PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN "For A Better Penn State" Established 1940. Successor to the Penn State Collegian, cr,tablished 1001, and the Free Lance, established 1887. Published every Friday morning during the regular Col kt by the staff of the Daily Collegian of the Pennsyl vania State Collge. Entered as second class matter July 5, 1031, at the State College, Pa., Post Office under the act lit march 8, 1879. Subscripttions by mail only at $1 a semester. Editor-in-Chief Helen Hatton Managing Editor Advertising Manager Fay E. Young Mary Louise Davey EDITORIAL STAFF News __________Dorothy Rutkin Women's Editor _ Beagle Weaver :isninr Board—Woodene Bell, Gloria Nerenberg, Audrey RY buck, Patricia Turk. ) , I , litorial Assistants—Lynette Lundquist, Doris Stowe. Sports Assistants—Leon Aaron. Leo Kornfeld, David Nal yen, Elliot Shapiro. )reporters—Kay Badollet, Arlene Greene • Bursars Ingraham, Caroline Manville, Lois Marks, Suzanne McCauley, Kay McCormick, Nancy Sherritf, Gwyneth - Timmis, Ruth Tisherman • Jane Wolbarst Graduate Counselor ADVERTISING STAFF Junior Beard—Phyllis Deal, Rose Mary Ghantous, Helen Hime STAFF THIS ISSUE )lanagrinit Editor Copy Editor Views •Editor Eports Editor _ What Is the WSSF? What is the World Student Service Fund? To destitute, war-desolated students, the World Student Service Fund is the means of continuing their education in face of hunger, war, disease, and poverty. 'With the contributions of American students, the WISSF is re-opening universities which were destroyed by war in cities like Prague, Bdlgrade, Cracow, and Brussels. Students in these universi- ties are provided with food, medical attention, books, and other study materials by the WSSF. Indirectly, a Penn State student who contribut es to the campus WISSF drive now in progress will - lie aiding a more unfortunate fellow student in a foreign land. One dollar collected here will pro vide a -month's supply of soy-bean milk for a Chinese student threatened with tuberculosis. Five dollars will buy as many as six books; eight dollars will enable a refugee student to leave a camp and study in a university for one month. $l,OOO (Penn-State'g goal) will operate a Chinese ctudent center for one year, with facilities for fbathing, recreation, reading, and self-help. %War is hard on education; its very existence is being threatened in many parts of the world. To preserve and strengthen higher education, the World Student Service Fund urges the coopera tion and contributions of every student. `Ring' Drive Ends Today Early this month Collegian ran an announce ment- concerning an All-College mass meeting where students were to contribute to a fund with which Hat Society Council was to purchase a new class ring for Lt. James M. Lloyd '43. Lieu tenant Lloyd had exchanged his class ring for rood when he had been released from a prisoner of war camp in Germany. Because the mass meeting was a failure, mem ihers of Skull and Bones placed boxes for student contributions at Student Union, the Corner Room, the various dormitories, town houses, and fra- Iternity houses. Now word has been received that the holder of the Purple Heart, who is on.leave in his Norristown home, may visit the College. In order to have the ring ready for presenta tion by next week, when the lieutenant is sched uled to arrive, the hat societies have set today as the deadline for student contributions. Your small contribution is nothing compared to the many sacrifices made by Lieutenant Lloyd at the front. War Stamps for Corsages Followers of Cassius' column will remember a rather timid and whimsical suggestion that war stamp corsages be given to coeds who attend the Interfraternity Council formal. This was a practice started at the College soon after war was declared against the Axis powers. (Wired with patriotism, ardent swains presented their favorite girls with corsages made up of red or green war stamps instead of the usual roses or gardenias. The practice gradually dwindled off, however, and the old habit of giving floral cor rages was resumed. Not a war stamp corsage has been seen on campus for the past several months. 'The war is now half-won. The government is conducting its Seventh War Loan Drive to ob tain 'funds that will bring victory in the Pacific speedily and with as little loss of lives as possible. IDOesn't it seem sensible that we should help the drive and help to finish the fight by reviving. the. short-lived custom of giving war stamp. corsages' for coeds to wear to formal dances? Business Manager Elaine Miller Louis Bell _Patricia Turk Fay E. Young Elliot Shapira David Nalven Penn Statements A new regime took over the• Collegian for the coming semester at a quiet ceremony Saturday evening known as the Collegian Banquet. An all-coed editorial and advertising senior board will head the staff this summer, another "first" in the history of the "Daily Collegian." Who says it's a man's world? Now that summer has arrived and with it sunshine and showers, Students have the old craving for a trip to Whipples. Th e gas oline situation seems to be ham pering the old school spirit, but it didn't get the better of the jun ior class members who swam at Glennland and Picnicked at Fair mount Park. It wasn't a track meet and it wasn't a bathing beauty contest that went past Carnegie Hall late Monday afternoon. It was only some fellow taking a swim in the shower as he dashed home wear ing nothing but a pair of shorts! Paeons of praise to the Penn State Players who produced an other top nerformance of the se mester when they staged the 'fillasty Heart" last weekend. Not only did the actors do well but the technical crew turned out an unusually good job of lighting, setting, etc, So women students held elec tions for governmental and rec reation board nositions Monday! (No wonder there is a lack of spirit Old Mania ailany's the coed with stars in her eyes these days because of the boyfriend arriving from ov erseas....AEPhi Phyllis Schweit zer traveled to Ft. Dix to see her fiance Tech Sgt. Ted Sandler.... Pvt. Milt Feldman is expected at any time to pop in on SDT Shir ley Levine.... Milt was a prisoner at war in Germany....P.fc. Jim my Etters has been visiting ChiO Sammy Sampson .... Zeta • Ann Emery went home to see Seaman 1/c Chuck Mauer.... Doris Stowe will be seeing her man, Air Corps Lt. Johnny Mc- Cracken, soon . Johnny has also been a prisoner of war . Theta Mary Ann Higgins has announced her marriage to Ens. Ralph Lyford....Midge Dren is engaged to Bob Edelman, pi lamb alum....KD Sally Reish has be come the fiancee of Staff S'gt. Joseph Hoover.... Doris Burgart and Theta Chi Frank Chippak are engaged....ASTP Pvt. Dick Benefield has pinned Eleanor Vin son with his SPE jewelry., .. Theta Joan Huber and Alpha chi sig Tony Retina are pinned.... Lambda chi Jim Shindel has handed over his jewelry to Jane Zimmerman, Tri-Dorm coed . . . Lt. Tom Krall came up to see his fiance Zeta Kay Miller.... Tech. Sgt. Frank Gillespie vis ited Zeta Phil Long.... Ens. Dick Rathmell of the Merchant Ma .... Pfc. Jimmy Schwartz jour- Faculty Limelight Interesting sidelight at the Collegian banquet Saturday night was President Hetzel's talk on his experiences as a high school, collegiate, and professional journalist.... For the "Country Gentle men's" overseas issue, "Prexy" has written a letter to Pennsylvan- ians, describing the present condi Dean H. P. Hammond will di of Engineering" a t Monday's Lunch Club. G. E. Simpson, head of the sociology department, has been elected chairman of the new steering committee. J. 0. Keller, assistant to the president in charge of extension, and H. G. Pyle, supervisor of in formal instruction, have written the section on Adult Education for the 1944 edition of American Yeatibook....Joseph R. Hilgert, associate professor of economics, will have an article ptiblished in the Harvard News Review soon. Miss Rose Cologne, 'Commun ity Adult Education specialist for the extension services, will teach for three weeks each at Women's College, Tallahassee, Florida, and Columbia University this summer....H. Barrett Pennell, Philadelphia architect, and Rob ert W. Schmertz, associate pro fessor, of architecture at Carnegie Tech, are• new... instructors for "Building. .or Buying a Home" THE COLLEGIAN FAY YOUNG behind the voting when so few coeds knew about the elections. A little more publicity on the part of WSGA and WTRA may have made the elections more successful and the officers elec ted a truer representation of the women students. And we wonder how the prin ter and proofreaders could misin terpret a sailor for a saint in last week's limerick! • Nominations, slates, elections loom in the minds of the campus politicians as clique chairmen are busily rounding up their hench man in an all-out drive for a winning candidates for the sum mer \ ballots. Three parties have never survived for more than a semester or two at a time on campus before one drops out of the race. After placing in the e frosh elections, will the Radical party accept the challenge and present a complete slate next semester? By NANCY CARASTRO neyed here to see. SDT Irene Klein Rhea Silverstone, AEPhi, went to Philly to see her fiance Lt. :Murray Friklman, former of lamb ....Ens. Bcfb Loffert, Navy Air Corps, saw Alpha Z Betty Ness. ...PIC. Steve Gretzkowski was up visiting Zeta Mary Haines ....SDT Mae Lenchner saw her man Sgt. Larry Schultz last week ....Capt. Walt Klinikowski, AAF, up at the Theta Phi Alpha house, is visiting his sister Jean and the rest of the little TPA's. Edna Dent went to Emporium to visit A/S Snuffy Walker, for merly here in V-112 . . . Pvt. Ken Taylor visited 'Perky Webster last weekend . . . A/S Bud Zimmer man, phi sig, visited AEPhi Helene Beerman recently . . . Seaman something -or - other Thumper Barkeley, farmer alpha ichi sig, was up seeing AOPI Weasy Umber ger . . . ChiO alums Malbel Parks, Laura Jean Davis, and Louise Cum mings were up ...Mabel is en tering Temple Med •School this summer.... Theta chi alum Paul Galvanek came up . from ' Ken tucky.... Zeta alum Midge Maris was here.... AOPi alum Betty Jane Drouse.... Cadet Nurses •Mue Bogardus and Doris Park were visiting friends here last week . . . That's all from us, beautiful BY WOODENE BELL ions in the Keystone state. .cuss "The Program of the School courses in Reading and Pitts burgh, respectively. The classes are sponsored by Penn State ex tension services. Captain George S. Howard, formerly associate professor of music in arts and science exten sion, has been highly praised by British papers for his command of the United States Army Air Forces Band in England. Two alumni of the College were recently appointed to positions as presidents of universities. George D. Stoddart '2l, 'Commis sioner of Education of New York State for several years, was elect ed president of the University of Illinois by the University's Board of Trustees. The other appointment was made by educators at Wayne Uni versity in Detroit. David Henry '26, became president of Wayne. He served .as vice,president of Wayne prior to his appointment. A Lean And Hungry Look This column, which is a plague spot in an otherwise good newspaper, usually contains a disoission of one campus event. This week there are several deserving its attention. For lack of a better method they are listed in order of stench. Penn State has several drawbacks—tropical rainstorms, termites and students. Now it has a "Youth Movement." The latter has nothing to do with the constipation of children. Our "Youth Movement" apparently was founded to "promote informal current event dis cussions at meetings that will inform students and stimulate them to action." This action, pre sumably, will be to debate all night before send ing a telegram of protest to a congressman who cannot read. If this group, the darling of local intellect. uals, runs true to form, it will detest the econom ic system which is sending its members to college in comfort and security. The sponsors of the "youth" organization, naturally, are a number of balding professors. Membership in Mortar Board is the highest honor that can be bestowed upon a coed at , the College. : One coed, who was not tapped by that august body Sunday morning, has distinguished herself in scholarship, activities, character, and personality so as to stand head and shoulders over the tappees. She may be interested to know that'she was not selected by 'Mortar Board because her soror ity sisters over at the •AOPi house buttonholed members of Mortar Board and convinced them to black-ball her. Article I, Section 3 of the new All-College Constitution informs one that the Penn. State Christian Association is now an ex-officio mem ber of Cabinet. It was not many semesters ago that every student leader of consequehce at the College signed a letter opposing PSCA's attempt to get on Cabinet. They stated that a group that allocates the largest part of its budget 'to--pay salaries to its directors could not be considered a student organization. This made sense to the members of that Cab inet and ,FSgA was denied a position. Appar4 ently times have changed. This column would be glad to print the complete, letter if enough interest is shown. The new President of the Women's Student Government Association is M. M. Dunlap. Miss Dunlap, as you remember, strongly defended the WSGA nominating committee practice in 'cab: Met this semester. Indicative of how to make out at college this story about the young lady. She was at, the Mortar Board tapping breakfast Sunday, but an other coed pushed in Dean Ray's chair. Without turning around Miss Ray said, "Thank you; M. M." --CASSIDS Front. and Center Lt. Ross B. Lehman, '42, former Collegian editor, was visiting his old haunts last week-. end. - Ross has been awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, -the Air-Medal with two clusters,. and the Purple Heart. A prisoner of_ the Ger-'-: mans •for nine months, he returned to this coun-% try on the exchange ship Gripsholm in February. Lt. Clair L. Hess, '42, a paratrooper with the 101st Airborne Division, has been twice wounded but has survived three paratroop land— ings on the European continent. He dropped over Normandy and Holland, and Clair and, twelve of his division were trapped at Bastogne •during the German breakthrough. The thirteen paratroopers withstood a six l. hour attack and tolled 250 German casualties, losing only two Americans. Clair was returned to this country in February and has been tour ing war plants. Lt. George Pittinger, '43, was killed in Germany in April while serving with an infantry division. Lt. John R. McCracken '4l was killed. in Nor thern France on November 10. He was with the 375% Field Artillery. Lt. Clifford Lauder '42, previously wounded on Adgust 1 in Franc e was - killed in November in Germany. Lt. Torn Egan '43 was killed in Manila on Feb-, ruary 17. He was a paratrooper. Pfc. William Haven '46 was missing in Luxem bourg on December 20, and was reported by ithe German Government Ito have died .in a prisOn hospital on January 11. ipfe. Dick Aikey '47 was wounded in Germa* on February 3- and, died: the -following day.-.: FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1945 111!1 12Z -.I*EDGIEMEIIMV!: