PA GE FOUR lr Bang . Coltegiati Successor to THE FREE LANCE, um UM Published Tuesday through Saturday mornings imelludive daring the College year by the staff of The Daily Collegian of The Pennsylvania State College- Entered as second-class smatter • July 1,, 1934, at tits State College. Pa., Post Office ander the act of March 3. 1875. Collegian editorial. represent tin viewpoint of the writers. not necessarily the policy of the newspaper. (1w signed editorials are by the editor. Dave PeUnita Franklin S. Kelly Editor Business Mgr. • Managing Ed., Andy McNeillie: City Ed., Dave Jones: Sports Ed., Jake Dighton: Copy Ed.. Bettie Long; Edit. Dir., Mimi Ungar; Wire Ed.. Chuck Henderson: Soc. Ed.,LsVona* Althouse: Asst. Sports Eds., Ted Saes's, Bob Shoellkopf: Asst. Soc. Ed., Lynn Kahanowitz: Feature Ed.. Barry Fein: Librarian and Exchange Ed.. Bob Landis: Photo Ed.. Bruce Schroeder. Aast. Bus. Mgr., Richard Smith: Local Advertising Mgr.. Virginia Bowman; National. Adv. Mgr., Alison Morley: Circulation Co-Mgrs., Gretchen Henry, Kenneth Wolfe; Per. sonnel Mgr., Elizabeth Agnew.; Promotion Co-Mgrs., Teresa Moslak, Don Stohl; Classified Adv. Mgr., Marty Worthington: Office Mgr., Mary Ann Wertman; Senior Board, Nancy Marcinek. Rath Pierce. Betty Richardson and Elizabeth Widman. STAFF THIS ISSUE Editorial Staff: Night Editor, Phil Austin; Copy Editors, Nancy Ward, Tammie Bloom; As sistants, Janice Laird, Jeannine Vandeuren, Ann Leh, Mike Feinsilber. • Ad Staff: Louise Caspary. Paperbound Texts Would Cut Costs (Reprinted from The Cavalier Daily, 'Uni versity of Virginia, March 18, 1953.) "This nation spends five times as much every year on dogfood as it does on college textbooks," we are informed by the current bulletin of the American Textbook Publishers Institute. We are also told that less than one per cent of the educational dollar is spent on textbooks, and that textbook prices have climbed only 39 per cent since 1939, while book manufacturing costs have gone up more than 70 per cent, and wholesale commodity prices have been upped more than 120 per cent. While this assortment of facts is interesting and no doubt quite reliable, we are puzzled. Is the purpose of the ATPI to preface and softpedal a boost in the cost of textbooks, or is it about to shirk the publishing racket and enter the dogfood business, since there seems to be so much money in it? At any rate, allow us to make a suggestion to the American Textbook Publishers Institute —since so many books are now being ,pub lished in paperbound pocket editions, why can't more textbooks be made available in a similar format? Tile benefits of such a step, both for the pro fessor and for the student, are multiple and manifest. The student would be able to purchase much more for his money by paying 35, 50,., or 60 cents for a textbook rather than several dol lars. Paperbacked textbooks would be easy to handle, easy to carry, and could be stocked in large enough quantities by the bookstores to prevent shortages. The professor could offer, his students a wider range of reading if enough books were made available in pocket 'editions, as has already been demonstrated in the Eng lish (literature) department where extensive use is being made of paperbacked books. There can be little practical objection to the printing of, textbooks in cheap editions—if it is possible to publish such diversified material as Barlett's Quotatons (abridged), dictionaries, world atlases, and poetry anthologies (all of which are now on the newsstands), it must also be possible to print histories, economics texts. etc., in similar style. Both the educator and the student are faced with financial problems today—a reduction in the cost of textbooks would help make edu cational ends meet a little easier. —William L. Tazewell More Care Needed In Posting Sigris Each year as the campus political campaigns open, both parties rush to indiscriminately plas ter downtown store windows with posters ex postulating on the merits of the various can didates. Every year, too, most of these posters are either torn down or taken down by the store owners. Sometimes the absence of the posters brings charges by one party against the other. It would seem that by this time the campus politicos would have learned a few lessons regarding posters. Evidently, they have not. In the first place, it seems only proper that local merchants be asked if posters may be taped to their windows. In some cases this has been done, and usually in these cases, the posters have remained up longer than usual. But the best thing to do would be to get per mission to place posters inside the windows, thus eliminating the problems of souvenir seekers, the not too gentle April breezes, the students who on Saturday night are "feeling good," the overzealous par t y workers, and the littered State College streets—an eyesore unappreciated by the borough fathers. If the party leaders would be willing to take a little more time in getting their posters put up, rather than trying to "get there the fastest with the mostest, ' their poster campaigns m!gh be less expensive as well as more effec jive. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Education. Budget Shouldn't Be Cut The taxpayers of Pennsylvania ,are overjoyed by the proposed economy cut in appropriations Par state departments. With the high cost of living, this is politically a good idea, especially with elections in the near future. However, one • little point has been neglected by the taxpayers in their joyous anticipation of no tax increase. If the proposed budget decrease goes through, the schools in the state will suffer more than anything else. If educational facilities suffer, in the long run, so will the state and its residents. Much has been written about the small amount of American revenue that goes info the educa 'tional system, but the problem still exists. Program after program has received , big bon uses and appropriation while the money re ceived by schools remains relatively the same —small. Among the' many things to be denied the College if the proposed plan goes through are the new animal and poultry disease laboratory the state's share of the atomic reactor cost, salary increases for College employees, and re placement of the swine which weredestroyed by last year's plague. Many of the programs for which the College requires money will benefit the people within the state more than the Col lege itself in the long run. No matter what sarcastic remarks-are made along the line, the future of the world, coun try, and state depends upon educating the youth of today. Education receives little enough—must'the proposed economy cut take such a large slice from a program so vital to the world of today? —AI Munn Student Handbook The business manager of the Student Hand book for 1953-54, Morton Zieve, has called for volunteers to work on the advertising staff. Student support of the publication on both the advertising and editorial staffs will be necessary for the success of the handbook. The incoming freshman's opinion of the Col lege will be formed to some extent by the impression he receives from the handbook. In order tr create the most favorable impression possible, the efforts of many will be necessary. —Dick Rau Safety Valve Objections to Calendar TO THE EDITOR: We would like to protest the new calendar revision. The College Senate approved the new plan which is supposed to meet all objections for merly expressed. According to the new plan, the Thanksgiving recess will be 4 1 / 2 days long. In the catalog for the 1953-54 session, the same length of time is given. Neither is the spring recess different under the new plan. One change is that a longer vacation at mid semester will occur. Why make it so long that the spring semester must be lengthened? Even C. 0. Williams. the dean of admissions, should not need this much time to prepare for reg istration. The College Senate explained the increased length of the spring semester is a means to compensate for "days lost during Thanksgiving vacation, and Memorial Day, when it occurs during the period scheduled for classes, for days lost by administrative proclamation for special occasions, and for the increased mid-semester vacation." This means that most students won't be able to work in the summer until the middle of the third week in June. • Does the College Senate realize how difficult it is to obtain summer employment even now when students reach home by the second week in June? Employers want summer employees to start work as early as possible. They won't hold off hiring until the Penn State students can come home. Instead, they are going to hire those who are available when the employers need them. The longer the time before they can work, the less the possibilities of obtaining a Well-paying job.. There are many students who need these jobs to continue their education. The College Senate should look into the pos sibilities of shortening the vacation at mid semester and bringing the close of the spring semester nearer the beginning of June. Gazette ... April 15, 1953 AGRICULTURE CLUB, 7 p.m., 210 Agricul ture. CHESS CLUB, 7 p.m., 3 Sparks. WRA LACROSSE CLUB, 4:15 p.m., 1 White Hall, experienced and inexperienced. MARKETING CLUB, 7:30 p.m., Beta Theta Pi. MI STUDENT COUNCIL, 7 p.m., 208 Willard. PSYCHOLOGY CLUB, 7 p.m., 204 Burrowes. RIDING CLUB; canceled. STUDENT EMPLOYMENT Camp Conrad Weiser, Pa., will interview men April 16 and 17. Camp Starlight, Pa.. will interview men and women April 17. Camp Nokomis. New York, will interview men - and women April 23. Married couple without children for summer job near State College. Men wanted for general outdoor work, garden and lawn care, etc. Asbury Arlington Hotel, New Jersey, will inter view men and women, April 24. Men with half-days wanted for the remainder of the semester. —Names withheld Little Man On Campus "New faculty member named Carter—beginning teacher, single —no dependents." WISE AND OTHERWISE Liberal Lacks Full Meaning Too many colleges are failing to give the full meaning, and pur pose of a liberal education, according to a recent report from the Ford Foundation. The foundation based its report on a survey con cerning student transition from high school to college. Too many students, the report says, never know what a liberal • education is. Many find out only after they have completed their college careers. Students in the survey had •three major complaints, all of which have often been applied to Penn State by its students. Students generally com plained about poor teaching. especially in the fjrst two years of college and in basic or sur vey courses. The majority of students 'questioned felt• they had, better teaching in the last two' years of high school than in the first two of college. Students also complained about the impersonality of the large university. This has also been one student complaint against Penn State, but that complaint is not valid. College students who cannot ad just themselves to the imperson ality of a large university will not be able to adjust themselves to an even more impersonal and larger world upon graduation. The individual, in his tendency toward becoming lost in .the so ciety, has been forced to adjust himself to that society. Those who cannot conquer the largeness of a college are, perhaps, somewhat immature. - The advantages of a large university often outweigh the:, disadvantages of its size. Through its largeness, such a college may often provide wider academic opportunities and im p r o v e d educational facilities.- And, except for a few cases, the larger university is better able to enlist outstanding pro fessors and speakers than a small college. The individual educational cost at a large uni versity is often lower. Perhaps the most important criticism of colleges, and a valid one, is the lack of stimulus to ac tive, independent thinking. "We find clear evidence of wasteful duplication and of barren work," the report said. "We find import ant gaps in training and intellect ual experience. Most serious of all, we find that many students do not do as well as they should." Many students favored. a more ma tur e approach to learning, especially in the last year of school. They favored the use of advanced texts and source ma terials, assignments in 1 a r g e r blocks, more training in. critical WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1953 Education By DAVE JONES analysis, and a chance to _work on their own. Penn State, unfortunately, in many ways suffers from this im mature approach to learning, and perhaps in a greater extent from immature approachers to learn ing. Too many professors believe class attendance and grades more impOrtant than learning. Too many students believe the same things. Regulation. of class cutting and intentional schedul ing of exams before vacations are two examples of this im mature approach. Such a learning approach is necessitated by the type of stu dent. As long as we educate on quantity rather than quality, such controls will be necessarily placed on students. And not until edu cation returns to a select number will those controls be removed. Engineer - Field To Be Studied A program to study educational techniques used in training engi neers is being introduced to the College by' the Westinghouse Ed ucational Foundation. This pro gram will be known as the George Westinghouse Professorship in En gineering Education. - . The program is designed to pro *vide educational short cuts in the engineering field and to supply better-trained engineers to allevi ate the shortage. Thp job of the scientist who will be chosen for the George Westinghouse Professorship will be to define and refine the liberal and cultural needs of engineering students in relation to their sci entific background. Tickets Now Available For Forestry Banquet Tickets for the annual Forestry Banquet sponsored by the For estry Society are on sale at the main office of the Forestry Build ing. • Price of the.tickets, which may also be purchased from officers of the Forestry . Society, is $3. The" banquet Will be held May 1 at the Nittany Lion. Inn. By Bible