PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion For Larger Audiences A sell-out crowd will pack Beaver Field Nov. 7 for the Syracuse-Penn State football game. And Schwab Audi to.tium will be filled for the appearance of Robert Frost Saturday night. There will be many people including students turned away from both events. Isn't there some way larger audiences could be accommodated for these and other equally popular events? The answer might be closed circuit television. The present closed circuit setup will probably stand idly by while anxious students are standing idly by wish ing there were some way to see these events. The cost of televising programs that are almost cer tain sellouts is a formidable problem. Such costs could be defrayed somewhat by charging an admission fee to rooms with closed circuit sets. Sparks and Boucke already have the closed circuit system and other buildings including residence halls will soon be in the network. Such telecasting could serve as an ideal training ground for students in the new broadcasting curriculum created this year. But especially, this could reach a much larger au dience for Lecture and Artist Series performances which would otherwise be impossible until a new auditorium Is built. Let's Organize Rules The recent discovery of conflicting University regu lations can only lead to acute inefficiency in administra tion if not corrected soon. Three different rules have been made with regard to eligibility for scheduling 500 courses. Each rule con tradicts the other two. The completely different rulings e found in the Undergraduate Catalogue, the Senate Regulations, and the Graduate School Catalogue. This is not the only example of contradictions in reg ulations. Another one pertains to permission to have cars on campus -- in this respect regulations come from the dean of men, the dean of women, and the vice president for business administration. And so these regulations travel around in circles, being interpreted differently at each spin. Confusion in the observation of such rules cannot be the fault of stu dents. Rather, the blame lies with the administrators who make them. If rules are to be obeyed and respected, University officials would do well to come up with a systemized method of making them. This apace measures the amount of legislation passed by the SGA Assembly this semester. A Student-Operated Newspaper 55 - Years of Editorial Freedom Vlr• Daily Tollrgiatt Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday morning during the University year. The Dail• Collegian is a student-operated newspaper. Entered as second-class matter July 5, 1931 at the State College, Pa. Post Office under the act or March 3, 1819. Mail Subscription Price: $3,00 per semester 55.00 per year. Member of The Associated Press and The Intercollegiate Press DENNIS MALICK Editor - 4eCO°l STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night Editor, Katie Davis; Copy Editor, Elaine Miele; Wire Editor, Dick Goldberg; Assistants, Edie Beck, 011ie Himes, Phyllis Pack, Sue Taylor, Judy Walko, Diane Lamb, Nancy Langsner, Pat Bean, Craig Yerkes, Robert Kraft and Sharon Bohm. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN: STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA GEORGE McTURK Busineas Manager Help Wanted: Church Needs 30 Gargoyles By ARTHUR EDSON WASHINGTON (JP) —Gargoyle lovers are getting the biggest break in gargoyle- history. They've been invited maybe begged is a better word to de sign gargoyles for the Washing ton Cathedral. This huge and beautiful build ing, constructed slowly and sure ly as a cathedral should be, still needs 30 gargoyles, or highly or namental rainspouts. And so, in the prose of the Episcopal cathedral dean, the Very Rev. Francis B. Sayre Jr.: "We will welcome the entries of anyone who, with some skill and craftsmanship, would care to make this a hobby." No box tops to send in. No jin gles to write. No advance coach ing by a solicitious quizmaster. No prizes. Just a chance for im mortality of a sort as the design er of a tiny portion of an enormous cathedral. Now for the benefit of those whose knowledge of medieval architecture is misty, let's step up closer to gargoyles. The words "gargoyle" and gargle" have a common ances tor in the old French word "gargouille," which means throat. That's what a gargoyle really is. It's the throat that sticks out a couple of feet and throws water away from the building. Instead of a simple pipe, strange monsters were designed to spit out the water. Fish have been especially prized by gargoyle de signers. If someone wants to give his impressions of monsters seen from a psychiatrist's couch, let him. He may become the Frank Lloyd Wright of gargoylery. Models may be submitted in clay or plaster, and they should be in a form fairly easy to handle. The resident stonecarvers, Ro ger Morigi and Edward Ratti, v, ill take the models, climb up to where the big blocks of stone are in place, and do their carving on the spot. Anyone who thinks designing a gargoyle would be fun can get technical help by writing R. T. Feller, clerk of the works, Wash ington Cathedral, Mount Saint Alban, Washington 16. Letters Student Muddled At Nittany Mud TO THE EDITOR: I wonder how many people have attempted to walk from Nittany Halls to the civilized section of campus after dark. - Last evening (Monday), my friends and I not only had to stumble around through mud puddles we could not see, but also had to run an obstacle course around the detour signs placed at the sidewalk. I realize that with such luxur ious dorms, we cannot expect EVERYTHING to be perfect, but is it asking too much to have the street lights turned. on between Nittany and McElwain Hall? —Fred Bender, '62 Gazette TODAY AIM Queen Contest, 7:30 p.m., HUB ball room American Society of Mechanical Engineers, movie night, 7 p.m , 111 Boucke Camera Club, 8 p.m.. 213-16 HUB Chess Club. 7 p.m.. HUB cardroom Christian Fellowship, 12 :45 p.m., 218 HUB Circa, 7 pm„ old staff members, 7 :30 p.m.; candidates, 404 Boucke Dancing Classes, 4:15 and 6 .30 p.m., HUB ballroom Englith Council, 6:45 p m., 2)7 HUB French Club, 7 p.m., McElwain lounge Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, 7 p m., 105 Mechanical Engineering Kappa Phi Dessert Party. 7 p ni., Wesley Foundation Resident Council of Student Christian Association, 6:45 p in.. 212 MTh TIM. 7 p m 203 HUB Women's Chorus, 6:30 p m., HUB assembly room WRA Dowling Club. 7:30 p.m.. Whit* WRA Dance Club, 7 Pm., White WRA Hockey Club, 4:t5 p m., Holmes Field HOSPITAL Patients in the University Hospital yes terday wets!: John Barlett, Patrick Botula, James Burrows, Elizabeth Foster, Stanley Foster, Helen Hill, Sally Hoover, Sheldon Katz, Frank Korbini, John Lang, Roger Lewis, Robert Morosky, Michael Raiser, Susan Randolph, Joel Spero, Patricia Smith, Mary Stevens, David Truitt. Ruh. *ea Milken. Carol Wrubleski ttle Man on Campus , el, e S _ a fie L. I- it NO VOUBLU BY 114' IltliE WE MO VcAR-1.01-11% 51-IKEDA COUPLE Of 'TRANQUILIZERS IN OS COK-E6.4' breakfast with bill Some Universities; Maybe Not Here "Many of America's 18,000 colleges and universities rank with the nation's worst-run businesses. Their opera tions are slipshod, their thinking stratified. Their officials refuse to look facts in the face." So wrote Ed Kiester in the Sunday Parade Magazine re cently. However, President Eric A. Walker strongly disagrees with the argument concerning Penn State. And he is right in many respects. Prexy said many universi ties have followed Penn State's lead in building residence halls and dining halls on a self liquidating basis. No student funds are used to build the halls and eventually they will be paid for from the housing fees. But the University is not in fallible in its business opera tions. Every leak in a college bud get drains off money that might go for faculty salaries, better classrooms and new lab oratories, the article points out. And with the enrollments ex • pected to dou ble from three to six million students by 1970, colleges will have' to squeeze every nickel to maintain quality. "I n fact colleges won't be able to stream line." , . ~." - Jaffe - Truer words could never be spoken at Penn State, where the influx of stu- Mi. 11 • . • 1 ' 0.J14Y DON'T COE 6ET TIDE WROLE kg:6....:. • _ II GANG IOGETNER AN CARS (37,.------ V AND SING PUMPKI N? • *, ; 'N - ' • 1 ( • : -:..'"-:--- • . . J 7111, . . • 1 .t.- . • - • ........ - !..... ;tt• a ~ .a 4,4 ' WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1959 Now , . -•-- V?= -- -- - ;',' • - • '‘ I • t),S , . 4 ~r,~ - by bill Off° dents has and will continue to rise every year. Streamlining the faculty as well as the courses can be most detri mental to the education sys tem as a whole. The University has gone about as far as it can go with its televised courses. Although students dispute and grumble about their effectiveness, the educators agree that televised courses have received favorable results. The article suggests four ways colleges can improve ef ficiency by defining and limiting what they are trying to do; making better use of facilities they already have; improving themselves by set ting higher standards for stu dents; and by showing a will ingness to consider new meth ods, to explore and to inno vate. Although Penn State has es tablished its objectives many limes, a firmer and more defi nite approach will have to be taken in the near future. Each year fewer high school stu dents in the lower three-fifths of their graduating class are admitted. A tri-semester or quarter sys tem seems just around the cor ner for Penn State students. If this summer was any indica tion, summer school is becom ing more popular every day. (Continued on page nine) - by Dick Bible' 1 ilYi Of , d 1 / ' - . 1 4