PA..;•E FOUR THE COLLEGIAN Establiished 1940. Successor to the Penn State Collegian. establWoriOi. and the Free Lance, established 18S7. Published every Friday during the l'Oglliar College year by the staff .of the Daily Collegian of The Pennsylvania State College. Entered as second class mutter July 5, 19:14 at the Post Office at State College. Pa. under the net of Mater 8. 1571. Subseriptior a by mail only at $l.OO a semesl ei Editor-in-Chief Alice R. Fox Advertising Manager Rosalind Becker Eliitoll7ll and Business Office Carnegie Hall Phone 711 Downtown Office 199-121 South Frazier St. Phone 4372 Editorial Staff—News Editor. Serene F. Rosenberg Service Ealitor, Rita M. Bellonti ; l °attire Editor. M. Jane MeChes- TWY : ASSlStallt AdVVELiSIIIg Manager, Priscilla Seranty.. 141Lnagi ilp, - Editor News E,litor ASsistant Managing Editor Helen Hatton Assistant Advertising Manager ____ Bitty Vogel Editorial Assistants: Re:aim:ant C. Robinson, Arthur P. Miller. Thomas B. Whesqley. Advertising Assistants: Kathryn Vogel. Elaine Millet'. Iler nice Eicnbrg. Friday, September 24, 1943 Why Stop At Two? . Although it looked last week as if the Col lege version of the Third War Bond Drive had fallen asleep at the starting post, it didn't take long for the stamp and bond boys to jockey a ntiw apparently willing to be driven student population down the home stretch. Receipts of the campaign, with the biggest promotion events still in the future, show that the valley campus can and does recognize a need fur -national and international collaboration. By the time the first half •of the two-jeep goal ar rived' in front of Old Main yeSterday it was more than paid for. With the price of a jeep set at $l4OO, solici tors reported a total of almost $2500 by yester day noon, a situation which makes obvious the gratifying probability that the College will ex ceed its goal. The situation, encouraging as it may be, is not an indication that the final whistle has blown. Actually, the raw contributions total is somewhat misleading, since a $2OOO bond bought by WSGA accounts for more than four-fifths of it. Individ ual offerings can still be improved. Many campus organizations have reported that they will turn large parts of their capital into bonds. Receipts of : these checks by the committee will account for the large expected margin between the estimated goal and final returns. Sellers wil concentrate on individual sales in the two major pushes remaining—the rally in front of Old Main this afternoon and the Victory Raffle which will precede the Bucknell kickoff. The continued rate of exchange from cash to bonds and stamps at these affairs can make the goal an insult to the outcome. . Cabinet and its committees in sponsoring and organizing, and the students they represent in supporting the drive, are well on the way to putting across a major civilian contribution. But buying two jeeps when it is possible to buy four, or four when it is possible to buy six, is not put ting it across. The time to quit is when no fra ternity can spare another $25 and no student can spare another ten cents. Cliques May Click Perhaps Penn State politicians are waking up l At any rate, they're beginning to see the light. What looked like a hoopelessly unequal political set-up now has possibilities of shaping intO. a program that may distribute political pow er More fairly. Tuesday's clique meetingat first looked like a stalemate, no additions to the original major ity ' . and minority groups. But apparently some wavering members of the stronger group finally realized the advantage they, would hame if they crossed over to the other side. It took them a long time to undeestand that there are certain oppor tunities involved in getting in on the ground floor of a new. and perhaps up-and-coming organiza tion, rather than being hangers-on with the so called big-shots. But it's certainly to their credit that they finally gave up the idea of being little frogs in the big pond. Now it remains to be seen if they can make a go of being the big frogs and enlarg ing. their: present little pond. • • .• L.H,I. Business Manager Nan Lipp Managing Editor Lee H. Learner Staff This issue Rita M. Bel foal The CAMPUSEER 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 . The seniors have been dodging strangely this week, and ducking into hiding places when they see a certain man coming towards them. After a couple of games of "You can't see me," we in quired and found that the pursuing gent is a sales man for an insurance company who won't take no for an answer. He's sold quite a few policies around campus, and from what the boys tell us, he's really a hooper-dooper salesman. 'One guy that he hadn't met was on the front porch when the salesman called and inquired for his prospect. The fellow told him the man he wanted wasn't in, but one of the brothers gave the show away. Now there's another insured man. Who Gets the Football . . . Tomorrow, before the game, you'll have plenty of chances to secure your ticket for the football raffle. , The prize is the ball used in the game with Bucknell, and all it costs you is an i i nvestment in some defense stamps. One chance for a quarter stamp, and three with a four-bit purchase. Be sure and look for us at the west gate, and we'll personally administer to your needs. Cider Rackets .. . • Forty .years ago, when the leaves began to fall and the apples were ripe, the students used to "borrow" scme professor's horse and go for a bar rel of cider to be consumed late at night in the dorm. These days cider is the polite refreshment offered to smoker guests and mixed groups. Not that the boys stuck strictly to cider, though. But then, half the fun was robbing the horse and gath- - ering around the keg when all was suppoSed to be dreams and snores. Today we don't do things the same way, and what with all the downstairs morns in fraternities mobilized, the cheering cup will no doubt be limited in its passage. But never fear, as long as there is: football, 9 with a Thespian show as Alice R. Fox a prelude and a dance for the .encore, good times haven't vanished altogether. The Bell Tolls . . . Never has there been sa many production diffi culties beset a show than the Thespian Revue that opens a two-night stand this evening. It struck us as a little funny the other night when we were sitting in the auditorium watching part of a re hearsal. About three minutes before ten, the bass man lays down his fiddle, the sax man picks up his horn and walks out, the two leading male dancers step out of their tap shoes and scramble for hats, a Marine or two dumps a load of stage properties, and some of the chorus diSappears. The Three Stooges make tracks for Irvin Hall, and when Old Main tolls ten, the servicemen have de- , parted, in time we hope, for their barracks; from there, the director takes what is left and strug-• gles on. This Weekend . . . THE (.OLLEGIAN 808 KIMMEL The Corner unusual Front And Center . By RITA M. BELFONTI 'Rumors about the return of junior rotisse students have been See America 1` First flying thick and fast these last , Pvt. Elmer Belfonti has just few days. If they mean anything, returned from a prisoner of war we'll soon be seeing Dich Schmitt, trip to Louisiana. 1 the last Bob Hibbard, Luke. Watkins,. Cliff month he has trav6led ilii'Ough 11 states and a distaii&e il o rover 3,- St. Clair, Steve Sinichak,.Seymour Rosenburg, Hal Griffiths, Iry 400. miles. He is sportinesouveyi- A Kanenigzer and lots of other faces irs from German and. Italian pris we've missed, Gone But Not Forgotten Macy Alexander packed •his lit- Coniniissions And Things tle duffle bag and left State Col- lege not so long ago to answer (in . Bob. Schuler was. awarded... his wings and a second looie's C9M . person) a rather insistent little mission in a recent graduation of mite concerning the Marines, Frank Drumm did likewise+ when boinbadier cadets at Roswell, N. the Navy beckoned this week. We M. Bill Finn, former. campus big wig, was commissioneW, a•;second have it that Frank..must report to Notre Dame Monday. lieutenant in the IritSntrj 'after Aviation Student Ben French, the completion of the Officer an old Collegian-Froth standby, Candidate Course at Fort Benning. let out a wail from a hospital bed Second Lieut. Bill Phillips 'ale down Texas - way.' Hesaid . his con-. cessfully completed .a ten ..weOks, ditiori mystifies the doctors just course .of training . at. the Marine as his attitude puzzled, his profs Corps SchOolS in Quantico; Nr_ir last semester. s ginia. - After graduating. • frbm a' Pete Rutan is now attending a .field artillery course . .at the.Ma7. quartermaster's school at Camp rine Corps school,. he was assigned Lee, Va. And John McNelis was immediate duty witH a combat ii - x:'- recently appointed a naval avia- ganization. Second Lt. Bill Means, lion cadlet and trasferred to the another Penn State alum graduat- Naval Training Center at Pensa- ed with the same class and was cola, Fla.. also assigned active duty. : • ... in peace and war This emblem is. -familiar , throughout .the nation as the symbol of a. well-trained team, integrated for set - vice 'in peace or war —The Belt-Telephone System. 1. American Telephone & Telegraph Co. coordinates all Bell System activities. 2. T'wenty-oneAssociatedCompanies provide telephone service in their own territories. 3. The Long Lines Department of A. T. & T. handles long distance and overseas calls. 4.. Bell Telephone Laboratories carries on scientific research'and development, 5. Western Electric Co. is the manufacturing, purchas 7 ing and distributing unit. The benefits of the nation-wide service provided by these companies are never so clear as in time of war. ** •:•,'•••:., • 4: * .i • •/:•E•s•:, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1943 oners whom he described' as "nice fellows, most of them glad to be out of it." , : Z 1 ... • : ...........------ s r..- t •rt: '1••:, .): ".,•:..:A:‘;,;1.4444,1k1 4 . •