FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1945 PSCA Holds Cabin Party 'Members of the First Semester Club'of the (Penn State Christian / Association will meet at the rear ..of Old Main tomorrow to hike to . Watts Lodge for the freshmaft overnight cabin party. (Robert (Dunlap and (Mary Lou ■ Waygood, co-chairmen of the -cabin committee, promise the .froshgood food, square dancing, - and a worth while hike. Those who are going are requested to bring blanket rolls to Old Main for transporting by_car to the ■ cabin. % The First Semester Cliuib will -"hold ten installation service in the Hugh Beaver Room from 7:15 to 9 p. irn. Monday.. A dance and re freshments will complete the eve ning'.' ' • Buddy Thomas and Joan Wolfe i head the Wednesday meeting of the .Second. Semester Club in the Hugh Beaver Room at 7:30. The ■program will consist of an hour of discussion and social time. The World Student Service Fund Rally will.be held in 304 Old Main at l:'3p Sunday. The rally Will initiate the drive on icamipus ; for. funds for students abroad. / Jane Crighton of Yale Univer sity, representing the National V WSSF, will be ithe speaker. ‘ Phoe be Forrest, in charge of the pro -. gram, invites everyone .to come. : Rev. Robert Eads of the Univer >• Vsity- -Balpt-ist Church presents a /critical discussion 6f the Book of ‘lsaiah in' the (Hugh Beaver Room •St;i2:3o each Sunday. The study . .is under the direction of Commis sion 111. Violinist Goes Long Hair Mozart's Concerto Schwab auditorium was packed . Monday night, in. (fact you could . . count all the .empty seats on one -hand. Townspeople and students //came,.early .to. see .who was/ who and" "why./All were dressed in /-“their “weekend” best which meant' -.heels- and. stockings, instead;, of /•lpafers, and socks and smart Suits' r instead of plaid trousers and pink .'‘shirts. - ’ \ ■ The Busch - Symphony walked . on the stage and took their /•'places; The -. audience applauded /-and- sank ,down into.,their, hard /wooden seats, padded only by :i their-coats underneath. rjv,.lt ..wasn’t long before everyone ' Was caught in the rhythm of the string instruments. The program >.was prerclassical and classical in y"style, but everyone was in the. ' mood for Bach, Handel- and, Moz art: who were well represented. ■""Heads nodded and kept time to . each . measure and accented each staccato as smiles of . approval - .were exchanged.. - -" Then it happened—tight in. the ' middle of the Rondo movement of "Mozart for Piano and -.Orchestra ,in . E-flat and just -when, the piano soloist was doing, "such a fine .job—-the lady violinist "'in the. last row began to have trouble. She..was rather young, "wore glasses and... had her hair "•done-in a very loose, roll swept "up all around. As she .struck an emphatic note with her bow—plop "'—almost simultaneously her hair "came down. " -• . - •“I .was just thinking about “long-haired” music,,” ope "of the coeds who saw it whispered’ in be vtween giggles.- " Oh, she did look odd, with her hair swinging baok r and forth Somewhere? hotel state coliege . travel bureau ! By Ap P°inTmeht-P hone - 733 - ,v , , I Letter To Editor Dear Editor, On Monday, having seven hours of classes and a noontime job,, I was unable to get to Recreation Hall to pay my fees until 4:30 p. m. Upon arriving, I found that I was toeing Charged $lO more than I had anticipated. Since I did riot have the extra money, I explained the situation to the man at .the Bursar’s Window. He said, “Well, you’ll have to get the money be fore 5 o’clock. . Tuesday afternoon", I went up jto the Bursar’s Office, confident that I would get at least a fair hearing. I intended to offer to pay as much ■as 'I had, and 'the balance on Sat urday. The man to wham I spoke was extremely discourteous. As soon as he understood I was ask ting for a deferment, he interrupt ed without apology, saying, “You can’t do that. You can’t take advantage of our system. You couldn’t 'get (away with it at any other college. Get the money! I don’t care if you get it from a slot machine, just get it!” - . .He refused to accept the money I offered him, and informed ihe that my dean would toe advised to suspend me from classes. I charge that his refusal to'grant me a de ferment is in direct' violation ;of the rules laid down for the con duct of his ■ office. - Fortunately, 1 was aible to bor row the money from a friend the same afternoon. Nevertheless, the action he threatened to take was tantamount to conviction, without trial;'l do not see how my attend T ance at the College may Ibe con strued las a forfeiture of my rights as an enfranchised resident ‘of Pennsylvania. Siricerely, Stanley Huppert, ■keeping time with her arrri move ments. As if that weren’ t enough, the young man sitting beside'.her, also ;a violinist, , had" a minor catastrophe. He. was.playing vigorously when the'string/ on his bow snapped. No' one -heard-it,- riot many saw it,- but there it- was/also swinging in. midair. What "a "’pair they made, his 'bow string arid her hair. At the next break,-she put her lock in place; but-at the very next fortissimo it fell again/ The girls shook with hysterics not daring to let themselves go! Sedate townspeople sitting nearby, tittered and poked' each/other, Then, they saw the spectacle too, and the pianist was forgotten. . Probably no one else noticed the side attraction—-not even, Mr: Busch. ■ himself. (But, the second and third row in the left balcony had a grand time, with all "apol ogies to; Mr. Mozart and the man. and woman who played the vio lins down below. Dr. f. Z. Koo To Speak For Penn-Sfafe-ln-China . Dr. T. Z. Koo of China and the Wprld Student Christian Federa tion, will be guest for the annual Penn State -in -China Sun-day December ‘9, and will speak at Chapel Service and a student mass 'meting at Ip.m. . Major iLoh of th Chinese Army Air Force and 21 cadets from the , Lycoming Engineering school will also .be guests at) .morning chapel. Dr. T. H. Cheng of the depart ment of zoology at 'Harvard Uni versity will be presented by Chaplain John Henry Frizzell. THE COLLEGIAN Navy Men Learn Ship Recognition From. Model Fleets How do Navy men who go to sea for the first time know how to identify ships they may encoun ter? This question is not left unan swered by .the NIROTC at the Col lege. At Navy 'headquarters in En gineering E there is a table of small Ship models, placed on ex hibition in order to familiarize the Navy men with ship structures. On exhibition in the Navy office are complete navies of the British Isles, United States, and'Germany, and -United States Maritime Com mission models. The little ships, made partially of plastic and partially of lead, are built exactly to scale. They are complete with guns, hull .form, stack, etc., so that the student may easily identify the vessel by its silhouette. In the future the Navy intends to use these models in the class room, where they will especially aid those men who have not had sea experience. .The small model vessels are sup plied toy the Training Aids Depart ment of the. Navy, which is a func tion of the (Bureau of Persoririel. Ctubinferfains Faculty, Foreign-Born Students , The Gosmopolian club will hold a tea "at the home of Dean and Mrs. Frank D, Kern, 140 W. FairmoUnt avenue, from 3 to 5 Saturday-afterpoon. One hundred and forty invitations have be'en sent, including about 100 foreign born students, and faculty mem bers- interested in thef club. Ari organization, of foreign-born students, faculty, members, ■ merh bers of . the College staff, "and other - interested persons, the club holds monthly meetings under the sponsorship of Dean Kern of the Graduate School. Officers of the cliab. are .Helen. Verner and Rich ard S’tauble. ;• Thirty-three .countries.. arU re presented this seiristr, with 16" of •these from South America, .13 from, Europe, three from Asia, and one from North America. The countries -are: South Arrierica, 'Bolivia,- Brazil, British Honduras, Canal Zone, Chile/Co lumbia,. Costa 'Rica, Cuba, Haiti, Mexico, Panama, - Peru, Puerto Rico, Trinidad, and Venesuela, •Europe: 'Alßanla', Austria, Czech oslovakia,. Danzig, Egypt, Eng land-, .France, ‘Germany, Italy, Po land, Rumania, Scotland, and Sweden; Asia: China, Philippine Islands, and .Turkey; and North America: Canada. Cabinet— (Continued fiam pud-? one)' State College Community Forum, and Patrick Brennan as chairman of the Freshman Orientation com mittee. William Maginn .will re main as head” of" the flag commit tee, 'assisted by Geraldine Rine hart, Janet Dildine, and Robert McGregor. . Thespians Need Writers Any script writers interested in writing for Thespians please contact. William C. Reutti, Phone 4061. . • •Smart Shop '•■■tiff*;.;: '• ' ' W ' '' nmmmmmimammmm ‘ ‘PEE K A B 00’ 'B RAC EL ET , CUFF. TYPE • -; /available in” Cold ancp Silver ' .. • - : Uoo.' 'Brooklyn Local' Lures Artists, Subway Addicts “Brooklyn Local” may bring fond recollections of mad subway dashes to some students, tout to art lovers it’s the familiar name of one of the many original engrav ings on exhibition this week in the library. This sensitive portrayal of 'a type of woman bred by big cities was engraved on copper by New Yorker Douglas Gorsline. He is wtell known in art circles because his abt is done in the tradition of old masters. . Gorsline’s work is on sale for father —plow a field, five dollars each as are the other original etchings and lithographs included in the collections pre sented to the library by the Amer ican Institute of Graphic Arts. Animal Studies On Display- On display in the cases are ani mal studies, rural scenes, portraits, human interest studies, and even a shipyard etching. 1 An outstanding scene is “'Eve ning Visit” toy Massachusetts-born William Mad Lean. It depicts a somber New England sky smear ing its gray-gloved fingers across a cold moon. A minute sleigh, out lined in the dusk wends its wiay to a sta'id farmhouse in the back ground. “The Plebian” toy George Ford Morris is a powerful lithograph.of ft*" created by —here are the Christmas cards you’ve been reading aboutl . . . These Ambassadors of Good-Will have been created for you by 'America’s foremost living artists . . . They’ll serve you with honor, and pay .warm respect to your friends’ good taste. » . • Because every card is an authentic reproduction of a genuine work of art your friends will cherish them for theif Christmas import and treasure them long after for their intrinsic beauty. The COLLEGE BOOK STORE 129 W. Beaver Ave. Open Every Evening a startled workhorse. Animal lovers will ibe enthralled by the questioning look Morris has im planted on its face. And while on the sutojeict of facial expressions it might toe well to turn from the animal world to the human scene and mention the original lithograph of the late “F.DiR.” by S. J. Woolf, artist writer. Woolf Interviews Celebrities Mr. Woolf, prior to World War II had traveled the world portray ing and interveiwing such celebri ties as Field Marshall Joflfre, Gen eral Pershing, Albert Einstein, Al fred E. Smith, and numerous oth ers. Franklin \D. Roosevelt short ly before his death sat for artist Woolf. Before concluding this resume of the exhibition, John Costigan’s etching “Autumn” must toe men tioned. This artist, who has won every major art award in the United States, has displayed ai sympathetic study of a rural fam ily. The toil-worn farm mother surrounded toy her children andl several bored caws disinterestedly watch a man—evidently the fath er—plow a field. Costigan has imparted a nostal gic,- 1 ‘back-to-the-tfarm’ ’ feeling to his etching, soothing, yet distress ing to city dwellers. tliat are works of art! « * •'"“"’I Price St io Sst PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers