successor To The Free Lance, Establishei r . • •.P. , r • AI /14.,"" . ite Elat`t , 4r • ............ ...... 0 -1 ,/ , \ AN' [ 10..."4 .r 4 • titer VOL. 39—No. 11 Cabinet Clamps Down On Student Activities Artists' Course Plans To Present Opera October 9 For the first time in the history of the College a full-fledged opera company will appear on the cam pus Friday, October 9 under the sponsorship of the Artist' Course. The company, made up chiefly from personnel of the Metropoli tan Opera Company, will present Puccini's "La Boheme" in English. A .30-piece orchestra, under the direction of Giuseppe Bamboschek, will accompany the production. The plan for having the course run this semester came yesterday in a meeting of• the board. The de cision was made after much delib eration. Dr. Carl E. Marquardt, commit tee chairman, said !yesterday, "With present unsettled conditions, theArtists' Course Committee hesitated at first in recommend ing to the President that the course be continued. However, the sub scribers voted practically- unani mously in favor of its continuance and with curtailed transportation facilities, it seemed even more logical than heretofore, to bring cultural experiences such as con certs to State College, rather than assume that our clientele go else where for them. "Furthermore, with the acceler ation of the acadeinic program the committee believed it is all the more desirable to provide an at traction in the Fall semester, so that the considerable number graduating in January would not be deprived of a privilege which their predecessors have had now for many years." Plans for the Spring semester Artists' Course are still under con sideration. Dr. Marquardt said yesterday that program will prob ably consist of three numbers. Seats for the operatic perform ance will be sold on a single-num ber seat basis. •Details of the ticket sale will be announced, at an early date. Warneke To Take Job As Instructor Affer Shrine Is Completed (Following completion of the Lion Shrine within three weeks, Heinz Warneke, its sculptor, will take up duties as instructor of sculpture in the Corcoran Galler ies in Washington, D. C. Occupied within the last few days with landscaping around the shrine, Mr. Warneke has been un able to proceed with his final work on the lion itself. He will start today on work with lighting effects. This task will require his work ing at night with artificial light and early mornng and evening to get proper highlight effects for any kind of lighting which may be de sired. Completion of the shrine . is as sured before the first home foot ball game with Bucknell, October 3. Dedication ceremonies are be ing planned for Alumni Homecom ing weekend by the . Alumni Asso ciation. The landscaping work being dohe around the shrine will make it possible to hold rallies and pep meetings in that section of the campus rather than in Jordan Fer tility Plots, their former site. Collegian Announces Subscription Plan For Clubs A nd Service Men At Reduced Rates Climaxing the subscription drive for this semester with two im portant announcements, the Daily. nations, will be contacted in the Collegian yesterday published next week. rates for service men, and for club Beginning Monday, the circu subscriptions. lation department of the Daily • Collegian - will maintain office On the Service Front, The Daily hours in the business office in the Collegian has reduced the rates basement of Carnegie Hall to re for men in the armed forces to ceive subscriptions and circula sl.2s, which includes postage and tion complaints. The schedule as mailing. Individual subscriptions announced last night follows: 9 may be bought from solicitors or a. m. to 12 noon; 12:30 to 5:30 at the Collegian office in Carnegie Po m.; and 7 to 9 p. m. Hall. Big news on the local subscrip- In addition to individual sub scriptions, a committee has been appointed to contact organizations and to make a drive for individual contributions for a fund to send The Ddily Collegian to camps where there are Penn State men. First step in the subscriptions for the service men was taken when the Old Main Open House Committee announced that it would pledge all of the profits Bucknell %den's May Attend IF Ball Full preparations for Penn State's first big weekend of the Fali semester---featiiiiiir:T - eddy Powell and his orchestra at Inter-- fraternity Ball—are rapidly tak ing shape with the announcement that an open invitation will be sent to the Bucknell student body to attend the dance before the Bucknell game. According to co-chairmen Rob ert H. P. J. Jordan '43 and David R. Sharp '43, the invitation will appear in Bucknell student publications next week. IF Ball weekend will be climaxed by the Bucknell-Penn State foo t b all game Saturday afternoon, October 3, which will open the 1942 grid season for both schools. Rumors originating on campus yesterday predicting an informal IF Ball were dispelled by Jordan and Sharp who stated that the dance will again be "strictly formal as has been the custom in former y.ears." The co-chairmen announced that all reservations for fraternity booths should be turned in at Student Union no later than Tues day, September 29. Exchange Money At SU Persons who have not collected their money or unsold books from the student book exchange may get it at Student Union anytime after 1:30 p. m. today, Bernard A. Plesser '43, director of the ex change, announced yesterday. First Semester Frosh To Tryout For Collegian "All first semester freshman men and women who are inter ested in trying. out for the Daily Collegian are urged tc attend a meeting in 9 Carnegie Hall at 4 o'clock today," Gor don L. Coy, editor, announced. Candidates for both editorial and business staffs should at tend the meeting. Sr T, OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 18, STATE COLLEGE, PA 'from its first session next Fri day to the fund: Other organi- tion front is the club plan for groups who want the Daily Col legian. The rates have been set at $7.75 for five subscriptions, •a saving of one dollar. Any organizations interested in taking advantage of the new club offer may contact the Collegian office and a . salesman will be sent out, or, they will be accepted in the business office during the hours stated above. Owner Renames Car 'Salvage Wagon;' Saves It From Pile By SEYMOUR ROSENBERG -"epiderrn.isf:Wagon;u- own— ed by one of the fraters, will heretofore be known as the "salvage wagon," it was reported last night. The reason the '35 Ford sedan has assumed the new name is that it was almost contributed to State College's salvage drive. Its own er had to use a lot of persuasion and even had to go so far as to sign an affadavit to save his car from the scrap pile. Friends of the owner decided to play a practical joke on him, knowing that he had left the "salvage wagon" on W. College avenue after running out of. gas. Along about 1:30 a. m. yester day morning, when the borough of State College was asleep, the vandals, four Pi Kappa Phis,' pro ceeded to where the car was standing and, with much groan ing and pushing, rolled the car down to the scrap pile on Co-op corner. With the permission of local salvage drive authorities, they were allowed to move the (Continued on Page Three) Penn State Club Invites Frosh To Bowling Party The Penn State Club, a non fraternity organization, will hold a bowling party for freshmen •and old members at the Dux Club on S. Pugh street, tonight, Ray Za roda '44, social chairman, an nounced last night. The club will pay twenty cents toward the cost of the evening's bowling for freshmen and twenty five cents for members' games. All members and prospective freshmen members who are - in terested are requested to be pres ent in the organization's club room at 7:30 p. m. The party will leave from there. Freshmen are also asked to visit the clubroom between 3 and 5 p. m. any afternoon so that they may become acquainted with the group. d 1887 Plan. Concerns Meeting Times, Coed Hours, '44 Prom, Dance Decorations In line with President Ralph D. Hetzel's recent convoca tion message and a suggestion by Dean of Men Arthur R. arnock, All-College Cabinet last night in special sessions adopted a definite policy for curtailment of student activities. Restricting meeting .times, recommending shortened coed hours .and the rescheduling of Junior Prom, and abolishing big dance contracted decorations and program's are the main stipulations of the program. President Hetzel and Dean Warnock urged the adoption of such rules in view of the recent policy of the National War * * * Department asking colleges to prove their wartime worth. Donald W. Davis, chairman, Jesse V. Fardella, Woodrow E. Hoch, M. Williams Lundelius, Pauline Crossman, David J. Mc- Aleer, and Robert L. Mahinney, all seniors, comprised the committee which drew up the "cut corners" plan. Following is a list of the Cabinet accepted program. 1. No meetings, extra-curricular activities, initiations or other stu. dent activities may extend after 8:30 p. m., Sunday night through Thursday night. A Cabinet com mittee will be set up to hear cases for special late permission re quests. This rule shall go into ef fect Sunday, September 27. 2. All-,College Cabinet recom mends -,to• *I•Sq.A Senate - that' .sec . ond semester freshman coeds should have only nine o'clock per missions on week night instead , of the present 10 o'clocks. Also sec ond semester senior women should have 10 o'clock .permissions on week nights instead, of .the present 11 o'clock. In addition all three o'clock permissions for big dance weekends should be cut to 2:30. 3. A recommendation shall be sent to the Student Union Board requesting the rescheduling of Junior Prom for sometime next semester because at present it is Interfraternity Council's defense scheduled just prior to final exam stamp sale, plans for which were ination week and only three weeks started several weeks ago, will be- after Senior Ball. gin next week according to Robert 4. No contracted decorations or programs shall be used at any big H. B. J. Jordan '43, in charge of the.sale., class dances. The plan, announced last night, To enforce the first provision, will requite every fraternity man All-College President Jerome H. to buy a stamp each month. Pay- Blakeslee '43, appointed a commit ment for the stamps will be made tee of Davis, chairman, Hoch, Lun by a house representative either delius, Bernard A. Plesser, sen iors; Dorothy K. Brunner '44, and. through house bills or to the repre sentative at will, dependent on Robert S. McNabb '45. This group single house rulings, will hear late permission appeals The committee in charge Of the and arrange to have buildings sale suggested a 50 cent stamp locked by 8:30 p. m. to aid in forcing the rule. en each month as the best amount. THIS IS WAR Donald W. Davis '43 headed the All-College Cabinet committee which formed the plans for cutting _down student activities_ in line with the College's wartime program. Cabinet accepted the policy last night. IF( Stamp Sale Set Next Week According to Jordan, each house will be given a quota based on the number of men in the house which will be published along with the amount of the house's purchase each month in The Daily Collegian. The sale will be held one day each month at the Student Union desk. Sales force will be appoint- ed by IFC president Sophomore Collegian Staff Meets Today MemberS of the sophomore business and editorial boards of The Daily Collegian, both men and women, will meet in the News Room at 4 p. m. today, according to an announcement made last night by Gordon L. Coy, editor, and Leonard E. Bach, business manager. By RICHARD D. SMYSER Cabinet also directed an appeal to students to consider their out side activities over which Cabinet has no jurisdiction and to eliminate and cut down wherever possible. In regard to the coed hours, dis cussion from the floor emphasized that if coed hours are cut, men's (Continued on Page Three) 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111119 Major Leagues 311111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 National League St. Louis 6, Boston 4 Pittsburgh 3. Brooklyn 2 Chicago 8. 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