P.A.GE TWO THE DAILY COLLEGIAN "For A Bettez Penn State" I:;,:ablished 1.940. Sucee-ser 'ln the Penn Stat., Collegian. ♦ .I•ilUshed 1994. and the Free. Lance, established 1997. l'uldishe , l daily except Sunday and Monday during . the tv=- 1.1.1. (Illleize year by the students of The Pennsylvania State ir;,01,,N, Entered as second-class matter July 5. 1934 at the ( )trice at State Colleqe, Pa.. under the net of March S. Met ber gssociated Colleerde Press Distributor of , a)lle€Sicile Di6est Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Paut L Woodland '44 _Philip P. Mitchell '44 411/ 02 ' Managing. Editor Adiertising Manager thellord D. Smyier '44 Richard E. Marsh '44 1 , 1 nriai and Business Office Carnegie Hall Phone 711 Staff—Women's Editor. Jane H. Murphy '44: .fiports Editor, Benjamin M. Bailey '44; News Editor. Larry T. Chervenak '44; Assistant Women's Editor, Mary Janet Wint..r '44; Editorial Associates. Fred E. Clever '44, Milton Dolinger '44; Richard B. McNeal '44. Robert T. Kimmel. flobect E. Hinter '44. Donald L. Webb '44. Sally L. Hirshberg ¶44. and Helen R. Keefauver '44. , • ullior Editorial Board—Adolph •L. Relser, Michael A. Blatt; lucwiti L. Jaffe, William E. Reimer, Seymour Rosenberg, Peter ..BroU. Stephen Sinichak. Rita M. Belfonti. Alice R. Fox, Joan Staff This Issue ti n: .gintt Editor This Issue _ NCIV. , :, Editor --- ----- Momen's Editor . its,o4tant News Editor ______ Tr , -shman Assistant _ Assistant Advertising Manager 41; acl Counselor Wednesday Morning, December - 9, 1942 Take it Ear i Please "Be original. don't make . paths." That was :the advice given to students aboUt two years ago •lien the destruction to campus lawns:by students taking short cuts began to mount quite an expense Lem in the budget of the department of grounds and buildings. Now the old problem has risen again. Stu- Kiants again are taking to, - the greens and wearing clown the grass, struggling hard itself to live in the partially ilrozen ground. To cite a few eyesores on campus, the Collegian needs only mention the ::-;ftetch of brown from the cement walks in front <,if. the Liberal Arts building to the door. The brown, whiCh is mud where the grass died, has a green background, and doesn't lend itself very well u beautifying the mall. Making matters worse now is the lack of fer tili7ers containing vital war chemicals phos liocus, for instance. Another important fertilizer nitrate, the most important element in These cannot be bought. They're on the lit:iority list. Unless college workers can restore the grass through manure, and possibly some sup tidi-23 on hand, the short-cut paths are apt to re.. Expense of such items as growing grass where 51. was trampled amounts to five per cent of the ))).oney annually spent by the departthent of :grounds and buildings for repair work. Don't cut across a path on the grass. Remem ip.r: when you were struggling to be recognized. 'Don't Tread On Me" Don't look now but all those final blue books .of the comprehensive type are closing in fast. Al though there has been no provision made in the -College calendar for finals, some of the profs have ormounced these trials by grueling as a parting :;liot this semester.. 'We say, take it easy. There are few courses that won't have a final I,tue book of the period variety designed to cover - the portion of the course since the last blue book. 'These in themselves will take plenty of study and rehearsing. And to go with them are lots of re ports and term papers that have a habit of corning due the last week of a semester. Add to all that a few comprehensives and the 3”) or student is ready for a rest cure in one of the cuiater spots for a few months. To belabor the point further, what good will all' these tests and :o . cams do, if the student has to slight the last guar -lA±r of his semester's work to brush up on the first three-quarters? It is true, as some of the instructors have that, if no other purpose is served, these omr.prehensives force the student to review. That may be right, but it certainly plays hob with the work in ,hand at the present. With the accelerated y)rogram, there is no letdown at the end of the 47,imester, but rather a rush to finish the designated 3 in time. So, please, professors, it e.3'5Y of tivi corn, pr , .o:-ensive —R,T Downtown Office • 119_121 South Frazier St Phone 4372 Seymour Rosenberg Adolph L. Belser Alice Fox Mary lane. McChesney Dtivid Adams Hasson _Louie H. Bell (Th. expressed in tin., column are those the eniumniA, and are not necessarily tlax , e of Daily Collegian.) A Lean and Hungry Look By Milton Dolinger A Mexican ,pr ove r b reads: "What can one expect of a day that begins with getting up in the morn ing " That's exactly how x've feel right now, especially since our ferret nosed spy. Tredwynkle, reported the doings of the days. Know you that the coeds in Watts Hall have been Ilif t e summarily ordered to remove their ~10, I various and sundry belongings to Ath i r -.1 Hall by Friday next—without benefit ILI., ..,.... of transportation. . . . Transfers all—the ,girls of Watts . ~,' ---who came to this vale of erudition because, well, because of Penn State's high -rank ing in many, many fields, are going to be out in the co-uld. Could not the College, perchance, keep the respect of these coeds by diverting 'one 'of the "company" trucks, or would they •rather: see the girls trundle their own bundles' at. the eXpeilse of. final week studies? . . . The giiod and noble l a ndlords an d .. Yougel's burro have been raising the rents of their student roomers with the 'plea of rising costs as an excuse. Tredwynkle, who doesn't entirely confine his meanderings to geography, brought our atten tion to the fact that OP. bad frozen rents as of last March. Investigation .on Our., part, however, disclosed that that refriggation only applied to defense areas. Lucky la4alords and ladies! But then again, why .should lot this place . be desig nated as such .an. area? ttudent-training and all that—as Deans Hainmand and Whitmbre - Will well testify. •., . . The recent stateme n ts by c e rtain heads of technical department's on the army reserve mixup seem to be disparaging to what are termed "Lib eral Artists." And the attitude of many so-called technical students toward these pursuers of khowl edge is hardly complimentary. Allow us, then, to quote a remark of The Reverend Hugh O'Donnell, Notre Dame, about liberd - 1 edncation: Science and Engineering are important in war, but unless these studies are implemented with religion. philosophy, and languages, we develop mechanics, not leaders—automatons. not men. Our own little Diana of the Crossways. Dottie Brunner, I-told-you-soed at Cabinet meeting t' other night about how the Curfew, although ridi culed at its inception, was now the best thing ever to hit this campus. Consider then the Curfew. "Consider President Atherton's tomb." to 1u Chri:sima,s red..s . e.~s~►w~+a2`i`"T~.d'~".'~t~ i G~'4,tir+~t-aa,Sr+B.~~~; -~`~ THE DAILY COLLEGIAN —Cassius Ilitrry in 9 to CO /lye '. Pooh Store titi.Otr-4froftlei eioi'af oft. md.4erktrt °' Milll Ut, she . Dort ted*e toeds— You Are Needed.Her6 Doesn't it se — ern unpatriotic' to surely , become monotonous after stay in school? Do , you' think a few . weeks.. . you're wasting time that cOuld . be Wi th the background. of train= put to use in a war plaht? . ing ;which :each coed will, or If you spend all your time 'should, have after graduation; • she'll be, doing the -Country a fa-. thinking about these things,. may- vor to stay in college now. be you are cheating the. country "Coeds should try to get ag• out of a good worker on an as- much technical and specialized sembly line. But, if you keep training as they can before they studying, you"re doing a big fa- take defense jobs, because wo.;- vor for Uncle .Sam. men with skill and technical ex- • War industries are begging for women—with no training needed —to fill positions on the assembly line vacated by men. Salaries sound enticing, and work would not be hard. Yes, it sounds like a good set up., Leave college, be on your own, and start saving for the fu ture. But, as Mrs. John H. Wil liams, AAUW state president. 'Don't pack your trunks yet, pointed out in a talk recently, coeds. Wait till they .start draft= any women can fill these jobs. ing women befcire leaving' the They are routine and would Nittany valley. —M. J. W. CAMPUS CALENDAR TODAY Senior Editorial Board of Col legian, News Room, 4:15 p. m. Basketball game with Susque hanna, Rec Hall, 8 p. m. Christmas Carol Sing Commit tee, 304 Old Main, 5 p. m. .PSCA Executive Committee, 304 Old Main, 6:45 p. m. Froth, the College humor maga zine, will be on sale at Student Union and the Come on Thin's day. WRA Bridge . Club meets, White Hall Playroom, 6:30. WRA Rifle Club meets, White Hall Rifle Range, 6:30. WRA BadMinton Club meets, White Hall gymnasium, 6:30. Badminton Club meets White Hall lounge, 5 p. m. today.- Judging Contest (Continueit from page One) vited to enter Competition. The • competition is sponsored by the - Block and Bridle Judg ing Club, members of which com prise the program • committee. Committtee members include John A. Christian '43, cattle: Jarries sA. Christian '43, sheep; Glen W. Stevens '43,' horses; and Leon M. Bodie '43, swine. There wille no entry lee fa! contestants:' WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1942 ;1;4144446Ni _ perience are desperately needed," according to Mrs. Williams. "Any woman can learn to work on an assembly line," she stated, "but. since only a few have the educa tion and capacity to lead, college women shoulcl, be willing to give . The greatest skill and service of which they are capable to fui ther the war effort."' • Mobile Unit (Continued from Page One) Eddie Coles and music will be fur,. nished by Joe 'Cannon, Ray For tunato, Don Smith, Dayton Green ly, Pepper Birchard, George Washko, and Pat Lamade. Because of the rubber situation, 'Clauss said, tonight's show will probably be the last for the dtu..a.-, tion. In the past, all trips were made by private automobiles. • -"Gasoline is no difficulty,", Clauss said, "as the local rationing board gives us what fuel we need; considering us as helping army morale." Letters from s ervic eme ri throughout the state have con stantly been received by the Thes pians, asking for, a Mobile Unit to visit their camps. Thespian produc tions are rated very high by the men who have seen them. ' Money for the Mobile Units was donated by the senior class, which set aside a fund of $l,OOO to cover their expenses. Reseives (COntinuid from page one) ert Lagert, Frank. McCowan, Richard. Okerberg, John Rutter. • Walter Taccomi, Jack Smith,' Gayle Starr, Carl Stokes, Fred Sutter, Russell Teall, Robert Troxell, Richard Wald, Herbert Wohlman, Richard Yoder, and Carl Pfeiffer•.