FRIDAY,- NOVEMBER 15, 1940 Groff Describes Chaos In China In Recent Leifer "My piayer is that China_ may some day have stretching across her areas, north to south and east to west, a great binding force such as the state universities in •Amer ica,"- declared "Daddy" Groff in a letter td Stevenson W. Fletcher, dean of the Agriculture School, which arrived recently from Ling nan University in Canton, China. Describing the difficulties under which the students entered this school year; Mr. Groff revealed that there is 'no communication betwen Canton and Hongkong and that the dreaded cholera has al rribst isolated Canton. • "The whole atnjbsphere is dark ened by the present world chaos, and a day at a time is .quite suffi cient for present living," he writes. "The cost of living is steadily ris ing and the problem of most fam ilies at present is to keep the wolf from the door." He pictured the problems the university, is faced with at present —experimental work in agricul ture is practically non-existent the soil is worn-out in many sections, and individual conservation has been disrupted. "Our present agricultural prob lems are quite different from yours," "Daddy" Groff asserted. "Here at Canton we are giving the younger boys, now cut off from higher education, a chance to keep their feet in the ground, learn / as much as they can from nature and their own initiative, and above all become food producers. "The effect upon the people's liVelihood, of depleted, worn-out soil is tragically evident when transportation, individua,l industry and conservation are disrupted. China, is, ,above all, fortunate in the everlasting energy and re sourcefulness of her agrarian pop ulation." Throughout his whole letter Mr. Groff stressed the impoitance of helping to maintain food supplies for the people in and around Can ton. He asserted that through these trying years, he has felt much closer to Penn State than ever before. "I anis sure, too, that eminating from Penn State is a clearer •vision and understanding of the great world issues which Christian mis sion, whatever their field of serv ice represent," he said. "The - few foreign students now in residence at Penn State must help to broaden this vision." University of North Dakota is completing a plant for experi menting with two of the state's natural resources_—sodium sul phate and lignite coal. Publication Calendar 1940 DECEMBER 1940 Ell Mil we MORI 4 010,11 logimg 1.4 18 Mil IRMO■ The calendar above shows the dates on which Collegian will puli 7 lish during the Of the Mtannitiiringi lhdtt Chrifstmat,}tara Steidle Urges Improved Defense "There are plans that should be carried forward by our govern ment without delay, irrespective of whether Germany or Great Britain wins the war," Dean Ed ward Steidle of the School. of Min eral Industries has said. In an article prepared especially for the Collegian, he continued: "The domestic production of strategic minerals should be care fully reviewed, both in this coun try and in the - western hemisphere. Those operations in this country which give reasonable promise should be !encouraged by the Gov ernment through loans for develop ment, especially technical service, and contract purchases of outputs. "The government should also support more research in govern ment bureaus and • the leading schools •of mineral industries on new techniques, especially new processes for the extraction and use of fuels, metals, and non metal lic products from low grade de posits. Control of the sea assumes a new meaning but we must make the country as self-sufficient with regard to the indispensable miner als as modern technology will per mit." Students To Run Skating Sessions Although the skating party of two sessions beginning at 7 p. m. and 9 p.m. Saturday evening is sponsored by the new Recreation Committee, three students, Harry A. Masters '42, Howard L. Olight er, and C. Walter York '42, will be in charge. Music records suitable for roller skating rhythm will be provided for the occasion through the use of a loud speaker system. Any talented skaters who are interested in helping as hosts and instructors are to contact Ray M. Conger or Max Dercum, committee members, or the three students now in charge. . A crowd of at least 300 is ex pected at the party. To prove the popularity of roller skating parties in the past, Conger said that the average attendance in previous years was 300 in afternoons and 200 during night sessions. Tilt first party, scheduled by a physical education group two years ago, drew a record crowd of 525 stu dents and faculty. Engineers On Trip A group of . thirty-two civil en gineering' and architecture stu dents made an inspection trip to the - Steelton plant of the Bethle hem steel company yesterday. Ac companying:were Professors Clin- , ton L... Harris, Royal M.. Gerhardt;. lAtis,. - A:'.Richatilson Arid harles . .A..t THE DAILY COLLEGIAN The complete freshman election code as approved by the All-Col lege Cabinet Tuesday night has been released today by H. Leonard Krouse '42, chairman of the Fresh man Elections Committee. FRESHMAN ELECTION CODE ARTICLE I Time of Voting Voting will extend from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday, December 16. The polls will be open' through the lunch and dinner hours. ARTICLE II _Place of Voting Elections will be held in the first floor of Old Main. ARTICLE 111 Eligibility for •Office All candidates must not have received a below grade at the eight week period to be eligible for elec tion to office. ARTICLE IV Method of Nomination Any regular freshman Student meeting the above requirement shall be eligible for nomination for a class office. To be nominated, a candidate must file a petitiod with the chair man of the Elections Committee by Friday noon, December 6. A- candidate for the position of president, vice- president, secre tary, treasurer, or historian, must have a petition containing the sig natures of 100 voters in his or her class, of which 25 per cent must be women. Accompaning the petitions must Library Exhibit Includes Old Historical Documents Notices of the Declaration of Independence, the death and bur ial of George Wash,ing,ton, and accounts of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln are included in 'THERE'S NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN.' --- except— Semi-formal MIMM Freshman Election Code be a statement of the platform. The Freshman_Election Committee shall approve all platforms, but shall reserve the right to censor any provisions which it may deem ridiculous. Pictures suitable for reproduc tion should accompany petitions of candidates for all class offices. -ARTICLE V Campaign The campaign will open 7 p.m. Tuesday, December 10, with a Freshman mass meeting. All can didates are required to be in pos session of their approved petitions before their campaign may be started. For each party that has running for a major office, the All-College Cabinet, through the Elections Committee, supply posters containing the party platform and pictures of the major candidates. There will be no other expense whatsoever i n c ur r e d for cam paigning. To be eligible to vote, voters must present their AA books and their matriculation cards which will be checked with the dean's list procurred before election. AA books will be punched by checkers and the voter's name will be cross ed off the list. Those who have lost their AA books or matriculation cards may be eligible to vote upon presenta tion of a note from Dean A. R. an exhibit of newspapers, docu ments, and manuscripts being ex hibited at the Library until No vember 25, Mrs. Sally S. Carey, chairman of exhibits, has an nounced. News of the Revolutionary War against the British is printed in a newspaper exhibit. Counterfeit 'I.OB C !ESTER • nd Hi's Orchestra "The Nation's Newest Sensation" SoPH IOP ARTICLE VI Eligibility TONIGHT RE( HALL »,‘ Warnock's office certifying that they are regularly enrolled fresh man students. Two year agriculture students in their first year may vote for the freshman offices. ARTICLE VII Party Affiliations Party affiliations; if any, of each candidate will be placed upon the ballot. It is not necessary, however, for each candidate to have a party affiliation. • One approved member of each party may be stationed at the rear exit of the first floor lounge of Old Main...to check their lists of voters. No conversation with the voter will be permitted. Party chairmen may examine these lists every hour for no longer than five minutes. ARTICLE VIII Violations Penalties of 20 votes will be in flicted for violating the following: 1. Electioneering in Old Main while voting is in progress. 2. Conversation by party check ers with voters before voting. 3. House to house canvassing prior to the stipulated time for campaign. 4. Faulty petitions or ineligible candidates. 5. Unfair campaigning following an initial warning. 6. Use of cars or posters other than those provided by the com mittee. H. Leonard Krouse, Chairman Freshman Elections Committee copies of the famous Ulster Coun ty Gazette of January 4, 1800 con tain tragic news of Washington's Copies displayed of. the New York Times and Harper's Weekly, for 1865 carry the news of Lin coln's assassination. Couple—s3.Bs PAGE PIVE Tax Included