PAGE SIX Girls Warned About Going Out Alone By DAVE RUNKEL Warnings that ask coeds not to venture out atone after dark have been issued throughout the campus. This warning has been posted on most bulletin boards in wom en's residence halls by junior resi dents and has been announced at regularly-scheduled floor meet ings, . according to several senior residents. The warnings have been issued in the West Halls as a result of a recent incident in the area. in which two girls were ap proached by an unidentified man, Mrs. Grace Howe, senior resident in McKee said last night. In the South Halls area the warnings have been issued, ac cording to Reta Peoples, senior Ed Majors Show Aids To Latins Students teach teachers? Education majors enrolled in Elementary Education 326 did earlier this month when they demonstrated teaching aids in arithmetic to a group of 23 Latin 'American educators. The teachers, who average 12 years of teaching experience, were fascinated with the devices shown them by the students. They ranged from- an abacus to a wooden .clock. The educators had many ques tions to ask about the devices and suggestiohs for their use some of which the students had not thought about, according to Dr. David W. Russell, professor of ed ucation. The visiting educators are en rolled in the Latin American Ed ucation Project, sponsored by the University and the International Cooperation Administration. The project is designed to help Latin American teachers gain a knowledge and broad understanding of the American school system. They spend 11 months studying on the campus and travelling throughout the state where they see American schools in operation. Countric., represented in the group now at the University are Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay and Panama. Dr. Richard R. Renner, assistant professor of education, is direc tor of the nroject. /lave a WORLD of FUN Travel with Pim 20th Year Unbelievable low Cost SEE bO tt LESS r SPEND r P N 116243/4 Suite 23. 111 S. Allen St. resident for Stephens and Hibbs, because prowlers have been de tected peering in first floor win dows and also because of the re cent flood of rumors about girls being attacked. Girls living in Haller and Lyons have been asked to be careful when out after dark, the senior resident for the halls said last night. "The warnings have been issued for no particular reason, ju . st to be on the safe side," she said. Miss Genevieve C. James, resi dence community coordinator in Pollock, said yesterday that the junior residents in the area have been asked to announce that all girls should travel in pairs when going out after dark. The warning is just plain corn mon sense for anytime of the year, but is especially apropos for 35 Campus Groups Enter Spring Week Thirty-five independent and Greek groups have entered this year's Spring Week carnival, David Cooper, carnival application chairman, announced yesterday. This year's carnival theme "American Heritage" has been broken down into three categories with the following groups entering: Up to 1800—Alph . a Xi Delta and Chi Pi, Alpha Gamma Rho and Sigma Sigma Sigma, Sigma Delta Tau and Phi Epsilon. Pi, Theta 'Delta Chi and Phi Mu, Sigma Nu and Ewing Hall, Alpha Zeta and McKee, Pi Kappa Phi and Zeta Tau Alpha, Nittany Council and Atherton Hall, Pollock C and Mc- Elwain Hall, Pollock B and Sim mons Hall, Zeta Psi and Simmons. 1800 • 1900: Alpha Phi and Kappa Delta Rho, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Alpha Sigma Phi, Delta Chi and Alpha Omicron Pi, Delta Upsilon and Delta Zeta, Beta Sigma Rho and Alpha Epsi lon Phi, Phi Mu Delta and Alpha. Delta Pi, Theta Chi and Alpha Gamma Delta, Kappa Sigma and Alpha Chi Rho, Acacia and Ather ton, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Epsilon Pi and East Halls, Siena Pi and Pi Beta Phi. • 1900 to present—Delta Phi Epsi lon and Phi Kappa Theta, Phi Gamma Delta and. Kappa Alpha Theta, Theta Phi Alpha and Zeta Beta Tau, Delta Gamma and Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Sigma Sigma and Sigma Chi, Delta Sigma Phi and Alpha Chi Omega, Kappa Delta and Phi Delta Theta, Beta Theta Pi and. Chi Omega, Gamma Phi Beta and Lambda Chi, North Halls and Hoyt, Pip Hock 2,3, 4 and 5 and Pollock The carnival will be held Satur day night, April 29. Cooper said that each group is responsible for getting its own tent and that tent are available at Ray Burial Vault, Tyrone. Europe Days, Incl. Steamer, from $798 OR)gdirr i Days, Incl. Air, froni $1,290 ROMmeWORLD '30.46 Days, Incl.' Air, from $1,930 MANY TOURS INCLUDE COLLEGE CREDIT Also low cost tours to Mexico $196 up, South, America $937 up, The West from $456, Africa,: from $1767. In The Metzger Building THE DAILY COLLEGIAN., . STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA the spring, Miss James explained. A senior resident' in Atherton reported yesterday that no warn ings like those posted in other hails have been issued in that ;hall. Neither Dean of Women Dor othy J. Lipp nor , Marian B. Davi son, assistant dean, could be reached for comment last night because they were out of town. However, a spokesman for that office said that no policy for all community living areas has been made by the dean. of women's office on this matter. According to Col. William C. Pelton, head of the department of security, ho incident of the sort that occurred in the West Halls area has happened in the_ last week. Pelton laughed at the sugges tion that several girls had been attacked 'recently. AD 8-052 ARE YOU FORCED TO BUY? If the American people were as gullible and as easily persuaded as the critics of advertising insist, we would have been forced to lock up our wives and daughters long ago! These critics have far more faith in the power of advertising than any person in the profession. The persuasiveness of advertising is far more dilute than is the person-to-person sales pitch of someone trying to sell us an item we don't want. Since the high pressure salesman can be refused, if is hard to credit the admonitions of those who maintain that advertising leads us like sheep to the stores where wo buy new washing machines to replace scrub boards, or a new car to replace a per fectably serviceable car only ten years old. These same critics insist the time may come when we will fall into a sub liminal trance and elect politicians, buy soap and fly to Europe against our conscious will. What a shock to be rudely awakened by an auto horn and discover that we are in London! How embarrassing to explain to a Bobby that the last thing we remem ber was watching the late, late show in State college. The absurdities of such a situation are clear. But, if we must follow the cyn ical approach we can rest assured that a rival air line would use a counter electronic ray to send us to Mexico. These hypnotic beams would cancel each other out and we would remain drearily in State College. Critics who say advertising makes us buy things we don't need are speaking nonsense, because the people who say this are confusing needs with wants. You and I buy things all the time everybody you know does which we do not need. But we are buying things that we want. Alfred Marshall observed half a century ago that as the economy expands and man progresses, "his wants become rapidly more subtle and more varied; and in the minor details of life he begins to desire change for the sake of change." Let us Consider two different aspects of spending behavior: 1. Long-term trends in purchasing power of consumers. 2. Changes in buying habits due to changes in income. • As to long-term trends in purchasing power, every indication is that the "level ing process" of having a huge middle majority is not just a matter of income. It is also that people are becoming more and more uniform in their patterns of living. Strangely, enough, in an economy where there is the greatest freedom of choice in the world, we have fended as consumers to become more and more alike in what we do and how we spend our money! We have tended again and again to buy the same products which everybody else has, and not to deviete from this very much be cause we do not want to appear too different from our neighbors. How do spending habits - change with changes in income? We continue to become more of a middle class market, but this huge middle class market may not always be content with tendencies to uniformity. Perhaps people will want to up grade their living and will no longer be satisfied with six neckties, but will want 20. The spenders have the power to do this if they want. Today most of us have an enormous amount of free time, to use as we wish. For producers, the opportunities to manufacture all kinds of leisure materials are excellent: Sociologists now wonder how long it will take for people to become satiated with watching TV, reading magazines and smoking cigarettes? Many people are already wondering what to do with their ever lengthening leisure time. Actually. there is considerable uniformity as to the percentage of the dollar income spent on recreational activities, regardless of family income. About 5 cents Out of every dollar goes for recreation. The really startling thing is the consistency of the percentage, 5-6 per cent, allotted for recreation, regardless of income. Is there anything new to be developed? Well, the combinations of new things are tremendous new ways of putting. things together, new ways of packaging. As consumers, we want all sorts of things, and because we have learned to want all sorts of things and because we like to have all sorts of things, a lot of prod ucts have become more expensive. There is more to it than that, of course but to some extent variety is the spice of price. Competing manufacturers, using advertising to inform the public, will force prices down as new products become more plentiful. Leading American economists, at a conference in 1958, were almost unani mous 11 their opinion that there should be no attempt to "tone down" the number of consumer wants. Our view has been well put by Dr. Richard G. Gelid', formerly economist for Fortune magazine and now president of Mount Holyoke College: "In this less than ideal world, the exercise of consumer choice sometimes leads to trivia and waste. But as soon as we contemplate alternatives involving more government regu lation, or restriction of advertising, it is felt that, first, we can afford the waste, and, second, that the sacrifice of inhibiting that sort of thing should be greater than the alternative of accepting the waste." Activities Budgets Allotted by Ratios (This is tlte_econd in a series of articles outlining the present system of allocating funds far student activities.j Student activities may receive funds from student fees if the activity "serves, represents or is open to the whole student body," according to William F. Fuller, manager of the. Associated Student Activ: Such funds are allotted on general activities fund adminis tered by 'ASA, he explained. In explaining the operation of the present activity budget sys tem, Fuller gave the following , breakdown of fee allotments: *The Student Government As sociation receives 50c for each student. SGA then allots money to other groups under its juris diction such as classes and Spring Week, I •The Association of Women Students and the Women's Rec reation Association split $1.50 for each woman student. AWS gets 55 per cent of the $1.50 and WRA the other 45 per cent. •Each college council receives 25 per cent for each student in that college. • The Association of Independ ent Men receives 25c for each in dependent male student. AIM traditionally allots 12.5 c per stu dent to the Town Independent Men and to each of the men's FRIDAY. MARCH 24. 1961 By PAT DYER a population ratio basis from a residence councils. *Leonides also receives 25c for each independent woman. *LaVie receives $1.75 for each student and The Daily Collegian gets $l.lO. The student radio sta tion WDFM gets 20c per student. •Forensics and glee clubs share 35c with forensics receiving 22a per student and the glee clubs 13c. The Blue Band gets 25c per stu dent. 4th in a series Sponsored by ALPHA DELTA SIGMA