9
d i rectories On Sale A limited amount of stu- dent directories are now on sale in the basement of Willard hall. Scorch ed Lab —Collegian Photo by Stone Dr. Henry L. Yeagley, associate professor of physics, looks over the scorch ed tables of the astronomy lab which was damaged by fire early yesterday morning. H ai i y CoSEeglan To Ask Increase n Assessment For Expanded Newspaper The Dail y Collegian will seek an increase in its student assessme t it in order to expand news content , it was disclosed yesterday. ' ¦ - The Collegian will ask All-College cabinet at its next meeting to recommend to the College board of trustees an increase of 35 cents per semester. Present assessment is 75 cents per semester , or $1.50 per from, each undergraduate student. Enlarging the assessment to $1.10 per semester should pay for increasing costs of publica- tion and permit publication of an eight-page paper daily, Dean Gladfelter, editor , said in an- nouncing the proposal. Through enlargement of the newspaper , it. will be possible to cover more of the news on cam- pus and to bring the Collegian closer to its student readers, Glad- felter said. Adequate coverage of all news on campus is impossible without increasing the size of the Collegian , he said. To Cover Campus News An enlarged will be nec- essary to cover campus news ade- quately, Gladfelter said , noting that one of the major criticisms against Collegian in the past has been that space has not been available to print news of numer- ous minor organizations on cam- pus. Under the present assessment , the Collegian budget permits pub- (Cohi inued on page eight) Attlee To Meet Truman , Discuss Use Of A Bomb LONDON—Prime Minister Cle- ment Attlee yesterday told a cheering House of Commons that he will fly to the United States— probably this weekend—to con- sult with President Truman . on possible use of the atom i c bomb in Korea. Attlee ' s announcement followed the disclosure earlier yesterday that Gen. Douglas Ma cArthur could use all means at his disposal to conduct the UN fight in Korea —including the A-bomb if neces- sary. The President' s words gave the definite impression that Mac- Arthur had the power to author- ize use of the bomb and led to Attlee ' s remarks before Commons. Attlee said that the British government considers a decision to use the atomic bomb of such grave importance that it could not be taken by the UN without the full consent of those nations now involved in Korea. Attlee ' s remarks led to a clarifi- cation of Truman ' s remarks by the White House. MacArthur has not been authorized to use the A- bomb so far and that " only th e president can authorize the use of the atomic bomb — and no such authorization has been given ,  the White House said. Truman Confere nce WASHINGTO N —Speaking like a man who had come to the end of his patience , President Truman yesterday told his weekly news conference that the United States has made every possible effort to avoid a third world war. ~ The President again spoke with an angry voice in replying to European charges that General MacArthur was not handling th e Korean war properly. Continuing in sharp tones , the President called attention to recent re- marks by Republican , senators McCarthy, Bricker , and Wherry charging the administration with trying to get rid of General Mac- Arthur. There is not a word of truth in th at , the Presi d ent told n ews- m en. Reds Veto Resolution LAKE SUCCESS Russia yesterday vetoed the six nation resolution for of Chinese Communist troops from Korea and th ereby opened t h e way for transfer of the Korean problem to the General Assembly where there is no veto. Trabue Favo rs Video Education Dr. Marion R. Trabue , dean of the School of Education , joined other educators yesterday in ask- ing the Federal Communications commission to reserve some tele- vision channels for educational purposes. Representing the American As- sociation of Colleges for Teacher Education , Dean Trabue said that they are convinced that TV can be made a powerful tool in education and that they do not want to be prevented from hav- ing opportunities to experiment with television by the immediate allocation of all desirable broad- casting channels to commercial use. Controlled Experimentation "In order to carry on the con- trolled experimentation necessary to learn just when and how to use television effectively in teaching, educational institutions must have their own TV stations ,  Dean Trabue said. He explained that with educa- tional TV stations it would be possi ble to experiment and evalu- ate the educational results of different versions of the same program. They could also test the educational effects of in- structional programs designed for use over commercial TV net- works. Dean Trabue said that the pres- ent procedures used to entertain the TV public are not those which will be most effective . in teach- ing by television. Early M orning Fire Damages Laboratory Fire caused approximately morning when a blaze broke out in an astronomy laboratory in the east wing of the sub-basement of Osmond laboratory. The blaze , the less than a week on campus , start- ed in an electric conduit which eventually melted and allowed the State - Pitt Game Ticket Inform ation Student holders of $3.50 tick- ets for the Penn State - Pitt football game tomorrow will enter Forbes field through the main gate and will . occupy seats (other than boxes) in th e entire second tier and sections 5, 6 , 7 on the ground floor , Thursday ' s Pittsburgh Post- Gaze tte reported. All seats will be available on a first-come , first-served basis. Deadline for the return of student tickets is noon tomor- row , Harold R. Gilbert , gradu- ate manager of athletics , said yesterday. Tickets may be re- turned at the ticket office in Old Main. Less than 1000 of the 4100 tickets sold here had been returned by Thursday after- noon , Gilbert said. Gilbert also said that the pl aying area of Forbes field had been cleared of snow and that workmen had begun re- moving snow from sections of the grandstand still covered. $1 0 , 000 worth of damage yesterday fire to spread. Two men working in the lab- oratory at the time discovered the blaze and turned in an alarm at 5:48 a.m. Dr. B. D. Saksen , vis- iting associate professor of phys- ics, and Alex Smith , technician in physics , tried to fight the blaze , but it required the efforts of three trucks from the Alcfha Fire com- pany to finally extinguish the fire at 7 a.m. Heavy smoke billowed from the laboratory and spread throughout the building, hamper- ing the firemen in fighting the blaze. Captain Philip Mark , of the campus patrol , said that ' most of the damage had been done by smoke and water. In addition to the telescope- making equipment destroyed in the laboratory, the adjoinin ' g planetarium and the office of Dr. Henry L. Yeagley, associate pro- fessor of physics , were damaged by smoke. Firemen said the actual blaze was confined to the southeast cor- ner of the room , where wooden shelves and a table were de- stroyed , but the heat from the fire caused metal and glass in other parts of the room to melt. They also said that the walls of the room were extremely hot.  The laboratory has been used by Yeagley for the past 15 years in making telescopes. Pro .ie cts of his students and work of his own were ruined by the blaze. Chest Drive Ends Short Of Goal Lorch Kee ps Up Dismissal Battle Colle g ian Told Dr. Lee Lorch has informed the Daily Collegian that he has  never given up the fight" in the matter of the College ' s r e- fusal last spring to renew his teaching contract. Dr. Lorch , who claimed the refusal was because of his anti- discrimination activities at the New York Stuyvesant Town housing project , made the state- ment in a letter answering ques- tions directed to him by the Col- legian. The College , in a statement last spring, said he was dis- missed because he does not have the personal qualifications which the College desires in those wh o are to bers of its faculty.  The state- ment said his Stuyvesant Town activities had nothing to do with refusal to renew his contract.  I have never given up the fight for a satisfactory conclusion to this issue ,  Dr. Lorch said.  I expect the American Assoc- iation of University Professors to maintain an active interest in connection with my dismissal from Penn State and to take fur- ther positive action ,  he added. The mathematics professor also been discharged earlier from City College of New York but no reason for dismissal was giv- en. The New York state com- missioner of education early last month dismissed his appeal for reinstatement and declared th e law did not require that a rea- son be given for his dismissal. Dr. Lorch now is associate pro- fessor ¦ of- mathematics and de- partment chairman at Fisk uni- versity, Nashville , Tenn., which has an inter-racial faculty. . He said the university was set up "irrespective of color  following the Civil War , but that state laws requiring segregation have forced it to have an all-Negro student bod y. Summer Course Bein g Surveyed All students will be required to participate in an enrollment survey for the 1951 summer ses- sions at the time of first-phase registration next Monday and Tuesday. Enrollment survey cards , which must be completed b y the stu- dent and turned in to his adviser with the other first-phase regis- tration material , will be avail s able at the office of the students ' advisors. The student is asked to indi- cate on the card whether he plans to attend the 1951 summer sessions , and, if so , to indicate which session or sessions he plans to attend , and the course to be taken in each. The tentative time table of classes to be offered during the 1951 summer sessions is avail- able today at the scheduling of- fice , the summer sessions office in 102 Burrowes building, and in the offices of the deans of the various schools. Mac Morgan  Bar itone  To Featu re 2nd Conce rt Mac Morgan , young American baritone , will present the sec ond program of the Community Concert series at 8:30 p.m. Tues day in Schwab auditorium. W. E. Kenworthy, chairman for the Community Concert asso elation , reminded members th at acceptable for admission to the recital. In . his program at Schwab . Mo r- gan will be accompanied by How- ard Barr at the piano. Born In Texas Morgan was born in Texas , bu t moved.to Florida at an early age and was reared in Jacksonville ; He played a trombone in th e school band there and sang in the church choir and the g j ee club. He began his voice  lessons at the age of 1 5 , and , upon the advice of John Charles Thomas, noted baritone , enrolled at th e Eastman school of Music in Rochester N. Y. He w as graduated from t j ie Eastman School in 1940 and the following year he married Helen Ne illy, a music student and piano ma jor ai-the school. In. 1942 Mor- only membership cards will be gan entered the National Aria Auditions for the summer season of the Cincinnati Zoo Opera and he was one of the two winners. Served In Army In 1943 , he shelved his career to become Private Mac Morgan of the U.S. Army and much of his three years in the service was spent in the Pacific theatre of op- e rations. He resumed his singing in 1946 , recital dates began to come in rapidly, and he won a national reputation for himself on the weekly network program , "High- ways in Melody.  He was also sol- oist with the Philharmonic Sym- phony at New York' s Stadium concerts and has filled three en- gagements in one year in Cleve- land. With $10 , 500 Tota l Final contributions to the Cam- n us Chest were approximately $1 0 , 500 , Herbert Axford , chair- man of the drive , disclosed yes- terday. The Chest . will begin to distri- bute faculty funds next week , since the faculty donations were in monetary form and can be distrib- uted now. Eighty per cent of stu- dent contributions were pledges, and the money will not be given to the Chest until next semester ' s registration. ' Axford called the drive a com- n l ete succ es s , even though h e final total was short of the drive ' s goal of $14 , 000. Axford will give a report on the Chest at next week' s all-Co llege cabinet meet- in g. Late AP News Courtesy WMAJ

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di

rector ies On

Sale

A limited amount

of

stu-

dent directories

are

now on

sale

in

the basement

of Willard

hall.

Scorch ed

Lab

—Collegian Photo

by

Stone

Dr.

Henry

L.

Yeagley,

associate

professor

of

physics,

looks over

the

scorch

ed

tables of

the

astronomy

lab

which was

damaged by

fire

early

yesterday

morning.

Haiiy

CoSEeglan

To Ask

Increase

In

Assessment

For

Expanded

Newspaper

The

Dail

y

Collegian will

seek an

increase

in

its student

assessmetit

in order to expand

news

content

,

it was

disclosed

yesterday.

'

¦

-

The

Collegian will

ask

All-College

cabinet

at

its next

meeting to recommend to

the

College

board

of trustees an

increase

of

35 cents per semester.

Present assessment

is

75

cents

per

semester

, or

$1.50 per

year from,

each undergraduate

student.

Enlarging the assessment to

$1.10

per semester should

pay

for

increasing

costs of

publica-

tion

and permit publication of an

eight-page paper

daily,

Dean

Gladfelter, editor

,

said

in an-

nouncing

the

proposal.

Through

enlargement of the

newspaper

,

it.

will

be

possible

to

cover

more

of

the news

on

cam-

pus

and to

bring the

Collegian

closer to its student readers,

Glad-

felter

said.

Adequate coverage of

all

news

on

campus is

impossible

without

increasing

the size of

the

Collegian

, he said.

To Cover Campus News

An

enlarged

paper

will be nec-

essary

to

cover

campus

news ade-

quately,

Gladfelter said,

noting

that

one

of the

major

criticisms

against Collegian

in the

past

has

been

that space has not been

available

to

print

news of numer-

ous minor

organizations on

cam-

pus.

Under

the

present

assessment

,

the

Collegian budget permits

pub-

(Cohi

inued on

page eight)

Attlee To

Meet

Truman

,

Discuss

Use Of

A Bomb

LONDON—Prime

Minister

Cle-

ment Attlee

yesterday told

a

cheering

House

of

Commons

that

he will

fly

to the United States—

probably

this

weekend—to

con-

sult

with

President Truman

.

on

possible use of

the

atomic

bomb

in

Korea.

Attlee

'

s

announcement

followed

t h e

disclosure

earlier yesterday

that

Gen.

Douglas

Ma

cArthur

could use all

means

at

his disposal

to

conduct the

UN

fight

in Korea

—including

the

A-bomb

if neces-

sary.

The

President's

words gave

the definite

impression that Mac-

Arthur

had

the

power to

author-

ize use of the bomb

and

led to

Attlee

'

s remarks

before Commons.

Attlee said that the

British

government

considers a decision

to use

the

atomic bomb of such

grave importance that

it

could not

be

taken

by the UN

without the

full consent of those nations now

involved in Korea.

Attlee

's

remarks led to a clarifi-

cation of Truman's remarks by

the

White House. MacArthur has

not been

authorized

to use

the

A-

bomb so far and that "

only the

president

can

authorize

the

use

of

the atomic

bomb

— and no

such

authorization

has b e e n

given

,

 

the

White

House said.

Truman

Conference

WASHINGTON—Speaking

like

a man who had come to the

end

of

his patience

,

President

Truman

yesterday

told

his

weekly

news

conference

that the

United States

has made every possible

effort to

avoid

a third world war.

~

The

President

again spoke

with

an angry voice

in replying

to

European charges

that

General

MacArthur was not

handling

the

Korean war properly.

Continuing

in

sharp tones

,

the President

called attention to

recent

re-

marks

by Republican

,

senators

McCarthy,

Bricker

, and Wherry

charging the

administration

with

trying to get rid of

General

Mac-

Arthur.

There

is not

a word of

truth

in th at

,

the Presi

dent told

news-

m

en.

Reds Veto Resolution

LAKE SUCCESS

— R u s s i a

yesterday vetoed the six nation

resolution for

the withdrawal

of

Chinese Communist troops

from

Korea

and thereby

opened t h e

way for transfer

of

the Korean

problem to the

General Assembly

where there

is no veto.

Trabue Favors

Video Education

Dr. Marion

R.

Trabue

,

dean of

the School of

Education, joined

other educators

yesterday

in

ask-

ing

the

Federal Communications

commission to

reserve some

tele-

vision channels for educational

purposes.

Representing the American As-

sociation

of

Colleges for

Teacher

Education

,

Dean Trabue said

that

they are convinced that TV can

be made

a powerful tool in

education and that they

do

not

want

to

be

prevented

from hav-

ing

opportunities to

experiment

with television by the immediate

allocation

of all desirable

broad-

casting channels to commercial

use.

Controlled Experimentation

"In

order to carry on the con-

trolled experimentation

necessary

to learn

just

when and

how

to

u s e

television

effectively

in

teaching,

educational institutions

must have their own TV

stations, 

Dean Trabue

said.

He explained that with educa-

tional TV stations it

would

be

possible to experiment and evalu-

ate the educational results of

different

versions

of the same

program. They could also test

the

educational effects

of in-

structional programs designed for

use

over commercial

TV net-

works.

Dean

Trabue said

that the pres-

ent

procedures used

to

entertain

the TV public are not those which

will

be most effective

.

in

teach-

ing

by television.

Early

M

orning

Fire

Damages

Laboratory

Fire caused

approximately

morning

when

a

blaze

broke out

in an

astronomy

laboratory in the

east wing of the

sub-basement of Osmond

laboratory.

The blaze

,

the

second within

less

than a

week

on

campus,

start-

ed in an

electric

conduit

which

eventually

melted and allowed the

State

- Pitt Game

Ticket

Inform ation

Student

holders

of

$3.50 tick-

ets

for

the

Penn

State

- Pitt

football

game

tomorrow w i l l

enter Forbes

field

through the

main gate and

will

.

occupy

seats

(other

than

boxes)

in

the

entire second tier

and

sections

5,

6

, 7 on the

ground floor,

Thursday

'

s Pittsburgh

P o s t -

Gaze

tte

reported.

All seats will

be

available

on

a

first-come

,

first-served

basis.

Deadline for the return

of

student

tickets is noon tomor-

row

,

Harold R. Gilbert

, gradu-

ate

manager of

athletics

,

said

yesterday. Tickets

may

be re-

turned at

the

ticket office in

Old Main. Less

than 1000 of the

4100 tickets

sold

here had

been

returned

by

Thursday a f t e r -

noon

,

Gilbert said.

Gilbert

also

said

that the

playing

area

of

Forbes

field

had

been

cleared of

snow

and

that

workmen

had

begun re-

moving snow

from

sections of

the

grandstand

still

covered.

$10

,

000 worth of

damage

yesterday

fire to spread.

Two men working in the lab-

oratory at the time

discovered

the blaze and turned in an alarm

at 5:48 a.m.

Dr. B. D. Saksen

,

vis-

iting associate

professor

of

phys-

ics, and Alex Smith

, technician in

physics

,

tried to fight

the

blaze,

but

it

required the

efforts of

three

trucks from the

Alcfha

Fire

com-

pany to finally

extinguish

the fire

at

7 a.m.

Heavy smoke billowed from

the

laboratory

an d sp r e a d

throughout the building, hamper-

ing the firemen

in

fighting

the

blaze.

Captain

Philip

Mark

,

of

the

campus patrol

, said that

'

most of

the damage had been done by

smoke

and water.

In

addition

to

the telescope-

making

equipment

destroyed

in

the laboratory, the adjoinin

'

g

planetarium

and the office of Dr.

Henry L. Yeagley,

associate pro-

fessor

of

physics

,

were

damaged

by

smoke.

Firemen

said the

actual

blaze

was

confined to the southeast cor-

ner

of the room

,

where wooden

shelves and a table were de-

stroyed , but the heat

from

the

fire

caused

metal and glass in

other

parts

of

the

room

to

melt.

They also said that

the walls

of

the

room

were

extremely hot.

 

The

laboratory

has been used

by Yeagley for

the

past 15

years

in making telescopes. Pro

.ie

cts of

his

students and work

of

his own

were

ruined

by the blaze.

Chest Drive

Ends

Short

Of

Goal

Lorch Kee

ps Up

Dismissal

Battle

Colle

g

ian Told

Dr. Lee

Lorch

has

informed

the

Daily Collegian

that he has

 

never given

up

the

fight"

in

the

matter of the College

'

s

re-

fusal

last

spring

to

renew

his

teaching contract.

Dr.

Lorch

,

who claimed the

refusal

was because

of

his

anti-

discrimination activities

at

the

New

York

Stuyvesant

Town

housing project

,

made the state-

ment in a letter answering ques-

tions

directed to

him by

the

Col-

legian.

The

College

,

in

a

statement

last spring,

said

he was

dis-

missed

because

he does not have

the

personal

qualifications

which

the

College

desires

in those

who

are

to

become permanent mem-

bers of its faculty.

  The

state-

ment

said

his

Stuyvesant Town

activities had nothing to do

with

refusal

to

renew

his

contract.

 I have

never

given up

the

fight for a

satisfactory

conclusion

to this issue

,

  Dr. Lorch said.

  I

expect the American Assoc-

iation of

University

Professors

to

maintain

an

active

interest

in

connection with my dismissal

from Penn State and to

take

fur-

ther positive action

,

  he added.

The mathematics

professor

also

ahd been discharged

earlier

from

City

College

of New York but

no

reason

for

dismissal

was

giv-

en.

The

New York state

com-

missioner

of

education early last

month

dismissed his

appeal

for

reinstatement and declared th e

law did not require that a rea-

son

be

given for

his dismissal.

Dr.

Lorch

now

is associate

pro-

fessor

¦

of- mathematics

and

de-

partment

chairman

at

Fisk

uni-

versity, Nashville

,

Tenn.,

which

has

an

inter-racial faculty.

.

He

said the university was

set

up

"irrespective of

color

  following

the Civil War

, but

that

state laws

requiring

segregation

have

forced

it to have an all-Negro student

body.

Summer Course

Bein

g

Surveyed

All

students

will be

required

to participate in an enrollment

survey

for the

1951

summer

ses-

sions

at the time

of

first-phase

registration next Monday and

Tuesday.

Enrollment survey cards ,

which

must be

completed

b

y the

stu-

dent and turned in to his adviser

with

the other first-phase

regis-

tration material

,

will

be

avails

able at

the

office of the

students

'

advisors.

The student is asked

to

indi-

cate on

the card

whether

he

plans to attend the 1951 summer

sessions, and,

if

so

,

to

indicate

which session

or

sessions he plans

to attend

,

and the

course

to

be

taken in each.

The tentative time table

of

classes to be offered

during the

1951 summer

sessions

is avail-

able

today at the scheduling

of-

fice

, the

summer

sessions

office

in 102 Burrowes building,

and

in the offices

of

the deans

of

the

various schools.

Mac

Morgan 

Bar

itone

 

To Feature 2nd

Conce

rt

Mac

Morgan

, young American

baritone

,

will present

the sec

ond

program of the Community Concert series

at

8:30 p.m. Tues

day

in Schwab

auditorium.

W.

E.

Kenworthy, chairman

for

the

Community Concert

asso

elation

,

reminded members th at

acceptable for admission to the

recital.

In

.

his

program

at Schwab

.

Mor-

gan

will be accompanied

by

How-

ard

Barr

at the piano.

Born In Texas

Morgan was born

in

Texas

, bu t

moved.to Florida at an early age

and

was

reared in Jacksonville

;

He

played a trombone in the

school band

there

and

sang in

the

church choir and

the

gjee

club. He began his

voice

 

lessons

at the age

of

15, and

, upon the

advice

of

John

Charles

Thomas,

noted baritone

,

enrolled at the

Eastman

school

of

Music in

Rochester

, N.Y.

He w

as

graduated

from tj ie

Eastman

School in

1940

and

the

following

year

he married

Helen

Ne

illy,

a music

student

and

piano

ma

jor ai-the

school.

In.

1942 Mor-

only membership cards will be

gan

entered

the

National

Aria

Auditions

for the summer

season

of the Cincinnati Zoo

Opera

and

he was one of

the two

winners.

Served In

Army

In 1943, he shelved his career

to become Private Mac Morgan

of

the

U.S.

Army and

much of

his three years

in

the

service

was

spent

in

the Pacific theatre of op-

erations.

He resumed his

singing in 1946

,

recital dates began to come in

rapidly,

and he

won

a national

reputation for

himself

on t h e

weekly

network

program

, "High-

ways

in

Melody.

  He was also

sol-

oist with

the

Philharmonic Sym-

phony

at New York's

Stadium

concerts

and has

filled three en-

gagements

in one

year

in

Cleve-

land.

With $10

,

500 Tota l

Final contributions to the Cam-

nus Chest

were approximately

$10

,500

,

Herbert Axford

,

chair-

man

of the drive

, disclosed yes-

terday.

The Chest

.

will begin to distri-

bute

faculty funds

n e x t week

,

since

the faculty donations were

in

monetary

form

and

can

be distrib-

uted now. Eighty

per cent

of stu-

dent

contributions were pledges,

and the money will not be given

to the Chest until next semester

'

s

registration.

'

Axford called the drive a

com-

n

l

ete success

, even

though

t h e

final

total was short

of the

drive

'

s

goal

of $14,000.

Axford

will give

a report on the Chest at next

week's all-Co

llege

cabinet meet-

in

g.

Late

AP

News

Courtesy

WMAJ

8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950

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1/3

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(micro

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pular

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atal

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ue

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ark

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45rpm.

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rpm.

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BIG

DISCOUNTS

^

*

for

a

*

 

^

Double-Duty Dresses

• For

"MIL

"

Ball Dancing

For

Holiday Dating

r

Waltz

around the dance floor

in an enchanting

holiday

dress . . . at the

"Mil" Ball

and other Yuletide festivi-

ties.

There

'

s no

better

way

to

heed your Christmas bud-

get

when

you

get

DOUBLE-

DUT Y f r om

one dress.

Choose f r o m our

exciting

new collection.

mary

leitzinger

136 E. College Ave.

d

0fi

r

Chri

stmas g

ift list?

11

solve your

gift-giving

Baffled by

your

Then come h

ere. We

 l

problems

promptly.

of most-wanted

re

ur wide

selection

cording *-insures

fast

filling

of your

Christ-

mas list.

From Strauss to

swing,

from

Bach

to

boog

ie-woogie  

Plan

on giving records

for Chr

istmas.

You

 ll

be g

iving

a welcome

g

ift.

CHE

CKING

THE

IN

1940

FILES . . .

Carnegie Library

Was Remodeled

and Named Carnegie

Hall

The

Football

Team Lost

Onl

y

One

Game

,

to Pitt—20 to 7 '

• And

SALLY'S Was in Its

Sixth

Year of Service

to the Students.

And —

Today More Than Ever

SALLY'S

SERVES

Storm

Delays

Opening

Of

Time Of

Yo

ur

Life/

New

Playe

rs

' Pr

oduction

Last

week'

s weather

conditions

administered another blow to

Penn State activities

yesterday when Players

announced that "Time

of

Your Life

 

will

begin

a

five-week run at Centre Stage next

Fri-

day night

,

Dec. 8

,

instead

of

tonight.

Director W.

H. Walters

said that

ed many

members

of

the cast

from

time for rehearsals scheduled this

~jj

l

week.

P

Howard Mason ,

assigned a I .

leading role as "Tom

,

 

probably

**

will not appear in the first per-

_

formances

of the

play because

of

T

a

leg

injury suffered

w

h

e n he

l

slipped and

fell while shoveling

*~

snow.

Charles Williams

,

w h o

played

w

the schoolmaster O'Flingsley

in

j-h

Players'

initial Schwab

produc-

to

tion

, "Shadow a n d Substance

,

 

L

j

is preparing to take over Mason

'

s

role.

'

be

John Price

,

sound crew worker

,

<j £

said

it

was impossible

to

get

sev-

th

eral

technical props ordered

from

Cc

New York City because

of

wea-

vr

ther

difficulties.

ye

"Time

of

Your

Life

,

 

a

drama

by William Saroyan

,

employs

fa

 

skits instead

of

plot emphasis to

p^

express

its

theme.

s

^

Others with featured roles are

James Beaver as

Joe

,

Charles

_

n

Schulte as Nick

,

and

Sonya

Tilles

-a

as Kitty

Duval.

{£.

Performances will be given

next Friday

and

Saturday ni

ghts

,

?

Dec. 8

and

9

,

and

will continue

for

,;

two weekends before Christmas

*L;

and

three

after. Tickets

,

which

m

should be

available

at the

Student

2

Union desk next Monday morn-

ing,

are 90 cents

for Friday night

m

'

and $1.25

for Saturday.

ta1

Editor Announces

Froth Promotions

Samuel Vaughan

,

editor

of

Froth, has announced these pro-

motions

to editorial

junior

board

:

Lola Edmunds,

Marilyn

Levitt

a n d

Peter

Whelan ; editorial

sophomore board : Richard Neu-

weiler

,

Emily Kostas

,

Joan

Ho

ff -

man and Rita Kretmar.

Photo junior board: Y a l e

Friedline.

Art sophomore board : Laird

Kinnaird

,

Arthur

Stevens

,

Ma

l-

colm DunkeL Jerome Clauser

,

Theodore

Shautawie and

James

Geffart.

Circulation junior board: Byrne

Tetley, Barbara

Waska

and Mar-

vin

R.

Berk; circulation

sopho-

more board

:

Gerald

Frank ,

Nancy

Calhoun

,

Grace

Porrello

,

Lenore

Kahanowitz

,

Nancy Jones

and

Joan

Harvie.

Advertising junior

board:

Julia

Arnold,

Richard Evans

,

R

ita

Fein

and Anita

Ranallo;

advertising

sophomore

board: Margaret

Riley

and Beverly Silverman.

Promotion sophomore board:

Marjorie McLaren

,

Nancy Getz ,

Margaret

Cont

i, and Eleanor

Chanko.

snow and ram storms prevent-

returning

to

State

College

in

Wash Da

y

Blues

Gone

Forever

Say

"Thank You

 

with Flowe rs

  THOUGHTFUL

MESS GE TO

YOUR

HOSTESS

Wash day is something

most

college students expect to leave

behind

when

they move to

the

campus of

their

Alma Mater-to-

be.

But

the

installation

of

laund-

ries

,

comp

lete with aut o

matic

washers

and driers,

has

made

wash day some sort of institution

on the campus.

Russel E. Clark ,

director

of

housing, est i

mates th

a

t

n e w

laundry rooms at the College

have

saved

the

students—«r

their

parents

,

whichever

way

you pre-

fer

it—at least

$40

,

000

'

annually

in

postage.

A tdtal

of 64

washing

machines

and driers has

been

installed

in men

'

s

and women

's dormi-

tories

,

along with

many

ironing

boards,

where the more skilled

of

the

washers

may

try their

luck.

One

.lad

,

who undoubtedly

was

satisfied

to

lug his bulging

laun-

dry

case

to

the

Post Office

every

once-in-a-while ,

said,

"the only

thing is

,

I'll miss

the

fudge and

other

little

extras

that

mother

always threw into the laundry

box.

 

The machine

age apparently

brooks

no

interference.

Women

Debaters

To Go To Temp

le

The women

'

s

debate

team

will

send

a

negative

and

an

affirma-

tive team to the

Temple Novice

dabte in

Philadelphia

tomorrow.

T h e

question

,

Resolved:

"That

the

n o n - Co m m u n i s t nations

should

form

a new international

organization

,

  will be

debated af-

firmatively

by

Peggy Crooks

and

G u y 1 a

Woodward.

Marjorie

Eh-

man and

Genevieve

Kelly w i l l

take the negative

side. Lois

Pul-

ver. is manager.

-

It you were a weekend

guest tell

your hostess

"thank

you

  b

y sending

her

flowers.

It'

s

a

thoughtful

and very

personalized

way

to

tell her how much you

enjoyed your

visit.

Eng

ineerin g

Grads

Decline

In

Number

The

number of engineering

graduates

will decrease greatly

in

the next four years

,

the de-

partment

of

labor'

s

bureau

of

statistics predicted

recently.

Although a record

number of

50

,

000

students were graduated

from engineering schools in 1950,

it

is estimated

that only 17

,

000

will graduate in

1954.

The bureau

based

its predictions on

the as-

sumption that

peacetime

con-

d

itions

will

continue.

'

The peacetime

draft

,

which will

take present

engineers as

well

as

engineering students,

and

the

de-

creasing num ber

of

freshmen

en-

gineering

students

throughout the

nation will take

the heaviest

toll.

Statistics show

engineering en-

rollment

has been decreasing

since

1946.

The

bureau pointed out

that

the predicted

17

,

000

graduates in

1954

would

fall far short

of

the

average number

of

men

needed

during a normal

peacetime

year.

Opportunities in the engineer-

ing field will increase

steadily

for

years,

the

bureau

predicted

,

because

of the

growth

of

industry

and production.

Section Cards

Read

y

For

Home

Ee

Courses

All students

in

schools other

than Home

Economics

who wish

to schedule

any of

the

following

courses

may

obtain

section

cards

at the main

office of

Home Eco-

nomics Tuesday:

Child Development and

Family

Relations

309

and

403; Clothing

and Textiles 101,

102

,

and 301;

Foods and

Nutrition 20

,

120,

and

121;

Home Art 215

,

240

,

317

,

337,

and 440; and

Household Equip-

ment 213.

Six At

Colle

ge

On

Committees

At a meeting held in Wash-

ington

,

D.C.,

last

week

,

the.

As-

sociation of Land

Grant

colleges

and universities

named

six

per-

sons

affililated with

the College

to

various committees.

Edward

L.

Keller,

executive

assistant in

Central

extension

,

was named interim

chairman

of

a new council on general exten-

sion.

The Committee of

Nine

,

which

deals

with nation-wide

research

programs

,

elected

Dr.

Michael

A.

Farrell

,

assistant

director

of

the Agricultural

Experiment

sta-

tion

,

to a two-year

term

on

the

committee. He was

also named

secretary

of

the

Northeastern

Regional Experiment

station com-

mittee.

Dr.

F ,

F. Lininger,

director of

the

Agricultural Experiment

sta-

tion

,

was named to the

market-

ing advisory

sub-committee

of

the Experiment Station

com-

mittee on Organization

a n d

Policy.

Dr. Russell B.

Dickerson ,

vice-

dean

of the

School

of

Agriculture

,

was elected

secretary

to

two

Resident

Instruction

committees.

Kenneth

L.

Holderman

,

direc-

tor

of

engineering

extension at

the College

,

was

selected for the

Extension section

committee,

and

Dr. Grace M. Henderson

, dean

of the

School

of Home Econom-

ics

,

was again named chairman

of

the committee on enrollment

statistics for the

Resident In-

struction

section.

Dr. Eisenhower

S

p

eaks

Toni

g

ht

President Milton S. Eisenhower

will be the principal speaker at

the annual

faculty-trustee dinner

tonight at 5:30 in the Nittany

Lion

Inn.

Special guest at the

dinner will

be Dr. Martin D. Whitaker

, presi-

dent of

Lehigh

university and

the

Pennsylvania

Association

of

Colleges

and Universities

, the in-

vitations

committee announced

yesterday.

The

dinner

is

sponsored by

the

faculty-trustee

committee

of

the

American Association

of

Univer-

sity

Professors.

Members of the

committee

in

charge

of the dinner are Dr.

C.

R. Carpenter

,

invitations

,

speak-

ers,

and

.

guests; A. F. Davis

,

re-

cording and publication;

Dr.

R.

Adams Dutcher

,

food

and sup-

plies; J. E. Kennedy, enterta in-

ment

; Dr. Helen R. LeBaron

,

dinner arrangements

; Dr.

Thomas

S. Oakwood, pre-dinner manage-

ment;

Dr.

E. F. Osborn

,

transpor-

tation ; L. S. Rhodes,

publicity;

and

Ralph

H.

Wherry,

finance.

Tickets

to the dinner were

sold

out

last Friday,

Dr.

R.

Wallace

Brewster,

chairman

for the din-

ner

,

said, despite a

40

per cent

increase over

the number avail-

able

for

the last dinner.

Bill McMullen , Florist

135

S.

Allen

St

Phone

4994

mmmmmmmmmmmmwmm*

 

£5

8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950

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2)

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Edition

of

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Wr wlir

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F o r something

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Do all ybur

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at

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tUtLtK

i

Ca

thaum Theatre Bldg.

since

i»zb

/nfes? Slippers

i

•desi

gned

for

the

"MIL" ball

desi

g

ned

for

the

holidays

Glittering lame

mesh

. . .

glim-

mering white satin . . .colorful

e m b r o i d e r e d

brocade .

.

smooth

kid

leather. Yes 

they

're

of slippers in gold andi s p

silver

for dancing

feet.

Give

your

formal a

touch

of sparkle

for

the

Mil

Ball . . .

with

danc-

ing

slippers

from

Miwri

A

109

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Allen

) $&

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n

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Other

White & Wycoff

and Individual cards for

the;§r

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American Greeting Assort-

family

or

for general use^

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;&

3l .

5c to 25c

-Ts

0

in

29c

to $1.00

Boxes

J

g

?

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Scented

Pine Cone

Notes

For

£

jjj

?

The Personal Christmas

Message

&

*

v-

Give your Christmas cards a personal touch

by

writing

r

 

^c

your

own

holiday

greeting

on

a

fragrant pine-scented

A

,

^l

card.

Contrasting

ink

on

red

, green

and

white note

•>

»

Cgi paper will give your cards a gay,

festive air. Each box &r

•k

_

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complete

with

pen

and

ink. t*

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$

1

00

%

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y

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^F

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our

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cards

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U

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Then come

in and

select yours

/Si

GRIGGS & KREAMER

^fe

PRESCRIPTION

SPECIALIS

TS

^

O

pposite

Old

Main

State

College. Pa.

^^

^ ^ ¦mj ^ j ^

%^

%^

 

V

v

For

Christm as

• •

BUUK i

11 T.ihrarv

of

Great

Painters

Van

Gogh

El Greco

Renoir

$10 each.

2) "A

ge

of

Faith

by

ixr ;

n

rv ,» - r ,«+ .

vv iii w m au

t

?/.su sing is

$10.00

t

wo

volumes

3) "In

Our

Image

"

by

Harte & Howe

.

  10.00

Plates from it alone

$5.00

i) i

rees oi

P ennsylvania

$5.00

Attractive

bindings

on

every book. The ideal gift

for

every

member

of your

family.

B I B L t i

1\ T\« «*»««..

-U T>.

L. 1„

»I

j./

±

sai

in iv utn JD iu i c

Home

EcWomen

Receive

Awards

"WE'RE FORECASTING

cloudy and more

snow

for Friday

"

was the

passin g

remark

made

by John Sherrod

(in left picture)

as he

mounled

to

the roof

of the MI

buildin g

yesterday

to

put

up

the weatherfla gs.

The

"

snow

flag

"

still

is in

his hand. In the

right

shot. William

Bonner and William

Diets ,

meteorology

student s

,

look

over

teletyped

weather

facts

received

by

the

College

from

Louisville, Ky.

Collegian Photo by Barto

Two

senior

women

have

beer

awarded

scholarships

by the

School

of

Home Economics.

Rose

Intorre

,

437

W

.

Beavei

avenu

e

,

has

been

presented

the

Borden Award

of

$300

given an-

nually to

the

senior Hom

e Eco-

nomics major

who has

achieved

the highest

all-College

average

prior

to

her

senior

year.

Nancy E. Metzger,

413

S. Allen

street

,

has earned the Ellen

M.

Stuart Award

for

the

senior

Cen-

tre county girl who has shown

general excellence

in

Home

Eco-

nomics.

Miss

Intorre

has

compiled

a

2.79

all-College

average., She is

s

member

of

Alpha Lambda

Delta,

freshman honorary

society;

Phi

Upsilon

Omicron

,

professional

home economics

sorority

;

Omi-

cron

Nu

,

home

economics honoi

society ; and is a

member

of the

Home Economics Studen

t Council

and Club.

Miss

Metzger

'

s

all-C o

11

e

g «

average is 2.61.

She

is

a membei

of Kappa

Kappa

Gamma

sorority;

Al

pha Lambda Delta

, Phi

Upsilon

Omicron,

and is

editor

of Home

Economics News and Views pub-

lication.

She also

won the Ellen

M.

Stu-

art high school award in hei

senior year in

State

College

high

school.

Free

To

Speak

Mrs.

Anne R. Free

,

of the

School

of

Home

,

Economics

,

will

speak

on

Social

Usage  at the

Junior Panhellenic council meet-

in a next

Tuesday.

Former

Psych

Prof

Attached To

Air

Force

Dr. Floyd

D.

Ruch

,

former as-

sistant

professor of

educational

psychology

at the

College

,

has

been assigned to

the Asiatic

theater of

operations

to work

with the U.S.

Air Force.

Ruch, a

psychologist

on

leave

from

the

University

of

Southern

California

,

is

trying

to

determine

the

'

effect

of

the

Air

Force

train-

ing

program

upon

flyers

in

actual

combat.

'Wh

o '

s In

News

'

Making

Selections

The

selection

committee

of

"Who'

s in the News

at

Penn

S

tate

  will

complete

a list

of

per-

sons

to be

included

in the pub-

lication

this

week.

It

is estimated that

400

students

will be selected

by

the com-

mittee.

Letters of

notification

will

be sent to those

students

chosen.

Arthur Benning and

Laura

Mermelstein share the

editorial

duties for

the

publication as edi-

tor and associate

editor

respec-

tively. On the

selection

committee

are Homer

Barr

,

president

of

the

Athletic

Association;

B a r b a r a

Sprenkle,

WSGA president;

Rob-

ert

Davis,

all-College

president;

and

Dean

Gladfelter

,

Daily

Colle-

gian

editor.

Students are

^elected

for

the

publication

on the basis

of

their

activities and services to

the

College.

Home Ec

Coeds

To

Get

Aw

ards

The sum of

$800

is available

from

the

Sears,

Roebuck founda-

tion

for

scholarships

to

freshman

women

in

Home

Economics

,

Dr.

Grace

M.

Henderson

,

dean of the

School

of

Home

Economics,

an-

nounced

recently.

Dr. Henderson

explained

thai

from

four

to

eight scholarships

(from

$100

to

$200

each)

will

be

available

each

year

to freshmen

who show evidence

.of scholastic

aptitude

, potentialities for

leader-

shi

p and

interest

in home eco-

nomics

, and who

have

need

for

financial

assistance. Special

con-

sideration

will

be

given to those

who

are

interested in rural

com-

munities.

This

year scholarships are

avail-

able to freshmen on and

off

cam-

pus. Application blanks

may

be

obtained from the

School

of

Home

Economics

and

should be

com-

p

leted

and

returned with the nec-

essary

recommendations

before

Tuesday,

Dec. 19.

Awards for this

year

will

be

made

in

January.

Vacations

Disrupted

By

Rain

And Snow

Penn State students screamed

bloody

murder

over

the

week

end in

Pittsburgh as thousands

Pitt game. There was

no

place

even

if

there

had

been

anything

*

.

*

One

taxicab outside the Fort Pitt

Hotel

drew more

customers

than

it could

possibly have

been

'~

— :

handled—even if it wasn 't stuck

storm marooned them in their

deep

in

the snow.

In

one 15-

dates

' houses.

minute period, 13 people

tried

*

'

*

*

»

to

hail

the cab.

Back

in Pittsburgh

,

the foot-

*

«

*

One

staffer

reports

seeing

s

tractor

floating

down

the

Sus-

quehanna river

outside of

Har-

risburg

at

the

height

of

the flood

in that

area.

/

*

* *

*

Altoona

merchants

got

more

than

they

bargained for

in

Christ-

mas

decorations.

The

center of town

was

gaily

decorated, with lines of hollv

stretched

from

light pole

to

light

pole.

By Sunday

night

,

the

lines

were

completely

covered with

that very

Christmasy decoration

—icicles.

* * • *

In Philadelphia

,

the

gale

crip-

pled

about

three-quarters

of

the

television aerials

in

the district.

Several men

out

on dates ended

up as

weekend

guests in the

Western part

of

the state

as

the

of

them

were

in

the

City for the

to

go—everything

was closed,

and

open

, there was

no way to

get to it.

ball team needed an Army

truck

to get them to the

station

Mon-

day morning to catch

a

train.

They,

and

others caught

in the

upper

part

of Pittsburgh,

had

no

way of getting downtown.

*

#

* *

Sports

publicist James Cooga

n

and his wife and several others

in

,

a

State

party

got as

far as

the

downtown

district

of

Pittsburgh

and

were forced to stay over-

night

in the William Penn hotel

.

It

normally

takes

15

minutes

to

<?et

from there to

the

Hotel

Schenley

where the Penn State

fotoball team

was quartered, but

they

couldn

't make it.

* * * *

Footballer

Di

ck Koerber

walk-

ed nine

miles

in the snow to get

to his home

outside

of

Pittsburgh

and give

an

engagement ring

to

his girl.

Oh

No

Not

Again

8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-collegian-december-1-1950 4/8

Read

y

for

M ilita ry

Ball?

RENT

at H

U

R'S

BUY

or

your

TUX

Do n

't delay

in preparing for the

bi

g dance.

Let

us

settle your tux

problem. Whether

you

intend

buy-

ing a tux or

renting

one

,

stop

in

and

see

us

now

and avoid

the last minute

rush.

Huts

Men

'

s Sho

p

State

College

. College Avenue

%M / M

ESffiW

Yes . . . for

the

best dance

of the

year

,

jo in the Roundup—come

to

the

 r  

m

im

ARV

E

ST

This Saturday

night at

Ree Hall

, the

STATESMEN will provide

music

from 9-12

for

your dancing

p

leasure.

Tickets can be

pur-

chased

at

Stud ent

Union

for onl

y

$2.00

per coup

le.

Free

refreshme nts

will be

served

in order to save

you

added

expense.

The

dance

is

semi-form al

,

but

there

wi l l

be

no

cor

sages.

HARVES

T

BALL

Penn State Cage

Tutor

Elmer Gross

Ij Ut?

< \*

*\-

W9

fill

I3

*

-

-

.

VHMMMl ^F

^

\

"Try io last one more round. Killer-

. •+•

?*>>: sr --

'

.v:

remember

,

it

 

s Tor

The House

'

.

"

Nittany Baske

tball Squad

Prepares

For

Opener With Ithaca

,

Wednesday

By ERNIE

MOORE

Like a new moon ,

basketball

is

still out

of

sig

ht

but rap

idly approaching the waxing

phase with

less

than

a week before the sport makes

its

 

initial appearance on

the Penn

State sport scene.

With almost

two

months of practice

by

the

boards

, Coach Elmer Gross

'

. Nittany

Lion

basketball team

is

shaping

up for

the

seaso

n

opener with Ithaca

college

next Wednesday

on the Rec hall court.

With only four

lettermen re-

turning from last year

'

s

squad

,

which

won

13

and lost

10

,

Gross

and his assistant John Egli

have

been working hard trying to find

replacements for such stars as

Marty

Costa

,

Joe

Tocci

,

and Lee

Schisler

who were

lost

through

gra

duation.

4 Lettermen

Captain

Lou Lamie,

Jay

Tiny

 

McMahan,

Hardy

Williams

,

and

Ted

Panoplos

are

the returning

lettermen

upon

whom

Gross

must

depend in

his

sophomore

year

as head coach of the Lion

cagers.

"The

lack of height

is going to

hurt us. It

helped

us to

win

a lot

of

games

last year

,

and I

don

't

know whether we ean make it

up

in speed

and

aggressiveness

,

 

said

Gross.

The

Lions

have

been

in

prac-

tice scrimmages against St. Fran-

cis of

Lorretto

,

Lock

Haven

,

Ju-

niata,

Hazle ton ce n t e r

,

and

Bloomsburg State Teachers col-

Five

Fraf

Boxers

Slog

Way

To

IN

Wins;

Nine Forfeit

Five more fraternity

boxers

slugged themselves into the win

column

last night

, on an intra-

mural card that

was

marred

by

nine

forfeits.

John Dinsmore

, of

Phi Kappa

,

opened

the evening

's festivities

by outpointing

Bob

Lansberry,

61

Theta

Kappa Phi. It

was

a 135-

pound

match

,

in

which Dinsmore

overcame his opponent'

s

superior

height

to

win.

In

a

165-pound

battle

,

Craig

Rupp,

of

Theta

Chi,

topped Kap-

pa

Sigma

'

s

Guy Pietz

, in a good

tight

fight

.

Both boys were evenly

matched

,

with Rupp gaining a

squeaky nod

from the

judges.

Theta

Chi

scored

another

vic-

tory in

the third bout of the

eve-

ning. In a 145-pound go,

rugged

Bill Hanley

ground out a

hard-

fought

verdict from Freeman

Singer

,

boxing for Phi Sigma

Delta.

It was

a

gruelling clash

,

in which both

boys

found them-

selves badly tired in

the final

round.

Bob Morton

,

of

Sigma

Alpha

Epsilon,

a husky lad ,

who

looked

at

home in

the ring, outclassed

Russ

Taptich ,

of

Theta Xi

,

in

a

sjood 175-pound match

.

Morton

fought a

steady,

waiting fight

forcing

Taptich to

come

to him

where he greeted

him with pow-

er-filled

socks

from both fists.

In the nightcap,

a 155-pounder

,

soccerman

Joe Lane

,

wielding the

gloves for Delta

Upsilon,

battered

and

banged his

way to a win

over

Howard Guest

,

of Phi Kappa

Sig-

ma.

Lane

had his

'

victim in

hot

water

from the

outset ,

and though

wild and

unpolished

at times,

he

landed

several,

stinging

haymak-

ers that

brought blood

from

Guest's nose.

It

was the best bout of the

eve-

ning,

and though Guest

was

game

all

the way,

the

better-con-

ditioned Lane was

just too tough.

The

nine men

who won .

by for-

feit

were Fred

Sheridan

.

of

Pi

Kappa Psi;

Al McChesney,

of Phi

Kappa

Psi;

Bob Decker

, of

Delta

Upsilon; Wall,

fi ghting

independ-

enfy;

Gordon

Stroup,

Beta Theta

Pi; George Yuscavage

,

of Pi

Kap-

pa

Alpha;

Mike

Rubino

,.of Alpha

Phi Delta; Bob

Eichenlaub

, of

Alpha

Sigma

Phi;

and

Lemyre

,

of Sigma

Chi.

The

Old

Colle

ge

Try

This guy

Herm

Sledxik real-

ly wants to play basketball for

Penn Slate

In a recent

scrimmage Sled-

J tik injured his wrist and

it

caused him considerable

pain.

But he kept practicing with the

wrist taped.

An X-ray did

not

disclose

a

thing. But

when

the pain

did

not stop another X-ray was

taken — this

time from

a diff-

erent

angle.

It was then Herm

quit scrimmaging. The X-ray

showed the

wrist was

broken

lege If

.

weather conditions per-

mit

,

the

Lions

will

travel to

Bloomsburg

tonight

for a return

s

crimmage.

Offensive Punch Slow

"We

can t get our offensive

moving — we don

't

score

like

we should. But

we

're faster and

more aggressive than

last year,

 

Gross commented.

In the

scrimmage

,

the Lion

coach has been

running

a

first

five

composed of

Lamie

,

McMahan.

Williams

,

Panoplos,

and

Frank

Moore

, with Joe Piorkowski

also

seeing a lot

of

action.

Moore

played

on

the

JVs last

season and

has

impressed

Gross

with

his

aggressive play,

while

Piorkowski

.

a 6-foot

3-inch

jun-

ior

,

is

a transfer

student

who

was

ineligible last year.

Lamie

,

who averaged 10 points

per

game

last

year,

and McMahan

,

6-foot

7-inch

center

,

will

be

look-

ed on to carry much of

the offens-

ive punch what

with

the

hif fh-

scoring

Costa

missing from

the

lineup.

Panoplos Carr ies

Speed

Panoplos

, probably

the

fastest

man on

the-squad

, will

try

to fill

the shoes

of

Tocci,

now

freshman

coach and last

year

'

s

"Mr.

Set-

ter-Upper.

"

Williams

,

who played a

fine

brand

of

ball for the

Lions

last

season,

is

having

trouble

finding

the range in pre-season sessions

but

Gross

expects him to

come

around soon.

(Continued

cm

pace eight

 

P

anthe r

Aerial

Attack

Wil l

Test

Lion

Defense

Unless the

weather

man

tries

to

get

into the act once

again

,

the 50th

annual

Penn

State-Pitt

football clash

could

very

easily

resolve itself

into a test of the

Panthers'

passing

game and

the

Lions

'

aerial

defense.

Having

successfully

coped

with

the

passing attack

of

West

Vir-

ginia and

Rutgers

in recent

weeks

,

-

the

Lions

can expect to

have

t h e i r

tough

a

erial

screen

given a final

probing from

P

an-

ther quarterbacks Bob

Bestwick

and Bob Osterhout.

B e t w e e n

them

,

Coach Len C

asanova's

T-

operatives have completed 75

pas-

ses

for 893

yards. Against Notre

Dame

Bestwick completed 19

of

24 passers for 252 yards.

Pitt

End

Nears Record

Pittsburgh

a l s o h a s an

out-

standing

receiver

in

senior end

Nick

De Rosa

,

who is nearing two

Pitt pass catching

marks.

De Rosa

has

caught

22

passes for 299 yards

(Continued

on

page

jive)

Smidansk

y

O

n AP

All-State 2nd

Team

End

John Smidansky, leading

pass receiver for

the

Nittany

Li-

ons,

was

the only

Penn

State foot-

ball player

to receive

recognition

higher than honorable

mention

in

the 1950

all-state

selections

of

the

Associated

Press.

Smidansky

was

named

to the second team.

Four Penn State gridders

re-

ceived honorable

mention.

They

were

Stew

Scheetz,

tackle;

Ken

Bunn

,

center; Capt. Owen

Dough-

erty,

wingback; and

Tony

Orsini

,

halfback.

For The House

8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-collegian-december-1-1950 5/8

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Whew Won t

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when

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'

t

you feel tops . . .

knowing your Christ-

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't suf-

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Due to an over-abund-

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So

don 't

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ORDER

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AT

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tate College

127 W.

B

eaver

Ave

WHA

I

MAnE *

TE

DDY'S

TICK

^nAr

i

Ln

ii

By

Short Handled Spade

Yes,

I had been foiled before

,

but

this time it was going

to

be different.

I'd uncover the

fascination

of

this restaurant.

I'd solve

this

mystery. All this

I thought to myself as I once

again

entered the place called

"TEDDY'S"

at the corner of

Beaver and Pugh.

T f Tlrnc

fliyinor t imo an d fV»OT-Q

was a crowd. Nevertheless I

found a seat along the long

counter.

I sat

down.

I was

handed a remarkable menu. It

listed dinners

for

65c Skeptic-

ally

I

ordered liver

and onions.

In a moment I

had

warm food;

I had tantilizing

food;

I had

de-

licious

food

,

and I

had lots

of

it. I ate. I

ordered another

cup

of

coffee and asked

for

my

check.

It

totaled 70

Liver, onions

,

potatoes ,

peas

corn

,

bread

,

butter

, and two

cups of coffee, all for 70

T.n

foT*

iVio f nicrV if

o

l-ir» Qiififiil

blond

I know asked me

how I

was making out on my latest

case.

I

told

her that she was

my only love and then realized

that she

had meant this

Ted-

dy '

s tickler.

I

replied

, I

have

-

n't made

any

progress

,

baby,

but I

sure am

enjoying my

work "

jlo

u e

v^onnnuea

1

00%

Wool

SLACKS

  A

OK

*#•

jB f

mr

Ideal Fo r school

1WCEV3

CHEVIOTS

PtNNSHIKt

C L O T H E S

112 S. Frazier Street

Next Door To City Hall

Wait Till Next

Year

THE

DAILY

COLLEGIAN

swamis peer

fearlessly

into their

crystal ball

which has become

misshapen from

constant

polishing.

Champ Ray

Koehler clutches

the winner

'

s

cup as

runherup Marv

Krasnansky

eyes

it

enviously.

Continuing

from

right to

left,

George

Glazer and

Art

Benning leer

at

the

goddess

of

luck who kept

them

from

matching

the

champ

'

s

.645

average.

Collegian

Photo

by

Stone

On The

Ball

A pre-game dope story on

the

anticipated Pitt-Penn

State

fool

ball

encounter

stated last

week

that this

50th

meeting,

would

b

like

none

other in the

history

of

the classic rivalry.

Little

did

th

author

of

that

piece

realize how

prophetic

his

words woulu

be.

.

'

¦

While a

holiday trek to

Pittsburgh

may

have

looked

like an

adventurous

and

quite

enjoyable

.

undertaking to

stay-at-home

students,

those

who

ventured

*the

trip

now

have

their

own

picturesque

description

for what w a s

turned

into

a

weekend

night-

mare.

Let'

s take the

example

of

one

party—that

including

the writer.

Normally

the trip from Philadel-

phia

to

Pittsburgh should not

take

longer

than

seven

hours. To-

gether with the

Collegian

'

s foot-

ball writer

,

Marv

.

Krasnansky,

football feature writer George

I

Love Freshmen

  ' Glazer '(whose

Frazer we

started out

.

in), and

John Schulte,

our

group

hit the

road about 2 o'

clock Friday

after-

noon.

Sixteen hours

later an ice-cov-

ered Pontiac Catalina poked

its

streamlined hood onto Pitts-

burgh'

s Penn avenue. Within

huddled five bleary-eyed voyag-

ers.

.

What

, you

may ask

.

had

happened

to

the

Glazer

Fra-

zer? And how come there are

now live

in the

safari? Well,

dear

reader,

the remainder

of

the story now

fakes on a

slightly confused blur.

Stick

with us and we 'll attempt to

baffle

you

completely.

Progressing some 50 miles

from

Philadelphia on the

Pennsylvania

Turnpike our Frazer-developer

a

mysterious knock which

we

pass-

ed

off

with a shrug

of

the shoul-

ders.

Before

we

'

had added

two

more

miles

to the

speedometer

the

mysterious

knock

had

turned

into a musical

bo-i-n-g.

We

came

to

a

dead

halt some 270 miles

from

pur destination.

Leaving us to guard the

car

,

Glazer—in

his

shirtsleeves—hail-

'

ed a passing motorist ,

spat

dis-

dainfully upon

the

deceased

en-

gine

, and sped off toward . the

nearest service station.

'Be

back

in 15 riunutes,

  he called.

An hour

and one-half later

we

decided -to take out after our

missing,

companion.

Piling

lug-

gage

,

and

ourselves

,

into the

back

of- a greasy repair truck

we

started

off on a breezy

ride

,

down

ten miles

of

open highway.

In the

meantime,

Glazer

-

had returned—but

. now .

he

could not locate his car. Later

.

he related how he ran wildly

up

and

down three

miles of

the Turnpike

before beinw

picked

up

by two

State

Pol-

.

.

:

¦;icemen.

Coming upon

the car

standing

dark and desvrled

/ the

policemen

immediately

; spread

an order to all

prowl

cars in the

immediate

vicin-

By

RAY

KOEHLER

Sports

,

Editor

Memoirs

Of A

Lost Weekend

iiy

lo

pick up three youths

carrying

luggage.

Meanwhile

,

upon

reaching

the

selfsame

gas station,

we

were in-

formed

that Glazer

had

just de-

parted. Overhearing

our

plight

,

a saintly

gentleman

offered

us

a

ride

in

his

1950

Pontiac.

That'

s

how

come our

entrance

into Pitts-

burgh

in

a

strange

car.

.

.

Now

appeared the

fifth

voyager

on

the

scene

,

a

quaint character

claiming to be an

Amherst

man

hitch-hiking

to St. Louis.

During

the remainder of the

trip

the

guy

assumed a Hindu-like

pose

in

the

rear

of the car.

We knew he

ha u

a

vocabulary because he uttered

about three words—one of them

being

ouch " when I

slamme'

.

the door on his head as he

at-

tempted

to extricate himself

from

his

luggage at one of our

frequent

stops.

Matters

progressed

smoothly

until we hit the Somerset por-

tion

<of

.

the Turnpike where

a

blinding

combination of snow,

hail

,

and rain greeted us like

long-lost

brothers.

Every

few

miles we were

forced

to literal-

ly

get

out and get

under

 

as the

ice formations on the

wind-shield

made it an impossibility

to see

more

than twenty

feet

ahea

.

d.

The crowning

blow

came

when we approached a sign

which

read,

"Careful 

Tfiis

read may be slippery when

wet. 

Our driver,

a

bronco-buster

from way

back ,

was a daring

sort

of

a chap

with

a

"damn the

consequences—full speed ahead"

attitude. Threading

his

way

through the

maze of

stalled cars,

buses

,

and

giant

trailer trucks

he

finally brought

us

through.

Dripping

water

like a shaggy

dog coming

in

out

of

a rain show-

er

,

we

found our reservations at

a

Pittsburgh hotel cancelled.

We

finally wound

up

at a hostelry

where

for the

nominal

sum of

$10 we were allowed to repose

for

the remaining hours

before

gametime.

One can imagine the vague an-

noyance

we felt when

informed

later

that the

football

game

had

been

postponed. Krasnansky

and

I looked at each other,

and

what

followed

could not have

been

printed

even

in

Froth.

Ma^aggia

la futball 

But what

of

.

Glazer? Was

his scrawny

body

lying life-

less Somewhere beneath a

snow-covered

bier?

Uh-uh.

Entering a local beanery that

afternoon

we were startled

to

see

George

come

stumbling

toward us while

uttering

hoarse

cries.

As

it

turned

out,

he had

taken a train from

Ephrata and

arrived hours

before we had.

.

Maurauders

Win

Henick

Tallies

20

A high-scoring outfit named

the Marauders vaulted into con-

tention

in

the intramural

inde-

pendent basketball league

by

stopping the

Rockets

Wednesday

bv the unusually

high

score

of

38-12.

Keith

Renick led the win-

ners

to their

initial

triumph

by

combining nine field goals and

two

fouls

for

twenty points.

For the opposite extreme in

scoring in the same

league

(I),

the

Pre-Vets nosed

out

the

Blackfeet

,

8-6.

Also

in league

L

the

Bees downed

the

Coal Crack-

ers

,

21-16

,

and the Kni ghts

,

led

by

Schaeffer

'

s 10

markers

,

top-

ped

the

Barons ,

18-15

, in

sp

ite

of

the fact that Snyder garnered

all of the Baron'

s 15 points.

In league H. the

Happy Loser

'

s

Gene

Fink-bucketed 8 points to

lead his squad to a

27-23

victory

over

the Keys.

The Happy

Los-

ers rallied from a 14-12 half-

time deficit.

Another

contest in league

H

saw the

Rustlers edge

the New-

manites

,

14-12

,

as Bud Rine-

(Continued

on

page

eight)

S

wamis

 

Sour

Yea

r

Ends On

Sad

Note

The

Daily Collegian

swamis

wound

up a

dismal season

on an even

more

dismal

football

day

Saturday. With the

ele-

ments

p

lay

ing havoc

wth statistics

and

pre-game ratings

,

the

four

swamis each pulled onl

y six

wins

out

of

the

thirteen tries.

As

a

result

,

Sports editor Ray

Koehler moved into

th e

lead

by

a mere four

ten-thousandths of a point

,

to capture th e

swami championship

for the sec-

ond consecutive

year.

On the basis of

picking more

games

throughout

the

y e a r .

Koehler

's

average

dropped

only

20

points to

.6456

,

while

Marvin

Krasriansky

'

s

rating

'dropped off

sharply 30 points

to .6452.

Swamis Protest

Reminiscent

of

the

1949 finish

in the American

League

batting

championship

when

George

Kell

,

Detroit third baseman

,

outhit Ted

Williams,

of

the Boston Red Sox

.

in

a similar close

finish

,

the

final

tabulations brought numerous

squawks

from the

prognosticators.

The loudest

one came from

Krasnansky,

who immediately

proclaimed,

I demand a re-

count "

George

Glazer ,

who fin-

ished in third

place with a .594

average, and

Art

Benning,

who

faded

badly since

losing

his

wis-

dom teeth

, took the

boobie

prize

with .588.

Both Glazer arid Ben-

ning

demanded

an

additional

week to nick more

games

'

to en-

able

them to

climb

out

of the

"500

club " so

they

hoped.

This

year

's

swami

group added

a little spice to the

proceedings

by inviting famous sports editors

and

other guests to

pick winners

along with them.

The guests w.sre

Chet Smith

,

Pittsburgh

Press;

Al

Abrams

,

Pitsburgh

Post

Gazette;

Gordon

Williams

, Reading

Times;

Art

Daley,

New York Times;

Ed

Watson

,

Centre Daily

Times;

Bob

Kotzbauer,

Lock Haven Express;

and

ye gads,

Miss

Grace Hender-

son

,

Dean of the

School

of

Home

Economics. A letter to Holly-

wood'

s Jane Russell

failed

to

bring

a reply,

much to the

swa-

mis'

regret.

In a season full

of

upsets and

constant setbacks

,

our swamis are

keeping

their heads high

, an

d

hoping for

better luck next

time.

Koehler and

Benning

have pick-

ed

their last

games

for

Collegian.

Glazer and. Krasnansky

are eligi-

ble

to give it another

try next

vear.

Gfidde rs Face Bestwic k

(Co

ntinued from

p a g e

f o u r )

this year

to

bring

his three

season

total

to 650

yards.

At

the

same time,

however, Nit-

tany

pass defenders

have held the

opposition

to 571 yar ds

in 8 games

,

for an

average

of 71

yards

per

contest. The Panthers

have

total-

led

965 yards

in the same number

of

outings.

That the Panthers

have

relied

heavily

on

their passing game is

indicated by

the

statistics which

show

them

to

have

.

thrown 155

pases

while rushing the ball 332

times. They have

gained

but 725

yards

on

the

ground.

While the Panthers have devel-

oped

a

powerful passing game,

their own pass

defense

could

stand

improvement.

Opposition

aerial-

lsts have

connected on 82 of 164

attempts for 1090 yards.

The

comparative

figures

are

,

of

course,

tempered

bv

the difference

in

schedules.

The

'

Panthers

,

w in-

ning but

one

of

their first

eight

engagements

,

have played one of

the

toughest

schedules

'

in the

East.

The

Lions

th

emselves

,

have a

potent pass-catch

duo

in /quarte r-

back Vince

O'Bara

.

and end John

Smidansky. After a slow

start , O

-

Bara

has

come

along

fast in the

past

few weeks. His

passing

has

sparked State to three

straigh

t

victories.

O'Bara has

completed 35 passes

in 97 attempts for 594 yards,

while

Smidansky has

caught 24 passes

for 337

yards.

Both

teams

are expected

to

be

at full

strength for

the

skirmish.

End

A rt Bet ts

, injured against

Rutgers

,

will probably

be

ready

for

action.

He

is the only

Lion

still

doubtful.

Casanova expects

to

have

his

first

string backfield intact for the

first time within a month. The

starting backfield

of

Bestwick,

halfbacks

Bill

Sichko

and Bi l l

Reynolds

,

and fullback

Joe Capp

has had

one

or more of its mem-

bers missing most of the

year.

Tackle

Charley

Yost,

sidelined

since the

opening play

of the

sea-

son,

is also

expected back

is ac-

tion.

The

Lions

arrived in Pittsburgh

early

today.

Weather

conditions

permitting, the team will work

out in Forbes field this

afternoon.

The squad will be quartered in

tha

Hstal

Sffaanlmr.

8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-collegian-december-1-1950 6/8

VIC

s

HAKES

ANDWICHES

UNDAES

NACKS

Open

Unfit

  Midnight

Dail

y

ntiE

Midnight

145

S,

Allen

St.

Zror

L^nridtmas

•Penn

State Class

Rings

•Jeweled

Fraternity

Pin

s

•Fraternity

Rings

•Cre

sted Fraternity

Jew

elry

'C

ollege

Seal

Mounted

Jewelry

It

it's

that sought after BAL-

FOUR

jewelry

you want fo r

Christmas

, you

'd better

hurry.

There

'

s still

time

but the

Christmas mails will be

heavy.

Drop

in within

the

next few

days.

BALFOUR'S

Location:

AA

Store

Claude

'

s

Coming

ey

B

C?*£$»

>

*

Don

'

t Miss

Him

I

<

«

¦  ?

 

M

I

itQ

ry

Ba

II

y

*

m

m

Rec Hall

,

Dec.

8

$4 per

couple

Formal

i*9*

HIS PIANO AND

HIS

ORCHESTRA ARE

COMING

TOO  

• • •

A Luck

y

Fire

One of the luckiest things ever

to

happen

tc

Penn State was the destruction by fire of

ar

unoccupied Pollock Circle

dormitory

Saturday,

IT

WAS LUCKY first of all because

the

build-

ing

was

one of

the

six closed

recently

for

lack

oi

occupants. So only wood and metal burned

in

the flash blaze,

not human

beings.

It

was lucky because the fire was confined to

just

one

building an d

,

despite gale-winds

, did

not spread throughout the area.

It was

lucky

because

,

even

had

the

fire spread

,

all the

occupants of adjacent

dorms

were away

over

the

holidays and

the

buildings

empty.

.

But

the

most

important

feature of

this lucky

fire

was

that

it acted

as

an unmistakable piece

of handwriting on the

wall,

a warning from

an

unexpectedly lenient

Providence

that

some-

thing

should

be done about

Pollock

circle,

and

done quickly.

Wooden . dormitories are

a

menace.

The

Uni-

versity

of

Oklahoma learned ab o ut

wooden

dormitories the hard way,

a

year ago

,

in a horri-

ble

and

tragic fire.

Half

a

dozen

other

schools

have

found

out

about wooden

dormitories

too,

have seen the lesson

written

in charred

bodies

and seared flesh.

PENN -STATE has

been

incredibly

lucky. It

has had its lesson

at

the

cost

of

only

one old

building. But Penn State

would

do

well

o

ab-

sorb this lesson

, p

romptly. The eight

Pollock

ci

rcle dormitories

still

occup

ied

are

so

many

invitations to flaming

catastrophe.

These

build-

ings must go.

The odds

,

are

eight to five

that

the

next

one

that burns

will

burn

people

,

not supplies.

I

—-Hon

Bonn

Little

Man On

.

Campus

B

y

"I

suppose

yo u

'll

take

advantage

of

me

because

1

can

't r

esist

giving

'A'

s

'

to students

with

a

smile.

Bibler

 

3tj*

iathj

Ctfiiegtan

Successor

to THE FBEE LANCE,

est. 1887

Publi shed

Tuesday

through

Saturda y

mornlnr "

in-

clusive

during; the

College year by

the

staff of The

Dallj

Collegian

of The

Penns ylvania State College.

Entered as

second-class

matter

July

5,

1934,

at the State

College

,

Pa., Post Office

under

the

act

of March S

,

1879.

Collegian editorials

represent

the

-viewpoints

of the

writers ,

not necessarily

the

policy

of the

newspaper.

Unsign ed

edi-

torials

are

by

the editor.

£>«an

Gladfelter

^

— ^_

Owen

E.

La ndori

Editor

•*tas

Business

Mgr.

Man

aging Ed.

,

John tlalbor : News Ed..

Stan

Degler ;

Spo

rts

Ed.,

Ray Koehler; Edit. Dir.,

Herbert Stein;

Society

Ed-.

Deanle Krebs; Feature

Ed.,

Janet Rosen;

Asst.

Sports

Ed.. Art Benning ;

Asst.

News Ed..

John Asfcbr

ook;

Asst. Socie

ty

Ed.,

Bettina

dePalma ;

Photo Ed., Wlisen

Barto; Senior Board

:

Jack

Haddin gton,

Bill Dstwslier.

Ass

, Bus.

Mgr.,

Thomas

M.

Karolcik;

Advertising

Dir..

Harold L.

Wollin;

Local Adr. Mgr..

Hn go R. Mand

fs;

Pro

motion

Mgr.,

Laura Mermelstcln; Circulation

Co-Msr».,

Edward W. Noyes

,

Gerald F. X

eager:

Personnel Mgr„ Ed-

win Singel ; Classified

Adr.

Mgr..

Shirley

Fall sr;

Office

Mgr.,

Loretta

Stemplnski:

Secretar y,

Wini

fred

Wyant )

Senior Board : Norma

Gleghorn

.

Delores Home,

Mary

Xaoffman,

Sue

Halperin.

STAFF THIS

ISSUE

Night ed itor ,

Paul

Beighley;

Assistant

night

editor

,

S

hi

r

ley

Va

ndever;

Copy

editor

,

Lee

Stem;

Assistants:-Jake

Highton

,

Bernie

Ames

,

Edward Minshall.

Advertising

staff:

Joan Eidleman

,

Howard

Boleky,

Terry

Moslak.

.

__

Use

Of

A-Bomb

President

Truman

'

s

statement

on

the

atomic

bomb yesterday

should make

everyone

stop

an d

think for

a

moment.

THE

PRESIDEN T

said that

active

considera-

tion

was

being

given

to

use

of the atomic

bomb

against the

'Chinese

Communists

if the

step

is

n

ecessary.

The

first

q

uestion

one

mig

ht

ask

is: Just

¦

what

does

the

word

necessary

 

mean?

And,

along the same

line,

what standards

will

be

used

to

determine

whether

use

of

the

bomb

is necessary.

Although

final

responsibility will

fall

upon

the President

,

he indicated

in his initial state-

ment

that

the

military

commander

,

in the

field

would have

something

to do

with

making

the

decision.

This would

raise

the

question of

whe-

ther

use

of the bomb

would be

decided

ort the

basis of

military

necessity,

or

diplomatic

neces-

sity.

Would

it

be used

as a

last

resort

'

either to

end

the

Korean war

or

to

wipe

out any threat

of further war

,

or would it be

employed

merely

as

a convenient

and

quick method of

attaining

certain

ends?

ANOTHER

QUESTION

the

President'

s

state,

m ent raises is that

of

the

reaction

of

many

peo-

ples

throughout the

world

,

and

particularly in

Asia.

Already

there are

rumblings

that allies

oi

the United States are

worried and

dissatisfied,

Although we

do not

like

to admit

it

,

the peop

le

of

many

nations view this

country with

feelings

other

than love.

Would

using

the A-bomb

bring

alienation

,of

allies and

further

hard

feelings

among

Asiatic peoples?

Apparently

it

would

,

fo r

repercusions

along

this line have been

evidenced

already.

Another

facet

of the situation is

the

manner

in which the

President

made his

statement

and

his later

revision

of what he said.

Appare

ntly

this has

been

another

instance

of

an

off-the-cuff

answer to

a

reporter

'

s

question,

an

answer

given

without

much

previous thought or con-

sideration

having

been given

'

to i

ts

effect

throughout the

world.

When

far-reaching

policy

decisions are

announced

in such a way,

it

is no

surprise that

many

people

begin

to wonder

about the

validity

and consistency of the

Presi-

dent'

s policie

s.

We may

as well

face

the

fact that

the

President'

s statement

is,

in

substance,

a threat

to use the

A-bomb.

But

in

a ticklish inter-

national

situation,

with the world

moving

closer to

global war

every day. it

is question-

able whether

threats are

-more

appropriate

than diplomacy.

• •

azette

.

Friday, December 1

NE WMAN

club mixer,

Theta

Kappa

Phi,

7

p.m.

COLLEGE

PLACEMENT

Farther

information

concerning

Interviews and

job

place

ancnU

can

he

obtained in

112

Old Main.

Seniors

who

turned in preference

sheets

will

be giver

priority

in

scheduling

interviews

for

two

days followini

the

initial

announcement of the

visit

of

ohe of the com-

p

anies

of

their

chpiee. Other

students will be scheduled

on

the

third and

subsequent

days.

National

Tube

company will interview

Janua ry

graduates

in M.E.,

E.E

., I.E.,

and Mot at the B.S. level

on

Wednesday,

Dee.

6.

A

representative of the

Boy

Scouts of

America

will

be

on

campus

JDee. « to

Interview January candida tes

interested

in a professional

scouting

career.

Scouting

experience

is x

prerequisite. Graduates 25

years

old or

over

pr eferred.

A

representative of

the Young

Women  

s

Christian

associa-

tion will be on campus Dee. 6

to interview sociology

and

physical education M.S.

candidates.

Goodyear Tire and Rubber company will

interview

January

gradu ates in M,E. , Chem. Eng.,

I.E..

and

E.E., at the

B.S.

and M.S. level

on Wednesda y.

Dee. 13. This was previously

scheduled for Nov.

29.

Fidelity Mutnal

Life Insurance

company -will

interview

Janu ary

graduates

tor insurance

sales Dec. ' 6

,

7

,

and

8.

They are particularly interested in contacting prospective

agents

in

the following counties :

Dauph in

,

L

ebanon

, Lan-

caster, York

,

Adams,

Franklin

, Juniata ,

Mifflin,

Pe

rry, and

Cumberland. No

priorit y.

Fidelity

Mutual

Life Insurance

will

Interview

girls

who

are being

graduated

in

January

with a secretarial

course

Dee.

6

, 7

, and 8.

N

o priority.

Procter and Gamble

Distributing

company

will

interview

January

graduates

inte rested in retail sales work Dec. 6.

Tall men with extra

curricular activities pref erred. No

pri

ority.

E. I. Dn

Pont

De Nemours & company

will be

on

campus

beginning

Dec. 11

to interview

1951 PhD candidates in

the

following curricula:

Chemistr y, Physics

, C. E.,

Biochemistry,

M.E.,

Enft

lneerln g Mechanics ,

M etallurgy, Plant Pathology,

PI q nt Entomology,

'

Bacteriology, Food Technology,

and

Meteorology. No priority.

Inter national

Business Machines

corporation

will inter-

view

January graduates in

M.E., E.E.,

and Physics

,

Dec.

4.

Firestone Tire

and

Rubber

company

will

Interview Jan-

uary

g

raduates in M.E.,

E.E.

,

Chem.

Eng.,

and

I.E.

on

Tuesday,

Dec. 4. No priority.

Standard Oil

company,

Elisabeth,

N.J

.,

will interview

1951 M.S.

and

PhD

candidates

in

Chemistry

and Chemical

Engineerin g

on

Thursday and Friday. Doc. .

7

and

8.

No

D

riority.

.

National

Lead

company

will

interview January graduates

at

the

'

B.S. level

, anl

1951 M.S. arid

PhD candidates in

Chemistr y and

Chemical

Engineering on

Thur sday,

Dec.

7.

rhcy are

especially

interested in

PhD

physical and

organic

shemists ; also

organic

chemis ts for

synthesis work. No

priority.

AT

THE

MOVIES

CATHAUM:

All

Quiet

on

the Western Front

ST

ATE: K

i

n

g Solo

m

o

n'

s Mines

NITTANY :

Ghost

Goes West

A

Few

Sad Tales

Snows

 

Gates

\ t

 

"Ah

, you

ain

't seen

nothing;

the

snow in m y

home

town

was

cleai

up

to .

.

.

 

These

words initiated

many

a tall-tale related

throughout

our snowy

college

campus as

students,

recently extricated

from

then

snow-bound

abodes

,

slid

back to

dorms,

fraternity houses,

and class-

rooms.

THE

STORIES

WERE AS THICK as

the

snowf lakes

were

reputed

to

be

,

the

descriptions as

wet as

the

surging

flood waters,

the

humoi

as

refreshing

as

the two unexpected

days

of

vacation.

There

is the

one

about

the five secretaries in Old Main who

were

hoarding

pennies

for a month in

prep

aration

for

a

big

spree in

Pitts^

burgh. Well

,

they

got

there

,

but were

marooned in the

Fittsburghei

hotel for their

entire

soj ourn.

Then

there are the accounts

of

the

wayward

busses

that

took

16

hours to

get

f rom

Allentown

to

State

College.

Another

bus

, after

being

stuck for the third time

,

proceeded merrily

on its way,

lea

v in g

two

passengers behind.

Of cou

rse, t h e r e

are the snow-blanketed

cars

which

-

were

abandon ed

somewhere in Pittsburgh"

a

nd

the hours

spent

digging

out cars in

Coraopolis

or Braddock only to have them hurried

again the

next

morning.

Le

t'

s

not

forget

eating by

candlelight

for lack

of

electricity

or th e

poor Altoonaites whom

Reddy

Kilowatt deserted altogether.

AND

THERE

IS

THE AMAZED

girl

from

Johnstown who

wa s

just complimenting the

Pennsylvania

railroad on having its

trains

not only on schedule

,

but five minutes ahead

of

time during

the

crisis

,

when a

bedraggled

little

lady snapped

afhe r

, This

is n 't the 12:30,

girlie. I'

ve been

waiting

for this since 8:10 this morning.

 

Harrowing

bus rides from Lewstown . . .

Unused

football tickets

.

. .

Uprooted trees

. .

. Broken windows . .

.

Long

hours at the

tele-

vision

set. .

.

Unplanned

overni

ght stops in

Harrisburg .. . Five cent

candles

being

sold

for fifty . . . Snow . .

,

Snow

. . .

Snow

. . .

Well

, "Let

it snow

, let it

snow,

le

t it snow.

 

And maybe

Coach

Sherman

Fogg

'

s

boys

will have something on which to ski

this

year.

—Janet R

osen

/

Control of the

College is vested

in a board of

trustees of 32

nembers.

Members

ex officio include

the

governor

of

the common-

wealth

,

the President

of

the

College

,

the

state superintendent

of

pub-

ic

instruction

,

the state

secretary

of

agriculture

and the state secre-

;ary

of mines.

Terms of

the

other trustees are

three

years.

Six of

;hem

are

appointed

by

the

governor ,

9 are elected

by

the

alumni

and

12

by deleg

ates f rom

county

agricultural

and industrial

societies.

t

8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-collegian-december-1-1950 7/8

FAMOUS

BRAND

SHOES

Across

from the

Post

Office on Beaver Street

NOW $3.99

Others

Were

$5.95

Now

$2.99

and

$3.99

FOR WOMEN

Regularly $3.95

NOW $1.00 -$1.57

SPECIALS

Limited Number

Only

WHITE

BUCKS

Now

Only

$5.99

SADDLE SHOES

Now Only

$5.99

L^uff iu

um

LEW AYRES

"ALL

QUIET ON

THE

WESTERN

FRONT

Deborah

Kerr

Stewart

Granger

  K ING

SOLOMON

MINES

i

littanu

Robert Donat

 GHOST

GOES WEST"

Film

Classic

Release

NOW

At

Your

Warner

Theatre

We

still

have

a large selection

of

women's shoes in suedes

and

various leathers; in

most

size

s.

Such

famous

names

as:

DeLiso Delman

Rhythm

Step Cobbl

er s

Friendly

Carmelletes

Andrew Geller

Values

to $19.95

$|00

NOW

I to

v^ WW

tet

CAD

UBfc l

T

^

plu

zn.

O

R MEN

fieri

r

z.zz

»lui

tea

 4

Sfe

^. F

or

Men

00

¦tot Ma

McLANAHAN

'

S

Christmas

MUR

JEWELRY

ii^

 

if Kf

ti

i j *

^^

- ^

k

Be

Sm

art

. . .

f

Look Ahe ad

f

Lay-Away

NOW For Christmas

%

9

RitlgS for

your

best

gal

or

beau

^

Watc

hes of beauty

and

precision

J?

Ciga

rette

Lighters

for Him

or

Her

j

Bracelets and Pins

galore

Pen and Penci

l sets

of

quality

T

mhel

Retreat

Tomorrow

a

n

c y

George

,

Panhellenic

m c i l

president

,

announced

a

Penhellenic

retreat will

be

tomorrow in

one

of the cam-

cottages

beginning

at

9 a.m.

11 sorority

presidents

end

ling chairmen

will

attend this

2at.

Such

problems

as

pledge

ling,

scholarship,

and rushing

be considered

at

the meet-

scause

of weather

conditions

,

previous plans to hold the

eat

in the

WRA

cabin had

>e

canceled.

Maple cottage

been named

as

the probable

ige

in

which

the

retreat will

leld.

zxt

Saturday WSGA will

hold

etreat ,

also in one of the

cot*-

s. Representatives of

the

ite

and

house

as

well

as

70 Windcrest

Jots

To

Att end

Party

Approximately

70

c h i l d r e n

from Windcrest trailer camp

will

attend a Christmas

party

spon-

sored

by

WRA at

White

hall

on

Thursday.

Guests

at

the

annual

party will

be

between the ages of

three and

six. Anne Forrest will

tell Christ-

mas

stories when the

children sit

around a decorated

tree

in the

lobby.

Two Donald

Duck

cartoons

will

be shown. Santa

Glaus

,

Paul

Beighley,

will distribute presents

to

everyone.

Ice cream

,

cookies and app

les

will

be

served.

WRA ,

Leonides and Panhel offi-

cers

will hold

discussion at

this

time. Government and leadership

will

be

their

main

topics of

dis-

cussion.

t

thru

the

Two Rec

Hall

Dances

Scheduled For

Weekend

In

formal

Sop

h

Hop

To Be Held Toni

g

ht

The Soph Hop,

an

informal

dance

sponsored annually

by

the

sophomore

class, will be held in

Rec hall

tonight

from

9

to 12.

A Scottish theme

wil be featured.

Music for the affair will be

furnished

by

Gene

Magill and

his

orchestra.

Members of the

sophomore

class

who

have

not

received

their

tickets

may

pick

them

up

free

of

charge at

the

Student

Union

desk in Old Main.

This is the

second

'

year that

the

sophomore

class

has held

an

informal

dance.

In the

previous

years the class

sponsored

a for-

mal dance

with name bands and

charged

$4.00

admission for the

affair.

However,

.

lack of funds

to

support

the

dance

forced the

class to

limit

the

size and

curtail

the

expenses of

the

affair.

Co-chairmen for

the dance are

Marian

Whitely

'

and Thomas

Smith.

The committee heads are:

publicity,

Shirley

Gallagher ; dec-

orations

,

Glen

Wiggins; finance,

Josephine Waterhouse.

Weekend

A t

Pitt

Bores

B

lue Band

The Penn

State

Blue Band

was

bored in

Pittsburgh.

They

were scheduled to

prac-

tice their

routine.

Friday

after-

noon

for the

game

Saturday,

but

because

of the

snow

they

couldn

't

leave

the

Hotel

Pittsburgher

,

where

they were

staying.

"We

were

all

real

bored

in

Pittsburgh

,

  D a v i d

Fishburn,

trombonist,

said ,

and

all

we

did

was sit around and

play cards.

 

The

Blue Band

smoker

,

which

was

held at the

William Penn

hotel

,

was over early,

and the

boys

spent

the rest of the

evening

do-

ing nothing.

Saturday morning

t h e y spe nt

with their

ears glued

to the radio

to find out

whether

or

not the

game would

be

played.

After

hearing .that the

game

was to be

postponed

,

they

held

a

meeting

and decided to go

back

to

State

College

that

afternoon.

They gave two concerts —

one

at the

Pittsburgher

and the other

at the station. While at

the hotel

Ernest

Skipper

,

clarinetist

, w a s

telling

an elderly

gentleman how

inefficient

'

Pittsburgh'

s snow re-

moval was. The

gentleman turned

out

t

o

be David

Lawrence

,

mayor

of Pittsburgh:

.;,

Summing

up

the experience

Fishburn said ,

It

was

fun

but

I

wouldn

't

want

to

live through

it

again.

  '

Harvest Ball

Is

Sem i-formal Affair

Rec hall will be transferred

into

a

scene

of the

great West

tomorrow

night

for

the

^

Harvest

ball

,;

a

semi-formal

dance,

spon-

sored by the Ag hill

student

council.

Decorations

for

the dance

will

feature a corral to

carry

out

the

"Round-Up  theme.

Swinging

doors

will

lead to the

refreshment

stand and a large western

display

will occupy the center

of

the

dance floor.

The Statesmen will pr6vide

the

music and will

feature

a

quartet

for the first time.

Dancing

will

be from

9 to

12.

Tickets are

$2

and

may

be purchased

from

Ag

hill student council

members

or

at Student Union.

Co-chairmen

Joseph Breisch

and

David

Sta-

bler

asked, that

no

corsages

be

worn.

¦

'

This is

the

second

year

that

the Harvest ball is a

"big-time

"

dance.

Previously

the dance was

held

in the

TUB.

Committee heads for the

dance

are Sarah Chinii,

decorations ;

Stuart Frear

, publicity ;

Stanley

Domosch,

tickets and

program

;

Bill

Nichol,

refreshments; Bill

Wilson,

arrangements.

Newman Club To Hold

Informal

VWixen

Tonight

The Newman club will

spon-

sor

an

informal mixer

tonight

at the Theta Kappa Phi

frater-

nity house

, president Drew

Mahla

announced

yesterday.

The

mixer

will start at

7

p.m.

A

semi-formal

dance

,

originally

scheduled for

tonight

,

has been

postponed

until January.

It

will

,

however,

be held at the

TUB

and

previous

plans will be

followed

for the

dance.

Al pha

Omicron

Pi

Alpha

Omicron Pi

entertained

Theta Phi

Alpha in their suite

before the

holidays.

Looking

Glass

¦with

George

Leave

it to Orval

,

my roomy.

He got himself stranded in a

bar

during

the

storm.

A fifth was lonel

y

People

stretched

out all

over

the

place

,

he reports. Three

were out cold

(from

exhaus-

tion)

on

the floor.

A fourth was

sleeping

on

a table. And a

fifth

was standing empty on

the

bar.

Clancy Moldfeather

reports

that the beer can

cigarette

lighter he

bought

'

at Ethel's

saved the day. When electricity

was cut

of f

, Clancy lighted his

flame.

Heated

three rooms

,

poached

two

eggs

, th awed but

a

water

pipe

,

and kept

three

chickens

laying.

Yet sir

,

those

lighters

hold

fluid.

They

come

filled with fluid for 98

cents.

What a Christmas

present.

Pipe

dream com e

true

But

tha

t '

s

just

the beginning.

If

Dad or big brother

smokes

a

pipe

,

he

'll gloat over

a

goat

skin

tobacco

pouch by ROLF.

It snaps open and

shut

to keep

tobacco fresh and

moist.

Lin-

ing is washable. A

pipe

dream

at only

$4.

Or how about a GO

LITE

trav-

el kit

for mom or

sis? Comes

with the new plastic bottles

you can squeeze

to atomize

,

perfume

,

deodorant

,

or Bug-a-

Boo. You can buy

a bottle for

$1.

Or

a

set

including 2

bot-

tles ,

and 2

jars

in a

plastic

case

for

$3.50.

There

'

s

place

for hand lotion

,

cold cream,

make-up, etc.

Third eye

for

grandma

If

grandma'

s

threading

eye

is

dimming,

she 'll bless

you foi

an

automatic

needle

threader

at

$2.95. Or a

really

nice

read-

ing

glass

at

$3.50.

And if Aunt Nellie

is

spending

hours in

line

at the

post

office

to see how

much

postage

her

letters require

, she

'll appre-

cite a pocket postal

scale. It'

s

half the size

of

a

pen

,

with

a

pen clip. Gives

instant

reading

for

first class

and

airmail

let-

ters. Only

$1.

If Uncle Jake

'

s a card

carrying

union man

, give him

a billfold

with

place

for cards

,

pictures

,

spare

keys

,

and a

pay

raise.

Baby, it

's

warm

inside

Of

course

Ethel has

about 2,

000

other gifts. Take a

look

at

Duf-

fy

'

s elegant window for

more

ideas.

Or

stop

in: it'

s warm in-

side.

Don

't put off Christmas

shop-

ping

until

you

get

home. You 'll

have only

four

days

to buy

leftovers.

And

, you

might be

snowed in.

Which reminds me

to write

home

to see

if pa

got the

roof

iown

on our convertible

barn

Clearing

All Stock

Just look at some of th

e

values

being

offered

at

Famous Brand

'

s

great clearance

sale.

Here

'

s your

ch

ance to

buy a new

pair of

shoes

at

low,

unheard-

of

prices. Stop in today

,

while

there

'

s still

a wide

selection.

Men

'

s Shoes

Shoes

by Jarman ,

Cadillac,

and other

famous names

in

footwear ;

in

most styles

and

sizes.

Wing Ti

ps

Plain Toe

Scotch Grains

Loaf ers

Crepe Sole

Cordovans

Were $9.95

and $15.95

$#99

io

$f

A99

NOW

0 to lU

MEN'S SHOES

Value*

to $8.95

SLIPPERS

FOR MEN

JARMAN SLIPPERS

l  e£

 le< ?e4 {r   >

  2

t

.

C O I t t C E

A V I

S T A T S

C O l l t C i

  t I

FRI

DAY ,

DECEMBER 1

,

1950

THED ILY

CO

 N

 

ST TE COLLEGE

  PENNSYLV NI

P GE

SEVEN

msmsmmmm '

,«'

 

-

*<'5

5orps*r

&

NOW

$3.99 -

$4.99

8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-collegian-december-1-1950 8/8

The

First

National Bank

Of State

College

Memberof

Insurance

Corporation

ederal Deposit

Federal

Rest

System

ve

4

i

WAvv ufee

t n k p^wMMBU

(okJi

of a

pho tograph **

gnw lng

card.

Mais*

i» o

poiat to

stop

in and

*• »

o«r

*eb

efioi iof ilw

1950

dettgnc Prompt

Mfwaa

hafv on cm ora#fs» ..

 

GIBS

PHO TO

FINISHING

State College

,

Pa.

14 E.

College

Ave

phili p

Morris

chal lenges

brand

ther

leadin g

\

any

SSfc^O^L

this test

o

sugg est

BfeX «

v

'

J

W

i

Ster

HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF

SMOKERS ,

who tried this

test

,

report in si

gned statements that

i

n

PHILIP

MORRIS IS

DEFINITELY

LESS IRRITATING,

DEFINITELY

MILDER

i

2

 

..

Li

g

ht up

a PHILIP

MORRIS

Just take

a

puff—

DONT

INHAIE—

and

s-l-o-w-i-y

let

the smoke

come

through

your

nose. Easy,

isn

 

t it? And NOW...

Other brands

merely

make

claim

.. Light

up

your

presen

t

brand

Do

exactly

the

same

thing

DON

T

INHALE. Notice that

bite

 

that

sting?

Quite a

difference

from

PHIUPMORRIS

but P

h p

Moiuuts invites

you

to compare

,

o ju d ge

,

to

decide fo r yourself

Try this simple test. We

believe that

you

,

too,

will

agree

Philip

Morris is

,

indeed

,

America

's FINEST Ci

garette 

*

 

- • - •

E

A

NG

PLEASURE

i

MOKI

eans

MORE

CALL

FOR

Collegian

(Continued

from,

pade one)

lication

of.

one

eight-page paper

for every two

four-page

editions.

"We don 't

want to mislead

any-

one

by

promising

the

millennium

of

an eight-page

issue

every day,

but our

revenue

estimates

,

based

on an increased

assessment

,

show

that we could

publish eight pages

regularly

except

for unuual cir-

cumstances.

  Gladfelter

said.

Plan 40

Pages

"Our present

schedule

allows

publication of

28

tabloid-sized

pages

each week.

With

an

in-

creased assessment

, we contem-

plate printing about 40 -pages a

week

,

  he said.

If

the assessment should be

ap-

proved by

the

board

of

trustees

at their January

meeting,

the en-

larged paper should make its

ap-

pearance at the beginning

of the

spring

semester.

Ads Not

Enough

Such

an increase

in

the size

of

the

newspaper would not be pos-

sible on

the basis

of

advertising

revenue,

accordin

g

to Owen Lan-

don

, business manager. Although

increased

local

advertising

has

made possible

publication

of

more

eight-page papers than anticipat-

ed so far this semester

,

this has

been a

peak period

and

there

is no

indication

that

the heavy adver-

tising will either grow

or

contin-

ue indefinitely,

he said.

Principle reason for

expanding

the

size of

the Collegian would

be to create

more

space

for

cam-

pus

n

ews

,

Gladfelter said.

Other

new

features

contemplated

are

increased

photographic

coverage

and inclusion

of the ma j

or

wire

news

of

national

and

world

events , he said

.

Eng ineering

Lecture

The

senior engineering

lecture

scheduled for this afternoon has

been postponed.

.

Gross To Work

With

4

lettermen

(Continue

d f r o m

age

f our )

Not expected

to

be around

foi

the season's

opener but

slated tc

see plenty of action

'

after

tht

Christmas vacation

is Herman

Sledzik,

a 6-foot

4-inch

sopho-

more from DuBois center. Sled-

zik broke

his wrist

in a scrim-

mage and

has

been out

of

action

for

three

weeks.

Rounding out the first 12 arc

Chet Makarewicz, sophomore;

Ken Bouldin , junior; Bill

Gibson,

junior;

Tom Shuptar,

senior;

and

George Lynch,

a

sophomore.

In

reserve

Gross has

Dick

Phillips

,

a

sophomore

;

Zeke Sei-

del ,

a junior; Silvio Cerchie

.

a

sophomore

, and

Wil

Hauer

, a

sophomore who is ineligible

the

first

semester.

This year's

Nittany Lion team

averages

six feet two inches in

height—a few

notches

under

last

year

'

s average when Costa.

Schis-

ler,

and McMahan brought

the

average up to over six feet

three

inches.

The Lions

will

play four games

at home before the Christmas

vacation

,

meeting Ithaca

,

Syra-

cuse

,

Rhode Island

State,

and

Washington

& Jefferson on the

home court.

They

play

their only

away

tilt at American university.

Friends

'

Dance

Tonight ,

Supper meet ing Sunday

The Young Friends will hold

a

square

dance at 8 o

'

clock

to-

night at

the

meeting house

,

318

S. Atherton

street, and a supper-

meeting-at

5:30

p.m.

Sunday

at

the

home

of Helen

Striedieck

,

119 W.

Ridge

avenue. The dance

is

open to

the

public.

Maurauders -

-

(Continued

from

page

f i v e )

heimer combed the cords

for

8

markers.

Also

,

the

Weasels

and

Packers

suffered forfeit

losses

to the Deadwoods

and

Penn

Ha-

ven

,

respectively. The

only

battle

in league G also was

marred

by

a forfeit with the Erasers

get-

ting the win over

the

Oilers.

IF

YOUR typewriter needs repairs just

call

2492

~

or brine machine

to

633

W;

College Ave . Mr. Beattie s 28 rears

ex-

perience is at your service.

WANTED

TWO YOUNG women

needing

double

room.

Graduates or

secretaries.

New co-op

house near campus. Call Miss

DeMay

at

Ext. 478

during

day or 2505 in evening.

RELIABLE STUDENT with

car to

de-

liver Collegians everyday. Contact Ed

Noyes. Phone 4702.

ROOM FOR

.

Rent.

Single. Half block

from

campus

.

227

W. Park.

May be

used by couple. Kitchen privileges.

FOR

SALE

*

ALL PARTS connected—Good

'41

Ford

motor , good

'34 body,

good tires , good-

buy, good

everything. Phone

4332.

ALUMINUM TRAILER

,

Frigidairc ,

water-

- heater

,

bottled

gas;

reasonable.

Im-

mediate occupancy.

Glenn Wommer.

Hoover Trailer Park , State College. Route

322.

COMPLETE 30

ft.

Trailer 1949 Mobile

Cruiser. Hot water heater , bath

,

porch.

Excellent location. Call 6595 after 6 p.m.

DESOTO

COUPE 1936. Latest inspection

  G5.

Call 3897 after 4 p.m.

BROWN SHARKSKIN

suit single

breas ted.

Brown gabardine cardigan. Both 40

long. Excellent condition. Call Bob Gates

492S.

MUST

SELL

Kodak

35 camera complete

with

_

rangefiridcrs

and

carrying case.

Best offer

takes

it John Gaut 7621.

TWO TICKETS for Military Ball. Only

$4.1)0.

Call

Jim Railing—Dorm 22—

Room

24.

LOST

GOLD BULOVA watch at Rutgers game.

Crest

on

band.

Initials J.R.B. on back.

Reward ; Call

Joe

4702.

.

BED

COMBINATION billfold

and coin

purse

Sunday night in frortt of Mc-

Elw ain

getting out

of-

taxi.

Call 5051-

Ex

'

w 108.

¦ ¦

¦

^

K&E LOG LOG Duplex slide rule.

Nam*

inside case.

Reward.

Call

Andy

3204.

IDENTIFICATION BRACELET

lost

be-

tween

Post House and

Thompson

Hall

Tuesday

evening.

Reward. Call

Andy

Ext.

1090.

GRAY TOPCOAT

,

Hess

Broth ers

label

;

outside

room

3,

Sparks

' 1%

weeks

ago.

Call

Frank ,

Dorm

35

,

Room 11. Phone

5051-295.

"

.

20.00 BILL

either

in

Willard or towards

¦

Rea

&

Derick

Thursda y

afternoon.

Urgent

.

Reward. Call Jack

7169.

CLASSIFIEDS

FOUND

PAIR OF

horn-rimmed glasses.

Front of

Armory. M.J.B.

inside

case. Call 5051-

1087 ,

Room 112.

MISCELLANEOUS

TUTORING

DONE

in math

, physics

,

chem. ;

all classes.

For appointments

write

P.O. Box

476.

YOUR BUCK guarante ed. Hunting parties

arranged. Call Herb 213 Hamilton.

BOWLERS— WE

are

now open Saturday

¦

afternoons from 1-5 p.m. every eve-

ning from 6-12. The Dux Club.

 

i