PAGE FOUR. 11. r• Elattg Collegian .ticeessor to THE — PREE LANCE. est. 7881 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 ander the act of March 3. 1879. Collegian editorials represent the viewpoints of the writers net necessarily the policy of the newspaper. Unsigned edi• teriala are by :he editor. Dean Gladfelter Editor STAFF THIS ISSUE - Night editor: Ernie Moore; copy editors: Paul Poorman, Len Kolasinski; assistants: Jake Highton, Sally Miller, Bob Landis, Virginia Schar, Bobbie Betancourt. Advertising staff: Bob Leyburn, Dorothy Naveen, Don Jackel, Reddie Morgan, Alison Morley, Marty Cooper, Eliabeth Slotta, Morris Shanken. Improved System For Coed Elections WSGA and WRA are takin an ambitibus step towards more enlightened elections with their new self-nomination plan. Indeed, the old one needed an uplift. Under it, the WSGA senate and WRA board of control drew up slates of candidates, which were augmented at mass meetings. The mass meetings were usually poorly attended and unorganied. As a result, the chosen candidates were not aware of the duties of their • offices, campaigns were inad equate, and the turnout at the polls was un satisfactory. ALL OF THESE ILLS are offered due remedy in this new procedure. Every woman student has the opportunity to seek nomination, upon filing an application and being interviewed by an application board. This board, in addition, primes the girls on the duties of their positions. Thus, it can be presumed that those who display this initiative are interested in holding office. The innovations do not end here. With the hope of getting the women students acquainted with their candidates, both WSGA and WRA are campaigning for all their office-seekers. They introduce the candidates at house meet ings and display posteri containing uniform pictures in the dormitory lobbies. In order to make the individual campaigns more democratic and less annoying to the wo men students, restraints have been included in the election code. Door-to-door electioneering and posters in the lobbies are now tabodi, and candidates are restricted to a $3 campaign ex penditures minimum. • GRANTED there are loose joints in this frame work—there are still no clear-cut standards for eliminating applicants. But, the foundation is firmly based on democratic election procedures, the enthusiasm has been excellent; the possibili ties are manifold. The final proof will be in the ballot boxes on March 15. Safety Valve . . . . Beg Breakfasts TO THE EDITOR: In reference to the num bers in the Foods building story by Bettie Loux (March 7), I have made some calculations which don't seem to check too closely with those in the article. Assuming that breakfast rolls are four inches square, one can calculate that the College must produce 722,004 rolls to place them end to end for 45.6 miles. This is done by taking 45.6 miles times 5280 feet per mile times 12 inches per foot, 'and dividing by four inches per roll. Even if 10,000 students ate in the dorms, it is doubtful that each student eats 72 rolls for breakfast. My figures may be off by several hundred thousand but that's still a lot of rolls. The amount of hot cereal consumed is another point I would like to argue. Modern trailer tank cars hold 4000 to 5000 gallons of material. Hot cereal is usually served in the dorms in four ounce ladles. Calculating in the following man- Students! Remember, you have only four days at home before Easter so bring those drab,. winter clothes to us TODAY and we'll put Spring in your wardrobe. You'll lead the Easter Parade in clothes expertly cleaned and pressed by— PORTAGE CLEANERS Pickup and Delivery New Location PHONE 2632 118 S. Pugh St. Owen E. Landon Business Mgr. —Janet Rosen THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Case For Retaining Present Sheepskin Serious consideration is now being given to the possibility of altering the College's diploma. Plans advanced call for a reduction in size from tie present 14 x 17 to about a quarter of that. THE CAUSE FOR THE CHANGE was set forth and vigorously supported in a recent edi torial on this page. The article went so far as to call the conventional_sheepskin a "monstrosity," cited it as inconvenient, and claimed that it had outlived its usefulnes. Let us not be so hasty to part with tradition. Let us remember that this completion of four years in college, this conferring of a degree, is a big thing, and that it merits big recognition— physically big. Let us remember for how long the sheepskin has been the symbol of this big achievement, until the slang term "sheepskin" has become synonymous with the technical "diploma." NOW ONE ARGUMENT ADVANCED against the "monstrosity" is that "few students will frame and hang on their living room walls something of that size." Well, few students will frame and hang on their living room walls di plomas of any size—it isn't being done in living rooms nowadays. And no matter how small the apartment, if a student does want to frame his diploma, he'll want to enough so that he can dig up a wall bigger than 14 x 17. Many have said that diplomas should be handed out individually to graduates by the President. This is a wonderful idea. They also say it would be easier to give out the small di plomas than the big ones. This is an annoying idea. Must we always do things the easy, ex- pedient way? Must we sacrifice a rather fine tradition for convenience's sake? Certainly it would be easier to give out the small shingles, but as long as it is not impossible to give out the big ones, the argument is not valid. So, in summary, cabinet and the administra tion would do well to think long and hard about abridging the diploma. For when students are graduated, they want and deserve a true di ploma, not an elaborate lower division certifi cate. Gazette . Friday, March 9 BEGINNERS' HEBREW class, Hillel founda tion, 4 p.m. PENN STATE BIBLE fellowship, 405 Old Main, 7:30 p.m. PENNS, VALLEY SKI club, square dance, Faith Reformed church, 9-12 ' COLLEGE PLACEMENT Socony Vacuum will interview June graduates at B.S. level in Chem. Eng., Geo-phys., E.E., and C.E., at M.S. level in Geol. Monday, March 19. Columbia Engineering corp. would like to have preliminary application blanks from June graduates in Chem. Eng., C.E., E.E., and M.E.; blanks obtainable before Tuesday, March 20. American Smelting & Refining company will interview June graduates in Metal. Monday, March 19. General Motors corp. will interview juniors or graduate students interested in summer employment in E.E., Chem. Eng., and Metal. Monday, March 19. Campbell Soup company will interview' June graduates in Ag-Bio.-Chem., Bact., Chem. Eng., M.E., Phys., Org. Chem., Biol., Ag Ed., Aa . . Ec., Bot., Acct., and Agron. Monday, March 19. General Motors corp. will interview June graduates at the B.S. or M.S. level in M.E.. 1.E., E.E., Chem. Eng., Chem.. Metal.,Acct., Eng. Mech., Aero. Eng., and at M.S. ar Ph.D. leve in Phys. Monday, March 19. ner, one comes to the conclusion a great many people eat more than their fair share of cereal. Calculations: 128 ounces per gallon divided by four ounces per serving times 10,000 gallons gives the rather large number of 320,000 serv ings. Again assuming 10,000 students eat in the dorms, one cannot visualize anyone eating 32 bowls of cereal each morning. By the way, just why would anyone want to place breakfast rolls end to end from here to Altoona? —James Goodwin Ed. Note—Wouldn't have enough rolls to go any further. Ron Bonn PETE'S PLACE Our Specialties Boneless Sirloin Steaks Ham Steaks Pork Chops Sea Foods Lunches Atop Nittany Mt. Turn Right At Pleasant Gap On Route 53 Little Man On Campus "It's of no use to try to impress me, Worthal. I'm afraid I'll still have to put you on probation!' Business School For. Penn State By JACK BODDINGTON (The second of two articles dealing with the expansion of business education at Penn State.) With the Department of Economics and Commerce facing the immediate problem of how to continue its remarkable progress toward a notable standing in the field of business education, it would seem essential that a solution be put into operation as soon as possible.. The most complete and logical solution is the establish ment of a separate school of , business. THE PRESENT STAFF and administration of the department is today is proving its ability, there fore, most of the necessary man- Power for such a plan is at the College's disposal. Additions would be necessary only as fur ther expansion justified them. What would be the major ad vantages of the school? First of all„sttnients desiring a corn- . prehensive education in spe cialized business fields have been seriously hainpered by 'rather heavy liberal arts re quirements, and recent sugges tions by the LA planning com mittee hint at an even gredter burden. With rninirqum basic commerce requirements 'added, the student under the present system will have only about 15 semester hours at his disposal for those subjects most impor tanf in his selected field. Language requirements, absent in the curricula of most of the nation's better business schools (including Bucknell, University of. Pittsburgh, and University of JUST IN TIME FOR EASTER Pennshire again comes through with a brand new selection of GABARDINES ':',:giV.T.K:i4.. tc ... ... 0 ! ; *"erWr o 77- 1 2i;i:.,.. P 1 1 ' ; . • ‘..';':" ti; / - -., -- ).•-i, • N%nfA ...,., t...k , ,,, •1:',1 , 4 1 .....* "I . i,..:t . .. - , 0 g ie ;. ~ v., • ::::i..-,i; ••:: 41' . . Vs.. p , r. lik,„ll . .:Erk:4 •fi'.. , ,,i'....:',.:•.• %..:•:.:-:.:::•.:.•• p i t . ~,:.;. ~,.:., ..,:..?:Avf,i., , , ..,•.:...,..; r•,...:. , , , .... f., ,,, • • ••.1.- , - k t......?.t, , '..:::•:..1T. , i:' . ii.; , •: . i .. ; .. ii. i•.: ~ . ,, , , , .., i . ; ' ,...: 1 1 . !;.5 .i .... .v: : ., , ~,*,... : I'il- . ::,;.-' q.k..:.'...., k a tt 112 S. Frazier St. FRIDAY, MARCH. 9, 1951 By Bibler Li Pennsylvania), have in the past caused many students interested in commerce to avoid the curric ulum and even the College. Cer-- tainly the value of a broad edu cation cannot be ignored, but a separate school of business could more effectively adjust its own requirements to the needs of its students. Fr e e semester hours, now pitifully inadequate for specialization, would be avail able for concentrated study in ac counting, marketing, retailing an d merchandising, insurance; etc. AS DR. W. N. LEONARD, head of the department, has ob= served, there should not be a clash between vocational and academic work. There is now that clash. A second advantage would lie in the raising of 'standards and subsequently more rapid acceptance in the business (Continued on page five) TANS, BLUES,. GREYS, SKIPPERS and BROWNS SIZES 35 to 46 LONGS, REGULARS, SHORTS '22.50 A SELECTION THAT WILL SET YOUR HEART TO THE TUNE OF SPRING! Next Door to City Hall _ "P. 4