Penn State Collegian i.. 1 to ntl,,chh. dttrow tht Collo. ,eur 13, student, of the >ham* ht Ite Collet .in In the inttroto of the Colh. , ht, lia. st hi noth>. alumni and fro.ntla THE EXECUTIVE BOARD IS Ti lICLI Jr 1. C IIeCONNAUCIALI .lAN • TUIINLIt '39 THE EDITORIAL STAFF , II BFI I. Ir 22 'I LI NN mrr,rirrre ..!... 1.1 P \ tll.l. HAM 2, I 7 \ E HUI 1 710,, 2,.. ON LAIRD 2.1 ._ . .... NEWS EDFIORS %lIIHam 11 Schirmer, '3O Robert I' '... envoy, '3O It,, at 1 hulertfeld 40 a K Ornu,..e 10 II Coozar Jr JO MEll=l THE BUSINESS STAFI lAM C TURNFR A! - C M.CONNAMAPY , WARD la IrF -V-- - ASSISTAN r BI . SINESS MANAGERS it o,l' L Rehm 1 30 Milt t t M ',Kolbloont 10 } Rum. 10 It Dowd) Jr 30 bre nJ Eastern Intercollegiate enspaper clacoelation srana }Naar MI. Issut tthtor Thi, 1,... FRIDAY. OCTOBER 5,192 S A SENIOR LA VIE—OR NOT? The most important business sshich will eonfsont mem.l s of Student Council when they eons one Tuesday night their ln-weekly meeting ss dl he that of deciding the fate La Vic, the present Junim yearbook. And it noss tin es that the plan foi publishing La Vie as a seams an al still be adopted by legitimate action inasmuch as dent Board and venous outstanding membeis of the dent, faculty and alumni body haw passed favorably nn the ness plan. Yet, it mould be unfair to pass such a ruling moiety; Ruse .s few students, who might possible constitute an representative poop, faros the nem plan That is Y general student opsnion and continent is solicited rtainl,l, these has been nn unanimous umising against' proposed action; nesthes has these been the genmal nment so despmately desued Whethei it is because of ck of intmest or lack of knouledge on the past of the dent body that this pmplemng silence musts is not nun If it he lack of intmest, then the general mdmdes ce should sem= after the passage of the luting If it lack, orknouledge that binds the student's tongue, the. lieu ing description of the ness plan u ith arguments pro d con ioa se", to enlighten tern and thus aid his If the new plan is adopted La l'te ill be issued collo the second semester of the senior peat as is customary the larger universities of the country The present wets oil maintain then positions and following Oleos ill be elected at the Sluing elections of the sophomme 0111‘ one cool, Instead of the usual two, will be sued to each senior. To ptocale fin the %m at. histoiv d 'molds of the test 1920, in event of the passage of e new plan, one of two methods mill be emploced that a sniallei and less elaborate annual 1 1 .111 be is , ated erely lot the sake of continuing the churn of record 01 supplementaiy section will be added to the senior yeat ok for the same purpose A list of the pro arguments follows 1. A senior 3earbook mould be more trill) represen- Ilse of college life since it mould contain a more atle 4ite and complete record of etentmand nctitities. 2. It mould case the expense of Ini3ing two annuals 3 It mould pros ide more time for staff member, to wile mailable material and would retiree come of the al) burden which weighs upon artier Juniors. I. It would contain a more time 4 assortment of Alen accounts and would he more accurate!) de,rling the -)c!ir7hich is part of its title. , • „ For opposing arguments, these ate listed• I E‘ents of the present year mould not be pis med in the customary elaborate or adequate manner. 2. Present seniors mould need to sacrifice their ac ,ities list and be content oith little or no o mien part the histom of the College as recorded in La Vie 3 Piriancml settlements and other items of business ight he left unfinished at the time of graduation. • J. The College has not >et become an actual unncr• ti and so is not read> for such n foroard step, These ore the major famrahle and 11(1,4,1Ae opinions incoming the proposed change which, ham all piesent dications, mill pass Student Council Tuesday night unless appal ent consensus of student criticism uses against Those who would still manifest no concern and intei .t they feel that ,judgment should lie solely with e class it affects should testae that it has a duect beat. g on two classes, the Juniors and seniors, and an indnect eanng on the remainder orthe students who must some ay adhere to the new• ruling if it is passed. Immediate student comment on either side of the luestion is hereby solicited thmough the Letter Box de artrnent of this publication. The powei to mule out the noposed plan as smell as the might to adopt it is possessed y the student body Tako your choice and net accoidingly. BRIGHTEE PROSPECTS Prospects for a favorable reception of Penn State's n °posed 38,000,600 Bond Issue at the November elections ne b, coming brightei The membets of the'State Chain .er of Commerce voted favorably on the College Bond Issue y a larger inajmltyithan on any of the other thtee issues. residing to tin. ligmes, 63.4 per cent of the voting mem os dcelmed themeelvee In favor of it mhile 36.6 per cent Med "no" While numerous fuctors pond toward n passage of le Issue, it is by no means an accomplished fact. Stud ds, faculty, alumni and filends of the College must all and their efforts towards the success of the cause The people of the State must be made to realize what the pro posed Bond Issue means to their College, shat it means in the education of then sons and daughtms. To the Col lege the Bond Issue Is et mything It is north to orkmg haul I'm Pre3llo t I sidert Tn a met. Now that the beast tu%hing season is ON CI. the nets fiaternity pledges still base an opportunity to see them =cites in .1 totally (lament light During the period of iu%hing the leading Insilco sons king. lie stun petted, lump. ed, ti eated to "movies." chocolate ['oozes, etc. Hi, t amts mat allowed to expand beyond all limits %%Rh I the encum[erence of his %est as the only lestrieting in j iluence He sons THE DESIRED ONE He was a tin lgod upon a candy thione until a pledge pin tested snugly in the lapel of lus coat. - .r.411.e.1.C.15e: Anett.uott rtlitor Manning Mit, ~cm-IntL I. ditor A•ein.mtt I. dsior -- Iluttinrvot Manas.cr -Circulation Mann-er Adtvrti4lntr At the touch of the ss and of the modern Greek Allot'. ins the thione has Nanished The tin god no longer legally in fiotetnal cu cles on his tinsel chariot Ile is himself again, es en leas than himself With a shock lit :makes !rem his dream of ideal blotheihood and finds Inmself on the cold, hard giound. Ile must now take Ins true place in the daily mounds of the umomantm putt at flatermte life lie must learn the business from the giound up, as it woe. Noss he maim,' that it is his place to seise uncomplainingly. Ile ',ill no doubt rebel at him penal state at first It nlll do him no good. Such things H SLIIHHILH, F Hem° iut ashes. mowing lawns, ,axli.g Hoots, doing midnight lunch and mall sett ice, and an along the In oth -014 at the ungodly . hour of soon o'clock in the morning me inevitable in the life of e‘ety fleshmanThledge. if he conies off Ills duties Stith good glace, he uill sun the lespect and leniency of his oppres,ot.s If not, he still be introduced to the paddle plinciple ,The foregoing may sound harsh to the ems of the fra ternity pledges. They may get the idea that they time joined the strong gioup and seriously consider turning ni then pledge pins The men m ith the !ingest vanity will hind the pill the bitterest to smallom But considering everything, fieshnian duties me not such a haidship as they seem The tasks mill seem less humiliating if the freshmen still remember that e‘eryone in the classes abut c base Nubnutted to the same so-styled indignities Ile must discuid the idea that he, indlyirlualll. has been chos.. en to ieceire the floss oof the nether spurts AlioNe all, lie most not tomer himself to the basest of all crones of Collegiate Definitions NUMBER 1-CO-OP COACH A Co-Op coach is any poison endowed with pom Judg merit, a loud voice, two faces and a thick skull, an individ i ual who will make a public ass of himself by convening or, thickly populated corners with other knights of the assout ed quid to paiticipate in a gars atolls and vociferous squab ble over the defects of the football team A high and mighty voice supplemented by an extremely minus knom ledge of football them m pundits, ale the essertial requisites of a Co-Op coach Not only students are eligible for post, as Co-Op coaches but townspeople, high school boys and esen som, members of the circuit . , and Mama] comps rse the ranks id the demented mentor= Usually, disgusted athletes who bemoan tire fact that thi.‘ "didn't get a square chance' bolt from the teal ranks of college students and with their e‘aggerated therm roe of football spread undesn able propa ganda over the campus, Co-Op coaches knott abet is wrong atth the coaching staff; tt by the line is weak, ahv the backfield is slot., why so-and-so is on the bench when he should be on the 'tatsite, why so-and-so is on the 'torsite when he should be on the bench Co-Op conches know anything and et el t thing. why Ducknell is going to squelch us, why we will notes heat Pitt's wet st team with out best. For authentic infolmatton on anything—except foothall—readers should consult the Unorgam7ed Association of Demented Mentois feo.Op Coachcs)---.State College blanch. We Are Still Doing Business KEELER'S Cathaum Theatre Building KINGS FOR A DAY THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Side Lines Penn State opponents should see plenty of red this year. Sensing. Evans, Morn ill and Du% all are the sor ell-topped g, Allen aho pi ovule the dungen colon 'line coaching shelf boasts Griffiths and inning), as its led bends IMIMI Tomortou'. encounter should pro ide plenty of Ineuml, Action •hould prevail v,ith Bullet, and Lwow fighting for ,uinemace on Nov Bor er Battlefield I=l=l Captain Ilidlei and.Slaughtet, Get ' tvsbuig's tao tiny tackles, should keep, then go,d line a ell hidden ft 001 view The tritium weighs a scant 212 pounds sshdc his running mate mci clv tips the ,talev at 210 I=l=l Bee likes to keep his gtidmen in good 'humor doting practice sessions the othci dal he tooted his whistle Cot set immage and members of the fist too teams put on then equip ment Five minutes latei Dutch Rickel trotted out with knee pude. shin gnat& ,elbou ptotectois etc. The jocund t ietician said snulinell, • "Dutch, you look like a mediesal knight " "Ye ih t hut I don't play like one," came the quick reply. iffll=l Penn State's coach tiles to mnke real lions out of his proteges It is not uncommon to heal him shout be tween plays dining, sol unmage; "Men, nit' gotta' teal,'" Twenty Years Ago I=l The Bellefonte Centiat train ran Into a diove of toms a