PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion inform the People In his testimony before the joint session of the State - - Senate and House appropriations committees next week we hope President Eric A. Walker impresses upon the legislature the urgency of our need for-funds. _He should explain the disgraceful results of last year's deprivation of money, and spell out the consequences of Another refusal to grant the full budget request. _ The increase in tuition, hike in room and board fees, the regulation requiring - pre-paymentof tuition, the estab lishment of a $5O general deposit and a- host of tighter fiscal regulations grew from the legislature's unrespon siveness. The failure of the General Assembly to grant the Uni versity's full request may be an'indication that the people of Pennsylvania are not acquainted with our needs. While this year's drive for4unds should be directed to the legislature, any large scale expansion of the Uni versity, and its Comhionwealth campuses must be the wish of the state's electorate. Thus, the University administration must: begin a publicity campaign, which will inform the state's citizens of Pennsylvania's educational needs and Penn State's atteippts to fulfill them. A lob of this nature will not be easy, but the Univers lty's ultimate success in achieving the size and greatness envisioned by many administrators may depend on the success of such a campaign. • We are sure students, alumni and all persons inter ested in the growth and future success of Penn State will be glad to help. Control of the Press When the Pittsburgh Poit-Gazette called "30" during the fall, few observers were surprised. Rumors that Pitts burgh was to be left with one daily newspaper had long circulated in the trade. Now the new year has brought an end to two of the lour Los Angeles dailies—an end that was also preceeded by rumor and followed by charges of a deal between owners of the LA papers. Whether or not,there was a deal involved is important. but not as important as the chop down in th• news market available to the public. The right of the people to know—to be informed—to hear all sides of an issue and then reach conclusions—is protected primarily by competition in the press. The events in Pittsburgh and Los Angeles, however, ,only reflect the current trend in American journalism toward a monied and monopolistic control of the press. Too few citizens are aware that such a situation presents a grave challenge to their freedoms. A Student-Opirated Newspaper 57 Years of Editorfal Freedom al l g Batty Tatlrgian Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Vabllahed cSarisday through Saturday morning during the, University year.- Tba .pally Collegian b a atudent-operated newspapor., Matured as norrond-rianr matter - July 8. 1914 at the Stat. Collage. Pa. Poet Office under the art at March 1. 1879. Mall Subscription Pricer 111.1111 a year Mailing Addrasa Bea tit. State College. Pa. Member of The' Associated Pre:: JOHN BLACK Editor 4W, ot7 Editors, Lynn., Coteries and Richard Leighton: Editorial Editors. Ides T•idrhelts sad Joel Myers: News Editors, Patricia Dyer_ and Paula Drumm: ronsonnel and Training Diroctor, Karen Hyasckeal: Assistant Personnel and Training Director, Susan Eberly; Sports Editor. Jlllll6ll Karl; Assistant Sports Kolitisr. Dean Kink*; Pirtals Editor, John Braes. Local Ad Ida. Margo Dolmen Assistant Local Ad Iddr, Martin Zonis, Nation& Ad Mgr. nom. Beniitotty Credit Mgr. Jeffrey Belmarts; Assistant Credit Mgr. Ralph Friedman: Classified Ad Mgr, Bobbie Graham: Cireatatssa Myr, Neal Lott*: Promotion Kyr.. Jane Trtraskist P•nroanst Mgr. Ardis Hells Office Mir. Morey Gomm Perrone with coliplainto about The Datly/Golheriaa'a editorial policy et 'mows eineme may voice then; In the letters to the editor celuiss or present these, Mpens. or ill writing. to the editor. AU reatplalats will be iareetitated *Meta wade to . :seaseir Munition where this newspoper is at fault. The Danz Cohesion. however, epliehis the light to saalaiala Ib hafepesaeace and' to onartioe Hs own lodgment as 1* whet it thiabals to tie be intern* of the Ilaharaity Ildr a aim"' • „ • THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARKIPENNSYLVANIA WAYNE r I Business Manager Letters to Williams States Plans To Aid PSU TO THE EDITOR: Once again the students have been dealt a severe blow by the announce ment that the state will give us $4 million less than request ed. Since this is a very impor— tant election year and because the state's budget has been balanced for the first time in many years, there is little, chance that Penn Stat . - will r 0 ceive a higher appropriation. Mr. Reed Ferguson, one of the lobbyists, "is in agreement with me that if money can be ut from something else, Penn State will receive more money. There appears little chance that this will occur. Therefore, I suggest that the student body take the follow ing, action: •Concentrate most of our efforts, not on this year. but on next year. Dr. Walker will try to cut back in some other field before he asks for another tuition boost. He should be able to cut back and still in crease the teachers' slartes with the increase in appropriation that Penn State will receive, this year. - •Pressure for a bill to be introduced in the General As sembly making Penn State the State University and granting a charter to the same effect. •Endorse Mr. Sinkler's (past chairrnan'of the now disbanded Citizens' Committee on Educa tion) recommendation that the Governor's Committee on Edu cation be reactivated. *Endorse Dr. Walker's plan for.an independent State Coun cil of Higher Education to di rect the orderly development of education opportunities in Pennsylyitiia. •Endoite) . _ Sen. Hays' plan for making our Board of Trustees rrißre responsible to the Commonwealth. •Realizing that a higher ap propriation will mean that money must come from some source, recommend that Penn sylvania adopt a new modern constitution which would elim inate much of ' the needless duplication. — As soon as preliminary dis-, cussions with members of the General Assembly to deter mine the climate in Harrisburg are finished, I shall begin a state-wide, drive to get these points adOpted. —Corner Williams '63 Karl's Column Draws. Debate TO THE EDITOR: Judging from Jim Karl's editoral en titled "Narrow-Minded Profs— You Bet," I am starting to doubt if Penn State prepares men for professional jobs or gives it to them. ' Mr. Karl grossly con adicts himself by saying that Lundy, a mediocre student, "expected no pressure on a prof from a department head to raise a grade." and then ,saying that a "deal" between John Egli and the department head was al most accomplished. : I admire our athletes. but I can feel no sympathy for their tong practice hours. There aro many students in various ac tivities who spend as much time the full year around with• out any more compensation than prestige and self-satisfac tion. - I do not know the details of Lundy's case, but I know that the excuses for the flunk (frustrated, unbalanced, etc.) profs are strikingly familiar to those used by moat flunkers. The entire faculty Would prob ably be considered mentally unbalanced if we believed half of these excuses. The only solution to Mr. Karl's problem is to offer Wayne Lundy's father a liberal contract with no - escape clauses. Sigmas '62 the Editor, 'Future Plans TO THE EDITOR: Recent events indicate to me that Penn State is in more financial trouble than the student body realizes; I think it relevant to point this out, since • the in ability of the'University to ex tricate itself from its difficul ties has so far resulted in a corresponding depletion of our bank accounts. President Walker, at! the cost of severed relations with the students, has been on the road trying! to raise funds; he has not been successful to date; While; at the same time dis gruntled•graduates are, not fall ing over themselves to kick in to the] alumni fund. In the aftermath of Business VP Albert E. Diem's resigna tion, Dean of Women Dorothy Lipp , warned of possible in creased dorm fees, already jacked up once this year. She told Lyons Hall girls last term that if 250 vacancies in wo men's dorms around campus were not filled, housing fees might go up. BUT THE PEO PLE WHO WILL FILL THESE VACANCIES ARE ALMOST ENTIRELY 'ONES WHO HAVE HOUSING CONTRACTS FOR THE ENTIRE YEAR. Early fee payment and the increase in refundable deposit give additional evidence of the school's lack of working capi tal, entirely apart from Dr. Walker's warnings of long range• enrollment and expan sion cut-backs to come. _ - , The largest share of the re „cent tuition boost went to give faculty members a long-de 'Peace, Not Panici—SENSE TO THE EDITOR* Hiroshima: August 6, 1945 Crowds of maddened peo ple were running like de mented lemmings, trying ,to get across the river. They were screaming and it sound ed, like ic?ne enormous voice their skins hung from them like strands of dark sea:- 'weed! Instead of noses, holes! Their ears and hands were so swollen ,as to be shapeless .. In theirl terror of dying they clawed;their way over one another! their eyes hanging from their sockets, pushing one another into the! river, and screaming all the time. '+ (Children of the Ashes, by Robert Jungk) But it couldn't happen here? We in She peace movement have been charged with being unreallitic. Perhaps we are. Perhaps the stark realities of the Riroihima holocaust, are unrealistiC. They are fairy tales and we are authors. Soon we may all be characters. History, has shown us that arms build-ups have ultimately led to Wars. Today, in the ther monuclear age, war means the extinction of life as we know it. Therefore, if we assume that everyone; values life (his own, at lbast),we come to a contra diction inherent in the whole ' I DON'T TH►NK SHE COULD DO: IT! TUESDAY, JAJUARY 9; 1962 Undisclosed' served pay raise, and, in my opinion, the administration is to. be congratulated for taking this step so necessary to retain Penn State's academic walls intact. Neither should high Old Main officials be blamed for the current ' financial. straits which resulted from ”overex pansion" or what on hindsight appearsto be a faulty estimate ofa the Pennsylvania voters—and their representatives'—in telligence. The citizen's suppression of his scarcest resource, the high ly :trained employee, can only result in a, bigger depressed • area bill which he, the citizen, will have to pay. I am critical, however, of President Walker's failure to make a frank appraisal of the-University's financial pros ; pects, such an appraisal as.that which last year resulted in the intensive, albeit futile, letter writing campaign to Harris burg. Because the Penn State stu-' dent will apparently have to ; pay his own way, at least in the foreseeable future, I think he is entitled to some forecast of his educational invoice. As things now stand the cutline under Albert E. Diem's photo, which appeared in The Daily Collegian on;the announcement of his resignation, neatly sums up the situation for students, facility and! administration a like: "Future ' plans undis closed." --LawseriCe W. Cameron "64 '64 concept of the cold war arms race. Those who vacuously belittle the risk of global war , and an nihilation—the same ones who would continue the arms build up— knowingly or unknowing ly :are encouraging their own destruction ;and that of civili zation. ' Right-wing extremists here and abroad irave that Commu nists cannot be trusted, that negotiations are meaningless since they mean "concession." We do not absurdly propose that the United States "con cede" to the USSR. We advo cate negotiation an d coin prbmise ON BOTH SIDES concerning disarmament, the present crises and others which may arise. I"Coh . ipromise" and "concession" ars not synono auras. 'A policy of increased military expenditures and resumption of testing will hardly create an atmosphere of trustfulness and compromise, needed if any ne gotiations are to be successful. We do not condone nuclear testing by any power! It is not a question of being "Red or dead. ' It - is.a question of life for !all peoples on our globe. We Must live side by side in peace, not panic and haired. Let America take the lead in the "peace race." Future gen erations will thank Us. We will thank each other. -SENSEi Students for Peace DIDN'T THINK SHEI) BE ABLE:- TO GIVE UP CHEWING HER FINGERNAILS FOR FIVE MINUTES. AND HERE ITS BEEN FIVE DAYS!! • C Ifro - It Ka. t - ellll _- - - -., _ • I MADE Mg BIG MISTAKE WHEN I JUDGED HER AS A HUMAN BEING INSTEAD OF AS :A SCHOOL TEACHER -'4 . -j-- tr• &vol.. i 4.44.4...