FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1950 Plans Furthered for $2-Million Union HERE'S' AN ARTIST'S conception of the $2,060,000-"first unit" f oot the College's .Student Union building, slated to be in construe. lion tentatively by. December 1950. Plans will be up for final ap•.: . pro Val of the Joint Alumni-Trustee Committee and Board of Trus tees on 'June 10. Meanwhile,. All-College Cabinet was ,asked last night by two members of the undergraduate SU committee to okay a student fee brsiTining next semester, as a,"pointed boost" toward early SU consltuction. • . • , Visible 'above, from the street. level -in front, are She main flOor and scc,ond floor. Noi visible in. the drawing are the ground floor and' ba:37.3...n.a. (Details of. SU-facilities appear elsewhere on this'page.) Tod: of the Union . . Follow progress of the 13-year "fight" for a Student Union Building at Penn State by examining this log oi SU highlights: • 1937—Agitation began in the Collegian for a SU'building similar to those cropping up on other campuses. Collegian staffers have been among the - student ring -leaders in the SU 'drive, according to Mr. George Donovan,. manager of associated student activities _and stu-• dent .uniOn. • • January 1939---Eiglify-nine per cent of Penn State students want a SU building, a cross-section survey of 800 students reve s aled. Eighty-four per cent of all those contacted in the survey said they would be , willing to pay a fee each semester toward a SU. • February•l939—Dr. Robert G. Bernreuter, associate profesSor' of OycholOgy (now a full;professor) pointed out that many coeds .are having "pass up - the future greatsin the engineering field" because of lack of aSU building as a social center. He said.a . SU would•bring about more. friendly between Male and female students: • Deceniber 1939—Collegian want-ad: "Wanted—a hundred thous 7. and bucks from some wealthy alumnus to start the ball roiling on: a Much-needed SU buildin g ." „ / • • 1940••—AdamSmyser,:Collegian editor, exhorted action:, ",. . . • • 'Can't. we 'rest just a minute, catch our breath, fill out this vast, hollow shell we call a college with more of the real stuff 'of 'life? ..,.. Why can't the College•help the situation by providing a Student Union. blinding? .. If not the College, what, aboUt the students lhemselvei or the alumni?" .MAY .1942—!'S.S. Dry Dock," campus non-profit night ' club begun yDonovan'in the Old'Main basement, celebrated its third and beAt.year.: Modest forerunner of the SU building as a social center, the •.`Dry . Dock" offered an' entire evening. of fun for less than a btick .A 50kent cover charge entitled a • couple to a' table, dancing to.recbrdings 'and.a floor show of professional caliber. Sandwiches— student- made—coat• a" dime. Extra "take" above expenses for the evening was-returned to the students in the •form of doOr prizes.' •.•,•=Maich• I946—Campus-wide student interest and drive toward a'SU reached probably its highest pinnacle to date, led by•• Law; .rence.Fostor, 'Collegian staffer; and .others. About .2,700 students (Continued on page foukeen) B I TOM MORGAN THE. DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA SCIO Seen: by 1...,W ! . LoOtig Set fri' ' A ballroom abbut half tile floor area. of Ree Hall, plus extensive doftee, shop; 'soda, bap and dining' room facilities,: lounges, and other features 'will highlight the .$2,- 000.000 - "first unit" of the. Student Union 'building.- ' . , According to tentative present plans:; released. yesterday. by Samuel K. Hostetter, assistant to the 'president in charge of busi ness and finence,:future additions to the , '"first unit" Will '.be made as funds are available.. The build ing will'have: four floors. FolloWing o are descriptions of each noel , in. the "first- unit". as outlided• in the: up-to-date plans revised 'from tentative plans re ported. 'last. January in = the Col- Ba . .einent FlOor -• " Control area for all utilities in the building, such ak 'electricity and heat; ' Unexcavated areas Ground•: Floor . .(This :floor will be • below the street level in the front, i but will be: level. with the ground in the rear.) . Kitchen; serving Several areas on this floor; • . (Continued on page fourteen) ULMEI Plans for a $2;000,000 four-floor student social and recrea tional center to lie, erected soon on a Mid-campus site have been approved by the College's Student Union Building .com mittee, S. K. Hostetter, chairman, disclosed yesterday. On the committLe axe . faculty; administrative officers and students. 1-161. pointed out that how soon • the building is . erected 'depends "If •the, present All-College- Cab partly on. 'approval of present inet passes the fee for next fall," he declared, "it should serve to Alumni SU plans by a Joint Trustee- virtually assure that we'll have committee a ri•cl the a much-needed Student 'Union and of . Trustees on June 10, building in construction during and partly on whether a Student the coming school year."' • assessment can be 'started next The fee would be used• for con fall- to help• finance the build ing. , . struction and maintenance of the SU building, according to Hostet ter. MacCalluin and Thomas Mor- OMI k Sit • "Keeping 'in mind • these two gab, Cellegian ex -editor, last provisos," he said,- "the 'outlook night asked. Cabinet—as a climax is favorable and the SU- build- to a 13-year student ,"*.fight" for ing Should -be 'in construction a SU building-L-to approve a, SU during the coming;, school l. - year." fee- and make known: that ap- Declining.- to name : a specific prove' to.. the • Joint Alumni site, Mr. Hostetter -said' it- is not Trustee committee in June. definite yet, but' he indicated Financing the SU is called one , ' that . it 'Will' be a . -location - bear of the major problems now con the center of campus. . - • fronting the College ; since - ex , • Need Assessment . ' tensive SU planning—directed by -\-• Meanwhile,' James. ,MacCallum; . (Continued' on page fourteen) chairman, 'of the undergraduate -.. • SU, committee, - declared - yeSter-, . • . . • day that-'the "time' is ripe for, a . Voluntary '.strident assessment to ke-Cite s help finance the SU. building." - - ' - He pointed out that fees -are _ a major means- 'of SU building SUO U t K 100 finance on many campuses, and added that Penn State students have asked the .Trilstees twine previously (1946 . ,and and. 1947) :for a SU fee 'as a boost toward the bl4lding; but action was deferred, To Start Soon PAGE THREE . . Mr. George. H. Deike; called "one of the of Trustees in the history,•of the College,' ex pressed trust."that something defi nite"on a. Student Union building can be accomplished "in the very near future," in a recent letter to Thomas Morgan, Collegian ex editor and student member of the College's SU committee. .Mr. •Deike declared, in part: must confess that I have I been deeply interested in this mat ter for a period of several years, both as a member of the Board of Trustees and as an alumnus of the Cellege. The need for a Student Union building is well recognized and I trust that something definite can be, accomplished in the very near 'future. . .We are all vita 4 bitereS*l ib,tbis subject."