PAGE FOUR Otg• Daily Collegian Successor W ENE FREE LANCE, est. 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 6, 1934, at the State College, Pa., Post Office under the act of March 8, 1879. Collegian editorials represent the viewpoints of the writ. era, not necessarily the policy of the newspaper. Unaignee editorials are by the editor. Mary Krasnansky , Edward Shanken Editor Business Mgr. Managing Ed., Ron Bonn; City Ed., George Glazer; Sports • Ed.. Ernie Moore; Edit. Dir., Bud Fenton; Makeup Ed., Moylan Mills; Wire Ed., Len Kolasinski; Society Ed., Carolyn Barrett; Feature Ed., Rosemary Delahantyt Asst. City Ed.. Lee Stern; Asst. Sports Eds., Dave Colton, Bob Vosburg; Asst. Society Ed., Greta Weaver; Librarian, Bob Schooley; Exchange Ed.. Paul Beighley; Senior Board. Paul Doorman. Asst. Bus. Mgr., Jerry Clibanoff; Advertising Mgr., Bob Leyburn; National Adv. Mgr., Howard Boleky; Circulation Co-Mgrs., Jack Horsford, Joe Sutovsky, Personnel Mgr., Carolyn Alley; promotion Co-Mgrs., Bob Koons, Melvin Glass; Classified Adv. Mgr., Laryn Sax; Office Mgr., Tema Kleber; Secretary, Nan Bierman; Senior Board, Don Jacket Dorothy Naveen, Joan Morosini. STAFF THIS ISSUE Editorial staff: 'Joan Kuntz, night editor; Mimi Ungar, Bob Fraser, copy editors; Bob Schoellkopf, Evelyn Kielar, Nancy Meyers, Helen Luyben, Jim Peters, assistants. Ad staff: Bette Agnevi, Nan Bierman, Frank Kelly. Hell Week Hazing Is on the Way Out The hell week activities of fraternities have often been the target of critics of the fraternity system. It is a news item worthy of note, there fore, when Judge Frank H. Myers, past chair man of the National Interfraternity Conference, tells fraternity men that some hazing and hell week activities are "sadistic" and absolutely without justification and should be eliminated. Judge Myers' comments on hell week prac tices were made at the second annual InterfraL ternity Council Association of Fraternity Counselors banquet Saturday night at the Nittany Lion -Inn. The IFC would do well to take seriously the words of Judge Myers. The IFC began to act against detrimental hell week activities last year when it ruled that fraternity pledges may not wear any dis tinguishing signS on campus and recommended that pledges be allowed several hours of sleep during hell week. Already this year the IFC has taken addi tional action on _ the - hell _week .problem. The IFC set up a civic responsibilities committee through which individual fraternities can ob tain jobs for pledges to do during hell week. In, the meantime, a great many college fra ternity systems have abandoned hell week hazing practices. Hell week has become a help week on these campuses. The IFC has started along the path toward the elimination of hell week hazing. Judge Myers' words should be used as a keynote toward the establishment of a definite and enforcable IFC regulation outlawing detri mental hell week practices. Some of these practices—such as keeping pledges awake through the night, compelling them to submit to humiliation and physical punishment, forcing them to do such useless work as shoveling a pile of coal from one end of a cellar to the other—are, as Judge Myers said, "sadistic" and absobitely without justifi cation. Such practices should be eliminated by the IFC for the betterment of the fraternity system and for the protection of the best interests of fraternity men. As IFC President Stan Wengert said in a recent statement to fraternity men in the iIFC newsletter, fraternity men, as part of the college community, have a responsibilty to the college, the state, and the nation. That re soonsibility is to make the most of the educa tional opportunities made possible by the tax payers and by the action of the government in deferring college men from the draft so that they may complete their education. Any phase of fraternity life which inter feres with the primary purpose of college stu dents—getting as good an education as is possible—is standing in the way of fraternity men fulfilling that responsibility. And those phases of fraternity life which do interfere with the fulfillment of that supreme obligation should be eliminated. Guess the Game Score By Quarters TEAM 11 12 13 14 ITotalt •:. I Syr,acuse • I I . 1 . I I . I , I Penn State I I I . I I I 1 5,44., - ' - Attach This Clipping To A Penn State •>-? .2 4r7' , Laundry Slip and Be • Sure It Is In The , 4 0 0•-• Office Before Game Time. The Nearest \ Guess Wins! . 1. I $lO FREE LAUNDRY Winner for Purdue Penn State game • Mr. Pyle, 330 S. Burrowes . PENN - STATE LAUNDRY 320 S. Beaver Avenue Phone" 3261 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE; PENNSYLVAI4IA. Safety Valv e-- Campus• Women Are Not Mature, by Their Own Admittance TO THE EDITOR: A strange sociological phenomenon appears to have occured on our campus. Currently there is an issue of whether or not certain women's organizations should publish their election statistics, a recognized standard procedure in our democratic society. Basically the • question is: Are the Penn State coeds emotionally mature enough to govern themselves by standard democratic procedure? Strangely, the men students believe overwhelm ingly that Penn State coeds are sufficiently ma ture—even stranger the Penn State coeds be lieve they are not mature! If these facts be true, the men should not force democracy on these women—instead the coeds should be treated in a kindly and paternal manner by the- men. Of course the immature coeds could not be. permitted to have voice in the direction of All-College affairs.' I am not suggesting, however, that women should be left out of college life; there are many campus activ ities more commensurate with - their emotional maturity. Gazette . . Thursday, November 7 ACCOUNTING CLUB, Beta Sigma Rho, 7 p.m. ALPHA RHO OMEGA, 303 Old Main, 7:30 p.m. AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 119 Os mond, 7:30 p.m. BEGINNERS' HEBREW CLASS, Hillel, 7 p.m. CENTRAL PROMOTION AGENCY, 208 Wil lard Hall, 7' p:m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION, 304 Old Main, 6:45 p.m. COLLEGIAN editorial candidates, 9 Carnegie Hall, 7 p.m. DELTA NU ALPHA, 13 Sparks, 7 p.m. FORESTRY SOCIETY, 105 White Hall, 7 p.m. LION PARTY publicity, promotion and dis tribution committees, 214 Willard Hall, 7 p.m. JUNIOR CLASS project committee, McEl wain Lounge, 6:15 p.m. NEWMAN CLUB, scholastic philosophy lec ture-discussion, 317 Willard Hall, 7:15 p.m. NITTANY GROTTO, 318 Frear Lab., 7:30 is .m. PHILOSOPHY CLUB, 203 Willard Hall, 8 PI LAMBDA SIGMA, Omega Psi Phi, 8:30 m. ,-- WRA HOCKEY, Holmes Field, 4 p.m. WRA SWIMMING, White Hall pool, 7 p.m. COLLEGE HOSPITAL - Robert Abelove, Richard Armstrong, David Ar nold, Carol Babb, Jean Backman, Gloria Bliss, George Brown, Lewis Dow, Virginia Goyne, Henry Gruber, Larry Henry, Barbara Hyman, Richard Kartlick, Corrinne Katz, Archie Kinder, George Livingston, Louise Mikolaechik, John Mooney, Patricia Redlich, Kenneth Shearer, Marjorie Smith. AT THE MOVIES CATHAUM: The Tanks Are Coming STATE: The Prowler ' NITTANY: Quartet STARLITE DRIVE IN: Joan of Arc COLLEGE PLACEMENT General 'Electric Co. will interview January graduates in E.E., M.E., Phys. and I.E. Thursday, Nov. 10. Philco Corp. will interview electrical and mechanical engineers at the B.S. and M.S. level Tuesday, Nov. 13. Aluminum Co. of America will interview graduates at all levels in Metal., Ch.E., M.E., E.E., and Analytical Chem. Monday, Nov. 12. They will also interview Ph.D candidates in Physical Chem. Hagan Corp. will interview January graduates in E.E., M.E.. and Ch.E. Monday, Nov. 19. Hughes Aircraft Co. will interview graduates at all levels in Phys. and E.E. Friday, Nov. 'l6. Reliance Electric and Engineering Co. will interview January graduates in E.E. and M.E. Thursday, Nov. 15. ' Philadelphia Naval Shipyard will interview January graduates in M.E., E.E., and Arch.E. Wednesday, Nov. 14. They will also interview students with an ad vanced degree or experience in Metal. and Bact. Westinghouse Air Brake Co. will interview January graduates in M.E. and I.E. Monday, Nov. 19. . STUDENT EMPLOYMENT Man to set pins for bowling league. Piano player for Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday 'Student wife or student to cook noon meal. Receptionist for doctor's office in• mornings. Man. for radio repair. • Bass player for orchestra. Woman for cull time employment during holiday sea son in toy department. Those students who will be available' for employment during the Thanksgiving holiday, pleale leave their names at the Student Employment, Office. —Bill Alexander Little Man, On campus "Don't worry about my experiment, Professor. I wasn't doing anything . very important anyway." Interpreting the News Korean Talks Need Deadline By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst Current developments in the Korean truce negotiations suggest the time may be approaching when the United States and her United Nations allies will have to consider some sort of deadline at which the negotiations must turn toward peice or, .a resump tion of full-scale war. One thing the Allies cannot afford to do, in the general world situation, is to let the Kremlin get the idea that, while they are willing to fight the cold war, they are unwilling to fight a hot war, even in Korea. That would rob the containment program of all its strength. Of course there has never been any illusion about the possibility of a real peace settlement in Ko rea. The limit of Allied hopes regarding the negotiations ha s been a cease=fire on terms which would not prejudice their entire position in the Far East. Communist Suggestion. The latest Communist, suggest ion in the negotiations, which now have been going on nearly half a year, shows little or no indica tion of a desire even to meet the minimum allied' requirements for cease fire. The Reds suggest that the fighting stop •where it is; and that the questions of enforcement of the armistice and exchange of war prisoners be negotiated there after. This would mean robbing the Allies of their ability 'to put on military pressure for settlement. Russian Attempt The whole bUsiness seems to be tied up with • Russia's attempts to prevent the, concentration of al lied strength in Europe, - delaying the integration of West Germany 'SMART FROM THE - ST,T° • When walking or dancing Or just looking smart, . A paii of GLICK'S shoes _ 'ou'll love from the start. GLICK'S SHOES _THURSDAY, - NOVEM.I3ERt'`.B x'1951 ' By Bibler into the European defense pro gram and aiding th e Russian effOrt to create a unified Ger many under conditions which will permit COmmunist infiltratidn- as in Czechoslovakia. - The prosecution of a half-war in Korea, while insincere truce negotiations continue indefinitely, fits admirably into this picture from the Red standpoint. The State department always has been doubtful that the Coin munists wanted a truce.. High officials have expressed the be lief that the chance for agree ment was about one in five. It has seemed to me that the Reds really needed a truce because of the likelihood that the Allies would either win the war or force Russia, against her - wilt, 'in to more direct intervention.. Collegian Promotes 2 Rob e r t Fraser and . Mildred Martin have been promoted to the senior board of the Daily Collegian, Marvin Krasnansky, editor, announced yesterday. ' f They will serve as co-librar ians, Krasnansky said, replacing Robert Schooley who will be leaving the College for service in December.