PAGE TWO TINE GAILY COLLEGIAN - For A .Setter Penn State"' .aitablished L 940. SUCCe.3S.3r to the Penn State Collegian, established 1994, and the Free Lance, established 1387. Published • daily except Sunday and Monday during the regular College year by the students of • The Pennsylvania :State College. Entered as second-class matter July 3. 1934, et the poat-o -ee at State College, Pa., under the act of Ikarch 3, 1879. Editor Business Manager Adam Smyser '4ll -4.,0„, Lawrence Driever '4l ETtorial and Business Office CIS Old Main - Bldg. Phone 711. liana:Tim: Editor This Issue News Editor This Issue .. :News' Editor This IssUe___. Warren's Issue I_ , Mitor___ Assist nt Women'., Editor This Issue Or.aduate Coumse',)c Saturday Morning, January 18, L 94? The Alumni Association Membership Plan—A Start Not A Finishi 'lf the. Alumni Council' approves the Associa tion's new . membership plan when it meets here on February 1 it will be doing the Association a favor but the plan itself will not do a thing to re vive the organization.. Like putting a pulmotor in place, the real work is not even started. But the stage is set. The AssOciation now is due to be "battled" tooth and nail by students Who will be asking all nanner of embarrassing questions in the hope not of ruining the Association but of finding in it the• kinds of organization that can best be of service to themselves and the College. It is going to be a good "battle" to watch and an even better one to fight in. The students who will be asked to pledge mem-, berships in the Alumni Association are not expect- , ed to pay eight dollars for five-year enrollment without first convincing themselves that the eight dollars is well invested. Currently most Penn State alumni and under graduates hold the idea (whether it is correct or mot does not alter the situation) that the Alumni Association is an unprogressive organization. Less Than 2.000 alumni have bothered to join the Asso ciation. The idea needs to be changed and the present leaders of the Association are set on changing it. That is the reason they proposed their new under graduate metnbership plan and fought almost a year to sell it to the student body. The first effort was won so completely that last November the All-College Cabinet gave the plan its unanimous vote of approval. The next phase is just beginning. The students have not yet bought anything. They have only signified that they trill look at the Association's wares, see what it has to offer, and buy their memberships only if the investment looks like a good one. The net result cannot help but benefit the Col lege. To sell itself, the Association will have to produce evidences of success and a worthwhile program. Each time it recruits a new member its capacity for success will be increased. The Association leaders do not want to have each student meekly submit to paying an eight dollar membership. The result of that would be a massive Association just as impotent as the pres ent small one because it is flabbier. In their plan the Association leaders see a sure improvement if the students, once they become xnembers work to see their dues used to the best advantage. Active interest is basic to an effective alumni group. Editor's Note:—The Association has already compiled a reply to many of the questions it ex pects to be asked by students. The major points of this will be outlined in the Collegian after sec ond semester publication begins. Whose Idea? In view of the fact that students pay an athletic fee of $7.50 a semester, and a physical education fee of $4 a semester it Seems unfair that they should pay $.25 . more to see a home hockey game. Especially is this unfair in view of the fact that last year the student body and the Athletic Advis ory Board voted to make hockey an intercollegiate sport and award a regular six-inch varsity letter to participants. Any excuse that there is a lot of upkeep to be considered is invalid. There is a lot more Up keep for football.. Borough officials have announced that State College's new police officer, Roland A. Martin, arrived in town Thursday night. They have add ed that the taking up of his duties may be delayed tc some extent until his uniform arrives: Downtown Office 119-121 South Frazier St Night Phone 4372 Roes B. Lehman '42 ...Richard A. Baker '43 _Dominick L. Golub '43 _Alice M. Murray '42 Ruth L. KieAine '43 ----C. Russell Eck 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111li111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111E eti THE US MANIAC 'Orchids To Hutchinson • Before you final-fagged stildents go over the deep end and condemn all and sundry profs to that place where the hot' coals simmer, digest this little story. Wednesday last Asst. Prof. K. D. Hutchinson's Econ. 23 class was bemoaning the fact that the one female member of their numbers, Anna Gold shmid. was bedridden with the awful-awfuls and they would have no one to show off before. Feel ing sorry for Anna, they decided to pass the hat and buy her some flowers. The collection netted a nickel a man or approximately one iron duke. Maybe the small amount was due to the fact that Carl Guckelberger was passing the hat, or maybe it was because George Parrish and Rog Findlay were there, but anyway, it netted but one thin buck. • So what did Prof. Hutchinson do when Gucky got to him? Did he toss in a paltry nickey? He did not! He tossed in a week's salary, or one dol lar, and said, "Buy her a real bouquet." It. Would be a please and an honor to get a minus 2 from a prof like that. Tell-All Department Jeanne Stiles says that the State kids in Phila delphia are 'going to have a party . in Philadelphia between semesters . She doesn't know just where, but she is sure it will be in Philadelphia. That's what we like about these Collegian gals, they never forget their journalistic What, Where, When, Who, and How. We wonder if Roy "Ride 'em" Rogers really got those twelve stitches in his hand by "shutting a window the wrong way" as he claims? _ CoMe on, Roy, let us up. • Is it from too 'much pre-final hand-shaking? Were you trying to wipe that egg off of you, or did someone bite the hand that fed them? Roy, incidentally, is m.e.ing the super-colossal Drydock show• tonight of Marce Stringer, Don Taylor. et. al. Maybe the bandaged hand is just a sympathy gag to keep the audience from tossing coke bottles. We understand that Bud "Beetle-brow" Mor row, has been extolling himself to his chums as a deerslayer par -excellence. According to reliable information the only deer he ever bagged was the one that bounced off the fender of his car this Fall. Before we go any further we wish to apply for the position of all 50 of the strong young men ad vertised for in the want ads by Joanna Hood. Just write the Maniac, in care of The Daily Collegian. That guy Don West sure has delusions of gran deur. Why he's so weak he has to keep TWO women around to protect him. During ExarnWeek in metax At The Corner UNUSUAL THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Books 60% CREDIT Gay & Fawtett Mechanical and Electrical Equipment Buildings Robb & arrison Art in West ern World Morrison Feeds and Feeding Hadley Principles Vet. Science Stuart The Potato Lyon & Buckman Nature and Prop Soils Baer Fertilizers 1938 ad. Forster • Farm. 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