PAGE TWr, TICE' OAILY> COLLEGIAN • "For. A • Better. Penn State" successor to the. Penn- State.- Collegian, established 1901. and the Free Lance. established 1887 Published daily except Sunday and Monday during- the regular College year. by..the. stndents . of_ The P.ennsyltania State College. , Eriterad...as second-class matter July 5:`1934. ' ' at the post-office at . State -College, Pa., under the act of • .111aMh 8..1849.' Editor I ,l3usinessManager Adam A. Smxper , . Lawretice S.,Driever '4l Women's Editor—Vera L. temp '4l; Managing Editor —Robert IL Lane .'4l; . Sports ' Editor—Richard C. Peters ;41; . .News Editor—William'. E. Fowler '4l; Feature. Editor —Edward J. K. McLorin '4l; Assistant Managing Editor— Bayard Bloom '4l; Women's Managing Editor—Arita L. Hefferan .241; Women's Promotion Manager—Edythe B. Rictkel '4l. Advertising 34anager—Jobn H. Thomas '4l ; Circulation Manager—Robert G.• Robinson '4l ; Senior Secretary—Ruth Goldstein '4l ; Senior Secretary--Leslie 'H. Lewis '4l. Editorial and Business Office 313 Old Main Bldg. Dial 711 Managing Editor This issue _Ralph C. Routsong, Jr. '4l lq , ' ws Editor This Issue George Schenkein '4l Women's Editor This Issue Vera L. Kemp '4l )phomore Assistants Gordon Coy, Nick Vozzy Wednesday. Morning, November.l3, .„1.940 Did The- 1 4 41stlE4eciionrDefeat -TimiAmeri,canti're4s. ? 17Iowm!.ich forge . does ttle,,Ain.erican.px:ess today exercise? Is .its ;defeat .in -1 he. presidential election a sign gat editoriaL opinion,,even.,the,mightiest,of it, is r oo longer . potent?. , The answer seems to be yes k butit,is pot . a sure yes. In on_ e . .way the. defeat:,of the,,press ,in.,this election is a. credit xg the,press. It. might be..ta4en,•to . ,show that ; although the , editorial opinion.,predorninantly : favored,, Wendell • Willkie,;„the news columns of all papers. presented . bath sides impartially. :-On the:basis of this impar; tial presentation, it,might be said, the. American , • • •, publicmade its decision. .There are, of course, other, factors.in last week's clefeat of. the. press. ~,Xtesident.R.Op.Sevelt , had , ~hind him. two groups : editorial. opinion was .not likely to influence very strongly,.,the Solid -South, and that, great bloc Of . .voterswhc. have received eery ciirect.financial,benefits from the, seven, years of Roosevelt rule. Such : a suggestion Jeads,naturally to an assurnp tionthat the press.may no icinger represent, a true • cross-section of pUblic opinion. This . -seems to ,be true. • Perhaps it is because American society has , realigned . itself since the crash of 1929. Since 1929 there has grown up a class distinc tion and even emnity between capital and labor that is sharper than any that existed before. This is partly due to the fact that labor has only recent ly come to appreciate its full potentialities as an crganizeci bloc and partly due to the fact that since !933 it has had its first real champion in the White • House. With this new division of society, cutting cross 'vise instead of up and down v most newspaper edi tors and publishers find out that they have all 1.-en sliced into the same half, usually called the upper half. Thus they are all agreeing with each , oilier and with the half they have b•~en sliced into, but the half to which they don't beling and which they don't affect too greatly is apparently the cbminant half. Perhaps this is an explanation.. If it is then it is also true that the loss of prestige by the press confined only to certain issues,,the issues which our society cross-wise.,When we find a prob lern which slices, up, and, down. we are likely to.find the press divided, and the proportion of 'its "division; .is likely to reflect_ clearly the sentiment of the - American public. A probable result of this new cross-slicing is that the press will not continue to be Jeft out in the cold. A certain bloc of ,it,(more sizeable than now) may do the • expedient and, become champions and representatives of !the `forgotten -men" who .since 1933 have become so important in out . .. A merican way of life. That change will represent a new era in American life, and will bespeak a sort et bloodless revolution Syracuse 'And Sthool Spirit The football tie with, Syracuse will be more than %,-orth the loss in national gridiron prestige if it helps boost school spirit. • Perhaps Penn State fans were getting too used to,the monotony, of .victory. Since s tile • great flare up over beating Pitt last .November for the. first time . in. 20 years, victories over Muclinell,.-.West t. Lehigh,. Temple, and. South Carolina. are .dull by comparison. i . ,A..Syracuse .victory would . have been just as dull. .A:;tie . tfas. potdull atall. - . Significantly,_„more ~than. fans waited ,yell 1. over. an . hour, to receive,the, team ,when / it, game I back on Sunday. , Last. Friday, only a handful.; Downtown Office 119-121 South Frazier St 'Dial 4372 1:3 t[Afl AND MOW :100)( If no one objects, we are becoming increasingly irritated at.-.those little items. which ,from .time,to time _appear in.,the.• Collegian's columns_announc ing.the,departure or return of little_groups of.high minded persons bound on "Social Inquiry Trips." To observe conditions among, the poor of,the.large cities. To see, bow, the other ,half 'exists. How rice; how smug. Here is a .poor man; let us ob serve this peculiar phenomenon carefully as a so ciological specimen. But he is ,human? No mat- - ter about that, see how he moves from place to - place.. See how he eats and talks; ouserve his.pro letarian,manner. Let us dis Cuss him and write a thesis about -him and.deduce, certain facts about • him, and reduce the facts to charts ,and statistics. " Pow very modern and socially-conscious we shall ht.!. And how completely futile. The other day, moved .to 'eploration, we .toured the new library from end An. end ; horizontal.: and vertical. It was notsuch a good idea. The new ; library is . 6xternally not at all, bad looking. We have, • in. time past.called it Centre County's Tem ple of Karnak for reasons that .are a little vague row but which are, nevertheless existant. Inter nally, however, Mr.. T..ewis'Lnlu: is ,not all ,that could be•desired. ,The,top two floors are Sunction ally useless; .can ~be...reaclied, only, at.,tbe , cost .of .much,ptlyical effort and mental strin.. : .cineAsks wistfully, why. ,s Itch ; things, must, ,be .4 clone, with it. t • Aye suggest painting .it.pink and Am : ming it...into a pfgeon loft. The only ; thing about it that one hesi- - : „tptes to. decry is the ple,aant view, from the roof. ' For the i past sev,eral,weeka,we'ye. been ,hearir loud, cries of .lamentation, ,over the _dreadful fact - .,hat no one .has been showing I.lp.,for:lthe , early „morning Pep rallies. We . wonder. . It. takes.•an • .Iron will and a-dumbadoration for a cause to get out of bed at six o'clock in themorning to cheer a ,departing foqtball ,NotNthat we of . ,penn State are not,iron willed, but.there are.times, when it seems quite a„great deal more impprtant.to sleep than to go to Pep•-rallies.. Other schools,meet this question py, throwing their lhowl-le:;ts in. : the eve- I.;pg,•accompanied by bonfires. Ve 'might do well to follow that theory, instead of the one presently in .favor. _ At eleven ()clock on Monday motpirig, on. the eleventh -of November,..we watched two..middle aged men gently lower a flag to half-ma St. A flag at half-staff is :unspeakably melancholy. We were ,reminded a little bitterly of Mr. Lincoln's "that ti.ey shall not have died in vain." !Let when later . we retired to the Corner to restore the tissues we learned that eleven o'clock had come and gone i'ith business as usual. Somehow that was reas- ,It was not entirely in vain perhaps; flag • at half-mast is not too high a price,to pay for the peculiar privilege of sitting quietly over a coke . in the academic serenity of a Corner room booth at !, cloven o'clock on the eleventh of November. BOOK WEEK This week America is ceiebrating Book Week. which this year "takes on more sig nificance than a mere promotional scheme. America has the freest press. in the world— has the leas censorship (tho not little enuf to suit Ezra Pound); its book press espe- daily is of a quality unsurpassed any where. In a world filled with dictatorships and suppressions, American books are still free to include..revolutionary To the publishers of these books we • ex press our gratitude and very sincere admir ation. Will you ,join us by showiug a material interest? ' EVERY AMERICAN . SHOULD BUY A BOOK 'THIS WEEK ! Cii 41 0 0 ei tote 129 ,We,st-,Peavergswe THE PA.XE,,Y, gOLLEGIAN 0 . . , r ,. . '..... et I: ,100(4 VlO. .( I :,. . ii " -.4A44l3loasjcit;be:g9cyri I,Y ) :".. l. ?e,,OliPLed;Pidlibt l) f ifsAktiON)?Yr,PARPAq44# iorkLover: imetzery,:Nya,lk ,pl . 3,9§i_..gps4 l ttkiggs,m4pse -quality-staros,ont.-1Yon : 'welcome Its taste aridits after-sense of refreshrognt; St r ,E ;T MAT , }Wed !zn4eratrncairt of,The 620-cola Co, b 7 COCA-COLA-HBOTTUNG - -cAMPANY „A,L,TCHYNA FOB PROMPT :SERVICE ~ I V g.DNESpAY, -NGVE.MBER;I.3; ;Pito