I:'=R . . Published Tuesday through Sat- 4 ,-... 4.4r Collegian 'editorials represent .1 the viewpoint of the . Writers, urday mornings inclusive during gi lt B a f f t g Catirg ta It , not necessarily. the policy of the .1 . 1 the College year by the staff • or The Daily Collegian of the newspaper. Unsigned .editorials Pernaylyania State College. Successor to THE FREE LANCE, ma. 1887 are by the editor. Entcred as second-class matter DAVE JONES, Editor STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night editor, Tammie Bloom; Copy editors, Len Goodman, Diehl McKalip; Assistants, Mary Bolich, Paddy Beahan, James Jacoby and Roy Williams. Ad staff: Linda. Holmes, Edie Wolfgang and John Craig. Blue Band and the Penn Game Seats Last week, after the Penn-Penn State foot ball game in Philadelphia, - the Blue Band spent a good deal of its time grumbling about its seats at the game. The grumbling was justified. Members of the band were seated in tempor ary stands on and behind the goal line. Student seats, after action taken lagt year, extend-from goal to goal in the first , ten rows. The Blue Band was seated in the goal area by the Penn State Athletic Association because those were the best seats available when it came time to seat_the group. Tickets had previously been sold to faculty, alumni and students. The band's trip to Philadelphia will be paid by the student body. All arrangements for the trip- were made by the Athletic Association. The association finances the band's trip to the annual Penn State-Pitt game in Pittsburgh. During each of these weekends, the band play: for an alUmni smoker. Regardless of the gigantic ticket problem that face the association—and they are gigantic —there is probably little reason why the Blue Band could not have better seats for the game. The band takes up the same numbei of seats, no matter where it is situated. It is hard to see why a block of seats could not have been set aside for the Blue Band be fore ticket sales began last spring. Those seats need not be on the 50-yard - line as some would have us believe. They could have been on the .or 30-yard line, and the band would have been satisfied. Certainly almost anything is better than the seats given the band. The Blue Band is composed of students. It is unbelievable, then, that the student body would Fraternities, Social Life and Thomas Schott, president of Interfraternity Council recently called upon Penn State's fra ternities to raise their scholarship standards. Shortly before this the Dean of Men's office released a memorandum containing fraternity academic averages for the spring semester. It showed the fraternity men's average of 1.39 was .07 above the all-men's average. When this average is compared wi th the All- College average of 1.43, the non-sorority wom en's average of 1.65, and the sorority women's average of 1.88, it is evident something is wrong with fraternity scholarship. Phi Beta Kappa, mother of American Greek letter fraternities was founded as an educational and social society. Early in its career it dropped the social side of its program to emphasize scholastic achievement. Thus fraternities were founded on scholarship—the pooling of thoughts with the intention of learning. Since that time, the scholarship aspect fraternity life has diminished in importance while the social phase has grown until, in some cases, it completely overshadows scholarship. For the continued well being of a modern fraternity, social life and academic achieve ment must both have their place. This ha been successfully accomplished in some of Peril State's fraternities. Nineteen fraternities exceeded the All-Co: legespring average during the semester: Twelvc othese 19 maintained their high rank for twc or more semesters. Many houses succeeded raising their rank by ten places or more. In the memorandum, the dean's office ex pressed hope that improveemnt of these house. was not just an unexplainable favorable turn e events, but due rather to concentrated effort by the fraternities to improve scholarship. On the other end of the scholastic ladder arc the great number of Penn State's fraternities which plod along semes t er after semester achieving averages below the All-College aver- COLLEGIAN SENIOR BOARD, 7 p.m., 111 Car negie Hall. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY, 7:30 p.m., 219 E.E. FROTH ART STAFF, 7 p.m., 9 Carnegie. MINERAL INDUSTRIES STUDENT COUNCIL 7:30 p.m., 208 Willard. NEWMAN CLUB, 7:30 p.m., Student Center. OMICRON NU, 6:45 p.m., H. Ec. Living Center. PLAYERS lighting, costume, Schwab basement: construction workshops, Schwab loft, 7 p.m. STUDENT EMPLOYMENT SERVICE Man to work on College farms Wed., Thurs., Fri Substitute waiters. Counter work evenings downtown Girl to cook meals . in town. COLLEGE PLACEMENT SERVICE The companies listed below will conduct interviews on campus. Schedule interviews now in 112 Old Main. GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. will interview January grad uates in ME, IE, ER, and Physics on Oct. 16. TEXAS COMPANY will interview Ph.D. candidates in Ch.E., ME, and Chem. expecting to receive their degrees in 1954; MS in Ch.E., ME, CE and Chem. who have completed at least one semester; and BS January graduates in the fields of Ch.E., CE, ME, and Chem. on Oct. 19. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA will inter view January graduates in CE, EE, MR, Ch.E., Fuel Tech.. Geology, Geophysics, Geochem, P.N.G., Chem, and Physics. on Oct. 19-20. MALLINCKRODT CHEMICAL • COMPANY will interview Ph.D. ra , "(l;qates in Ch.E., EE. ME, and Chem. expecting to receive their degrees in 1954; MS candidates in Ch. E.. EE. ME and .Chem. who have completed at least one Klemm- July 5, 1934 at the State College, Pa. Post Office under the act of March 3, 1879. Gazette... Today KY,` DAILY COLLEX.n.AN. STATE COLLEGE. PEP;NSYLVANIP VINCE DRAYNE, Business Mgr. begrudge the band. 30-yard line seats. For their work in preparing the halftime routine, and for -their part in the pre-game pep rally, the band deserves decent seats. That the student body sends the band to the game shows the students want it there. Ganted, few would go to Philadelphia to see the Blue Band if there were no football game. But it cannot be denied the Blue Band, in its own way, represents the College as much as the team. And the Blue Band contributes/ to ward bettering the College's name . and refiu tation.. Just what connection there is between the band and the association is not clear. The grad uate manager of athletics and the band director do not know why there is a relation. Neverthe less, it does exist. The Blue Band would probably be better off if it were clearly defined as part of, or sepa rate from, the Athletic Association. If the band had a budget for yearly operations, much con fusion ds to who finances the band and who does not would, be eliminated. It seems the association has continued a tra dition in arranging for,band trips. In continu ing this tradition, the association has also as sumed the obligation to do the job right. •It failed in its obligation when it gave the band poor seats—seats even worse than those given students who did nothing to make the weekend a success. In the future, the association must face up to its responsibility, or deny the responsibility. Until such denial, the association must serve the band and serve it well. The association has no reason to feel it is doing the band a favor. Education age, and sometimes barely above the scholastic average of 1 required for graduation. For these fraternities, the time. is long past for constructive efforts to improve scholarship. For the rest strict observance of study hours, an active scholarship chairman or scholarship committee, a wise policy of pledge selection, intelligent pledge training programs, and the development of a feeling within houses that academic achievement is important, are the 7 , nly ways to bring scholarship to a decent level. —Jack Reid Safety Valve ... Asks Forum Support TO THE EDITOR: General James Van Fleet, Charles Laughton, Irwin D. Canham,.and Ches ter Bowles are not only . big names but also good speakers—a rare and expensive combin ation. If students are interested, if students really want a good Community Forum, then students will buy tickets this week and this year. In the final analysis, the only valid test of what students think of our program is the action they take in supporting it. If this year's program "sells the house," then the future of your Community Forum will" be promising in deed. If students do not support forum repre 7entatives by attendance, then they may be :ure that future representatives—if they can ;,nd any—may find it too difficult to arrange I still better program; for that would be vir 'ally impossible of any price. The issue- is clear; the time to buy tickets •as arrived and, almost certainly, next year -1 1 d be too late. Elton Carter General Chairman; State College Community Forum ter; and BS 'January graduates in Ch.E.; EE, ME, and Chem. on Oct. 19-20. RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA will interview January graduates in RE, ME, ChR, Physics ,and 'Ceramics Oct. 19-20. PROCTOR AND GAMBLE CO. will interview Ph.D. can didates in Chem. and Ag. Bio-Chem: expecting' to receive their degrees in 1954 on Oct. 21. SOCONY-VACUUM OIL CO. will Interview* January graduates in the fields of CE, ME, Ch.E, :Bus. Adm., and Liberal Arts on Oct. 21, DU PONT will interview Ph.D. candidates in. Ch.E, ME, Engineering Mechanics, Chem. and Physics expecting to receive - their degrees in 1954 on Oct, 21-23. THE BURROUGHS- ADDING MACHINE . CO. will intek.- view January graduates in ME and ER on Oct. 22. FEDERAL TELECOMMUNICATION LABS. trill inter view Ph.D. candidates in EE and Physics expecting to re ceive their degrees in 1954, M.S. candidites in EE and Physics who have completed at least one semester; and Jimpary B.S. graduates in EE and Physics on Oct. 22. DU PONT will interview M.S. candidates in Ch.E, ME, IE, Chem., and Physics who have completed at least one semester, and January B.S. graduates in Ch.E, ME, lE, Chem., and Physics on Oct.. 22-23. SHELL DEVELOPMENT CO. will interview-Ph.D. can didates in Physics expecting to receive their degrees in 1954 on Oct. 22-23. SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODUCTS INC. will interview January • graduates in Chem., Physics, Accounting, Busi ness Management, Mathematics, Ceramics, Metallurgy, Ch.E. EE, lE, ME, on Oct. 23. CHRYSLER CORP. will interview January graduates in Ch.E. F.E. ME and Metallurgy on Oct. 23. • NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, LOS ANGELES DIV. will interview January Graduates in Aero, CE, _EE, ME. Arch. Engr., Ph.D. candidates in Aero, EE, CE, ME. Arch. Engr.. M.S. candidates in Aero., RE. CE, ME, and Arch. Engr., on Oct. 26. THE NATIONAL RUBE DIV. OF U.S. STEEL will inter view Januair - graduates in ME, EE, and ,MetaL on Oct, 2.6. ittle Man on Campus - - -.!,44.e/zmape . iNc4/4, 'Boy, you should have seen her clobber that guy yester gancin y _Around At a Roommates are a 'peculiar specie of animal found in large num bers around centers of culture and -learning—like pigeons. This year for the first time I decided to get a single room. And for the first time, I don't have a roommate. The situation has its drawbacks and. rewards. For example, when the alarm clock goes off, there is no one to help me ignore it. However, I do quite well on this score alone. There is also the mat ter of conversation. It tends to be limited. On the other hand, when I walk into the room at 3 a.m., there is no one to pour forth protestations, both vile and loud, about my hav ing turned on the light in his eyes. When I turn off the radio during the middle of a profound lecture on the government labor regula tions specifying the hours of labor and wages required of profession al potato bug pickers, there is no one to inform me that he is deep ly interested in the subject and would I mind please turning 'the radio on. It was in this mood of philo sophical meditation on the mon astic existence that I happily crawled into my bed at 3 a.m. Sunday. A short while later—five hours later to be exact—the thought pushed its way through my numb brain that things were not quite the way I left them when I went to bed. I opened one eye. The sun was up. But I - couldn't help that. I closed the eye and ,tried to get back to the point in my nocturnal ramblings where I was inter rupted. But the idea that things wern't right still persisted. I opened the eye again, and closed it. I re fused to believe what the one eye had to say, so I tried the other eye. I refused to believe what it had . to say and closed it also. Then my ears got into the act. The fluttering sound started again: Then I opened both , eyes, and after an unsteady'moment, finally focuSed them on the flut tering object. My eyes still agreed. It WAS a bird. The answer seemed simple. Merely open the window and let him out. I stumbled . over to the window and raised it. The bird thought this was a good idea un til he got to the screen. He looked surprised. But then most Sunday drivers do- when they get into this sort of situation. He recovered and proceeded to race about the room. The only thing we needed was exhaust fumes to make .the place look like,National Air Race time trials. I sat. down on the bed and studied the situation. I was an noyed. At eight o'clock on any morning, I'm in a foul frame of mind, let alone. Sunday morn ing when I can sleep late with- wEDNESDAY, OCTOBER Hr . 1.953, new kootnniale out my conscience gouging me too deeply. The bird continued racing. The sight of such exuberance that early in, the morning was blas phemous. I couldn't decide if he was panicky or just out to raise - Cain, particularly when he stop ped occasionally to swing back and forth • on s , the curtains. The landlady would have taken a rather dim view of that. I thought of opening my door and letting my friend downstairs with the landlady's canary. The landlady wouldn't • have gone for that either, so I kept the door closed. HoW he got into the room had me puzzled. At least I presume the sparrow was a he. I don't really know. We hadn't gotten that familiar. I hadn't left any eggs lying in my dresser drawer, and I didn't remember having brought any friends in with me , the night before. I My friend continued the time. trials aga i n. The showoff: I could have flown rings around him the night before. Then the dawn broke enough. Only the bottom half of the win dows were screened. I remem bered having opened the top half ` - a. few inches three nights before to let the blue haze of cigarette smoke escape. My friend settled dovin on . the bed, then hopped to the floor. The floor is softer, He didn't stay there long. The time trials were resumed, I became concerned about the natural forces of ani mal digestive tracts possibly going into . operation. I was totally un prepared. • With this new potential prob. • lem arising, the need for. letting my friend out became inipera tive. I hauled down the top half '• of a window. My friend . "clii j appeared. Before closing the window again. I decided to look around a bit. My friend hadn't left. He just decided to romp around the closet a little. Showing; little re gard toward the canons of social graciousness, I flailed -at him wildly - until he got that unwanted feeling and roared through the window like an F-84 with a jet assisted take-off. ' - I returned to bed, thought. a second, and went back to the window and closed it—com pletely. I returned to bed again, . stretched out, sighed, and re- ; laxed. The time to resume favorite Sunday morning pas time had come. But I -was wide awake. • .*•-•" By Bib' Ey DICK RAU