PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion A Dedicated Dean Next semester's class of freshman coeds will be the first in 13 years not to he greeted during Orientation Week by Dean of Women Pearl 0. Weston. Miss Weston will retire July 1 after 17 years at the Univeisity. Last night the Board of Trustees named her dean of women emerita—an honor well deserved by the woman who has served as dean to more than 10,000 coeds. The job of dean of women is not always a pleasant one, and it can be far from easy. Policies arising in the dean's office often are controversial, and Miss Weston frequently has been criticized. But no one ever has ques tioned her sincerity or devotion. Miss Weston has been noted as a capable administrator —thorough and efficient. I ler duties have included such "extras" as advising Alpha Lambda Delta, women's scholastic honorary so ciety, and All-University Cabinet. Cabinet advisors aren't required to attend the meetings, but Miss Weston nearly always is there. She has been a dedicated dean of women. Her girls have meant much to her, and she will not be forgotten by Coeds' Cooperation Two recent and short-lived conflicts between the Department of Housing and women's organizations have proved that student interest and initiative can often patch up problems in a hurry. The first conflict arose when Housing announced that the number of rooms allowed for each sorority suite would be cut from 40 to 25, beginning next year. Panhellenic Council organized some stiff resistance and within a few days• President Phyllis Muskat presented an alternate plan, which was approved. The sororities ended up with a guarantee of as many rooms as needed for suites, a considerable improvement over the original guarantee of 40. The Panhel plan also specified that women who would have to move to make way for the sororities would receive first preference for unassigned rooms. This provision was cut, but was reinstated following protests by Leonides. Both Panhellenic Council and Leonides solved their housing problems by appealing them to University offi cials. Both campaigns were marked by cooperation be tween the groups and by initiative and quick action by each group's leaders. Fifty-four Years of Student Editorial Freedom Orlte Eittitq Totlegtatt Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Puhll+hed fuesday through Saturday morning during the University year. The ()ally ( allegian is • student-operated newspaper. Entered ma second-elan matter July S Mt at the State College. Pa. l'ost Office under the act of March It. (078. Mall 4uham-100n Price: $3.00 per semester $6.00 per rear. ROBERT FRANKLIN Editor SEB*, City Editor David Fineman, Managing Editor, Richard Drayne; Sports Editor, Loa Preto: Sssociate Sports Editor, Matt Mathews; Personnel and Public Relations Director Patricia Evans; l npy Editor, Lynn Ward; Assistant Copy Editor. Dick Fisher: Pholorrauhr Editor Hobert Thompson. Credit Wu. Janice Smith. Local Ad Mgr.. tom Bucker; Asst. Local Ad Mgr.. George Mciurk: National Ad Mgr., Betsy Brackbill: Promotion Mgr.. Kitty Bar ren: Personnel Mar., Mickey Nash: Classified Ad Mgr., Rae Waters: Co• Circulation Mgrs. Mary Anne First and Murray Simon: Research and Records Mgr. Mary (ferbein: Office Secretary ailyla •Johnson. ST tri , "rilis ISSUE: Night Editor, Bohbi Copy Editor. Cathy Fleck: Wiie Editor, Jim Moran Aviectant-.: Jim Serrill, Pat Vargo, Barb Greenwald, 11,11, Lewlq, Barham Turk, Jim Strothman, Bienda Desch, Susan Weinman, Jame Trevaskia and Janet Beahan. Gazette Ton AY 11Hd•East Students, 2 p tn.. 218 HUB Student Movies, 7 p.m, HUB assembly hull Theolan Society. 11 a in., 111111 ball roOtri TOMORROW Art School Reception, 3 p m , HUB main lounge and art gallery Sotany and Plant Pathology Tea, 3:30 p m HUB reading room Campus l'arty Steering Coramittee, p in2ls HUB Christian Fellowship, 2 p.m.. 218 HUB Entre Nous. 2 p.m, 212 HUB Flash Card Committee. 6 212 HUB Float Parade Committee, 2 211 HUB Graduate Bridge Club, 7 p m , 217 HUB Newman Flub. 7 p.m.. 21145.16 HUB Student Merles, 6:30 p m HUB as- sembly hall Swedbordjan, 10:30 a m., 212 HUB Thespian pledge class. 1:30 p.m.. 214 HUB William Penn Foundation, 4 p.m., HUB assentbly hall THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE. COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA ROBERT PICCONE Business Manages. MONDAY Alpha PM °Merl. 7 p.m . 214 HUB Christian Fellowship, 12:30 p.m., 218 HUH Dancing Class, 8 :30 p.m., HUB ball. TOM IFC. 7:30 p m , HUB assembly Leadership Training. 6 :45 D.m.. 216 HUB Leonides. 7 p.m., 212-13 HUB blare I Spring Week Committee, B p.m.. 212 HUB .. Model Railroad Club, 7 p.m . 216 HUB Philosophy Club. 7 p.m., 217 HUB UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Jerome Abraczinskas, Darlene An. derson Isaac Aurelio. Jean Beret, Charles Beechin, Rebecca Birnbaum, Richard Black, Lester Bower. William Connolly, Patricia Couch. John Daw. sun. Frederick • Desk. Madeline Dime long, Robert Gingerich, Ronald Glou, Burton Golden, Susan Holman, Yean Hwang, Joseph Janosky, Mary Kesel, Susan Lindsay. Robert Lorenzetti, Humberto Moreira, Emily Nissley. Jos. eph °neer, Thomas Phillips, Sheldon Price. Louis Quatrini. Martin Roche. Dennis Royer, Barbara Tomasic. Mary Ann Welk ie. David Whipple. Kathleen Winnie,, John Zion. Letters '5B Grad Hits Gift Decision TO THE EDITOR: As an old hand at fighting for a student-operated AM station, I would like to make a few observations, a few of them quite candid. There are two main reasons the administration and the board of trustees frown upon AM facili ties for WDFM: •The University does not want to compete "unfairly" with com mercial station WMAJ of State College. •The University Is fearful something may go over the air waves which ,may hurt the good name of Penn State. Neither argument holds much water. Admittedly, a student-run AM station would take student lis teners from WMAJ. However, the University has no obligation to see that students listen to the State College station. There are many good things a student-operated station cmtld do in providing additional entertain ment plus. educational program ming for the student body. A student station which can be heard also would help build much-needed school spirit as the student body grows larger and larger. No one has asked for a station which can be heard throughout the state. No one has even asked for the freauencv power to be heard in Harrisburg. Some 20 miles away from State College, and you can't pick up WMAJ, at least not very easily. The station need only be heard in State Col leer. and University Park. Certainly we must asume the students operating the station will show the highest responsibility for good taste in presenting the beet of radio nrogramming. Now for a few observations a bit more on the candid side: Thomas Hollander. last year's senior class president, said he feels he was "speaking for the class" of 1958 in "saying that the action taken by the (trustee) com mittee . . . is quite acceptable." (Quite acceptable to WMAJ?) Hollander certainly does not speak for the entire class. He seldom did as an undergraduate. Mickey Bergstein, sporty, bald and highly competent manager of WMAJ, is close to, and plays golf with, members of the admin. istratinrt. He sneaks for Bill Ule rich, Clearfield publisher and in fluential alumnus. Ulerich—also a former member of the board of trustees—is an owner of WMAJ. It has always been a long, rough road toward a student-operated AM station. It now appears the road is even more bumpy. —Ed Dubbs, '5B, former editor, The Daily Collegian •Letter cut Counselor Blanks Available for TIM Application blanks are avail able in 109 Old Main for town men who wish to serve as orienta tion counselors to new students enrolling on campus next. Sep tember. Applicants must have third to sixth semester standing, with averages of 2.5 or better. The form must be returned by next Friday. Those selected will be asked to arrive on Sunday, September 13, to counsel for a few day with a small group on the. aspects of life at the University and to serve in other assigned capacities during Orientation Week. Russian Tour— (Continued from page three) sponsible for paying their own expenses which are approxi mately $l3OO per student. Miss Panameroff who will rep resent the University has received a $350 stipend from the Univer sity toward her expenses. She is also seeking financial aid from other sources. Miss Panameroff is a political science major interested in inter national relations. She is a mem ber of Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi, national scholastic honorary societies and Pi Sigma Alpha, political science honorary. She is also a member of Delta Zeta, social sorority. ittle Man on Campus by Dick Sibi I al Well, if your eyes are THAT bad—why doncha get glasses?' Words to Spare 'Green Mansions' Is Almost Comic Opera "Green Mansions" doesn't work Hollywood's adaptation of W. H. Hudson's classic "Romance of the Tropical Forests" currently playing at the Cathaum Theatre, is very much Hollywood and very lit-le Hudson. This film has been awaited with much apprehension by devotees of the novel, be cause it is such a peculiar and delicate story, with a charm that would seem almost im possible to catch on the screen. Hollywood has proved that if it isn't impossible it is at least highly unlikely. Hudson's novel told the story of an ethereal romance be tween Rima, the Bird Girl, a wispy daugh ter of the for est, and Abel, a young and a d v e n ture some escapee of a Venezu ela revolution. The story of t h e romance, with its com p 1 i cations of natives and R i m a's diffi cult "g ran d- DRAYNE father," its long and harrowing search for Rima's homeland, and its tragic end, is both a love story and a hymn to na ture, Hudson, a famous natur alist, handled the story with imagination and taste, making it a memorable novel. But, sure enough, Hollywood has brought "Green Mansions" down to earth. The lush trop ical scenery of the South Amer ican rain forest remains with all the color Hudson painted it, but the other elements of the tale survive only in vary ing degrees, if at all. Rime, played by Audrey MMENET7— ge& GOT A NEW YOU ARE FOURTEEN SECONDS WATCH,EH,LUCY? OLDER NOW THAN WHEN WE / IT'S PRETTY.. MET...YOU ARE NOW TWENTY aCONDG‘OLDER... 1 -- s-nAta... •-4-4-11-• ~ ......4 ... , ........... 0441L4,..4/4... 1411 In ........-.- -.... . , ...a: '''' ams.m...• TWENTY-FIVE SECONDS.. 1 lIIIRTYMONDSOLDER... FORTY.._ ug TNIRTY-FIVE SECONDS.. RTYTIVEI Y Jr • 4 1 ii . ? fa --- i 41 i ‘ 4 ;4 .40.7 4 "IA ..........; 1 ..........., ../...,-- - . -- " - --""-kEE N SATURDAY, APRIL 4,1959 By Dick Drayne Hepburn, is a rather sophisti cated and straightforward Bird Girl, who seems somewhat un comfortable in the forest and often doesn't appear to care much for the whole business. Anthony Perksins as Abel is so wrapped up in his own emoting that it is impossible to believe he is very sensitive toward the surroundings of na ture which the original novel handled so lovingly. Lee J. Cobb as the grandfather, Nuf• 10, is overdrawn. The natives are Hollywood natives, and there's even a Hollywood tribal dance thrown in as local color. Plus hand to-hand combat with knives, during which both combatants fly through the air into a pool of water (analagous to break ing through a large card table in a Western). And the ending, where Rima is spiritually re incarnated against a glowing horizon, is just a little too much to bear. There are some high points in the film. The camera work is excellent throughout, espe cially in the few spots when Rima is shown capering in the forest with her pixyish face flashing through the leaves, The sounds which the Bird Girl makes before she first ap pears are striking and charm ing, although she makes her appearance too early. Sometimes Miss Hepburn (Continued on page eight) fi C -aje Sri