PAGE KJUR StudentsAfraidtoßorrow Hurt U ni versify—Dil wort h Philadelphia’s Mayor Richardson Dilvvorth yesterday! blamed the reluctance of students to use loan funds for a similar reluctance on the part of a “conservative” legislature to increase expenditures for higher education in Pennsyl vania. Dilworth said, “If we could tell legislators that students ait* v. tiling to hock their future, I think thev would be more will ing to inciease for high ei education.’’ He said the Uni versity has about $lOO,OOO in a levolvmg student loan fund, but onlv about 2a per cent of this is u ,od The* problem, he said, is not peculi.il lo Pennsylvania, but is one fared by all states. Dilworth spoke (o a meeting of the Faculty Luncheon Club in Dining Room “A" of the Iletzel Union Build ing. Dilworth devoted a large por tion of his remarks to a discus sion of the University's expan sion program, which plans for 25,000 students on the main campus and an additional 10,000 off-campus by 1970. Dilworth said the University “hasn’t come near to deciding who it wants to educate. This should be done to persuade the legislature to appropriate money. Education should benefit both the individual and the community m! which he lives." | Dilworth said it will cost $75-j 100 million to provide a physical plan on campus to accommodate these students and even more for, the centers. He said the centers should be equated with the mam campus and that “patching up” poor phys ical plants will not do Dilworth said the federal gov ernment must help the stales improve educational facilities just as it has helped with hous ing and urban renewal. He said no state can embark on an in dependent sociological or educa tional program because it will create a bad tax climate for in dustry for which there is in tense competition among the states. Dilworth said he thought there woud be a “big drive” for fed.-' eral aid to education, in the next! Congress. He said he was sure] Sen. Joseph S. Clark, Jr., and thei other Pennsylvania senator, who-j ever is elected, will support this.' Ed Nomination Blanks Freshmen in education may ob tain self-nomination blanks for Education Student Council today' through Friday at the Hetzel Un ion desk. Elections will be held in the HUB cardroom Oct. 28 and 29. Can't decide what business would suit you best? Maybe you should iook into the possibilities offered by a life insurance sales career. Among its many advantages are the freedom of being in business for yourself, and no ceiling on your earnings. The head of our campus unit will be glad to fill you in on the details. CAMPUS OFFICE 103 E. Beaver Ave. AD 8-9421 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia . THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Richardson Dilworth "In answer to that.. Slashed for Cash PHOTO "Getting to Know You 1 ' SALE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAV SAV Centre County Film Lab Integration Panel Belligerent Student Says Negro 'Destroys White Land Values' By LIANNE CORDERO A belligerent student with a trace of a Southern accent in his voice last night questioned the “right of Negroes seek ing homes to destroy the value of white-owned property." The question was addressed to a 4-member panel discussing the problem of “Integration in the North," in 121 Sparks. Flatly denying the charge, Dr. John A. Morsell, assistant to the executive secretary of the Na tional Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People, de clined to discuss the question. Panelist Father George B. Ford, recently retired pastor of Corpus Christi Church in New York City, added that there is a leveling off after the “initial drop” in prop erty values. Sam Gibson, director of the University Christian Associa tion and panel moderator, at tempted to close the discussion with the remark that the panel had been following a heavy schedule of lectures and meet ings all day. The panel had been in session for more than an hour. But commending the student CraMlTf Wollensar Taps ALL METAL NEW Cl S “ D * Now Recorders Now 139.50 TRIPODS with heads | VIEWERS TOC - BRAND NEW c »r (while they last) were 199,50 35 (custoM) l! 3 (also mw) NormlUy , m Nqw 79 9J w „ mM Regularly «« 49.95 BMND NEW!! (0 „, 7 , 106 WEST BEAVER AVENUE STATE COLLEGE, PENNA. for his courage in questioning a problem that so many people try to avoid, Maurice B. Fagan, ex ecutive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council and of the Philadelphia Fellow ship Commission, asked that the discussion continue. Fagan pointed out that if “a community is going to pot” all kinds of low income groups will attempt to move in. “If whites do not get scared, property values will not drop,” he said. Fagan cited the example of 50 or 60 communities where residents had not left and the new Negro family had been success fully integrated. Each of the four panelists dealt with a particular phase of Northern Negro integration for 10 to 15 minutes. Dealing with the moral and ethical values of our culture, Ford led off discussion by stating that the belief that white, composing only one-third of the world’s pop ulation, will' continue to be the dominate race will be challenged in the future. Ford saw two contradictions of our values in the white attitude toward religion and democracy. “When we put our beliefs into practice we do not apply them equally,” he said. ALL Graflex Constellation and Argus 300 SLIDE PROJECTORS M— J OFF LIST PRICE Ail Brand Now List $69-$79 Slide Fites I all BO LEX O/ off list | CAMERAS CI A L “^ st person in lino at 11 a.m. tomorrow can buy a new WIRGIN 35 (new for 39.95) October 20 October 28 $2O off for only 98c TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1958 Morsell, representing the Negro point of view, listed a number of differences between integration in the North and the South. But ha added that it is “not uncom mon to hear problems in the North given as reasons for not doing anything to correct the Southern problem.” "Too many people have the altitude that they must first clean up the Northern dilemma without realizing that we are one nation," he said. The role of public and private agencies dedicated to handling segregation was discussed by Fa gan and George Culberson, ex ecutive director of the Pittsburgh Commission on Human Relations. Culberson pointed out that 15 states and 40 cities now have public agencies set up to admin ister fair housing, fair emptoy ment practices and fair education laws. But in virtually all cases the agencies handle, settlement i 3 reached without going to court, he said. Fagan urged that “moral forc es” in the community set the example bv promoting integra tion. The problem of segregation will be solved, he said, “when people are willing to stand up and be counted in a crisis.” ARGUS Camera, CQ KIT etc. ' OVC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers