FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1944 The Wesley Foundation The Melhodisl Church Sunday, 9:30 A.M. Church School classes: "Great Religions of the World," Dr. W. Pearce, leader: "The Life of Jesus," Rev. Mussina, leader. 10,145 A.M. and 7:30 P.M Worship Services 5:15 P.M. Student Choir Rehearsal 5:95 P.M Student Supper Recreation 7:3o—Wesley. Players present "The Shepherds," directed by Mrs. W. E. Keepper. B:3o—Christmas Caroling MERRY CHRISTMAS FRED'S—AIen St G~ Est ~•; ' - ; ^ ~~CT': = _ ~' ~':'-•=l:=s ~°f'i~~;c.. Ott:S.V.M3=3^'•7=7M.l-7...W 7 r.:3:;.. - I CHRISTMAS GIFTS for a man that he'll enjoy! )1 KAHN'S MEN'S SHOP 2S$2: ~FiSb`~{YS^«S ~.f^ iGK'_:'~"v."".:.K.~^'3:':4s-~. -w: v""::~3'~w..~ ~ ' Sii~i~S"S~''vi"TS~'. ' , V1fitt P42 .".•:••WX*V.1. , Wird!a.....1."1. , :1t147V.1.,....r:4'''..!.-'73.1 . :::"....K. , 4r.r..,.";..T...1.17:1•Zr..-57 1 1 4 • i'i if ea..merfratio4 ill , • 11 - 11, ..,.°l.--•lic , . ,. .'•:',`if , . 0 t . , ' A.; r ;A: . 1 ••• ~. v , i'l V ~ ...,k...., . yi ,-- .7-4.1: - --....r. ",;: .il -- "1:1,' • • :: -01 , ,z.. ".,.. I ,` ~.., 1 , - e,- ) . ' 4 O - .4 441 f!'/!1F - 4 , -,Nzrp... '•' I . 0/ the Sea44o. • 1 i• 1 ..t.: . , The management and staff of this firm extend Christmas Greetings and wish for you every prosperity in the New Year. !t has been a p!eastiro SMART SHOP • 'lO .tA ,0 . ii 14 MISY.42CS-- - a.V.{5141M-V-:1:4::.!a'e.:.- - Z2S - .::Y.PZL , ZI:4:4 ?..'.1 ,- Zr.:::.a.:l`..:ll.*:•Zi>"ti.i. , :'-':-'Z'31,` 2 1.41. 4 ! ^ . YZ:VitS ik A 1 1 4 4 q.• „. 4e • ! ' e t ..4 ~ 1' , 1 , ~ „.• ' . •;:,^ .; i': „, VA'' '' ,1., j 4 13 • , 5- %; ft litleftv Bee4l. *csa 4 Afwv:,,,,, ekuatmas ,joiL a , Qua Mai le. , r Plervla i i , • ; T Zitt V' ' 4 l ' l O if f 64 •(4 '6l Ty Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation YitiTACIACIAP.3IE.ZS:3IIIIW.:- reM.I.3ZIXS•aroU: 7Mli.t.tiVaii:EW.l:42(:--,....4ESZWZISZE:WIMWKWIIS.3cIrAMAgYegWrirSVUTIttC. First National i' fi ; A fi ' fi We send you sincere and ~;; i l tj hearty greetings. full of M ‘ l i s,l l Christmas cheer for each .. V, of you. And we add good '. 'iii J. 4 wishes for happiness and M if prosperity during the next 1 i.t ' M twelve months. i 0 1 , , *I . .4 1 Cassidy's Barbet Shop V ;4 Arid we haven't seen the time yet that it didn't give us a pleasant experience. Each year we are more ap preciative of the friend ships and patronage that has been ours. Each Yule tide season has found us more determined to serve you better during the corn-' ing year. This year is no exception. We are truly grateful and fully aware of your part in ;:he progress of this organi zation. We value your con tinued good-will and trust that we ma r merit it for many more years to come. ! of State College tiffle-Publicized Board Of Trusfees Guides College Policies,. Operations BY BENNETT FAIRORTH Before a new curriculum can be included in the College catalogue, .cr a dormitory constructed, the Bard - f Trustees must approve Cie measure. Before Westinghouse or DuPont can award a fellowship, or any school and department buy sup plies, the Board of Trustees must ,ppi Dye the measure. Befere professors can be ap •pointed, salaries raised, or the Col lege health service enlarged, the Board of Trustees must approve the measure and any other change in the College program cannot be enforced until the Board of Trustees has given the final &at- The 32 trustees as a body tour the College twice a year, confer with school and department heads, and hear reports of administration officials. Each trustee Is Interested in the welfare of the College and is informed of its needs. II: il I d -I . .1' 1. Since College officers and fac ulty members settle immediate questions, the Board of Trustees directs the College's policies and decides on overall matters. Like a corporation, the College owns 3000 acres of land, operates seven un dergraduate schools, one graduate school, undergraduate centers, ex tension services, and research pro jects. Grounds, buildings, and equip ment are valued at 22 million dol -1 lags. The College must lay out mil , lions of dollars annually to keep the lawns raked, 'buildings heated and lighted, and salaries paid— ' and the Board of Trustees is the final judge of all transactions and expenses. Five trustees are ex-officio members: \Governor Edward Mar tin; President Ralph D. Hetzel; Superintendent of Public Instruc tion Francis B. Haas; Secretary of Agriculture Miles Horst; and Sec retary of Mines Richard Maize. The governor appoints six mem bers from any part of Pennsyl: vania. The alumni choose nine 'members who serve three years. At a convention the remaining 12 members are elected. Each county sends to the assembly • three representatives of agricultural so cieties and three from mining, en gineering, or manufacturing organ izations. The only woman•on the board is a, farmer's wife, a leader in farm orgaizations.. „The,;,ll9.ard ; ; ; ls,„:*se composed of two insurance men, two lawyers, two consulting ,engi mere, two publishers—of the Har risburg Patriot and Williamsport Grit—,eight farm and orchard owners, 10 business executives. Officers of the board, all elected by the trustees, are: J. Franklin Shields, president; Vance C. Mc- Cormick, vice-president; President Ralph a Hetzel, secretary; Samuel K. Hostetter, business officer of the College, treasurer. The treas- i!1 r~ :3 14 Bank Iltannmalcer—tAderwood J. FRANKLIN SIMMS, •• President of the Board urer cannot belong to the board. From the board's members,,an executive . committee of seven members is formed, plus the presi dent and secretary of the board as ex-officio members. The executive committee meets seven times a year. Six meetings are booked for State College and the other for Harrisburg in January. , The 27 appointed and elected trustees are divided into Ave standing committees and study problems of •architecture, educa tion, grounds and buildings, mance and business, student and staff welfare. At the peak of the College or ganization is the little-publicized Board of Trustees guiding .the majcr policies and operations of the College. Physical Education Profs Attend State Meeting Four members *of the School of Physical Education and Athletic at' the College participated in the 23rd annual meeting of the Penn sylvania State Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation held in Pittsburgh Friday and Saturday. Dean Carl P. Schott presided it a panel on competitive athlet-, ics. Dr. A. F. Davis discuiaed, "Health. Education . , in ,, ,the:Zgo . st- Period,". and , .` .Lawther participated ball clinic. , •Dr. Lloyd M. Jones, president elect of the Association for 1944- 45; presided at a meeting of• the the Commission on Postwar Prob lems and at the convention. ban quet. Livestock Show • Block and Bridle Club will con duct the annual Little Internation al Livestock 'Show at the stock, judging pavilion January . 27. Any one interested in fitting sheep, cat tle, or light' horses for the show should contact Herbert Terndrup At the sheep barn. WARNER BROTHERS' STATE COLLEGE THEATRES PROGRAM CATHAUM THEATRE Fri.-Sat. . Mon.-Tues. "And Now Tomorrow" Ala Loretta Youn g Tuesday Our Hearts Were Young iarta Lynn Bond. Show and Gay" • Gill Russell Wed. • "She's a Sweetheart" Larry Parks Thurs. "Immortal Sergeant" Gary Cooper *****************A************************* STATE THEATRE Fri.-Sat. "Casanova Brown ,, Gary Cooper Teresa Wright Mon. "Sergeant Mike". L3eaarrnynePßarakiess Tues. " Man in Half Moon 'Street"nsenAmrlksthaerer **************************44***************: NITTANY THEATRE Fri. "Song of Russia" Robt. Taylor Sat. "Pride of the Plains" Mon. " Dragon Seed', K. Hepburn Tues. "Make Your Own Bed" Jack Carson Wed. Wat. Bead* "The Hairy Ape s. Hayward THE COLLEGIAN Cigarette Quality Hasn't Changed, Haley Claims Glamorous movie stars, athletic champions, and other celebrities once upoh a time smoked Chester fields, Luckies, or Camels to soothe their nerves, and even the average American smoker preferred a cer tain brand. But today smokers buy cigarettes wrapped in nny kind of package—where, when and if they can buy them. Despite the present cigarette famine, the quality o! cigarette tobacco has not changed appreci ably, claims Dr. Dennis E. Haley, of the agricultural and biological chemistry, department, who has ex perimented with „cigarette and eigarleof tobacco, with his col leagues for the Federal govern ment for the past 25 years. Tobacco growers still' fertilize their fields with exact quantities of nitrogen and potash and care fully tend their crop. The tobacco Is still cured at high temperatures over a short period of time and. then mellowed by lent and bac terial enzymes. When leading cigarette com panies today .advertise that they hire experts to buy. their tobacco, they are telling the, truth, Dr. Haley points out. The Liggett and Meyers Co., Reynolds Co., or other authorities can Seel and look :at the tobacco and quickly recognize a qUality product. In the language of the tobacco expert, quality means a nicotine content of two-and-a-half per cent and a sugar content of 25 per cent of the total dry weight of the to.: bacco leaf. When the cigarette is lighted, the sugars in the tobacco fuse. The air then cannot flow through the tobacco and instead enters be tween the paper and the outer layer of tobacco. In a test conducted by Dr. Haley and his. students with a mechan ical smoker, the .tar , content ex ceeded 40 milligrams when the cigarette was smoked completely. When smoked to a stub less than an inch, the tar content fell short of 30 milligrams. Likewise with nicotine. When the cigarette was smoked com pletely, nicotine content of the smoke totaled three,. milligrams' and less than two' Milligrams when smoked' -an inch, si. .tub. But ta nicoifl*.eente4t: of te; Onoke diffei:ezith biands6f Cigarettes and 'Conditions of smoking. , '' . Dr: Haley and his co-workets have also experimented with cigarleaf tobacco at the College and the Tobacco ExPerimental Lahore- . tory at HoSeville, Pa. The Penn State professor has strived through his research to improve the quality of the tobacco. For' a -long. time; soil chemists have known that a high potash content in the leaves improves the quhlity of tobacco,. The indepen dent .research of, Dr. Charles D. Jegiies • of the agronomy depart ment indicates ,that to obtain a favorable response •to the potash treatment': the =clays -in the soil should be more or less saturated with respect to potassium. Tobacco growers are now hying to fertilize the preceding crop plus the to bacco with a liberal supply of potash. After cigarleaf tobacco is picked, it Is dried in a curing shed where leaf enzymes cause a desirable change in composition. When this tobacco reaches the nwnufacturer, it is pricked in 450-pound boxes and subjected to 3000 pounds of pressure. The boxes are then stored in chambers under favorable temper ature and humidity. As a result.of the action of bacterial and leaf enzymes, ammonia and nicotine are lost to an appreciable degree, making for a milder cigar smoke. ALL GOOD * WISHES To Our Friendi a+ this glorious Christmastide • and a HAPPY • NEW YEAR •Temple Market '. v '~~h. R~"~~4~ti: ~ 4u:.~. lu'w " ~=+' lu~.`CS+~~k ~ ..' ":.`4~~i~ ."~r.~~~~R~'~. REA & DERIC S ,::. , ;a . ~..::, Gifts for Every Member of the Family . A.:... •••=', . -4 1 . . Toiletries Sets Evening in , Paris Lenthetic - Ayers Max Factor Dorothy Gray Pinaud Elmo Cheratny , rp ii N ,....,.....,..a.,,vz.m.,....,:r.m.....ct.:„...mr.,zawi., COLOGNES-PERFUMES Cara Nome Corday Richard Hudnut L'Orle .17 . Bourjois—Lucien Lelong a de Raymond—Leigh N I (E5z.•51 , ..L-g - I.4«:mm.my_tlistsma:,-ammcm(stP4 i t o 1 51 9 3W11=. , :a. , :.1M.C1 , 1W:.4.- --, YSZEn.4 , :::".. , Mll , Zs:l23:4M , L2l.l%iliktaSUEsziftit. , l:.;:fil,%M. E , Z9M5.7.-:II:,ZSSVS:Ittt Certain Toilet Preparations, Jewelry and Luggage Subject To Federal Tax Manicure Sets Revlon Chen Yu LaCross Cutex Rig . "':.',.5' 1. :.::...DgF,t1C..K,!: : ..1'.,t4, 1 _C. N , 121 S. Allen Street State College, Pa. •qi,:t4,T.:.:;:,-RAT. P. •.' . -.. s Tp o:.p s I YO UR TYPEWRITER NEEDS SERVICE . JUST DIAL 1492 TSZ ••,7S. It's a very pleasant, cheering custom to renew friendly associations during the Yuletide by extending to you our sin cere wishes for a Happy. Christmas. And our optimistic predictions of a Prosperous New Year. . McLANAHANIST; 14 S. Allen Street. State College Stuffed Animals Games—Jig Saw Puzzles . Paint Sets—Model Aeroplanes pi 3,, '',.;,-;',., :'l l v . i . i s :;' ' ' ' : 7 i '' ' : , . . e -t-....,, For the Children For the Smoker Tobacco Pouches—Lighters • Pipes—Tobaccos Pipe Racks—Ash Trays Cigarette Cases General Gilts Playing Cards—Comb and Brush Sets—Globe of the World Page Three