PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion Driving Ban Indicates An Eye to The Future Students are questioning the recommendation to ban sophomore driving because they feel that there is no need for such action at present. But, from a long-rage view point, this suggestion shows foresight into a problem that is bound to become acute in the near future. The parking and traffic problem has been the major Issue of the semester. Why has student driving been prohibited on Pollock Road? Why have the administrative officials cracked down on parking and traffic regulations? To investigate these questions posed by the students , . the SGA Assembly appointed a committee to study the traffic code and report back to Assembly. Now that the administration has levied such regula tions on the students, it is a bit difficult to find sufficient reasons to ask that they be retracted. So the next best thing would seem to be to anticipate future regulations. As it now stands, the sophomore ban recommendation has not been made to prematurely create an area of conten tion. It serves to call a potential problem to the attention of the Assembly where it can undergo careful investiga tion before any administrative action can be taken. Sooner or later the administration is going to take action to relieve the overflow of cars, and the sophomore ban could be one answer. Once this is done, there will be little chance of turning back as is shown clearly by the current regulations. By calling the problem to the attention of the Assembly now, ample time can be reserved for careful consideration of any alternatives for future parking and driving regulations. Suggestions from the Assembly can then be presented to the administration in advance of any action on the latter's part. This affords the Assembly a good opportunity to study all aspects of problems which will inevitably arise with the rapidly increasing enrollment. Something is going to have to be done about parking and traffic. What better way is there to do it than through student action? A Student-Operated Newspaper 55 Years of Editorial Freedom Daily Tollrgian Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday morning during the University year. The Daily Collegian is a ■tudent-operated newspaper. Entered a■ aecond.class matter July 5. 1934 ■t the State College, Pa. Post Office under the set of March 3. 1379. Mall Subscription Prices LIAO per semester $5.00 per year. DENNIS MALICK GEORGE McTURK Editor €4,M'D9 Business Manager Managing Editor, William Jaffe; Assistant Editor, Catherine Fleck; Public Relations Director, Loin Neuharth: Copy Editor, Roberta Levine; Epode Editor, Ssndy Padwe: Assistant Sports Editor, John Black; Photography Editor. Martin Scherr; Member, Zandy Slopison. Local Ad Mgr,. Sherry Kennel: Asa% Local Ad Mgr., Darlene Anderson; Credit Mgr., Murry Simon: National Ad Mgr., Lee Dempsey; Classified Ad Mgr., Sara Drowns Co-Circulation Mgrs., Loretta Mink, Dick Kitzinger: Promotion Mgr.. Ruth Briggs: Special Page M¢r., Alice Mahachekt Personnel Mgr., Dorothy Bmeal; Offir• Secretary, Bonnie Bailey; Research and Records, Margaret Dimperlo, STAFF THIS ISSUE: Night Editor, Phyllis Pack; Copy Editor, Katie Davis; Wire Editor, Dick Goldberg; Assistants: Susie Eberly, Kay Mills, Fayenola Zalmon, Sue Taylor, Jim Karl. Staff Cartoonist, Nancy Wigfield. Capitol Bustles Amid Noisy Politicians By ARTHUR EDSON WASHINGTON (?P) Congress doesn't officially open for business until to day, but already the town is jumping. President Eisenhower hurry ing back from his. Augusta, Ga., golf course, senators popping up everywhere with well honed adjectives. Anyone who moved fast enough, and who didn't mind if his ears took a beating, could listen to nine senators speak at one spot or another yester day, including four full-fledged news conferences. So let's get into the preopen lng warmups by dropping in on one of the news conferences. held by Sen. Stuart Syming ton (D-Mo). Because Symington is often mentioned,as a possible presi THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA dential candidate, he drew a full house. He has just returned from Africa, but nobody cared much about this. Most report ers seemed interested only in his presidential hopes, if any, and the air was filled with such pithy exchanges as these: "If you should become presi dent." "Well, the question is a little hypothetical. I am not an avowed candidate." "If you are not an avowed candidate, what kind of a can didate are you?" Symington said he'd have to say he isn't a candidate at all. But you had the feeling if you twisted his arm long enough, he might shyly step forward. Symington often talks about how we lag behind the Soviet Union in missiles, and some of the talk was of that. Syming ton thinks the gap is growing larger. As he talked, he pursed. Anti-Semitism May Not Be Work of Reds By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst It is easy to speculate that the Communists are behind the new outbreak of anti-Semitic inci dents, hoping to discredit West Germany as the time for negotia tions over the German future ap proaches, but the speculation may not be well-founded, In the first place, there is no denying that there are Nazi left over in Germany, and neo-Nazi organizations containing hoodlums perfectly capable of the acts. The overwhelming popularity of Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer, who has sought zealously to lead German thinking away from such fields, is sufficient evidence that these ele ments are neither representative nor powerful. But in Germany and the rest of the world there are enough extremists who, like anony mous letter writers, are willing to act surreptitiously to create the impression of an organized movement. Any Communist conspiracy in such a matter would be in con stant danger of discovery, and the resultant danger of the Com munists cause very real. The Communists have always been extremely wary of charges of anti-Semitism, recognizing it as a link to Czarist Russia where the program was once a well-used weapon of the government to keep the minds of the people off their other troubles. It still exists, of course, and at times has flared to the point where it was clearly discernible even through the Iron Curtain. But the line has seldom been clearly drawn between anti- Semitism and the general run ning fight which communism carries on against all religions in its effort to stand as a re ligion within itself. Stirring up hatred is not the Soviet line today, although the Chinese Communists still go for it in a big•way. Gazette TODAY Association of Childhood Educators, 7 p m., Simmons lounge AIM. 7 p m., 203 HUB Bua Ad *Council, 6:15 p m., 205 Boucke Chem-Phys Council, 7 p.m , 216 HUB Chess Club, 7 p.m., HUB eardroom Christian Fellowship, 12:45 p.m., 218 HUB Delta Nu Alpha, Donald Cook-speaker, Kappa Sigma Eng-Arch Council. 6:45 p.m., 214 HUB Forestry Society, 7 p m., 105 Forestry Nittany Grotto. election of officers, 7 p m., 121 M I. Sports Car Club, 7 p rp., 212 HUB Women's Chorus, 6:30 p.m , HUB assembly room WRA Dance Club, 7 p m., White Hall dance studio Zoology Club, 7 p.m., 114 Fccar HOSPITAL Jocelyn Binns, Carol Cogs, Sandra Dove. renux, Charles Felton, Robert Cense, Bar bara Gill, John Janetlca, David Kiser, Bart Klimkiewicz, Sarah Mawhinney, Irene Mc- Donald, Richard Morrow, Frank Moyes, Warren Myers, Michael Pancone, Edward Rogner, Nancy Schiffman, David Schwartz, William Stout, Rachelle Strasnick, John Thiebauth, Joanne Thompson, Gary Tiffany, Robert Treifeld, Dolores Williams. his lips, like a man who not only weighs his words but also savors them. This it turned out, was a delusion. "If I seem a little tight in the mouth," said Symington— his mouth tight—"my dentist gave me a good working over." Leaving the tight-lipped un avowed candidate, busily un avowing, let's scurry down to the basement for the inaugur ation of the new Senate sub way train, designed to whisk senators from their new office building a thousand feet to the Capitol in exactly 52 seconds. This project has been criti cized, mostly by some of the senators themselves, as a "hor rendous, expensive boondog gle." But the two senators on the program—and who were on the building commission— were not among the critics. Sens. Dennis Chavez (D-NM) and Styles Bridges (R-NH) •were , pro-subway.- ; ; - - - Little Man on Campus by Dick Bible! Lit4PfsgrANo 'ME rcbroAu.iss,m vcrir9 +VA 'ME trE6f '065 RavivEg' of THE 66A60N.4 without malice Bluebooks, Papers Fill Campus Air I have a bluebook today that I didn't get a chance to study for. I have a final speech to give Friday, two more bluebooks next week, a term paper due next weekend and I can't find a thing in the library. Furthermore, I'm a senior ana I must pass all my courses or I won't graduate with my class. But there's this one prof who doesn't like me and I'll never get by him. Whew! Who's complaining? We're just joining in the most popular game on campus about this time of year called "Can You Top This?" Yes, this is the time of year when each student is giving his own impersonation of Atlas by carrying the whole world around on his shoulders. NoDoz and coffee sales triple, beards lengthen, barbers go broke and sorority suites settle down for the first time all semester. There was a time whe this only hat pened duri, finals. But wi the new tin: on scholarshi the all - higl study sessioi ar e commoi place a 1 mol all semester. You'll find people study ing ing almost everyplace im aginable—even in the library. We seldom go near the library for studying purposes. It's a good place to meet • people, read magazines and such, but there's too much noise to study. Anyhow, since the coffee ITS NO WONDER SOME PEOPLE GET FAT po *6&,44, 4411 46.splim OR, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1960 ‘ l . ~.. r by denny =lick break has become almost a necessity, the librar} is just too far from the nearest pot (coffee) to be practical. This is a subtle suggestion that it wouldn't be a bad idea to have a little coffee shop in the li brary. Then everyone could congregate there instead of making a lot of noise in the halls. Freshmen experiencing their first end-of-semester jitters look like they're all about ready to have heart attacks. Don't worry, Frosh, you'll get accustomed to it after your tenth semester. It'll all be over soon. Then we can sit back and relax. and add another New Year's resol ution that NEXT semester we'll start studying from the very first day. (Methinks that line sounds familiar.) MALICK WHIM PROGRAM SCHEDULE WDFSI 91.1 megacycle. 56 Weatheraeope 00 Marquee Memorial 55 News 00 Jazz Panorama 00 Forum of the Air 30 Artist Series Preview 45 News and Sports 00 Virtuoso 30 Sign Off ALL THEY EVER DO 16 EAT. ALL TREY EVV THINK ABOUT IS E TIN G !A I • / / - . 7 . - , :. , li t Ai lAA ' --- 4E. : 1 ..i , 4 4 1 4 i _ SS ma , . YOU CAN 6AY 5'41°14 THAT AGAIN'. • p 1 - 10 A Z., 4,-. (' X if f • 111 ZAW :A ree. ,3:4? WDFM WEDNESDAYS