Safety Valve ... A Cheerful Smile TO THE EDITOR: Mr. Garretson-Butt makes it seem so hard to smile in his obviously humor ous column, but I'm sure that if he would have contacted the right people, he would have seen that not all is woe and misery as he put it. It's hard to make people realize that the one preci ous thing left in life when all is sOOOO sad as your "boys" put it, that a smile or a cheerful word to someone goes a long way. I think the real purpose of the campaign waged by Mr. Errigo and the Student Councils (if you • would have investigated. A good re porter always gets both sides of a news story) was to revive 'the traditional "hello" and cheer ful spirit of Penn State. The Penn State "hello" spirit did exist here when all our blessed freshmen started on our sacred campus soil and were' indoctrinated from the beginning into the spirit of friendliness and good spirit. This will probably exist only when the constant habitual gripers of other schools are out. Now, think it over .. . Isn't it better to stop a minute from the daily grind and say "hello" to a girl or a friend .. . Smile and think it over. —A supporter of the "hello spirit" • Letter Cut • Name Withheld - Beta To Burrowes Before Burrowes Building was erected the School of Education was housed successively on the first floor of Old Main, in one end of the Engineering F; and in the old Beta Theta Pi house. Gazette . . . . Wednesday, Maich 29 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Club, 105 Willard Hall, 7:30 p.m. NAVAL VOLUNTEER Electronics Warfare Co., Naval Lecture Room, EngE, 7 p.m. CA ROUNDTABLE, 304 Old Main, 7:30 p.m. NITTANY BOWMEN, 207 EngE, 7 p.m. RIDING CLUB, 317' Willard, 7 p.m. PRE-MED SOCIETY, 217 Dairy, 7:30 p.m. COLLEGE PLACEMENT reetior baforatation concerning interviews and job place. meats .eau be obtained in Ll 2 Old Main. / - Seniors who turned in i preference sheets will be given priority in scheduling interviews for two days following the initial announcement of the visit of one of the com panies of their choice. Other students will be scheduled on the third and subsequent , days. E. R. Squill}, & Sons; Mar. 30. Juniors in Chem, Biol, Phys, ChemE, ME and Sci. inter ested in summer work, with possibility of per thanent employment after graduation. Candi dates must have an average of 1.5 or better, and show:leadership in extra-curricular activities. Iniurance Company of North America, Mar. 30. .June grads in A&L, C&F, ME, EE, and CE; Carbide and Carbon Chemicals Division. Mar 30; 31; June grads in Chem E and ME. Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co., Mar. 30. ) June' grads interested in insurance sales. General Aniline Co., Mar. 31. M.S. and PhD candidates in Organic Chem; also, women June grads in Chem who have a knowledge-of Ger man for abstracting work. Westinghouse Corp. April 11, 12, 13. June grads in EE, ME, IE for openings in salei and a few manufacturing •openings. Also a few jobs in highly technical engineering, requiring out standing analytical ability, for EE and ME. There are no openings in routine or service en gineering. Openings also in Metallurgy for ma terials, development and application. Philadelphia Electric Co.. April 12. June grads and juniors in EE. Marathon Corp., April 12. June grads in IF for time and motion, and wage incentive work. , General Electric Business Division, April 12. June grads in C&F for their training program. A great deal of accounting will be involved dur ing the first three years. Applicants must have an average of 2.0 or better. STUDENT EMPLOYMENT Information concerning these positions can be obtained at the Student Employment Office in Old Main. Couple with no children wanted to worh in Centre County for entire summer.. Husband to work as guide and wife to assume household responsibilities. Excellent salary. Substitute waiters in college dining commons - leading to permanent positions in the fall. Summer camp counselorships for men ant, women. Interviews available March 25. Direct Selling field. Products include Mutua; funds, baby equipment, chemical products sterling silver, and others. Fuller Brush Co. Full time positions open for summer. Various counties in Pa. available COLLEGE HOSPITAL Admitted Monday: Mary Lou Larpenteur, Barbara Schulz, Royal Bell. Admitted Tuesday: Edwin Carpenter, Mary Louise Kendall, Robert Bowen, Joseph Michal ski, Vivian Bitner, Suzanne Frings. Discharged Tuesday: Richard Haupt, Robert Helfand, Ross Libengood, Stephen Kalatucka, Philip Barker, Blair Green, Robert Free, Robert Gabriel, Joseph BUbernak, George Barber, Walter Grimes. AT THE MOVIES CATHAUM—Father Was a Bachelor STATE—Woman in Hiding. NWAANXQA Dola Little Man On Campus "Remember how happy you 'Pledges' were when the council ruled out paddling?" College Backsliding In Coaching. Setup Evident student concern over the College's football coaching situation prompts us to look to a pertineni discourse,delivered by a Pittsburgh sports scribe. Chet Smith, sports editor of the Pittsburgh Press, enjoy's the reputation hereabouts of having a sensitive finger always on; the Penn State sports pulse. His observations, for one 140 miles away, are often uncanny. With this preview, we delve into a recent Smith column on the , College coaching setup: \ Si . • • Our opening understatement will be that Joe Bedenk's recent retirement as the football coach' at Penn State has left the Lions, in a predicament that would be hilariously ludicrous if it didn't carry serious implications for the future of the school's foot ball., "State s now in the position in which the old Brooklyn Dodgers under Uncle Wilbert Robinson so often found themselves. "Too many men on one base. • "FOR AN INSTITUTION that had its house in such good order only three years ago that it produced a Cotton Bowl contender, the Mount Nitts certainly have done a paramount job of backsliding. "When Bedenk told authorities he didn't want to coach foot- • ball any longer and would concentrate on baseball, Earl Bruce was called in from California Teacher'S College to whip up spring practice. Patently, this was an interim appointment for the able and likable Bruce, who got his start at Brownsville High School. "Bruce •went to California when State chose that school as its freshman farm during the period after the war, when •no yearlings were permitted on the main campus. "If he is now at State on a trial basis, that's only another con tributing factor to the ,mess. It would be the first time such a plan had been tried, at. Penn State or anywhere 'else. "THE LIONS NOW have this weird setup in their laps: "Bob Higgins, who pulled in his neck after 19 years, bn March 12, 1949, because of poor health, is still there as a professor of physi cal education. "Cap'n Robert builds good will among .the State parishioners, for which he is eminently qualified. Bedenk is the baseball coach and also a professor of physical education. , "Some 12 months or more ago, John Lawther gave up coaching basketball but remained as a professor of physical education. "The assumption is reasonably safe that there were no salary cuts involved in any. case. Who's left in football? "ASSISTANTS AL MICHAELS and Jim O'Hora from the Hig gins regime, Sever Toretti and ex-Pitt Panther Frank Patrick, Who were Bedenk appointees. "Tangling the snarl:to restore some semblance of order may well turn out to be an involved process, if it is not impossible without a major operation. "That's because of State's unique plan - for signing coaches, all of whom become members of the physical education faculty. This makes for security, but it also poses a stumper when there is a change at the top. "A new coach, brought in from the outside, naturally would want to' pick his own staff. He might wish to retain one or two of the existing lieutenants, but it would• be a miracle should he keep all four. "So what happens to the leftouts? Do they move in with the evercrowding group of professors of physical education? ' "On the other hand, a lesser .man, burning for a college berth, might accept and agree to employ the present aids. "IN ANY EVENT, the college is faced with .an almost insoluble dilemma. The institution can't go on naming new coaches year after year, assuming their salaries if they are found less than capable or, like Higgins and Bedenk, found the burden too heavy or too dis tasteful. • "Increasingly ambitious schedules, a remodeled stadium and a position in eastern football the Lions are anxious to maintain, plus alumni enthusiasm, are all driving factors that call for a quick and effective - way out. _ "The question is--Who knows what to do? "If somebody does, he'd better swing into action and stay out of Recreation Hall, where the Phyi-Ed Department is housed, Other wise, he might be trampldd to 'death by professors of physical educa 00ft. t.r\; IA , by Bibler A Chat With ARW WII;JiiiiISDAY, MARCH 29, 1950 This is another in a series of articles by Arthur H. Warnock, dean emeritus who was in contact with thousands of undergraduates during his 30 year tenure as dean of Men. Before I came to the campus in the fall of 1919 I had seen student government in opera tion at the University of Illinois, and din't think much of it. It wouldn't assume responsibility. I was prepared not to think much of student government at Penn State, but an early experi ence changed my mind. ONE SATURDAY NIGHT that fall I went downtown to watch • a football celebration at Co-Op Corner. One of my jobs as assistant dean of men at Illinois had been to assist the Cham paign police force, fire department and'business men, in trying to prevent football celebrants from wrecking the town on such occasions. Standing on the Senior wall near the corner I watched the milling crowd.of students cheer ing and celebrating. Before long I saw wood , starting to come forth, elicted by the cry, "Frosh, get wood!" "Here's where she blows!" I said to myself, thinking that a dangerous bonfire was about to be started. ABOUT THAT TIME the Senior Class presi- dent, accompanied by a burly football player in a letter sweater, walked to the center of the street corner—the diamond, as it was called then, and said in effect: "Fellows, the show's over. We're going home." "That's what you think!" I said to myself, 'because any show of official authority like that in Champaign, as I had known it, would have ' literally added fuel to the flames. The students howled and griped for a while, but within a half hour the show actually was over, without any property damage and riot ing. Then and there I decided that a student government that could do what police forces and fire departments in my experience failed to do was worth paying attention to. Later I discovered that .the student compli ance was not the result of the personal popular ity of a class president or a football star, but was the result of their automatic reaction to a training in student government and cooperation and discipline that had begun in their freshman year and had continued throughout their sopho more and upperclass years in a long-established Penn State .tradition. Safety Valve ... Truly Represents TO THE EDITOR: I want to send a belated "thank you" to 'All-College Cabinet for' the bang-up job they did in selecting an official ring • that truly represents the College. The pfficial ring adopted by Cabinet seems • comparable to any college ring I've seen. I've ordered mine. Emergency dormitories were used on campus years ago as they are being used today. One of these temporary dorms built in 1903 was called "Bright• Angel," and another built in 1904 was tabbed the "Devil's Defi." - Or Daily Collegian Successor to THE .FREE LANCE. est. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday mornings in clusive during the College year by the staff of The Daily Collegian of The Pennsylvania State College. Mitered as seemed-41as' matter .16 5. 1934. at the State College. Pa.. Pest Office ander the act of March 3, 1879. Editor Business Manager Tom Morgan Marlin A. Weaver Managing Ed., Wilbert Roth; News Ed. Jack Reen; Sports Ed., Elliot Krone; Edit Dlr.,' Dottie Werlinich; So ciety Ed., Commie Keller; Feature Ed., •Bob Kotzbauer; Asst. News Ed., Jack Senior; Asst. Sports Ed., Ed Watson; Asst. Society Ed., Barbara Brown; Photo Ed.. Ray Bente:* t Senior Board: George Vadasz, Kermit Fink. Asst. Business Mgr., Rodger Bartebt; Advertising Dir., Louis G. Gilbert; Local Adv.- Mgr., Donald G. Baker; Local Ad. Mgr., Mark Arnold; Promotion Co-Mgr.. Harold Woi lin, Ruthe Philips; Circulation Co-Mgrs.,Bob Bergman and Tom Heroiclk; Classified Ad Mgr.,. Shirey Faller; Person nel Mgr., Betty Jane Hower; Office Mgr., Ann Zekauskas; Secretary,. Sue Stern. STAFF THIS ISSUE Night Editors Red Roth, Shirley Austin Assistant Night Editor .... La Vonne Althouse Copy Editor , Shirley Austin Assistants Virginia Opoczenski, Peg King, Julia Ibbotson 'Advertising Manager .... Claude Di Pasquale Assistants Drew Mahla, Oweh Landon, Joan Eidlernan, Ray Bisswanger , 1:::3 —Arthur R. Warnock —Oscar Schmitt Not New