PAGE FOUR Fate of Germany Last week. a member of the faculty expressed the opinion that Germany should be ruled after the war by a commission composed of England, the United States, Russia, and the Reich itself. He believed that democrary could be established with Allied help. There is no question that the mentioned coun tries will have the power of life or death over Germany. Death of the country and its people certainly will be an impossibility, but inevitable liquidation of the Nazi fanatics end their follow ers must not be of any concern to Reich repre sentatives at any such proposed commission. Did Germany send any commission to Poland asking, perhaps, in what manner the Polish people wished to be destroyed by the Hitlerites? Or did any of the other countries which the Nazis over ran entertain a •delegation of the German coun try and discuss with them methods of their 'own annihilation? The German voice was heard,enough in Poland, Austria, and outside the doors of Moscow. That voice has been somewhat silenced, but it should be completely and conclusively silenced until it w4ain proves itself worthy of honest cooperation Frith the rest of the world. German culture, which has long been ranked with the foremost in the world, should be given primary consideration as a postwar rebuilding program. The people of Germany are not Nazis, but machines of the Nazis. Fear has forced the Germans into an unwanted way of life, a life of false promises, an existence of doubt. The Allies must forever convince the German man and we men the Nazi form of government to be a blun der. But the culture or Germany must be encour aged, Germany must be made to realize that the beauty of their past masters should not disappear with the Mizi. The old saying that the people of a nation can not be destroyed should be kept in mind at the peace conferences. Make way for the good parts of Germany. Wartime Thanksgiving Classes will be held today in the usual wartime manner. Thanksgiving Day at Penn State will not be characterized by bus-loads of students leav ing town, or professors pleasantly sneaking away for a day or two with the family for just a little rest with the relatives. This Thanksgiving Day will see less turkeys and more war bonds. And especially 'on this day, as the sixth war bond drive is starting, everyone should think more about war bonds. Saturday night, the ASTP units on campus will offer to the College, the War Stamp Stomp, ad mission to which is a twenty-five cent stamp. Stu dents and servicemen, the majority of whom would naturally not be individuals making stu pendous sums of money, could attend this dance, enjoy themselves, and at the same time, help out a national effort affecting the lives of millions of people. Campus Pride? And then there was the editorial about "let's keep the campus clean." A walk up the mall the other day resulted in the counting of 227 1 pieces of wastepaper lying around, not on the whole campus, but just on the right side of the mall from the main entrance to Old Main. This is a silly pastime one might say, but it establishes proof of the increasing laxity of students in their respect for a college campus. So "let's keep the campus clean." THE COLLEGIAN "For a Better Penn State" Establiished 1940. Successor to the Penn State Collegian, established 1904, and 'he Free Lance, established 1887. Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Emil A. Kubek Betty Federman Advertising Manager 41111* Mant.g.ng Editor Evelyn Wasson B. J. Cutler Editorial lioaist Women's Editor Helen V. Hutton Feature Editor ....___.___..__. Nancy Carastro Sports Editor _Victor Danilov Editorial Assistants---Ruth Constad, Gertrude Latwatsch, Estelle Simon. Pegg.ie Weaver, Fay Young. Reporters —Woodene Bell, Bennett Fairorth, Gloria Nercu berg, Pat Turk. Managing Editor Avsistant Managing Editor ----- News Editor Sports Editor _Fay Young Assistant Advertising Managers--Mary Davey, Helen Kline News Assistants—Leon Aaron, Barbara Ingraham, Lynette Lundqut, Millie• McAllen, Dorothy Ituthin, • Elliot Shapiro. . oveMbZ 23; 'T9" ""`"' ""..a Staff This Issue Gertrude Lawatsch __Nancy Carustro Pat Turk NOME NOW 7714 T TRAINS AND WES ARE' NEEDED. .15?, IfIENTXTRAite; Old -Mania, Glancing through some old Col legians one night we came upon a column called "Penn Statements" written by one - Serene Rosenberg, former managing editor of this rag. Serene rivaled Max Schulman of "Barefoot Boy with Cheek" fame in her bitter essays, and many an alleged big-wig and campus. or ganizati on withered under her biting sarcasm. She spared nobody in her literary blitzkriegs, not even, bless 'em, the United States Navy. If we recall correctly, her part ing blast was at the "little boys in white coats" as she termed the V l2ers in summer uniforms. The last brought a deluge of mail from the swabbies to the Commander himself who resented the compari son between our stalwart sailors and the Good Humor man. Without Fear But Sy was fearless and wrote her 15 inches every week in spite of the assassins who lay in wait for her every Wednesday night in the bushes outside Carnegie Hall. Last June she departed these smoke-stained walls with never a bitter thought for those she left behind as she went on to higher and loftier things. A little more of this will sound like an obituary, but honest, Sy isn't dead. She lives on, as far as we know, in. Pittsburgh, and she has a position at Gimbel's writing ad copy for—of all things—infant's wear! Which, just goes to show you that ' she's really a sweet kid at heart. Way way back in the beginning of the column we started out to quote a little item from "Penn Statements" about the zealous campus politician who ran around telling his campaign workers net to forget to vote. He kept himself so busy he forgot to cast a ballot and lost the election by one vote! Beauteous Betty • Beauteous Betty Lyman, theta alum, hied herself to California to marry Ens. Charlie Good, former phi kappa sig here . Her theta sisters say she was married in a little Spanish chapel . . . Sounds tres romantic! . . . Theta Tommie Thompson left school to join her husband Lt. J.ack Hunter in Kear ny, Nebraska . . . Delta Gain Betty Cresswell recently married Ens. Earl Lines and was visiting last week . . . Ditto Claire Con way, theta phi alpha alum, who came up with her husband Staff Sgt. Jimmy of the Army Air Corps . . Jimmy is home from the wars temporarily after 18 months over- in. Tuesday for a makeup examine seas . . . Kappa delt Betty Jane tion, announced Bruce V. Moore; Holsinger has marritdiSeapam 2/o :director of the. psycho-educational .• By NANCY CARASTRO . . . AEPhi Phyliss Schweitzer is engaged to Staff Sgt. Ted Sandler, AAF, now in the Pacific theater . . . SDT Lee Berlin wears a sparkler from phi sig alum Kenny Sivetts . • Ghost Town State College will be inhabited only by WCTUers and eager-beav ers this weekend as the rest of the normal population will be off to see the team trounce Pittsburgh at the city of the same name . . . Among them will be Zetas Bobby Briggs, Betty Craven, Phyliss Long, and June Culver . . Going in a trio are alpha chi Pris Wag ner, theta Jeanie Weaver, and theta •phi alpha' Kitty Reddinger . . . Theta Ruthie Twichell will be going too . . . She's seeing sigma pi Jerry Heisler in the Smoky City . . . Back Again Last weekend Larry 'Feries. for mer sigma pi and All-College prexy, was in town visiting . . . Alpha Xi Delt Penny Embury was tip . . . Kappa delts Betty Farble and Marjorie Bilstein came to see some new sisters initiated into the sorority . . . Gamma phi's Jean Tritchler, Tommy Ehlers, and Dotty Monroe all took a weekend off from practice teaching to come up . . . ChiO Peggy Trump Metz and her husband Bill, a former KDR, came to see their friends . . . Bill is now in the Signal Corps . . . Phi Mu alum Mary Jean Hoskins visited . . . Zeta. Noima Van Tuyle's man, Seaman 2/c Jim Hutchison, came from Bainbridge to see her . . . Lt. Mark Silverman journeyed here to see his fiancee AEPhi Joyce Langunoff . . Aud rey Kreegar, also AEPhi, was vis ited by Marine Pvt. Johnny Peters, now at Princeton . . . Kappa Betty Meyer is still happy over her visit to Camp LeJeune to see Marine Pvt. Don Bretherick, for merly herein V-12 . . . Ex-delta gam prexy Marge Cherry . Newton came visiting . . . AEPhi . Adie Gluck went to Harrisburg to see Pvt. Jack Geist . . . Alpha chi Marilyn Globikh, oft - crowned beauty queen, is expecting Tom Datz, a sigma'pi at F and M, this weekend. —MANIAC Make-up Psychology Exam All freshmen and transfer stu dents who have not taken the psy chology tests given during fresh man week should report to 207 Home Economics Building 'at 7 p THURSDAY, NOVEMBER .23„ 1944 A .Lean: And-:llu4gry Look Today. is Thanksgiving. It is" a legal holiday. Everyhody•knows what n' legal holiday• is. It is a day when all stores; banks; and places of business are closed—a day when tired.rneh who have been working• without respite •for months, sit down in an easy chair,•take off their shoes, and beat their wives with them—it is a day when students at Penn State attend classes. However today is not a day of Thanksgiving to some students at the College, for ' yesterday the polls closed on another All-College election. Na turally there will be some cases of disappoint ment and some who will claim they were shafted. Shafting, a technique not new to politics, con sists of a maneuver to give one candidate the dirty end of the stick. In the past it had reached such a state of refinement nere that two new words were added to the campus vernacular to de scribe respectively, the perpetrator, and the vic tim: of the practice—shafter, and shaftee. • At the risk of appearing naive I say that shaft ing has been diminished this semester and that we have had a clean election. It was a hard fought campaign with a normal measure of the tradi tional mudslinging at, and deadcatting of the op position candidates. Now that the results are a matter of record we will see both the victorious and defeated office-seekers accept the verdict _of their student constituencies with good will, and -bury the •hatchets where. they do •the mcik •,.: Eager .to do my bit in this 'dernonstration 4f demOratic student government; I presented my- self at the voting place carrying with me the in spiring words of my party boss, Warde Heeler,: "Vote early, and often." Voting, I am sorry to say, was no such easy mat ter. At the table in the first floor lounge of Old Main where the dirty work was taking place, I was forced to shoulder past three sinister looking individuals, who, I learned, were clique chair men watching each other stuff the ballot boxes. After a short wait I was able to pry the attention of an elections committee official from his well thumbed copy of the Police Gazette. "You pay yer poll-tax yet?" he wanted to know. Taking my money and putting it in a box labled "Fund for the rehabilitation •of needy election committee officials" he asked for my identificaL tion. I did not have to show him more than my matriculation, social security, and draft .card 4, ~. my reform school diploma, fingerprints, and. pe digree proclaiming me a full-bred Ilex TerrieV ber fore he would give me a ballot -1 -'' '1 i " ' " ; i I found the three clique chairmen only -too will, : ing to help me mark• my ballois, ,E§6aping. with minor cuts and lacerations, I deterV npd i to lint next . time . by. absentee ballot. ; hie pretty c coe . behind me in line had no diffieultii'in'identifying . themselves. The elections clerk would expeitlt slide under the table and gaze fondly at their legs. "Yep, that's So-And-So," he would say.