Successor To The Free Lance. Established 1887 VOL. 38—No. 50 Campus News Briefs of the Fred Allen Talent Search, ~ , that descended upon the campus arrived on campus last night and Speaking on the topic, “Peace Wednesday night and yesterday Afl lloail Ta (naaL will hear the performers selected Efforts During the First World mo rning not only caused college MIJ fIGCIU 111 JjJCdll by tbe judges of the All-College War, 1914-1918,” in 121 Sparks at dogs to stay inside and study Students are invited to attend Talent Night sometime today.- 7:30 p.,,m, next Tuesday, Dr. Kent but also grounded airplanes an address to be presented by Pbe winner who will orobably Forster, instructor in history, will throughout the Eastern section or Allan I. Moses ’43 was elected Dr: P. A. Wells, director of the be announced tomorrow wiil be the second lecturer in the cur- the united States, according to manager of varsity football for Eastern Laboratory of the United make arran sements to appear on rent Liberal Arts le cture series. Hans H Neuberger, College the 1942 season, it was announced Staftes Department of Agriculture the Fred Allen program January Morris Bench, instructor in ro- weat her expert. yesterday by Neil M. Fleming, in 109 Ag Building at 4:10 o’clock 7 He will have all expenses paid mance languages and publicity Neuberger said that the pheno- graduate manager of athletics. He this ' afternoon, F. F. Lininger, a ' nd rece i V e $2OO for his radio chairman for the lecture, said yes- menon was caused by a cooling of will replace William F. Finn ’42, vice dean of the School of Agri- performance. terday that Dr. Forster is well- warm and moist maritime air. this year’s football manager, culture announced last night. ~ . T ' T vnmiut- l ua i ified to s P eak on tbe subject The temperature was 16 degrees Associate managers named were Dr. Wells will discuss the work T b lray ,. ' > 4 o ’ Pnmfir iinn’ o£ P eace negotiations of the last a b o ve the'normal mean tempera- Frank J. Perna ’43 and Harve S. of the Laboratory, chiefly utiliza- _ eon . , a 'll*! S reat war. . . ture Wednesday, he sr,id. The Bair ’43. Clair E. Eisenhtirt ’44, tion of farm products including °!? a fi ’ The speakers for the remaining f og> w hi c h lasted Until yesterday Ferdinand E. Fidati ’44, and animal fats and oils, milk, pota- a ” d ve ... , , ... . four lectures of the year as an- a fternoon, covered the entire Maurice Grossman ’44 were voted toes, fruits and vegetables, and ? osen e nes ,ly g y nounced by Dr. J. Paul Selsam, Eas t ern section of the country. 'first assistants. tobacco. judging committee. associate professor of European Rain clouds will form tonight James A . Bauscher ’44 was .. I- , , _ history, in charge of the series, and tomorrow, Neuberger pre- named freshman manager with Blue Key Holds Dance f ll _ are wi£l . iam t Popa Barney visit- dict ed, and State College residents Joseph Hadin - 44 James Milhol \ ... lel I Afl A IcAHASK ing architectural design critic and can expect either rain or snow land > 44 , and George L. Ruther- Blue Key, jumor honoiary, wiil VUIIV consultant, January 13; Louis f or the weekend. ford ’44 selected as alternates. hold a formal dinner dance at the Adamic, nationally-known author Moses whose home town is Nittany Lion Inn at 7:30 o’clock A| |h|amn sf I All 91 and lecturer, February 10; Joseph - . PiXureh Ls a member 7 Blue 7h ™ n , ced last At international J. Rubin, instructor in English rpp fnnfAfAllfA Key hat society ,rnd vice-president night by Robert H. P. Jordan, so-. ~ . . . „ composition, March 17; and Kings- Vrk ; fratprn j tv cial chairman of the society. Livestock bred anc shown by a vis, associate professor of . of Phi Epsilon Pi fraternity The Nittany Lions will provide the College made further impor- J April 21 T-. Da. UaU Uava The llst o£ varslty and fresh ‘ the musical portion of the enter- tant winnings on Tuesday and ’ * 188 Dfi 11810 fIOIS man football letter winners will tainment, he said. Committee Wednesday at .the International . , hi not be released until the return of members are S. William Kalin ’43, Livestock Exposition- in Chicago. \|l|Qop| UfllOfl R616956S The annual fall meeting of the Coaches Robert A. Higgins and A. Edward Leitzinger’43, John W. The pen of 10 barrows on foot, -Central Pennsylvania Educators’ Martin S. McAndrews, who are Hanley ’43, and Bill Murphy ’43, Berkshires, shown by the College, yj| Q| |)gQOIS lOf Conference will be held at the Col- away on business, ex officio. took the sweepstakes prize in this . , p J r 1 lege next Wednesday afternoon, it U ... .... V .-'™ ; d «" Lost And round JerVlte was announced yesterday by Dr. E. .. , ... ~. Newman Dinner Tonight S ZVaifTth.’2? ina»-.«ortto-.ncre,s,th.v.iu. b. v a „ o™-, P sy=h..adu- is Ex-Sfudenfs Join The annual anniversary dinner nontest to students of the lost and found ca^° n - ... . . 1f..., of the Newman. Club will be con- _ .’ . .. . . .. . . service of Student Union, this list The program will begin at p. ||||' 10FDS ducted this evening at the Phi Theßerkshirelightweig t - of campus depots where articles m. in the Home Economics build- f „ students at the Kappa house at Bp. m. On the r ° w tbe Collegewhich may be turned in was released yes- ing. at which time the conference ™““tudents at the committee in charee of the din- P laced first in lts class and took terriav will be divided, into three discus- College will soon begin night ner are John W. York ’43, R. Alma tbe f 1 championship of the *. d £ Hammond’s office, 203 sion groups One of these groups. Gillespie ’43, Eileen M. Mclntire breed ° n Monday was named re- Main Engineering: the janitor’s under the leadership of Harold Corps Training Renter in the first ’4s,,John W. Boyle ’45, Joseph T. s f ve champion lightweight of the Engineering A; los Electri- Pegf principal of the Roosevelt pha.se of their flying instruction. Reichwein’42, and Donald Schriv- sh ° W- cal Engineering; the main desk in Junior High School in Altoona, Upon completion of the 3 er In sheep carcasses, the grand the Central Library; 102 Burrowes will discuss problems of student week’s flight course, the follow and reserve grand championships Build ; n „. 3 Zoology Building Dean government in high schools. A sec- ing men will become second lieu- Eta Kanoa Nil Initiates , 0f l he ShOW W l re b( t h n r - b , y Steidle’s office, 101 Mineral Indus- ond group, under Dr. Allan Pat- tenants in the Army Air Corps: hiH nappa nu iiimuiuj lamb carcasses shown by the Col- . 2QI R RaR . the i an ;t o r’s terson of the Lock Haven Teach- James M. Alexander ’4O, Paul W. Eight students have been initiat- i e g e . Prizes previously announc- ’ gnarks Building. ers College, will consider prob- Bachman ’39, Alfred R. Bechtel ed into Eta Kappa Nu, electrical e d taken on foot include the grand Ae i-iculture Economics exten- lems of training secondary school Jr. ’4O, John W. Bickley, James enginering, honorary society, in- champion wether' lr:mb in sheep, . ffi Horticulture Building' teachers; and a third group will H. Buckey ’43, William B. Camp eluding Theodore F. Taylor ’43, an d the champion Duroc Jersey 320 Buckhout Laboratory Dean discuss the reading problem in the bell, Oscar A. Booz ’4O .Robert and the following seniors; Anson barrow of the breed. Fletcher’s office, 111 Agriculture high school. E. Brubaker ’4O, Paul L. Davies C. Burwell, Jack 'E. Dair, John M. Building; 103 Dairy Building; 101 ; —~— ' 42 - Pomfrett, Fred C. Reutanauei, • New-Phvsics; 105 White Hall; 102 ThfOO DirflirAC Tf) Ra Harold W. Gilbert, Harold K. Ralph B. Edward F. PJfA COVHITlitt66 PldllS Home Economics Building; and 101 1W66 rICIUIM 10 DC Good >39) James T . Hamilton, Weller, and Myron F. Wheelei. _ ~ . , Forestry Building. Af Dtf A Mppfmfl John H - Hobaugh, Casimer A r( la rv T ft fa«A DATf Social Inquiry Trips < ( ? W ? . Krause 42, Donald J MacLellan fliuery lOreieKUll .V ' tnnr rin Harris TL H f T r I “London Night,” a film direct > 44> Erik s . Moeller ’4l, Robert Senior students in the advanced bu and Pittsburgh ihf©© PfOIS. 10 SpeSK London with a commentary M . shellenberger ’44, and Ashley ROTC corps will be the guests of over the ChrisSs 1, MJIIaI T««,n lulLlmn ™ 6 ” ding WUlkie will E . Woolridge, grad. Colonel and 3^ s - mUon vacation by the PSCA social prob " ® lOWfl MG6tinQ pLtureSLThe BeaverSoo lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHH dery at a tea at the Nittany Lion lems committee Major Francis J. Heraty, assist- V™ " es; ™ 5 todav - . -n.T Inn December 14. The other guests Margaret K. Ramaley ’44 and L. ant professor of military science Familv Affair ” a storv about T fltP will include the officers of the E Ugen e -Scott ’44, co-chairmen of and tactics; Dr. Duane V. Ramsey, . a nH “Shock Troons y of Dis I.N “W b military department and their the , Pitts burgh trip announced the assistant professor of sociology; P « Wricane will he 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 wives. group will meet at a designated and Dr. A. H. Reede, associate pro- n _ aDOUt nurr cane ’ wli WASHINGTON - Japejnese- T 0 Hold Skating Part** time in the city, and visit Terrace fessor of economics will be the ; American peace talks appeared IMA will hold its second skating party in the Armory tonight from 8 to 11 o’clock. All girls are invited. Admission will be twenty cents per person, and IMA membership cards must be pre sented by all boys. Physical Exams Due Dr.: Joseph P. Ritenour, director of the College Health Service, re quests that all freshmen and trans- fer students who have not com pleted their physical examinations report to the dispensary as soon as possible. fANTA, jays: — STATB CO/iBOB Don't fail to get the eight-page Christmas supplement . .. part of today's issue. % (Ml lA ' Fred Allen Agent To Hear Talent Today James Harkins, a representative Village, Bedford Dwellings, Juve- principal speakers of the Town - li.rfo-a to be on the breaking point last nile Courts, Chinese restaurant, Meeting to be held at'Hillel at 7:30 UdMICF utIOSGII JtlugG night Climax of the situation HiU City. p.m. Sunday Prof Franklin C. Banner, head is expected today at 10 a . m . E. Elizabeth Mason ’42 will be in The Town Meeting will have as of the department of journalism, when j is to give her an _ charge otf the Philadelphia tour. No its topic this 'Sunday “Is Our De- has been selected by the Michigan swer to secretary of State Cor one has been named by the social fense Effort Jeopardizing Our So- Press Association to judge news- deU Hull . s dem ands The answer problems committee to supervise cial Gains?” Faculty, townspeople, papers participating in its annual . „ Ynpn) .j t h „ „ ' flat « no .. the'Harrisburg visit. . and students are'invited. contest. is expectea no. Customs Quiz Baffles Frosh If your freshman roommate be lieves wearing green dinks, know ing movies, and learning songs is humiliating to intelligent college men, you can use some of the an swers to the recent Tribunal “bluebook” to disprove his pet theories. The test, drawn up by George R. Ross ’42, Tribunal member, was considered very simple by the seven-man boai’d, yet proved cap able of stumping many of the ex emptees. Some of the inane answex-a to the quei-y about the All-College presidency were DoVothy (maybe the fi-eshman’s girl—or perhaps he meant Doherty) and John A. Baer ’42, Collegian managing editor. The mix-up caused by Robert D. Baird’s uncei'tain status at the first of the year elicited the OF THE PENNSYLVAN FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 5, STATE COLLEGE, PA. Next L A Lecturer Fog Grounds Planes, T T II A n Confuses Hot Dogs lO lalK wll ■ 03CG A natural smoke screen of fog confused comment, “Dorothy, is the All-College president, but the frosh bible says Bail’.” Although many hopeful BMOC’s have had the political setup thoroughly explained, it still seems a bit hazy to some of the freshmen. When asked to name the two political parties on cam pus, the fi-osh replied with an swers of Republicans, IFC, WSGA, IMA, and Off-Campus. One bewildered fi’osh named Geoi’ge N. “Red” Rumsey ’43, Tri bunal member, tte the fi-eshman class president, while the list of students named as senior class president included Crouse, Grouse, Smaltz, Baird, Mattern—and Krouse. The Home Economics Building was located behind Burrowes Building and next to the “Sextil Chem laboi-atory,” while Student (STATE COLLEGE Union was placed on the left as you enter Old Main. In answer to the question, “Why are the fi-eshmen required to sit in the east stands?” one fi-osh said, “So the sun shines in our eyes and we don’t get our money’s worth.” Old Main was described as the building with the Sandwich Shop in the basement and its main oc cupant was called Dr. Henzel. Estimates of the number of members on Tx-ibunal varied from as high as 15 to as low as 5. The “spirit”" was thei’e though as one frosh classified Penn State as “the best in the east, west, north, and south” to pass along with about 90 per cent of those who took the test. The other 10 per cent wei’e punished on Wed nesday evening. WJtcttt WEATHER Warmer with Showers PRICE THREE CENTS Moses Elected Football Manager For 1942 Season NEW YORK— William Green, president of the A. F. of L., de nounced the ' Smith anti-strike bill which passed the House of Representatives yesterday. He joined by Phillip Murray of the CIO who said that this was the first step during the emer gency toward totalitarianism in America. MOSCOW —Russia and Poland signed a peace pact yesterday and dedicated themselves to the elim ination of Nazism. Polish prison ers, held in Russia since the end of the Russian invasion of Poland, will be released. LONDON Britain delivered an ultimatum to Finlrind which mist be answered tonight at 10 p. m. or a declaration of war against the Helsinki government will result. However, British spokesmen said that if Helsinki is communicative, the declaration of war may be postponed.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers