PAGE TWO TIRE DAILY COLLEGIAN `Far A Better ?en= State"' Xitah'Libel 1940. 5L1CeY.t52,317 to the Penn State Collegian, established 1904, and the 9'r Lance, established. Laa? Published daily except Sunday and Monday during the Colleze year by the students of The Pennsylvania 43tate College. Ent:red a; aenend-class matter July 6, 1934 ..11 the post-office at State College. Pa., under the act of Maral 8. 1879. • Editor • Bus. aud Adv. Mgr. F►.ckauxz Satiric): . 4/- Lawrence 'Driever '4L ertilorini 4.1(1 Etnnineil 0 facc: U 1.3 OM Main 13Idg Phone fl Woolen': Editor L Kemp '4l; Managing E.fitoc --Robert fl. Lane '4 Sport; Editor—Richard C. Peters '4l: News F4lif itirr: E. Fowler '4l: Feature Editor-- Edward J. K. McLorie. '4l; Assi.itant Managing. Editor.—Bay• turf Bloom '4l; cVornen's Managing Editor—Arita L. liefferao '4l; Women's Feature Editor—Edythe B. Rickel '4L. Credit Manager—John H. Thomiat '41.; Circulation Man oger—Robert C. Robinson '41.; Senior Secretsry—Ruth Gold. Mein '4l; Senior S:teretary—Leslie H. Lewis '4l. Junior Boar.l-131in A. Baer '42. R. Ilelen Co.rdiul '42. Winn B. Lehman '42, William J. McKnight '42, Alice M. Murray '42. Pat NageThers '42, Stanley J. PoKetpn -0(29. '42, Jeanne C. Stile) '42. Junior Businein C3•xird—'Thomas W. Allison. °42, Paul Goldberg '42, Jame; E. McCaughey '42. Margaret. L. Embul7 '42, Virginia Ogden '42, Fay E. nom '42. fitinsitinfr Editor This Issue Ri.xis B. Lehman '42 POWS Editor This Issue . James D. Olkein •43 Woman's Editor This Issue _ Jeanne C: Stites '42 As....istant W., - kmen's Editor 'thin fs.nie _ _Kathryn M. Popp '43 Gi nauate, Counselor _ ___ __Louis If. Bell Saturday Morning, April 19, 1941 IProgress in War Whatever else it brings, war also brings with it rapid progress in almost all phases of life. Penn State has felt this. Under stress of the de fense emergency it has expanded its educational wrogram, training 10,000 workers throughout the state. Its latest move has been for the erection of a $400,000 training airport which can be of great service. to the defense program and will be equally valuable after the emergency has passed. • Both programs, and especially the first, reflect credit on the college for its far-sighted planning.- Through its ability to place its defense courses immediately in operation, the College is now train ing half of Pennsylvania's defense workers, and a fifth of those being trained in the whole nation, The project airport, although not yet realized, is no recent idea. It has been carefully planned nlany months, reliable sources indicate, and if it is established will certainly not be a hit-and-miss matter. Only two other colleges in America have comparable airports of their own—Virginia Poly technic Institute and Purdue, Gibiners Jurisdiction Our best reasons for believing that All-College Cabinet has the right to divide the use of chapel funds and to switch them away from Lingnan lJniv,?rsity are provided by a circular published several years ago by the Penn State in China com mittee, "Penn State in China is a student enter organized in 1911 under the inspiration and in re sponse to the challenge of G. W. (Daddy) Groff 'O7, The enterprise is sponsored by the Men's Stu- dent Council and the Women's Student Govern - ment Association. Penn State was one of the first American colleges to recognize its obligations abroad and to establish relations with a college in the Orient. The students chose Canton Christian College, now Lingnan University, because Mr, Groff had already invested his life there." • This seems to effectively answer challenges to the Cabinet's right to change the Lingnan chapel fund. It also .points out Penn State's interest in Lingnan because of 'Professor Groff who is no Longer there; Who Supervises Whall The Anchorage fire puts the College in another nasty light. Although the College exercises strict supervision of coeds, by its own claim, it failed to require the operator of a downtown dormitory to carry • insurance which would cover fire losses. The women did not choose the dormitory them selves, the College assigned them to it. It should have made sure that everything was shipshape, Down Harrisburg Way Apparently the clause in the Moul resolution holding up appropriations to the Soil Conservation Board and the Pennsylvania State College refers Only to appropriations not sponsored by Mr, Moul. That seems to be indicated by the Moul Bill revis ing the Soil Conservation Board which recently passed the House and included with it an appro priation. Republican members of the House, of course, jumped at this chance to embarrass Mr, Moul's Democrats on their inconsistency. Unper turbed, the Democratic speaker ruled the bill was Pot an appropriation because it had not yet been Downtown Office 119-121 South Frazier Si Night Phone 4.472 ei):4 :itk MANIAC 111111111111 11 1 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111011191M1 Lesson In Dropkicking Chuck "Flash Gordon" Reid, ex-football man ager and man about town, received a setback the other night. Chuck and a Beta brother were sit ting in a crrm booth with Beanie Seibert and an other lovely lass, bowling them over with charm and witty conversation. Chuck was just at the point of giving Beanie the supreme thrill of her young life by asking her for a date when Beanie got a phone call. It was another Beta who wanted a date with her and was accepted right under Reid's handsome nose! Walt James, Blue Band prexy, is torn between love and his career. Walt recently shaved his mustache to which he had been attached for ten years. Although Walt vehemently denies that Fij Fulton, who is the wearer of his KDR hard ware, had anything to do with it, rumor says oth- erwise. Walt is tops in his line as a horn tooter and he claims that his mustache strengthened his lip muscles and thus enabled him to play better. Looks like another case of Sampson.a . nd Delilah to us. Four letter description of Betty Crilly, currently ,pinned to Phi Gam Ralph Routsong; E.8.1.P. "Every Brick In Place." Jack Heck, Phi Kappa dude, was shafted by Yvonne Wilson this weekend for Johnny Thompson, Yvonne's Alumni steady. Turnabout's fair play, Hero Cracks Rib Al Mclntyre '39, ex-Collegianer and recent hero of the Eastern Airlines plane crash in Florida just discovered two weeks after that he didn't come out of the wreck unscathed.. After roaming around loose since the crash, an X-ray disclosed that the rugged Al had a few cracked ribs and he is now wrapped up in a plaster corset. He must have just sobered up. Seen in town today were Jack -Kennon '3B, e.x senior class prexy, Bart Buser '4O, lacrosse immor tal, and Phyllis Gordon '4O, former Collegian Staff charmer. Jack, as you seniors will probably soon learn, is selling insurance, while Beaming Bart is enroute home to rest up for the army. Phyl, so far as we can ascertain, is just "in. town.." Joe Menham, Rex Rockwell, tootler, broke all records for endurance by riding 52 hours on a bus to get up from Florida after Easter. Reason for Joe's spectacular feat was to work at the skellar while one of the waiters took a trip! We make a motion that Penn State have a June Queen as- well as a . May Queen. Not that.Jo Con drin isn't every inch a queen, but we think it's about time beautiful Emily Coyle was given a little recognition, Follow The Crowd - To REC HALL Tonight April 19—. • AG , • Fro lic Bigger and Better Than Ever— Numerous Booths and Unlimited Gambling JIMMY LEYDEN and his orchestra Dancing 9-12 Price—sl.oo THE / DAILY COLLEGIAN -' CAMPUS LENDArt , TODAY High school one-act play tourna ment, Little Theatre, 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 7 p.m. Campbell Soup interviews, 305 Old-Main, 8 a.m. to noon. Pi_ Lambda Theta meeting at Kappa Alpha Theta, 2 p.m. Initi ates All coeds interested in attend ing the Camp Counsellor's Con ference to be held in May should meet in the northeast lounge of Atherton Hall at 12:45. p.m. PSCA Cabin Party, leave rear of Old Main 5 p.m., cost 50 cents. Women's interclass baseball meet on Holmes Field at 10 a. m.. _weather permitting. TOMORROW Outing Club's bicycle breakfast hike, Freedman's on Miles Street, 7 to 10 a. m. Sigii at Student Un ion. Bring 65 cents. Newman Club, 405 Old Main, 7:45 p.m. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ST/'TE COLLEGE __ Member of Feder& Deposit Insurance Corp or, " enn State an Parade" 3rd Annual Circus MAY 26 AT 8 P.M. 221/ RESERVE TICKETS ON SALE TODAY AT 9 A.M. STUDENT UNION, OLD MAIN GET YOUR TICKETS EARLY PRICE 50c SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1941 1- MONDAY . Sophomore cheerleadei dates report to first floor:-.1otin6g, Old Main, 4 p. m. . 4-H Club, 405 Old Main, 7:30 p.m. FF of A, 418 Old Main, 7:30, p.m. Student Radio CommitteeT:3l - .8. Old Main, 7 p.rtr.- Meeting of all sophomore cheer•: leader candidates, first floor low:14.81 Old Main, 4 p.m. • ' • - New exhibit of original French prints of the 19th century, College' Art Gallery, 303 Main Engineering. TUESDAY - Exhibit of Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid) food, 209 Home Ec, 8, a,m, to noon. • Liberal Arts Council, election of new membei.s, 305 Old Main, 7:15 p.m. . , 808 TAYLOR PLUMBING and HEATING N. BUTTS DIAL 2722