SATURDAY, NOVT3M6ER 7. 1953 A Chance to improve Customs Program Students who were dissatisfied with this year’s customs program are being offered a chance to give constructive criticism to the Freshman Joint Customs Board. The' board has sent out a request to campus . organizations— such as Leonides, Panhellenic Council, Freshman Council, and Hat Society Council, for recommehdations on revision ol next year’s customs regulations. The customs has also asked individua' students, especially freshmen, to submit recom mendations. The board believes frosh who underwent this year's customs would probably have the most important opioipns- of points either lacking or over-emphasized in the pro gram. ’ - ■ Complaints about this year’s program were primarily against the lack of enforcement kr. upperclassmen. When customs were strongly enforced during the- first week, frosh spiri. was accordingly high. When enforcement drag ged, during the last two weeks of the program, frosh likewise lost a great part of their enthusi asm and adopted an attitude of unconcern - and disregard for customs regulations. ‘Penn State Yankee’ Pattee Autobiography to Be Out This Month By DON SHOEMAKER “Penn State Yankee,” the autobiography of the late Dr. Fred Lewis Pattee, will be ready for sale Nov. 21. Dr. Pat tee, member of the faculty for 34 years and /of the al ma mater, completed the man uscript for the book in May 1950, two years before his death. . It was presented to the Pattee Library under the title of “My World As In My Time,” along with other writings of Pattee. The manuscript remained in the hands of the library until this. March, when friends of Dr. Pattee and the College de cided it should be published. Publication of the book was di rected by a committee' includ ing William L. Werner, profes sor of American literature and close friend of Pattee, Louis Hi Bell, director of the Depart ment of Public Information, 'and Richard C. Maloney, as sistant dean of the School, of Liberal Art's. Book design was handled by Wendell S. Macßae, publications produc tion manager. Funds for the project were donated by friends of Pattee and the ’College, and his Dartmouth classmates. A to tal - of $ll5O was collected from private contributions and the remaining sum was .added by the College. Profits from book sales will be re turned to contributors and the remainder will be pre sented to the College. The fact that Dr. Pattee was a New England “Yankee” for the first 31 years of his life, be fore he came to Penn State in 1894 inspired the title, “Penn State Yankee.” The book is roughly divided into three sections. The first deals with his boyhood in Bris tol, N.H. The second tells of his career at Penn State, where Little Horse Show Set for Tomorrow The second Little Horse. Show will be held at 1:30 tomorrow at the College riding stables. The horse show is sponsored by the Riding Club and contestants are limited' to club members. Ribbon awards will be present ed to four winners in beginner, intermediate, intermediate jump ing, advanced, advanced jumping and open classes. Book Club Selects Dugan's 'iron Ship' A book by James Dugan, 1937 editor of Froth, has been, selected for distribution by the Book-of the-Month Club. The. book, Dugan’s latest, is “The Great Iron Ship,” which deals with the Great Eastern, the largest trans-Atlantic vessel of its day, 1858. A portion of the boo'k was serialized recently by the New Yorker magazine. Prof tb Attend Meet Dr. Miriam Lowenberg, head of the Department of Foods and Nutrition, will attend the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association and a meeting of the .child health committee of the association Tuesday in New THB DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA However, customs will undoubtedly be with is again next fall, and distant as that time may ■eem, action now will help make next year's customs a strong and vital part of campus life. If all campus organizations, and all individual tudents who have given any thought to frosh :ustoms—pro or con—would seriously consider .’actors that might improve the strength of the program, and would take the time to offer the customs board definite and itemized suggestions for future regulations, perhaps next year’s pro- Tam would actually’fulfill its intended purpose. —Peggy McClain Dr. Fred Lewis Paffee he held what was probably the irst - full professorship of American literature in the country. The concluding chap ters tell of Dr. Pattee’s life af ter his retirement in 1928. Dr. Patiee, noted teacher, writer and traveler, wrote or edited more than 25 books. However, he was probably best noted for his books on the history of American lit erature. His most famous piece of writing is "Contem porary Writers of American Literature Sitice 1870." Since -there was no source for ma terial other than the authors themselves. Dr. Pattee wrote letters asking them 'or infor mation. A portion of the autobiography is devoted to the replies he received. Some authors' 1 included are H. L. Mencken, Hamlin Gar land, Mary Wilkins, Mark Twain, and Bret Harte. "When JUNIORS... . Attend Chcmel in Force 'Center Section of Schwab RESERVED FOR -SPECIAL Please Present This Coupon Good for one pair slacks or skirt cleaned and pressed with any two-piece suit, topcoat, or dress. —One Week Only - Nov. 9-14 UUJN9SBSTTE and SUNWAY CLEANERS This indicates frosh spirit fluctuates with the strength of enforcement. And upperclassmen will obviously not enforce regulations which they feel to be of no value foward promotion of class spirit and frosh adjustment to campus life. At present, the subject of frosh customs is oot of major importance to most students. Prob ably the only students actually concerned with next year’s program are members of customs ■oard and of groups preparing recommendation ists. the book was published in .1915, it caused considerable controversy, because it was the first time a critic had dealt with authors outside the tradi tional New England school: Dr. Pattee was one of the first ,to advocate American lit erature in United States col leges. He instituted courses at Penn State when he came here, and was a strong supporter of the teaching of American lit erature throughout his whole life. Dr. Pattee is probably best known to Penn State students, as composer of the words of ihe alma mater. In 1901 Penn State had no offi cial song, and Dr. Pattee wrote the present words sim ply as- an example. However, the trustees approved them and they became official. Originally, there were six verses, but today only four are used. One outstanding land marks on the campus—the Fred Lewis Pattee library—was named after the nationally known author. There are many pages'in the autobiography devoted to Penn State. But the book is not a running history of the College’s growth. Prather, it is a book of personal episodes and anec dotes. There are few references to living people or people now on the College staff. This is probably because Pattee’s /lo cal memories go 'hack only to -928, the year of his retire nent. Sales of the autobiography are being handled by the Paiiee Library. A special pre-publication price of $3.75. plus one per cent Pennsyl vania sales tax. is being of fered to those who order the volume before Nov. 21. Reg ular price is $4.75. Orders are being taken by Ralph W. Me- Comb, College librarian. Regular Price! 210 W. College Ave. Little Man on Campus 'Oh, they're losing yards on 'Time in the Huddle' all right, b' notice they made a touchdown on every play." ...And So Bio Weekend By CELIA JOHNS Imports by the dozen will be tempers are cooled and the happy floating around campus this ? ou >?," e eads fo J *° dance tvt„. i j to tlle music of Ralph Flanagan s weekend. Newly-pressed gowns orchestra. and crinolines will be cluttering j About 15 minutes will be spent walls in the dorms. Corsage sales m li ne before coats can be checked are reaching a peak. Fraternities. Then the ordeal begins. Some have inventoried so that supplies people say that football is dan iof food and favors for their dates gerous, but apparently these peo- I stock every house. |Ple have never been to a Penn ! It’s Junior Prom weekend, the i s * ate d . ance - The gowns begin to first of the College’s four annual ? how . signs _of wear, guys begin . “big weekends,” ' complete with to ,X' >1 P e thei f brows and “pardon houseparties and a name orches-! m p, is constantly repeated, tra. Somehow the dance finally I . , . , 'ends, and the race for the coats 1- ex^' ted *-? be. begins. The next obstacle to over -1 others of its; come j s finding the car. Back at : Smi *"} T jut - Sown- house, everyone talks about 1 vHll' J ' Uys ; the wonderful time they had at ai + unc om- ! the dance and, surprisingly, most evenmg l n . a !tT tux - he ipeople re ally mean it. usual comments of I wonder j One of the Dartv coeds on cam f h°e W can * g ” 1 pus that Sis weekend wTI) i-choed and reechoed 5 are ;Oe unique. She sighed, “At last a re ec boed. _ ] a chance to live it up until 2 a.m.” j Cuys will spend hours hunting: No matter what the viewpoipl • a pair of black shoes and will is, no matter how many head- ■ | end up wearing black loafers. As aches they cause, big weekends ; usual, 9 o clock dates will turn up are definitely here to stay. at 9:30, but after two minutes PAGE SEVEN