PAGE FOUR Published 'Tuesday 'through liaturday rosentnira during the University year, The Daily Coltrigiar Is a student operated newapsper. 33.01 per we/nester f+.o4 per year Entered as eecond-class matter lids S , 133 i st the State College. Pa. Poet Office under the act of March 3; 1873. ED DUDES, Editor - - _ Aast. Bus. Mar_ Sus Mortenson: Local Ad_ Mar. Marilyn Manazina Editor. Jody ilarklaan : City Editor. Robert Frank- Elias: I.:st. Loma Ad. Mae- Ross Ann Gonzales; National lin: Sports Editor. Vines Carorci: Copy Editor. Anna Fried- Ad. Mgr.; Joan Wallace: Promotion Mgr., Mariann,' Staler: bent; Assi■tant Con? Editor. Marian Beatty: Assistant Sports Personnel Mgr., Lynn Glasaborn: Classified Ad Mgr., Steve Editors, Matt Mathews and JAW Prato; Make-pp Edilidt, Ginny Milstein; Co-Circulation Mgrs. Pat toliernickt and Richard Philips; Photography Editor. George Harrison. . Lippi: Research ■nd Records Her.. Barbara Walk .Office Secretary. Marlene Marks. STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night Editor, George French; Copy Editor,- Lynn Ward; Wire Editor, Denny Malick; Assistants: Cathy Fleck, Betty Lou Sea nor, Carole Zielke, Diane Dieck, Sally Wilt, Rollin Berger, Donald Casciato, Carol Brazill and Carmella La Spada. Textbooks and Travel University students may have the opportunity in the next Set;• years to spend their Junior year at a European university. This program has been under study for almost a year and w 11 be presented to President Eric A. Walker within a few weeks. The Junior-Year-Abroad plan is nothing new to American colleges and universities although Penn State could be the first of the land-grant institutions to adopt it. Studying abroad is no longer an expensive venture. Every year thousands of American stu dents enter the doors of universities in all parts of the world. According to the report, the expense of sup porting students in another country is almost exactly the same as supporting them at home. - Today in our colleges and universities there is steadily increasing interest in serious study progarms • . . These programs are coordinated with work in American institutions in such a way that they contribute valid credits toward the student's degree from the American college of his choice," the report stated. The two major difficulties in establishing this program are cost and the coordination of credits. Fraternity 'Jumping' TO THE EDITOR: Obviously a person must bd long to a fraternity at this University in order to get advance sale tickets such as those for the Army-Penn State game which went on sale - Monday evening. There must have been a hundred or more loyal but irate fans turned away because of the line jumping tactics of the fraternities. Granted, it's a great system having an un fortunate pledge wait all night holding a position in line which he turns over - to a large number of fraternity brothers in the morning, but it is certainly a far cry from being fair play. It is quite disappointing to those who are waiting in line to see the group at the front of the line increasing by tens and twenties as the minutes roll by. One fraternity brother bragged about the fact that by these tactics all the Pitt game tickets last year were gotten by the fraternities—none by the independents. How wonderful! That says a lot for the fraternities! If some India would wait all night and then let all the independents in front of him in the Morning, there would be much weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth by the fraternity members. How about a little fair play by the fraternities or a system whereby the first come, first served policy is put into effect? VII. The Winner Names the Age (Novelist Lillian Smith today gets to the answer of how we can select a good winner of the age, the winner who wilt name the age.) The answer lies first in leadership; second, in the determined efforts of each individual to take his stand, to speak up, and try to create a climate of courage and hope and faith. With out the second, we cannot have the first. We need leaders. not martyrs. But we cannot have leaders unless the best people stand by the lead ers, unless we give support when support is needed. For fifty years, the South has had no great leader from the white race. Demagogues by The bushel but not one great leader. This. too. is part of the price we have paid for our silence and for our walling ourselves away from the great ideas of our age. We could have had great leaders: there were men in our South with the intelligence. the in tegrity, the vision to become great leaders but we, the people, did not give them our support. We gave that support, every time, to the cheap, foul-mouthed demagogue who appealed not to our reason and conscience but to our anxiety; who begged us to return with him to the past, a past that never actually existed, instead of going on with the rest of mankind into the future. We let down our leaders by not building them up. A leader cannot be built up unless the people, the best people of a region, build him. But it is not too late. We can still do it. The Negro group is searching for and finding its good leaders and is beginning to give these leaders their support. What men some of them are! If the white group could onirfind a young 53 Years of Editorial Freedom O'lle Bang Collegian Successor to THE FREE LANCE, eat. 1887