SucOessor, -to the Free Lance, Established .1887 VOL. 37—No: 42 Monday, Dec. 16 Set As Tenialive `44 Elections Date Freshman elections will be held in the first floor lounge of pid Main on Monday, December 16, if ' - All-College Cabinet approves the _.:date at its meeting tonight, H. Leonard,Krouse, '42, chairman of the Freshman Elections Commit :. tee, announced late last night. Other dates to be submitted for Cabinet consent include the Fri day, December' 6 deadline for candidates petitions, which will require 100 signatures, and a pre election mass-meeting scheduled in Schwab Auditorium for Tuesday, December 10. - - The elections committee stipu lated that party candidates seek ine election must• turn in their photographs and party platform with the petition for committee sanction. No candidate may run for office if he has a below grade. Campaign expenses and the use of. , cars for soliciting voters are forbidden, Krouse said. All standard political posters with the party's ticket and platform will be issied by the elections com mittee. Although the selection of the '44 party tickets will be held off un til the below grades list is releas ed,. the campus cliques have ten tatively slated their nominations for next week. Other election rules to be ap proved by Cabinet are the corn plete•election :code,; the stipulation that each party must present - a five-man ticket including presi dent, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and historian • officers, and that a vote for the president will automatically register choice for his vice-president running mate. Book Suggestions Wanted By Group To meet the needs desires of all students as thoroughly as possible, the Student Libiary Com mittee will provide an opportunity for student book requests in an effort to expand the reading facil ities of the Library, it was •an notinced by Willard P. Lewis, Col lege librarian. There are adequate funds avail *able for the purchase of books most frequently requested by students, it was announced. Various types of .books• will be purchased to meet the greatest needs and demands that are submitted. Students composing the commit tee are: Stuart H. Garfinkle '4l, Marjory A. Harwick '4l, Samuel 0. Patterson '43, Ruth G. Hoffer '42, Charles B. Elder, Jr. '43 and David I. Finkle '42. Fewer Use Infirmary Under Free Health Plan Despite the new free hospital ization plan adopted this year by the College Health Department, th'e number of patients to use the 'facilities of the infirmary has drop ped, it .was :announced yesterday .by the head' of the College health' service, •P: Ritenour: ~ .:r :51iidenf-In..:trash Damage..estimated, -at • $75 was incurred when two cars driven by Robert W. Hildebrand '42 and El by Boririg of Huntingdon collided on South Allen strcct.near Calder alley at• 11 m. Sunday. ...,.., ti • Weather— - 4r Colder, Rain .. - • -...- • ..-. • • • or Snow. a ~...,......„..... .Antirgtan , ',.C . iti .El . lig • .. , ,,: , ,,) - ‘,.„',„, ) ,, I- , ( g. numunnumuuunuuunanuuununununuununnn College Gallery Displays Original Renoir Painting _ An original Renoir oil paint ing is now' on display in the Col lege Art Galley, Room 303 Main Engineering. It is the first mod ern original painting by a well known master to be exhibited by the College. The picture is the work of Pierre Auguste Renoir and is entitled "The Card Player." It its not a reproduction and will be on exhibition until November 23.. This work of cne the great French impressionists is being shown through the courtesy of the owners, Mr. and Mri. Roger E. Ritter of Shingletown. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Show Censored, Thespians Say A new presentation of "The Balloon Goes Up"—the house party Thespian show—will be give nat 7 p.m. this Friday and Saturday. Tickets for the repeat perform anCe will go on sale at Student Union Tuesday morning, Roy P. ' •Rogers, '4l, Thespian business manager, said last night. Prices will again be 50 cents for Friday night and 75 cents for Saturday. Answering charges that the ne'w show was risque, Thespians say that the production was censored by College authorities and that the repeat • performance will re main unchanged except for tech nical revisions that have been made to "pep up the revue." - Again featured-in the-show will be the Three Stooges, Marce Stringer, a Thespian Glee Club of 30 male voices, and a chorus of 20 campus beauties. Other per formers will be Leon Rabinowitz, Jimmy Smith, Leo Morrell, the Singerettes, arid the Campus Owls with Jimmy McAdams conducting. Written by Mike Brotman, Ned Startzel 'and George Parrish, the show, is a revue embodying sev eral Fred Waring arrangements together with a sew original num bers and a series of satirical take offs on campus organizations arid personalities. Cabinet May Act To Get Assisfanf Deans Of Men A report on the adyisability of recommending that assistant deans of men be added to Dean A. R. Warnock's staff will be heard at the All-College Cabient meeting in Room 305 Old Main at 9 p. m. today. Other business will probably in clude action toward obtaining a special train or bus for the Pitt game. Cabinet is also expected to consider enlarging the comp list to include captains and manager of the rifle, ski and hockey teams. Committees Formed To Help Draftees An extensive College plan to aid students and faculty members in all matters pertaining to the draft was outlined yesterday by Adrian O. Morse, assistant to the president in charge of resident instruction. Actual work of the plan will be handled by eight committees, - a general.committee and! one in each ichool, Morse:saici:•President Ralph D. .Hetzel authorized -the lormation of the _committee before he left for Chicago lait week•but, according, to .Mr. Iliforse, , announce-: ment-of the plan was held up until all groups were ready to operate. Mr. Morse, chairman of the gen •eral committee, said that it will act as a clearing house for all infor mation and recommendations and OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE _TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 12, 1940, STATE COLLEGE. PA Van Zandi Asks For Preparedness A militant note was injected in #o an otherwise ordinary Armis tice Day observance in Schwab Auditorium yesterday by Repre sentative James E. Van Zandt of the 23rd district as he stressed the need for military prepardness. Approximary F.,300 students and townspeople participated in the program which was sponsored by 13 student and borough organ izations. The program was opened by a military ceremony in front of Old • Main. Music and a respon sive reading were held in the aud itorium in addition to Representa tive Van Zandt's speech. He said that America needs a military machine, ztripped of pol itics, to combat the power of Hit ler whom he termed the "narrow shouldered corporal." In the second point of his talk, Van _Zandt said, "The United States will not statid for any group —Communist,- Fascist or Nazi— which tries to destroy the efforts of those building this military machine." -He contrasted the United States, a nation at peace, with the countries at war. The narrow shouldered corporal. he said, "has brought• war face•to-face with America and it is time for us to act." ,Speaking of veterans of past wars, he said, "The veteran hates war and knows more about it than anyone else because he has been at war." 'College Records 'Quake The seismograph of the school of Mineral Industries at the Col lege recorded the disastrous Ru manian earthquake Saturday alight. The first waves arrived in State College at 8:50 p. m. The instrument remained in mo tion for nearly 50 minutes. Dis tance of focus was estimated at 4,500 miles. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 PHA Supplement-Added To This Morning's Issue To start off the annual PSCA financial canvass, the Daily Collegian has published a sup plement of four pages which , is inserted in this morning's issue. In an attempt to acquaint students and faculty with the many, phases of PSCA activity, the supplement will present a group of stories centering upon the main PSCA groups which cast the greatest influence upon Penn State campus life. . A complete list of - the 1941- 42 budget needed for PSCA ac tivity is also included. Ulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll will coordinate the work of the school committees. Other members of the group are Edward K. Hibsh man, Samuel Hostetter, and A. R. Warnock. Explaining• the purpose of the whole organization, Mr. Morse said:-."Students,and faculty mem bers who want assistance in inter preting the :Selective Service Act, in deciding what they ought to-do if called, or in the actual tilling out of the draft questionnaire may ap ply to.the:committees in their own schools." The school committees follow: Agriculture—J. Ben Hill (chair man), John E. McCord, Earle I. Wilde; Chemistry and Physics Frank C. Whitmore, Grover C. Lions Prepare For NYU After Syracuse Thriller Pill Trip Poll Starts Today Would you be interested in a special train or bus to Pittsburgh for the Pitt game on November 23? This and other questions are be ing asked students in a poll which starts today at the Student. Union desk. If enough students are in terested there is a possibility of getting special transportation fa cilities at lower rates. The rates permit 37 students to charter a bus to Pittsburgh at $4.20 per person round trip. Twen ty-five students can get a special bus at $4.35 per person round trip. The fare for a special train leaving State College at 1:30 p. m., Friday for a minimum of 150 stu dents will cost $5.59 per person round trip. Other questions on the poll will determine e whether . the student would prefer to go by train or bus, and the most convenient time to leave. Hoffman Has Article Printed In Journal • William S. Hoffman, registrar, has an article entitled "The Uni versity of Commencement Pro gram" in the current issue of the Journal of the American Asso ciatiOn of Collegiate Registrars. In the same issue is an article by F. B. Dilley of Ohio University which endorses a previous article of Mr. Hoffman's, "Figures Don't to tally. C hand lee, Donald S. Cryder, Wheeler P. Davey, David C. Dun can, Merrell R. Fenske, William R. Ham; Lytle R. Parks, Oscar F. Smith. • Education—Clifford. R. Adams, Clarence 0. Williams, John F. Friese; Engineering Charles L. Kinsloe, Clarence . E. Bullinger, Harold A. Everett,-Burton K. John stone, Frederic T. Mavis; Liberal Arts--Charles W. Stoddart, David B. Pugh, Charles C. Wagner. , • Mineral Industries John W. Buch,-Henry M. Davis, Raymond E. IMurphy, Frank M. Swartz, Francis C. Todd; Physical Educa tion—Lloyd M. Jones, Eugene C. Bischoff, Robert A. Higgins, John D. Lawther. PRICE THREE CENTS Len Krouse Saves Day For Unbeaten Gridders Deprived of the untied tag after l a 13-13 thriller with an aroused I Syracuse football eleven, the still undefeated Nittany Lions began priming yesterday afternoon for Saturday's clash with another un predictable team, New York Uni versity. The Violets tumbled Franklin and Marshall from the unbeaten ranks over the weekend. Yesterday's practice was mar red by a continuous downpour which curtailed the outdoor ses sion considerably. The Lions' outlook was considerably bright ened, however, by the possibility that all injured players may be ready for the battle with NYU. Though the outcome of . the Orange deadlock may be disap pointing to State followers who envisioned an all-victorious sea son, the courageous comeback of the Blue and White will long be remembered by witnesses of the nerve-racking tilt. It . was Lenny Krouse's mira culous pass receiving and Bill Smaltz's accurate tossing that sav ed the day for the State forces. Twice the two backs colloborated to pull the Lions out of a hole. The first chance occurred in the second period with only 50 sec onds left when Krouse speared a Smaltz toss on the two-yard stripe and stepped over for the touch down to tie the score at 6-6. Ben Pollock's placement kick was blocked. The, Lions' second •touchdown came in the waning moments of the final quarter. Trailing 13-6 with only four minutes of play re maining in the final quarter, Smaltz threw a pass from the Syracuse 43. Krouse appeared hemmed in on all sides by Orange defenders but he suddenly leaped high in the air on the 15, grabbed the ball and twisted his way to the goal-line. Pollock's success ful kick for" the extra point pro vided the tying point. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111rn tale News Bulletins Berlin Russian Premier-For eign Commissar R. Molotov was sent to Berlin last night to confer with Adolf Hitler. The move is thought to be a step toward the joining of Russia with Axis pow ers as the minister would not have been sent for any matter of less consequence. The entering of the Russian power into the Axis fits in with Hitler's plans in Rumania. Hitler has stationed 1,000,000 men near the Russian controlled Black Sea. London RAF pursuit planes shot down 20 invading bombers yesterday afternoon. Thirteen of the huge bombers were found to be Italian planes. England. how ever, cbserved Armistice Day as bombs crashed on its' soil. Paris Germon police were scattered yesterday as the French people observed Armistice Day and rebelled for a few hours against: the Nazi rule. Chicago King Winter. swept Ihrough the -western states last night and struck almost every state from the.canadian border to Mexico. Temp tares of 17 and 20 below zero were recorded in Montana. A 60-mile gale whipped through Chicago. Storm warnings were issued on the Atlantic coast. Thirteen. were reported dead and one hundred injured.