PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion It Can Happen Again A coed was abducted about 9:15 p.m. Sunday while she was walking along College Ave. She blacked out when taken into a car and found herself sitting on the library steps half an hour later. Three incidents of men trying to lure coeds into cars were reported over the weekend. Over' the years there have been many incidents of men attempting to abduct or attack coeds. Most have not been made public. Un doubtedly a good number have not been reported even to the police. A 17-year-old freshman named Rachel Hutchinson Taylor returned by bus from the spring recess on March 28, 1940, and began walking from the bus stop to Atherton Hall. Her mutilated body was found the next morning in the driveway of the College Township School, Lemont, The murder remains unsolved. There is no reason to believe that a coed walking alone at night is less subject to murder, rape or kidnapping today than 18 years ago. Perhaps if more of the incidents of attempt were re ported to the public, coeds would be more aware of the very real danger they face. Perhaps if the campus were better lighted, they would be safer. But Penn State at night can be a desolate place. It is an elementary measure of self-protection for coeds not to walk about campus or town alone at night. Sound Versus Seats Eleanor Roosevelt will come to campus on Jan. 7, and she'll speak in Schwab Auditorium. That's been settled, but not without some controversy. There are a number of people who thing Mrs. Roose velt, the first speaker in the new Lecture Series, should give her talk in Recreation Building. Mrs. Roosevelt is a world-famous figure, and the Rec Building partisans reason that more students than can be seated in Schwab should be given a chance to hear her. But then others say that the acoustics in Rec Building aren't good enough for a successful lecture. Also, there has been some talk that Rec Building is not an appropriate setting for Mrs. Roosevelt's talk. There's been another argument advanced in favor of holding the talk in Schwab—a rather far-fetched one. This is that there should be a good showing for this, the first in the series, and that it would be better to have to turn students away from Schwab than have Rec Building not completely filled. This is poor logic, although the members of the Lec ture Series can make only an educated guess at the num ber of persons who will show up at the lecture. The lecture happens to be scheduled for a week which also includes two intercollegiate athletic showings and the visit 01 the Finnish gymnasts. But the decision has been made, and the acoustics and setting have been chosen over the increased capacity. Tickets can be picked up beginning Jan. 5, the Mon day after the end of the Christmas vacation. Interested students should make sure they're there early in the morn ing if they plan to get seats. Fifty-four Years of Student Editorial Freedom atle Battu Citlegtatt Successor to The Free Lance, est 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday morning during the University year. This Daily Collegian is a student-operated newspaper. Entered as second-class matter July S. 1931 at the State College, Pa. Past Office under the act of March 3, 1079. Mail Subscription Price: 13.00 per semester 15.00 per year. • ROBERT FRANKLIN Editor 44CV4°' City Editor, David Fineman: Managing Editor. Richard Wayne; Sports Editor, Lou Prato; Associate Sports Editor. Matt Mathews: Personnel and Public Relations Director. Patricia Evan*: Copy Editor. Lynn Ward: Assistant Copy Editor. Dick Fisher: t'hotography Editor Robert Thompson. Credit Mgr., Janice &kith: Local Ad Mgr.. Tom Hockey: Aut. Local Ad Mgr 4 G Mcl'urk; National Ad Mgr.. Betsy Brachial; Promotion Mgr.. Kitty•fine gert: Personnel Mgr., Mickey Nash: Classified Ad Mgr., Rae Water*: Co. Circulation Mara.. Mary Anne First and Murray Simon; Research and Records Mgr.. Mary IG•rbein: Office Secretary. Mile Johnson. STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night Editor, Diane Dieck; Wire Editor. George French; Cony Editor, Carol Blake+lee: Amiatants. Elaine Miele. Amy Rosenthal, Judi Whar. ton. John Slack. Meryl dueracelc. Zandy Slosson, Fat Vargo. Karen Boiler. Conti* Lewis Pat. Gaven, Su Pollland. Barbara Foster., THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA ROBERT PICCONE Business Manager Letters Reader Attacks Karn's Letter TO THE EDITOR: On Saturday last, I happened to read in the columns of your paper a letter to you written by a student, Mr. William Karn. I was somewhat surprised by the vituperative lan guage, the trenchant expressions and the voice of anger against a whole race. Mr. Karn probably has some reasons to be angry but I wonder whether a student with that cali bre which he has for graduate studies can make generalizations without going into further con sideration of the subject. It seems to me that his thesis is: Women are inferior to men. I agree with Mr. Karn that we must admit differences where they exist, but I do not agree that the genius of the woman is in ferior to that of man. When we are making generalizations, I think we should not take excep tions among one sex as Shakes peare, Leonardo de Vinci and Beethoven, and feel that each one of us is therefore superior to all women. If there have been some genius es among men, we must remem ber that nature has, compensated it with innumerable instances of Idiocy, madness and stupidity. Otto Jespersen, after careful re search comes to this conclusion: Genious is more common among men by virtue of the same gen eral tendency by which idiocy is more common among men. I feel that intelligence is not the prerogative of any particular sex. It is a gift which improves with opportunity, and given the same opportunity women can be, and have shown to be, often su perior to most men. While teaching in India (I taught for several years at dif ferent levels in the University), I had noticed that invariably women showed a capacity for more earnest and industrious work in intellectual fields and were often better in intellectual feats than their male counter parts. But what mattered in fur thering their studies was a lack of opportunity—due to such fac tors as marriage and others. I agree with Mr. Kern that we must be less materialistic and have less of the acquisitive in stinct. Men may not acquire things for themselves but I have a secret feeling that they acquire them to turn them over to women so that they may keep them ready for them (men) when they need those acquisitions again! V —K. S. Narayana Gazette TODAY Association of Independent Men, • 7 p.m., 203 HUB American Rocket Society, 7 p.m., 105 ME ASAE, 7 p.m., 206 Ag. Eng. Camera Club. 7:30 p.m., 212 HUB Chess Club, 7 p.m., '7 Sparks Delta Phi Alpha, Christmas meet ing, 8 p.m., 419 W. Maple-Ave. DOC Student Council, 8 p.m., 218 HUB DOC elections, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. HUB Cardroom Leadership Training, 7 p.m., 119 Osmond Nittany Grotto, 7 p.m., 121 M.I. Psychology Club, 7 p.m., 111 Boucke Student Government Reorganiza tion Committee, 5 p.m., 203 HUB Women's Chorus. 6 p.m., Assem bly Hall Joanna Apulia'. Kenneth Colbank, Fred• erick Deak, James Dean. Judith Douglass, Barbara Greenwald, Jeffrey Hardy, An drew Jordan, Donald Kamenetsky, Althea Leslie, Terrence Madden, Anthony S. Mor timer. Judith Muskat, Terry Ritter Caro lyn Shustick, Walter Smithson, Barbara Spratt. Fred Waltman, Nancy Israel. Ar nold Marbles. Coed Abducted-- (Continued from page one) was back in class yesterday. The borough police have been investigating the occurrence as well as similar inci4nts which have occurred recently in the' HUB parking lot. The first, re ported on Friday. involved a girl whom a man tried to lure into his car. Two other such incidents followed over the weekend. Since there are no actual iden tifications, however, the police have almost nothing to help them in the search. ittle Man on Campus by Dick . Sibiu "Well, this college is known for•its very friendly, Words to Spare Want Improved TV? Turn Off the Set By Dick Drayne A few years ago one of the country's big television networks had as its director one of the most intelligent and imaginative men the medium has seen in its short history. This director had a very sensible theory about television: that it had an obligation to present intelligent entertainment, professional in production and worthwhile in content For a few years he raised the standards of the network higher than it had ever been before, or has been since. His leadership fostered good dra ma, TV adaptations of Broad way shows, stimulating news and public events programs. "He was gradually shaping his network—and by virtue of competition also other net wo r k s--to the standards of taste he thought It should oh. serve. And so, for his efforts, he was fired. The ambitious ideas of this top-flight director, it seemed, required too much money. Sponsors weren't willing to foot the cost of his shows, and so he lost his job. He was a victim of the "vicious triangle" that has all but killed any ar tistic values in television. The triangl e? Networks, sponsors and the public. No one is willing to take any re sponsibility for making televi sion worthwhile, and so it sinks downward, Season after season, dragging the tastes of a discouraging portion of the na tion with it. The networks have the facil ities to raise the standards, but they say they haven't the 011Mffifr .-- Q tH6II j .a,,,,, A 'ICI thA. 6 00,,, Isisaisk. -- A l __ lk -60°.3 , 0 11 m ~,,, .. 1111111111111 t , ....w.tst-ev..--zt 5061 E OF 06 ARE UPPER . -am p/ LTlRB'ol,A,ArrYriff • ALWAYS BE A LOWER -BUNKER... 1 iP \- V -- .11 0 - o— , yam ok 1 1 - --- 9 1 6 - e-Avez.- (.2-/7 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1958 helpful faculty:. money. The sponsors have the money, but they have no im petus. The public could pro vide the impetus, but it would rather take what it's getting and learn to like it. What's needed, apparently. is a lithe cooperation. But this doesn't seem likely either. The networks don't want to recognize their obligations to provide something worthwhile for viewers. And the sponsors don't want to realize that the quality of the programs reflect on the - quality of the sponsors. But if the public refused to follow the parade of compla cency, TV's sad story would soon brighten. If , people would begin to turn off their TV sets when they realized they weren't be ing entertained—or that they were being insulted—the rat ings would drop and things would happen fast. Sponsors and networks can take the critics raps as long as the ratings are high; but when the viewing public starts ,to ig nore a program, the men be hind the scenes start doing some fast thinking. Flip the set off often enough and pro grams will improve in a hurry. And who knows, people might even discover they like their living rooms with the lights on.