PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion Tightening of Control Possible With Lipp Plan It r, tulle to stop quibbling ovei signing in and out and begin to look at a few of Dean of Women Dorothy J. Lipp's long-range plans fur student life at Penn State. The underlying factor in the women's rejection of one of the facets of her plan—junior residents—is a fear of the ramifications which may evolve from such a le.oderce hall staffing plan. A tem that the plan might be a watchdog system with eel tam of one's peers stationed among the students to niarshall to the higher echelon reports on conduct. This plan might lead to a tightening of administrative control such as has not been experienced before. Dean Lipp has claimed that the women know nothing about the plan. This ignorance, then, is the crux of the matter for it leads to fear. But why hasn't this plan been adequately explained and discussed with the women before Dean Lipp began laying the ground work? Under the proposed new living plan a group of 25-50 women would have a junior residence hall counselor who is subordinate to a graduate counselor who is subordinate to one of the four basic living unit counselors who is sub ordinate to the dean of women's office. This structure can lead to efficency but it also can lead to a tight control. What will be the explicit duties of all of these staff people? Will they be there for help and guidance or for discipline and organization? All of then" are certainly not going to be adequately trained for coun seling and guidance. Those who can See_further ahead are troubled by the combining of this staff system with the coed residence hall program which may lead to an entire student govern ment based on living units. What effect will the coed council system have on the organization of the Student Government Association? If representatives are elected from councils instead of classes and if these residence hall counselors have a great deal of control over their counselees, might not this be a way of more fully extending the control by the administration, to the SGA? If a representative is bringing up ideas contrary- to administrative doctrine, then he might be effectively silenced through counseling. One more question. Why have we heard literally nothing from the men's side? Since Dean Lipp's proposed plan eventually effects the men too, more talk ought to be emanating from Dean of Men Frank J. Simes' office. A Student-Operated Newspaper 55 Years of &Worm! Freedom 00 Ball' Tollrgian Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Plibli. ll edllo.(laV through Saturday morning during the University year. The Daily ((Inman 14 a student-operated newspaper. Entered as second -clays matter July 5, 1935 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. Member of The Associated Press and The Intercollegiate Press JOHN BLACK Editor City Editor, Carol (llnkesler; Assii.tant Editor, Gloria Watford: Sports Editor, Sandy Pada c; Assistant Lity Editor and Personnel Director, Susan Linkroum; Feature I tutor and Assistant Copy Editor. Elaine Miele: Copy Editor. Annabelle Rosenthal, Photography Editor, Frederic Bower; Make-up Editor, Joel Myer: Local Ad Mgr., Brad Oasis; Assistant Local Ad Mgr.. Hal Deisher; Credi. Mgr.. Mary Ann ('vans; Ass't Credit Mgr.. Neal Keitz. Classified Ad Mg... Constance Breed; Co-Circulation Mgrs., Rosalind Mies, Richard litringer; Promotion Mgr., Elaine Michel; Personnel Mgr.. Becky Kohudie• Office Secretary, Joanne Huyett. STAFF THIS ISSUE: Headline Editor, Jerrie Markob; Wire Ech tot. Meg Teichholtz; Night Copy Editor, Ann Palmer. Assistants: Alice Bi union, Phyllis Mandlebaum, John Morris, Vickie Wentz and Sandy Yaggi. Agriculture Student Council. 7 p m 212 111,11 Alpha Kappa Pli. 7 p rn , Delta Signal rill Angel Flight, 6 •45 p ni • drill in A r• mon' : 7 :70, Inviines4 m«•ung, 211 wiliiii ii Artigt4 Scrim Anton Klll.l 11. 8:10 p m, Seh x% lib : 1%0113811m 3 ;15 p in. SOIM HI) Chibitian Fellont , hip, 12.45 p in . 218 HUB Cooly Societs Skeleton, 8 pm. Ill'll 14'101111d floor Collegian Promotion Staff, 7MO 1, in 211 Ilou"6i• Economics Faculty Seminar, 12 00 Milt ilminv room A Education Student Council, 7.45 p In, 2U HUB . Father Ilaramin Discussion, 7:00 p.m 217 11151't Five O'Clock Theatre, "The PaS4" by Jameit T. Miller, 6 p.m., Old Main Little Theater Geophysics and Geochemistry Seminar. CHESTER LUCIDO Business Manager GAZETTE' 1 .15 p.m. 121 At met al Induct rl. Honorary Graduate Fraternit'. for Coumeling and Edutation, b pm , Autoport Move of Repregentathes, 8 a to.- 5 p nh, 212 HIM IMRE Mineral Indtmtries Student Council. S p.m.. 211+ Hint Mixed Choir, 7 p , n , HUB aisembly hall Nittanv Crolto. i pm , Mineral indti,trze4 Panhellenic Council, 6,10 p m , 203 HUB Ph)sie4 Col reqUIUM, 4 15 p 11l . n I Os mond raelloluirS Club. 7 10 p m., Wednes day. May 11, 10) Bonet,. Sigma Delta Epsilon, 6.70 p.m., 213 111.113 Society for Advancement of Manage ment, 7 .10 p m., Alpha Chi Rho ft a tm nuts Special Education. 8:15 p in , 217 111:11 Tenni* Club. 4 p.m , Recreation Hall SGA Commlttes. 4 u.m.. 214 HUB THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA 203 HU lt Letters Senior Finds Four Types Of Prejudice TO THE EDITOR: Recently I sav the old movie "Gentlemen's' Agreement" which struck out at anti-Semitism The impi essing thing about the film is that it isn't attacking hatred and flag-waving techniques. It exposes the responsible citi• zen who either knowingly or un knowingly carries with him a quiet, under-the-surface kind of prejudice. Prejudice, after all, is a feeling and we act or react to As I thought about this picture. I related the points it made on anti-Semitism to discrimination against Negroes Let me enumerate some of the more common feelings many peo ple have but don't realize their dangerous implications: The person who says he is not against Negroes but cracks de grading jokes about them. The person who says he is not out to reform the world and so does nothing. The person who says there isn't any problem or sits and waits hoping that it will all pass over or says that's the way it's done here. The person who gives the clas sic apology that some of his best friends are Negroes. It is feelings and attitudes like these which many people carry that, more than scattered out 'ages, keep our society disciimi nating —Peter M. Glick, '6O HOSPITAL John Callentvleh Man Altee Ctm rnnmt, Filwr: 41 Fold% ce. Douglas Cerat ol Manta llxtt•wh, Ronald Ktdbael,t, Fd t Ktue. Joan Kolf. Eltritbeth Lott, Dons4l,l NI-Indell, Walter Mat tin, Martle Round.. Kay Sozelle, Barbara Si 'flat let, Te; time Sehrnmer, Stanley Sinn,', Mall AII II Robert WIN.? Ft edertek Sit,an Write. WDFM WDFM 91.1 megacycles T 1 r.snAy WDPM 91.1 megacycles 6.7,, 1 , 1 eat her , ope .00 Ft nth PI e,ents 7 1:i BI S }Wm 7.30 June Se-aion 7 i New, S , n) Ballet Theatre 9 00 1 , n16 Mu-ic 9:30 Fot u 4 t , 15 Nen,. s and Spot 10 din Conttnninn a y 11 •10 Sign Off iE LOERE 50 >PY TO NEAR THAT ARE GONG TO OUR NiANA6ER AN TrU5 YEAR, lARUE ENCIA! / AND (OE THiNil YOU SHOULD HAVE 602 T OF KGOOD LUCK K 155 'FRatt ONE OF Yk.VR PLAYERS TO HELP YOU START THE SEASON! ;ELL, ?H o g: VERY NICE, : GiRt.5...1..AH-1,..1.,„ F. i tt • .6" i; ll P ' A i 1 4111 r -lie J.7.......ms 44 lb • • fi- I SMA CI I 4 op.- - ,14p lip r. t- ) 64 ! r 44 ul _ 114, PEANUTS 0.. i DON'T !i Va.) LET iIAF. PLAY t l I THiRD BASE TNIS 1 YEAR, CHARLtE BROWN' _.- 4 g 1 i . ` 146 5 / - .Q l ,,...k_____ I-- Ailj .--- * World At USSR Warns Of 'Spy' Bases MOSCOW 4:1)1 Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev warned Norway and Pakistan yesterday that the Soviet Union will hit at bases in foreign counts ies used for American spy flights over Soviet territory. Khrushchev called Norwegian and Pakistani diplomats over to his side at a Czech Embassy re ception. He told them that if the United States is allowed to continue to use bases in their countries for operations against the Soviet Union "we will have to aim our rockets at your air bases." In a speach to the Soviet par liament last Friday Khrushchev announced that American flier Francis G. Powers had fallen into Soviet hands and his plane was shot down at Sverdlovsk on May 1 while on a spying mission. Khrushchev said Powers took off from Peshawar. Pakistan, in tending to fly to Bodo, Norway, Counties to Check Voting Records WASHINGTON (.4 3 ) Atty. Gen Witham P. Rogers, in the first use of the 1960 Civil Rights Act, asked yasterday to inspect voting registration records in four counties in four Southern states. Rogers announced the inspec tion requests are being presented to regktration boards in McCor mick County. S.O ; East Carroll Pat ish. La ; Werster County, Ga , and Wilcox County, Ala. Each of these counties was de scribed as having large numbers of Negroes of voting age, and no Negro registrations FBI agents will deliver the at torney znnerars letters to the registrars. Rogers described his move as the forerunner "of a widespread program of inspection of voting records in states where constitu tional rights of citizens may have been info inged by discriminatory practices " W.Va. Campaign Ends With Candidates Blazes CHARLESTON, W.Va. (,P) West Virginia's Democratic pres idential campaign churned into its final hours yesterday with Sens. John F Kennedy of Massachu setts and Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota blazing away at each other as "can't win" candidates. With fair skies and cool weath er predicted, a little more than half of the state's 670,000 regis tered Democrats are expected to turn out today for a primary that might have a decisive effect on Kennedy's chances of getting. his party's nomination. In the last stage of their battle, Humphrey was generally credit ed with holding an edge over Ken nedy. Sukarno Visits Cuba HAVANA (P) President Su karno of far away Indonesia flew into Havana yesterday for a 5-day state visit. The first head of state to visit Cuba since Fidel Castro took power received a warm wel come from the prime minister and President Osvaldo Dorticos. TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1960 NOW, JUST SNOW ME WHICH ONE 15 'TM 8A5E... • 1 - ('IP .`1 . 1 4 *41 4 tr, t :,.(14. 41111111.1 , mirmilf/ A Glance Allies Recover From Gloom LONDON (/P)—European allies of the United States bounced back yesterday from the gloom that gripped them after a U.S. recon naissance plane was shot down over the Soviet Union. They generally predicted the summit talks would open in Paris on schedule next Monday despite the incident. Some sources suggested that So viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev would not push the matter too far. They read this interpretation into the Soviet leader's own re port on the case virtually absolv ing President Eisenhower from responsibility. Some papers also pointed out that when it comes to spying, all great powers are involved and the Soviets have a great advantage because the nations of the West are open societies. Spies in Embassy, UN, Czech Admits WASHINGTON (iP) House investigators yesterday released testimony of a former Czech mili tary attache that his nation's em bassy here and their U.N. dele gation in New York have been loaded with Red spies. Lt. Col. Frantisek Tisler, the military and air,attche who de fected to the United States last summer, said his official position was a cover for his main job of heading Czechoslovakia's military intelligence operation in this country. The House Committee on Un- American Activities released Tis ler's secret testimony Monday, ob viously to help offset Soviet charges resulting from the shoot ing down of a U.S. spy plane over the Soviet Union May 1. Rhee Will Spend We As Non-Partisan Citizen SEOUL, South Korea (IF') Syngman Rhee squelched sepeu lation that he might try a come back. declaring yesterday that he intends to spend the rest of his days as a private citizen of the republic he helped to create. The 85-year-old ex-president is sued a statement in making pub lic a personal letter from Presi dent Eisenhower praising South Korea as - "a monument to your life-long work." In the first 12 years of the young republic's life, Rhee had ruled with a stern hand until his government was toppled by a popular revolt two weeks ago. At his retirement, Rhee issued a terse statement saying only that he wished "to devote the rest of my life to the nation and people as a citizen." Jet Safe After Crash NEW YORK ( A Boeing 707 transcontinental airliner with 109 persons aboard skidded safe ly into ldlewild Airport amid smoke and flames yesterday after a landing gear collapsed as it hit the runway. There were no in juries.