PAGE TWO Lost One Policy! Just about a year a go, Penn State refused to play the University of Miami in the Orange Bowl in a regularly scheduled football game. The reason, of course, was racial discrimination in the Soyith. Southern football players wouldn't play against the Nittany Lions' two Negro players and the Higgins men wouldn't make the trip without them. Now. with Cotton Bowl arrangements com pleted and the Lions (with their Negro players) set for an invasion of the South. the story is somewhat different. In a way, that is as it should be. Had any other ~vhool but Southern Methodist been host in the Cotton Bowl, it is doubtful that the Lions would have received the invitation. SMU was also the flyst Southern team to come north to play teams with Negro players. The MlAs tangs should be commended for throwing over those age-old ties and taking o n a liberal aspect. They have made an important and precedent-set ting decision. But all is not so complacent within the Nittany Lions' own confines. When the Athletic Advisory Board decided against the football teem playing Miami. it set a precedent which supposedly clpsed College Calendar All calendar items must be M the Daily Collegian office by 4:30 p.m. on the day pre• :eding publication Wednesday, December 10 SKI Club, 110 EE, 7:30 p.m. AVC, 121 Sparks, 7 p.m. IFC, 405 Old Main, 7 p.m. ASCE, 219 Main Eng, 7 p.m. STATE Party, 417 Old Main, 8 p.m. PARMI Nous, 418 Old Main, 9:30 p.m. DRUIDS, 415 Old Main, 7 p.m. CAMPUS Unit Red Cross, 409 Old Main, 7 p.m. NEWMAN Club, membership committee, 305 Sparks, 6:45 p.m. PRE-MED Society, 105 Freer, 7 p.m. VARSITY Rifle Team, Photo Shop, 7 p.m. NAVAL Reserve, Surface Unit, Armory, 8 p.m. OUTING Club, WE, 7 p.m. At the Movies Cathaum—Lured. State—Jezebel. Nittany—Honeymoon. College Hospital . Admitted Monday: John McCreary, T. R. Jamison. Admitted Tuesday: Howard S. Gilliland, Charles Hazen. Discharged Tuesday: James Fluke, Clyde Mater, Julia Kalbach, Irene Dopfeld, Placement Service Hazeltine Electronics Company, December 11, EE, Phy (degrees to be received in Jan.). PhD receiving degree in June also eligible. Standard Oil Company of Indiana, Decem ber 15, eighth semester men, CE, ME, EE, Pet and Nat Gas. Campbell Soup Co., December 11, eighth semester men, Ag Bio-Chem, Chem Eng, Chem, Comm Chem, ME. Baldwin Locomotive Works, December 12, eighth semester men, ME, EE. Boy Scouts of America, December 15, eighth semester men and undergraduates in terested in working as field executives in C&F, A&L, Ed, Phys Ed, For, Ind Ed. Ingersoll Steel Division of Borg-Warner Corp., December 10, seventh and eighth se mester men, lE, ME. Arrangements for interviews should be made at once in 204 Old Main. 1* ° \ C) . , N "Get Set" for a Beautiful Weekend . 0. Pledge dances, Christmas parties, and '‘, 7 your last big weekend on campus until ,next year—are three gocci reasons why you'll want to look your very best. 42 Make yuur appointment now—and st•e how an hour of your time will re ward you with days of flattering com- plirnen to NO ONE 15 TOO BUSY TO LOOK THEIR BEST I HOTEL BEAUTY S STATE COLLEGE HOTEL THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA the door on Penn Slate competition in the South in any sport. This, at any rate, was the excuse given when Leo klouck's boxing team was denied permission to par ticipate in the Sugar Bowl Sports Tournament, Dec. 29 of this year. Although there are no Negroes on the team, the Board held that it was "unable to accept due to the present situation." The Sugar Bowl invitation contained a phrase saying that it was understood that there would be no Negroes on the Lion boxing team. Bowl officials had contacted Houck before extending the official bid. The Tournament would have been equal to the Rose. Bowl game in the eyes of Leo Houck and the boxing team. It would also have been the highest honor that Penn State's "Dean of Boxing Coaches" or the boxing team had ever received. But the pol icy was more important, the Board decided. Still adhering to this policy. the same board denied Jerry !Carver, Lion national track cham pion, permission to run in the same Sugar Bowl Carnival. This was worked out finally and !Carver was given the go-ahead through an over-looked phrase In the Student Rules and Regulation s that allows individual students to appear In commer cial enterprisei with College permission. So while the Cotton Bowl bid acceptance is a step in the right direction in the racial question, it is a move that has lett the College's athletic policv in doubt. Editor's Mail call Everyone's Help is Needed TO THE EDITOR: One of the avowed pur poses of Who's Who in the News is to give de served recognition to students who have devoted a large portion of their time to serving the Col lege. The majority of the students whose names will be included in the book, however, have had only the edge of the spotlight rest on them. This is a situation that, of necessity, has to exist. The lion's share of publicity is almost automatically drawn to a few men Who serve in a few capacities. Yet we feel that the efforts of the others, the reserves so to speak, should not go unrecog nized. Lou Bell said it in an editorial about the football reserve twenty years ago when he com pared the importance of the reserve to the amount of publicity they receive. Mr. Bell wrote, and it was reprinted in the Dec. 4 Collegian. "Yet it is usually only a word or two eagerly devoured by the famished reserve whose pub licity nourishment is sadly lacking." One of our most important functions is to. at least, give them that word or two. In order to continue the publication of Who's Who in the News, however, the assistance of all those whose names will be included in the book is absolutely essential. —David J. Adelman. —Joseph F. Ruciick. Co-editors. Who's Who in the News. Protests Co-op Decision TO THE .EDlaukt: 1 think the trustees of this institution mace a grave mistake in rejecting the proposed campus co-op, which ninety-three percent of the students favored. I think it would be an excellent idea if the names and addreues of the trustees could be published for the information of the students. If they are really interested in having a co-op, they should then write their protests to the respective trustees, i n the hope that they might re-consider the mistake they have made. This school needs a co-op very badly. We need something on this campus in or'er t o save the stu lents frcm continvally being over-charged by the *.own merchants, who continually take advantage f us. —Sherman 1). Kaplen • See page 1 for the names and addresses of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees. 1 " . ' EL. f if* BUY ON EASY TERMS CRA11131) Es College Physicists Trap New 'Ultrasonic' Sound Dr. Harold K. Schilling. acous tics laboratory director, and two assistants. Clayton H. Allen and Dr. Isadore Rudnick, have come up with sound that can be "seen but not heard." The sound. called ultrasonic. is too high pitched for the human ear to hear but it has sufficient energy to start a fire, kill a mouse, or keen as many as 20 glass marbles suspended in mid-air. This super-sound is generated in a small lantern-shaped siren developed by Mr. Allen and Mr. Rudnick, working under Dr. Schilling. The project wait started during the war under a contract with the Signal Corps of the War Department. The siren works somewhat like this. Compressed air in a small chamber escapes through 100 small cone-shaped holes equally spaced around a six-inch circle. As air escapes, a wheel spins at 18.000 r.v.m. The sound has a Pitch of 30.000 cycles, which is too high for the human ear to detect. The sound will burn a wad of News Briefs Naval Reserve The Surface Unit of the Naval Reserve will meet in the Armory at 8 o'clock tomorrow night. All reserve members and others in terested in naval ordnance are invited. . Critique All complimentary and sub scription copies of Critique must be picked up at Student Union by Thursday, said Alex Gregory, editor. Outing Club Boxes for clothing to be sent to Europe have been placed in the girls' dormitories by the WRA Outing Club, said Lou Frazier, president. Miss Frazier also said that members of the club interested in skiing will hear Miss Mildred A. Lucey of the physical education department explain the use of skiing equipment in White Hall at 7 o'clock tonight. Hillel Program Hillel Foundation will present a dramatic program over WMAJ at 7:15 tonight. niE DAILY COLLEGiAN successor to the three Lance set 187'. Published ruesday through teriday mornings during the College year by the staff of the Daily Collegian of the Pennsylvania State College Entered as Lecond class matter July 5, 1934, at the State College. Pa.. Post Office under the act of March 3. 1879 $2.50 a semester: 54:25 the school year Alian th Ostat Donald W Ellis STAFF THIS ISSUE Managing Editor News Editor Assistant News Editor --- Betty G.bbons _ Dotty Werlinich, Auiatanta _ Elaine Eats, Bill Kauffman •eilgt.. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1947 cotton in aix seconds in open air. It can light a Dinerul of to: acco without a match or bring a cup of coffee to the boiling point in seven , minutes. It can also POD corn. With the cooperation of Dr. Hu bert Frings. entomolo at the College, scientists 1e .led that ode white mice placed in the sound field died after a one-minute eX posure. A mouse that survived 30 seconds exposure appeared to be normal eight minutes later. The following day. however. its outer ear had deteriorated. The silent siren also was found effective in killing insects. Mosgut toes died in ten seconds in the sound waves. Possible uses for ultrasonic sound in the world of tomorrow are for the sterilization of foods. homogenization of milk. medical treatments and surgery. treatment of seeds to increase food nroduc tion. elimination of smoke men ace, speeding of chemical reac tions and acceleration in the slow nrogress of aging whiskey. Scabbard and Blade Initiates 13 Members Thirteen members of the Ad vanced ROTC Corps at the Col lege were initiated into Company "H". Ist Regiment, of the Na tional Society of Scabbard and Blade, military honorary, at a dawn ceremony Sunday after suc cessfully completing a night prob lem that began 8 p.m. Saturday. Also formally initiated as asso ciate advisor to the Penn State chapter was Major John Stewart. AC. who will assist CarPtain Har old W. Yount, CE. The cadets initiated were Rob ert Anderson. Thomas Botsford. Lynn Christian, George Dorrance. Norman Farrell. Robert Harbison. Howard Hagler. John Holmes. Robert Lauer. Donald Miller, Thomas Monaghan. Richard Weil. and Melvin Widrow. - Bus Mgr . - Elaine Nelson _ Lew Stone c____ owitml- - _,- ._.---- - 111 __. .tor cool el:Wen in Radios or phonographs serviced by expert ro. pair:non! The Best in Radios STROMBERG . CARLSON MOTOROLA SPARTON BENDIX STEIGE'S RADIO CENTER Opposite Post Office