PAGE POUR Editorial Opinion You Can Help Eliminate Unnecessary Costs • There's more • truth than poetry in the Alpha Phi • Omega "keep off the • grass" sign we saw on campus this week: . • • This year thoughtless neglect coupled wit_ i•niischief by students and visitors will cost the University about $23,000 over and above the normal cost for upkeep of _the physical plant. - • • This p 3,0013 will come directly out of; students' pockets, according to Stanley H. Campbell, vice president for buidness. . Three -thousand dollars is spent annually o regrade •; and reseed lawns where students take "shoiteuts." The University provides enough sidewalk and cross sidewalk facilities to make this expenditure' a shameful. waste 'of money., The University spends $5,000 annually to pick up paper, bottles and other trash from University streets and lawns. This ,is also a needless waste of time and money. Trash cans are placed around the campus and are put there to be iused. . Cleaning and washing marki off chairs and restroom walls costs the University $4 to 5,000 above normal clean - lug costs each year. This spring the University will spend $9 to 10,000 for repairing, refinishing and replacing desks and desk sur . faces which have deteriorated under destructive student pens and pencils. In these days when the University is in a tight budget squeeze, we believe that every available penny should be used for bettering and. expanding' the University's edu cational facilities. With a little conscientious effort, students calp eliminate these unnecessary expenditures which contrib ute directly to higher student fees. A Student-Operated Newspaper 57 Years of Editorial Freedom tlro &dig (1101 tertian ••• Succenor to The Free Lance. en. 1887 Pa%Bahia Tuesday through Saturday morning during the University year. The Daily CoSeems is a student—operated newspaper. Entered as second—class matter Ja 1934 at the State College. Pa. Post Office aMer•the act of March 2, 1979, Mall Subscription Prise: $41.00 a year Mailing Address Boy 261. State College. Pa. Member-of The Associated Pr.( ANN PALMER • Editor. Afilitb" Managing Editor. Carol Enakiernan: City Editors. Jan Mahan and David SoHeaths News .and World Affairs Editor. gay MIlls; News and Fastares Editor. Sandra Varna; Editorial Editor.. Joel Myers and David Eunkel; Sports Co—editors, John Morris and Dean BMA: Photography Co-oditors, T.a Browns and Den Colo— own: Personnel Director. Saralee Orton. Local Ad Mgr.. Jean Hold; Assistant Local Ad Mgt.. Jane Slh.rstain; National Ad Mgr.. Harikari" Brown; Credit Mgr.„ Ralph Friedman; Assistant Credit Mgr.. Marry Ranch; Promotion" .Mgr.. Barry• Levitz; Classified Ad Mir, Csstberino Baosser• Circulation Mgr.. Mason Citeasier: Personnel Mgr.. Anita Hell; Office Mgr.. Lynn Murphy. CANDIDATES THIS ISSUE: . Lynne Cerefice, ?lolly Dranov, Jim, • Karl, Richard Leighton, John Beauge, Joel Myers and John Black. • • , NJ • L . la, . ~....;..1 M .... 4 C- 04. ......• "Step on me, Then you'll see _ How higi tuition Fees will be e " If Ni P z ^-7. 0 4 , .... A '' A A',. ... sm—le. 4. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA 'th willful HERBERT WITMER Business Maniger Letters Sr. Boosts 'Penny Mike , TO THE EDITOR: We!who are students here can almost take our - higher educationq oppor tunity for granted, a; one of our 'rights." However,: in many areas ,of thistrouble world, students who seek suc ji an op portunity are extremely limit ed by the lack of 'adequate university facilities, ,res idence halls, and health centers, imd even lacking such essentials as • text books and libraries. Here at Penn State, we have the rtunity to work with countless thousands of outlet low students around the world in expressing our coucernl for those of our generation who seek desperately the oducation which we take for gri,ntedl We can give of ourselves Ihnitigh World University Service. World' University Service is ' an international organizatiOn of • students, neither political? nor religious, which seeks sirhply to aid students with such basic needs, wherever they - may be. will hold a: "PENNY MILE"• in the blocked off sec tion '•of Pollock Road Friday. Can we contribute ,the equiva lent of a mile of pennies? Only 15c equals one font—lT IS • POSSIBLE! For the sake of our fellow- students around the world—let's_ try! —Bob Clapp '62 (W.U.S. campus : Prot/ram - Committla), • MahoOey . Hits Camp4s : Party TO THE EDITOR: I, Anne Mahoney, have been associated with and active in student gov ernment at Penn State. I;am a USG representative: from the Pollock Area and President of the AWS Pollock .00 4 unciL Un til recently I was 'associated with Campus Party.,The !more I came to knob about Cinipus Party and its leade:rship, the more I disliked it. As I -prepared for thel corn ing_ elections, my aptitude to ward_ the party ehangedifrom sympithy, to disinlief, to anger. It became Clear: that there was no corinntion be tween Campus Party and the good of this university. For exaniple, T wits not told :of the change in roasting tiros of the Campus Party on Sun. day evening April 15,' 1962, Therefore, I . arid - my sorority did not know that the time of meeting was changed froin 7:30 to 6:30. Campus Party obvious ly did not want csonspetilioa for the various officers. • I do not feel that political parties should be concluded in this manner. Therefore, I announce my support for University i Party and urge all my fellow, Penn Staters to do the sane. In this way, we can all work for a better Penn State. —Anne S. Makioney 13 Frosh Criticize: ...i • ÜBA Policy, TO THE X.DITOR: We Iwould like to take this opportunity to congratulate the staff bf the Used Book Agency fo4 their subtle method of'subsidizing the Scholarship fund at Penn State. We have been gmlightened that all books not claimed within ten days of the closing of the book sale immediately become the property kit the aforementioned orcani4ation. W.e realize that benevolence is a virtue, but only as a vol untary action. Many students have become benefactors with out original intentions. Is the Used Book' Agency under the impreision that Penn State students can afford to literally give away theirlbooks? If so, they are greatly disillu sioned. Let's face it, 1 Robin Hood and his Merry Men are a legend. —Jo* Calip •65 —Jim ridge 15 •Letter cut (Editor's..nate: Tfie dates on which the Used _Book 4Yenty returns unfold books are print ed in The Daily Cogegiart and eri signt in the/JUR.) t Little Man on Campus by Dia Wet Interpreting Strength Needed To Halt Cold War By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst If the non-Communist world would mobiliz e as the Kennedy administration mobilized against the Abel price! rise, the cold war would soon be, over. "Soon," of course, is a'relatWe word. In the making of; history it can mean It considerable time. In the light of growing Western strength, of precedent, of an apparent cleavage in the Conimunist front, and in the light of So viet internal deviations from • the Marx-Lenin economic and political line, some postubites appear now. The United States, perhaps overly concerned with the opin ion of the uncommitted nations and the worldwide fear of nuclear war, has not swung into the cold war with all, the strength of its convictions. , In a war in which economics is the 'avowed weapon of the other side, the overwhelming economic strength and skills of tithe West have not been truly mobilized as tanks and men were mobilised in the old type of war. The government of th e _United States has been working for the long pull, and the in dividual parts of the business community have been working on individual interests instead of joining for counterattack at a . point where the entire sys tem is threatened.• =There has developed over a period of time a situation in dicating that the rion-Commu-' nist world ran live beside na tions which use the' Commu nist economic system internal ly, provided that system is WDFM Schedule THURSDAY 1:00 Nevi 6:06 Dinner Pate 4:511 Weatherseope 7:00 CAMPUS BEAT 7:00 Call from London T:IS Album Review 7:30 Musically Erma&lnE 8:00 News 6:05 This is the Subject 11:00 News in French Folk Music Opinion 16 8:46 News. Sports and Weather 10:00 Chamber Concert 12:00 Sits-oft FRIDAY 0:00 News II :06 Dinner Date 8:66 Weatiterswein 7:00 Spotlight 8:00 Light Classical Jukebox 8:05 Marquee Memorise • $:45 News. Sports sag Weather 10:00 Ballet Theatre • 72:00 News 12:05 Night Scant 2 :00...Sara-en U:08 Siat-eal • • THURSDAY. APRIL 19, 1962 divorced. from ideblogical pansionism as a vehicle for traditional aggressiveness. , Built nonaggressive comdst once need last only until there is a, powerful demonstration •that economic communism is • rurnworkable of which there are strong signs: which must be as evident to Communist "leaders as to the outside world; since they continue to adop t practices which ' are ("custom arily accepted as , trappings of free enterprise. As to precedent, the ability of nations to :change deeply embedded policies to meet•new conditions-often has been deni onstrated: The latest case is that' of Britain which, -under economic pressure 'frim West ern Europe, is abandoning a policy of centuries duration' to become a. European nation. The Soviet Union, too, as her internal organization is mod ernized, can be brought .to ;a realization that her world out look must also be modernized. The Kennedy adarlstratini now is getting around to codifi cation' of its foreignt policy, in a 385-page document, now in its third draft at the State De partment. The administration's reaction against the steel price rise was fundamentally .a .reaction against • : something which re acted on foreign policy. Indeed, every important event or move ment has that effect, these days. The codification now under way is designed to see that government action in the cold war is concerted. The inchisifin of business is this concertium is required_ " When such a concertium his been attained, and the economic partnership of America and Europe has been attained, then the West can move with the strength and assurance,. !in every cold war episode,. which the administration displayed last Thursday in the steel case. And then there will be: a real beginning of pressure on the Soviet Union to reach! a true accomModation with the West, not merely an 4ccommo dation finch as- they, now seek as'a zig in a course upon which they intend later to tag.' -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers