Page 2 EDITORIAL 1 — « Readers Urges More Involvement In this, our last editorial of the year, we want to address ourselves to the class of 1976-77: For most of you, next year will be your last year of college. That year will be the one you’ll remember as either a meaningful or meaningless experience. It’s, your choice. Our advice to you: get involved. It’s that simple, but it can make all the difference. There are some 35 student organizations on this campus. Be active in just one. It’s the only way you can make these 215 acres of higher education mean something for you personally. There are also numerous faculty and staff committees here that need student representation. Get yourself on one, and fight for what you believe in. This school is you, every one of you. If next year is a good one for you, it’s because you made it good. If it’s a bad one, your noninvolvement made it that way and to quote one of our more quotable professors here, “That’s your problem.” A college education can be more than attending classes and grades. But the “more” is up to you. Don’t leave here with just reams of notes you’ll never look at again. Get involved. Letters To The Editor It's Not Radical To Use Our Consititution After about three weeks of quiet investigating and one week of screaming as loud as I consider civil, Ifeel that I have gained a reasonable command of knowledge of security on this campus. Since too many people were so busy chewing on Chief Paul to hear my civil screaming Til have one more go at it before I shut up and worry about myself for 3V* months. Okay, Chief Paul has a public relations problem. Some of it (but damn little) stems from where he has spent a subtantial portion of his life. Counter-intelli gence has little relation to higher education, but most of the problem is on our side. Automatically dis trusting a man because of his uniform is just as asinine as judging by skin color. Meet him sometime. The Office of Student Affairs presently performs the function of prosecutor, town manager, part-time judge, and police commi ssioner. Jerry South is a good and decent man as well as a superior administrator, but the “Federalist Papers” say this should never happen. I’ve been told that there will be changes. This agnostic fervently prays that they will will be substanitive. We are lucky enough to be very close to the State Capitol. If we had the collective balls to march en masse down there next year and scream blue bloody murder for a Marajuana Decriminalization Act we could save our younger brothers and sisters from a world of hurt that we have lived through. Now that I have by horrible accident become a Dauphin County resident I intend to work and vote against the insensitive clods presently serving as magi strate and District Attorney. I hope my fellow county residents will do the same. For those of you who want an island from law enforcement, I gleefully look forward toward the moment when you need a cop. I hope he isn't there. To summerize- Our jus tice system should have all the checks and balances built into it that the state and Federal justice system has. Some state laws must be changed. We can help change them. Our police cannot exer cise discretion after they receive an outside com plaint There is a Ist class misdemeanor called malfea Is Ignorance The Excuse? Your Editorial column of May 13, 1976, was mis leading and deceptive. You made reference to ‘unequal legal representa tion’ between John Lane and Deborah Peabody. Hie point is that John Lane was at a disadvantage. Ms. Peabody was not a party to the hearing on May 3, 1976. The charges were made against Mr. Lane by the University. Ms. Peabody was only a witness on behalf of the University. As such, she is subject to be cross exam ined. I cross examined her just like I cross examined each witness for the University. Your Editorial, like some of the other articles which appeared in the May 13, 1976, edition, has reached a conclusion without benefit of proper knowledge about the facts and background of C.C. Rudlf The Vagabond Is Jobless But Free By Leonard E. Brewster Assit Prof., Humanities and Philosophy Nothing is more common these days than pompous and naive-that is to say, professorial - exhortations about the humanities. The concern is employ ment. Students do not take humanities courses for they are less likely to get jobs if they do. We who teach such courses must reverse the trend for fear of losing pur jobs. One of the most common arguments directed to this purpose is the “Its-All-a -Mistake” argument. Insur ance companies, its adher ents maintain, have a secret passion--secret even to themselves I think -for ac tuaries who can scan a line of Wordsworth; and the Civil Service Examiners will pass only those who know the Aristotelian predicaments. sance and nonfeasance. I have personally witnessed discretion from this depart ment when they themselves have discovered the viola tion. I look forward to Dr. South’s July report. It might (I hope) meet all our needs. If it doesn’t or isn’t accepted, we will simply have to keep fighting until there is nothing left to fight. I once promised myself that I would never be a college radical. But a balanced and fair criminal justice system was some thing that was thought of, fought and died for two hundred years ago. I thought. Thanks for listening, Ray Martin this case, It frightens me when some omnipotent soul sets up a system, polices that system, makes the rules for the operation of that system and then sits in judgement of all who violate the unpublished rules/ If this University claims to have a fair and impartial system of judging its students, it certainly was not displayed on May 3, 1976. The fact that your staff, some ad-hoc members of the Hearings Board (husbands included) and the University community have not been able to discern the real parameters of this case indeed unfortunate. Maybe ignorance is the excuse. John M. Jones Assistant Professor of Business Law and fasnraneo Thus students just don’t understand how quickly they will be snapped up if they will only major in English literature or ancient philo sophy. Unfortunately there is little sign that employers understand this either. But there is always "The Better Person Argument” in which it is conceded that humanities courses do nothing to get you a job, but in which it is also maintained that you will be a better person for having taken them. But this proposition evaporates as soon as it is discovered that no one-least of all a humanist-knows what it is to be a good person much less a better one. I adhere to a third position which I choose to call “The Vagabond Argu ment.” Very briefly, it holds that the purpose of humani ties courses is to render the students who take them unemployable, that is to say—useless. This is accomplished by treating as exemplary unem ployable, useless people. Furthermore, what is at tended to in such figures is exactly what made them unemployable and useless. We study in Socrates, for Faci^^JFonun^ instance, his habit of hanging about the market place asking impertinent questions of those who might have helped him get ahead. Naturally, anyone who treats someone like Socrates as worthy of imitation, can hardly expect to impress the recruiter from Pringle's Potato Chips. But the advantages of being even more intimately linked through employment with a fundamentally corrupt society such as our own are easily exaggerated. As we continue to subvert foreign govern ments, plot the assasination of their leaders and gorge ourselves in the presence of their starvation ( or in the The Capitol Campus Reader The Pennsylvania State University The Capitol Campus Middletown, Pennsylvania 17057 ph. 717-944-4970 The C.C. Reader Is published by the students at Capitol Campus every two weeks during the fall, winter and spring terms. Printing is done at the Middletown Press and Journal. The Reader office Is located in W-129, Main Building. The opinions expressed in this newspaper do not necessarily represent the views of the students, faculty or staff of Capitol Campus or The Pennsylvania State University. Paid advertisements in the Reader are not necessarily endorsed by the editors or staff. Office Hour* Spring Term 4th period 12:1$ to 1:30 p.m. Wld 6th period 3:05 to 4:20 p.m. Edltor-InChlef. Associate Editor. A sal stent Editor.. Photography Editor '.. Meric Switzer. Business Manager. Tom Grogan Advertising Manager Robert Bennett Assistant Advertlalng Manager. Robin Platt* Suit Jean Beany, Randy Fee, Rebecca Oswald, Deborah Young, VliglnU Lehman, William Kane, Vem Martin, John Leierzapf, Mark Appleby Pettis Stanchak, Ray Martin, Hot Uon Coordinator. Faculty Advteer Typaeatter* May 27, 1976 Dr. Leonard Brewster ultimate refinement of deca dence, adopt expensive diets), we might reflect on the impracticality of doing anything on the assumption that such a society will last out the decade. However, even if we were not suirounded by such reeking decay, we might still ask whether wo as human beings are meant to be mere instruments to someone else’s purpose, in other words, employed and useful. This is the question that the life and activities of Socrates suggests, and the answer seems obvious: human beings are supposed to have their own purposes. The reason for studying literature, philosophy, mu sic, and the other utterly useless, but peculiarly hu man disciplines is to show what having one’s own purpose or, what comes to the same thing, being free as a human being is all about. In each of these subjects man appears, not as a victim of an alien world, but as the maker of his own world. And to overcome and even bend to your own purpose that which would enslave you is to be free. The purpose of the humanities is thus to nurture and promote unem ployability, which is just another word for freedom. If we as teachers of the humanities fail to do this, we shall become, by a just irony, the same type of dreary functionary we there by produce. Phyllis Schaaffar Qairy Achanbach ...John Sianchak Paul Balll*, Social Commltlaa Chairman Dr. Malvyn Habar Oaborah Young, ■Kaisn Plckana, Robert L. Fisher Jr.