PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion Student Fate of New Hold Last night 23 per cent of the student body elected the SGA of heels and Assemblymen that hold in their hand , : the fate of the present SGA system and possibly the whole concept of student government at Penn State. It is i egi ettable that the representatives who will be chin ged with such an important task had to be elected by such a minoi ity and under the shroud of a campaign mailed by numerous charges of the use of improper tactics. The election campaign that made such an notorious beginning with an attempted fix, then quieted down only to burst forth with a final round of questionable tactics during the three-day voting period, ended in the same notorious manner amid charges aimed at invalidating the election. A sad state of affairs for such an important elec tion. And now a new regime takes over bent on salvaging a student voice to the University wilderness. Nut only a wave iesponsibility but also a mandate orn the students rests upon the shoulders of those elected. A mandate to save SGA. The new leaders, who have already made the usual statements pledging themselves to do their best for the students, will find that more than ever these cannot be hollow words. The present SGA system and perhaps student govern ment itself has one year to prove itself. One year before a vote of the Senate sub-committee on organizational con ol approves the stem for the future or sounds its death knell. If SGA is not only to survive, but rise to a respected influential position, it requires that the students make their mandate known through the structure of this repre sentative democracy and that the elected leaders channel this mandate to the administration, A Student-Operated Newspaper 55 Years of Editorial Freedom Mir Bugg Tollrgiatt Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday morning during the Untrereity year. The pally Collegian is a student-operated newspaper Entered al second-elan, matter July 5. 1934 at the State College. Pa. Poet Office under the act of March 3. 1879. Mail Subscription Price: 93.00 per semester MOD pet year. DENNIS MALICK EdHim ate>, Managing Editor, William Jaffe; Asslatent Editor Catherine Fleck: Public Relations Director, LoIII Neuharth; Copy Editor. Roberta Levine; Sports Editor, Sandy l'adwe: Assistant Sports Editor. John Black: Photography Editor Martin Brherr; Member, Zandy Slosson. _ Assistant Ad Mgr., Chester Lucid.; Credit Mgr.. Murray Simon; National Ad Mgr., Nancy Proebel: t. lassified Ad Mgr.. Sara Brown; ( o-t irculation 'Mgrs., Loretta Mink. Rkhaid Kitzinger: Promotion Mgr., Darlene Anderson; Special Page Mgr., Alice Mnhaehk; Personnel Mgr., Dorothy Smeal: Office Secretary, Bonnie Bailey Meyer; Research and Records, Margaret Dimperio. STAFF THIS ISSUE: Wile Editors, Amy Rosenthal and Kay Milk; Night Copy Editoi, Barb Yunk; Headline Editor, Pat Dyet; Assistants: Ellen Bleecker, Bev Cades, Marilyn Geyer, Maigie Hoffman, Jerrie Maikos. Little Man on Campus by Dick Bible, c , ;_lPE@Exgmo li th Ttig W I 114 AT OW &ON& GALLED AO FOR A MAMA THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Leaders SGA GEORGE McTURK Business Manager Letters Soph Praises Student Pickets On Race Stand TO THE EDITOR: What might seem to the casual observer to be just a battle to obtain a haircut in volves a latent strife for racial equality. Such oversight reflects the misjudgment and indifference Inherent in so many young Amex - "Are Americans getting soft?" This is the question commented upon by Penn State University of ficials and campus dignitaries. If the answer is yes one must surely include a mental weakness which blinds us to careful evaluation of the circumstances that threaten the very heart of our democracy. Democratic society is inhabited by a free and equal people, men tally alert to speak against and to repulse any action which is incon sistent with liberty and justice for all men. So often do we feel that a fight for equality does not directly in volve us. Possibly because we have not felt the pangs of racial discrimination. Or is it because some of us are too closely associ ated with materialistic gains to realize the true aim of American democracy. Neither of these may be the answer, but the fact remains, so many young Americans are in different to prejudices that chal lenge democracy. I don't want to represent myself as a crusader for the revamping of individual thoughts and feel ings. Every man is entitled to his opinion. But I do want to point out that any positive or negative stand is welcomed in a democ racy, because such action reflects motives of an active, alert mind. The barbershop pickets on South Allen Street represent a fundamental group, aware of lo cal injustices that are national in scope These are young Americans who have taken a stand against a prejudice that contradicts dem ocracy. "What are you doing?" —Eugene Harris, '62 Gazette TODAY Air Forte Glee Club. 8 p in , HUB rissern- bly room - Angel Flight, T p.m . 211, 215 HUB ASCE, 7:'30 p m , 211 Boucke Bacteriology Night, 7 p m , 205 Patterson Hall Biological Sciences Lecture Series, Dr James Leathern, speaker. 4 15 p m , 112 Bourke. Bridge Club, 6.30 p m , HUB eurdroom Campus Party. 6 30 p.m . 213 HUB Christian Fellowship. 12:15 p.m 21R HUB Collegian Ad Staff, new members. 6:30 p m., Colleirian Office Commonwealth Campus, 10 a in, 2 p m 2IS HUB CPIC. 7 p m . 21(1 Hl.lll Executive Committee. 10 n.m., 210 HUE Graduate Mining Seminar. M. G. Alvarez Fl peaker. 3:20 p m., 24 MI Handbook, 9:15 p rn , 214, 216 HUB liktory Round Table. Dr Herbelt. Heaton speaker. 7.30 p m . 111 Hnueke Mike and Rostrum Club, 6'3(1 p.m., 217 HUB Omicron Delta Kappa, 8 p m., HUB RZ. semblv romp Philosophy Colloquium. Dr. Jose Perrater. Morn. speaker. 4 •15 p m., 2 Sparks Prof Snarf contest. 8 a.m . first floor HUB SCA Assembly. 7 p.m.. 203 HUB Sigma Tau Delta. 7:45 p.m.. 212. 217 HUH Spring Week committee heads, 6.30 p m , 214 HUB University Party. GM pm, 21? HUB WRA Aquarnde, R p m , White HRH pool HOSPITAL Jamey Armstrong. Murry Barsky. Don na Berman. Stephen Blum. Elmer Brown. Matilda Cohen, William Duemler, James Ebert, Francine Garfinkel, Bruce Gina. der, Linda Hendricks. Linda Hunt. Mary Isaacs. Robert Kimble. Linda Levin, John Lindley. Arthur Lingousky, James Nebls, Russell Reinhard, Sheila Roaenzyrog, Sher on Bowles, Mot ton Schweißer, Bernard Tandarich. Kinzo Yamamoto, Martha Wel ler, Frances Zengerle. SUMMER CAMPS April 7—Mien and womeni—Herald Trib une Pre,h Air Fund Camp. N.Y.: (Menl —College Settlement Fatm-Camp, near Philadelphia April 7. B—(Womenl—Camp Lenore, Pa April 12—(Women)—Camp Mesncosa, Adi- rondackc, NY. April 26—i Men)—Cradle Beach, near But. falo, NY. April 28—( Men) —C-Bar-T Trail Ranch Denser. Colo. Chem-Phys Council To Study Scholarships The Chemistry-Physics Student Council set up a committee to set stipulations and qualifications for a proposed council scholarship last night. The exact amount is uncertain, but present indications point to a value of $75 or $lOO. 7:co 11,ii .1( ''''' ,?f.t.,.._*...r.:),_..,..._„___:,...„ , ~,,, _,.0.,... „..___. I JUST CAN'T MAKE MYSELF GO THROUGH THOSE DOORS... 11117 e ' penny candy Take Heed, Snowballs "There was a child went forth every day, and the first object he looked upon, that object he became and that object became a part of him ... the early lilacs, and grass, and white and red morning glories." The fast day of kindergarten, high school proms and college. Years of schooling which become more a part of every child than any other experience Now, evei ywhere in the coun try, that same child is preparing to go forth once more, finally to leave his formal school days be hind. What part of him have those years become? The pai t that is properly socialized and ready to enter society as a well adjusted, well-mannered indi vidual 9 Or will the "objects he has looked upon" become a more sig nificant part of the child. So many seniors at this point feel they will graduate with only a superficial knowledge of many unrelated s u b _, •• ..;" jects. Think 1 n g or ,of this, I can't .. .. .:. , ~... ' help remember ing .- • . " my favorite e high school i io .i French teacher, w h o tried so *:.,,,,..: . hard to awaken ::... ._; - ....,,...•,. us to the dan ger - of our apa thetic ~ • approach - .. . ... -. . , : to education. Many times he MISS NEunAirrn told us, "T h e way you learn French, or any thing else, is like lining up a row of snowballs on the windowsill." He was right, of course. Most high school students learn one day's lesson, and then tuck it away in a safe, dark corner of their mind to remain undisturbed until a test comes along. The pat tern is repeated each day; none of the material is related to what was learned the day before. "And what do you end up Letters Picket Issues TO THE EDITOR: Your coverage of the attitudes and intents of the group which is seeking an end to discriminatory practices in pub lic accomodations in State Col lege has been very fair and im partial until Tuesday's Collegian article on the resumption of the picketing of Bunn's Barber Shop While it is understandable that your reporter emphasized the sen sational aspects of the picket, i.e., economic boycott, it is to be re gretted that it was not reported that the group had decided that such pressure was not the primary motive behind the picketing. The issue is moral in character. The picketing of the barber shop is only one prong of a many pronged effort to probe the extent THURSDAY. APRIL 7, 1960 I CAN'T! IM AFRAID TO GO INTO THE LIBRARY... ~. , ..... rit , ...c....t.,,,.„ r I've GOT e: 5... N .. -1,!0_ 1 0:) LIBRARY GRIEF! '' -; FEVER! i , 4 ~ i i, ~. ~ .... 4 ..,,.. i.s. _:,,, Seniors Melt! by bah neubarth with?" my teacher asked "Little collections of knowledge lined up like snowballs on the window sill." By the time we graduated, some had learned to integrate the material in each subject into a meaningful whole. But in college the "snowball principle" reassert ed itself on a larger scale. Now we complain that except in our major field, our courses are com pletely unrelated. The fault, obviously, lies not with the courses but with the old habit of treating each as a sepa rate unit of knowledge. The com plainers have never realized that the knowledge of the world is so tightly interwoven that it can be separated only by ignorance. Underclassmen still have time to start integrating their courses. You'll know when you succeed in really breaking away from the high-school approach to educa tion. It may be the day your AAH prof discusses ancient Egyp tian art, and it fits right into the ancient history course you had last year. It may be when you realise that the Greek gods on the Par thenon are really the same ones you studied in literature. Some of us have succeeded; some of us can only wish; some don't really care. But college has become a part of us all. The mem ories of good times, close friends and at least an awareness of how very much we have yet to learn. "All these became a part of that child who went forth every day, and who now goes and will always gb forth everyday." -30- Discussed of segregation in our "own back yard" and to place upon the con sciences of students and towns people alike the moral issue in volved: is a Negro entitled to few er civil rights than a white man? Does a man's color make him any more or less human or entitle him to more or less dignity? The group seeks to turn the eyes of the residents of this area towards the momentous revolu tion occurring in our world (in the southland, in Africa, and in State College) as oppressed races are seeking their God-given (and man-suppressed) rights to equal ity of humanity. —Robert Grantham, '63; Ju dith Kali, '6O; James D. Miller, '6O; Charles Trout man, UCA Student Pastor