PAGE FOUR P«fcU*h*d T««War thraagh 8«f nUy umiwn during du Uni vanity fiar, Tht Dillr CftlUftia U «itiidt* •ftrty MwiHHf* __ | (2.01 »cr icaeiUr IS.II p*r year L- _ Katera4 ai irn —1 Matter July S, 1934 at the Slat* C eUege, Pa. Post Offica tadcr tha act af -March 3* 1879. ED DUBBS. Editor Asst. Bos. Mrr„ Saa Mertaaaoa: Local Ad. Mgr.. Marilyn MasasUf £dftar. Jm4r Barkiaon; City Editor. Hobart Frank- Elias: Asst. Local Ad. Mgr., Boss Ann Contain; National Jin; Sports Editor, Vine* Carocd; Copy Editor, Ann Fried- Ad. Mgr., Joan Wallace; Promotion IlfL, Marianne Mtler; Wt: Aesiitant Copy Editor, Mirim Beittr: Assistant Sporta Personnel Mrr„ Lynn Glassborn: Clasalfied Ad. M*r„ Sts?# Editor. Mott Podbcask: Make-op Editor, Ginny Philips: Pho- Biilstein: Co-Circulation Mrn H Pot Misrnlckl and Richard tsersphr Editor. Gtorc* Harrison. Lippa; Research and Record* Mgr., Barbara Wall: Of flea Secretary. Marlene Marks. STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night Editor, Ralph Manna; Copy Editors, Lou Prato, Pat Evans; Wire Editor, Jack McArthur; Assistants, Bill.Jaffe, Linda Segar, Marie Russo, Cathy Fleck and Pam Alexander. The Court and Fraternity Discrimination The Supreme Court has set a precedent which may some day be used to outlaw discriminatory parctiees by fraternities. In fact, it could affect discrimination on racial or religious grounds in even private schools, other private clubs and colleges supported or controlled by church groups of any denomi nation. Ill* Supreme Court April 29 proclaimed that a man who left his money in 1831 for a college which would admit only "mole, while orphans" cannot have his wishes entirely respected. - Stephen Girard allowed the city of Phila delphia to act as a trustee for him, and now his wishes cannot be fully fulfilled by the trustee. The court ruled that the organization the city set up to carry out such trusts was an “agency of the stale” and not an agency of the donor of the. money. lien the Supreme Court invokes the 14th Amendment, which reads: “No State shall make^ or enforce any law which shall abridge the” privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.” It is conceivable that fraternities may fall under thii precedent case. Mpsi of them are in Discordant Note Pivot, the campus poetry magazine, made its annual May appearance yesterday with a record breaking sale of more than 900 copies. Since the first publication eight years ago, Pivot has been continually growing in sales and reputation. It has a unique position among “little magazines” produced on college campuses in that it is self-sustaining. Pivot it recognized by the world of poetry lovers; it has gained a reputation for fine mod ern poetry. Copies of lhe magazine are request ed by college English departments all over the country. Two years ago a copy of Pivot prompted a remark in the New Campus Writing, an annual book about college writing, that “there is much promising literary activity” at the University. Sounds like a discordant note among lhe tire some cries of cultural apathy. But Pivot's suc cess this year and lhe progressive growth of its counterpart, the Lantern, student literary mag azine, may prove the national magazine right. . Pivot had been walking the tight rope of student interest in its 7-year struggle for sur vival. But this year, it looks like the small yellow. book has a sunny future. Gazette Today BELLES LETTR£S. 7 :SQ p.m.. Atherton Lounge CAMERA CI.UK, 7 p.m.. Miner*! Science Auditorium -COLLKGIAN AD STAFF. €:4& p.m.. 9 Carnegie COLLEGIAN BUSINESS STAFF, 6:30 p.m., 201 Willard COLLEGIAN PROMOTION STAFF. 7 p.m.. 10S Willard •DELTA SIGMA PI. 7:30 p.m.. Phi Siema Delta GAMMA SIGMA, pledges at <>:3o; members. 7 p.m.. 2 Whit* LANTERN CIRCULATION STAFF. 7:45 p.m.. 209 HUB NEU BAVARIAN SCHUHPLATTLERS, 7 p.m., Westmitt- 9ler Hall PANHELLKNIC COUNCIL. C:SO p.m.. 20S HUB PSYCHOLOGY CLUB. WSGA JUDICIAL BOARD. 6 pja.. 203 HUB Cnirtraitr Hoipitai Stanley Burd. John Diffenbach, Emilie Frm. John Godayte. Wilma Hickman. Roberta Lereh. Richard Neely. John Sweeney. Florence Wynne, Rebecca Zahm. Drawing 11 Intersession 'Miners' Get $5O Gift Engineering students schedul- A $5O contribution has been re ing Drawing 11 in intersession :£ e \'' ed , for second year from a. 6 . „ . , , ... iSchroeder Brothers, Inc. of Pitts have been asked to sign a section j burgh, by Arnold W. Asman, pro list in the Mechanical Engineer- fessor and head of the Depart ing building. ment of Mining, to help-cover ex- This course may be offered on- penses of deserving students ly if a sufficient number of stu- attending the Cleveland Coal dents apply. ' [Show, Monday through Thursday. L ’ ¥]\ LANTERN ! {jSiQ E. College ! I Steak Sandwiches I on calf Meeting ; iSSUST T Hoi Sausages , rmlrvnnn,,, i.u .• tTd eca i e A Submarines TOMORROW Last Meeting TIRE SALE L u 0 iD- r _on i - . . , • ewarvAito -u onr f i Now—a wholesale tire deal on , j] 0 - ! Completely different everyom must attend j aU sizes E Xce n en t values if I HfllTlburQSrS I /■%,,• •_» n„* .• _ • » ~ . —no excuses 11 your casing is recapable, for |i| D|ZZ3S II OflJfl/IQI iCfintltlQ It l 6CfCfI COpyJ ! we need used tires. For exam- j *STORIES and promotions • some ; P i e ... N Breyer s Ice Cream | •poetry fleW aCeOUntS. | 6:70-l5 $13.9e plus tax at ! Plus Similar Values . 112 S.. Frazier St. ! Contributed by Students 6:45 9 Carnegie , ti p c ca i c Phone AD 8-8381 11 OSr - ' ■ lIVC JMLC Open Evenings and Sunday* j - Utye Hatiti Collegian SeccMMr U THE FREE LANCE, «t. ISIT —Judy Harkison SIB HUB THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA STEVE HIGGINS. Business Manager corporaled under charier* issued by a slate. It is even more conceivable to see how they can fall under this ruling if the college is state* supported. Local chapters of national fraterni ties and. local fraternities receive their charters from the college, which could be considered an "agency of the stale." The same is true of private clubs. Many of these are incorporated under state laws. Added to this list could be private colleges. We wonder whether the Supreme Court it self realized it was getting -so close to banning any form of discrimination when it handed down the Girard decision. We also wonder if the decision does not pose more problems than it answers. But,* when these problems are overcome and answered in future Supreme Court decisions— and undoubtedly they will be—America will be better for it. Many fraternities and fraternity men will not like the idea that some day they mir be re quired io take the action Pi Lambda Phi took so wisely on its own several years ago. But then “brotherhood” to many of them has a different meaning than it does to-us. —The Editor Safety Valve Round-Robin Attack? TO THE EDITOH: These observations pertain to the article of April 17 by Mr. Arthur Edson of the Associated Press concerning the late Sena tor McCarthy, and remarking on the measure of a gentleman. That was quite a game of round robin. Mr. Edson writes an article expressing your sentiments and has a Mr. Ginsburg ex press his, Mr. Edson's own. Do you honestly consider that such meaning less spite, published on the day of the Senator’s burial, did anything to increase your own stat ure. Apart from the questionable merit of the poem quoted in part then and now, “... where God has failed in the man," are you or Mr. Edson conversant with the definition of a gentleman? Again in part, “a well bred man of fine feelings.” That excludes you fellows from the club wouldn’t you say. Doesn't a newspaper, a gracious term here, owe a responsibility to all of its readers. Haven't you assumed, rather too optimistically, a gen eral agreement with your own point of view on the pari of your readers. When you are selec tive in your material choosing only those ar ticles which establish your own opinion, con cealing or omitting any view to the contrary, you have really missed the point of news re porting. Over a period of time I have been very im pressed with an insidious type of reporting which the Collegian appears to favor. It brings to mind two lines from another poet, Alex ander Pope— . Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer And without sneering teach the rest to sneer. —Mrs. Richard T. Holzmann Route 1. Centre Hall (Editor's Note: Mr. Edson's-column was print ed because of its news interest not because it necessarily agreed with the view of the edi tor. And speaking about round robins . . .) Profs Write Econ Book Dr. William H. Martin, associ ate professor of economics, and jDr. Emanuel T. Weiler, chairman of the Department of Economics ■I at Purdue University, are co authors of “The American Eco jnomic System,” a book released Iby the MacMillan Company. Editorials represent th« viewpoints of the writers, not ncccMßrilj the policy •( th» paper, tha itudent Mr, ar tha Uniraraitr Little Man on Campus "Worihal! Just because you got an "A" in typing clast... / Interpreting the-News Khrushchevs Poor As Grandma, Wolf By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst The rulers of Soviet Russia have never understood why the Western Powers won’t make a deal formally establishing spheres of influence. Nikita Khrushchev’s latest pronouncements make it clear he thinks the big powers should buy and sell the small powers at will. He still thinks-there must be a way to get the United States to make a deal with-Russia, aban doning the satellites to their fate, cutting the Western Allies adrift, and leaving the world wide open to Communist infiltration. Lacking that,. he thinks the Allies can be frigthened into cutting themselves adrift to cuddle around Russia in some sort of Hiller-like dream of a consolidated Europe. Among the more fantastic of his ideas is that the United States and Russia might form some sort of coalition to exercise controls over everyone else. Constantly he swings back'to the claim that everything would be all right if the United States would just stay at home, abandon the North Atlantic Treaty,Organ ization and her overseas bases. There is no slightest recognition of the fact that the United States, after World War 11, did go home and that Russia did not. There is no recognition that the United States reluctantly maintains her bases because she has seen Russia seeking to expand at every .point where there has been no adequate de fense aaginst her. Khrushchev's suggestion that the United States and Russia might form a coalition to preserve peace and tell everyone else what to do would be a master stroke for communism. * When the United States had TUESDAY. MAY 14. 1957 by Bibler thus surrendered all'claim to mor ality, Krushchev thinks, and been abandoned by the rest of .the world in disgust, then she could be eaten by the Communists with impunity. . But Krushchev's teeth have now become so prominent he not only makes a very poor grandma. He's not even a very practical wolf. Camera Club Will Hear Lecture by Exhibitor John ’W. Doscher,-leading pic torial exhibitor, will lecture at the last meeting for the semester of the Camera Club at 7:30 to night in the Mineral Science Audi torium. He will give an illustrated talk on “Visualization, Key to .Picture Making.” His Country School of Photography, established in 1946 in New England, has attracted students from' nearly every' state and from foreign countries.' Tonight on WDFM 91.1 MEGACYCLES 6:50 Sign On 7:00 Simmons Lecture Series 7:55 . Sports Sounds in the Night 9:00 News 9:15 Sounds in die Night 9:30 Msrquee Memories 10:00 This World■ of Musie 11:30 News: Sinn OH New# Face to Face'