PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion Little Man an Campus What's the Matter With Penn State? Secoul of a Senes Take a long look at some of the things th,it have been going on at Penn State in I ec(•tit years to‘Ve have some "temporary" em.;i neemog buddllNS that have been "tem pot ary" almost since World War I. • ‘Ve have faculty salaries 'substantially lo,;-ET than those at eight comparable East (.l ii and Middle Western universities. • We have fees approximately one-and tunes higher than those of c•ompar-' able tintversaies aW( have a town with the pai king ;Ind ti it tie problems of a city of mole than pnpulation eWe have students who, by a 3-to-1 ratio, refused to vote in the last spring ( , lect ton •\\e have an administration which gave it.,olnavish gifts in the name of the students every year for a decade. Consideration of these long-range prob -I,,ms and dozens of others leads to the in escapable conclusion that all is not well at whit President Eric A. Walker calls "the best public university east of the Ohio River Cettainly no institution's staff and students can allow such situations and still make the progress they desire. What's the matter with Penn State? We all know many things which have been the matter with Penn State over the years. Yet here we are making even non long-range mistakes that could be avoided: •We have lost student recommenda tions in the faculty-administration Senate- Go-Round for periods of up to seven months. •We have told 1958 seniors that we won't use their class gift as they intended —not because it is impractical but because it is not necessary to strenghten the in structional program. •We have a recently revised code of conduct for women students—which al though improved, is still based on standards brought forth from the last century. •We have a fine system of television networks to teach some of the more basic courses—yet, we use the system to broad cast the instruction of some professors least adaptable to it. •We seem to be continually behind in getting things accomplished, whether it be installing a pizza oven in the Hetzel Union Building, building a dam at Stone Valley or constructing new i esidence halls. It is too great an assumption to con sider that all the above-mentioned situa tions are isolated instances. It seems to us that some more basic faults are involved. What's the matter with Penn State? Penn State is suffering from a king sized hangover—physically, educationally, emotionally. Poor physical planning in the past is exemplified by the many discordant styles of architecture on campus; by the position of the West Halls and the West Campus fraternities on land that now should be used for classrooms; by relatively poor parking and traffic facilities. Poor educational planning in the past Published Tuesday through Saturday mornings daring the Unlver.ity year, The Daily Collegian is a student operated newspaper. $3.00 per semester 3100 per year - - -- -- Entered as second-claw matter July 6, 1931 at the State College, Pa. Post Office under ROBERT FRANKLIN, Editor STAFF THIS ISSUE: Wire editor, Nicki Wolford; Night editor, John Black; Copy editor, Susie Link rotn; Assistants, Baibara Foster, Janet Beahan, Karen Hyheckneal, Judy Rosenberg, Sue Weinman, Bill Mausteller, lion Smith. is evidenced by the fact that the University too often has neglected the "liberal" for the "practical" arts; that the University in essence has no basic college of arts and sciences around which every great uni versity is built—a situation which appar ently has been considered grave only recently. 01le Datil" Cilllrgiatt Successor to THE FREE LANCE. tat. 1887 4rrpo THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA There is a feeling that the University did not do all it could have done to gain state support during some years in the past. Nor has the University always had a most active alumni. And planning both by and for students can be regarded only as fair in considera tion of the work of some past student gov ernments and many of the social and rec reational facilities students don't have. But the headaches we now are feeling may well pale before an onslaught of new problems that may arise from present and future policies. What's the matter with Penn State? Penn State lacks the dynamic leader- ship needed to build a great university. We have the able, dedicated men who could do the job—and many are trying to do it. But we can only surmise that we also have the grand old system of mammoth back-stage faculty-administration-trustee power and policy wars—a system that makes for anything and everything but a program of unified advancement and smooth administration. We have inherited a time-honored organization that paradox ically permits neither real, dynamic admin istrative leadership nor fair and complete hearing of student and alumni views. Oh, yes. we have made great strides as of late—but if has been in spite of "the system." Our University is populated with a lot of fine faculty and administration mem bers—members who too often neglect the University's future for their stake in it, who are too scared for their jobs to consult with students. We have adopted the fine policy of courting our alumni—who give money but not advice—and ignoring our students—. who give advice but not money. And if you think the University lacks something, look at the borough and the students. State College is woefully inadequate to meet the needs of the students—profes sionally, commercially, municipally, cially. Certainly the University has ne glected its responsibilities on the other side of College Avenue. And if we call State College provincial, what do we call the students? Many of us have little interest in what goes on out side of University Park, our home town and our draft board. Many of us have been willing to leave the administration of stu dent affairs to a little group of seniors which often have adopted all the liberalism of a wounded animal dragging in the un derbrush. What's the matter with Penn State? Not a thing. Not one thing that won't go away if we continue to pretend it isn't there—as so many of us apparently want to do. ROBERT PICCONE, Business Manager Fifty-four years of Editorial Freedom the act of garch 3. 1879 ver here, Henry, I'd et cetera Motherly Rules Rule Out Reality The only thing I can think of that we on have in common with the world is fallout. And this University is determined to keep touch with reality as possible. Which is kind of frightening, since we seniors must clutch now when we think that our education is not over, but just begin ning. We've been pressed into a state of regression by the motherly rules that: •Women must be home by 10 p.m., unless they're seniors an d have 3.2 aver age s, which by some logical process makes them more grown up after dark. Does reward for scholar ship have anything to do with maturity or morals. FINEMAN • Names of even very ser ious rules and morals offend ers may not be known so that we may protect the reputations of those who themselves have shown that they care little for their reputations. • All campus organizations have been gathered up into a little basket so that their funds can be counted and the growth of their members checked in the process. - •Students must attend class es. This means that we have less judgment and maturity than our European counter parts whom we, as full Ameri can citizens, will be expected to lead. Some of these stringencies, I*A7 s TLI T B -I TI4 . INK (1:1E NAVE TNE WRONG DOME, 01,1) IT DOESN'T SEEM RIGHT ATTITODP. I THIN< (i,JE SHOULD TO ORGANIZE A SASEFALL TEAM, BE MORE POSITIVE, AND TRY AND THEN HOPE FOR IT TO RAIN TO DEVELOP MORE CONF'DENCE .. EVERY DAY Q) you U. N T HAVE 1 TO GO OOT AND GET BEATEN! 111 II i•; - ' i ll ii ,1 71 . 7 1 . II 11 H .' -AAR& 01;iiii-lii j '• ', i ; irogt4 i I 1 1 l'' 1 1 10 I f" i ll 11 l' ':; , ,• ~ 1 1 , , , r i i : 116-I,l , ii' qi i i iti'l 1 i , Hil h'ti, ,i I !q iai;" ' I . 'l 1411:, it , il I,' l 1 I k k .:. ill), 1!1( 1 .!! I ',fi f ; Ik ; : i , ; '; 1 1!, ; 1 1 :i I i I'l 1 1 _Oita ,I '__ l r i 1 '-i 4... 4.'' 'i II ii -- '''' — ik - ----r- - simituall i t i ,-- - , 11111011111 lIIIMIIII MUUIMIII _a i m j _L omm L rianiminuirannuannimuisnusni "--••••• lllarrwmnewirdiuim........ Jl. 1 4 ,i:tii!,llll; 1;1111 t i ll , 130 Y, I HOPE IT RAINS , i-iiiriNllllihiii!l 1 ( : , I l i . ' :1 „ ii: Id ! ~, ;Ifni i I • I AGAIN TOWRROW! 1 111 ; ill'ciiill i iii';iiilir ' 111 I) 1; ; (I, l ''!l'.,,„ ai ' L .,,„„_' , , ;I ,;;;'l4i ' 1!;'11;,'' 1 1 111 ), 1 . 1 ,11 ,1 i 11 ;• '';l' ',/fin II 'ld ii!i'l,4 l . 1 11,'Ila f a lai: ,;:ii, 11 1 ~ , I . . . i i ., ~.., , ~i , ,,,,, . il l t i, I , la! rqi ' , l 1"1' t-J IP, "I MfiliftlA4 .7 111 11 1 1 1•1Illi li o ll AV 11 1 11111 1 / . .111' ar l '7ollll, l 111 1 il t ' .l tilliikellrill' , 11 :1 ;d 1 Pli 'b , the: P li, 'i , _ ; 1 1'1 I gilit uu il i titi i i r eillafflttirritiltgita..i. 11 *.eninglitEEHIPlitgitIt i n i lli".4 umminiirdnifinHolliniariiiiiiiirli illilinaliairMilinallallllll;l7l '''-tit. - 4 -- ; -- 4111111111.1UMIIIMMIIIIII , . ' gillillialifitilMurinitellinuamitism WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1959 now our boy's room—: by Dave Fineman it seems, will disappear. For example, we'll have so-called community living soon, al though this is an unfortunate term, since there is little that resembles a community on this oitt-of-the-way campus with its four levels of rule and respon sibility. Others, I fear, will be in creased, such as the tighter and tighter hold the University is taking on organizations. And, again on the other hand, we may, in the future, have unlimited class cuts, if the lint- Continued on page five Gazette TODAY AIM Judicial Board. 7 p.m., 218 HUB BX Candidates, 6:30 p m , 214-216 HUB Chess Club, 7 p.m.. 7 Sparks Christian Fellowship. 12:30 p.m . 213 HUB Clover Club Meeting, 7:15 p•m , 111 Tyson Constitution Committee of Freshman AdNisory Board. 7 p.m.. 211 HUH Engineering-Architecture Council, 6.16 P.m., '4'l2-213 1 - 1118 Kamm Phi Initiation Service, 7 p.m., Wesley Foundation Newman Club, Professor Case Lecture Series. 7 p.m . 101 Chapel Choir Prac. Lice, 7:30 p m., Our Lady of Victory Church Sigma Theta Epsilon, 7 p.m., Wesley Four da don TIM, 7 p.m 203 HUB UCA Fireside, 0:30 p.m., Thompson Lounge Women's Choir, 0 p.m , HUB Assembly Hall WSGA, 13:80 p.m., 217 HUB by Dick Sibiu the campus us as out of graduating