PAGE FOUR &le Batig eillitili4tl Successor to THE FREE LANCE. est. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday mornings inclusive during the College year by the staff of The Daily Collegian of The Pl.lmsylvania State College. Entered as second-claim smatter July .5,, 1934, at the State College. Pa.. Post Office under the act of March 3. 1879. Collegian editorials represent the viewpoint a the writers. not necessarily the policy of the newspaper. iln• signed editorials are by the editor. Dave PeUniteFranklin S. Kelly Editor 4A - 3 0 Business Mgr. Managing Ed.. Andy McNeillie; City Ed., Dave Jones: Sports Ed., Jake Dighton; Copy Ed., Bettie Lour: Edit. Dir., Jint Grorniller; Wire Ed., Chuck Henderson; Soc. Ed., Ginger Opoczenski: Asst. Sports Ed., Ted Soens; Asst. Soc. Ed., LaVonne Althouse; Feature Ed., Julie Ibbotson: Librarian and Exchange Ed.. Nancy Luetzel. Asst. Bus. Mgr., Richard Smith; Local Advertising Mgr., Phyllis Ralson; National Adv. Mgr., Alison Morley; Circu lation Co-Mgrs., Gretchen Henry, Kenneth Wolfe; Personnel 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. STAFF THIS ISSUE Night editor: George Bairey; Copy editors: Bob Landis, Sheldon Smoyer; Assistants: Roy Williams, Mike Feinsilber, Nancy Van Tries, Ed Reiss, Al Goodman, Bev Dickinson. Advertising staff: Eleanor Ungethuem, Ethel Wilson, Sondra Duckman, Eli Arenberg. `3OO Seats' Plan Can Create 11l .Will The 'most important item on the agenda for tonight's session of All-College Cabinet will be the discussion of • the Recreation Hall seating plan suggested by Dean Ernest B. McCoy. All groups represented on Cabinet which hold regular meetings have given a great deal of their time to discussing the problem. Some have favored the plan, others have turned it down. Just how the final vote will go on cabinet remains to be seen. Basically, the plan is a good idea. No one par ticularly likes to see alumni, faculty, grad stu dents, or townspeople barred from indoor ath letic events held in Rec Hall. Under McCoy's plan, 300 tickets for admission to these events would be made available to these groups. Ap proximately 150 tickets are now being distrib uted to team members and certain other per sons. According to the proposal, tickets already being given out would be included in the 300 seats. We'd like to see as many alumni, faculty, and grad students as possible admitted to in door events, but not when their admission will prevent students from seeing these events. Dean McCoy, basing his statement on second hand information, has said that at few events last year was every seat in Rec Hall filled. It's a shame to have these seats go to waste, he said: It is a shame to have seats go to, waste in Ree Hall, but there were probably no more than two or three times last year when all the seats were not taken and hundreds of peo ple weren't standing. As long as there is not enough room to handle the student body at Penn State, tickets should not be sold to virtual outsiders. Actually, there is no authority for distributing the 150 tickets that are now being given out. What guarantee can be offered that should the 300 seats proposal be passed no more than 300 seats will be sold? Dean McCoy has never seen an athletic event in Rec Hall. He has frankly admitted that his proposal is being offered solely on the basis of second hand information. Perhaps the dean should withdraw his request for awhile; and give himself an opportunity to study the situa tion first hand. Passage of the proposal can create good will with the faculty, townspeople, etc., but it would undoubtedly create such ill will on the part of students who, after all, have paid an athletic fee which entitles them to attend all athletic events. If any students are to be denied admission to Rec Hall because their place has been sold to someone else, the plan should be defeated. The seating plan proposal is one of the most important questions cabinet has had to face so far this semester. The meeting should be very interesting for those concerned enough to at- tend. Support the Team A huge bonfire at tomorrow's pep rally will be one of the highlight's of "Beat Pitt Week." it will be the first bonfire held on campus for many years, and it will be the last if students allow themselves to be carried away in gather ing material for the• fire. There is plenty of scrap wood lying about campus and State College. There is no need for students to ransack College buildings in order to prdvide firewoOd. Such actions will only result in the prohibition of future bonfires. It is hoped that tomorrow's pep rally will be the biggest and best to hit Penn State for many years. Certainly State has a team which deserves boisterous student backing. And the team needs evidence of student sup port to build a fighting spirit strong enough to beat Pitt Saturday. Tomorrow has been designated "Blue and White Day." To our knowledge it is the first such event on campus. Students have been re quested to wear blue and white tomorrow. This is not asking too much of a student body which has its best football team in years. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Elections Committee Showed Alertness One of the background organizations during a campus election .is the All-College elections committee. This committee sets the rules for the election and the campaigns of both parties. This year, we feel the elections committee was alert at all times. Evidence of this could be seen in the way it handled the final clique meetings. The committee set up a system for entrance into the final meetings and the system was carried out. To be admitted to the final clique meeting, a person's name had to appear on a list that had been submitted to the elections committee. In all cases that we observed, no one was ad mitted to.the meeting unless his name appeared. The committee further demonstrated its effi ciency when it clamped down on the wearing of sandwich signs. And finally, the committee penalized 'each Lion Party candidate 15 votes because the party accepted more than the al-_ lotted $35 .in donations. Effective regulation improves elections on campus. If the regulatory bodies set up by All- College Cabinet can perform as well as did the elections committee, we would consider our so called student government a much more effec tive unit. We think students would share the same opinion. Let's hope the elections committee is just as effective when the more important All- College elections roll - around in the spring. —Mimi Ungar Safety Valve Dorm Complaints Voiced TO THE EDITOR: Recently there has been a lot of adverse criticism about the conduct of the residents of the Nittany-Pollock area. How ever, before prejudging these students, take a• look at the conditions under which they are forced to live. Many of the freshmen who for various rea sons had no chance to visit the campus before this fall, were entirely misled by the College's dormitory pamphlet. They were not told that these Nittany-Pollock dormitories were tempor ary buildings and were also over a mile away from most of their classes. The slight difference in rent (about $1.15 a week between Nittany and West Dorms) did not indicate the vast difference in accommodations between the West Dorms and the temporary dorms. Among the inconveniences faced by the aver age Nittany-Pollock resident, noise during study hours is a small one. In many .dorms in the area the keys to all the doors are interchange able. Those doors that cannot be opened by someone else's key can be opened very easily by sliding a card through the door by the lock. Nobody's, belongings are safe from vandalism and robbery. Janitorial service is almost non existent. The flies from the nearby chicken coops helped make life miserable for residents up until November. On top of all of these in conveniences are the lack of proper laundry and recreational facilities. A great many students in the Nittany-Pollock area would like the College to do one of two things, lower the rent to a point where there is an appreciable difference between Nittany- Pollock and West Dorm's rent, or release them from their one year agreement so that they can look for rooms in town. Gazette ... Wednesday, ,November 19 ALPHA PI MU, 101 Main 4ngineering, 7 p.m. BARONS reorganization meeting, Nittany Dorm 29, 6:30 p.m. INKLING editorial staff, 215 Willard, 7 p.m. • KAPPA PHI KAPPA, 204 Burrowes, 7:30 p.m. LIEBIG CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 109 Agricul ture, 7:30 p.m. MINERAL INDUSTRIES STUDENT COUN CIL. 208 Willard, 7 p.m. NEWMAN CLUB lecture-discussion, 'Mysti cism', Professor Case in charge, rectory base ment, 7:30 p.m. PERSHING RIFLES, Class A uniform, Arm ory, 7 p.m. RIDING CLUB, -317 Willard, 7 p.m. THETA SIGMA PHI initiation, Simmons ini tiation room. 8:45 p.m. WRA BOWLING CLUB, White Hall alleys, 7 p.m. WRA MODERN DANCE CLUB, White Hall dance room, 7 p.m. COLLEGE HOSPITAL Donald Bailey, John Eller, James Gomez, Marie Heller, Georgene Huber, George Hughes, James Kollias, Donald Lippert, Charlotte Lutin ski, Joseph Mento, 6 George Missirner, Wayne Raifsnider, Ida Mae Renner, Elaine Rothstein, Carleton Rowe, Lois Sealy, Robert A. Smith, Elizabeth Swank, Antonia Vido, Vaughan Weber, Harrison Yocum. COLLEGE PLACEMENT Penna. Transformer Co. will interview January B.S. can didates in M.E. and E.E. Nov. 21: Jay' Manufacturing Co. will interview January B.S. candi dates in M.E., E.E., 1.E., mining eng., metal., and ac counting Nov. 18. North American Aviation, Inc. will interview January B.S. and '53 M.S. and Ph.D. candidates in M.E., E.E., C.E., aero. eng., and arch. eng. Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 17-18. Jeffrey Manufacturing Co. will interview January B.S. can didates in C.E., E.E., M.E., 1.E., C&F, mining eng., mineral prep. eng., journ., and accounting Thursday. Nov. 20. Linde Air Products Co. will interview January B.S. and '53 M.S. candidates in M.E., chem. eng., chem., and phys. Thursday. Nov. 20. A United States Government representative will interview January graduates interested in intelligence work Thurs day, Nov. 20. Interviews can be arranged in 112 Old —Byron Fielding rattle Man z7on Campus ' ~J~ 3 Interpreting the News U. S. ffighhandedness Can can Trouble Associated Press News Analyst A good many delegates to the United Nations are beginning to express concern at the growing tendency of the United States to reject out-of-hand all suggestions except its own for approaching the knotty problems before the General Assembly. Another fagot was added to this fire Monday by the U.S. expres sion of dissatisfaction with the Indian proposal on Korea almost before anyone had had a chance for a good look at it. India propose d, primarily, that. a four nation group be set up to supervise voluntary re turn of war prisoners, with a decision to be made later about the disposal of those who re fused to go home. India sug gested Poland, Czechoslovakia. Sweden, and Switzerland, but left the way open for a change in this lineup. The U.S. said a commission of two Communist and two non-Communist coun tries couldn't work and in ef fect, though unofficially through an anonymous spokesman who could be overruled if develop-• ments warranted it, rejected the whole thing. The U. S. wanted to let other nations know promptly what its attitude would be so there would be no headlong swing to the pro posal by the small nations. ' Delegates were quick to pOint out, however, that the Unit e d States only irritated a lot of peo ple, while if it had stood back and let Russia do the rejecting, as she has been doing with such propos als all along, some political hay might have been made. Some of the small nations, es pecially Canada, have been pretty close to India in working up the new resolution. The British Com= . monwealth nations showed clearlY Forum Tickets Still on Sale Season tickets for the 1952-53 Community Forum,series are still available but may be .purChased only on the day of a forum per formance. The next forum program is scheduled for Dec. 8 at which time Elsa Lanchester, - nightclub entertainer and character actress, will appear in a comedy presen tation, "Private Music Hall." For um tickets will be on sale until' 8 p.m. Dec. 8 at the Student Union desk in Old Main. At this time• season tickets, priced at $3 an d entitling the holder to attend the four remain ing forum pr6grams, and single tickets for Miss Lanchest,er's per formance, priced at $1.50, may be purchased. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1952 4 J' e',7* • ri • • ~..CV-1 2 :farf i , arA)v - 12_5 ..,6•Ercfeti) By J. M. ROBERTS JR. that they were glad to have a new approach and were willing to con sider it. They think there are things in the new proposal worth discussing. Many of the delegations which feel this way were among the sponsors of the original .21 na tion resolution, offered by - the U S., to endorse the Panmun jom program and the stand on war prisoners. Observers felt Tuesday that this 21 nation stand had now been damaged, that some of the nations might actually go along with India if it comes to voting. The United States, of course, is operating on what now seems to be the obvious theory that the Communists have no intention of reaching a truce agreement, that the prisoner issue is merely a peg on which to hang their intransi gence, and that even' if it were eliminated something else would be made to serve. India and some others in the UN have not yet come around to this view. They still think it possible to do business with the Comxnunists. They may all be wet. But as lona as the situation per sists, the Soviet can use such is sues to emphasize the differences in world thought, and any little mistakes among the Allies makes more room for the Communist wedge. 'Amphitryon 38' :Cast Announced The cast for "Amphitryon 38," Players' next Schwab Auditorium production, has been announced by Warren S. Smith, associate professor of dramatics and direc tor of the play. The S. N. Behrman adaptation of a comedy by Joan Dryden, was done as a thesis production sev eral years ago in the Little Thea ter in Old Main. It will play Jan. 15, 16, and 17 in Schwab Audi torium.. The cast is as follows: Jupiter, Gordon Greer; Mercury, Sid Arch er; Sosie, Albert Sarkas; trumpe ter, Richard Neuweiler; warrior, William Muiser; Alkmena, Jolly Oswalt; Amphitryon, John Anis ton; Nenetza,. Carol Strong; Kle antha, Beverly Masters; echo, Vel ma Kaiser; and Leda, Alice Mears. -u By Bibler -7Api : :"z"; —0 R e diZADED s , )' -. 4 . } % F-0