The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 26, 1950, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Zip Battu 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.
Entered as second-class matter July 5, 1934, at the State
College, Pa., Post Office under the act' of March 3, 1879.
Collegian editorials represent the viewpoints of the writers,
not necessarily the polity of the newspaper. Unsigned edi
torials are by the editor.
Dean Gladfeller Owen E. Landon
Editor • Business Mgr.
Managing Ed., John Dalbor; News Ed., Stan .Degletl
Sports Ed., Rai Koehler; Edit. Dlr., Herbert Stein: Society
Ed., Deanie Krebs; Feature Ed., Janet Rosen; Asst. Sports
Ed., Art Denning; Asst. News Ed., John Ashhrook;
Asst. Society Ed., Bettina dePainia; Photo Ed., Wilson
Barto; Senior Board: Jack Boddington, Bill Detweiler.
Asst. Bus. Mgr., Thomas M. Karalac; Advertising
Dir., Harold L. WoIlia: Local Adv. Mgr., Hugo R. Mandes:
Promotion Mgr., Laura Mernie!stein; Circulation Co-Mgrs..
Edward W. Noyes:, Gerald F. Yeager; Personnel Mgr., Ed
win Singel; Classified Adv. Mgr., Shirley Faller; Office
Mgr., Loretta Stempinski; Secretary, Winifred Wyant;
Senior Board: Norma Gleghorn. Delors. Horne, Mary
Kauffman. Sue Halperin..
STAFF THIS ISSUE:
Night Editor: Dottie Laine; Copy Editor: Er
nie Moore, Dave Colton; Assistant Night Editor:
Norma Philip; Assistants: Jo Hutchon, Greta
Dunsmore, Jan Herd, Louise Caplan.
Ad Staff: Bob Koons, Carolyn Alley.
Headline Seekers
If some stray movie starlet had strolled into
the All-College cabinet meeting at about 10 o'-
clock Tuesday night, she would have thought
she was back home at Hollywood and Vine on
a scene replete with gag lines, headline-seekers
and publicity agents.
INSTIGATED by the All-College president,
various cabinet members at that point were
raising a chant that sounded pretty much like,
"We want a headline. We want a headline. Fight,
team, fight." •
The occasion was a discussion en the size
of headlines and the amount of space given
to what the All-College president and others
called "publicity for the Campus chest."
Some cabinet members felt that the Campus
chest drive had not been given sufficient "pub
licity" in Collegian. To be frank, in an error of
news judgment, one story regarding the cam
paign had been poorly handled as to space and .
location, and this was readily admitted:
THE WHOLE orgy ended up with cabinet
moving to endorse the Campus chest program
in the hopes that it would make headlines. Had
they not been thinking of the "publicity" value,
'they probably never would have taken the ac
tion. In fact, considering that cabinet itself set
up the Campus chest, one would presume they
already had endorsed it.
Not that we object to • cabinet's endorsing
the campaign. What we do object to was the
quite obvious attempt to dictate news evalua
tion to Collegian. The fact that it was predi
cated upon ONE story which did not receive
the space some people thought it deserved
makes the attempt even more obnoxious.
It might be well to point out to cabinet that,
before yesterday, a total of six stories on Cam- .
pus chest had appeared in Collegian. That's con
siderably more space than a good many other
items. of news interest have received. Another
story and an editorial on the subject were writ
ten Tuesday before the cabinet meeting.
WE'LL LEAVE IT up to our readers them
selves to judge whether that is a fair amount
of space, considering that the campaign does
not start until the end of this week and that
Collegian always has been pressed for space.
We'll leave it up to our readers to judge whe
ther cabinet's frantic search for headlines was
justified.
3rd BIG WEEK
PRIVATE
LIVES
CENTER STAGE
FRI. SAT.
90c $1.20
Tickets At Student Union
STARLITE
DRIVE-IN
on BELLEFONTE ROAD
Thaws 7 and 9 P.M.
Thursday and Friday
"Twelve O'clock High"
with
GREGORY PECK
Also Selected Short Subjects
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA
Nine In One
For a chance to contribute and help nine wor
thy charities in one simple action, you can't
beat the Campus chest.
CONVENIENCE is the primary function of
the chest program. The purpose of concentrat
ing all of these drives into one grand campaign
is principally to eliminate year-round heckling
of students by individual charity solicitors.
For this reason it is important that students
realize Campus chest is not just another drive.
but a chance to do all the charity-giving for
these nine organizations now for the remain
der of the school year 1950.51.
Giving once for all is an excellent method es
pecially in those instances where you wouldn't
mind contributing, but don't because of the ob
noxious tactics of many solicitors.
DONATING PROCEDURES are simple.
Eighth-semester seniors are the only student',
who need to give cash right now. All others
simply designate an increase in fees for next
semester, or, in the case of veterans, a deduction
from book receipt checks. Solicitors will ,ask for
$2 from each student, but any amount may be
designated.
Unfortunately there are also disadvantages
to the chest setup this year. One of them is
that the student may not designate how much
of his contribution is to be given to each of
the organizations. Allotments are on a pro
rated basis, established last spring by the Col
lege committee of the National Student asso
ciation and approved by All-College cabinet,
But despite this disadvantage, we think the
one-packaged idea of donations is well worth
the student's consideration, if only from the
point of view of helping to budget his finances
in advance.
Gazette .
Thursday, October 26
NEWMAN CLUB, 106 Osmond, 7 p.m.
CHEMISTRY-PHYSICS Student Council, La
Vie Pictures, Penn State photo shop, 7 p.m.
WRA Swimming, White hall pool, 7 p.m:
WRA Outing, White hall, 7 p.m.
PENN STATE Marketing club, 228 Sparks,
7.p.m.
- WESLEY FOUNDATION drama group, 258
E. College Ave., 7 p.m.
NSA meeting tonight CANCELLED.
COLLEGE PLACEMENT •
Further information concerning interviews and job place
ments can he obtained in 112 Old Main.
Seniors who turned in 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 subsequewt days.
Sperry Gyroscope: company will be on campus Monday,
Oct. 30, They are interested in midyear D.S. graduates in
electrical engineering who are in the upper half of their
class; 1951 PhD candidates in electrical engineering and
Physics; M.S. candidates in electrical engtheoring and
physics who graduate not later than June 1951. The priority
system will not be in effect for this announcement
Curtiss-Wright corporation, propellor division, in Cald
well, N.J. will interview midyear graduates in aeronautical
engineering, electrical engineering and mechanical engineer
ing at the B.S. and M.S. levels on Tuesday, Nov. 7.
General Fireproofing company, Ortho Pharmaceutical cor
poration, Youngstown Sheet and Tube, and Timken Roller
Bearing company will be represented by Dr. Paul E. Wil
liams' who will interview January graduates on Wednesday,
Nov. 8. Dr. Williams is interested in students in C&F, A&L,
Met., Mining Eng„ zoology, Phys. Ed. C.E., 1.E., M.E., Pre-
Med, and accounting. Applicants should be in the upper
half of their class. Positions available are primarily sales.
The priority system will not be in effect for this announce
ment.
For information concerning the following jobs, applicants
should atop in 112 Old Main.
Men to sell refreshments and cushions at foot
ball game Saturday.
Men to work as substitute waiters and dish
washers for Homecoming weekend.
Men to work as orderly at Centre County
hospital.
Men from West Dorms to work breakfasts.
IT PAYS TO Multilithing .
ADVERTISE . All Types of Printing
With
Collegian .Classifieds Commerc
Bldg., ialPrinlin gStateColle Ige nc.
Glennland
. .
WARNER BrioTH,ERs •
111.11.TTANY NOW! -
Tonite—Doors Open 6:45 At Your
Featuretime 7:44, 9:51 Warner Theatre
0 'ALEXANDER KORDA'
:41 • , ,elear,e4
• , Calhoun:
ele4€4
1,4110/1 TON Yvonne DeCarlo
Richard Green
74,430i.274 LIFE agett.OVES.
,‹
"DESERT
REMBRANITLi HAWK"
wire.
Gertrude LAWRENCE
ELSA LANCHESTER S 7
late
EDWARp DHAPMAN
Kathryn Grayson
—EXTRA ADDED— Mario Lanza
"RUBENS" 'TOAST OF
One of the Most NEW ORLEANS'
Arti'stic Pictures of the Year
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT
Herbert Stein
Little Man On Cam
"No this is NOT chem. lab:"
Alumni-
(Continued from page one)
for alumni only. The cider party
will continue - throughout the
alumni dance, scheduled for 9
P.M. and lasting until 12:30 a,m.
Gene Magill and his orclrstra
will provide the music for the at.
fair.
Lehman said the dance and
party, an annual event, is limited
to alumni only because there
"simply it not enough room in
Rec hall for the student body and
the returning alumni."
Hort Show Set
For Homecoming
Spurred by last year's crowds
of over 9,000 visitors, students of
Penn State's Horticultural club
expect over 10,000 to view the
annual Hort Show Oct. 28 and
29.
The annual show, featuring all
phases of vegetable, fruit, and
ornamental horticulture, is an
event of Alumni Homecoming
weekend at the College.
Dominic Palumbo, Jr„ of Mt.
Lebanon, Pittsburgh, is manager
of this year's show which empha
sizes the theme "Your Backyard."
The pavilion on Ag Hill is being
converted into a huge landscaped
backyard setting, with actual
dwarf fruit trees, a pool, grassy
lawns, vegetable gardens, and
flower arrangements —a 11 with
growing plants.
STATE COLLEGE
Boalsburg Aulo
Effective Sept. 24, 1950 State College, Penna.
Eastern Standard Time
Lv. State College 11:00 A.M. 4:30 P.M. 7:00 P.M
Ar. Lewistown
Lv. Lewistown
Ar. State College
Make Direct Connections With East-Bound .Trains
12:29 P.M.-5:57 P.M., Fri: & Sunday 8:22 P.M.
12:49 p.m. - 7:25 p.m.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1950
Home Ec To Get
Eight On Council
The number of representatives
to be elected to the Home Eco
nomics student council has been
changed from six to eight, said
Huber Stevens: president of the
council.
Freshman to be elected include
one from hotel administration
and two from home economics.
Sophomores will 'include one
from hotel, administration and
four from home economics.
Nominations for student coun
cil• elections will close Friday.
Schools holding nominations this
week are. Chemistry and Physics,
Education, Engineering, Home
Economics, Liberal Arts, Mineral
Industries, and Physical Edu
cation.
Council Acts To Send
Collegian To Centers
The Education student council
decided at its last meeting to take
action on the suggestion that The
Daily Collegian be sent to each
of. five undergraduate centers.
The council also moved to op
pose the cutting down of part
of Hort Woods for a parking lot
and said that turning it into a
memorial park or, even letting it
grow wild were preferable altern
atives.
It also appointed Perry Posocco
as council delegate to the P.S.C.A.
"Religion-in-Life" meeting.
- LEWISTOWN
Bus Line, Inc.
Daily Daily Fri. & Sat.
Only
12:05 P.M. 5:35 P.M. 8:05 P.M
12:55 P.M. 7:30 P.M. 10:00 P.M.
2:00 P.M. 8:35 P.M. 11:05 P.M
West-Bound Trains
Fri. & Sun. 9:52 p.m.
By Bib