PACE TWO Cabinet Action Today's statement by the Messrs. Keller and Allen points up two things. First, it shows that Keller's pungent discourse last week was not meant to make Cabinet out as possessing no more action than a stalled hearse in a snow storm. Second, it shows that it was meant to point out to Cabinet that a clearer adminis tration stand should be sought by Cabinet on several points. Deeper probing on certain points of general student interest is possible by All-College Cabinet, but only to and through the College administration. As for student affairs carried on by Cabinet, all students are free to question and petition Cabinet action, according to the constitution, which is printed at least once yearly in the Daily Collegian. IN OUR MIND, the ideal result of all this would be overflowing student galleries at all Cabinet meetings that would force Cabinet meetings out of 201 Old Main into a larger room. THAT CABINET is currently floundering in lethargic inaction can be refuted strongly. As Keller himself pointed out, this is a miscon ception that has apparently been evoked by his Ccibitiet speech, so let us puncture a few boles in it. These are a few Cabinet actions or projects this year that , are already completed or are underway at present: 1) Room 204 Old Main has been set aside by the College as a student government room. to be known as the Ralph Dorn Heizel Memorial Room. It will begin operation soon as a daily center for coordinating student z , government and all groups represented in student government. ;) Plans for ice skating on the practice foot ball field have been formed and are ready to function when weather permits. 3) A STUDENT GOVERNMENT • handbook to explain student government and its varied functions is in the process . of planning and pub lication; 4) A loan to Critique, camp — us literary maga- zine, has been granted to remove plaguing creditors from the backs of students and ad ministration. 5). A committee is working on something • apparently now dead to most students but Still alive in Cabinet—a possible change in th. football seating arrangement. 6) Other Committees—such as the ring, elec- tions, Orientation Week and safety committees —are consuming much time in accomplishing their assigned aims. The newly-created dormi tory and five-day-meal-ticket committees are a natural result of student petition to Cabinet. Robert Davis, who brought them before Cabi net, said he would have done so Thursday re gardless of Keller's prodding at that particular meeting. The outcomes of investigations and actions undertaken by these Cabinet committees and Cabinet as a whole may not seem important to every student. But they are important to Student government in its role as medium be tween the student body and the College administration. And they are important to All-College Cabinet insofar as they are for the student body. Otte Elaitg Collegian Bucceosor to THE FREE LANCE. est. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday mornings tn• elusive duririg the College year by the Oaf of The Daily Collegian of The Pennsylvania State College. I Entered as second-class matter July 5, 1934. at the Stint College, Pa., Post Office under the act of March 3, 1870 EditOr Business Manager Torn Morgan IleilM°l Marlin A. Weaver Managing Ed., Wilbert Roth; News Ed., Jack Reen; Snorts Editor. Elliot Kraals; Edit . Dir.. D ottie Worths. ich; Society Ed., Commie Keller; Feature Ed.. Sylvia Ochner; Asst. News Ed,, Jack Senior; Asst. Sportsd., Ed Watson; Asst. Society Ed., Barbara Brown; PrAmotion Co-Mgr.. Charlotte Seidman; Photo Ed., Ray Benfer; Senior Board George Veda's, Albert Ryan, Myrna Tex, Robert Roses Staff Cartoonists Henry H. Prow: Staff Photographer Ssm Vaughan. AWL Business Mgr., Joe Jackson; Advertising Dir., Louis Gilbert; Local Ad Mgr.. Don Baker; Asa't. Local Ad. Mgr., Mark Arnold: Promotion Co-Mgr., Karl Borleh: Circulation Co-Mgrs., Bob Bergman and Tom Karolcik; Classified Ad Mgr.', Thelma Geier; Personnel Mgr., Betty Jane Hower; Office Mgr., Ann Zekauskas; Secretaries Marion Goldman and Sue Stern. Letters to the editor should be limited to 200 words •. 4 hat all contributors may be given space. The editor reserve , the right to print in part all letters over that limit. Letter. must be signed and the address is reeuested. STAFF THIS ISSUE Managing Editor ....Ray Koehlei News Editor Lynnette Wilson Copy Editor ..... Wilson .Barto Assistants Audrey Lipsky, Paul Poorman, Lee Edward Stern, and Norma Zehner. Advertising Manager .. .. Judy Krakower Assistants Laura Mermelstem, Norma Gleghorn, Winnie Wyant, Claude DePas •lale, and H. W. Mandes. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE coutor, PENNSYLVANIA :RICA 4:› Reprinted from the May, 1947 issue of zsguntr. "Windcrest to Rec Hall how much?" Tete-A-Tete ABERSOPHY: Hey, Bill, stop hustling around for two minutes and answer a couple of questions for me. Ghee, you look , awfl.ll— you ever get any sleep? BILLINGSWHEEL: Nah, but what do you.want to know, kid? ABERSOPHY: What's this All-College Cabinet that some wild character named Keller has been raving about lately? It sounds' like Congress being worked over again. . BILLINGSWHEEL: Well, sir, you've core a long way 'An your three months up here ... at least you read the Collegian. As fair as the studen't body is concerned, All-College Cabinet is its Can gressi and decides nearly all the problems relating to ettudent affairs. ABERSOPHY: Yeah? Do they really have any power to 'do anything? Can they fix me up with a room in the new dorm, or a better chow deal, or . BILLINGSWHEEL: Easy lad, they're already working ori"those things, but before any decision is reached, the Cabinet cbnimittees must get all the facts and then the Cabinet will seek the best .loltk ton for the student body as a whole. ABERSOPHY: Oh, that's pretty good. But how well repre sented are all the groups on campus? BILLINGSWHEEL: Everybody is covered at least tree times, once through his living group; class, arid also through his school. On Cabinet are presidents of all eight school councils, AIM and IrC, Leonides and Pan-Hel, the AA and WRA, the four classes, WSGA, the Boards of Publications, Dramatics and ForensicS, and the :three All-College officers. , • ABERSOPHY: Wow! Sounds fair enough, if it works. BILLINGSWHEEL: That depends on the calibre of the people on the Cabinet, and proves that it is the responsibility of every student to make sure the person representing him Is the best in his group. ABERSOPHY: Man, I certainly would like to be on that outfit. BILLINGSWHEEL: All you have to do is get elected. Those French Movies The combined French classes at the College were recently "convinced" that it would be to their best interests to take in a triple feature being showh free for nothing at Osmond. The filths, 20 minute shorts, were imported from France, of all places, and looked it. In line with its long policy of public service, the Collegian prints the substance of these films. YOUR CORRESPONDENT was hampered in his , efforts at clear reporting by the unfortunate circumstance that the darned movies were narrated in French ....without subtitles yet! However, by conferring with other. advanced student§ of, the language of ro mance, we managed to piece together the following fairly complete narrative. The film opened with some words flashed on the screen. These too were in French, and are of no interest here. 'All of a sudden, however, a large expanse of dull water. appeared, -and a Frenchman on the seund track started-babbling frantically through his nose. The water was almost certainly the Atlantic ocean, al though a strong minority claim that the narrator called it Lake Erie. 'Anyway, the film started 'roaming up and down the coasts of-France—of which there are a lot more than you realize until you've got to sit through this picture. Here are certain conclusions to be gleaned from the glances• of the simple peasant life glowingly illustrated. - Basque girls wear skirts cut two inches above the knee, and hasque cameramen are fond of low-angle shots. Basque girls, how ver, wear large numbers of petticoats. France imports immense quantities of something or other, but exports even more of something else. Either this picture was 20 years olci or its a lie about those French bathing'suits. All French cooks weigh 300 pounds There Is a little white dot that bounces tip and dowh across the lap of France and is exploited by movie directors to show where 'ley are talking about. 'The twin bed has not yet been introduced to the French peas ,itry. The French peasantry do not miss it. ' It takes many years to produce champagne. Consumption is ornewhat more rapid:- It's all a lie about French girls. All French movies close with the word "fin" splashed across the screen. This may very well mean: The End. tALI I Air. Copyright !pa by Esquire. toe. By JACK SENIOR By RON BONN NgWl4lli yy i ~'~~'g. ~~ . -" El WA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1949 Tracking Down Tales With The Staff DR. EUGENE A. MEYERS, economics prof., provoked a laugh with this one when he spoke to the 'Philosphy Club last week on "Why Come To College?" To illustrate his point that a college educa tion' will not necessarily guarantee vocational success, he related a story about a Greek who emigrated to the United States. Despite illiter acy ana the fact that he spoke in broken Eng lish, he became a millionaire - in 20 years. When asked what he attributed his success to, he replied, "Oh, I get a big idea, and then I hire a college graduate to work out the de tails." THE STUDENT CLEANING AGENCY is doing' fine according to all reports, but when one over-optimistic student brought in a hun dred dollar•bill to be changed, he was referred to, the bank. • STUDENTS ON the UCLA campus have or cranized a new social club. Known as the "23 Club" it caters exclusively to oldsters who have 'passed , their twenty-third birthday. • * . WHILE THEORIZING on what the first electric refrigerator ad might have been like,, one enterprising advertising major suggested this• slogan—" Electricity now does what the icemantdid before." Some assumption, that! sifeti .Valve . . A Christmas Wish TO THE EDITOR: May . I please submit the following few lines of verse as my Christmas wish that someday soon Christmas will again be a joyful season where people can rejoice in peace throughout the entire world? —C. 0. Calvin ON CHRISTMAS EVE—A WISH I looked out my window • Towards a distant star, 'Twas Christmas Eve—the Holy night • A' night, no man could mar. And as I stood there watching The star grew large and bright, And brought to mind the mem'ry of Another Christmas night Then soon appeared the carolers. Who sang of Christmas cheer, "Peace to all—good will toward men To all a glad New Year." 'Oh that men might once again Rejoice on Christmas Eve, • And sing the sacred music of The things which they believe. That good will might be common where, Men gather to rejoice, To worship God and all His works . In the churches of their choice. And again the song' of Bethlehem Would to each one impart An urge to say on Christmas Eve, Sweet prayers from the heart. Gazette . • Wednesday, December 14 AIM Meeting, 409 Old Main, 7:30 , p.m. ARCHERY CLUB, '124 Sparks, 7 p.m.., CIRCULO ESPANOL, Hillel Foundation, 7 p.m.- COLLEGIAN CHRISTMAS Party, Eutaw House, 8 p.m. Buses leave Cornor Room .at 7:30 and 8:30. NEWMAN Club Discussion Group, Church easement, 7 p.m. PENN STATE CHESS Club, 3 Sparks, 7 p.m. SOPHOMORE CLASS Meeting, 3 White (-14111, 7 p.m. WRA Badminton Club, White Hall, 8:30 p.m. WRA Bowling Club (Advanced), White Hall, 7 p.m . - WRA Dance Club, White Hall, 7 p.m. WRA Concert Group, White Hall, 8 p.m. WRA Outing Club, 1 White Hall, 7 p.m. WRA Swimming Club, White Hall, 7:30 p.m. COLLEGE HOSPITAL ADMITTED MONDAY: Nancy Buen, Lois Jean Condra, Richard Rittenhouse, James Gull borg, Clifford Wheeler, Jacob Meckler, James Darcy. ADMITTED TUESDAY: Phillip' Spahr. DISCHARGED MONDAY: Wilbur Hankey, John BurtOn, Mary Lou Transue. DISCHARGED TUESDAY: Lois Jean Con dra, Thelma Evans, Walter Grimes, Jarlies Wolk, Theodore Horner, Harry Swimmer, Joseph Brown, Richard Rittenhouse. AT THE MOVIES CATHHAM—The Black Book STATE—The Hatchet Man NITTANY- w^o a Fullback