FOUR THE COLLEGIAN "For A Better Penn State" Established 1940. Successor to the Penn State Collegian, established 1904, and the Free Lance. established 1887. Published every Friday during the regular College year by the staff of the Daily Collegian of The Pnnsylvania State College. Ettered as second class matter July 5. 1934 at the Post Office at State College, Pa. under tre act of March 8, 1879. Subscriptions by mail only at $l.OO a semester. Editor-in-Chief Jane H. Murphy Managing Editor Larry T. Chervenak Editorial and Business Office Carnegie Hall Phone 711 Managing Ediwr Assistant Managing Editor Sports Editor Assistant . Advertising Manager FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1943 Your Month This is the month ! Although a year-round program is supposed to be in fOr ce, citizens throughout the nation will take time off the "tak en-for-granted" period to concentrate on a strong drive for war bond and stamp sales the month. This is the month set a side to cultivate the habit of buying, saving, and buying more. An. All-College drive, similar to the one organized last year for the Red Cross, will be conducted on campus now un der the direction of Raymond Parks, chair Man, working with District Chairman Harold Gilbert. The quota is high, btit past efforts show that a sincere try from the students brings not able results. The need is great. Propaganda movies may rub us the wrong way, but there isn't much we can laugh at in a V-mail letter from "some where in the. Pacific." There isn't much to justify our not giving when we compare their situation over there with our's here on the home front. Total all the things that we do for the war effort and notice the unbalanced equaton you have if you place just one of their hardships on the other side of. the equal sign. It's a temporary challenge for an extra hard push. Here's the chance to catch up on patriot buying and the opportunity to fire a little spirit, into a club, fraternity, 'or honorary: Here's a place where raining day treasuries can take root:Here's a paying proposition for the future and an aid for savng lives. Remember a few of the angles. Recall that every service man is also giving his monthly share of money toward bonds and the war effort. Remember that we aren't asking you for your time, your life or yotir family's. We're merely reminding you that, even though you are but one pebble on the beach, Your contrbution can mean a great deal. Realizing• the size of the campus at this time and com paring it to the number of organized clubs and activity* groups, one can imagine that large amounts of money are a vailable. And recognizing too, the level headedness of to day's college student, one would imagine that he would jump at the chance to use stale money for an-anything-but-stale project such as this., Our start in this war program has been strong and com mendable, But it will lose its value unless the same quality of work is continued. Three days of the drive have already passed. In these last 27, we ask for cooperation, enthusiasm, and the typical Penn State spirit. College Capers - - • We'd like to present a definite proposal to meet a very definite need. The need is for any method which can help eliminate pre examination cramming and its attendant evils without reduc ing scholastic: standards. It is a need which though always present is now accentuated by a stepped-up study program which includes even such traditional holidays as Ttianksgiw. ing and New Years Day, which has put professors on a twel ve-month-yearly work basis, and which has been crowded with extra monthly examinations to meet V-12 requests. What we are proposing is not a "for the duration" elim nation of all final examinations . . . The College Administra tion explained clearly last semester why such a temporary expedient did not fit into a program dedicated to maintaining normal pre-war standards. What we do suggest is a reduction in the number of fi nals on the basis of demonstrated merit. Specifically, our plan is this: 1. That any student whose class and bluebook aver age in any course is at least a "2" need not take a final examination unless .he so desires. 2. That in case the student chooses not to take the final .examination, his. decision. shall% have:.no . effect on , his final Business Manager Philip P. Mitchell 4113P ° Advertising Manager Richard E. Marsh Downtown Office 199-121 South Frazier St Staff This Issue M. Jane McChesney Peggy Good Lee H. Learner Priscilla Schantz 1.4- , ;: 1 ,..... ~' :,', -,,,: i , i 'i: f ~ 1 . . ..,t , ' ,1, , , i 1:::1..1, 4' 4.',4', r 1 411 I'a9' Phone 4372 THE ( ,OLLEGIAN 3. That in case the student does choose to take the final examination in an effort to raise further his grade, the final examination will contribute to a possible change in the usual manner. We consider the plan a sound one principally because 1. It would eliminate a portion of the all night cramming sessions, with their admitt ed dangers to health and with their "here today-gone-tomorrow knowledge." 2. It would place a premium on consis rent effort rather than on cram-sessions. 3. It would permit a student to concen trate his attention on his "weaker" subjects. 4. It, would helplessen the burden on our round-the-calendar professors, and help com pensate for the new burden of extra V-12 tests. 5. It would still preserve final examina tions for those average and marginal cases where final- examinations are of most impor- lance. A general recommendation or ruling by either the Council of Administration or the College Sen ate embodying the central idea of the plan could. , put it into immediate operation. We feel that it deserves their consideration. L.T.C. That Needed 'Clique' Still analyzing for defetcs in the experimental wartime elections code, Cabinet heard, at its last meeting, a proposition for the return of poli tical parties to the campus. Current problem is whether they're worth the bringing back at a time like this or whether we should play politics down under the revised code. However, there will always be elections, poli tics, and campaigns. And there will be, unde - r this new system, an excess of candidates and ef fort spent without organization. Although cliques might be tempted to put a fellow up for office who would poll the most votes rather than he or she best fit for the job, there is an organization in those groups that we can't hope to obtain without them. These miniature parties in 4 &est many students who do not necessarily car,. to obtain offices; they organize' candidates and cut down on ex tras woh would probably attract few votes. They spirit a ccmpetition which gets people out to e. They promote good ideas for the pol set-up because they who are most involved are grouped together an dcan speak as one. Should cliques come again to this campus, they) ' - 4 111 have campaigning limitations on thei and should strive to bring out the best persons they have. Persons who like to play the political game should be forgotten and members should start early in a search for good student govern ment material. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1943 c ßanless' Period September first marked a temporary time-out for pleasure driving bans, with emphasis on the temporary District Ration Board Head Ray V. Watkins commented yesterday on the seriousness of the situation and-the need for "students to use their heads in their splurge during this "banless" time: Although coupons will be plentiful now, the gas they represent is as low as before and only sen- sible saving now will mean a moderate amount of gasoline later on Students thus far have been cooperative in using cars hardly at all—their continued economy •is requested Anniversary A dean of me nis no longer the ,fellow who just keeps the men in line. But - ours never has been just that For 24 years, Dean Arthur R. Warnock has been counsellor to the men active in admini- strative plans and programs, a strong backer of student government, and an essential to Penn State tradition Tomorrow the Dean celebrates his 24th an- niversary at the College And with .that milestone comes a futuke of renewed challenge to a dean of men 'who has played his part wall on a changed campus she Women Let's Shift The Shifts Turn about is fair play and for 52 days "out of Atherton" coeds have been eating their meals on the "graveyard shift." They have done re markably little complaining but it seems wise to reverse the order for .the following ; 50 day 5....., It is impossible to begin the evening's work, after eating dinner at 6:45 p. m., before 8 p. m. Coeds at. Atherton do' not have to walk to and from the dining room via Holmes Field. Ather ton Hailers can leave their work and go directly to the dining rooms. There is no obvious reason for the shifts being arranged the way that they are. However, if there are reasons, it seems) wise to explain thOse reasons to coeds so that the dream of eating at a normal time again will not be continued. Women's voting season comes again on Sep tember 13. It can either follow past trends of a minority vote or it can represent a mapority of' coeds. The latter response would prove that co eds have awakened to their "inalienable right" and ar einterested in deciding who is , to tell them what hours to corn in and who is to represent them in All-College cabinet.• It woul dprove that women are not interested in seeing that their sorority sisters "make out" but that the best person for the office wins. A strong independent- vote has been an' unknown element in past lections. ' Coeds ignore elections but when a ruling Is made that seems umfair they rise in a body and oppose the 'makers. The right to criticise is the' basis for fiature improvement but the majority of, coeds only begin to act when a matter comes to, light which can be debunked. A9ctiOn should come• at the beginning • . at primaiies and final elec tions. WSGA is the mainstay of women's government and should represent every last coed. Its duties were important in the past but it must take on an even greater responsibility tomorrow when wom en will outnumber men students. It needs a com petent leader but even more important it must have representatives who realize that their job is a big one. Will WSGA be the kind of governing body you want or will it be one you will criticize? If it does things you don't like ask yourself before you complain, "Did I do my part by, voting, or am beginning by criticizing my government . ?• Because it is your government. Buy War. Bonds I===l= * * *