PAGE FOUR Editorial Our Pampered Students No matter how much reassurance we may get from the White House, Soviet gains in technology are impressive and diarrr.ing These gains can be traced directly to the educational system in the Soviet Union, where scientific studies and sewn u fie dedication reign supreme. The average Russian high school graduate has been exposed to 5 years of physics, 4 years of chemistry. 5 years of biology. I year of astronomy and a 11)-year pro gram of mathematics ranging from arithmetic to cal culus. Thu ty per cent of these students. thoroughly back grounded in technical subjects and completely dedicated to science, enter Soviet colleges and engineering schools. The eng"leering schools turn out 80,000 engineers a year. compared with fewer than :SO.OOO annually in the U.S. In addition to the strenuous schooling and the empha sis placed on scholastic tchievement. an extensive pro gram for gifted children is carried on in the Soviet Union. These gifted children are sought out and en couraged to work at full capacity. The! e is no teacher shortage in the Soviet Union. This is understandable since school teachers and college pro fessors make up one of the few elite classes in Russia. They are well paid and highly respected. No one can deny the simple logical proposition that good teachers in sufficient numbers are needed for a satisfactory system. It goes without saying, of course, that much of the Soviet educational achievements are accomplished in a way that is anathema to us. There is little, if any, academic freedom in the Soviet T_Tnior. The regime decides how many of which specialists are neded and then dictates who shall train for the needed positions The Soviet student is worked to the point of endangering his health. This practice has reached such a serious point that Soviet doctors have condemned it. Communist ideology is stressed in all phases of school ing and no deviation from the norm is permitted. Students may question neither fact nor opinion ex pressed by teachers and professors. But as numerous as these and other evils in the Soviet educational system are, we can learn from the Russians. And we can learn from those persons in our country who have been fighting all along for a better system of educa tion in the United States. In comparison to the need, a small number of scholar ships are available in the United States to qualified stu dents. Much of the responsibility of providing more scholarships rests with industry. It is true that many in dustries support education, but not nearly enough. The government, too, has a responsibility, we feel, for providing scholarships and other grants for and above the amount now provided. The Soviet Union may push its students hard, but per haps we are guilty of being in the opposite extreme. How many primary, secondary and college students do we know who consider school a necessary evil and take it in the lightest vein? This is possibly the fault of so called "progressive" educational systems which consider finger-painting more important than reading and col leges which consider football more important than philosophy. literature and science. The fine work being done now with gifted children must be extended and better supported. Perhaps Soviet achievement is a welcome challenge for developing the great potential in our educational system. Our duty is to meet it in the American democratic tra dition—but to meet it nevertheless. Editorials are writtea by the editors and staff members of The Daily Collegian and do not necessarily represent the views of the University or of the student body. A Student-Operated Newspaper 1 04 ..t u Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Published Tamolay through Saturday morning daring the University year, The Dant , Collageon Le a etude/at-operated newspaper. Entered as amoruivelam matter July s. et the "seta Collett. Pa.. Poet Office ander the set of March 3. OM. Man liebeeriptuse nisei $3.11 per semester Mei pet Lett ED DOBBS. Editor STAIT THIS ISSUE: Night Editnr, Mtle Max.', Copy Edit.or. Ralph Mann•: Wire Mitor, Lynn Vi•rd, AinLi.uivaus. Bobbie Tama. Ann Jaeohos, Loretta Aynardi. Carmel& LaSpinin. Dian Hoc!, Jun Maras., Veal Freiman, Judy ,SVaeciberger. .4 ,, T‘w STEVE HIGGINS. Bus. Mgr. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA iSatety Valve 'Respect Lost' For Lion's Paw TO THE EDITOR: Last Thursday night, wanting to see what was, going on in student government,! I attended the meeting of All- 1 University Cabinet to hear dis-, cussion of the proposed CD-ROTC plan. As a Penn State student this was a new experience for me,l and one I hope everyone will take' the opportunity to have I was truly amazed at the proceedings and didn't want to leave—but in another vein I was not very pleased. I saw ac lions at this meeting, which I never be f ore envisioned as being possible at the top of stu dent government. I had heard a little about Lion's Paw, and had always envisioned ' this group as an upright and ;honorable organization acting for the betterment of Penn State. But , after seeing their actions at Cab:- net I have lost all respect I ever j had for them. I was able to pick out all of the! Lion's Paw members on Cabinet' just by their authoritarian man ner of speaking and the way they' seemed to have their speeches all y prepared to give ahead of time. Each one seemed to attack the proposal from a different side and seemed to speak in a set order. The fellow who sat next to me knew all of the members of the organization and con firmed all my "guesses" as being correct. It seems to me that a group like Lion's Paw should not try to run Cabinet and student government hete at Penn State. Are individ uals elected to head their respec-, live groups supposed to be a vot ing• representative of his OWN organization? Or is he to offer the views of a pressure group and so slight student wants. I believe that in a case where a group of individuals ban to gether and sacrifice the welfare of the University and its stu dents, it is time for the students to organize and rid themselves of such an undemocratic influ ence. After watching Thursday's Cab inet meeting and the true inde pendent thinkers who are in r t y representing University and student welfare. I offer my congratulations to those persons . who remain independent and free from outside pressures . . . •Letter cut Prof Studies Ag Communication A study of communication pro cesses in a farmer cooperative is being made under the direction of Dr. James H. Hopp Jr., assistant professor of rural sociology. The Agricultural Experiment Station has received a $3OOO grant from the U.S. Department of Ag riculture to support the research. Members of an advisory com mittee assisting Copp are Dr. Macklin E. John, professor of rural sociology; Dr. Emory J. Brown, associate professor of rural sociology and agricultural extension; Dr. Clare A. Becker, professor of agricultural business management; Dr. Howard Bonser, professor of rural sociology ex tension; and John Gauss, pro fessor of agricultural economics extension. Girard Sentence-- (Continued from page two) practice were told that scientists complained last year they were being "hamstrung by unrealistic security requirements." Syrian and Egypitian parlia ments yesterday approved imme diate negotiations for federal un ion of the two countries and called on other Arab countries to join. The proposed union is expected to corer foreign, defense, econ omical, financial and cultural af fairs, though the two powers would maintain internal indepen dence. Players Admen to Meet Members of Players advertising crew for the shows 'Amahl and the Night Visitors" and "Apollo of Bellac" will meet at 6:30 to night in Schwab Auditorium. Little Man on Campus by Dick Bible, —Arnold Harris, '5B "But he told ME it would leave a scar!" Shop Talk College Journalism A la Hip-Hip-Hooray The latest issue of Editor & Publisher, the Fourth Estate's trade journal, reports that college campus editors "want to give their readers something more than chit-chat and hip-hip hooray journalism." The article reports on the annual conference of the Associated Collegiate Press New York City two weekends,' ago. Editors from member papers; (The Daily Collegian is not a. member) took a dim look at cen-1 sorship of college papers, and) came up with these ideas for more editorial freedom: •The newspaper should take its own position on national and world politics and even campus affairs. •The college paper, being a monopoly, should not be just a mirror; it should make stu dents think. •There should be a major, award to stimulate editorial inde pendence on campus papers. •Readers become apatheticl about causes when a newspaper ; fails to follow through with con-f structive remedies for conditions' it criticizes. •You don't print everything that happens on campus: there are rules of morality and ethics that figures in editorial respon- sibility. •It's the fault of the news paper if students are not fully informed on a matter of inter eat to the university. • The force of personality is needed for good editorials. •It is the duty of every editor to resign rather than serve merely as a tool of a paper that is nothing more than a journalism laboratory exercise. •Why have an editor if a fac ulty board makes the decisions? •Weakness in the college press are only reflections in the PEANUTS. AND NOW THE NUMBER ONE SONG 14IT ' 4 4 _ / • , .. , (\i- A N C A ROs TioN SII4 I E ((. li I , % - .! ..... ....-- ........ ,__,- .. zg -. ISIOI - 7,1. 1 1 ..2 1 4 . L-..v.:.-4-.-.7,-.....—:. 1/-11, TNE i•Or — NA - nasi - IN GAD ..i,r. GRAPE! . '.."‘'. /%*l-11 ............6.:, — it . ; .. _ \,. _ I . TIN :._-- _ - - „5- zz, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1957 general public press. •An editor's freedom should be bound only by the laws of libel. •To be a good editor you must be willing to be unpopular. After reading soin e of the plights of other college papers given in the magazine, we on Col legian are proud we can boast that Penn State has a student-run newspaper with editorial freedom. • * • We mentioned in passing that The Daily Collegian was not a member of the Associated Col legiate Press. This newspaper dropped membership some years ago. The main reason: Most of the members are small college week lies and we feel our problems are quite different from those of the majority of the members; there fore, we feel we have little to gain by membership. —The Editor Pedersen to Talk At Officers Dinner Dr. Sven Pedersen, U.S. Army, retired, who spent the past sum mer in Libya, will address a din ner meeting of the Centre County chapter, Reserve Officers Associa tion, Wednesday night. Pedersen, who is from State College, will speak on "Impres i sions of Libya" at the meeting to be held at 5:30 p.m. in the Hetzel Union dining rooms.