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8/17/2019 The Daily Collegian - December 1, 1950
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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
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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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
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-collegian-december-1-1950 3/8
»/.0U
2)
Westminster
Edition
of
¦
Wr wlir
'RiK
Io
sin.nn
F o r something
senti-
mental give a
Bible. And
ours are something
you
'll
be
proud
to
give.
Do all ybur
u m ioiuma
o
nuppm g
at
i#m
i*n r#
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
S.
Allen
) $&
&&.
W
^/%
VW
WWVV
**
^W
*
4g
A
;
«>r
Christinas
. GREET
IN
G
CAR
DS
THAT
Y
OU
'LL
LIKE
J>
AND YOUR FRIENDS,
T
OO
#T
*
%
0
%
*\-
*\
-»»
>
i
If
r
*
*>•»
*^s
resent
n
BEAUTIFUL Sf cAvMye
Sf ity/ e
CARD
«V
,
ir
IP/n
w
&
Wyckoff
r
V
12
Distincti
ve
Cards
—12
Different Desi
gns
3fc
Jj fc
Wi
th Envelo pes
ig
?
«£?
Jn
An Attractive Box
r
-
£.
ONLY
50C
'mE
BOX
%»
JR
Other
White & Wycoff
and Individual cards for
the;§r
<C?
American Greeting Assort-
family
or
for general use^
¦a?
ments in
;&
3l .
5c to 25c
-Ts
0
in
29c
to $1.00
Boxes
J
g
?
*^
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
_
_
complete
with
pen
and
ink. t*
'
j
$
1
00
%
¦
Onl
y
"
The
Box
¦
^F
See
our
window
display
of
Christmas
cards
^f.
U
,.
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
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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
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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
s«
"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
Recommended