f AGE TWO Sally Collegian Successor to THE FREE LANCE, cat. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday mornings in rtaaire during the College year by the staff of The Daily Collegian of The Pennsylvania Siate College. Cntered as second-class matter July 5, 1934, at the State College, Pa., Post Office under the act of March 3. 1879. Dean Gladfelter Editor STAFF THIS ISSUE Night editor: Bob Schooley; assistant night editor: Jan. Herd; copy editor: Jack Garretson- Butt; assistants: John Sheppard, John Pak kanen. A Temptation Cheating on examinations is one of the great est temptations facing students, for much of their futures rests on the grades they make in college. Unless those grades are sufficiently high, the student will be unable to graduate, and much of his time, energy, and money will have been wasted. At final exam time the temptation is par ticularly great. Some students will go to any length to learn exam questions in advance or to take a crib to the final. THERE'S NO USE kidding ourselves into be lieving that all Penn State students are too honest to cheat on exams. And one of the worst injustices these students commit is directed at their fellow students, who also are cheated be cause they do not have the same dishonest ad vantage. Cheating is practiced on the Penn Stale, campus, and everyone on campus knows it. But aside from College regulations and proc toring of exams, the only defense which the vast majority of honest students has is a combined front against cheaters. The student who cheats on an exam will cheat in other phases of life. He is not the kind of person one would want for a friend and companion. If his dishonesty is to he counter acted, it must be by ostracism and disdain by letting him know that he will not be accepted by the other students with whom he must work and live. Blood Donors Following final exams, most students will go home for a few days. It would be worthwhile, during those days when there is free time, to visit the local blood bank. Blood donor centers throughout the country constantly are calling for additional contri butions, for the steady stream of war casual ties from the Korean war has swollen the normally great demand. Many communities in Pennsylvania are equipped with donor facilities. Donation of blood for medical use is a valu able service to fellow citizens. It is a project well worth contributing to during mid-year va cation. Friends Depart Six-hundred seniors will move out from Penn State following commencement ceremonies next week. Whatever their feelings about the event, there’ll be little opportunity of expres sing them in the midst of the last-day formal ceremonies. IN A COLLEGE of 11,000, it is not classes that move out into jobs, marriage, the army, etc., but rather individuals. Friends and acquaint ances are leaving. It is to them that individuals who are remaining behind wish good luck. Owen E. Landon Business Mgr. —J. A. John Ashbrook THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Safety Valve •.. Agrees With Writer TO THE EDITOR:- After reading the letter from Bucknell concerning the Penn State-Buck nell basketball game, I find myself in complete agreement with the writer. Your note showed a total ignorance of present-day basketball. Any team that has to Stop playing basketball to win games should not be on the floor. You should not make any unfavorable comments about an other school until Penn State has a modern basketball coach. Proverbial Straw TO THE EDITOR: Being rash I know,'but I must agree with the “boola-boola” boys from- Bucknell not in literary style but in the mes sage carried. I am prone to believe our coach has reached the end of his usefulness “A big time college needs a big time (basketball) cdach,” also. The Colgate game was bad enough, but the tactics used in the Bucknell game was the proverbial straw. I hate to give Bucknell any degree of satisfaction, but such is the case as I see it. Proper Attire TO THE EDITOR: The question of coats at dinner-time in the new dining hall was never a serious one with me. I felt that a coat was the proper attire for a college student at dinner time. Now I feel that if the College demands proper attire for the employees in the kitchen. I can hardly believe, with any stretch of the imagination, that the yellow and blue shirt of the regulation gym suit is proper attire for kitchen help. Such a shirt is what one employee wore at dinner time tonight. I have been to enough gym classes to know that one doesn't come from phys. ed. smelling like a rose. I feel that if this situation is brought to the attention of the proper people something will be done to remedy it. ■■ P.S.—lf the fellow described above is in such financial straits that he can not afford a shirt, I will be glad to give him one of mine. Gazette... Thursday, January 18 CIRCLE and Square club, 100 Horticulture, 7 p.m. 1 FORRESTRY society, 105 Forestry, 7 p.m. FRENCH dub, election of officers, 303 Old Main, 7 p.m. WRA outing, 2 White hall, 7 p.m. WRA swimming, White hall pool, 7 p.m. STUDENT EMPLOYMENT F«r Information concerning the following job*, applicants •fc+eU stop In 111 014 Main. STUDENT to care for two children between Jan. 21-26; children aged 1% and 5; cash plus food in exchange. HOUSE TO HOUSE SALESMEN for Valen tine candy; this vicinity between now and Feb. 1. FACTORY DEMONSTRATOR for electrical appliance company to work Saturdays this vi cinity; excellent hourly wage; interviews being scheduled. OFF- CAMPUS RESIDENTS for substitute duty in women’s dining hall; remuneration in meals. COLLEGE HOSPITAL Patients: Gwendolyn Allen, Marlin Brenner, Donald Craul, George Elder, Glenn Wiggins, Joseph Isajewicz, Emerson Knyrim, Ronald Krape, Haralyn Levy, Lawrence Lindberg, Rob ert Mazeikis, Albert Pettit, David Pierson, John Sheridan/ Sorley Snyder, and William Worth ington. , • Richard Staples A Basketball Fan G. Roderick Snyder Little Man "Oh! 1 don't mind not having paper it helps my metnory if I just write on anything." West Dorms Hove Varied Music Diet The music in the West dorm dining commons is a balanced musical diet with appetizer, entree,' and dessert, according to Hum mell Fishburn, professor of music education. The men eating in the West dorm dining hall hear approxi mately one hour of varied music at noon and another hour during the evening meal. The programs, which are posted in the lounge, start with light selections by mod erns like George Gershwin .and Jerome Kern, and continue with short selections from the classics. They conclude with lighter works “Nobody is trying to stuff classical music down the men’s throats,” Fishburn said. “That is why we have such varied music. We want to appeal to everyone’s taste.” L-P Records The music is all on long-play ing records, and. at present the library consists of about 22 hours of music, six hours of sympho nies, four and a half hours of modern American music, four hours of ballets and dances, three hours of suites, one and a half hours of tone poems, and three hours of other music. When com plete, the library will consist of about 50 hours of music. Fishburn has made the project THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1851 'll Campus “his baby” and spent the Christ mas vacation making selections of music to be bought and timing each selection. He has the pro grams set up so that none runs less than 58 minutes' and npne more than 62. No Commercial Music The programs are free of com mercial music of all sorts.. There will Be no swing music, Fishburn said, because the men can get enough of that over the radio and on the snack bar juke box. “The jazz idiom, too, is heard often and much of it is of an impermanent nature. AH of the music we play during meals will be as good a hundred years from now as it is, today.” For Best Results Use Collegian Classified By Bibler