PAGE FOUR :tie ilattg Collegian Successor to THE FREE LANCE, est. 1881 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 viewpoint of the writers, not necessarily the policy of the newspaper. Un signed editorials are by the editor. Dave PeUnits Franklin Kelly Editor • Business Mgr. Asst. Bus. Mgr., Richard Smith; Local Advertising Mgr., Phyllis Ralson; National Adv. Mgr., Alison Morley; Circu lation Co-Mgrs., Gretchen Henry, Kenneth Wolfe; Perspnnel Mgr., Elizabeth Agnew; Promotion Co-Mgrs., Marion Morgan, Therese Moslak; Classified Adv. Mgr., Eleanor ,Mazis; Office Mgr., Mary Ann Wertman; Secretary, Patricia Shaffer; Senior Board, Nancy Marcinek, Ruth Pierce, Barbara Potts. Betty Richardson, and Elizabeth Widman. Managing Ed., Andy McNeillie; City Ed., Dave Jones; Sports Ed., Jake Dighton; Copy Ed., Bettie Loix; Edit. Dir.; Jim Gromiller; Wire Ed., Chuck Henderson; Soc. Ed., Ginger Opoczenski; Asst. Sports Ed., Ted Soena; Asst. Soc. Ed.. LaVonne Althouse; Feature,. Ed.. Julie Ibbotson; Librarian. Dot Bennett; Exchange °Ed., Nancy Luetzel. Night editor, Sam Procopio; copy -editors, Nancy Meyers, Chuck Obertance; Assistants, Nancy Morris, Bev Dickinson, Leonard, Good man, Helen Luyben. Ad staff, Alison Morley, Phyllis Kalson. • Gift Choice, Honors Should Be Released Balloting for the senior class gift ended yes terday. Perhaps by now, the senior class gift committee has counted the votes and knows which of the five suggested gifts will receive the nod. We think the rest of the student body should be allowed to know, too. On Monday, however, the chairman of the class gift committee stated that the selection of the gift will not be announced until the Class Night exercises June 8. The same goes for the men's and women's honors spoon man, barrel man, bow girl, and the rest. We assume that the reason for withholding the information is to give added glamor and prestige to the Class Night proceedings. However, the seniors aren't the only ones interested in the results of the recent ballot ing, and if the current plan is followed, they are the only ones who will be around when the announcements are made; Part of the prestige of the • class honors is having people know about them. If the present policy is followed, there won't be many con gratulations for the winners. But even more important than the release of the winners of the class honors is the an nouncement of the gift selection. The gift com mittee must certainly be aware of the great student interest in the gift. The student body has every reason in the world to be interested, since it will be the students who will be affected by the selection. Announcing the balloting results now would not be setting a precedent. Last year the gift selection was announced at the Senior Ball. The year before, the class honors were an nounced as soon as the voting was - completed. The last issue of the Daily Collegian for this semester will be published on May 27. We think the gift committee should officially release the gift and class honors before then. The students want to know the results. Class Standing Affects Draft Status Sometime ago the Daily Collegian 'carried an explanative editorial •on draft deferment prospects. Of surprise to many students was the re quirement that students now holding academic deferments must reapply for new deferments for next fall and must apply at the Office of the Recorder, basement of Willard Hall, to have SSS Form 109 sent to their draft boards. This should, for convenience sake, be done before leaving the campus for'the summer. The present 11-S classifications which many students now hold must, by law, be reopened by local draft boards next month for review. To be eligible for a new 11-S deferment to continue College in the fall, a student draft board must be notified on Form 109. Students who filled out the white applica Lion cards for Form 109 at registration will have their draft boards notified of their schol astic -status by the College as soon as , the standings are available in June. However, all other students who now hold a scholastic deferment must fill out that card in the registrar's office. This report must be made each June. Stu dents who had their standing verified- last sum mer must repeat the process this year. Class 11-S deferments are granted at- the discretion of local boards and the demand for draftees in a particular board's area will probably indicate how many students with present deferments will be refused extensions. It can be deduced, however, that current sem ester class standing will play a big part in 'the local board decisions. _ • In any case, students should see that their local boards reecive Form 109. "This country would not be a land of Op- "Every man is born with the faculty of rea portunity, America would not be America, if son and the faculty'of speech, but why should the people were• shackled with government he be able to speak before he has anything to monopolies"—Calvin Coolidge say?"—Benjamin Whichcote —Jim Gromiller THE DAILY COLLEGIAN: STATE C'''''. 4 t,EGE. PENNSYLVANIA Alumni Association Beneficial to Gross • Each year about this time the Alumni Asso ciation: begins its drive for new members among the graduating seniors. Unfortunately, too many students never realize the advantages of belong ing' to the group. Too often they have to be coaxed to join. When graduation finally rolls around, the many complaints and dissatisfactions which have irked the students during the years at Penn State somehow seem to fade away. Most students, we are sure, feel some regret when they begin to realize that their school days are over and the grind of getting down to work is only beginning. • "Just what can the Alumni Association offer me?" is the question , many students raise. Here are a few of the many benefits: 1. First priority on reserved football tickets. 2. A subscription to the Penn State Alumni News magazine issued seven times a-year. 3. The Football Letter, a personalized re view of each week's game written by Ridge Riley, executive secretary of the Association. 4. A subscription to the Penn Stater, a quarterly newspaper. In addition to these things, the` Alumni As sociation sponsors 65 Penn State Alumni Clubs throughout the country which can aid young alumni in becoming acquainted in new corn munities. It also maintains the only active alumni ,mailing list. If seniors join the association on or before Commencement Day they can take advantage of the special price of $2. After that date the annual fee will be $3. For those who want to take Penn State with them when they grad uate, the Alumni Association offers the op portunity. Tapping Procedure Could Be Revised The junior and senior men's hat societies are at present engaged in spring tappings and ini tiations. In three of the four societies, the choice of tappees is made from letters of application ex plaining the applicant's qualifications. . Although this in one light appears as an ex cellent method of screening the most deserv ing students, a bit of thought will bring to the surface the fact that some equally deserving students are missed. The letters of application amount to little more than "Look how good I am" posters, and be it shyness, • conservatism, a ,dislike for the system. or carelessness,• or • what, there will always be some student who will not apply. Both junior hat societies, Blue Key and- An drocles,. and. Skull—and;,•Hones, senior - ..society, tap through the application method. Parmi Nous is the lone exception. The applications do give the societies some thing to go on, and,,m4e,it easier to tabulate an applicant's -points-upon-which the choke is, in most cases, made. The three societies which use the system, however, rely upon it too . ,theavily as a basis, for tapping, with the result that there are some deserving students' left out. Perhaps some system of nomination along with th e personal qualification application would be more effective in insuring that Membership in penti.State's hat societies will go to those Who aireinost deserving. Gazette• ' " . 4 1 : • Wednesday, May 21 AMERICAN SOCIETY OF AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS, 105 r i cultural Engineering, 7 p.m. DEAN OF MEN'S COFFEE HOUR, 109 Old Main; 4 p.in.,•: . . PENN STATE GRANGE meeting, 100 Hort iculture, 7 p.m. RIDING CLUB meeting, 217 Willard, 7 p.m. COLLEGE HOSPITAL Gelda Antokolitz,- Constanc e Belli, Jack Brougher, Semih Cayli, Anne Dinardo, - Evelyn Horwin, Janet Kebbe, Jack Kirkpatrick,' Karl Thomas, Lois Walken, Jerome Webster, Ronald Zwieganbaum. AT THE MOVIES CATHAUM: Mutiny 2:07, 4:01, 5:55,7:49, 9:43 NITTANY: Maginficent Obsession 7:08, 9:26 STARLITE DRIVE-IN: Teen Age, plus Youth Aflame STUDENT EMPLOYMENT ltxn to work for part of rent of downtown apartment. No children. • Clerking 20-30 hours per week during summer. Boy for lunch counter work 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. daily. Work for -room and board for summer or for summer and fall. Boys for work on College farms •Wednesday and/or Thursday. Opportunity for foreign student tro.work in western section of country. Housework. Room,• board, + transportation, and• good salary offered. Agricultural instructor to work in camp in Penna. Counselor in wild life, outdoor sports,- conservation, to work in State College area camp. Couple for local summer employment. COLLEGE PLACEMENT ' Peck Hotel' System representative will interview Tune grad uates in Accounting and Hotel Administration May 22. Little Man On Campus 0:1 61) m i r ll "I think 'my advisor is nuts --'- how could buck teeth, no make up, and a plain cotton dress make me smarter." Anyone who has ever thought it might be intriguing to sit in on testimony' during a Congressional investigation would have found the Association of Independent • Men Board of Governor's meeting Saturday an interesting, if not rel Somehow the grilling and persistz ped by a secret campus organizat. "Are you or have you ever been a member of the Communist party?" proceedings. We had the disturbing feeling that a wrong answer might re sult in a tar and feathering, if not a lynching, in front of Old Main. The answers in general were as evasive as might be expected ,circumstances, ancl,thos e ""testifiing" had an - adVantage over the suspected Reds in that there was no danger of con tempt of court' or a perjury Irial awaiting' thein. • ~", It was inevitable, therefore, that, just as in a suspensive play, there would have to be an oc casional bit of comic relief as an outlet for pentup tension. This was quite aptly provided, the board and spectators felt, by the candidate, for the AIM presidency who, aftermaking his qualification speech,' turned • around and added, "The only other organization I belong to is Spelunkers—caVe. explorers." Then there was the fellow who had come as an alternate for a 'delegate from the Nittany dorm area. All seemed fine until it was discovered that the substitute lived in Pollock Circle, and there fore was deemed ineligible to rep resent the interests of the neigh boring settlement. "But I was an alternate last week . for Town Council!" the surprised delegate cried out, -J. G. The only thing missing in'the Armed Forces Parade the other day was the • CODET—"Coeds Organized for Drill and Emer gency Training," a group some .what equivalent to ROTC which was quite up-and-coming during the fall of 1942. According to The Co-Edition, a bi-weekly women's publication which last ed at the _College from Septem ber 1937 to May 1943, over 215 coeds began taking instruction in marching and military cour tesy at the Armory one hour a week that fall under the com mand of Col. Edward Ardery, then • professor of military sci- , ence and tactics. The Co-Edition calls Colonel Ardery a "charming man, very impressive, and patient. 7 ."Under his command," the story runs, It's A Lu-Loux By BETTIE LOUR 1::'.3 WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, '1952 By Bibler axing, way to spend an afternoon. nt question, "Have you been tap ion?" sounded quite similar to the "the girls will be able to compete with the ROTC boys who have had an equal amount of training, IF NOT OUTDO THEM," In another story about the CODET from the same issue, (three columns were devoted to the gro u p) we find that the 'fatherly colonel "thinks it is just as easy to work with the girls as with the boys. The girls' re sponse in all cases was purely voluntary. They are going into it as a voluntary position, where in many cases the boys do not under stand the idea of ROTC, and take it because they feel they have to." The story concludes with the statement that "The girls have been very earnest in tackling the problems." The Co-Edition, before its un timely end, managed to come up with some admirable crusades and straight-from-the shoulder edi t,orials. A regular feature was a kooakCondUct message before each big weekend. According to an editorial which claimed (in bold type), "We know what a drag our "house-party men are when they waste a good time drinking— they either fall asleep on a per fectly good weekend or become -boisterous enough to embarrass, us," their reasons for abstaining were not because it might lead to their dismissal from college or 136cm/se of any moral issue involved. Trust it to a fashion-conscious woman, this was The Co-Edi tion's reason: "Why should we drink when it ruins the good appearance we are striving to make with new formals and clever outfits?" Registrar's Office Gives to Mander Fund.'. Employees in the Registrar's office have made a $2O contribu tion to the Mander fund sponsor ed by the Philadelphia Inquirer. . The money collected in the fund will be used for the family of Jos eph E. Mender Sr., who wa s 'dorwned in an attempt —to save;, the life of a seven-yearfold:boy-in the Schuylkill river. ~ ,; ! '~ -