PAGE TWO THE DAILY COLLEGIAN '"Fa; A Better Penn State” Established 19*0- Sucopor to the Penn State CoUeiriaa. •vlnbltehed ]9o*. anti the Free Lance, established L 837. Publisher! dailv except Sunday and Monday during the reir. *i)nr College year by the students of The Pennsylvania State College. Entered as second-class matter July 5. 1934 at the IPoeI: Office at State College. Pa., under the act of March 8, «P7P. Editor-In-Chief Business Manage; X. Woodland *44 Philip P. Mitchell *44 Managing Editor Advertising Manager Winhurd D. Smysar *44 Hichard E. Marsh '44 •3d»U>ri&f and Buaineim Office Carnegie Hall. Phone 711 anftgi.ng Editor - Lewis L. Jaffe H*‘wa Editor i'bxwhman Assistant insist. Ant News Editor Benjamin I. French AimiHtnnt Advertising Manager „ - Nan Lipp 43raduat49 Counselor Tuesday Morning, January 26, 1942 Cabinet Bans Driving (See news article, page 1) '.No more student driving after February I—■ 'whether for shopping, chapel, or any of the-other excuses usually offered for unnecessary driving. •True, there has been little Violation of the OPA ruling, and in effect, the new ruling by All-College Cabinet merely serve to repeat the Federal reg ulation and make the ban more air-tight. One thing was definitely lacking. The "cabinet low does not provide for students riding back and forth from school, especially at the beginning and end of vacations and between semesters. Collegian thinks Cabinet was right in banning student driving between vacations, but this paper does feel more provision must be made for getting in. and out of State College. Students may drive automobiles home for Spring vacation under the ruling, but may not return to school with the cars. One question: “How will students get back at the end of the vacation?” Every body will have to come back by bus or train, and all this traveling ■will be done in one day. It’s all right to limit student driving in and around State College when the students are'here between trips home, but Collegian thinks some provision should have 'been made for taking trips home at vacation time and when the semester ends. • The whole thing was railroaded through pretty fast, all in one meeting, and many of the repre sentatives have probably already reconsidered their action last night. Some of it was warranted, but it went a bit too far. La Vie Qiaamdry 'Harry Coleman’s in a dither these days. He’s finding out that the job of La Vie editor has it;: headaches. Here’s the situation: Since the greater part of the senior class will leave in May, that means that the 1943 version of the yearbook must be finished as soon as possible, ft will be impossible to have the book ready for 'iUKtrib'ution by the end of this semester but it will be possible to have all'the material assembled and cent to the printer by May. The printing is a iji.onths-long process in itself and so the book will not be ready for distribution until sometime' this Summer. Provisions have been made to have copies mailed to those leaving at the end of this .semester. All this is beside the point which is that all .seniors must have their pictures taken by Febru ary 10, the deadline set for the portraits. The pho tographing schedule was mapped out last semester arid everything looked like it would come out all light. But a bottleneck has arisen. Seniors are not re porting for their sittings at the time set by their appointment cards. And this is generally confus ing everything. To meet the deadline pictures must be taken at the rate of 90 each day. At the present rate of broken and unreported for appointments only about 40 are being taken, This rate would double •the time requirements set by the original schedule. It’s going to be hard enough to complete the hook this year even without these unnecessary delays. It would seem that all seniors would be anxious to have the best possible yearbook since tbey’re the ones that are paying for it. This won't be hard either if everyone gets busy and follows the simple directions. - Professors have ■*>;j)ressed their willingness to excuse students j'nmi classes for these appointments. So that doesn't give rjic seniors much of an excuse for not Downtown Office 119.121 South Frazier St, Phone 4372 StitH This issue Robert E. Boger J' esiderl^; Executive committee of Penn , . »* l°V h CU i‘ State C of Russian War Re lent semester—through its accel- i;«r onervu -n/r • < _ erated academic program-263,000 ‘ n 303 ° ld at 7 pm ‘ man-days will have been saved, International Relations Club will measured in terms of students who meet ,n 5 Sparks at 7 P- m - graduate ahead of a normal sched ule. Twenty-two Penn State men 8-30 p-m ' have already given their lives for WRA Bowling Club meeting, their country, he revealed, and the Wll ite Hall bowling alleys, 6:30 College has a record of more than P- m - 1600 former students who are now Froth subscriptions may be call in the armed forces. Because of ed for at Student Union today and the rapid mobilization of man- tomorrow. power, these figures are far from complete. President Hetzel’s report to the trustees listed the College’s many l _ i|j ii‘ contributions to the war effort La IIC r I CHI ICS -- - other than campus teaching He (Continued ftom page one) S3l d -that nearly every laboratory that can lbe eliminated b student C „ am ? US^° S °. me X ltal cooperation is the filling out of IT' l, ? a C ;, ThroU f g] \ \ S u e T blue activities cards. Some stu sion services, he pointed out, haid- dents wbo will graduate this May y h I C ,T and who weren’t in the last LaVie Z ln U by did not receive activities cards t^s^xsisr* pro ' s~ ««*~~ Nearly 100,000 men and women, K those people t at either he said, have been enrolled during student Union he Ph £ td shop or the past tvvo years in various pro- the LaVie office th obtain. fn lL^ Slg ? h . prepare * em these cards to All out for technical jobs in war indus- tries. Over 20,000 are enrolled in the current program FaCUIfV ADpOinfmenfS - - - To date, 54 members of the Penn State faculty have been (Continued ftom Page One) granted leaves of absence for serv- professor of economics in arts and ice in the armed, forces; 22. for. sciences extension,., to associate war service in government agen- professor of economics in residency cies other than military; and since was approved. * > 1940, 75 have resigned to go into Promotions of Hummel Fishbum war industries or to accept per- from associate professor of music manent government positions. and acting head of the music de- music education and acting head Ghamplin Gives Speech rdle of music; of- R. 1 r W. Boucher, from associate pro- Dr. Carroll D. Champlin, profes- fessor to professor of agricultural sor of education at the Pennsyl- and biological chemistry; of W. T, vania State College, delivered the S. Thorp, from assistant professor Commencement address at the of animal pathology to associate regular midwinter graduation ex- professor of animal pathology; and ereises at Bloomsburg State Teach- of J. R. Villemonte from instructor ers College; Sunday. His subject to assistant professor of civil engi was, “Whose World Is This?” neering, were announced. / " /& * > * lORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPamt a, COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF ALTOONA TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1943 Phi Mu Alpha Orchestra will rehearse in 117 Carnegie Hall at Bowling Club .meeting, White Hall bowling alley, 6:30 p.m. partment to professor of music and JS&w** - ffctQtA C'W'tN^ ia State College call 273’1