PAGE FOUR aim Bag Collegian soccoooor so THE MICR LANCE, we Isl 7 Published Tuesday *roil:orb Saturday mornings inclusive donna. the College Year by the staff or The Daily Collegian of Tile Pennsylvania State College. Entered as leeond-clans matter July 5. 1934. at the State Collette. Pa. Post Office antler the net of Mareb 3. 1879 Collegian editorials represent the viewpoints of tke writ• era, not necessarily the policy of the newspaper. Unsigne' editorials are by the editor. Mary Krasnansk* , Edward Shanken Editor Business Mgr. Managing Ed.. Ron Bonn: City Ed.. George Glaser: Sports Ed.. Ernie Moore: Edit. Dir.. Bob Fraser: Makeup Ed., Moylan Mills: Wire Ed., Len Kolosinski: Society Ed., Carolyn Barrett: Feature Ed.. Rosemary Delahanty: Asst. City Ed., Lee Stern: Asst. Sports Eds.. Dave Colton. Bob Vosburg: Asst. Society Ed.. Greta Weaver: Librarian, Joan Kuntz: Exchange Ed.. Paul Beighley: Senior Bd., Bud Fenton. STAFF THIS ISSUE Night editor: Chuck Henderson; Copy edi tors: Andy McNeillie, Julie Ibbotson; Assistants: Irwin Weiner, Dick McDowell, Bob Landis, 3etty Allen. ' Ad Staff: Alison Monley, Betty Lou Yarnell. Ag Fee Increase Justifiable, Fair While the move to have all students pay a ten cent per semester fee for the support of the agricultural judging teams appears on the sur face to be an attempt by the aggies to get the rest of the College to bear the expenses of the teams, such is not the case. Careful considera tion of all the facts leads us to believe that the fee is both justifiable and fair. The nine judging teams for which the fee is being asked do not represent ,the School of Agriculture. They represent Penn State, just as much as does the football teams, the debating team, the glee club, and the blue band. And, just as these activities are to a large extent supported by student fees, so should the judg ing teams. While it may be true that the large majority of men on the learns is enrolled in the School of Agriculture, it is also true that a large part of the debating team is enrolled in the School of Liberal Arts and in the technical schools. The same analogy might •be made of athletes; a large number of athletes are en rolled in the School of Physical Education and Athletics. We have heard no proposal that students in these schools be expected to meet the costs of debating or athletics without the aid of the remainder of the College chipping in. The committee which has drawn up the pro posal has been aware,- however, that the peo ple up on Ag Hill have a far greater interest in the judging teams than do the people "down on main campus." For that reason they have not proposed that the cost of supporting these teams' be spread equally throughout the Col lege. _ Since Ag Hill has a special interest in the judging teams, students enrolled in the School of Agriculture will be paying 85 cents per semester for the teams under the plan, while all non-agricultural students will be paying but 10 cents a semester. If the figures drawn up by the committee are accurate, and we have every reason to believe that they axe, 18.2 per cent of the students (those enrolled in agriculture) would be paying about two thirds of the costs of the judging teams, while the 81.8 per cent of the students , in non agricultural curricula would be paying one third the costs. In cold cash figures, agricultural students would be paying about $3OOO per year in fees and all other students would be paying about $l5OO. The need for the fee is apparent from the study made by the School of Agriculture com mittee. Judging team members are paying an average of $44.80 per year out of their own pockets in order to represent Penn State in intercollegiate competition. On some teams the personal expenses of team members run up to $87.20 a year. Just as we would object to members of the debate team, the blue band, the glee club, or the football team being asked to pay for trips out of their own pockets, we think it is un fair to ask the members of the judging teams to do so. Ten cents from each student is not asking too much. It is a fee which should be ap- proved. Without Honor (From the Pitt News) In the past, basketball—as played by Pitt— has occasionally bordered on the farcial. When it did, the reason was mainly because we were so obviously the underdogs. The farce was in the lopsided score. We have become accustomed to supporting second-rate teams, but our unhappiness about the win-loss record has always been tempered by a certain amount of good-humored tolerance. We didn't expect too much but we knew our boys were always trying. If they lost, it was not without honor. But, no matter how you look at it, the per formance last Saturday night was nothing but pure farce. The similarity between TV wrest ling and Pitt basketball was overwhelming. We lost and lost without honor. The "deep freeze" tactics may have kept the score down but they made Pitt look like a troop of buffoons. If we are to follow the theory that our athletic teams represent us on the playing fields, what must they be thinking up at Penn State? * * a We think it stinks! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE •COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Chapel Goal Would Increase Collections We wouldn't like to make any predictions, but the prospects for a campus chapel seem to be getting better. Sentiment for the chapel is growing among students as well as faculty members. Before we will be able to get a chapel, however, we will have to get the funds, and that means that the Chapel collection will have to be diverted - toward the construction of a chapel. At present the Chapel collection, which in recent years has reached $4500 annually, has been going to Penn State-in-China. But since the communist government has made it im- • possible for Westerners to operate on the mainland, the Penn State-in-China operation at Lingnan University has ceased. The Penn State-in-China funds are now go- ing to Daddy Groff and an assistant who are preparing research data on Oriental plant life. We think the original intent of the Penn State-in-China has long ended and that stu dents would rather see the Chapel collection go toward the ,construction of a chapel One result of the diversion of the funds to a chapel would probably be an immediate in crease in the amount of money given in the collection. Given 'a tangible goal, students and other Chapel-goers would, we feel cer tain, be more generous with their money. From almost every angle, the diversion of the collection for a chapel seems the wise thing to do at this time. Safety Valve-- Reader Calls Prejudice Against Jew a Sickness TO THE EDITOR: The recent controversy concerning the alleged anti-semitism and bigo try of Upton Close, has prompted me to put into writing my . personal views on the subject of religious prejudice. I can honestly say that in: my lifetime, I can remember hating only one thing: that thing has been, and always will be, prejudice against the Jew. Please don't mis understand me and form the opinion that I hate people who are prejudiced against Jews. I don't hate these individuals, I only feel a deep affliction for them. I firmly believe that the existence of such a prejudice-feeling in the mind is a definite form of sickness. By now, the reader probably realizes that I am a' fanatic on the issue of prejudice. I can not for the life of me understand how anyone can dislike a person because he is Jewish. In the next few lines, I would like to present true-to-life happenings that may give the reader a few sound reasons to agree that prejudice against the Jew is the sign of a warped and• unjustified form of thinking. My very best friend is a Jew. 'He firmly believes that Christ has not yet arisen. I am, on the contrary, a firm believer in the present day existence of Christ. Although the two of. us differ greatly in these respects, we are still the best of friends. Yes, Harold Gold stein is now. and I hope and pray, always will be my best friend. Let's suppose that I had been prejudiced at the time that I met Harold. By being preju diced, I would have denied myself the greatest friend a person could hope to find. We've taken trips together; we've gone out on double dates together; we've stayed at each other's homes; and we've eaten at each other's table. Is there anything wrong in this? Even though Harold would do, and has done, anything I ask of him, should I despise him because he is a Jew? I cannot imagine how any broad-minded, sensi ble human being can answer yes to any of these questions. I fully realize that „I, and people who think as I do, are in the minority, but I pray to God, that the present day minority will someday be the majority. I am not trying to change any one's opinion on this matter. I am only making an attempt to try to get the Jew-hater to think, and to ask himself, "Why am I prejudiced?", and to be honest with the answer that God will put into his heart, • Letter Cut Gazette ... Wednesday, March 12 CAMERA CLUB, demonstration on "The Use, of Varigam," 305 Horticulture Building,•' 7:30 p.m. CHESS CLUB, 3 Sparks, 7 p.m. COFFEE HOUR, dean of men and cabinet, 109 Old Main, 4 p.m. DELTA SIGMA PI, Phi Kappa Tau, 7:30 p.m. MINING ENGINEERING SOCIETY, Mineral Industries art gallery, 7:30 p.m. NEWMAN CLUB lecture-discussion, Prof. Case in charge, Rectory basement, 7:30 p.m. THETA SIGMA PHI, Grange game room, 6:30 p.m. WRA MODERN DANCE GROUP, Modern dance room, 7 p.m. COLLEGE HOSPITAL • Ascher Barmish, Elva Burgess, Sally Collins, Paul Crofford, Douglas Frey, William Hamilton, •William Hartie, Lucy Joinef, Leonard Kilmer,, Barbara Lascher, Irving McNair, Jean - Nisley, William Parks, Hudson Samson, Charles Suer ken. ' AT 'THE MOVIES CATHAUM: Detective Story 2:13, 4:06, 5:59, 7:52, 9:45. STATE: When Worlds Collide 2:11, 4:03, 5:55, 7:47, 9:39. NITTANY: The Strip 6:25, 3:19, 10:15. The Russians are burning both ends of the candle in this climatic effort to prevent West Germany from making new contractual ar rangements with the Allies in lieu of a peace treaty. Moscow appeals to the Ger man desire for unity, offers to let her have a national army under a• general government, talks blithely of freedom of speech, press, religion, political convictions, and assembly. She appeals- to France with a warning about the revival of Ger-, man militarism and offers to en ter into a. multi-power treaty; something 1i k - the one she al ready has with France, directed , against any Ger man attack on 1 1 0-i, • molds the nations who ^ -'! , `;`rkVl fought her in World War 11. All of the old Russian double- talk is there •,..1411h about suppressing organizations which threaten democracy; • and everyone now knows what Rus sia means when she uses that word—she means her own system. If Russia were to - grant to her Own citizens the rights which she now 'offers Germany—and were to live up to Western defi v,.nitions of the termi— there ivOuld be no more cold war and no threat of hot war. She calls her iron disregard for the dig ,;,mity of the human being demo . 'cracy. Although this latest manuever was carefully planned, going back a month or more to its inception Bob Boudreau Little - MarrOn Cappus "Honest, Worthat I'll just pop if I eat another bite." Interpreting the News Reds Try to Block German Cooperation By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst Russia is making• a new and carefully conceived effort to prevent the integration of Western Germany into the European defense setup. Her proposal for• a German peace treaty climaxes years of lip service to the ideal that Germany must be reunited, but with treaty regulation of her ability to make war. . . . . Gazette . . . COLLEGE PLACEMENT American Smelting and Refining Co. will interview June graduates in Metal. and Min.E. Monday, March 24. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. will interview June graduates in Commerce Monday, March 24. Corning Glass Co. will interview June graduates in M.E., Ch.E., E.E., 1.E., and Cer. Monday, March 24. They will inter. view Chem. and Phys. graduates at all levels. Curtiss Wright Corp. (Propeller Division) will interview June graduates in Aero.E., M.E. and E.E. Wednesday, March 19. Dr, Paul E. Williams will interview June graduates in Metal., M.E., E.E., C.E., C&F, A&L, Chem., Pre-Med., Zoo.. Sci. and M.S. or B.S. candidates with experience in Bact. Monday. March 24. Rohm and Baas Co. will interview June graduates in Ch.E. Chem. and Phys, Mon day. March 24. United Aircraft Corp. -will interview WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1952 throUgh the puppet government of Eastern Germany, it contains'dan gers for Russia, too, and by that very fact proclaims itself as a step in desperation. The Allies can now, and prob ably will, take the offered op portunity to make Russia put up or shut up. They - can hold a con ference, ,and take the Russian pro posal paragraph by paragraph and make the Moscow delegation back down. There can be no clear cut victory, because the ultimate failure to agree would be over definitions. But this is one of the best chances yet to highlight Rus sian insincerity. In the meantime, the Rus sians would accomplish one of their purposes if they could de lay =the arrangements now un der way between Germany and ~the Allies. The Allied cue would be to go right ahead with, the contractual an d military ar rangements, on the grounds that everything of this nature has always been subject to an ulti mate peace Ireaty. Russian in sistence that all steps should be delayed during negotiation might well bog down the whole conference. Russia would prob ably Profit some by this, 'through increasing confusion in the German mind. There is ha r dly any doubt, however, that the Allies and the internationalists among the West Germans will push the contrac tual an d military negotiations now under way. June graduates in M.E. and Aero.E. Mon day, March 24. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. will inter view June graduates in A&L and C&F interested in either sales or claims work on - Tuesday, March 25. Phillips Petroleum Co. will interview June graduates in Ch.E., M.E. ' E.E., P.N.G. and Metal. Saturday, March 15. S. S. Kresge Co. will interview June graduates in A&L, C&F, and any other fields interested in management, Tuesday, March 25. . Westinghouse Electric Corp. will inter view June graduates in M.E., E.E., 1.E., Ch.B., Metal., Cer. and Phys. Tuesday, March 25. They will also interview M.S. and Ph.D. candidates in E.E., Metal/and Phys. and Ph.D. candidates in Phys. Chem. STUDENT EMPLOYMENT - - - Married couple without children for local summer employment. Woman with dictaphone experience for Part-time employment. - Camp Conrad Weiser, Wernersville, Pa. will interview male councelors .March 18 from 9 to 12' noon at the Student Ear ployment Office, 112 Old Main. - 0 /„.. 75 tek, 0