PAGE FOUR 'Ptiblished Tuesday through Saturday mornings. daring i the University year. the Daily Collegian it student :- operated ricoPripaper. Entered. as second-class TAMMIE BLOOM, Editor STAFF-THIS ISSUE: Night editor, Paddy Beahan; Copy editors, Roger Beidler, Nancy Gray; Assist ants, Anita Oprendek, Barb Nicholls, Fran Fanucci, Betsy Gruneck, Ira Wasserman. Ad staff: • Linda Holmes, Fred Schmidt, Enie Wolfgang. Class Cut Policy: A Disregarded Ruling The present cut policy of the University needs one of two things, enforcement or definite .revision. • According to the Senate Regulations for Undergraduate Students, each student is re quired to attend every session of each class he schedules. To be more simple, cuts are pro hibited. However, in practice, this regulation is re vised by almost every professor on campus. There are, of course, some professors who re fuse to allow any absences. They penalize stu dents either by deducting percentage points from their final grade or by refusing to give them "that extra break" when their mark is hovering between a 0 and a 1 or a 1 and a 2. These professors, however, seem to be in the minority. At the opposite extreme are the professors who, the day of class, announce the exam dates for the course and tell their classes: "As long as you show up for these, I don't care if I never see you." These professors compile no seating charts and make no pretext of taking class attendance. Then there is the group between, the majority. Some professors, as departmental policy, will allow three cuts, without penalty, and will penalize students for cuts above the maximum. Others set the cut limit at two, four, six, or higher, but they set some definite •limit. In ad dition, some members of the faculty make a policy of allowing - the student to cut as often as you feel you can," with the stipulation that the student will be warned if he over cuts. There is still another group which falls into this majority—those who either have no policy On Ugly. Man This week groups on campus are going all out to promote their various candidates in the annual Ugly Man, contest. The contest is a lot of fun for everyone. The winning contestant will receive an award and the group sponsoring him, a trophy. But behind all the fun and prizes there is a much deeper meaning to the contest. The money collected by the candidates will go to the. Campus Chest. This money will then be turned over to local and national charitable organizations to further their work. Students should remember this when giving money to an Ugly Man. Who wins the contest realy immaterial; it is where the money is going that counts. Therefore every student should give some thing, no matter how little, to the man he thinks STUDENT EMPLOYMENT camp Starlight will interview men and women today in Old Main. Meal jobs available at fraternities and campus dining halls. UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Nancy Lee Thompson, Cecelia Poor, Marilyn Junior Men's Hat Groups Accept 48 Forty-eight fourth and fifth se mester men were tapped yesterday and this morning by Androcles and Blue Key, junior men's hat societies. Androcles tappees are Norman Miller. Donald Ziegler, Dean Ves ling, Gordon Pogal, Phillip Wein, Edwin Tooker, Francis Taylor, Philip Steal, Vernon Sones, Earl Seely, Richard Rubenstein, Mi chael Rosenfeld, James Parmiter. David Morrow, Louis Adler, Hugh Cline, Sheldon Brown, Wil liam Duff, Daniel Van Duyne, Douglas Finnemore, Charles Fol kers, Leroy Harris, Stuart Horn, Joseph Hayes, Howard Levine, Stanley Juras, Peter Kiefer, Bruce Lieske, John Lyon, George Ying ling, and Marvin Jackson. Blue Keyt tapped at 7:30 a.m. today at the Lion's Shrine. • Tapped were Gerald Huston, Robert Eisenhuth, Robert McMil lan, John Russell, Roger Beidrer, James Bowers, Richard Seng, Ed ward Miller, Philip Beard, Ron ald Lynch, John Hess, Leo Park ett, John Thalimer, Lynn Meyers, Senford Lichtenstein, Frank Nor ris, and Sol Cohn. Present members of Blue Key attended a banquet last night in the•Eutaw House. ghr Balm Cattegtatt. Editorials . represent ' the viewpoint of the writers, not necessarily the policy of the paper. Unsigned edi . Successor to THE, FEEE LANCE. est. 1887 . torials are by the editor. atter July 5, 1934 at the ,State College, Pa. Post Office under the act of March 3, 1819. —Mike Miller Gazette . 71 Students Get High Test Scores Seventy-one students who took the National Teachers Examin ation in February had high scores, according to Hugh Davison, pro fessor of educational, research. Elementary education students stood above 86 per cent of other competitors. Students taking the early ,- ..hildhood study examination scored 71 per cent ahead of the other competition, as did those competing in physical education. The physical scientists came out ix. front of 73 per cent of the group, mathematicians led 63 per cent of their competitors, and so cial studies students were ahead by 66 per cent. • WD Council Awards Toe Somers, former Association of Independent Men president, and Richard Oswald, eighth se mester electrical engineering ma jor, received awards at the annual West Dorm Council banquet Wednesday night. Somers received •an award for his all-around activities and Os wald for high scholarship. Androcles members who were given Orientation Week counsel ing agreements should return these to Thomas Kidd, member ship chairman; or one of the pre sent officers of the hat society, Kidd announced. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA, FRANK CHESSMAN. Business Mgr. ~'~ at all on cuts or, if they do, believe in keeping students in the dark about it. In courses under 'these professors, the student isn't sure just where 'he stands, and has no apparent way of finding, out. The- wide discrepancies in our present cut system and its enforcement benefit no one and harm everyone. Keeping a regulation which is not enforced seems absurd. A professor may get the reputation of being either a "snap" and a real good guy or "an old crank" and someone to avoid when registration rolls around. The students suffer, too. They are sorely tempted to schedule, as often as possible, those professors who do allow frequent or unlimited cuts, and to avoid those who do not, without considering the quality of education involved. The absurdity of the present situation can be best exemplified by the case of two coeds, roommates, who are taking the same course, this semester, from two different professors. They take nearly the same bluebooks and will take a departmental final. They use the same textbook and cover the same material. One is allowed unlimited cuts; the other is allowed two, and her grade will suffer if she takes more. Situations like these have no place in a well-run University. Whether the present -+fficial policy should be enforced, whether students should be allowed a definite number of cuts in all courses, or 'whether students should be allowed unlimited cuts in all courses is not the most important problem. The present confusion is. The best solution to the problem is to define and enforce a cut policy throughout the Uni versity. Safety Valve--- Defends Freshmen TO THE EDITOR: I don't believe Anita Opren dek (referring to an editorial in Saturday's issue) has quite the right slant on freshman spirit. Our spirit is not measured by how many people know of the dance we are sponsoring, or for that matter how many people try out for the talent show. How can freshmen be expected to know of the class dance when only $2O was alotted for publicity? Compare this to the $l2O the junior class spent on Junior Prom publicity and how fax does $2O go? It's a wonder even 24 of 66 women knew of the dance. Fortunately the talent show and the dance were a success. —Steven Jordan Chairman, Decorations Committee, Freshman'Class Dancer Crowley, Jane Mason, Patricia Ellis, Anita Isen berg, Myrtle Brown, Richard Blank, Thomas Schwarz, Daniel HutchinSon, George Walker, • Edward Patrick, John Strahle, Howard Down ing, Philip Lang, Thomas . Glenn, John Pine, Joseph - Durek, James McLean, John Shaynak, and Thomas OsenbaCh. AIM Board. Gives Student Probation The Association of Independent Men's, judicial board of review has recommended that a fourth semester student be placed on board probation for his part in a Nittany area dorrriitory fracas which resulted in a door being damaged. Three second semester students also involved in the incident were given suspended sentences. Board probation entails that the student must be present at all meetings of the board for the remainder of the semester. Paper was tacked to the door and set afire. The door had to be refinished. Chem-Phys Council Names Coed Head Barbara Foss, sixth semester science major, was elected presi dent of the Chem-Phys Student Council Wednesday night. Miss Foss is the first woman elected president of this'council. Other officers elected are Roger Uhler, sixth semester chemistry major, vice president; and William Childs, fourth semester chemical engineering major, secretary treasurer. Little - Man of -Canittins "Jus' lookit—lf there's anything I can't stand, it's a ShovrOff'VE- Conference Speaker —Ann Leh By PHYLLIS PROPERT Governor John S. Fine said yesterday he will include a 'strong recommendation for the establishment of a State. Recreation Commi,s sion in his farewell message as Governor to the General Assembly next January. "I am convinced the creation of such a commission would provide Pennsylvania with an administra tive agency that would coordinate all state efforts in the field of recreation for the purpose of de veloping an effective state policy and program on the conservation of our human as well as natural resources," Fine said. • Aporoxiinately .300 delegates. to the seventh annual Pennsylvania Recreation Conference heard Gov ernor Fine . speak at a luncheon meeting at the Nittany Lion Inn. The governor told his aud- . ience he understood. the State • Recreation ouncil •intends resubmit the` proposal of such a commission at the next . session •;. of the General Assembly. Such a proposal had been submitted in the session, Fine said, but it died in committee. .Pennsylvania will never adopt the::role of enforcing administra tive uniformity in recreation ,or consolidation in supervision, Fine' Said. The. place of the Common wealth.. he said, is, cooperative with private groups, supplying such f or ms of assistance .where necessary. In 1951, Fine 'said, a comprehen sive survey was made of.` the ComniOnwealth's recreational bus inesses. It was discovered, he said, that nearly $800,000,000. was. pended in travel and recreation during that year. He said•recrea tion, travel, and, vacation enter- . prise rank as the ninth commer cial activity of Pennsylvania. Fine told the delegates they , were working for the "rounded personality of our ambitious youth growing up in an age where security is a mere hope." "In - the human equation of things, recreation is underscored in importance for its' relations to leisure time activities," he said. Crediting the machine with giv ing Americans time for recreation, Fine said if leisure should lead only to being bored it would be a national tragedy ~ indeed. "Leisure, we are reminded, is the seed-bed of national culture as well as of personal develop ment," he said. One of the greatest probleMs of modern society is individual lone liness, Fine said. Loneliness, he said, is partly due to the fact that leisure time becomes a period of lostness. Every child in the Common wealth has approximately 3000 hours of leisure time dur ing the course of a year, he said. An adequate recreational policy Fine Advocates . Rec Commission FRIDAY, MAY' 7.. 1954 By Bibler is imperative, he said, if juven ile delinquency is to be checked. • The well-being of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania, Fine said, is ultimately the sum total of the well-being possessed in spirit, mind, and body by our fellow cit izens throughout the state. C. S. Wyand, executive assis tant to President Milton S. Eisen hower, welcomed the delegates on behalf of President Eisenhower who was out of town. Leo Weinrott, chairman of the State Recreation Council, intro dUced Fine as a man Who was deeply interested in recreational problems. - Governor Fine had come by plane from_Chicago to the Uni versity yeserday ' morning, .He had addressed 35 charity agencies Wednesday in Chicago. • . He left the University shortly after his address.: 'for Luzerne 'County. He was scheduled to give, three more - SPeeche.s yesterday, of-, ter he'left the University: : Koster to Head Fioth .Copy Staff Betty Koster, fourth semester journalism major, has been named to, hdad the newly organized. Froth copy staff. The staff has been 'cre ated to handle copy reading, "Old Mania.", Office work, and other miscellaneous., tasks. It replaces the promotion staff. Rhoda. Resneck and Ruth Klu ger Were - named to the senior board of the promotion staff. .. Named to the junior board were Naney-Ree% Nell Malmrosh, Doro thea Kalays;-:Jerry Weiner, Harris Sklar; Richard - Wolfman, Barbara Horn, and Donald Chalmers. Named to the sophomore board were Mary Ann Gbur, Gail Le pine;' Joanne Reis, Ilse Schuman, Judith Smith, Maryann Paletta, Janke Karp, and Sarah Sykes. IA Dean to Speak Ben Euwema, dean of the Col lege of the Liberal Arts, will speak at an Engineering • 3 lecture - .at 4:10 p.m. Monday in 110 Electrical Engineering. Tonight on WDFM 91.1 MEGACYCLES • 1:30 __ Baseball—Penn State.vs :Syracuse 7:30 Jazz - Moods 8:00: " Music •of the People 8:30 Paris Star Time 9:00 Light ClassiCal Jukebox 14.46 si-,