Tuesday, November 7, 1939” Student ROTC j Staff Named | 52 Seniors And 95 Juniors| Appointed Col. EmeryJ Fifty-two scniurs and 94 juntorij have been appointed cadet in the ROTC, it was announced yesterday, with Cadet Col Al£» thur M Skibbe '4O in charge of the student brigade This number is 42 moic thaft •ast year, Colonel Ambrose 'H, Emery, head of the 'military do* partment, said Yesterday. Cadet Lieutenant Colonels ap pointed ore Leonardo S Wilhelm *4O, M Gilbert Radcliff ’4O, aijd Grover C Woshabaugh '4O who is infantry executive officer j;‘ Cadet,Majois named arc Walton’, L Turner ’4O, infantry brigade adjutant; B Paul Blasingame ’4.0 engineer brigade plans and traili ng officei, Robert R Blumenstein 40, Robert W Green ’4O, Brunei G Ortelli ’4O, Chailes M Parkinfe *4O, and Albro L Parsons ’4O Also named were 41 scniois iu> cadet captains -and 94 juniors as cadet second lieutenants 1; Forestry Societies 1] Hold Joint Meeting)'- For the first time Xi Sigma PI. honorary forestry fraternity, and the Penn State' Forestiy Society uill hold a joint meeting openjto the public The meeting will „bo held this Thuisduy at 8 p m in room 110 Home Economics Build; tag - 4- H. O Kimmel, State Cooidinatoi of the Soll_Conbeivation Will speuk followed by V C Miles, Aiea Forestei for Western Pe£n sylvania of the Soil Conservation Service A sound motion picturo entitled "30 Yeais'of Logging’’ will conclude'the meeting V Rutgers Univeisity lias a new course in tiie organization of public relief 1 ' , 1 ’i •3-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers