PAGE FOUR All-Star Tilt Awaited TEAM 6 FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS The intramural touch football season ended with Team Six as the Highaeres Champs. Their final record of 8 wins and no losses speaks for itself as to the excel lence of the team. The members., of the team are as follows: Joe Fulton, Harry Scheidy, John Rosenstock, Jim Salvaggio, Alan Saul, Tom Sear- Physical Culture Club Established The Physical Culture Club is a newly organized club associated with the Hazleton Campus of Penn State U. The purposes of . this club are promoting physical fitness for its members and complying with the efforts of the Federal Gov ernment pertaining to the encour agement of physical fitness among the youth of America. The officers of the club are: President Maurice Gugliemini, Vice-President Jeffery Lyon, Treasurer Walter Pilger, and Secretary Melanie Krasnay. Of the thirty; members of the club, four are members of the feminine gender. The club has spent $200.00 of the money allotted to it by the S.G.A. for equipment; As well as being a learned mathematics instructor at High acres, Mr. Ross; the Club’s advisor is also an experienced physical culturist. The planned program of phys ical fitness is open to all. A CENTURY AGO Penn State graduated its first class one hundred years ago this month, when 11 students, of an original class of 59, were granted bachelor of scientific agriculture degrees. At graduation exercises this week, about 500 will receive degrees. LETTER reasons that you are here in an institution of higher learning is to learn—not only in a classroom, but through many different experiences. Disgusted Student (Ed. Note —This column is open to the student body and the faculty at Highacres. Unsigned articles will not be published, but names will be withheld upon request.) 'ABOLITION* followed, in which questions were directed alternately to each speaker, with each man also hav ing an opportunity to comment on the remarks of the other. A refreshment period followed, in which guests took the oppor tunity to meet with the speakers and discuss the film informally. HIGHACRES COLLEGIAN foss, Joe Fitter, and Fred Bamoski. DOLLAR BASIS CHANGED A new. chapter is being written in the long and tor tured history of this nation's money. President John F. Kennedy's recent announcement of the end of federal sales of silver has brought up many questions concern ing the background of the issue. While several volumes would be required to do justice to all phases of Amer ican monetary history, a brief resume of a few high lights may be helpful in viewing the importance and consequences of the current situation. Since its founding, the United States has experienced the advan tages and disadvantages of several types of monetary systems: bi metallism, the gold standard, and flat standards. The Coinage Act of 1792 provided for bimetallism (use of both gold and silver) with a mint ratio of 15 to 1. Under these conditions,, gold was under valued, sellers generally sought foreign markets for their gold, and a virtual > silver standard came into existence. ... .... , In an effort to!'remedy the situ ation, the federal government fixed the ratio at 16 to; 1, in, ,1834. This move undervalued silver and brought on a reversal of the coin age situation, resulting in a prac tical gold ‘ standard. . The CiviTWar presented a se vere financial 5 strain on federal funds, which led the government to issue large amounts of fiat pa per “greenbacks” not re deemable in gold. This paper mon ey rapidly depreciated in value and caused considerable economic dis- tress. However, the government finally did agree to redeem such currency in gold through the Spe cie Eesumption Act of 1873, “CRIME OF ’73” Since silver had virtually dis- World War. The economic chaos appeared from the American mar- of the Great Depression and the ket, the Coinage Act of 1873 inflation-minded program of dropped the coining of silver dol- Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New lars. This created no immediate Deal brought an end to the gold stir because silver sellers were standard in 1933. The Silver Pur still able to make considerable chase Act of 1934 restored silver profits overseas. By the late to the government’s buying list. 1870’s, however, new silver dis- Since the end of the Second World coveries in the American West War, the federal treasury has coupled with a general move to maintained a silver purhcase price abandon bimetallism in Western of 90.5 cents an ounce and a sale Europe caused a great rise in pro- price of 91.6 cents an ounce. • silver agitation. The coinage law SITUATION TODAY of 1873 was now widely condemned On November 28, 1961, Presi as “The Crime of ’73.” dent Kennedy announced the end The question of gold or silver of federal sales of silver and his became closely tied to politics in intention to request Congress to the late decades of the nineteenth repeal the Silver Purchase Act of century. The increased political 1934 and all other subsequent sil power of the silver-minded West ver legislation, paved the way for the passage of Since silver purchasers will have the Bland-Allison Act (1878) and to look to private sources for their the Sherman Silver Purchase Act needs, the immediate impact of the (1890) which restored silver to the President's action will probably be coinage list and provided for a sharp increase in the price _of specific silver purchases fyy the silver and products with a' high federal treasury. The 1890’s saw silver-content, e.g., silverware, the money question take on a rad- jewelry, photographic film, and ; Warriors Lead League Lackawanna Jr. College Slated For Jan. 15; Other Games Planned ical, even emotional, character as a political issue. The Republicans and Democrats were not united in their stands but generally sup ported gold and silver interests respectively. In addition to the major parties, several third parties Were formed. Of these,, the Populists were the most successful, polling over a million votes for their presidential candidate, James Weaver, in 1892. Private “armies,” e.g., the follow ing of Jacob Coxey and his march on Washington, were organized to propagandize the merits of silver. ’96 PRESIDENTIAL QUESTION The issue came to a head in the presidential election of. 1896. The p t yo-gold Republicans re-elected William McKinley in spite of the brillialit campaigning and oratory of the pro-silver Democrat, Wil liam Jennings Bryan. This defeat for silver seemed to kill the money question as a major political issue and the nation was definitely on a gold standard by the turn of the century. SILVER, GOLD F.D.R. Gold’s path in the twentieth century has hit many obstacles. There was a temporary reversion to bimetallism during the First DECEMBER 7, 1961: An All-Star team is currently being selected from the ranks of Highacres intramural basketball teams, with an inter-collegiate game With Lackawanna Junior College on January 15. The team, members of which have not yet been finally named, will practice January 8 for the Lackawanna tilt. Other intercollegiate games ate being tentatively scheduled with the Wilkes-Barre, Pottsville, and Scranton campuses of P.S.U. Also slated to-begin on Jan. 16 will be the continuation , of the present intramural season.. Cur rently leading the intramural league are the Warriors, sporting a 4-0 record. In second place are the Celtics, trailing the league-leaders with a 2-2 card. Five teams make up the league, with a total of 46 players. The breakdown of the teams is as follows: Team No. 1 The "Warriors" 1. Scheidy 2. Diefenderfer 3. Randis 4. Bossig 5. Lapinski 6. Warner 7. Defina 8. Fulton 9. Rosenstock Team No. 2 The "Lakers" Team No. . 3 The "Celtics" 1. Pilger 2. Milora'i 3. Badamp 4. Guglieminl 5. Marchese 6. Matteo 7. Sacco ; Team No. 4 The "Hawks" 1. Slattery 1. Bittner 2. Searfoss 2. Casper 3. Strunk 3. Baratta 4. Bernoski 4. O'Donnell 5. Brenner . 5. Koval 6. Saul 6. Gerhard ' 7. Bear 7. Bertolini ' " 8. Bolitsky 8. Michael 9. Schreiner 9. Shenosky . . 10. Garrison 10. Riley Team No. 5 The "Piston*" 1. Sloboda 6. Riggs 2. Bobeck 7. Wisniewski 3. Maletz 8. Rink 4. Falcone 9. Hampel 5. Yoder 10. Yuhas various electrical items and cision instruments. Early eatir mates have predicted a rise id $l.OO or $1.05 an ounce for silver. If the President’s full program is eventually implemented, it may mean the end of the silver-gold controversy which has faced this nation since its founding. an event will undoubtedly be wel comed by most history student! who have labored through the. vas| complexities of the many coinage acts and the even more numerous suggestions for monetary reform. (Editor’s note The preceding feature on the current change iif the U.S. money system was under taken by Mr. Epler of the History Department at the request of The Collegian.)