The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 19, 1962, Image 3

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    THURSDAY. APRt 19. 19/12
Behind the Newt
_
•
• , . . • , . , To u rname Won
nts
NonsiNe - Oticible .Lini"
',By . •
4 : LAWRENCE CAMI3IO9I - . etrEst-Naels occupy high goveralresurgence. hawevser, is the Euro-' Women, Debaters
Lying heneath _the surface o meat dears- ,- .:, ,pean-oriented attitude of both tbei:
the sent Berlin crisis and at *Konrad Adenauer, iriadditiordpolitical leadership in Germany's . The women's debate team came close to sweeping three
to lending silent • support to irri-4 two major parties and of the busii
'the bottom ofl most , East-Westi . i. +tournaments last weekend. Men's teams from Penn State,
clashes in Europe it the festeriwr dentist groups, also actively sup-fness community. Indee.d , the.
problem of Germm re-unification6.lP°rla•re-armament and condones,atormic research mentioned by theißucknell, Villanova and Penn were among the "victims" of
While 'the NATO: nations have ormer Nazis in high places-- Soviets is not home-grown,
.but:
the women from the Nittany Valley
supported West , German Chancel
.,a mg than his foreign minister,'rather in the farm of contribii- ; . - •
rd Schroeder. itinns to Common Market agencies, All of the debates were on the national topic: "Resolved,
for Konrad Adenauer's hopes oft Al ! of the - above statements are devoted to peaceful use of nuclear,
eventual reAnrification, the Sck. , that labor organizations should be' -- •
- .true German , the Russians can,power. .
viets have made it clear meet -. . ?under the jurisdiction of anti-:Scranton but lost to a mixed team
• say , is - her arms indus- ....,..,...
World War II they will entertain ' •
t —total
no kizigie Germany other than 'al Ty production capacity is b een s t ym i e d in Europe since the: "--- - :York.
;now above World War 11 levels- The University's women de
communist one: l eve l s;' of the Marshall p lan and - At the Delaware Valley Tour
;she has 1900.000 men Under arms aters took first place at the Buck- ' nanient. held at Rutgers Univer
e en suffered setbacks in •
Germany "in 1945 was divided:and a 2-million-man reserve. The v---Y u g o - mol l Univemity Good Neighbor
lavia Austria , Greece and Pm-.!say South Jersey Campus, Grace
according to the , Yalta, agreement, German "revenge seekers." theyL nd. 'yet Europe is, 90 to spea boTournament. Arguing the affirmta- r, freshman - .
in liberal arts
which.provided no ress basis.continue, are carrying an atomic home -•— the ii, • ns;; tive, Patricia Schmidt, sophomomr.f_'7 3 .
and ii ,.. esh m rnazt eth in leh ect em uca , and Nancy N from ancy
Bet rree h. ,
territory for for re-unification; a riassumptionresearch, alxiut $2 billion_a The - pmspects of seeing the .in liberal arts from York,
of one Germany could appear year on T.Vmilitary and have' amassed ~,,,d itical. economic and tAndree I3uscanics. junior in jour- esd , , md .
won
all their
cialot
implicitly in the fact that the di- men and supplies im foreign soil. mai s W e ; ngth - of a monolithic inalism fro Belle Vernon, de- '''
jilt: affi . rmative, they de-
Visian was an "occupation" and; ed w estern leated men's teams from Blooms-, A . r g. ."Ing
further that a peace treaty would THEELE ARE mitigating Germany - in a unit
is un _!burg. Bucknell and Scranton. b ut
nova men I
s ems from Villa
- features to German rearmament, Europe en her doorstepnova, Penn and Ursinus,
be signed with a single govern-hoWever such that these accusa- thinkable to - the USSR—as, itl°2ll to a muted team from C° r / - , The negative team, eompoaed of
ment. This assumption, of course.; -- - - - - •
'lrons apply more to NATO than would be to us. It is un l i k ely Marsha Alpert, sophomore in eclu-_
depends on which side is makingf to West Germany vone. but the'thereforethst there will ever be' MAXINE TINE. junior in lib- cation from Nyack, N.Y.. and
the int • r P retatici t ' 'Soviets omit Their enumeration. 'a reunified Germany as far as, tbe.eral arts from Scranton, and Rob- Debor a h Shapira, junior in psy-
SO BY SIGNING a peace treatyl ' A mong o th er points, the Soviet USSR and her allies - are con-llyn Sklar, sophomore in liberal 'chology from Brooklyn, N.Y.. de
with West Germany alone, France s do not state the corned. farts from Wallingford, argued tested the Maryland meri' a Seton
Great Fritain , and the Unitedi bass , between Germany, (A sec,:ind'•• k article appearing 'the negative side and downee me Hall mixed team and tied theDu-
States gave legal status to icill deal with the Scranton men, the Kings College , quesne Men. The. Penn State
and supplies on foreign: next week
p w reseat as
evident Oder thim -Neisse as
m bcamdary w
teat - t i l l e t i scsil imitetactirlthaletiliteGe-noten,tiainl.l position r U e l_ ester w ar cetion. oss . Gerataa linen , and the Penn State men.:wornen • and the Duqueme men
._
;The pair last only to Marywood had identical 5-0-1. , records. Du-
Soviets bad no intentions• of al-, s td e k o ili ng two-thirds o f I tersu p_ ,;College's women's team.
i quesne, however, won the trophy
lowing their zone to rejoin its plies in other NATO countries— - NEWS ANALYST •
brother territory, much less of re - ;notably Great Britain and France' La 1 The University women's team °is Pointl.
r ..iercia, sentio. lalso won the first place trophy St ALSO. DIMING the past woorig
turning any pre-war German terri- —has obviated the immediate pos- 1
1 moss la asitireanties from ; th e annual Miserwordia College end. Josephine Barger, Junior in
taries such as East Prussia andisibility.of her launching a mule-, Philadelphia. is managing soda- _Novice Tournament. Arguing the liberal arts from Curlbville , and'
Silesia to the enemy's control. I teral attack against anybody. 1
for and - a
paha' sal insakest for 'affirmative, Joan Doh, siefilioninre Helen Jeweils, sensor in liberal
;
Accusations '
as to which side, The German Federal Republic's ; La Critique. Ate campus Sitar- ; in elementary education from arts from Tamaqua, were the stele
enused the present situation mayrorces have no general staff , and; ary and . critical ma g ma,
,His Center Valley, and Patti McGill...gates to the National Student
Ily' in both directions , but now as soo n as a mayor unit is 70 'per! article On Canttlin re-zusifica. 'freshman in liberal arts from Bed- '
Congress of Delta Sigma Rho,
the 'West must face the fact that cent activated it passes autome-, lion coosinues The Daily Coi- ford, won all their debates.
• inational forensic honorary society,
for several v compelling rea- tically under NATO command. It; *o n e s sew e ss s iew i r s erpes .. . J oan T - l ens i ssn. f res h man in.at th e university of India na. sons, a divided ny W il l be a addition , mos t We s t German arms, tattoos of national and Inter- liberal arts from Lemont, and Di-' The topic for the Congress was:
non-negotiable adjunct of Soviet are foreign-manufiattured. 1 ' national *yeah written by stu- anne Lamb, junior in journalism: "What should be the United States
policy for many years to come. ' What. militates more than any! dents and %wall memaben. from Arlington, Vio, arguing the trade policy in regard to the Eu
other factor
For one thing, it takes news agains t hi Nazi-type.
__
_ __ ___ __
negative, defeated the men from ropean Common Market"
_
than 17 years for the Russians •
people to forget a war which
killed at least-one—and ofttinws
many—of each and every family. ,
A • coneession ; which put a re-'
unified ' Germany less than 300
'miles from the Russian frontier—
and right Ori it if East Prussia was
returned—would cause a bad case
of politidal indigestibn not only in
the USSR but alsd in Poland,'
Czechoslavakia and Hungary.
. r • 1
AND IT IS also true that the,
Polish are fax more anti-German '
than anti-Sovieti thus whether thel
communist regime believes its
own propaganda or not, it pays
to , take advantage of the wide-
spread Germanophobir in the ,
satellite nations and at home.
The
Anti-German propaganda with
some base of truth is easy to gen
erate and generally revolves on
three points:
oWest • Gerilimy is re-arming.
John W.
THREE AWARDS
• .. far members of The graduating class. of highest standing, who pee
loess, in the opinion of the Sena* Caat2l2lifte on Schvicushipe and
Awards, those guahties of ability and personality that will'enable them
.to profit best by graduate study, - at this University or elsewhere.
• I..): Applications are now being received for the John W. White FeThiw
*hip: from senior' students- who intend to ponoe graduate studies in
. 1_962;11
APPLICATIONS:
• ~.. may be obtained at the Office of Student Aid, 218 Willard Ihdidnig.
i '... must be sublnited not later than 5 pm. Friclay,' , Apri 27, 1%2.
• ....should be returned to:
' office• oaf Student Aid .
21a wine=d ihinaiug
The; Pennsylvania State Univers*
Univers* Park,,lPennsylvania
THE BARI' COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK., PENNSYLVN4Ie4
EARN MONVI num
Watch softball and ears mem
at the same bate. Um*, softball
games for T.Q.A. softball leaps.
Call Bob Stillman
AD 8-2770 or
Bien op al T.I.M. office. 21116 HUB
HAVE YOU COMPLETED. AND
RETURNED YOUR FOUR
TERM EVALUATION FORMS
TO THE HUB DESK?
White Fellowships
of $6OO EACH
YOUR SPECIAL EASTER MESSAGE
Veal Sod a special design and message for
+mule you want to remember in our new
cedlectios of lisawark Easter cards—cards
2&She highest quality in their distinctive
L IIIII Choose year greetings, sad Jet the
'kiddies choose cards designed especially for
thew, foam oar heatrtifni collection of flan:mak
'Easter cards, "when you care enough to send
the way best."
tviclanahan's
414 L Co*ply& 134 Si, Allen
.3t.
RAGE THREE