PAGE FOUR Editorial 0 • inio A Trend in Honesty A commendable precedent for a University-wide aca demic honesty system in the future Ikas been set by the College of Mineral Industries The system, the first to be successfully implemented in a college, was approved by the Senate Committee on Student Affairs. The charter of the honor system stresses several reasons for its implementation. These are: sAs an incentive to and a reward for the develop ment of moral responsibility among students. oTo increase mutual respect and cooperation between students and faculty members. •To add dignity to study and teaching in the college. •To make studying and teaching in the college a more rewarding experience. The system places a great deal of trust in the student and its success or failure will depend upon whether this trust is well-founded. Students who do not wish to partici pate in the system will have the opportunity to follow the usual procedure for taking examinations. With this alternative in mind, each student should think over carefully the responsibility he is assuming in participating in the system. If a student feels that he can not carry out its tenets, he should not participate. It will be best for all students in the college to keep in mind that the system, being new to the University, will be under careful observation by not only those connected with it. but by the other colleges on campus. These colleges will want to see how feasible the sys tem is and how successful it will prove to be in order to ascertain the possibility of setting it up in their respective colleges. To have a University-wide honors system would be a wonderful trend in education methods. It can provide, if the students cooperate, an excellent training for all concerned. If the college. approaches the implementation slowly and with caution, it is bound to work. But the students in the college will also have to do their share in making it a worthwhile program by observing its operation and study ing its principles. The honors system is initially on its way to becoming a part of the University in the near future—provided that it proves successful in the coming year. A Student-Operated Newspaper Tilt 'BMW Tritirgiatt Successor to The Free Lance, en. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday morning during the University year. The Deily Collegian is a student-operated newspaper. Entered as second-class matter July 5. 1931 at the State College, Pa. Post Office under the act of March 3, 1879. Mail Subscription Price: $3.00 per semester $5.00 per year. DENNIS MALICK GEORGE McTURK Editor d4B11:13 1 Business Manager Managing Editor. William Jaffe: Assistant Editor, Catherine .Fleck Plains Relations Director, Loill Neuharth; Copy Editor. Roberta Levine; Sports Editor, Sandy Padwe; Assistant Sports Editor, John Black; Photography Editor. Marlin Bcherr; Member, Board of Editors, Robert Thompson. Local Ad Mgr., Sherry Kennel; Asa% Local Ad Mgr., Darlene Anderson: Credit Mgr., Mary Ann %Attie,: Notional Ad Mar ., Lelia Uhler: Classified Ad Mgr.. Sara Brown : Co-Circulation Mgrs., Loretta Mink, Murray Simon; Promotion Mgr., Ruth lirigge; Special Mgr., Alice Mahachek: Personnel Mgr., Dorothy Smeal; Offire Secretary, Donnie Bailey: Research and Records, Margaret Moped% STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night Editor, Sue Hill: Copy Editor, Elaine Miele and Jim Striithnhin : Wile Editor. Neal Friedman: Assistants, Elie Beek, Janet Rosenberg, Janie Trevaskis, Steve Milner, Craig Yerkes, Lynn Cerefice. 1 , 11 - A•l4 JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND.. , ta4,4:104. 2 ,1 - tiro Vi • 44 WELL, IT'S KIND OF _HARD TO SAY.. "PIG-PEN," HOW IN THE UJORLD DO YOU MANAGE TO TSO DIRTY?! i A. , ..,04 ...e... ".-**,:ib LB' 0 __,_ , t tilg„/ I GUESS "MERE ARE SOME THINGS WE WILL NEVER KNOW IN TI-415 LIFETIME! AP 1 ► . i' • t 7.-' I/ 4.*:: i ,: c 4 -. i l/11,1V V.g. dYi vl4. "i'.4 ‘a CI!. ./.:4,, • .-•:...-.- ,f';'1;•-::::;1' -... it! S' - ': - , -..r.1.-.‘ --, - - 12 '-- ' • .. 5 - 4 - d 4. __-_ . . THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Interpreting New Ministers Confused Over Soviet Talk By J. M. ROBERTS Associat - ed Press News Analyst The Western foreign ministers at Geneva may be a bit confused by the seemingly childish devo tion of the Soviet delegation to procedural matters,' but it would not faze such old hands as Dean Acheson, John Foster Dulles, An thony Eden or Georges Bidault. ,The new hands will just have to get accustomed to trying to ex tract some substantial meaning, if any, from the gyrations of the Communists. Andrei Gromyko, hearing of President Eisenhower's assess ment of the meeting so fat as a Russian effort to make propa ganda, might ell look up in surprise and , ask "Well, that's what we called it for, isn't it?" There may be other reasons, too. It's a good guess now that one of them is to give the Reds a chance to talk their way out of Khrushchev's threat to take uni lateral action designed to get the Allies out of West Berlin or, if not that, to get Red forces in. The traditional Soviet attitude toward small nations is that they should pose as the big powers dis pose. Stalin & Co. never under stood why the West would not settle everything by establishing spheres of influence willy nilly. But suddenly the Hods are very soliciVaus about the feel ings of the Poles and the Czechs who, on every other day of their lives, are . expected to dance briskly to whatever tune the Kremlin calls. It may be only natural that the Reds, having gotten the Ukraine and Byelorussia, two Soviet coun ties, into the United Nations, should expect to get Poland and Czechoslovakia into a big-power conference. More likely they ney 7 er expected any such thing, but have two main objectives. One, to appeal to the pride of the satellite peoples, and the oth er to create a record of protest ing the numerical imbalance of a conference which isn't expected to get anywhere. Gazette TODAY Club Habana. 9.12 p m.. HUB ballroom Delta Nu Alpha, 9:30 a.m. - I. p.m., HUB lobby Student Movies. 7 p.m., HUB assembly room WSHA Election Committee, 2 p.m., 218 HUB Campus Party Steering Committee, 2 p.m., 217 HUB Christian Fellowship, 2 p.m. 218 HUB Encampment Committee, 7:110 p m., Col- leglan office Freshman Class Advisory Board, 't p.m., 217 Willard Newman Club, 7 p.m., 21.1 RUB Slams Delta Chi, 10 a.m., Nittany Lion Inn Student Movies, 0:30 p m., HUB assembly room Swedenborgian, 10:30 a m., 212 HUB MONDAY Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m., 214 HUB Christian Fellowship, 12:30 p m., 218 HUB College of Education. 4 p m.. HUB as- sembly room DOC Council, 7 p.m., 217 HUB IFC, 7:30 p.m., HUB assembly room Leonides Council meeting and party, 6:46 pm., 2():1 HUB Residence Halls Counselors, 6.46 p.m., 212 HUB Sandra fiber, Charles Roster, Alan Co hen, Donald DeMaio, Judith Douglass, So san Furminger, Caroline Gillespie, Lois Greenberg, Judith Grundy, Leßoy Ishler, Lewis Kasselman, Richard Metzger, John Orr, Randall Quinn, Carlene Rarick, How ard Rogers, Hugh Welling. Donald Zehner. Seniors May Get Invitations Monday Seniors may pick up gradua tion announcements and invita tions beginning Monday at the Hetzel Union desk ticket booth, Hours for distribution are 9a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday. Receipts must be presented in or der to pick up orders. Graduating seniors should check with the offices of their re spective deans to obtain instruc tions about Commencement exer cises to be held at 10:30 a.m. June 6 on Beaver Field. Senior Receives Medal Dorothy Becker, senior in edu cation 'from Rahway, N.J., was presented the Pi Gamma Mu medal of Pennsylvania Epsilon chapter of the national social sci ence honor society. _ _ . TOMORROW HOSPITAL Little Man on Campus by Dick Wag So What Something to Do? Something to Do! The average Penn Stater does much complaining about the lack of things to do. He claims he is bored with the world and wants to go somewhere else. Nothing new has happened since the Pirates won their last ballgame. Well, !`average Penn Stater" we've found a solution to your plight, here are a few things that should interest you and after you've done all of them you „ ,,,,,. , ; can—yes, you -. „=. "- --.-.: '• : 4. can study. , - % .- ; -4 OK, you've '.,._ ~,,: _, ~-. been to thew . . _ .::. , , HU B, you've : - . - - 4 : „ A 7 ,„ 1 ,,, - - been to the '• 7- - . movies and k . you've party ~..' ~ - ?:, - : , ;: 4 ! hopped till • ..- : ..,1 , 1 , " - % . , , you can't see 4';‘,`; straight any . = more. Almost ---:------ every one has done these SCHERR things. But how many of you have ever taken a walk through any of the laboratories on this campus? The basement of Whitmore has a glass blow ing laboratory, the second floor of Frear has a cockroach farm, the Mineral Science Building has an X-Ray laboratory and many shops, Walker lab has a maze of glass and tubing that rivals the catacombs of the Colosseum. After you have seen These labs, take a walk over to the Dairy Building and see how they test milk samples and then jaunt over to Osmond and see how the physicists and chem ists work. All right, you don't like labs; well, there are many other things around. The Hetzel Un ion directory lists hundreds of special interest groups. Among them: The Chess Club, the Phil osophy Club, the Society for the Advancement of Manage ment, the Institute of Radio En gineers, W3YA-AYA; the Emer son Society, the Society of Mili tary Engineers—hundreds, all for the asking. The library too has much to offer. Upstairs in the Penn State Room is a running his tory of PSU since its earliest days. The stacks, although hard to gain entry to, are fas cinating. The periodical room can keep one intrigued for hours. Directly behind the library is the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel, open to all. In the Chapel is a small library where there are deep and soft leather chairs and a grandfather clock dating from 1837. The spacious SAIURDAY, MAY 16, 1959 by Marty Scharr main lounge has one of the finest: hi-fi music systems on the campus. Inside the chapel there is a beautiful simplicity that can make one forget the business and noise of the world outside. Let us not forget the store windows in town. Some of the shop owners spend much time and energy putting up fasci nating and inspired - looking displays—hours could be spent on College Avenue. From time to time there are other events that attract the interest of all too few. The Horse Show and stables, the Dairy Exposition, the Artist Series, our own musical and dramatic groups, May Day, sporting events other than football and gymnastics, and often there are visiting lec turers. Just to enumerate a few more things, there is the Gar field Thomas Water Tunnel, the nuclear reactor, the Uni versity observatories, the mus eum in the Mineral Industries Building, the local taverns which afford a wealth of hu man nature, the weather fore casting station, the office of The Daily Collegian, The Glennland swimming pool, the cattle barns, the SGA assem bly meetings and if you're in terested, as we said before, you can even study. WDFM SATURDAY NIGHT 6:55 Sign-On & News 7:00 HI-FI Stereo Open House 9:00 News 9:30 Campus Beat 1:01) _ Sign-Oft SUNDAY NIGHT 6:66 __ Sign-On & New 7:00 ----_ The Third Programme 11:30 .-- Sign-Oft - MONDAY NIGHT 6:66 Sign-Qn & News 7:00 __ Westinghouse Adv. ha Research 7:16 ____ Forest City Footnotes 7:30 __-- Dateline: London 7:46 ----------__ Reflections 7 :66 . Pennsylvania News 8:00 .____.:._ Contemporary Concepts 8:56 ------ Sports News 8:00 __-__ Music of the People 9:30 ___. Campus and Religion 9:46 -- Preview 9:66 10:00 . Background 10:05 —_--- Symphonic Noteboo 11 41 Sign-0