PAGE FOUR Published Taesday through Saturday warnings hlchasive during tke College year by the staff et The Daily Col legian of Dee renroyiknittis State College. DAVE JONES, Edilos "Managing Ed., Marshall O. Donley; City Ed., Chuck Asst. Bus. Mar., Mark Christ; Local Advertising .Mgr., Marianas; Copy MIL, Chit Mathias; Sports Ed.. Sam Robert • Carruthers; National Adv. Mgr.; Dave Burke; P - encepio; Edit. Dir., Dick Ran; Wire-Raab) Ed.,Bill Jost: Circulation Co-Mgrs ., Frank Cresaman , ' Diane Miller: So.? Ed., Lynn Embanowits; !mit-Sports Ed., Dic McDowell: Promotion Mgr., Ruth Israel; Personnel Mgr., Patience Asst. Soc. Ed., Lit Newell; Photo Ed., Brace ,Schroeder: Ungethuma; Office Mgr., Gail Shaver; Classified Adv. Feature , Ed.. Nancy Meyers; Exchange Ed., Gus Vollmer • Mgr., Jean Geiger; Sec.. Carol Schwing : Research and Librarian, orraine Gladue. Records Mgrs.. Virginia Bowman. Eleanor .Hennessy. STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night Editor, Diehl . McKalip ,copy editors, Bill 011endike, Mary Lee, Lauffer assistants, Bill Snyder; Bob Dunn,' and Mary Loubris. • Don't Use the Same Rope Twice The establishment of a student traffic court as recommended to All-College Cabinet should help solve• a problem that has vexed Tribunal since the full enforcement of the present traffic parking plan last fall. The function of Tribunal, the handling of cases detrimental to the name of the College, was virtually forgotten last year when Tri bunal became bogged down with hundreds of parking violation cases. • In general the set-up as proposed to cabinet shows a great deal of thought has been given to the organization of the court. However, there is one point that might bear closer study before being accepted. The proposed amendment calls for a senior member of Tribunal to be chairman of the traf fic •court. This organizational set-up will pro vide, as contended, a link between Tribunal and •the traffic court. The link is desirable to keep in touch with policies followed by the traffic court. But, since Tribunal will be the appellate court for actions of the traffic court, Safety Valve ... Hits Honor System TO THE EDITOR: Often the only effective method of dismissing unpleasant realities in an argument, in the lack of any positive proposals, is simply to scoff at 'the opposig arguments. This is what Mr. Sauder has dons in his letter (in the • Sept. 29 Daily Collegian) on the so called honor system. The term honor system, as it is used, is nothing but sentimental semantics. The true honor , system is a sort of academic anarchy in which all students are trusted to act honestly ... In most schools the honor system consists of a double-barrelled pledge in which the student agrees (1) not to cheat, steal, or act dishonor ably, and (2) to report anyone who does. The proctoring system is—in the best sense of the word—a police system; the so-called honor system is an informer system. The essential difference between the present proctoring sys tem and the proposed informer system is not in en&, but in the methods used to achieve these ends . . . This is not to say that the informer system Safety - Valve On Immaturity TO THE EDITOR: As I am an immature fresh man I probably shouldn't write this, but your little article in today's (Sept: 30) Collegian is overly slanderous toward the Class of '57. I hate to bring up things that have happened in - the past, but, you have forced my hand. Customs, it is said, are an old campus cus tom. Each ' new freshman class inherits the right to be overlorded by upperclasSmen. The riot staged this year was far from new. In fact, it is about as old as customs. I can recall having heard of riots by immature freshmen several times in the past. Monday night, the riof was not entirely staged by the freshman class. It would not have gone so far as it actually did if it hadn't been for some mature upperclass men egging the froth on. I don't believe you can disprove me there. This also brings to mind an incident that happened, I believe, in 1951. The panty raid was certainly a mature exhibition. Don't you agree? The present senior class was a mature, original group at the time, Richard Lemyre, our honorable All-College president, was certainly mature by offering. or should I say challenging, to take on the whole freshman class single handed. Due to the laxity of customs enforcement by upperclassmen, I believe they should be abolished! —Robert Howe Editor's note—Admittedly immature actions .in the past are no basis for immature actions in the future. The panty raid came from combined efforts of immature elements in all classes, not just one class. The mob refused to listen to reason three times, and refused to hear a logical argument by Lemyre. AUDITIONS for announcing candidates, campus radio, 7 p.m., 304 Sparks. COLLEGIAN PHOTOGRAPHY Candidates, 7 p.m., 111 Carnegie. HELLENIC Society, 7:30 p.m., Tub. NEWS AND VIEWS staff and candidates, 6:30 p.m., 14 Economics. STUDENT EMPLOYMENT Experienced barber. Experienced, clothes presser Tit Jung Cotirgittu. Slseessem to THZ MIME LAMM. est. 1857 TODAY THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE. COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA a person who has already judged the guilt or innocence of an appellee will be on hand to judge the guilt or innocence of the student a second time. It is true that Tribunal is comprised of. nine members—nine members who can probably sufficiently present diverse views for a fair judgment. It is also true that seldom in the past has there been a better example of give and take among members of student govern ment. However, there is always the chance that in the future there will be a split decision that will make the one voice found on both the traffic court and Tribunal of great importance. The chances of this happening may be very slight, but to the one student accused of a traf fic violation the results will be quite important. In the search for an equitable and more ef ficient judicial system, our student goyernment should be careful not to hang a man twice with the same rope. is bad; the entire point is not whether it is good or bad, but whether it will work here or not . . . . favorable conditions for (the honor sys tem's) establishment do not exist on the Penn State campus. But aside s from feasibility,• the honor system is unfair, not only because it more readily rewards those who cheat, but by its very nature. It is justice without mercy: "or to make an exception in enforcing the honor system, regardless of circumstances or the degree of offense, is to destroy the faith upon which the system is founded. A proctor ing system, with student judicial processes, i=- nore able to give fairer decisions . . . in studying any proposals for an honor System, let's not imagine that those who cheat under difficulties are not going to cheat because the obstacles are removed. Because we all ought to be good does not mean that we all are good. e Letter cut Tennis, Anyone? About the lostest person in the country these days is the man who's not a baseball fan: the man without his country's pastime. For the next several days, the world will be a different place. The day will be reckoned by the game of ,the series. In the afternoon, at least, time will be measured by somewhat dif ferent standards. Innings will replace hours. and a combination of hits, errors, walks and outs will substitute for the measurement of minutes. Seconds will' be reckoned by- pitches. Ebbets Field and Yankee Stadium are the rational capitals, and a handful of umpires will constitute the Supreme Court. There are - two classifications of man today: a Dodger fan or a Yankee fan. Man's most valuable possession today is a nortable radio. Static and—dread the thought— ain are his two most feared enemies. One question faces the country today: What's _he score? The South could secede, or the stock market quiver. That wouldn't matter. The. condition of Mickey Mantle's leg, or the meaning behind a nod from the head of Chuck Dressen are much more vital issues. And scrambled between it all are the razor blades. The baseball fan who could go unshaven these days—despite inning by inning sales pitch —is the ultimate example of sales resistance. About the only non-controversial thing you can say about the World Series is that they'll go four or more games. Say anything else, and you'll be sure to find someone who'll place a wager on that. Gazette • • . Fred Drabenstadt, Hana Gach, Ronald Gard ner, Paul Green, Helen Hammersberg, John Hertel, Patricia' Hennessy, Russell Hummer, Virginio Juan, Marilyn Kaplan, William Kuda roski, Charles Larson, Marvin Lessin, Sally Os trom, Earl Shoemaker, Robert James Watson, Lee Wetmore and Richard Pinney. COLLEGE PLACEMENT SERVICE The companies listed below will conduct interviews on campus. Schedule interviews now in 112 Old Main. REM-CRU. INC. will interview January graduates in ME, lE, EE. Metallurgy, and Accgunting on Oct. 13. GENERAL. MOTORS CORP. will interview January graduates in Chem. Eng., Arch. Eng., CE, EE, lE. ME, and Accounting Oct. 1345. Co'legion editorials repre sent the viewpoint of the writers, not necessarily the policy of the newspaper.' Un signed editorials are by the editor. VINCE DRA.YNE. Business Mgr. —Mike Feinsilber COLLEGE HOSPITAL —Dick Rau —Duane Holm Little Man on Campus - -- 11 \?* fter reviewing your case we're still in a quandry—Mind steppi ound here for a moment?" Music Lover Whiperiiioo - : Gtilery. • We can't really be termed a "music lover" like the long hairs who lose all sense of equilibrium (their eyes do 33, 45, and 78 rpm) at the first strains of a concerto and they begin to spout lyrics, the composer, date, period, country, etc. (no offense to Music 5, which we skillfully avoided). And . we're not a bon cat who's really hep to the jive. But 'we appreciate a pleasant tune and fine vocals, Not having taken music lessons as a child (at the relief of the local maestros), we ~.never took music seriously, and barring an occasional dixie land combo or stray Salvation Army drum and bugle corps, never even took no tice, Then last summer, we, were termed "barbarian" by a self styled debutante . long past her "coming out." It was then we became a "Cultured Scholar" and began to do something about it. We sent away for a pair of tickets (free, at that!) to Robin Hood Dell on the bonny, bonny (if somewhat polluted) banks of the Schuylkill River in. Philadel phia. In previous years, concerts were run as private enterprise and invariably, thanks to Jupiter Pluvius, Old Man. Weather, con certs were alwys rained 'out. Considerable money was lost be cause contract performers had to be paid whether or not they sang. Philadelphia, lest it be called a "scab on the face of America" like her big sister New York, overtook several civic projects to develop culture within the city and decided to underwrite the Dell. Free tickets were distributed for the asking . to allow common people a "slice of art." As a result, the Dell was of ten a strange mixture of dis traught society matrons, street walkers, women's clubs, musi cians, and students striving for the arts. We went to hear coloratura Roberta Peters of Metropolitan fame. Arriving late, we looked for a place to sit and were amazed at' the number of front seats not taken while the back was jammed solid. We would have collapsed in the first row if we hadn't been indignently informed that this was the local "Diamond Horse shoe" reserved for Friends of the Dell. We picked up our rhine stone tie clip and trudged back through the crowd to perch on a stone wall. Already the banks of the Dell were covered with mobs of people. Women sat on blankets with their shoes kicked off, wigg ling their toes. Men squatted con tentedly sipping the mysterious contents of a thermos jug, and children wove their way among people crouched beneath the trees. As it grew darker the orchestra came out and began to ;tune up, and colored spots flooded the sta THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1953 WPANC wesixt) By CHIZ MATHIAS dium. Ten thousand people filled the seats and an equal number (according to the morning paper, we didn't take a census!) coated the sloping banks Under the char coal sky. Overhead old Jupiter Pluvius started kicking up his heels and Erich Leinsdorf of the Detroit Symphony, guest conductor, made an announcement that Harrisburg Weather Bureau predicted rain and program numbers would be arranged so tmportant numbers were played before the downpour. This called for an entire new seating arrangement in the or chestra. While musicians played musical chairs in the shell, our attention was caught in the aud ience by a peculiar, disheveled girl clanking down the aisle with all the grace of a Pershing tank. She wor e mushroom - colored slacks and a tee-shirt with the figures C 01347. We couldn't . de cide if it was a telephone exten sion or a parole number. She found a spot on the stairs and sat down with her head in her lap. Then she laughed, squinted her eyes, stuck out her bottom lip, and went through all the grimaces • of a well-rehearsed pantomime. One minute she was Sarah Bernhardt sending her lov er to the guillotine. The next in stant she was a playful trained seal barking and flapping her arms for a fish. We caught, some of her conversation. "I'm surprised they let me in, ha! I was going to sit outside in the grass and : listen." Her eyes rolled iup in her head. . "Hey, what's your name!"! She spied a "cat" from South Philadelphia sitting on the bottom step and occupied herself for the next ten minutes trying to put a hex on him. By this time she had a large audience. "My name's Bernice." It might have. been a proclamation of Cae sar rendered in fog horns. Then Mr. Leinsdorf made a majestic swoop with the baton and . the music began. There were mountains, and rivers and fountains—and Bernice! "What's the name of this piece?" The. orchestra was play ing Mozart's "Symphony No. 39 in E Flat Major," originally. , scheduled for after intermis-3 sion, and the harpist, who ar.? (Continued on pag e -five) By Bib! SpeCIAL •NESicf." reir.coNALITY GAAS C4S•PI