RAGE FOUR e111t17. 1 / 3 11CU l'uesday througi Saturday mornings. durini the . University wear. th 4 Collegian is a student• ogeratee newypauer. Etiteied as second-class DIEHL Mc STAFF THIS ISSUE: Assistants, Mike Moy son. Ad Staff: Diane Cabinet Members Must 'Control Emotions' The 1954-55 All-University Cabinet reached a turning point at its meeting Thursday night when, as observers said, "tempers flared." From this turning point Cabinet can con tinue on in the way of chaos and disrespect which was indicated at the Thursady meeting, or it can mend its ways and being the cool headed and gentlemanly and ladylike discussion of the questions which come before it. It must cast aside individual differences and work diplo matically toward significant legislation for the student body. This . .is not to say the last meeting was the first and only example of this deplorable be havior. It has slowly and almost unconsciously built up to open anger from simple inattention and frivolity. A few light moments and even • an occasion of well-controlled and enthusiastic vigor are to be encouraged and this piece should not be taken as a move to eliminate all emotion from Cabinet. However, these emotions must be in complete control at all times. The bad thing involved with bursts of anger, such as were displayed at the last meeting, is the poor impression they make on the student body. That group, which has set Cabinet to legislate over it, believes only what it hears and reads and does not know the facts behind the action. Thus when tempers flare, students see not an emotionally worked-up Cabinet, but a group of immature individuals who have not even learned to govern their own minds, let alone the student body. In the specific case causing last week's awk ward. moment, All-University President Jesse Safety Valve-- Student Teaching Tioubles TO THE EDITOR: Although student teachers are as much a part of this university as anyone on campus, the housing department seems to view us in an entirely different category. For example: we are forced to pay for any night we spend on campus regardless of whether we use school provisions or not. In one case, some of us spending the night at a cabin party off campus were compelled to pay the same, fee as if we had spent the night in the dormitory on dormitory beds. Food service shared the attitude of the hous ing office when it refused all dormitory meals (without charge) until the actual day of classes. ThiS policy has never applied at the beginning of semesters when students live and eat in dormitories before classes begin. This means students moving back on campus this weekend had little choice other than pay two nights' rental and two days' meal fees. Student pocketbooks _ are not padded ade quately to meet the type of regulations that result more in violation than respect. —Silvia Grube Park your car wrong at the University of Cincinnati and help a deserving undergraduate through college. That is the result of the first year of enforcing the campus parking violation penalty system. Seven $l5O scholarships have been awarded for the academic year 1954-55 from parking, penalties of $2 for each offense. It has also been noted violations have been steadily de creasing in number during the year.. The sys tem has been of considerable help in relieving the tight campus parking problem. Campus parking -is limited to faculty and administrative offiCers while others park in several free lots near campus. Intercollegiate Press , . 1 Tilt Batty Catirgia,rt Editorials represent the viewpoint of tke writers. Little Man on Campus . . .._. By Bibler to not necessarily the policy of 1-• the paper Unsigned edi- Successor to THE FREE LANCE. cot. IEB7 lariats are by the editor r Th (dj 0 1 . . -L. 4ii matter July 9, 1934 at the State College, Pa. Poet Office under the act of &larch 3. 1879. i . ~ , .71 . • ; i •,, 7.4 C. ..) ... :KALIF, Editor ' 40E60' FRANK CRESSMAN. Business Mgr. ..., . ... :17,1 •D r i.... ~-.. . • : Night Editor, Ted Serrill; Copy Editors, Joe Beau-Seigneur, Jackie Hudgins; g;1 1 ':0 -,/, \ 1,, -le, Fran Fanucci, Barbara Nicholls, Arabel Wagner, Ginny Philips, Judy Harki ....::.,,;•,..: ~.,7 10. lir • Fr.- ~ ..:i 1.• Hallock, Enie Wolfgang, Nancy Peterson, Sally Rosser. .:• ,. . : . 4 , ',:i,....:•'" 71 I I r .....,:::..,.„:.,..„....... gibe ',fi t PROIFeSSOW-=:•-0 : ~ . .. .. . _ ..,.f.::!:: : ,.. .: THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Arnelle and Benjamin Sinclair, president of the Board of Dramatics and Forensics, differed over the membership of the Cabinet Consti tutional Revision Committee. • Both men had justifiable stands—Mr. Arnelle because he has the constitutional power of appointment and because all six members named were fully qualified for the positions, and Mr. Sinclair because he could fully have expected to be on the committee considering his current interest in revising the constitution via amendments. Be this as it may, however, nothing justifies the outbursts of the Cabinet members involved in the argument. For example: it seems poor policy to use vulgarisms such as ':guts" in ad dressing the chair, and poor diplomacy for the chairman to blow his\,top. Cabinet has erred in the past, but its most recent mistake has brought the full force of its misdemeanors to the attention of the members. There is no reason why the group' can not. profit by its mistakes and regain the decorum of a legislative body. If certain members of Cabinet feel they must settle personal differences, let them do it out side of the convened meeting. In the private of a room closed to other Cabinet members, student observers, and reporters, they can exe cute their verbal duels without providing rea sons for students to question the good intentions of the individuals as legislators. Cabinet must make a decision now to turn from its quarrelsome ways and attempt to con duct itself with the diplomacy becoming the top student law-making body on campus. It must do this to retain the respect of the students and to enable it to accomplish anything. Gazette ... Today CLOVER CLUB, 7 p.m., Alpha Zeta COLLEGIAN BUSINESS CANDIDATES, Women 6‘:30 p.m., Men. 7:30 p.m. 100 Weaver COLLEGIAN AD STAFF, 6:30 p.m., 9 Carnegie COLLEGIAN CIRCULATION STAFF, 6:30 p.m., 203 Willard COLLEGIAN PROMOTION STAFF, 7 p.m., 102 Willard CPA ART' AND DESIGN STAFF, 6:45 p.m., 310 Main Engineering ED STUDENT COUNCIL, 7:30 p.m., 204 Burrower FROTH AD STAFF, 7:30 p.m., Froth office, Carnegie Hall FROTH CIRCULATION BOARDS, 8 p.m., 217 Willard HOME EC CLUB. 6:30 p.m., 105 White Hall HOME EC STUDENT COUNCIL, 7:30 p.m., Living Center JUDICIAL. 7:30 p.m., White Hall JUNIOR HOTEL MEN, 9 p.m., 14 Home Economics NEWMAN CLUB ATHLETIC COIfM., 7 p.m., 107 Willard NEWMAN CLUB DISCUSSION (Bishop Sheen on TV), 7 p.m.. Catholic Student Center PSU DEMOLEY CLUB, 7 p.m., Beaver House SENIOR BOARD of Collegian business staff, 8:45 p.m., 9 Carnegie UCA SQUARE DANCE, 7 p.m., TUB ZOOLOGY CLUB, 7:30 p.m., 214 Frear Lab UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Eugene Chomicky, Frank DeSalle, Mary Dorman, John Forrest. Anthony Galanti, Lorenze Getz, James Garrity, Bar bara Hendel, Holly Hildebrand, Mary Kammire, Earl Kohn f elder, Martin Kumer, William Lawn, John Lynn, Ronald McGrainor, Mary Monroe, Thomas Muller, John Platt, Frank Reich, Russell Seitzin - ger, Joyce Solovey. UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT Those qualified for interviewing are: undergraduates who will receive degrees in January. 1955; M.S. candidates who have completed at least one semester of study: and PhD candidates who will receive degrees in 1955. Arrange ments for interviews may be made now in 112 Old Main. ESSO STANDARD OIL DEVELOPMENT (NEW JERSEY): B.S. & M.S. in Chem.E., CE, EE, ME & Fuel Tech. ; PhD in Chem. & Cherin.E. on Nov. 18 & 19. _ . • _ _ _ _ AIINNBAPOLIS-HONEYWELL REGULATOR COMPANY B.S. in ER, & Phys. on Nov. 19 ; MS in Bus. Ad who has BS degree in engineering. BETHLEHEM STEEL: BS in ME, CE, Chem.E., HE, lE, Metal., Mining Engr. & Ceramics on Nov. 22. ti.S. STEEL CORP.: BS in all fields of engineering & Metal. on Nov. 22. BELL TELEPHONE LABS.: BS & MS in ME & EE ; PhD in ME, EE, Phys. Math & Chem. on Nov. 22 & 23. CARTER OIL COMPANY: BS in Geo. Phys: MS & PhD. in Geology. Phys & Geo. Phys. on Nov. 22 & 23. Past and Present Impressions GRAVE BUSINESS- For a few minutes yesterday, your editor thought he had found another campus landmark for incoming Frosh to memorize. He thought he had another grave to go with that of George W. Atherton, president of the University, then a college, from 1882 until his death • in 1906. The grave was of "Tiny," a toy dog of an unknown brand owned by Mrs. Edwin Earle Sparks, wife of the president of the college from 1908 through 1920. When Tiny died; according to Lt. "Bud" Lewis of the Campus Patrol, she was interned along Pollock road near WalkerrLabora tory. Bud, who came to the force early in the 30's, said the grave was appropriately where the fire hydrant is now located. Marking the tomb was a small white block of stone. It pro truded approximately six inches from the ground and on its five inch square top was inscribed the word, Tiny. We organized a group of ama teur archeologists and went in search of the lost marker. It was hoped the stone could be found, buried beneath the dirt moved about in the recurbing of Pollock road some years ago. But, it could pot be found. With the clock creeping up on 5 p.m., the witching hour- that turns busy offices into ghostly crypts, a hurried call was put through to Walter Trainer, super visor of landscape construction and maintenance. Being here in the early 30's also, he remembered the small white stone and looked into what had become of it for us. The answer is that the grave was destroyed when the steam TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 16, 1954 1 ,:;\ )i( ..It t ) I CO 7 : 4 1 ( / fry I \ )) -- - (6' • . ---• . _______ (1 ~_.l .1( .I_,Fr-;-„ ..... 7 , c a .... t - - ... - . By DiE4l-11. McKALIP lines from the power plant were extended to Osmond Laboratory. The humble burial ground was not transferred and the small white stone was not saved. MORE UNDERGROUND— We talked to several telephone construction men who are cur rently prowling through the tun nels which wind through the cam pus carrying' heat and other utili ties from building to building. They said they were working 12 hours a day to make some changes in the telephone setup at the Uni versity. Inquiring about the weather down there, we were told there were steam lines in many of the tunnels and this made them too (Continued on page five) LAVIE PICTURE SCHEDULE Today Today Home Ee Seniors 6:45 Phi Gamma Delta 7:00 Froth Tonight on WDFM 7:25 7:30 8:00 8:30 __________ 9:00 ________-. 9:30 - 10:30'_ I . "C"---- 91.1 MEGACYCLES Sign •On Worm That Never Turned Behind the Lecturn Music of the People Informally Yours This World Of Music Sign Off
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers