The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 22, 1950, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Politics
The soap boxes are back in the moth balls,
the big canvas “Vote Today” sign on the Mall is
now back in the closet to await next year’s fray l
and the students have elected next year’s stu
dent government leaders.
Since Monday morning quarterbacking is
the stock in trade of most interested parlies.
. we shall partake of it. In our eyes, this week's
election results—a sweep for the Lion party
can be laid to several different causes, perhaps
none of which could carry the ball alone but
taken together ascribe to the doctrine of "the
whole is greater than its parts."
The “whole” in this case is a Lion sweep. The
parts, which have gone to make it possible,-
were, from our interpretation:
1) THE FACT THAT THE Lion party-boasted
a one-man force in its top spot who was politic
ally hard to beat. Well known already on cam
pus, Bob Davis may have carried the entire
Lion slate, with the possible exception of Harry
Kondourajian, all-College vice-presidential can
didate, who—because of similar campus promi
nence in government and otherwise, might have
stood his ground alone. Together, they were that
much harder to beat and their solidity was gen
erated to the rest of the slate whether or not it
needed the support. Davis’ popularity was fur
ther indicated by the fact that some seemingly
voted for him but split the rest of their vote be
tween Lion and State.
' 2) The fact that the Lion party conducted
by far the more thorough pre-election cam
paign in publications, radio and most other
promotion phases. This was one of the most
extensive we have viewed since being on cam-
PUSe
3) The State party’s noticable lack of solidity
in backing its slate from top to bottom. Both
parties were adorned with factions (that’s poli
tics!), but in the Lion case the faction eventu
ally worked harmoniously; State men appeared
divided from the first, and never did appear to
shake off all the discord.
4) THE STATE PARTY'S lateness in bearing
down contientiously on securing candidates,
and, on stirring wide-spread party and campus
interest in the approaching campaign. The Lion
preceded the State by at least a month m this.
These points may not be all the story, but
we think they are the meat in explaining the
Lion sweep.
®lye Sally CaUegtan
tauMMT to TUB FREE LJkNCE. tot. I*BT
FaUUinl Taeotar throat* Saturday aiornlnto ti;*
j chair* daring the Colleg* year by U» atett *f The Daily
Cafflaetaa *t The Pcnaaylyaala State Colley*.
Xatef«d a* aeeaad-olaa* uoatter Jnly 5, 1954. at the Stat*
Cdhre, P**t Offi** aadar th* act *f March 3, IBM.
Editor m.. Business Manager
Tom Morgan Marlin A. Weaver
Manayiny Ed., Wilbert Roth; New* Ed. Jack Rten;
Sport* Ed„ Elliot Krana; Edit Dir., Dottle Werllnkh; So
elety Ed., Comatl* Keller; Feature Ed., Bob Kotibaner:
Aaat. Now* Ed., Jack Senior; A act. Sport* Ed., Ed Wataoa;
Aaat. Society Ed., Barbara Brown; Photo Ed., Ray Benfer:
Senior Boards fieory* Vadaaa, Kermit Fink.
ilaat Buainc** Myr., Rodyer Bartel*; Advertlalny Dir.-,
Loo la G. Gilbert; Local Adv. .Mgr. Donald J. Baker; Asot.
Local Ad. Myr., Mark Arnold; Promo. Co-Myra., Harold Wei
lin, Rnthe Philip*; Circulation Co-Myra., Bob Beryman and
Tom Karolcik; Claaalfled Ad Myr.,.Shirley Falter; Peraon
net Myr., Betty Jane Hower; Office Myt, Ann Zekauakaa;
Secretary, Sue Stern.
STAFF THIS ISSUE
Night Editor Art Benning
Assistant Night Editor Bob Vosburg
Copy Editor Stan Degler
Assistants Barb Harford, Marv Krasnansky
Advertising Manager Loretta Stempinski
Assistants Bob Leyburn, Mary Kauffman,
Bill Prokoff, Anita Ranallo, Jim Keightly
NOW!
At Your
Warnor Theatre
C^atliaum
JANE POWELL
ANN SOTHERN
"Nancy Goes
To Rio"
jStuie
JANE WYMAN •
MARLENE DIETRICH
HICHARD TODD
"Stage
Fright"
Wlitany
GENE AUTRY
and CHAMPION
"MULE TRAIN"
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Little
Insurance—
(Continued from page one)
policy. The lowest policy offered
is $5OO. Dividends on a larger
policy—for example, a 20-year
endowment policy of $lO,OO0 —
would accrue faster and the Col
lege would receive the student
gift of $lOO faster.
(4.) In the event that the stu-
I dent would die before the policy
reached maturity, his beneficiary
would receive the full face value
of the policy minus the portion of
the $lOO that had not yet been
paid to the College.
Representatives of the Woods
agency have stated that they ex
pect to sell such policies to about
1,500 students each year, MacCal
lum said.
A committee to designate p”r
poses, beyond the SU building
whicn the $lOO student gifts shall
be used will include: Samuel K.
Hostetter, assistant to the presi
dent in charge of business dnd
finance, chairman; Wilmer E. Ken
worthy, assistant in charge of stu
dent affairs; George L. Donovan,
manager of associated student ac
tivities; Ridge Riley, executive
secretary of the Alumni Associa
tion; C. R. Barnes, executive ac
countant; the All-College presi
dent, vice-president and secretary r
treasurer, and the senior class
president.
The plan was presented earlier
this year to Cabinet and was
unanimously approved. On the
insurance committee, headed by
MacCallum, were Harry Mc-
Mahon, All-College vlce-presi-
Monday & Tuesday
Presented by the
International Film Club
•■^OUTRANKS'OPEN CITY 1
AND 'PAISAN'.*
—Newsweek
*A master at shabby liv
ing—the girls in their
short black dresses,
wobbling on platform
shoes—has the forlorn
dignity of a Chaplin
AH ending, plus a less
fly calculated pathos.'
V -TIME
I my
GERmAny JHr
YEAR JHmTIRO
an On Cam
will mean a
"1 suppose thii
Committee Set Up
by Bibler
I
SIS
it'.
'■A
v*-
n
'J
$-j:
■eekend campus.".
Inauguration
(Continued from page one)
appointed Charles Beatty and
Robert Anderson to a Cabinet
awards committee. The student
government handbook will be
completed by the. end of May,
Allen announced.
Earl Schaffer, Liberal; Arts
Council president, said yesterday
that his contention that Dr. Lee
Lorch’s dismissal appears, to be
based on Dr. Lorch's activity in
Stuyvesant Town, a New York
housing project, stems from "in
vestigation by me and by other
members of the Council, and
from an editorial in the New
York Times." He said yes today’s
Collegian stated erroneously that
the contention stemmed from
publicity initiated by the Pro
gressive Party of Pennsylvania;
Yesterday’s Collegian read;
“. . . Students in the Cabinet gal
lery upheld Schaffer’s contention
that Dr. Lorch’s dismissal ap
pears, through'publicity initiated
by the Progressive Party of Penn
sylvania, •to be based on Dr.
Lorch’s activities in, opposing
Negro discrimination in Stuyves
ant Town, a New York housing
project.’’
dent; Joseph Reinheimer, senior
class vice-president: Donald Carl
son, Charles Godlasky, \ Harold
Leimbach and Curtis wessner.
The topic of a Student insurance
program benefiting the College
was first introduced to Cabinet
by James Balog, senior class
president. '
SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1950
Gazette...
Saturday, April 22
ALPHA DELTA SIGMA Smoker, Sunday at
7:30, Phi Gamma Delta.
GRAD CLUB Social, 304 Old Main, 8 p.m.
OPEN HOUSE, Hillel Foundation, 8:30 p.m.
DELTA SIGMA PI Initiation, Beaver Room,
Old Main, 9 p.m, Sunday.
■ COLLEGE PLACEMENT
Fatih** itifornatUa couettnlii* luUrthw* J«ft plat*-
mcitts be •btainetl In 112 Old Main.
Seniors who turned In preftrenee sheets will be (itta
in flehednltnr ‘ Interview* for two day* foltowln*
o the. initisl announcement of the tlelt of one of the eem
;;>**lei of their cholee. Other stndentfl wIH be tchedoled on
the third Ond sobseotetit days.
Ralilon-Purina Co., April 25. June and sum-
mer grade for sales department.
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., April 28, 26.
> June grads in Education and Liberal Arts for
' both claims and sales work.
Allied Stores* Inc., April 25. June gradß for
their retail training program.
Sylvania Electric Products, Inc., April 25. June
grads in Chem; B.S. and M.S. in Metal.; M.S.
candidates in Organic and Inorganic Chem.; and
PhD candidates in Phys. Chem. and Phys. No
priority list for these interviews,
' Mergenthaler Linotype Co., April; 20, • June
grads in ME for either sales trainee program or
management trainee program. '
Ell Lilly and Co., April 24, 25. June grads in
ChemE; PhD candidates In Organic Chem, Bact,
, and Microbiology (major in bact., minor in bio*
chem.) „ - .
Moore Products Co.. April 27. June grade in
ME for a variety of positions; lE, and CnemE.
General Fireproofing Co.. Ortho Pharmaceuti
cal Corp., Timken Roller Bearing.. Co., .and
Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co., April 27. June
grads in C&F, Liberal Arts, Pre-Med, Zool. ME,
lE, ChemE and Metal. ;,' ~.
S. S. Kresge Co., May 1, 2. June grads in LA
who are interested in retailing. .
National Biscuit Co.. May 1, 2. June grads in
EE, ME and ChemE for their engineering train
ing program. Cahdidates must be single, with
out any marriage plans for a year, and 21 to 26
years of age.
H. J. Heins Co., May 1, 2. Men and, women
Btudenta in Home Ee, Chem, Med. Tech, Bact,
• Botany, Zool and Entomology, Pre-Med, Sci, and
Ag Bio Chem for summer work. A background
of chemistry and bioiogy Is necessary. '
Reliance Electric 1 and Engineering Co., April;
27, 28. June grads In EE, lE, and ME for sales;
work. No priority list for these interviews
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT
Information eonearntns th«a paaltlona can bt obtained
at the Student Employment Office In Old Main.. ..
' Substitute waiters and kitchen help in college
dining commons leading to permanent positions
in September. \ , . • .
Summer camp and resort jobs available to
persons with Various specialties.
Dietitians for several camps. ,
Hotel dining room managers and staff. Seats
150. May be operated under rental agreement.
Sales personnel.sought for both current and
summer work.
Fuller Brush Co. Full time positions open for
summer. Various counties in Pa. available. .
Summer farm job outside Philadelphia. Ag
students with farm background preferred.
Summer sales opportunities with Marshall
Field enterprises. Group meeting and inter
views, Saturday, April 22.
1 COLLEGE hospital
-Admitted Thursday! Stanley Vitt, Charles
Wilson. ...
.Admitted Friday: Dorothy Laine. .
Discharged Friday: Jacqueline O’Dell, Mariam
Keim, Margaret Way, Ellleen Dreener, Dons
Klinkowstein, Eleanor Kruchesker, Richard
Schlegel, Nicholas Mohhiges, Francis Dargo,
John Onuskanich. '
\
SLIDE
RULE
HOP
••• • •
Gene
Magill's
' Orchestra
• • •
Saturday
April
22
••• • •
Rec Hall
9 to 1
••• • •
• Informal