0.11.4 (t . , , it n Successor COMPLETE To The Free Lance, Established /887, rnu fair VOL. 36—No 36 Bids On Movable Equipment For New Buildings Will Be Opened By GSA On February 10, Loman Announces Latest Group Includes Several Thousand Items Which Total Over Half Of $611,000 Appropriation; Bids On Two Minor Group's Open On February 19 Bids on the first large group of contracts for movable equipment for the new College buildings—Group 40, laboi-, atory and pharrnlacy equipment—wilLbe opened by the Gen eral State Authority on February 20, Harold W Loman, Col lege Phichasing Agent, declared yesterday. Group 40 embraces several thousand items, the total expense of which will amount to well over half of the $606,- 000 Authority appropriation for movable equipment here. The list of items for the initial group which affects every new building on the campus with the exception of the Li brary, required 250 pages of paper General divisions of the mov able equipment in this huge group include balances, electric ma chinery, electric apparatus, fur naces and ovens, optical equip ment, water and steam baths, and miscellaneous articles 'Bids on two minor equipment groups, beds and cots and mat tresses and pillows, will be opened by the General State Au thorny on February 19, Loman said. Bids on other groups have not been advertised for as yet Explaining how the contracts will be awarded, Loman pointed out that Group 40 has been brok en,down into 95 "lots," each deal ing with a specific type of equip ment. This arrangement, recent ly accepted by GSA officials upon Loman's recommendation, will en able each 'bidder to bid on any number of lots he wishes Thus the 'contracts undei this group may be awarded to_one bidder, 95 bidders, or some intermediate number ,Sids Due ,Feb 20 "Although the bids are due February , -'20," the purchasing ,ageut, declared, is impossible ,to„pyedicAtist how,soßiazyle... - ecitt, tiacts'iv'tlflie`TWardeit. ,Bidstritst be. carefully , analyzed, since' they involve a great deal - of detail" After the 'contracts are award ed;'' fabrication of many of the items , will be necessary before they can be installed, Loman in dicated This may take from one to ' three months, and makes it 'inevitable that some of the con tracts will not be completed un til. Summer. Gioup 40 and the two minor groups on which bids have al ready been requested by the Au thority are only three of a total of 46 groups included in the GSA movable equipment program, Lo man concluded Teddy Wilson's Orchestra To Play In War Setting At Military Ball Tonight ,:. Teddy Wilson's orchestra fea turing Jean Eldridge, "The Phe nomenon of the Piano " Th it s the billing for Military Ball Recreation Hall at 9 p m tonight According , to' Chairman Arthur M Skibbe '4O, the dancers will find,themselves "behind the lines somewhere between, here, and there" In other words, the dance foot will be a scene of meriament in contrast to the field of battle surroundings The floor is to be surrounded by at med guards and unlit:sly Held pieces Something new, has been cleat ed by this year's committee, as it is the flrst time that Military Ball has ,featured a name band and also the first year the cadet affair has been scheduled for the spacious pecfeation Hall lather than the Armory ~ ..,Teddy Wilson's band has been receiving .con,istently fine com ment since its recent organization and; .. combined with his intricate piano arrangements; is said to be one of the up and coming swing Outfits. One-Credit Swim Course Scheduled This Semester new - two-hour one credit Swimming course, Physical Educa tion 181, will be given during the second semester for the training of instructors in swimming, diving, life saving, and water safety Mrs Virginia A:Jeffrey, instruc tor-In physical education, will con 'duet the women's class which meets in White Hall at 4 p m, Monday, by appointment, and Al bert 'P. Michaels, instructor' rn :physical education,' will supervise , the men's group in Glennland Pool `which meets at the same time Engineering Open House Sel April 13; Dance April 12 Balog, Goodman Chosen As Chairmen; -18 Are Named On Committees Michael Balog '4O and Jerome N Goodman '4O were appointed at a meeting of the Engineering School Council yesterday to serve as co chairman of the annual Engineer ing Open House which will climax a week-end of "engineer" activi ties on April 13 Eighteen students were also named to six sub-committees April 12 was set as the date for the Engineer's Dance, which will be held ' m - Bee Hall The dance Committee will:Am- chosen in the c'Corniiiitiees4Listed . Those appointed to sub-commit tees were Electrical Engineering —Charles D McCarthy '4O (chair man); Robert B Blannmg '4l, and Ralph B Stiawbridge '42, Mech anical Engineering—Robert Gun del '4O (chairman), Walter R Hos terman '4l, and John T MacGuire '42, Industrial Engineering George R Keehn '4O (chairman), Richard It Geissingei '4l, and George Yamas '42 Civil Engineering Ralph E Graber '4O (chairman), Albert G Butler Jr '4l, and Louis Laushey '42, Architecture and Architectural Engineering—.l Lee Thome '4O (chairman), David L Garratt '4l, and Charles Goldberg '42, Adver tising—Aichie R Cot nell '4O, Ben jamin Crilly '4O, and 'Robert M Moyer '4O . Speech Clinic At Erie Herbert Koepp-Bakei and ,Hai - old Westlake, professors of speech, conducted a speech , clinic in the Erie public schools on Wednesday and Thursday They were assisted by Miss Dorothy-Lou Furey and Eugene T McDonald Bon Bon To Present Tops ln , Singing At Senior Ball To most swing fans, the name George TunneU wouldn't mean any more than a can opener would to a pengum, but if we mentioned the name Bon Bon nobody who is really up on swing "stuff" would mistake it for anyone but the featured singer with Jan Savitt's Top Hatters. • BON BON Z 658 STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1940 3-Day Details Released For State Parley Program For Convention • Includes Campus Figures And Daily Group forums With the arrival of favorable returns from many of the 82 col leges and universities, and with complete returns expected by the deadline tomorrow, David E Per m in '4o:convention chairman, re leased a tentative program today for the Pennsylvania =Went gov einment conference scheduEd here on March 1,2, and 3 Although all plans are subject to change, the convention commit tee has outlined a temporary schedule for the convention's three-day stay on the campus On Friday morning, all repec sentatives from the various schools will register, followed by a luncheon in the Sandwich Shop with probably Arthur R War nock, Dean of Men, as the speak er. - Open Forum Friday An open forum on student gov ci nment, in the afternoon, and a dinner in Atherton Hall, featur ing a prominent speaker, and the W S G. A dance in the evening, will conclude Friday's activities Including a new feature in thc. present ,set-up, the committee has decided to have round table dis ciNsions in addition to the for ums One of these discussions will start off Saturday's program, which will consist of another luncheon in the Sandwich Shop, with another campus dean as guest, a boxing match in the af ternoon, and an evening banquet at the Nittany Lion Inn with Pres ident Hetzel as host Sunday morning, resolutions , for the convention will be drawn I up, officers, for next year elected, and - the 194,1 convention site chosen . , The convention committee will hold-emeeting .Irloriday to deter— mine how to iiiindlethe question= names which they are receiving from delegates and to iron out other minor details concerning the student parley College Chapter 01 Civil Engineers Praised Highly Dy' National President The local student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engin eers has been commended by Don ald H Sawyer of Washington, D. C , society president s , for having excelled in conducting its affairs in an effective and meritorious manner during the academic year 1938-39 In a letter addressed to Prof John S Leister, of the civil en gmeering department, faculty ad viser of the student chapter, Saw yer adds that "Inasmuch as a chapter's success can result only from ability, punctuality, and dil igence on the part of Its officers and members, the year's record speaks well for the character of the organization and of the mem bership " However, George Tonnell and Bon Bon are really the same per son and you'll heat the tops in modern song-styling tf you're present at Senior Ball two weeks from tonight when he puts the lyrics to Jan Savttt's famous shuffle rhythm Savitt, who wound up a spec tacular stay at the Hotel Lincoln in New York early this week; met his colored songster while they were both at Station WCAU That was before Savitt's sky-rocket rise to the top of the swing lad der. Bon Bon has been with the Top Hatters for the past three years. Tickets for Senior Ball are priced at $3.85, co-chairmen Da vid J. Morgan-and James R Saus ser announced several weeks ago. A theme for Senior Ball was chosen from bids yesterday after the Collegian went to press. Res ervations for booths will go on sale at Student Union some time next week, it was announced by the co-chairmen. Poor Exhibits 2 Studies For Old Main Mural i Al New York City Show 1- Two studies for the murals now being prepared for 01# Main are included in a one-man' show of work in several medic which Henry Varnum Poor is having at the Rehn Gallery in New York City this month. t The studies Poor is displaying are of a forge scene originally planned for the mural and a con ference fable scene which he has decided on to replace the forge , scene. This latter, according 'to Francis E. Hyslop, instructor in fine arts, is the finest work in , the show. Besides oils, Poor is displays ing a group of Pennsylvania 4. sketches., a group of drawings: , and full size cartoons for the. , murals he painted in the Depart; ment of Interior Building he' Washington Fletcher To Talk On. Art Exhibit Noe Next Wednesday-1 Current Showing Of ,40? Prints By Modern Artist:s, Is Finest This Year The current exhibition of "40 Large Prints by Modern Artists,' which is considered the best to show in the College Art Ga 303 Main Engineering, during the present academic year, will be sup= plemented with a gallery talk, by Hartley Fletcher, of the depart ment of tine arts, at 7 30 p m Wednesday Miss Fletcher's talk, "Processes of Modern Prints," will be the sec ond _in the winter group of Fines Arts Lectures Organized by the Museum' of' Modern Art, New York, as a trav eling exhibition to be shown a over the.UnitedStates,,the..extilia, icon will remain here until Febru ary 17 It includes 21 prints which the museum used in its tenth an niversary exhibition of "Art in Our Time " The great majority of the prints are by the foremost artists of the last 50 years and all were deliber ately chosen for their large size and bold character Among the artists represented are the Frenchmen Arp, Braque, Cezanne, Derain, Gauguin, Legei, Matisse, Redon, Renoir, Rouault, Toulouse-Lautrec, Vlaminck, and Vuillard, the Spaniard Picasso, the Germans Kollwitz, Nolde, and Max Ernst (who now lives in Paris and has become a leader of the Sul realists), the Swiss Klee, the Rus sian -Kandinsky, the Americans Bellows, Chariot, Dehn, Wanda Gag, Grosz, Feininger, "Pop" Hart, Kuniyoshi, Pascm, Raphael Soyer, and Mary Cassatt (who spent most of her life abroad), and the Mexi cans aiozco and Slqueirob Insects Depict Dictators, Humans LiVe Like Insects; Are Dictators Humans? Seventeen years before Czecho slovakia ungratefully a ccep led Herr Hitler's invitation to become pail of the "Nazi Nation," two Czechs, Kai 1 and Joseph Capek, Jolted the drama world by writing a play about insects The comedy was written in 1922, and, coincidentally, 1922 can also be recalled as the year in which two European gentlemen decided to Increase the broadcloth ,ndustry by having then followers wear "black shirts" and "red shirts " But insects, as yet, have not been classified as dictators, and dictatois, as yet, have not been classified Not realizing this, the Czech brotheis persisted in writ ing, "The Woild We Live In," a play which attempts to show to the audience that the only difference between insects and dictatois is that insects don't have dandruff, halitosis, pink tooth brush, and B 0 -, The Capek brothels decided that man could see the type of life that he lives by studying the life of an insect As early as 1922, it seems, the Czechs had the premonition that it was possible to live the life of an insect, and, since March 15, 1939, they have, been taking a practicum course on their 1922 theory The Penn State Players will celebrate their 20th anniversary with this captivating production carved out of the strife and suffer ing of "dictator dictated" Russia and Italy in Schwab Auditorium on March 15 and 16. Averages Used As Basis For Class Cutting Professors Cooperating In Movement For Fairer Elimination Of Students Local professors are cooperating in the movement to use scholastic average as a basis for eliminating students from over-crowded class es, College authorities stated yes terday At the same time, officals indi cated that reports of arbitrary dis missal were being investigated and that professors not cooperating would be required to observe the rule In several cases of unfair "kicking-out," it was reported, ad justments have been made and stu dents have been reinstated in the courses in question The problem of eliminating stu dents from classes was discussed in an editorial, "Semester Pink Slip," published in the last issue of the Collegian This editorial po,nted out that "a few minutes extra time on the part of every instructor confronted with the pro blem" would mean a much fairer method of cutting down classes This semester masks the first time in a long period that the old College rule requiring scholastic criteria for reducing classes has been enforced It was formerly the practice to allow each instructm to ndiust his classes in any way. he saw tit Honorary To Hold Dinner At Lion Inn Advertising. Fraternity To Initiate At Banquet ,Piof George Burton Botch kiss,_New York University's not .latittiortty,onsadvertising,—will be: guest' speaker at the annual initiation banquet of Alpha Delta Sigma, national honorary adver tising fraternity, to be held at the Nittany Lion Inn at 630 p m Sunday, February 18 The formal banquet will be pre ceded by the initiation as honor ary members of David Knipe, Bethlehem Globe-Times, Col Charles C Curtis, Allentown Call-Chronicle, and C M Snyder, Reading Eagle The undergradu ate initiates will receive their pins during the banquet. Prof Hotchkiss will speak on "Current Trends in Advertising" at a meeting open to all students interested in advertising in Room 121 Liberal Arts Building at 11 a m Monday, February 19, un der the auspices of Alpha Delta Sigma and the journalism depart ment Or. Forbush Is Speaker for Sunday Chapel Di Bliss Forbush, executive secretary of the Baltimore Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, will speak on "Only Hu man," in chapel Sunday morning Dr Forbush is also Vice Chairman of the Friends General Conference and author of "Towards Under standing Jesus' and "The Gospel of Mark " As Geneva Travel Fellow, Dr Forbush spent three months in Europe last Spring working with refugee groups in Germany, visit ing International Centers in Swit zerland, France, and Holland, and lecturing m England Interested in education, Di Forbush is Chau man of the Board of the Baltimore Friends School and Trustee of Morgan College Collegian Business Staff Will Hold Meeting Today The Collegian business staff will hold a meeting of all junior s board members and sophomore candidates in 313 Old Main at S p. m. today. Any candidates not in attendance will be auto matically dropped from the sophomore board, C. Russel Eck '4O. business manager, has an nounced. - Alumnus Elected Senator James Grove Fulton '24, who has been elected to the State Senate from the 45th' Senatorial District, was selected among The 3,000 out standing young Americans by "Young Men of America " He at tended Harvard'Law School after graduating here. „ Job Placement Is Expected To Work By Next New Booth Arrangement For Payment Of Fees Is Announced By Bursar The Bursar's office yesterday announced an innovation in payment of fees for this year. The order of fee payments on February 15 and 16 will be ac cording to alphabetical windows excepting that separate windows for deferred payments will be set up in the center The new order of windows from left to right are. A to Bit Bla to Cry Cub to Fre Fri to Her Hes to Key All deferred Kov to Mat Mau to Ptn Pip to Sga Sha to Tra Tra to Zur Two Auto Victims In Serious Shape Since Friday Crash Cramer, Harkins Worse Than First Reported; Other Student Improves - BULLETIN An operation to relieve pressure on the brain of Berne F Cramer, College junior who has been in a critical condition since he was in jured in an auto accident at Mar tha Furnace last Friday, was suc cessful and he is improving rapid ly at University Hospital in Phil adelphia, it was leaned in State College today Meanwhile, John W Harkins, victim of the same accident, is making a slow but steady improvement in the Centre County Hospital at Bellefonte Heine F Ciamer '4l and John W Harkins '4l, who had previ ously been reported as recovering from an automobile accident which occurred last Friday, ,were in a critical condition this week Cramer, the mole seriously in jured of the two, was taken to the University Hospital in Philadel phia in an ambulance aftei X-Rays disclosed he was suffering Isom a fractured skull Hatklns, who was suffei mg from a fractured left collarbone, broken nose, 'lacerations about the face, and head and body [muses, had lapsed into a semi-coma at the Bellefonte Hospital Houghton W Clark, Jr '4O, the other injured student, was report ed getting along well Jack A Sloan '42, the fourth occupant of the car, escaped injury Club Plans Program The Louise Homer Club will give a musical program in Mrs Gail B Pope's apartment in Ath erton Hall at 7 p m Tuesday, Febi nary 20 with Harriet A Wil hams '4O in charge Hitler Contributes Kriedl To Penn - State Faculty In these days of chaos and confusion in Europe, it isn't often that Heir Adolph Hitler does a favor for anyone. But, believe it, it's true, the "Beast of Berlin",has done something for Penn State When the Nazi invaders swept through Czechoslovakia in 1938, the industrial and research inter ests of Dr Norbert Kiiedl were among the numerous things which the Germans destroyed. Dr Kriedl, who was at the tune in America supervising tprepaia bons of the Czech glass' exhibit for the New York World's Fair, found that it wasn't "any use to go back" to his homeland. The glass specialist found, his life work in Czechoslovakia ruined and 'sought similar interests in this country After a short time as consultant PRICE FIVE CENTS Gradually Expanding Program May Finally Include Undergraduate As Well As Graduate Assistance Director, When Chosen, Will Be Allowed To Work Out Details Of Development; liberal Arts Probably first School To Come Under Plan - See Edltorial, "The Placement Bureau," on page 2 The Student Placement Buieau authorized last month by the Board of Trustees will begin a gradually expanding program by next September with its work starting as soon as a full-time dii ector is appointed, it was indicated yester day. - ___ Indications nere that the Bureau—which the Trustees gave President Ralph D. Hetzel blanket authority to create= would develop gradually under the guidance of the director with its first work in those schools of the College which do not now have adequate placement services Eventually the function of the Bureau would be expanded to in clude all schools, to make contact with all branches of employment, to offer service to alumni as well as to graduating senims, and to coordinate the undergraduate em ployment and assistance work which is now handled by a great variety of campus organizations That the service will not be av aillble for the present senior class was indicated by the announce ment that it is likely to take sev eral months to find a man equip ped to serve as director The - first scbool likely to be serv ed by the new bureau Is Liberal Arts which at present is the only one that has no placement serv ice whatever Plans for the Placement Bureau have been worked out during the past 10 years by several different groups, among these the Alumni Association, the Alumni Commt tee of 100, and a special commit tee appointed last Fall by Presi dent Hetzel, who had been consid ering the matter for several years No definite program, however, was placed before the Trustees at their meeting in Harusburg on January 25 and 26, and President Hetzel, an ex-officio member of the Board, was given blanket author ity to create the Bureau Although all schools but Liberal Arts now offer some sort of place ment service the best organized is that established by the School of Education which has standard forms and a detailed procedure for its work Orris '39 Escapes Death As Training Plane Wrecks William L Orris '39, former stu dent architect here, miraculously escaped death last week when his plane crashed and was completely wrecked as he was practicing solo acrobatics at the Flying Cadet Training Base in St Louis, Mo Suffering from a fractured right leg, broken left hand, and minor cuts about the face, Orris will re turn to his training base after a few months recuperation He needs only five hours to complete his cadet training and be transferred for advanced flying to Randolph Field, Tex for a glass company in Dunkirk, N Y, Dr. Kriedl came to Penn State as an assistant professor of glass technology in the School of Mineral Thdustries, where he is de voting his time to the application of phosphates to glass and other ceramic materials Speaking of the Nazi absorption of his fatherland, Pr Krtedl said he knew "that the German Anch luss would wreck the glass indus try, Czechoslovakia's biggest en terprise, because it would put our exports at a disadvantage in the world market." Bureau Start Fall Trial Period May - Bring Expansion Of Hospitalization Experiment Next Fall Will _Determine_ Extent Of Free Health Service An experimental operation be ginning in September of the hos pitalization plan approved last month by the Board of Trustees will determine the extent of the free service to be given by the Col lege Health Service in exchange for an increase in the annual stu dent health fee from $5 to $lO Alf eady students have been promised seven days of free hos pitalization and the elimination of dispensary charges under the new system but Dr Joseph P Riten out. directoi of the Health Sei vice, indicated yesterday that the amount of free service might be expanded if the trial period be ginning next September shows the budget would allow it. The additional return to the stu dents would come in the form — of an increase in the number of days of free hospitalization, provision for paying bills for surgic - al cases which must be sent to Bellefonte, or the elimination of charges still remaining for such services as spe cial X-Rays, special drugs, or ex traordinary hospital attention which might be demanded by set mus sickness See Large Increases Estimates on which the trial budget was worked out call for a 75 percent increase in patients at the College Hospital under the new plan and a 25 per cent increase in Dispensary calls The new hospitalization plan will be mstalled in the Summer School begnning in 1941 with a 75 cent fee charge made during the two three week sessions-and a $1 50 charge for the mini "ies sion of six weeks In connection with the new pro giam, Dr Ritenour announced yes terday, the Health Service will publish a book of regulatons gov erning its treatment and -service It wll also seek to extend its pres ent program to require each stu dent to have two complete physic al examinations, the one now re quired on entering the College and an additional examination of all gi aduatmg students First Aid Class Will Open To 20 Students This Term A new First Ald class, conducted by Lorin Elder, will start next Friday, February 16 J-, Orins Keller, assistant to the president, has announced that the class will be open to 20 students Eighteen men completed the course -at the end of the first semester.— - ---- - - . Department heads who desire to have their staff members - take the course have been requested to notify Elder