Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, December 05, 1939, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Semirvueekiy -
'■Ssr[ prtut ofate OlnUrgian | =
,v . * »
VOL. 36—No. 24 f
.Students
favor Lion
Shrine Plan
Campus In Front Of ‘
..Oldi Main Voted The
Best Suited Location
An overwhelming majority
v qf students favor the erection
.of a Lion shrine on this'eamp
.us, according to results of a
poll recently completed by the
,/enn State’ Collegian.
,Of the. aproximately 600 stu
dents contacted, 91'per cent fa
vored the establishment of such
a shrine, while only 9 per cent dis
sented.
, All of the 91 per cent who were
in favor of the shline stated that it
* should -be located on the campus.
The diffeience of opinion occurred
Vfhen.it came, to the selection of
the exact location ' -
However/over 50 pei cent smd
the sltrmc should be located
oh' the campus in front of Old
-Mam, a spot the majority, of the
students pass’daily >
“ Other locations whtch many
suggested were the center'of the
. liberal Arts quadrangle, the Mall
above the Main Gate, and the held
east of White Hall where the Pitt
rally was held.
. .There appeared ’to be no doubt
- as.to what the students considered
, constitute the shrine'-A
opinion can be summed
•up by',one questionnaire which
stated, “A Nittany Lion—with an
.open .space nearby for. a bonfire.”
’ 'as to-when the
shrine- should be'used were: foi
large.! pep rallies, at celebiations
pfter, 1 important athletic victories,
"and' for' student mass meetings
not of a political natuie ,
'One*'reply. commented'’ that the,
erection of a ,shrine .would cer-
vaid'in, mamtaing and m-
keeping
, at^stsQceC , . , X’T'-- r '*“‘
number of comments
a shnnesimiJar to that
of f ,Tecumseh at the'United Stales
Academy. Befoie' exams,
the'midslupmen gather around the
statue of the Indian ; chief and
r A thrp\v pennies at the, monument
.for good luck.' - 1 '
, V an y students commented upon
.the financing of the project, stip
ulqtmg that* it should be financed
•-.from’ CollegQ -funds, and not from i
‘student contributions.' .
Only a few of the ,9 per cent ,
who - voted against the project ,
i stated reasons for' doing so •
( However, a'graduate student
,ed that the idea* .wasn't piactical
and there were many othei prob
lems '’deserving much more atten- 1
lion \ 1 . ■
Second Number Of.
fortfolioToGoOn
Sale This Week-End
-second ‘ibsue£of‘ Portfolio,
’ student-fdculty- liter
ary publication, -will, go
,this ■-week,.7 the .editor, Jean C
Craighead *'4l. * aunounceds today
The magaziue was 1 organized late
Jast Spilng and published its first
jjssue. in’ October- "
,\So successfqUthat-it.sold out its
first’ printing T und bufit up
A sufficiently large subscription list
to'insure-its continued publication
this -sear, .Portfolio gained addi
tional prestige when
,its ■'petition for official recognition
was granted by the Student Wei
ffgre Committee at a fall meeting •
• Faculty members represented’in
the i December issue of , the Port*
[folio .are Jessie”,C Chmeron, in
structor- in the School of Physical
Education,- and , William F. Gas-'
instructor Un> English, compo
sition and /a ' former. newspaper
man. ‘ ‘ _ *• «•
.. Short.stories,.articles.and poemß
py the following "students complete
*4o, Rob
ert C Mullen “39,' Walter, Dickin
son/*4l,' Maxine,WJest ,’4O, Herbert
Nlpson r ’4O, George Gittleson _ '41,,
and! Jean C ,l ,
f r uit Judging League
To HoldlConfest Here
Vl* ,■» , jA
annual/contest'of the East
ern States-Fruit -’league
be held, here/next- Saturday!
ffof.,Frank:N. : "Fagan/ of the de
jpaftment of'horticulture announc
ed today'-; 't »IV c <,>, *
v "Ten " students are
competing'this year‘for'the three
Places on', the College'team." *- *
New Committee , Seeks
Increased. Interest In
Extra-Curricular Work
A committee to seek ways of
increasing student participation
in'extra-curricular activities was x
appointed yesterday by All Col-'
''lege ' President''H Clifton Mc-
Williams, Jr -’4O 1
Made up of six outstanding ac
tivities men, tlie committee has
been asked to present a program
that will bring students now ac
tive into' some sort of extra-cur
• ricular work.’
' McWilliams will serye as
chairman of the committee Oth
er members are George E -Rit
ter ’4O, president of Parmi Nous,
secretaiy-treasurer of the Ath
letic Association, and co captain
of the lacrosse, G Wanen El
liott, Jr* ’4O, piesident of Skull
and Bones,, and chairman of Stu
dent Tribunal, Robert Baird M 2,
'president of Druids, David E
Pergrin MO, president of the
senior class and a member of
Skull and Bones; and Thomas C
Backenstose Ml,'president of tho
junior class and a member of
Skull and Bones ' >
Dunaway Talk
Tonight Is Ist
In L. A. Series
‘Old Regime in Virginia*
Is Topic; Colonel Emery
Will Speak On January 16
"The Old Regime In Virginia” is
the subject of a talk by Prof Way
land *F. Dunaway'in the Home Eco
nomics Auditorium at 7 30 tonight
as the first of the current series
of Liberal Arts Lectures,,
Dr Dunaway, foimeily profes
sor of history at Fredericksburg
(Va) State Teachers College, has
been on. the faculty here ,for 20
yeai s, He has written several
books including "A History of
Pennsylvania” many articles
published in historical magazines
,£'Dr l Dunaway's 'lecture' will .treat
In.', Virginia in pre Civil War times,
particularly l the* social and
customs of that .era
The Aits Lecture committee lias
announced -that Col Ambrose 13 R.
Emery, head r of the department of
military science and tactics, will
give the second lecture of the
series January 16 and will be fol
low (1 by 4 Dr Robert E “ Dengler,
professor of classical languages
Dr Frank C Whitmore, dean of
the School of Chemistry and Phy
sics/ will he the fourth speaker
and Prof Franklin C. Banner, head
of the department of journalism,
will conclude the series
Kissing Spreads
Monday Colds ,
Says Ritenour
Dr Joseph P Ritenour, director
of the College Health Service, ag
rees with the at
Washington State College'who ha 3
cited the' consistent outbreak of
colds on Mondays as proof of col
legiate disdain, for the ■warning
that'kissing spreads colds
At least, Dr.,' Ritenour says,
Monday is the biggest day of the
week for the Health *Servcie especi
ally for colds 'and other sorts of
lespirutory disease.,
A second reason' for s the usual
Big Monday, Dr. Ritenour thinks,
is the failure of students to report
HlnesS over the 1 week-end for feai
,of being put to bed ,
QollegeAn
/Penn’ State-last* year" ranked
higher than', it ever, had before
among American 'institutions- of
higher learmng/on a basis
rollment and degrees granted. Reg
istrar William S. Hoffman has re
ported. ,OiT four „of feix . rating
points the College was among the
20 Jargest institutions in the na-'
tion. ‘ .
" , Rankings accorded to ‘ the Col
lege for 1938-39 follow. , r .
; pa. Nat.
. - ? No/Rank Rank
Sept.-June . '
* Enrollment' 17,292 *2 - 19*
1938lSumther r -
. Enrollment l-—3,503 1 ; 18
Total/ Bachelor’s/,' • ( \
3lo' 2- ’l3
Totf.l All"
.Degrees-- L_1,608'3,' 18;-
Except m, the total number of
degrees University of
Pennsylvania'<is the only school in
Pennsylvania surpass the Col-
Z 658 STATE COLLEGE, PA.,' TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1939
How To Get Tickets
In One Easy Lesson
‘Parky’, Parkinson And Collegian Scribe |
Disclose. ,Tale Of Artists’ Course, Stand ,
By DICK JETERS
| - (Herein follows the “time-report" of Edwin (Parky) Parkinson ’4O
and this writer who “held the fort" to be first In line to purchase Art-
Ists'Course tickets Saturday morning ) "
1 15 to 1 45 Saturday morning—Purky a few minutes Jute in meet
ing me at the Diner (fiec adv)—says he Just got up, having stofen a
few winks in preparation for the ordeul to come—consumed five cups of
coffee, a hambuiger, and two oiders of dough-nuts to get a "lining"—
we're off—that is to Old Main
2 CO to 3:00 a m—Outside Old
Main just as the clock in the tow
er strikes two wonder how to
get in, with'all the doors locked
somebody slipping: a hambur
ger through the back door to a psy
chology major . we go in with
the ’burger 2 15 now, and In
the., first flooi lounge wondeiing
wheio to hide fpom Jlie patrolling
campus cops and janitors, who,*we
haye been warned, will end our in
trusion -,best bet is hiding in
the second /loot lounge behind ,a
couch, so we do 2 20, a cop
just went by the,couch and missed
us completely. Gad, it’s cramped
back here, guess we’ll take a stroll
. 250 now, and a cop who juss.
caught us walking abound the sec
ond floor is amazed and * sore at
seeing us come out of the second
floor lounge which he just .inspect
ed, so out we go.
' 3.00 to 4 00 a rrT—Now'gently
Artists’ Course
Hangs Out SRO
Further Sales Cancelled
In New Record Sellout
With every available ticket pur
chased by 1/ p. m. Saturday, the
1939-40 Artists’ Course was assur
ed of success from both financial
and interest- viewpoints ‘-Sales
which were j to'have-continued yes
terday and today are automatical
ly! cancelled by tho greatest' ticket
‘Mle^n^he^hlstory-df'nfig^CoSrs'e^
. Shortly-after 'noon on'Saturday
the i tickets for student' consump-,
tlon were gone and approximately
50 sludeuts then waiting in line
ucrc ( turned back with hopes of
buying tickets from the faculty
townsfleople ;window on Monday
morning „ However, at’l2 30 the
“sold-out” sign appeared on the
faculty window,‘thus ending the
shortest ticket sale for Artists’
Course pasteboaids,' four and one
half hours after opening time
Committee Pleased
Puiticulatly gtatifying to the
Aitlsts’'Course Committee was the
interest of the student body and
the eagerness with which they
consumed their share v of the tick
ets, accoiding to Dr Carl E* Mar
quaidt, chairman of the commit
tee - '
Di 'Marquardt expressed regret
to those who -were T turned back
and disappointed In not "being able
to get tickets,' but said yesterday
that a limited amount of standing
room-may be/sold 1 for eqch num
ber, if the Committee and depart
ment of grounds and buildings will
approve such a measure
PSCA Delegates At,Confab
Six PSCA members journeyed to
tlie ludiana State Teachers College
on a deputation trip Sunday to
confer with a similar group there
The persons attending the confer
ence were. Wallace H Dunlap *4O,
Mary , E Millet ’4O, Robert T
Struck ’42, Mae Brown ’41,/Rich
aid D Bltner *4l, and Andrew P
Szeckley ’43
ongßigge.
lege In total degrees', the Univer
sity of Pittsburgh has pushed'into
second place, with State third. The
College )did-hot place, among the
leading 20 ( institutions m number
of musterVdegree's conferred or.m
number of doctor’s' degrees, grant
ed ' ' 1 " -* v n
l‘U t
As' president’ of tbe American
Association of College Registrars,
Hoffman compiled, the report on
089 institutions of higher learning
for' 1938-39. omitting only one*
large school, the College of thes
City of New York. C.C N.Y failed
,io make a report! taf the Associa
tion.
'* Of'the 36 institutions that man
aged to place m .the first 20 ( on one
or/more,, six points, Regis
trar Hoffman noted,’ only three
bore the name of-College* Brook
lyn College, Hunter College, and
the Pennsylvania State College.' *
‘ Penn State alsor placed among
the largest 10 gchooJs_ip five diff-
ousted ambstanding In front of the
west door of Old Main, but still
first in line Parky Is getting
hungry—down to tho diner again
to get him a coffee while he wraps
VP in a blanket and “guards the
door’’ . back to Old Mala at 3 45,
but the coffee melted through the
paper cup and Parky is still first,
but not alone About 25 other
ticket-seekers are braving’ the ele
ments now, including several pro
fessors, who seem to be preparing*
bluebooka for classes in the morn
ing
4 CO to 5:00 a m.—-Parky says
he will "stick around’! I take
a nap in the car . , time out for
one hour’s} imp, curled »very uncom
fortably in the back seat . . the
alarm wakes me and at 5.03 I re
lieve Parky who is now Inside Old
Main seated very determinedly in'
front of the student ticket window
(Continued On Page Two)
Taylor Flays
Sales System
Long -Wait For Artists’
Course, Tickets Deplored
See Editorial, “I>aty Vaeus Com
i won Sense,” on page 2 and Let
, terbox'on page U
"While all indications over the
weekend pointed -to u smashing at
tendance at the annual Artists’
thei-pai t-- of
subscribers to the'"Course mounted
with regurd to the necessity of
having,, to lose sleep and stand
hours in line before tickets could
be purchased
The consensus, * of,opinion '•ap
peared crystalllzed 4 *fn a 'letter ‘Vo
the Collegian' from Prof -Nelson
W Taylor of the department of
ceramics Excerpts of the letter
follow
“On Saturday morning my part
ner, Dr HJ M Davis and I lost ap
proximately six hours of sleep as
we stood in line I estimate that
about 3,000 man hours of sleep and
rest were lost by the ticket seek
ers who began to form in line out
side Old Main before 3 110 a m
“This antiquated pi active of
forming a queue does not do credit
to the intelligence of Penn State
1, tof one, am thoroughly ashamed
W it.- -J _ '
Piof Taylor offered, a J pi ize “of
one Artists’‘Course ticket,'Row B,
Rear Balcony, purchase price $5,
to tho nmn. woman, or child who
I submits the ’ best suggestions as
to how to sell 'and distribute Art
ists' Course tickets on an equitable
basis to the campus and general
public without the necessity of
forming a queue of people at the
ticket office Suggestions must be
typewritten and should be mailed
to Dr C E Marquardt, Chaiintan,
At lists Course Committee, 10S Old
Main, not later than 12 00 noon,
Friday, December 8 ’’
The first ticket buyer ut the
ticket office was reported to have
appeared at 2 a m
t2OInU.S.
crent .special groups,' Registrar
Hoffman showed. The „ divisions,
their 1938-39 enrollment, and then
national rank are* Agriculture
(924), IQtli; Chemistry (460),
3rd, Forestry. (453), sth; Home
Economics (482),, 10th; and Min
eral Industries (298), 3rd
The Registrars figures show a
total national, college enrollment
from September to'June last year
of 1,000,490 with 272,431 or 27.2
percent of these students' centered
in tlie 20 largest institutions. The
total enrollment m the 490 col
leges conducting summer sessions
was 272,431 with 106,463 or 28 9
percent l of these students in the
-largest 20 schools.'
- In all, there were 132,739 bach
elor’s degrees granted throughout
the nation m 1938-39, the report
shows/Master’s degrees amounted
to 32,101 and doctor’s degrees'to
3,721 with' the total for all degrees
including-vprofessional and honor
ary at 169,504. '
Commerce Students
■Will View Showing Of
Film On Air Express
A- moving picture program
Showing the growtli and develop
-1 incut of the air expiess, spon
soied by Delta Sigma PI, bonoi
iiry commerce and finance sod
Tety, will be presented in Room
ddl, White Hull, at 7 p m next
(Thursday
/} All seniois und juniors in tlie
jrdepui tment of commerce' and fi-
Snance should attend the pro
fgiam to which outsiders arc also
ipvited, it wus announced
b"
Students Back
v
Referendum
Before War
,}!
j j Majority Support Poll
- S Of Citizens To Replace
Declarations By Congress
O
’■•A majority of Penn State stu
dents favor a public referendum
to decide whether or not the United
States Shall enter a foreign war,
accoiding to aaecent survey con
ducted here 1
v’/jOithe 235 students interviewed;''
57 4 percent favored the referen"- :
(Turn, while 42 6 felt that the de
cision should be left with Congress,
where it now lies
}j A considerably greutet majority
supporting the referendum was
observed among freshmen and
Sophomores than among upper
classmen Sixty-five and eight
tenths percent of the freshmen
contacted favoicd the plan, as did
58 8 percent of the sophomores,
,49 2 percent of the juniors, and
52 4 percent of the seniors
leasons given foi the
lefeiendum weie that the people
who are 'to fight should decide
Ivhethcr or not to fight, and thut
Congress is not a true represent
ative of the people in such an em
ergency
§ Those opposed to the plan felt
it the general public might be
ayed r by~propugandu, and'that
m a’ general emergency there
would not be time for a referen
dum ' 1
Polls Conducted
By Lepley Show
Fans Are Fickle
That student attitude toward
: the Penn State football coaching
■ staff is fickle and fluctuates accord
ing to the success of the team was
indicated in recent polls conducted
by the class m experimental psy
chology under the supervision of
Dr "William M Lepley.
The tests consisted of 22 state
ments given to 133 men and 34
women students on two separate
occasions The students were ask
ed to .check thqsc statements, with
’alnch,they most.nearly agreed.,
The* first sampling, taken im
mediately after, the , Cornell de
feat; showed a “relatively unfavor
able” student attitude} toward the
coaching staff in general The sec
ond, given to the same students
aflei the victories over Maryland
und Penn, showed a “significantly
more favorable” attitude
The scale used, based on the
technique developed by Thurstone
ut„the University of Chicago, is
divided into 11 units and permits
n maximum theoretical change
oTsix points The student attitude
increased in favor of the staff by
one'point, or almost 17 percent of
the possible maximum change in
tlus 1 paittcular case
“The results of this poll cannot
be computed on a percentage or
fractional busis, for the poll mere
ly'reveals the changes in student
attitude caused by the progress
of vthe team and w’as not made to
hpd out what percentage either ap
proves or disapproves of,the coach
ing. staff,” 'Dr.‘ Lepley warns
Deferment Fee Blanks
Are Now Obtainable
Application blanks for tbe -de
ferment of second semester, fees
are'available now at tbe Bursar’s
Office Closing date for filing ap
plications for tbe deferments is
January 7.
Can't This Happen Here?
v Eleven student editors of the
Punch Bowl, a University*of Penn
sylvania publication which, like
Froth, is an undergraduate “hu
mor,* magazine,” have been sus
pended from all editorial activities
because of risque jokes appearing
in their last issue
1400 Freshmen Expected At
'43 Pre-Election Meeting In
Schwab Auditorium Tonight
i All Frosh Reauired To Attend ■
ELECTIONS BOSS w ° ™' ena '
I Kiley, Yeager Slated To Start ,
Campaign With 3-Minute Talks
Backenstose Will Introduce Candidates;
Engel And Pergrin To Speak; Elections
Planned For Next Tuesday In Old Main
The biggest pie-election ti eshman mass meeting m Col
lege history will draw approximately 1,400 members of the
elass of '43 to Schwab Auditoiium at 7 p m. today.
A ruling by Student Tribunal will requite all freshmen
to attend the meeting, the purpose of which is to introduce
43 cand.Jales to theii Classmates
Highlight of the afTan will be
three-minute campaign speeches by
W. Byron Riley and Eugene R
Ydager, All-College and Independ
ent candidates, respectively, foi
freshman class president
Othei candidates, including Den
nis J Curney and George A Palm
er (for vice-president), Elsie L.
'Rooth and Wilhelmema Kipp (fot
secietary), Charles B Ruttenborg
and Paul H Richaids (for treas
uiei), and Jacqueline Shaffer am!
John M McLaughlin for histor
ian), will be introduced from the
platform by Thomas C Backen- 1
stose, cliau man of the Freshman
Elections Committee
A William Engel, Ji ’4O, chau
man of the All-College Elections
Committee, and David E Pergrin
’4O, Senior Class President, will
give short talks .Yells will be led
by head cheeileader Walter H,
Sypherd, Jr ’4O
Active caraaigmng by ’43 pai
ties will begin immediately after
the mass meeting and will con
tinue until elections, which will be
held next Tuesday m the first
floor lounge of Old Maui
THOMAS C BACKENSTOSE
300 Persons
Attend Night
Club Opening
‘Dry Dock’ Premiere
Labelled ‘Smash Hif
Satisfied with the acclaim of the
SUO poisons who attended the
opening oLthe'Dry DockNitc Club
hi the Old Main Sandwich Shop
Sutuulay night, tlie committee has
announced thut leservations for
next Saturdav muy now be made
at Student (Juiou
rv -Fium the setting of a bowery
dive, and the caiefree attitude of
that managed to re
sent* tables, an estimated 150
were turned away at the door as
favoiable opinion made Dry Dock
definitely a success
In Uue night club fashion Bud
Yanofslty, in his role of.muster of
ceremonies, led a “professional ’
flooi show that included some of
the best of campus talent Besides
Yanofskj there weie the Three
Stooges, who added to the hilarity
of the evening, Songstress Marce
Stringei and Maglciuu Jack Vos
buigli
Forestry Ball Has
Legendary Theme
Pa up Banyan, hero of the North
woods—he of the 76-barielled shot
gun It took a blacksmith three
weeks to load, he who owned Babe
the great blue ox, and he who
made the Grand Canjon b> diag
glng his cant-hook behind him—ls
the honoiary sponsor of the annu
al Forestry Ball which will be held
ftom 0 to 12 Sutuiday night in the
Armory
Built around a theme which will
involve many of tlie tales of this
famous legendary woodsman, the
Ball this yeai will be semi-formal
for the (list time It will be a
night when all “tall stories must
be believed,” the committee in
chuige of the dance said jester
day
Rex Rockwell's band will supply
the music with admission at 75
cents a couple
Penn Stato in a world that worships
PROGRESS
has its own Men of Mark, silent scientists who often have received
their least recognition among the very students they teach
*• The Collegian, believing that students should better realize the
contributions to progress which have come from the still Nlttany*
Valley, begins today the first of two series of
50-Second Chats
with these men Introduced first are the men under whom Penn
State’s research is conducted. Helen V Atkinson ’4O has written
.about these men in a series of eight bio sketches of
THE DEANS
—-eight men who guide the work of the graduate and the seven un
dergraduate schools, beginning on Page 4 of this issue with a sketch
of Dr. Frank D. Kern, dean of the Graduate School. The second se
ries, about faculty men whose scientific contributions have some
way aided the cause of progress, will be written by Adam A. Smy
ser '4l
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Five Students Hurt
In Automobile Crash
S jitxtul to the Collegiun
LJNGLESTOWN, Pa , Dec 4
Five Pennsylvania State Collegu
students were slightly mjuied heie
last night when then cai crashed
into a stump while they weie re
turning to State College after
spending the week-end at then
homes m Reading and Pottsville
The mjuied students weie Leon
M Knetz, ’4O, driver of the cat,
Leonard R. Greenaway ’4l, Clai
cnce W. Moon, Jr, M 2, Chester C
Curley, Ji ’4l, and Franklin P
Goettman Ml
All except Moon aie members
of the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity
at the College. Moon is a mem
ber of Tau Kappa Epsilon
College Architect
Has Larynx Removed
Dr Paul Philippe Ciet, recently
appointed as architect for the Col
lege, has undergone an opeiatron
ioi the "removal of his laivnx in
Philadelphia
Dr Cret’s wife said thut hei 63-
yeai-old husband is “Doing us well
at can be expected ”
“I am hopeful thut some day he
will be able to speak again, but I
am told that he will have to bo
taught,” she said
Dr. Cret won the gold medial of
the American Institute of Archi
tects last year for “the most dis
tinguished service to the profes
sion ”
♦ ♦ 4-
Yeager Heads
’43 Ticket Of:
Independents
By WILLIAM E FOWLER
Political guns boomed to right
and left this week as the freshman
Independents announced their can
didates, the M 3 AH College Party
released Us platform, a
suipiise move—a new Independent
Party chairman was named
Eugene It Yeagei was selected
as Independent nominee for fresh
man class president, with George
A. Palmer as his running mate
Wiihelmenia Kipp will seek the
post of secretary, with Paul H
Richaids and John RI McLaugh*
lin the Independent candidates for
treasurer and historian, respec
tively
On tbe-exe of active “campaign-"
ing, Frank ft Flynn was elected
chairman of the MJ Independent
Paity last ThujEday night Simul
taneously PaJmer the former part}
heud. was nominated for vice presi
dent
The follow lug six-point platform
was announced by the M 3 All Col
lege Paity
1 We advocate the building of a
Lion Shrine to represent the
spirit of Penn State and to be
used as a fitting place lor the
demonstration of that spirit
We me in favor of the painting
of murals in the lobby, of Old
Mpain to further the beauty aud
dignity of that building
We feel that the housing situ*
at ion in State College, admitted
ly bad. should have au immedi
ate solution
We Intend to further relations
between fraternity men, non
fraternitj men. and women of
Penn State through organiza
tions of mutual interest
We feel tjial the freshman class
should be allowed representa
tion on Student Tribunal
We think that freshman wom
en's customs, as well as the
men's customs, should he de
pendent upon the outcome of
the freshman sophomore boxing
matches
Phi Lambda Upsilon
Admits 35 Members
In Fall Ceremonies
Phi Lunibda Ifpsilon. honorary
chemical society, Initiated 19
giaduate students, nine seniors,
and seven juniors at fall initiation
ceremonies in the Stock Pavilion
at 7 30 p m last Thursday
The undergraduates initiated
were Robert K Smith MO. James
W Shigiey MO, John D Garber.
Geiald B Bready Ml. Oliver A
Schaeffer Ml, Harry D Sarge Jr
MO, James R Hetherington Mo, Al
bert L Myerson Ml, .Samuel
Schwartz Ml, Robert W Kindle
40, Charles G Overberger Ml,
Leon L Bertram Ml, Robert F
Filbert, Jr Ml, James Q. Under
wood MO, John R Lotz MO, and
Alfred J Pogteraro MO
The graduate students w'ere
George W Blum, Lynn J .Brady,
Chailes E Lewis, Thomas'P Car
ney, Edward O Ramler, Romeo B
Wagnei, Gerald C. Bassler, How
ard T Francis, Herbert H. John
son, George W, Moersch, Rudolf J
Pfister, Anthony C Sbabica ,Jr,
David M Jenkins )Jr, Warren
Stubblebine, Richard B Green
burg, James R. Oyler. Rafael Btir
gos-Macias, Jason E Matthews
Jr, and MJ'ers F Gribbins