PAGE' TWO HE DAIILY COLLEGIAN "For A Better Penn State" ::•:.'ri , :c:m3or to the Penn Stat. 7 FAitablished t 940 Published daily elt,:ept Sunday and Monday during titd. ;regular College year by the students of The Pennsylvania. State College. Enter!.l as second-class matter July 5, 1934 at; the Post-offi , o at .‘i,9.1.1:e College, Pa., under the aet, or. March 8, 1879. • Editor Bus.. and Adv. Mgr. Ross Lehman "42. James McCaughey "4. Editorial and Buoine:43 0 C fic,! 313 Old Matn 131(hr. . Phone 711 Managing' Editor Thi,, E5:31.1 , 1 liews Editor This Issue _ . Women's Editor This Graduate Counselor _ Wednesday, October 8, 1941 A Freshman Unit Make Up his Mind Westbrook Pegler recently published a letter :of , a freshman in college. This letter, Pegler says, was not from the boy whom they call Dun my, who is a cheap and shiftless little cynic with .a mind and spirit fed on scandal and swing; but the other one, who is a freshman and has written to his mother. It merits repetition and follows: • The son of George Spelvin, American—not the "one they call Dummy, who is a cheap and shift- less little cynic with a mind and spirit fed -on scandal and swing, but the other one, who is a 'freshman at college—has written a letter to his »aother as follows: . "I received a very bedraggled letter from you yesterday. Have you taken to chewing your let : ters before you mail them or am I to blame this laceration on the post office? • "I have selected my room for next year and made out my schedule of courses. Our room is very nice, but there is much doubt that I shall ever occupy this room. "There is considerable talk of war here. It is, in fact, the principal topic of conversation at table now, as never before. The • question now is when rather than whether. So there is con siderable bother in my mind. Of those who are taking the military science course only the best will be accepted into the advanced course, be ginning junior year. I have only been doing D work in this course, so this obviously lets me out. For this reason I have decided not to take the course next year, as the elementary course by it self is worth nothing as far as the draft or any preferment in the army itself goes. "As far as the summer job goes, I am not going to let it stand in the way of this thing. Few of us feel that we will get through more than next year, if that.. New draft legislation and things 'coming up make it look as if our sophomore year will be our last, and, although I try to make plans as if I were going to stay four years. personally, I don't think so. "The whOle thing is that I am really terribly confused. I don't know what to think and, be cause there's no surety of any kind of future, can't plan. I am utterly unable to make up my .mind, and, all in all, it .is a most unpleasant af fair. I feel that I ought to spend my summer in something that would be really profitable, not in the way of experience for a future job or and thing like that.. but rather something that will get me ahead in the Army, when I go. "Senator Nye was up here the other day preach ing the cause of peace. It was strange how angry his speech made me. The ostrich over again. He spent his time denouncing the New Deal and declaring that this was not our war and that we :would be fools to make again the same mistakes of 1917, as if the situation were exactly the same. "I realize that this is a very chaotic sort of letter, but I. am sort of chaotic myself these days. Really, I don't want any part of this beastly business. I want for years or more of college. I want to read good books and get a good liberal education. I want to learn to appreciate the fine .things in life. I am just beginning to realize what a storehouse there. is in the Past. It is as if I had just caught a glimpse through the key hole of a great world. I am suddenly consumed with a great passion to learn. There are literally scores of courses I want to take. I want to study music, drama, art (from a comprehensive rather than a productive view), philosophy, other lan guages, psycology (spelled better than that, I trust). "I want to write. I want to read, travel, do things. Dammit, I want to live. "I cannot imagine what has produced this very glum letter from one who was supposed to .cheer you up. It may be the reaction to the war news in the papers and to many individual worries of my friends." Having read the letter, Mrs. Spelvin, Ameri can, went off to a corner and worried. but her other son, Dummy, said he was practically set. He is ilximt band touring the L'anips to Downtown Office 119-121 South Frazier St Phone 4372 _ Herbert J. Zukauskaa _Donald W. Davis. Jr. Edith 1.. Smith LouLft. Bell THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111i THE FACULTY SAYS tra 111111i11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111i HAROLD. P. ZELKO Instructor In Public Speaking Much has been said of late, and rightly so, about student-faculty relations at Penn State. The re cent appointment of a committee to study methods of improving these relations is a significant move in the right direction. But it is very difficult to determine where this improvement should start and in what direction it should move, largely be cause the causes of the condition are complex and confusing. Students can easily accuse the faculty of being at fault and the faculty in , turn' can' blame the student body. But this gets us nowhere. Let us assume that there is room for improvement in both quarters. Certainly the faculty recognizes its shortcomings along this line. - I propose to dwell briefly here on what ap pears to. me to be a basic cause for. the poor relationship—a cause which steins rather de- finitely from the student body. I speak of the time-worn tradition which has come to be known as apple-polishing. To me, the practice of apple polishing is not a bad one. On the contrary, a student discussing his course or other problems with his• instructor before or after class, in the classroom, in an office, at the instructor's home, en.the campus, in front of the Corner, or wherever else it might be, is an ambassador for better stud ent-fadulty relations. One major fallacy in the student's mind in con demning the practice is to assume that the facul-' ty always looks upon this as apple-polishing. You give your faculty little credit jf you think they have no power of discernment regarding the evaluation of a student who so converses with them. The point is this. How can we expect to pro.- mote better student-faculty relations while this mysterious stigma of "apple-polisher" is hurled at students by their fellows for doing the very thing we are trying to • promote? My proposal, therefore, is this. Let's all talk with our in structors more outside the classroom. Call it apple-polishing, conversation, bull-session or what you Will . • . but let's do it! I pi•opoSe an Rini-Apple-Polishing Campaign (i.e. anti- the term only) which might get started through the medium of an Anti-Apple-Polishing Week. During this week students would make 'it a point to talk freely with their instructors out side the classroom and vice-versa. We might have planned programs to promote studenf-fa culty relations in other ways during this week. We might, as a matter of fact, spend the week concentrating on doing all we can to know each other better. Perhaps after that we might have broken down this vicious traditional attitude of the student body, and one of the strongest bar riers to good student-facUlty relations will have been eliminated or at least Weakened. IT'S NOT TOO LATE TO SUBSCRIBE THE THE FIRST BIG DANCE OF THE YEAR ree! Free! DAILY:. COLLEGIAN (Delivered Before Breakfast, Tuesday Through Saturday) **if* REMEMBER !! THE COLLEGIAN DANCE TO COLLEGIAN SUBSCRIBERS Friday, October 10. CAMPUS CALENDAR TODAY Rehearsal, Glee 'Club ; 10 Sparks, 7 p• m., Thespian tryouts in Little Thea tre, Old Slain, 7 p. m.. • "Cider Feed" jar all electrical engineering students, especially freshmen, EE building, 7:30 p. m. .PSCA freshman project corn mittee meets, 304 Old Main, 4:15 p. m. DMA 'Central Council meeting, 305 - Old Main, 7 rp. In. PSCA Community Service com mittee meets in Penn State in China room, 7 p. m. PSCA Speakers and Public Meetings committee meets in Hugh Beaver room, 7 p. m. • Sophomore men editorial candi dates for the Collegian, 312 Old Main, 4 p. Sophomores and juniors play hockey, Holmes Field, 4 p. m. Badminton Club, 2 White Hall, 6:30 D. m. Bowling .Club, White Hall alleys, 6:30 p. m. Bridge Club, Recreation Room, White Hall, 6:30 p. m. Rifle Club, Rifle ',Range, White Hall, 6:30 p. m. Archery Club, 3 White Hall, 6:30 p. rn. Honorary Badminton Club, 3 White Hall, 7* • PSCA , freshman forum publicity committee meets in 304 Old Main, 6:30 p. m. Meeting of Alpha Lambda Delta in , 220 Mac Hall, at 5 p. M. TOMORROW Swimming Club, White Hall pool, 7 p. m. (Meeting of all candidates for La WELCOME .t.A.LUMNI WE ARE HAPPY TO SERVE YOU AS IN THE PAST Meet Your Friend's At GRAHAM'S WEDNESDAY, QCTOB . pR 8, 1941 Garden Days Program Registration Drops A decrease of nearly 100 from last year's registration figure was shown yesterday as only a few more than 50 persons attended the opening sessions of the annual Garden - Days program which opened , yesterday and will close at noon tomorrow. College faculty members on the program are C. S. Anderson, pro fessor of rural education; John R. Bracken, professor of land scape architecture; J. A. Culbert, assistant in ornamental horticul ture; F. V. Grau, instructor in agronomy extension; C. B. Link, instructor in floriculture; • Warren B. Mack, head of the department . of horticulture; R. R Meahl, 'as sistant professor of nursery in diustry; ' Stevenson W. Fletcher, dean of the Schooi. of AgricUlture; and .E. I. Wilde, profeSSor of or namental horticulture. Vie junior board, 318.01 d Main, 4 p: m. Grange cider ..party, 405 Old Main, '1 p. m. • Hillel Coffee Round Table,, Foundation, 133 W. Beaver ave., 4:15 p: m. Red Cross Group 'meeting, Hillel - Foundation,' 3 p. m. Education Student 'Council meet ing„ 108 EUri'owes, 8 p. m. , . Eugene H. Lederer REAL ESTATE 114 E. Beaver Ave. Dial 4066 State College Free!