Successor to the Elatty gt 4 ' eatt r i an .j A . Free Lance,. Established:lBB7 VOL."37—No. 144 SPECIAL COMMITTEE, head ed by Chaplain John H. Frizzell, above, has recommended that a vote be taken in chapel to decide whether offerings shall continue to go to Lingnan University or be divided with a local charity. Vote Planned On Chapel Fund President Ralph D. Hetzel ap proved yesterday a recommenda tion by a special advisory com mittee that he sanction a vote by chapel-goers in order to settle the controversy over All-College Cabinet's authority to divert - chattel collections from Lingnan University. At its meeting last night, Cabi net did not act on the plan. Dr. Ralph L. Watts, chairman of the Penn State in China commit tee, said that members of the special committee from his'group were given full power to act and that approval by the full Penn State in China committee would not be necessary. - Under the plan, a series of flye votes will be taken in chapel be tween October - .1.2 and December 7. The result will determine whether offerings will continue to go, to Lingnan or be divided with a local charity. The recommendation .. was (Continued on Page Two) Tau Bela Pi Will Initiate Tonight Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering society, will hold its annual spring initiation and banquet tonight. Initiation will be held in Room 304 Old Main at 5:30 p. in. and the banquet will be held at the University Club at p. m. Frank C. Whitmore, dean of the School of Chemistry and Phy sics will be the guest speaker at the banquet. Students from the class of '4l who will be initiated are Wil liam F. Abbey, Gerald B. Bready, Michael C. Chervenak 11, Wil liam J. Dorworth, Jr., Robert B. Filbert, Jr., Oliver A. Schaeffer, and Gerald F. Snyder. Juniors who will be inducted are Axel W. Anderson, Charles G. Arnold, Henry L. Boker, Al bert W. Batten, August P. Colai aco, Harold C. Foust, Robert E. Geier, Richard V. Grimes, John W.. Healy, Howard B. Irwin, Ber nard J. Krings, Louis M. Laus hey, Ernest F.. Marshall, Joseph A. McCormick,' Jr., Charles J. Smith, Earl B. Stavely, Jr., Hen ry H. Stoner, Robert T.- Struck, Howard J. Talley, Jr. Edward Steidle, dean of the School of Mineral Industries, of the class of 1911, will also be in itiated into the society. - NewAll-College Election Seen Rep. Moul Completes Investigation Of College HARRISBURG, May 2d.—Rep. Clayton Moul (D., York) said to day that his investigation of the Soil Conservation Board and the agriculture extension of the Pennsylvania State College was finished and that he would pre sent a final report on it to the House tomorrow. No Penn State bills were re ported out of committee in the House although 44 other appro priation measures including bills for Pitt, Temple and Penn— were passed unanimously and sent to the Senate. It was re ported that the Penn State bills would come out of committee either Thursday or Monday. Seniors To Pick 'Hot Dog' Man A crown of garlic-seasoned baloney will adorn the head of the Senior Hot Dog Man, annual mirthfest king, when he takes his throne in response to a senior vote to select the 'goat' of the day on the Jordan Fertility Plots op posite Grange Dorm at 5:30 p. in. Sunday. Candidates for the honor of `chief goat' are seniors Edward 13: Harris, William E. LaPorte, and Roy P. Rogers. George L. Parrish will' be master of cere monies. - , Chief entertainers for the. 'ocL casions will be the Blue Band and Leon J. Rabinowitz and His Gang. A special 'jam' session will be featured by a group from the Blue Band. Along with the hot dog roast, $3 each will be awarded to a male and a female having the best decorated Lion's coats. In case rain halts the festivi ties the roast, now a College tra dition in its second year, will be held on the same site at 5:30 p.m. on Monday. Co-chairmen George L. Par rish and W. Lewis Corbin an nounced last night that all sen iors will be admitted free. All faculty and administration mem bers are invited guests. Lion's Coats Deadline Friday will be the last day for buying lion's coats at the Athletic Store,• Walter R. Hosterman Jr. '4l, chairman of the committee announced yesterday. They are priced at $l. In The First World War— College Campus Was Like Army Camp By GORDON COY Surveys show it, national lead ers predict it—everything points to the fact that the United States seems to be drawing closer to the theatre or World War No. 2. "Just how much will the crisis affect college life?" students query. Already, the draft shows possibilities of cutting inroads into 'campus organization.-. Students may get the best idea of what to expect in case of - war, if they delve back through and concerning Penn State and the first World War. In a series of three articles, The Daily Col legian will give the background for the statement made recently by Prof. John H. Frizzell, Col lege chaplain, who said, "The OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 21, 1941, STATE COLLEGE, PA Lodge Funds Still Insufficient Progress on the proposed Mountain Lodge was interrupted again last night when all bids for constructio not the cabin were reported to the Recreational Co ordinating Committee as being $2,000 or more above the avail able $6,700. Although the total amount available is $7,300, only $6,700 can be used for actual construc tion. -The rest is being held to buy the land, for the water sup ply and possibly to build a road. The proposed site for the lodge is near the ski trail. The original fund, $5,300, was donated by the class of 1939, and as that proved 'insufficient, All- College Cabinet answered a re quest for additional funds with $2,000 from the Interclass Sports Fund. Even with this additional money, plans were made, out twice and each time the bids turned in were too high. Last night's bids were in answer to a further revision of specifications in which the originally planned dormitories were left out, The committee now .has two alternatives to work on: either raise more money or again cut the plans. There is a possibility that nothing more will be done until next fall. • - ROTC-Graduation Parade On Golf Course Today The annual ROTC graduation parade will be held on the golf course from 3 to 5 p. m. today, Col. Edward D. Ardery, head of the military _science department, announced yesterday. ROTC stu dents will be excused from 3 and 4 o'clock classes. Individual awards will go to the following: Freshmen Infantry: first, Rob ert W. Fuss; second, Clifford M. Painter; third, Samuel G. Fisher. Freshmen Engineers: first, Michael Chruney; second, Charles E. Forbes; third, Fred J. Birnbaum. Sophomore Infantry: first, Ed ward J. Maslow; second, Wilbur Van Lenten; third, Stanley E. Forbes. Sophomore Engineers: first, William S.• Ivans; second, Rich ard C. Allen; third, James F. Fisher. campus was practically an arm ed camp in 1917 and 1918." Immediately following Amer ica's entry into the World War, the Board of Trustees placed the entire facilities of the College at the disposal of the government. Being a Land Grant College, Penn State already had military training on the campus and was not faced by a problem as dif ficult as most colleges, which had to provide army training for the first time. On the campus, students were trained under the S. A. T. C.— Students' Army Training Corps. Barracks were built to house civilians who came to the Col lege for regular camp training TWO HONORS came to J. Burn Helme, head of the fine arts department, yesterday with the announcement of his appoint ment as chairman of a jury •to select sculpture for the :York post office, and the publication in Parnassus, art magazine, of his article "The Paintings of Hobson Pittsman." `Goodbye Again' Cast Announced The cast for the Houseparty show of the Penn State Players, "Goodbye Again," to be present ed Tune 6 and 7, was announced yesterday by Lawrence E. Tuck er, director of the play. Playing his last role before graduation, 'Malcolm WeinStein '4l gets the leading male part, Kenneth Bixby, a novelist who is on a lecture tour. Bixby meets a married woman with whom he has had relations in college, and complications arise. Elinor F. Herrman '42, takes the female lead, the part of Anne Rogers, Bixby's secretary. Also in her last show lor Play ers, Thelma R. Kluger '4l, will portray Elizabeth Clochessy, the girl friend of Arthur Westlake, a young lawyer just out of Har vard Law School. Westlake will be played by Robert H. Herrman '44. Julia Wilson, the young, mar ried woman with whom Bixby is mixed up, will be played by Barbara A. Davis '43. Other parts are the bellboy, Milton olinger '44; maid, Aimee L. Sobbott '42; chauffeur, Wil liam C. Ritzel '43; Harvey Wil son, Julia's husband, by J. Scott Keck '43; and Clayton, Richard A. Mock '44. • as well as additional preparation received from special college courses What is now Holmes Field was Penn State's own "no-man's land" in 1917. Trenches were dug, dummies were set up to pro vide bayonet pfactice, and in several - months the campus vir tually became an armed camp. Strangely enough, costs did not vary much for students, although a slight increase was introduced at the dining commons. Members of the faculty and administra tion were hardest hit by rising prices, as their wages remained the same while living costs in town rose from 25 to 50 per cent. Weather— Clear and Continued Warm PRICE THREE CENTS Amendment Passed To Allow Vote Next Fall Cabinet unanimously accepted a constitutional amendment last night that will provide for new All-College elections next fall if both President Robert D. Baird '42, and Vice-president Gerald F. Doherty '42, are drafted. The amendment reads, "In the event of the disqualification or resignation of both the All-Col lege president and vice-presi dent, an election for All-College president shall be held within four weeks of the regular Col lege session after the disqualifi cation or resignatior, of the old officers go into effect." Under the old provision, the senior class president would have become head of student government as chairman of Cab inet until the end of the term. Cabinet also endorsed the fol lowing appointments to Student Tribunal made by President Baird: Thomas R. Heidecker '43, George M. Rumsey '43, J. Lee Clovis '42, George R. Ross '42, Richard N. Stevenson '42, and Robert A. Wasser '42. Richard E. Haskell '42, chair man of the Student Radio Com mittee, appeared before Cabinet to receive its endorsement of the proposed 5,000 watt, non-com mercial College radio station. Cabinet, however appointed a new committee that will meet with the radio committee to con fer with President Ralph D. Het zel concerning the feasibility of fulfills the request, Cabinet - will then change its meeting room to the plan. The Cabinet commit tee includes Jerome H. Blakes lee '43, H. Leonard Krouse '42, James W. Ritter '42, and Betty L. Zeigler '42. A motion was accepted asking the College to install office equip (Continued on Page Four) 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Late News 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 LONDON British and - Greek troops in Crete are running a race against time in an effort to wipe out the 15,000 German troops that ha've landed in Crete by air and ship before reinforcements can arrive. A German movement towards the British column is being attempted and supported by many dive bombers. CAIRO British forces are driving on Bagdad in a deter mined effort to end the revolt in Iraq. British officials in Cairo report that all Italian resistance in Ethiopia has been quelled with the surrender of the Duke of Aosta's army at Amba Alagi. This releases many imperial forces for fighting elsewnere. WASHINGTON Southern soft coal miners headed by John L. Lewis say that they will ac cept no concessions in their fight to gain the same wage scale as northern operators. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL National League Philadelphia 6, St. Louis 4 (11 innings) Chicago 9, Brooklyn 1 Pittsburgh 7, New York 5 Cincinnati 9, Boston 6 American League Philadelphia 6, Cleveland 5 New York 10, St. Louis 9 Boston 4, Detroit 2 Chicago 5. Washington 2