PAGE FOUR ditorial 0 • inio Policy Redefined The letter criticizing The Daily Collegian read by SGA President Richard Haber before Assembly Thursday night has caused us to feel that perhaps a redefinition of our policy for editorial comment is necessary. The letter criticized Collegian for its "negative" editorial comment on the secretive actions of the SGA Reorganization Committee and its chairman. It said that our wanting to present the news when it happened meant that we were jealous of SGA. It accused us of sarcasm in our presentation and biased editorial policy. We cannot quite understand why a letter criticizing Collegian would be sent to the SGA president. Certainly he could do nothing to correct the situation that the letter criticized. Had the letter been sent to Collegian, however, it would have been published in the Letters to the Editor column which is maintained specifically for criticism of Collegian or any other group by the readers. Also the criticism could have been heard by all the students on campus rather than just the select 40 or 50 in the assembly room. Had we then considered the criti cism valid, we would have attempted to correct the situation. But, according to Haber the letter was not signed. This indicates a lack of conviction in the writing or lack of courage to stand up for it on the part of the author. Sbme further actions cause us to question whether the letter was in fact written by an anonymous author or by Haber himself. Haber at first said that the Collegian could have the letter. However, he changed his mind after reading it to the Assembly and said he would "give a copy of the letter to NO ONE." He further requested that the reading of the letter be stricken from the minutes of the Assembly meeting. If the President had justification for reading the letter, we 'see no reason why it should be stricken from the minutes. We wonder what prompted his change of heart? Was this a testimonial to thoughtless leadership that has characterized the SGA executive branch most of the year? Moreover, the major part of the Assembly meeting devoted to consideration of reorganization seemed to bear up our impression that this case of secrecy and delay com bined to prove almost fatal to any intelligent discussion. In our work on Collegian we acquire a certain callous— ness to the various pleas we receive for "good publicity." Collegian is not a publicity organ. The criteria for what we print is newsworthiness and truth. We are out, not to do favors for anyone, but to utilize to the fullest the concepts of a free press, interpre tation and the right of the people to be informed. Certainly our editorial on the reorganization fumble was biased to the degree that it reflected only our think ing. But it was clearly headed "Editorial Opinion." We did not try to disguise it, but stood behind it as our con sidered judgement. Many persons have told us that they share our judgement. Regardless of what any "anonymous letter writer" thinks, we still feel it was the tardiness of the reorgani zation report that precipitated a lengthy and senseless discussion on possible extension of the present SGA char ter because there is not enough time this spring to revamp the election system. This loss of face for SGA merely became fuel for those who would rather get rid of student government entirely. It could have been avoided had the Reorganization Com mittee submitted its report some weeks earlier, or kept the Assembly informed of its progress. All actions of government bodies come under the scrutiny of the press. Morally, constitutionally, and ethi cally we feel we have not the right but the duty to comment. freely on these matters. We shall continue to analyze and criticize the actions of SCA, a task which it seems to have completely neglect ed ,itself. Mir Batty Tolirgian Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Published Tuesday through Saturday morning during the University feat the Daily Collegian Is a student-operated newspaper. Entered as second-class matter July 6. 1934 at the Stets College. Pa. Poet Office under the act of March 3. 18T9. Mail Subscription Petrel $3.00 per semester 15.00 Per year. Mailing Address Bog 281, State College. Pa. JOHN BLACK Editor STAFF THIS ISSUE: Headline Editor, Sandy Yaggi; Wire Editor, Meg Teichholtz, Assistant Copy Editor, Pat Dyer; Assistants, Sandie Wall, Susie Robbins, Maxine Fine; Sue Hooley, Ginger Signor, Faith Popkin, Toni Baurnes, Susie Cobrin, Joanne Phil lippi, Todd Lehman, Sandy Reabuck and Ken Kestle. Business Manager $616141 " CHESTER LUCIDO THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Letters Frosh Queries SGA Action On New Plan TO THE EDITOR: Is a tailor made plan of reorganization being forced down the throats of SGA Assemblymen? In view of the rather questionable pro cedures being followed and the general lay of .the plan itself, I would say yes. First, a campaign of pub licity was launched to the tune that the present student gov ernment system will complete ly shatter with the introduc tion of the four term plan. Action must be taken now, within the next three weeks or all is lost; the campaign states. And with the complete accept ance of this concept the assem blymen and the student body are to panic to the extent where any plan will be snapped up. At this point the SGA Re organization Committee steps in waving a magic wand in the form of a nicely mimeographed sheet of paper outlining a totally different and in many respects undesirable structure of student government To remove any taint from the name of the committee, an anonymous letter is read to the assembly discrediting the Col legian for stating that the clandestine measures used in preparing the plan leave much to be desired. Why is this need for total reorganization so urgent? Why should the job of organizing as a political party before the up coming Spring Elections be hurled at AWS, TIM. MRC, and IFC? Certainly it will be several years before the class system at Penn State is made obsolete by the four term plan. Could not this coming year be taken to smooth out a plan based on community living, at the same time giving the organizations involved a chance to adjust their structures to the new role they will be playing? I believe that this would be the most feasible way of in suring an effective student government in future years and the only way of preventing a form of government that rests in the hands of a few power groups and special in terests. Gazette Camp Interviews, 9 s.m., 212 11U13 Chess ream TN. Princeton, 1 p.m., HUB lounge Club Hubans, 8 :30 to 12 p.m., HUB ba 11 room Eastern Arts Research Committee, 9 to 12 and 2 to 5 p.m., 213 HUH Inter American Club, 8 p.m., Conference Center FEMME!! Sigma Alpha Mu. A to t p.m., 214 HUB Studetn Movie, 7!30 p.m., HUB nssem• lily room University Christian Association Collo. quium, 1:45 p.m., Eisenhower Chapel ToAtoßßow Artists Series. g p.m., Ree Hall AWN. 6:30 p.m Campo» Party, 6:30 p.m., 212 HUB Chapel Service, 10:55 a.m., Schwab Chem; Club, 2 to 6 p.m., HUB card room DARE, 3 p.m., Faith Church. second floor lounge Emerson Society. 7 p.m., Eisenhower Chapel Grad Student Bridge Club. 7 to 10 p.m., itUtt card room Liberal Party, 6:30 p.m., 121 Sparks Mt. Nittany Stamp Society, 2 p.m., 217 DUlt Navy Discipline Committee, 2 to 4 p.m 216 HUB Newman Club, 7 p.m., 214 HUB Spring Week, 3 p.ni., 216 HUB Student Movie 6:30 p.m., HUB assent- hty l'oolll Swedenborgian, 10:45 A.M., 212 HUB Thespians, 0 to 8:30 p.m., 217 HUB University Party, 0:30 p.m., 119 Os mond Lab Ag Econ. 3 to r, 2I HUB Alpha Colony, 630 p.m., 213 HUB Alpha Phi Omega, Exee meetings. 7 pan., 212 HUH Angel Flight, 7 to 9:30 p.m., 214 and 215 HUB Bridge Club, 7 to 10 p.m., HUB card TOM Circa. 7 p.m., 107 Boucke College of Education. 4:16 p.m., HUB nagen‘hly room Faculty Luncheon Club, 12 noon, HUB A dining room IFC, 7 :30 p.m.. HUB assembly room ISA, 7 n.m., 203 lIUU Naval Reserve Research Company 4-4, I p.m.. 303 Wegner Placement, B to 6 p.m., 208 HUB State College Color Slide Club, 7:30 to.m., MI auditorium —Dale Harris. '64 TODAY 212 HUB 200 HUH MONDAY Smoke Screen The present and past actions of the SGA Reorganiza tion Committee and its chairman in particular have left SGA, political parties, and probably AWS, MRC and TIM confused about their future roles. A new constitution was brought before Assembly for the first time Thursday and there is little time to discuss or change it before spring elec tions. The situation arose because of the committee's procrastin ation in drawing up a new constitution or perhaps because of a plan to railroad through the Assembly a constitution drawn up by a select few or a combination of both. The Daily Collegian had been asking that the activities of the committee, headed by Duane Alexander, be made public so that Assemblymen and other students could dis cuss it before voting time. At the Assembly meeting Thursday, an anonymous let ter sharply criticizing the Col legian stand was read to the members preceding the dis cussion of Alexander's report. Richard Haber, town crier for the occasion, read the let ter which he said criticized other aspects of campus life and contained very abusive language. Haber only read the parts of the letter which per tained to the Daily Collegian and first promised to turn the letter over to the Collegian and then refused. Attacking the editorial board of the Daily Collegian in an attempt to throw a smoke screen around the reorganiza tion committee's incompetence is not only obvious, it is stupid, Yet Mr. Haber chose to read the letter, which he said came from the Pollock area, and thereby lend support to the un- Letters ADS Head Answers Aberg TO THE EDITOR: The recent criticism of "those boxed testi monials" by Mr. Gilbert Aberg urged me to look up Mr. Aberg's position in the Univer sity. I find that he is in radio and television production and is also employed by the Public Information Office. Without going into a tirade on the obvious relationship of advertising to television and radio, (although there is no advertising in educational tele vision, which is the field I as sume Mr. Aberg is employed in, such television wouldn't have been possible without first having the groundwork laid by commercial TV), I would like More Comment on Ad TO THE EDITOR: I am certain the American people will be properly grateful to the fear less Professor Byers who has exposed a dastardly conspiracy of the Schlesinger gang (those so-called intellectuals), to abol ish all advertising, bring back a "pie-in-the-sky', city-state arrangement," and increase the price of toothpaste in State College. Fortunately, as the cham pion of our liberties has noted, "the intelligence of the Ameri can people is increasing in every generation," perhaps it self a tribute to better educa- Book Purchases Criticized TO THE EDITOR: In the Tues day Collegian article concern ing the recent purchases by the Pattee Library of 17th and 18th Century English Literature books, the Librarian Ralph J. McComb cited the purchases as being significant because they will greatly strengthen this area of research at the Univer sity. I agree with Mr. McComb that their purchases are sig nificant, but I question wheth er the library can afford a first edition of "Gulliver's Travels" when it can provide but one copy of "Economics and Intro ductory Analysis" (3rd edition) and "Man, the State and War." Perhaps these books are in significant to the scholar, but they are of great significance to SATURDAY. MARCH 18. 1961 named writer's remarks which suggested that fhe editorials in the Daily Collegian were "bi ased" (of course they are, that's what the editorial page is for) and that the Collegian was just upset because it had been scooped. A newspaper can be "scoop ed" only by a competing news paper and we do not believe that the borough paper sent a reporter or is even concerned about SGA affairs. As for our "biased" editor ials, the Daily Collegian has the right (see the United States Constitution) to express its own views on the editorial page whether or not those views agree with anyone else's. The letter writer, if he dis agreed with Collegian opinion, should have written a letter to the editor and signed his name and not hidden like a coward and given Haber Inc. the op portunity to use it as a smoke screen to hide their own short comings. In reading this letter, Mr. Haber revealed that he hadn't the vaguest idea of what a newspaper is and allowed him self to be dragged down be low the level of the letter writer. Haber Inc.'s handling of the whole issue accurately reflects the type of people which 80 per cent of the student body elected by staying away from the polls. -NICK! WOLFORD to take a suggestion to Mr. Aberg the Public Information man. I suggest that he purchase a horse similar to that of Paul Revere's and ride through every village and hamlet in Pennsylvania shouting th e press releases which are usual ly sent out by the Public In formation Office to newspapers supported by advertising. You might even include your "copper commercial" but I doubt if the jingle would catch on in a country where the ma jority of commercial jingles are good, not drab. —Donald P. Bellisario, President. Alpha Delta Sigma tion through advertising. As for me, I won't pay one cent more for toothpaste or listen to any criticism of one of our oldest professions. Furthermore, if I were an advertising agency; I would not hire out at election time to unethical persons who sully my honor and try to destroy the American way of life. Next thing you know they start telling us folk we can't spell good "enuf." With men who know their eggheads best it's treason, two to one. —Kenneth Inniss Instructor of English the hundreds of students en rolled in Econ. 2 and 14 and Pl. Sc. 14 who must wait an hour or more in rooms 107 and 105 of the library in order to check them out for a mere two hours. I realize that the scholar's needs must be fulfilled, but in doing so must the student's needs be sacrificed? Perhaps the Administration of the Pat- tee Library should reexamine its purposes in order to decide where its primary responsibil ity lies. Should its limited budget be used for the purchase of texts which are required daily by thousands of undergraduates or for the purchase of rare books to be hidden away in the dark recesses of the stacks? —Craig L. Bartholomew '63