STATE COLLEGIAN Published on Thursday of each week during the college year in the interest of The Pennsylvania State College. Entered at the Post Office, State College, Pa. as second class matter. EDITORS, ALEX. HART, Jr., *O5, Chief, F. M. TORRENCE, ’O5, T. F. FOLTZ, ’O6, W. J. DC7MM, ’O6, ED. FAWKES, ’O6, F. K. BREWSTER, ’O7 F. B. GARRAHAN, ’O7 BUSINESS MANAGER. W. G. HECKATHORNE, CIRCULATION MANAGER. P. A. RAINEY, ’O7. ASSISTANTS. H P. DAWSON, 'O7 W. N. LE PAGE, ’O3 SUBSCRIPTION. $1.50 per year or $1.25 if paid within 30 days after date of subscription. Thursday, Feb 9, 1905 EDITORIAL The following extract from an edi torial in the Princeton Tiger can be very aptly applied to the situation here at State: — The American is above all things a faddist, a man who rushes to ex tremes. What could be more mer curial than the temperament of a people who make a hero in one day, and unmake him the next day because he gives his wife a house which they have presented to him ? The yellow journals with their sky scraper headlines see to it that the American people change their fads almost as rapidly as the EXTRA pursues its first edition in the mad race for news. An author, practi cally unknown, is taken up by those high in power, and soon his mode of living becomes a household word, only to sink into oblivion at the ap proach of a newer fad. With such characteristics as these it is no won der that our particular community of the American people is too prone to rail at the injustic of those in power over the university. But is it not an extremist community in which a man is voted the most popular professor by a graduating class, and then three years afterward almost universally condemned on account of some slight of-fence which he may have given to the ultra-sensitive university .feeling ? Not that we condone the of-fence in question, mark you, but it is such a small thing, taken all in all, that we are inclined at .least to investigate both sides of the matter. And that is seldom done by the radi cal student. As soon as he sees any change in our university world that he does not like, he jumps right in and condemns it, without trying to find out the'reason for its being. The men in power are criticized simply because they are in power, but surely they have as high an ideal for Prince ton as the man who sits before his club fire and rails at their inefficency. It is a sad fact that a professor who is strict, be he ever so square, is not so popular with the undergraduates as his more lenient colleague. And when the faculty bring forward a measure which makes tor a higher academic standard in Princeton, such a howl is set up as one might im agine came from the throats of the despotized Russians when another of their liberties was taken away. One great trouble with us is that we are (following too much the line of least resistance. Too many of us are looking for a diploma, and not caring how easily we get it. An other mistake is our not giving the powers that be credit for thinking before they act. It is quite evident that they are every bit as wise as we, in our man-of-the-worldliness, and furthermoie they aie paid to run the university in the best possible way. And so when some change is made which seems to interfeie with your luxury or your schedule, don’t get cut your hammer and knock the men who have brought such discomfort upon you. The thing for you to do is to go out and try to arrive at their point of view. Find out why they did it. They no doubt have some more worthy end in view than your enjoyment of your after-breakfast smoke 1 And don’t condemn a professor because he is strict, but respect him because he is a man. Above all things, don’t be a faddist. If you honor a man to day, don’t entirely cast him off to morrow because he happens to of fend you in some small way. And in everything take not so much thought for yourself and your pleas ure, as for Piinceton, which will be come more and more dear to you every day, until that final June even ing when you sing tne last song and drink the last loving cup cf your Princeton days. A New Magazine, The Librarian has called our atten tion to a new periodical of unusual interest to students. It is the Inter collegiate Debating Journal, known as Both Sides and published at Cambridge, Mass., by an Inter collegiate Board. It is issued in the interest of college debating in Ameri ca, and will consist of reports of de bates, lists of questions, with anno tated bibliographies, etc, Vol. I No. 1, contains a very readable article on the Debating Method by Ex-Governor L. F. C. Garvin of Rhode Island, reports of the Yale-Princeton, Pennsylvania- Virginia Debates; editorials and an nouncements of plans for the further issues of the journal. The first number is brought out by the De bating Council of Harvard Univer sity, but it is the intention that a permanent board of inter-collegiate editors, chosen on account of the interest shown in “Both Sides,” will be responsible for the conduct of the Journal. Single subscriptions are $l.OO, in clubs the rate ranges from 50 cents to 15 cents depending upon the size of the club. E. E. Society, The Electrical Engineering Society held its regular weekly meeting in the Engineering Building last Wed nesday evening. A paper on ‘ ‘ Elec tric Lighting in Trains ” was read by J. C. Chrisman. B. C. Butler and G. L. Christman, presented a paper on the “ Maximum Distance to which Electric Power can be Trans mitted. ” Part of the proceedings of the American Institute of Elec trical Engineers was read and dis cussed on this topic.