Page Four Invitation Deadline Set Saturday noon will be the last date for ordering Commence ment invitations. announcements and programs at Student Union desk. It was announced yesterday by Arnold L. Schwartz '4O and Everett F. Waltman '4O. co 'chairmen of the invitations corn , mittee The Univetsity of Colorado next fall will offer a two-year course for the 53 per cent who spend on ly that amount of I:me in college S'tttle Shows at 1.30, 3.00. 6:30, 8:30 TODAY and WED THURS., FRI. I One of the strangest—and most beautifully-ihemed plc tures you'll ever see! . A romance A WA • 1111/ . :11,1116,' •I Shows at-4.30, 3.00, 6 30, 8.30 I LAST TIMES TODAY I WARNER RRRTRW MERLE GEORGE 7` r OBERON•BR i ENT '44l ' 7/9/I.4fk ADDED 'THE DOMINEERING MALE' A Pole Smith Specially WED. THURS . • • Shows at - - - 6:30, 8:30 Matinee Saturday Only at 1:30 TODAY ONLY The Thrilling Story of War on the Sea "NORTH SEA PATROL" WEDNESDAY ONLY ANN SOTHERN JOHN CARROLL RITA JOHNSON "CONGO MAISIE" THURSDAY ONLY GEORGE RAFT WILLIAM HOLDEN HUMPHREY BOGART JANE BRYAN f9wlslßLE.oruns", BUSBY SAYS--- It ain't going to be long now until you'll see the biggest show on earth and that's no exagerra tion The All-collitch circus this coming Saturday is whipping into fine shape as men and Gene Wettstone are cracking the pro verbial whip. Last night men and G W over saw the clowns in rehearsal, and these guys Whitey, Rollo, and Co, are going to come darn near to stealing the show from me How ever, my act, which I'm keeping a deep secret is going to be the most stupendous I've attempted since I was kicked out of Ringling Bros Wait'll you see me Of all the things in the circus, there is only one which actually scares me to watch That is this guy Clan Hess, who will attempt to break the world's mark at "The Muscle Grind" feat I'm waiting for him to tear both arms out of his sockets some day Very close to Hess' act is Mom Beck's, who will hold onto a piece of leather by his teeth and be lifted up to the roof of Wreck Haul. I used to do this trick for Barnum, but now that my teeth belong to that dentist out in Fris co, I ain't able to do the stunt Ee Cee Davis has a plan for breaking up the circus He and his two buddies, Nick (Waistline) Thiel and Ray (Slug) Conger are now digging a tunnel under Wreck Haul and expect to come up in the middle of the floor Sat urday night. They haven't been seen for two days as they are busy at their digging and the Corner Room (free adv..) is sending them food for their ordeel You can still get reserved seat tickets for the circus from Jorge Donovan at stewdent onion and if you get there too late there'll be lots of general admish tickets on sale Sat. night. Elections (Continued from page I) One approved member of each party will be stationed at the rear exit of, the first fl oor lounge to check the party lists with voters Party chairmen will be allowed to examine these lists eve* , hour for no longer than five minutes. Members of the Elections Com mittee, in addition to Engel, are Margaret M Cimahosky '4O, Mary Louise Freisher '4O, Mary E Mil ler '4O, Janet A Reese '4O, Eloise F Rockwell '4O, Mary R Wirtz '4O, L Eleanor Benfer '9l, Michael Balog '4O, G Warren Elliott '4O, Clarence H. Evans '4O, David E, Pergrm '4O, George E Ritter '4O, and Richard C Peteis '4l The complete list of nominees follows All• College President and vice-president Arnold C. Latch and Robert N Baker (C), Thomas C. Backenstose and Richard M. Getssinger (I) Senior Class (1941) President and vice-president William B Bartholomew and Frank M Platt (I), Edgar V Hall and Joseph R Scalzo (C) Secre tary. Grace E Rentschler (I), Mary Jane Dalton (C). Treasurer Frank W Stanko (I), Oscar Kran ich (C). Junior Class (19421 President and vice-president H. Leonard Krouse and Max S Peters (C), Gerald F Doherty and Robert D Baird (I) Secretary Ethel M. Patton (C), Mildred M Taylor (I) Treasurer James W Rittei (C), Benjamin L Seem (I) Sophomore Class (1943) President and vice-president Frank R Flynn and Leonard 0 Frescoln (I) ,Charles B Elder and Robert F Ramin (C). Secretary Sara E Miller (I), Helen J Chi appy (C) Treasurer William T Richards (I), Charles B Button berg (C) CAMPUS RADIO MIMICS Phone 2161 . J. C. "DOC" HUBER , 600 S. PUGH ST. Fordhaan University SCHOOL OF LAW New York Case System Three-Year Day Course Four-Year Evening Course Co• Educational Member of Assn. of American Law Schools College Degree or Two Years of College Work with Good Grades Required for Entrance Transcript of Record Must Be Furnished Morning, Early Afternoon and Evening Classes , For further information address Registrar of Fordham Law School 293 370.4wity, Mow Yei:e Poor Is Versatile Artist And Excellent Workman Painter Faces Many Problems In Old Main Fresco, But He May Excel Even Justice Building Murals Most people are willing to grant that besides being a carpenter, boat-builder, steel-worker, mason, toofei, gardner, potter, plasterer, and sculptor, Henry Varnum Poor is a painter and a very good one This is a rare thing indeed Most artists have critics who call them signpainters and . consider that overestimation About the worst thing anybody has said about Poor is that his color range is limited because he is chiefly concerned with essentials Even that is not very disturbing be cause it bungs out one of the characteristics that makes him a popular artist Thiough this he has achieved a simplicity and a 'boldness that make him most in telligible to the layman, who is probably the real critic of aft Poor's critics say he is a splen did workman and an industrious one He is not much of a talker He is a good writer He is confi dent in his reliance on himself. He is probably a great man Like the true workman, in his paintings he is concerned with direct statement and does not make even oblique appeals to the sentimental or the literacy, his critics say Since his return from Europe, they say he has shown, the influence of the French but without indebtedness to any par ticular artist ' Henry Poor is not stody For the time being only, the culmina tion of his work lies in the six mural panels he has done for the Justice Department Building 'in Washington Here Poor faced limitations of subject matter, and the limitations in time which fres co painting on wet plaster neces sarily creates To Poor's credit, it was here that he did his best work Painting at Penn State he must face similar problems His sub ject is the beginning of the Col lege The,space again is difficult a triangular area over the flanking stairs in Old Main Lobby where dimension and proportion call for serious consideration The painting is again a fresco, de manding the same applied work as his Justice panels His approach to the Penn State problem has already won him praise here By choosing Lincoln and the Morril Land Grant Act as his central theme, he has made the mural mole than just a local history, his design for handling the space with a triadic effect and scale—Lincoln in the center, In dustrial Pennsylvania to the right and Agricultural Pennsylvania to the left—has already been called masterful, and only the actual painting remains to complete the job When finished, the Penn State fresco may prove his best, may overshadow the Justice Building murals. The mural will be among the great ones of this age and the Lincoln will be among the finest in emstence All this is being said It may well be true A publishing house after seeing Junior PrOm (Continued from pogo 11 with 18-year-old vocalist Ray Eb erle and luscious blonde songstress Marion Hutton, Miller made ready to storm the swing heights With a late September booking, the band went into the popular State Ballroom in Boston Sur rounding collegians liked it The Victor Record Company thought the boys were good enough to sign up for regular Bluebird releases When Glenn went on to New York Paradise, swing critics began to whisper that Miller was the man to watch in 1939 The critics were right from there on Miller stock went up like a rocket. He broke records at thee. Mcadowbrook He was a tremen dous sensation at Westchester's Glen Island Casino In the prover bial hop-skip-and-jump, Glenn Miller was on the top of the mus ical heap—everywhere acclaimed as the nation's number one band maestro with the nation's number one band Which proves that sometimes it pays to skip classes to toot a trom bone If You Really Want GOOD PRINTING We can interpret your needs and offer medical sugges tions, for good pi rating doesn't lust happen It can come only after a careful study of your requhements Let us take the responsibil ity of assuring you good printing. NITTANY PRINTING 4-PUBLISHING CO. PENN STATE COLLEGIAN the design for Pours ,Penn State mural is considering a delay in its new edition on the history of art so as to include this newest mural These is more about Poor that is not about his critics. He was born in Chapman, Kan, in 1888. He attended the public schools in Kansas City. Already, by the time he reached high school, Poor's father had discovered that his son was continuing the habit of draw ing formed in early childhood`and warned him that he did not wish him to indulge in "art silliness." Graduated from high school, Pool went to Stanford University where he was a star athlete as well as a Phi Beta Kappa. In the summer he worked in the wheat fields and the lumber camps of the west and northwest. From his summer labors he saved enough to spend a year in Europe where he made a bicycle tour of the con tinent and studied art in London and Paris After a year in Europe, Poor re turned to Stanford and taught drawing and painting there and later at the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco He was drafted during the war, and at the front drew innumerable portraits of fellow soldiers until he was appointed by officers, who wanted pictures of themselves, to be the "regimental artist" At the end of the war, the artist settled near New York and in 1920 held his first one-man exhibition in a New York dealer's gallery Since young painters rarely make a living from their art, Poor de cided to take up some form of art which had a more' practical mar ket. He purchased a kiln from a friend, bought a book on pottery, and began to make simple deco rated pottery which had an almost immediate success For 10 years he supported himself through it and in 1928 helped to organize the American Designer's Gallery where he exhibited a bathroom done in his own decorative tiles Although Poor put a great dell of himself into this work, he 'was not leaching the goal he had set for himself as an artist so in 1930 he gave up pottery as a main vo cation and went to Europe to paint. Ever since then he' has given more time to painting than to pottery John W. White Medal, 3 Scholarships Awarded By Senate Committee The John W White Medal and Prize and three John W White Fellowships were awarded to foul members of the graduating class i °commended for the highest schol astic honors by the Committee on Academic Standards at the meet ing of the College Senate last t'veek Sylvia L Bernstein '4O was nom inated for the medal and prize award for outstanding scholaiship Marianne C Bessemer, George E Inkeep, and John .1 Trentm, all seniors, are winners of the fellowships, each one valued dt $OOO Sara E Hileman '4O. was named alternate Five seniors and seven juniors wei c selected as Evan Pugh Schol ars for outstanding academic ach ievements The seniors are Mary E Hatton, Leon M Knetz, Elmer D Longfellow, Calvin D Mc- Carthy, and Martin S Voris -The juniors selected are Gerald ,B Bready, Louis N Granger, Al bert L Myerson, Norman Racusin, Herman Smith, Leo Sommer, and John C Williams ' _ CLASSIFIED ADS Claseilied ads are accepted-only et Student Union Office in Old Main and must be paid befoie insertion Ads are accepted up to 1 p.m. on the day preceeding publication. TYPEWRITERS—AII makes ex- pet lly repaired. Fellable and office machines tot sale ,ut rent Mal 2342 F Mann, 127 W. Beaver avenue 16-Sept WANTED —By faculty cotiple, one-half of duplex house or small bungalow, unfurnished Must have living room, two bedrooms, kitchen and private bath Will oc cupy June I. Reply to Box B, Stu dent Union 241-31 c-GD WANTED—A third fellow to help fill furnished apartment.' Rea sonable Inquire 428 W. College ave. Phone 9183 EXPERIENCED chef and caterer with 11 years experience desires work in fraternity. Write box 349, Times Office; State College 246-413-1:14, Penn Slate Club Officers To Be Inducted Thursday Installation of the Penn State Club 1940-41 officers will take place at the annual spring ban quet in the Hotel State College at 6 30 p m Thursday The outstanding non-fraternity senior, annually selected by the Penn State Club, will be named at this time to receive the Club scroll His name will be inscribed on the plaque bearing the names of for mer men who were honored Officers of the executive board who %yin be installed are Theodore Rice '4l, president; William B Leober '42, vice-president, Spur geon IS Condo '4l, secretary, Ar thur Peskoe '42, 4reasurer, Robert A Henkel '4l, social chairman, and Edgar V Hall '4l, publicity I I chairman Hort Club Constitution Adopted; Officers/Named Organized to combine the inter ests now covered by five clubs in the horticulture department, the Penn State Horticulture Club re cently adopted a constitution and elected officers The new officers are Samuel Virgilio, Jr '4l, president, James R Zurlluh '4l, vice-president, Finley B Jones '4l, treasurer, Ro bert A Powers, Jr '42, secretary, and John M. Phillips '42, Ag Stu dent Council representative FACULT Questions asked about instruc tors in the Collegian faculty toll begun yesterday are I—Does he seem to know the sub bed matter of the course , (a) Is constantly unable to answer questions about the . subject (b) Frequently unable to ans wer questions (c) Occasionally unable to answer questions (d) Rarely unable to answer ques tions (e) Never unable to ans wer questions 2—ls he well-informed outside his own field' (a) Frequently dis cusses several other fields of knowledge accurately (b) Dis cusses one or two other fields accurately (c) Moderately ac curate when discussing other fields (d) Frequently inaccur ate when discussing other fields (e) Seems lost when dis .cussing other fields 3—Have clear explanations been made of the difficult parts of the course? (a) All of the difficult material made clear. (b) Most of the difficult parts made clear (c) Some of the difficult parts hazy. (d) Most of the difficult, parts hazy (e) Only simplest is explained 4—Does he make the course inter testing9 (a) Very boresome (b) Somewhat borcssome. (c) Fairly interesting (d) Interesting (e) Very stimulating s—Does he present the matetial to such a way that the student Is, You get twice the plea• - 4 sure watching the CRANE TWINS in the Broadway 4 . Revue Hit "Hellzapop pin'" because there ore , , 2 two of 'ern ...the busiest W,IT pair of dancing twins you' ,ike. ever saw. 437 e 040"' ,wfwv.w4-- POLL Q aware of the practical applica tion, (a) Entirely aware (b) Somewhat aware (c) Fairly aware (d), Questions' practical application (e) Student sees no practical apPlication 6—Does the organization of the course facilitate learning' (a) Extremely difficult to make sense out of the course (b) Poor organization' (c) Fair oi ganization Id) Good organiza- ton (e) Organization greatly facilitates learning 7—Have his examinations shown accurately what you have learn ed in the course' , (a) Grade four points too high or too low (b) Grade in error by three points. (c) Grade in error by two points (d) Grade in error by one point (e) Received correct grade (Space is also provided to indicate reasons if the stu dent feels his grade has not been a good indication of his knowledge B—Does he have mannerisms, voice, or other personal baits that interfere with wour , irig 7 (a) Personal traits facili tate learning (le) Personal traits have no effect on learning (c) Personal traits slightly dis distracting (d Personal traits distracting (e) Personal traits prevent learning (Space is also provided to indicate specific ' traits which hinder learning ) 9—Does he have a desirable atti- a lest asz;., the in tan/ Smokers - are Guying 'em acks at' a time" bbcauk -aye DEFINITELY MILDER, - CDOLER= G and BETTER-TASTING erfields are made from the world's garette tobaccos and they're made size, jn shape, in the way theyhiirn everything about Chesterfield, is, just for your smoking pleasure., BETTYMAE AND BEVERLY CRANE es ef 'Tot „ ~, y e : 4 , t Tuesday, April 23, 1940 ESTIONS tude toward his students?, (a) Seems to dislike students thor oughly (b) Slightly prejudiced against students (e) Fairly will ing to meet students halfway. (d) Willing to meet students ,half- way (a) Thoroughly wholesome and helpful attitude 10—What is your general opinion _of him as an instructor? (a) A made] for other instructors ' to follow (b) Superior (c) Good (dl Fair (e) So pooh' he should not be teaching , the course Game Commissioner Will Talk Al Forestry Dinner, Seth Gordon of the Pennsyl vania Game Commission will' be guest speaker at the annual For estry Society kianquet in the Sand wich Shop at 6 30 p m Friday. The banquet, to which many college professors and officials have been invited, is open to all students and professors in the for estry department About 50 stu dents are expected from Mont Al to. John L Gray, president Of -the society, will be master 'of7eere monies, and Henry Clepper:.exe cutive secretary of the SoCiety of American Foresters, wilr be Ares , cot and is expected to speak