PAGE SIX 0* Bugg Collegian Successor to THE FREE LANCE, eat. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday mornings inclusive 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 writ ers, not necessarily the policy of the newspaper. Unsigned editorials are by the editor. Mary Krasnanslry Edward Shanken Editor Business Mgr. VOL. 52 No. 2 Managing Ed., Ron Bonn; City Ed., George Glimer; Sports Ed., Ernie Moore; Edit. Dir., Bud Fenton; Asst. to the Ed., Moylan Mills; Wire Ed., Len Kolasineki; So ciety Ed., Carolyn Barrett; Feature Ed., Rosemary Dela hanty; Asat. City Ed., Paul Doorman; Asst. Sports Eds., Dave Colton, Robert Vosburg: Asst. Society Ed., Greta Weaver; Librarian, Bob Schooley; Exchange Ed., Paul Beighley; Senior Board, Lee Stern. STAFF THIS ISSUE Jim Gromiller, night editor; Bob Fraser, copy editor; Lynn Kahanowitz, Bob Vosburg, La \Tonne Althouse, Arnie Bloom, Rae Delle Donne, Joan Lewandowski, and Al Goodman, assistants. Ad Staff—Bob Koons, Ed Shanken, Bob Ley burn, Howard Boleky. e. Customs Purpose Is To Unify Frosh Monday at 7 a.m. customs will start for some MX) freshmen.' Last year when frosh returned to the campus en masse for the first time since the war, there was some doubt that a customs program could be reinstated. There were those who had strong doubts that such a program was worth re establishing at all. Even hard-bitten opponents of customs haie altered their opinions as a result of the sensible manner in which the program was enforced last year. Customs in 1950 were not vicious. They welded together a freshman class as spirited as those of the traditional rah-rah days of college life. Customs were not silly and are still not silly. However, what customs did not establish last year was that over the years viciousness would not become e part •of the program. Whether viciousness will ever become a part of customs is a question which we who are now at Penn State must answer. • That answer must be no. There is a tendency for those who have under gone customs at other colleges to have the attitude, Now it's our turn, and are we going to let those frosh have itl" We hope that this sludl not be -the attitude of he presenn sopho moae class, or of any other segment of the student population. The purpose of customs, as it was ably stated , by David Mg:itchier, Tribunal chairman, is not to humiliate the frosh. The purpose of customs is to acquaint them with Penn State, its campus, its songs and cheers, and its traditions. The purpose of customs is to mold the' class into a solid. unit. None of these purposes can be accomplished by enforcing customs with an iron hand, by cracking the whip, by making the freshmen cower in the presence of upperclassmen. As for the frosh, they would do well to abide by the regulations, for while customs will not be vicious, they - will be enforced. And violators will be punished. Customs can be a lot of good, dela fun, for both the frosh and the upperclassmen. So long as they are "fun, and remain clean they will be good. When they cease to retain these qualities they will be of no value to Penn State. If and when that day should ever come, we would be the first to advocate that they be removed from the Penn State scene. Frosh Eligible And Needed In All Sports Penn State will not be represented by fresh men athletic teams this year as a result of a ruling by the Eastern Intercollegiate Confer ence declaring freshmen eligible for varsity sports this year. The fact that Penn State will not have fresh men teams should not prevent the frosh from going out for the varsity sports. Since there are no frosh teams and consequently no frosh coaches, the varsity coaches are going to have to take a closer look at the freshmen athletes this year because they are the varsity players of the future. In many of the varsity sports, the freshmen trying out will not be able to .break into the starting lineup but working out with the var sity players give them needed experience for their next three years. In other sports such as lacrosse, tennis, soccer, and track, a freshman who has competed in any one of those sports in high school stands a good chance of breaking into the lineup in his first year. In a sport such as lacrosse which is not widely played in high schoolS,- freshmen with out any experience whatsoever are encouraged to come out and learn the game. Better than 50 per cent of the players on Penn State's la:- crosse team each year have never played la crosse before coming to college. Don't let the fact that there will be no frosh teams this year keep you freshmen from going out for the team. Penn • State welcomes the freshman athlete/ Ernie Moons A , r w TAl)rrit Men's Housixtg File Again in Operation • Thanks to the work of AIM representatives, a men's housing card will again be available for campus groups in the Dean of Men's office. A new, revised card has been added to the registration procedure for the -first time since 1948. Just why a valuable card such as the housing card was dropped is a mystery. The intervening years have proved that a complete file on campus, town, and fraternity men is needed for quick reference by campus groups. These groups have struggled through without the file until AIM, in cooperation with Inter fraternity council, designed the card and set the system in motion last semester and this summer. AIM, of course, will benefit directly from the card system. Now that a complete file of men living in town will be available again, AIM will be able to set up Town council in a matter of weeks instead of the two months it took Town council to organize last year. , Not only will AIM benefit, but the Campus Chest will be able to use the cards in making speedy pledge contacts. Also, a temporary tele phone directory will be made from the cards as soon after registration as possible for use by telephone operators until the' Student Directory is printed. Since the' cards will be kept perma nently in the dean of men's office, the dean .of men and his staff will be able to make use of the cards in a variety of ways. , But the important thing is that every man on campus can be located in a matter of •minutes by simply flipping through a file, months before the Student Directory will be available. Thanks are due AIM and IFC and the other cooperating groups for giving their time and finances to re-establish the housing card which should never have been dropped in the first place. Promise. Fulfilled Students returning to campus, this past week might have been mildly surprised that , only one of the West Dorms' had been converted to housing women students. Toward the dose of last semester it:had been. announced that four of the West Dorms would be turned over to women in the fall. The ex planation was that as a result of the world situation, the College planned to enroll a great er number of women than ever before in order to make up an expected drop in male enroll ment. At that time President Eisenhower stressed that the move had been taken with great reluctance and that the dorms would be re turned to the men as soon as conditions would return to normal. World conditions are far • from normal, but because of the Selective Service regulations favorable to college student, male enrollment has not drooped as much as had been expected last spring. The change would be temporary, President Eisenhower promised the students—and he has kept his promise. He has once again proved himself deserving of the title bestowed upon him last spring. Milton S. Eisenhower is indeed Penn State's Prexy. Active Government Students who have been wondering just what the functions of student government on the Penn State campus are received part of the answer Wednesday night if they were alert. The answer was in the form of the Starlight Dance, sponsored jointly by 'the Interfraternity Council, the Association of Independent Men, Leonides, and Panhellenic Council. Student government leaders, aware that there would be a lull in Orientation Week activities Wed nesday night, quickly .rounded up a band, and made the necessary arrangements—the result was a highly successful affair. Tomorrow's Fun Night in Recreation Hall is also sponsored by student government. These are only samplings of student govern ment activity on the Penn State campus. The Book Exchange is a student government project, as is .the drinking colloquy scheduled for later this semester, just to cite a few. . Penn State is proud of one of the nation's finest student governments. Good- student gov ernment is a Penn State tradition. It is a tradi tion that can be maintained only by continued student interest and support Fair Prices at BX The-Book Exchange, a project of-Ali-College Cabinet, is a non-profit, student-operated agency. Profits at the end of the year are re turned to the students. - The normal , BX markup on sales is 40 per cent. This markup is necessary since the BX is not permitted to offer "unfair" competition to local merchants. Twenty per cent of the markup goes toward meeting the costs of operation. The remaining 20 per- cent is returned to students. In the case of . customs, however, the only markup, and it is a small one, is to cover costs. The frosh can be assured they are not being taken' fOr a. ride• when they purchase their• customs , Moylan Mills Little Man On Campus By Bibler ~.,..,.. .... „..., worm, ¢? "se‘ne mow* . isrigo C• 441.4 it: 'rat m/srat.Y xampo e A r CA 4 s -------,-,,, '... r` 7-coMc pr octowiors Nance CAIIS "--•=z--' a 447 "By the time they get to. me they don't enrolling in." • Well, the lean years are over, the drought is past, and there is one entire, healthy American coed for every two and One. half men on the Penn State 'campus. Women are roving the campus in predatory bands, trapping un wary males in shadowy spaces behind obscure buildings. Certain fraternity men are driving about in large automobiles, permitting girls to whistle at them. Male at tendance at the Psych Clinic has dwindled to almost zero, while hordes of psychotic females have forced the staff to go on a 24- hour basis. The ratio has received a fur ther neutralization with the gradual disappearance of th e Air Force from campus. The danger of a• pitched struggle between 1200 embattled fliers and 8000 love-hungry collegiates has passed without the neces sity of evoking an airlift. Also in the past are such des perate and utopian suggestions as female Mormonism, male depor tation, and one obscure plan to set up a unique form of railroad tYPe timetable. And as sex approaches normal ity here—numerically speaking— the Old .Boys begin spinning their yarns by the fire, tales of how it was when they were young and in their prime, tales of the three, three and a half, and even four to one ratios of—the Filthy Forties. They remember the ill-starred get-acquainted mixers during other Orientation Weeks, with f our thousand slavering males lined up against the wall of Rec Hall while three horribly embar rassed brothers danced awk wardly with three beaming young ladies in the very center of the vast, bare floor, to the sound of a funeral, phonograph. They tell stories of waiting lists, with delays 'ranging from four and a half weeks for a coke date to three years and five months for an assignation. They' remember Simmons lob by so filled with Air Force per sonnel that an unfortunate cor poral saluting a passing lieuten ant, was beaten severely about the head and 'chest by• an entire infuriated company. They shed a reminiscent tear for the freshman who, after cus toms were lifted and he was fin ally allowed to speak to women, spent the rest of his life seeking one to speak to and died in the arms of a husky campus police man at the age of 95, murmuring, "Mother." They swap yarns ahout cer tain secretaries who flatly re fused dazzling • salaries and su perb working comakuts. from FRIDAY,. SEPTEMBER 14,',1951 Bonn Mot By RON BONN . _ great corpoiations, perferring to work for tiny wages and in dingy offices at Penn State, for reasons which they never spoke about, even to each other. They laugh grimly recalling the lines of silent, quivering men, not speaking, but making a faint sighing sound like the ocean from afar, which formed before the Corner Room to wat c h buses loaded with imports pull up and discharge their colorful burdens into waiting limousines marked with large Greek letters. But these are merely old men, spinning tales of. their youth be:- fore a glowing fire, with none but themselves to hear. The new generation is out getting phone numbers. Former. Student Films Jap Talks Sfc. Dither F. Kepler * Jr., a former student at the College, was in charge of filming and re cording the proceedings of the Japanese peace conference held in San Francisco. Kepler is in San Francisco with a crew of eight men. Prior to this assignment, Kepler and his crew had been filming the dam age wrought by . the Kansas flood. The films were made to be studied by congressional commit tees considering reclamation ap propriations for the stricken area. Kepler is permanently station ed at Long Island, N.Y., with the Second Signal Corps photo graphic platoon. Alma Mater Sung For Fifty Years This year marks the 50th anni versary of the Alma Mater. - The song was written by , Dr. Fred ' Lewis Pattee, who was a pro fessor of English and Rhetoric. Inspiration • for the Alma Mater was the hymn, "Lead Me - WO In April 1901, Dr. Pattee offered the song he wrote as 'a 'suggestion. The song wo n immediate ap proval. - Gen. James A. Beaver, presi dent, of the Board of Trustees, designated it as the -College's Alma. Mater. ow WHAT Iheyfre