THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1940 Tribunal Ready With Ful iiiuimiiiiuiiiiiiiiunmimimimimmimiiiimiiiiimmimimimimiuuiimii CLASS OF ' liniimmiiiiiiimimiiiiimiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiimmmmiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiii JAII students, entering the .first year of any four-year course must observe .freshman customs. Spe cial students and two-year agri culture students entering the Col lege-with a freshman rating must also observe customs. • Students who are 21 years of age'on-or-before the school year begins and students -who have un dergone customs equivalent to the-" following at other colleges shall be exempt when they apply personally to Student Tribunal at its first meeting of. the college year. . Freshman customs will continue until Thanksgiving vacation for two-year agriculture students and until Christmas vacation for all other • freshmen, . unless .otherwise decreed \by " Student Tribunal. . Dress Customs 1. Freshmen, shall carry at all THE NITTANY NEWSSTAND 110 West College Ave. c Tobacco Cigars Cigarettes Smokers’ Supplies Magazines Periodicals Confectionery NEW YORK TIMES - Daily and Sunday NEW YORK herald’tribune Daily and Sunday NEW YORK MIRROR Daily and Sunday NEW YORK NEWS Daily and Sunday THE PITTSBURGH PRESS Daily and Sunday PITTSBURGH - POST-GAZETTE Morning PITTSBURGH SUN-TELEGRAPH Daily and Sunday BALTIMORE SUN Sunday Only “ WILLIAMSPORT GRIT " Sunday Only PHILADELPHIA - - BULLETIN Evening PHILADELPHIA RECORD Daily and Sunday PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER Morning'and Sunday PUBLIC LEDGER .Evening ALTOONA MIRROR Evening HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH HARRISBURG EVENING NEWS Daily THE DAILY. COLLEGIAN '-Tuesday Through Saturday FROTH Monthly THE NITTANY NEWSSTAND HO West College Ave. 4 CUSTOMS ii[iniiimmiiiiiinmiiiiii:iiimiiiiiMiiiiiii{!iiim>iiiii7liiiiiimimi!iii)iminiiii times on- their person a copy" of the Student Handbook, known as the “Freshman Bible.” The infor mation requested on the identi fication page must he filled out. -2. Freshmen shall, wear at all times their dinks, plain black bow ties and white socks except on trips, holidays, wvien escorting women to • house parties, house dances, or All-College dances. The period between midnight Satur day and 8:00 a. m. Monday shall be regarded as a holiday con cerning only the . dress customs; i. e., the dink, tie and socks. The dink is to be .worn ai all indoor athletic contests and mass meet ings. -. 3. Freshmen shall not date within-a threermile-radius of Old Main until after Thanksgiving vai cation. Freshmen shall not asso ciate* with women longer-than two minutes, at. at time. .. -" 4. Freshmen • shall attend all class meetings, athletic contests; and 'mass meetings and shall not leave such affairs until they are closed by the proper authorities or a reasonable excuse is given, issued by Student Tribunal. 5. Freshmen shall carry match es at all times. 6. Freshmen shall at no time walk on the grass of the campus; Freshmen shall not be permitted to walk on “Senior Walk” which extends from the main gate to the Pugh Street gate on the North side of College Avenue. 7. Freshmen shall occupy only the East stands at football games. 8. Every freshman shall wear during the first month of the col lege year a regulation sign (4 in. by TO in.) upon which his name and home town is legibly printed in large black ink letters. 9. No immunities, may be grant ed to freshmen by upperclassmen. 10. Freshmen are not permit ted to smoke on. the campus. 11. Freshmen shall remove their dinks upon entering "Old Main. - 12. At the command, .“Button Frosh,” freshmen shall remove their, dinks in the .manner of tip ping their hats.' 13. Freshmen shall learn the Al ma Mater and all the College songs appearing in the Handbook. 14. Freshmen must keep their hands out of their pockets at all times. 15. Freshmen must at all times enter Old Main by the front en trance' and Liberal Arts only by the middle front entrance. 16. Freshmen must know the pictures currently playing at the local theatres. ' 17. Each freshman shall carry on the Penn State “Hello Spirit” by speaking to every faculty mem ber and student whom he meets while on campus. 18. All violations should be turned in at Student Union or to a member of Student Tribunal. Freshmen may turn in violations of other freshmen. Senior (lass Leader . Will Not Return Edgar V. Rail ’4l, defeated can didate for senior class president in last April’s. All-College elections, will not return to College this Fall. Hall’s mother died during the Summer and, on that account, he has decided..to. make his home in New York .City and attend New York University. In addition to being the Campus Clique candidate for' class presid ent, Hall was the organizer and manager of the Dry Dock night club, assistant sports editor of the Collegian, and secretary of Student Tribunal. Beta Kappa Abandons Chapter Af Penn State Beta Kappa fraternity disband ed its local chapter over the Sum mer-and will not reorganize here. The fraternity had occupied a house at 413 E. Beaver avenue and this has now been taken .by Beaver House, a local fraternity ■group formerly on Frazier street.., THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Set Of Customs For Incoming Frosh Seven-Man Board For Enforcement Seven grisly upperclassmen, following in the footsteps of gen erations of brow-beating prede cessors, will mete out “justice” to be-dinked violators of freshman customs this year. Under the leadership of Chief Justice W. Lewis Corbin ’4l who served with .. last year’s extra toygh board, the seven justices will sit in their rooms at 305 Old Main and hear freshmen plead their cases. For customs violators the pen alties are more .varied than the crimes, but samples from , last year indicate what is in store: Dresses for violators of the dat ing codes, ..skis for freshmen who dare to walk, on'the grass, a suit case or a traveling bag for the freshman to carry the Handbook lie forgot, and any number of in genious signs, for. freshmen who forget the 18 rules Tribunal has presented for their “education.” (Editor’s note:—A word to the wise is sufficient, gentle freshman. Tribunal particularly likes to have freshman violators parade before the audiences at football games and mass meetings.) Lest the emphasis be placed too heavily on Tribunal’s enforcement of freshman customs, it should be said here that the seven justices are in reality a judiciary body oc cupying a position similar to that of the'Supreme Court in the fed eral government. They are em powered to handle all cases of student discipline and, with the support of the Dean of Men, can mete out"' penalties as severe as expulsion from College. One vacancy exists on the sev en-man Tribunal, created by the withdrawal: of Edgar V. Hall, ’4l, who, because of the death of his mother, will not return to Penn State this year. The six return ing members are W. Lewis Cor bin : ’4l- (chairman), Thomas M. SMITH’S TAILOR SHOP Welcomes You With The Newest and Smartest RECOGNIZED CAMPUS WEAR CLEANING mimiliimi'munMmmiiimimmimlmiiMiimmiiiittmimi!i iiiiiimnim Twenty, years may or may not be a long time. The fellows who were Pehn State freshmen in 1920 for the most part aren’t old enough to have sons .in college. They wouldn’t think it was long. The fellows who are Penn State freshmen in 1940 can be satisfied that it is long enough. The Students’ Handbook for 1920-21 reveals that there were 31 customs for Joe Freshmen to ob serve that year instead of 18 as this year. . All "the 1940 • customs were in effect then except for those requir ing frosh to carry a copy of the Student Handbook, the' “Button, Frosh” coinmand, and the require ment that know the current moyief;; Instead; of being forced to •'use-- the front entrance of Old Main, however, "freshmen, were forbidden to use it. In addition, the' 1920-21 students learned that the privilege of going bareheaded was limited to seniors, only seniors and alumni were al lowed on the senior ■ benches, freshmen were required to remain chapel until all others had • left, both sophomores and freshmen were required to wear coats, fresh men were not allowed to wear the College colors during the first semester, freshmen were forbidden to talk back to upperclassmen, frosh were forbidden to, wear in signia from high schools or prep aratory schools, freshmen were forbidden to enter pool rooms, cadet uniforms had to be kept buttoned at all times, freshmen were forbidden to loiter on Allen Street between College and Beaver Avenues, and freshmen were re quired to keep their coats buttoned when in public. Carr ’4l, Jacob Hay ’4l, Oscar Kranich '4l, George L. Parrish ’4l, and Raymond K. Leffler ’42. Leffler will automatically succeed to the chairmanship of the board in 1941-42. Class of 1944 NEXT TO POST OFFICE PRESSING TO GOOD -IN ' PAGE THREE OLD DAYS miiiiiiiiiiiHiiiitiimiMiiiinnmiiimHiiintimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiinimiiinimiiiu If these were not enough .for Joe Frosh to. remember there were several others to keep him busy; The • sophomore ■ class was allowed to issue one proclamation a year, the freshmen none. If the frosh defeated the sophomores in the interclass football game they, would be allowed to carry canes but only for the remainder of the same day. The frosh arid frosh 'alone were allowed to paint their class numerals but it had to be on the Armory roof on the Satur day night before Baccalaureate Sunday. The privilege of “adorn ing their faces with hair growths’! was limited to the three upper classes. Student Council was em powered to designate a “Clean-up Day” on which the freshmen at direction of the sophomores were “to clean up such parts of College property as are deemed necessary.” The Daily Cardirial, University of Wisconsin publication, recently noted its 48th ariniversary. Eugene H. Lederer REAL ESTATE 114 E." Beaver Ave. Dial 4066 State College vCOLONIAL 113 W.NIITANYAVE. Siatesf2nes£Clu6llesfdaKe. Ilyfcaaftjiagi./Zy*? l, •% m . . . T.r \. * A *'.J I | Free Parking Space w REPAIRING