PAGE TWO History of Soviet Union Receives 'Grim' Rating By ANN PALMER the Soviet city nf Stalingrad. "It gained a critical adva’i'ac* over, 1 P I was dead and followed the typi- the Umlcd States m the area of. lor cal pattern of cities thfoughout missiles and rockets. Salisbury DETROIT, MICHIGAN Oct. Europe at that time. We regained said. 2fi - The past history of the So' our Tonf.ddnce and fomrulatcd . , }c said lha( thc United slales o viet Union in relation to tpe rest could have, between 19.i6 and of the world was described as f eU lh ’a t it W ouid take at least "gnm” and. "not at all reasst.r-25 vears for the country *o re- 'Vot a'cept romem ing by Hamson E. Salisbury, build. (ration' on the, military as they director of National correspond- . “Wo thought that we were on- oughly as dijes the policy of the enm for the New York Times, jlcrinc the truly 'American ceil- USSR'. Salisbury - addressed a meeting becausTwVhad' 1 the assurance^ol THE SOVIETS have developed of the Associated Collegiate Press,'power-the nuclear Weapon.” jßVm'aeve™ national association of college j n a h az y sort 0 f ftwai^cncssjday■ 'necessities*,” he said., r mj! For two or 'three generations Tnree^a^hati^ono^al‘Kh^ushehcn r e e^a^hati^on 0^a1‘Kh^ushehcv ' , ''' rwcnt cou, ' ! ' <>s of ' many Americans who have visit-;*} awoke to.the realization action. ed the Soviet Union have come’J* u?5 * a could present a . challenge ' back with astute observations lo our democracy in the future. ~ “Khrushchev has promised the that Russians have poor shoes, '-but the problem Wits not deerneci Russian people a higher standard that their electors arc deficient’ Pressing and this country re- of living. This he has done b t bjf • and that food is B ,arc and taste- gained confident.’ •*>“• Th« >’c*h’ ,hc lnne r s‘ r » m i r ,, he said rr."** on the Soviet economy is being ■ • • THE AMERICAN alarm clock foR as evidenced by-rising costs' "THESE observations are super-went off,.according to Salisbury 0 f mea t anc j butter, finally reassuring,” he said, but in October 1949 when President. ... , ... ~ ~. the strength of Russia tn d ayTrumnn told the nation-that the: .Salisbury said he felt that the ~ cannot - be—judged -in—term'* .‘'of.So.viel_Unlon. had carned_ out its:P re ssure solidifying the econ-) poor quality in everyday com-'first ’ ~ ~—ei:omjLlias_firptly affected Khrush- ___ iKiriiiies" 1 • , . . ehev s foreign policy. . - V-->vyA;--.'.' . ’ '' -v The blase reaction to the rapid] « It Khrushchev could reduce He referred to the pre-World Soviet progress continued in the.. • armamcnl noc ds he couldi War II era-when the feeling was. United States, according to Sails- , ; ntcrna i demands This in-! , _ . . . widespread in the United States bury, through an amazing nuni- ' r a Tmove?' : i SKATERS ENJOY pre-wmter antics at the re that Hitler’s Nazism and Stalin'sibcr of significant events. j cently enclosed University Ice Skating Pavilion. Communism could not eo-cxist j America remained relatively w A ph SE f°?® t" K nmlm U W No waltzes were witnessed, but the skaters did Ihe Uilited States was wrong; unc , c)nccrncd when , in October causes the Kremlin to, - as shown by the Soviet Nazi ul- , n4 o wa „ nnnounced that Rus- move nastily and often . ra.sniy, Americans rearranged thcirlclear test, in 1953 when both the , ' ■ ■Slf flf £ thinking and began to behcvejU.S. and Russia exploded their Under Stalin,; cominuniMin was that Nazism and Communism by first hydrogen bombs and even ■' unity. Today it is divided into # coexisting would sap each other's'in August 1957, when Russia, n a ,i„ n i By DIANE CROWLEY strehßth. This was a false assump-,went ahead of us in missile ns Unilateral disarmament is nec t.on so when Hitler declared warivclopment with the announced,held m Uneasy alliance by the Umlaltral disatmnment i^nec cm the Soviet Hnion, we rcvisedlperfection of their Intcrcontincn- rest _° f ,. the worlcl - .|hr . 0 Siblev oro cmr thinking to believe that Na-jtal Ballistic .Missile. - "The party split makes science at the zisn, wodld kill Communism and! .., T rWASN ' T until 1957 when snid m? 'bccau 'c U r/t llmS* sa.d !’ hS , and' Mao-Tse- Monday ’night .. th. Poli.ic.l, - ■ -*- , up its frr&t sputnik that thc.rp driven by competition'Science Lcctuio Series. j AGAIN THE American obser- American people were shocked 1 j.: Q Ea C h is strivinc’ 4 « c i t trv j it ij vation pf,, the worrd situation, into the full. realization of that}™ faction is su-' '2 “ 1 ” ! proved wrong, for as Hitler fell, country’s force and power,” htv in thp communist' Party. J st slart W ay too," Sibley! communism began to gro w;said. I&ften this causes the- rash moves a , , ,“* ( , cd th ' ; stronger in thc woild. i By that time, the USSR had arid a ‘get tough’ policy. American public to accept thisj In 1944 after thc war, Salis- - - idea, offering five points for con-1 bury reflects on the condition of sideratjon. '• ’ First, Sibley, said, arms are! neither a defense nor a deter-, . - _ _ , ~ '. ~ , # rent. "In a nuclear war in which* A firm of Philadelphia. archi-H. Campbell, vice-president for 4Q mi j, ion Americans could be teds is studying the present 10-,business said yesterday. ;k in6d in direct hits and millions cation of eampus buildings, roads, Campbell said the architects.; from fallout, no system of walkways and bicycle paths to,'Harbeson, Hough, Livingston and, , f [d b e very valuable,” determine the placement of such'Larson. began their work in July. , •. . additions in the future, Stanley!He added that a definite comple-i nL ' - jtion date has not been set, but A DETERRENT to war should "I he hopes their recommendations'either prevent the expansion of !will be submitted by the end of'.Communism or actually prevent (the year. • ' fwar, and “weapons are doing I One re.ason for the study is the| neither of these,” he shid. (diminishing amount of space in, His second point was that if 'the central campus'area,’he said.] arms can neither defend nor -deter,, Thc problem involved is to make; the only logical step is disarms-, the most effective use of avail-iment. Sibley then advocated aj able ground without sacrificing! three-phase plan for disarming:,] the aesthetic beauty of this area! «The government should first; of the campus, Campbell said. 1 stop all weapon testing. 1 I TV RENTALS f | by day, week; month jil If ;7'riTPr>l TE, - EV,s ' ON ' : ii -if • IbL servic « j u ,VV J CENTER , qt State College TV P 232 S. Allen Street \ SR! UMinini'ii i, i; hi I H 11: ■r.i:i■ ■ 11 > ::t, ,'in'ii :■'.r.v/r ) Let Collegian Classifieds WORK FOR YOU LUTHERAN VESPERS TONIGHT 6:30 P.M. Eisenhower Chapel '■* .>..i'ill’dJSJfe-'-- lSS^RntH!i *** ■**“ ‘s TRn'sw“ ,;, -‘ • 1 - . for j'e-C;'.' st "aj oo *»e- es we'^oula 't o? sou ssnd Jo *>o' iArchitects Study Layout —TONIGHT— AIARD QUARTET . 8:30 p.m. Schwab All Welcome is it >: AKari'A»r»s»t!Sfi«A sB«’v Jv '0 ■-.-tf r e'.'. eye vigs neeo po ,: a> 9>tis would ; postpone maotig an appontment jjotil January., ' lhir>k VCU J bill *"c o 1 • m a n Growth of University Creamery Traced By STEVE CIMBALA jthe State College area. I The creamery receives no funds|producls just as the full-time cm ... ■ ~, t r ii.„J THE BUILDING, operated by from. the. University and, as alljployees do. A lamiuarsifiiu toiaie L.oiiege- t he university’s dairy departmentjdairies is under state supervision; A. wing containing offices, residents bB years ago was a was built in 1932 as a laboratorts regarding sanitation and milk classroomsandlaboratoriesisat horse-drawn wagon delivering the. for leachinß and rcse nrch: . iprices. . itaehed to the main creamery milk and butter of the State Col-, It is divided into five units,! rFOnGE dreibelbi*? m .„Jbuilding. Facilities for student lege creamery. | each reprcsentinß „ complete! mamcrv said instruction and experimentation That “one-horse” operation has: plant f or the handling of a dairy’^ r [tV products to the aro ' nlso located in thawing, since burgeoned into a creamery !p ro duct. The individual units arejf r ar ]-{v ns a sideline because Short elasses nre iamhl in . the that processes 600,000 pounds of| deV oted to the manufacturing of,Vwasbe S tenuiDDedto provide wing from November to hebru milk in a single month. ibutter,. ice cream, condensed milk equipp dto provlde ary, Dreibelbis said.-*-The courses In addition, the creamery, 10- ! and milk .powder.. . «nnn? re one or two-week periods-of. catcd on Curtin road across from; The creamery is arranged so‘ An approximate total of b.uuu instruction m milk tank weigh the Stock Judging Pavilion, daily ; that milk received, at the receiv-.qu arts or milk are sent toi| n g and sampling, making soft processes huge quantities of ice ing room may be pumped to the; t* 1 ® residence hall dining rooms,;j ce cream, testing dairy products cream, butter and cheeses to serv-, various departments making those; 110 snlcl > adding tnat about hp'Vj.and processing milk. • .ice University, residence halls andlfour products. p ™ n e ds are sold on daily retail AppROXIMATELY onc . lhird , -of the milk processed at the McCormick Named Top Faculty AdvisorUrc'M mg. has been cited by the Institute In announcing his selection for, jce cr * am a ’ e sald a , {h * . bl j£ s n th°from of the Aerospace Sciences as one the honor L Eugene Root presi- tore and in the Hetzel Union o rnllr ,^ of . thelnstitute s outstanding dent of the Institute, pbinted OU I-B u j]dinc '2l farmers in the State College faculty-advisors of the year. that the Institute constantly is pC.j,,' ~1....,.l.... ! arca - _ ' He has been advisor to' the developing new programs to keep ''.“ l “ aar on , LOSe ' > : \‘;“” Icac ‘ : “f’. Since they are part of the dairy University’s student branch for pace with the demands andbusiness, creamery employees tlie-pajrt-three-yeafST~T-h*4>rani;h,-*mipiiasis alj changing.profession. a . f rl f t | ‘;‘ Ic P; ( ' a^ | a . s ‘ lso aat have rather unusual hours. Truck ’ ' | ,nc creamuiys iciuu »iuiu. ‘drivers; for example, arc out on; ) ALTHOUGH the creamery cm- their routes long before most stu-j ; ploys 27 full time workers, some dents stir in the morning. Mostj Istudents are employed on an processing nlso begins early in, [hourly basis, Dreibelbis said.ifye mording, and by mid-after-; l When students have classes in the noon the creamery rooms are : building, they act as plant men spotless and shining after a thor-. and help to manufacture the ougli cleaning II '•T^jvS li -KKhvv Cf\-rw/±iJ!vg Three si ol Ihe somewhat somewha somewhat CARLO PONTI .... • r -S T, .‘ T?M • >. NOW at 2:00-5:15-8:30 P.M. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA -‘.COIOR —Photft hjr l.nu lUffnrr manage lo hold their balance and grace kirly well. Unilateral Disarmament I< #Six months later, manufae-jalready so hard pressed with their 'luring and stockpiling of weapons economic problems and those of should cease. . .! their satellites." ' ! Other Events I #Kor the next six "years, con-! As to invasion, Sibley raised 1 ‘ wr vr svvn 5 ventional arms and armies ishould the question whether invasion met American Chemical Society Re? be cut down and eliminated, re-iby non-violent resistance would! ception, 9:30 p.m„ HUB main mining a small army as a national be any less successful than a war.j lounge. ; police force. " ;in which of the participants AVVS, 6:30 p.m., 212 HUB. i Third, Sibley said, disarmament!lose anyway? • !Business Administration'Student would ’implicitly involve 'other 1 - Fifth, Sibley answered the* Council, 6:45 .m„ 306 Boucke. ipolicy changes to create-an al-'charges that his plan is Utopian.,Chemistry-Physics Student Coun i.ternative system of power to take He said that it only seems .Utopian * cil, 7 p.nj., 217. HUB. j the place of arms, such as as sys-, because people are not yct'ready; Chess Club, 7 p.m. 'HUB card tern of non-violent resistance. ;to accept the idea of unilateral; "rapnv . . , . j . The $45 billion formerly used! disarmament, ~ I Eastern Orthodox Choir rchcars j for arms manufacture could be ■ , I— 'used for" economic development, fl f g - • ▲ * from Latin America land retraining of former defense >■ workers: * ■ v m ant ■ ■ • ‘ lmprovement Techniques the United States the initiative in; , , 1 p world affairs which i£' lost after* Tvyenty-seven educators- from World War II,” he said. ILafin' America are spending 10 _ /months at the University learn- SINCE THE .whole notion of ij n g techniques, philosophies and the United Nations assumes a ais-|p rac tj c ,, s 0 f American education armed world,” Sibley forecast m- j n order to improve their own creased efficiency for the organi-'creational system, Myron L. zation if his ideas were accepted. ,c o u 1 ter, educational director. The USSR and Red China wouldlsaid yesterday, iprobably accept disarmament! The Latin American educators readily,-he said, because' they arelare here under the Latin Amen? Sahara Room To Feature 'Misfits' is Saturday the Hetzcl UnioniO to 12 p.m. in the HUB ballroom. rn Room will feature music " nl P* lt , ( '* was c ‘Uicelled . n,-last Saturday because of Tosyn i.e Mi.fits. During interims* j n dop Cn dont Men's Las Vtyfas siun Jeff Moss, who playedwhich was held in the HUB R' 'V Me.Darzle, will entertain ballroom. with several Broadway show Tickets for this Saturday’s tu... Sahara Room are on sale -now Sihara Room will be held ar- through Saturday at the HUB desk rordinc to regular schedule from'for $1 per couple. Th Saha i hy tt' THE .SAME HILARIOUS GANG THAT BROUGHT YOU.-* .. "Cany On gang-up on Hie 4 [HC IHIEI »i irt i r :itu ,r . f ..lui-W. \5 'S TONITE • 7:20-9:15 P.M- TODAY ON CAMPUS Cnnr or* ' a!. 730 p.m.. 303 Willard. v.oncerr Episcopal Choral Eucharist, 9:1! Ihr Al.iiil String Quartet, in ~ m., Eisenhower Chapel’ i e-uionce at the University. xxd Greek Week Publicity Committee present its second public concert : eis nl 2 18 HUB. :ii i;;;!uXd' ..n 1 witllHome Ec Club «:30 P-tn., Horn, be Se.r.i.iiti's ••Sonata a Quattro”; Economics Inina center. H.uteks ■Kjfth Quartet"; Seim- Kappa Phi Kappa rushing hoi t'- •Qu.utet-siit?, Op. Post"; smoker, i p.m...Phi Delta Theta and Ravels -Quartet in .F.” ' j, fraternity. _ , - ... I Liberal Arts Student Council, 8 .... _ . _ p.m.. 217 HUB. ■ History Round Table j Lutheran Vespers, 6:30 p.m., Ei- Mr. Richard WeinU will speak' senhoxyer Chapel,, on "Supreme'Court and Religion Model UN Publicity Committee, m Sehodls" at 7:00 p.m. in 303 8 p.m.. 217 HUB. . • 1 Boueke. ® M.R.C.. 9:15 p.m.. 217-218 HOB.** News and Views Training Board; 7 p.m.. Pi Beta Phi sorority suite. Shoe Shine Members of the Phi Sigma Panhcl, 9 n.nt., 203 HUB. Sir.ma Sorority will .shine shoes P. S. Bible Fellowship. 6:15 p.m., from i to 5 p.m. outside> of .212 HUB. Mot/ulr’s on S.“Allen - Street. 'Scabbard-mid 81ade..8:15..R4 at all exits from parking fields, he said. Liberal arts grad-'] otg 0 tg uates in particular’ have been: n n„„ _ ji * selected to serve as teachers in larn .p' director ol many areas, he added. it* s «s“ ri £ o dlv,sl ° n - , ex P W '>* that increasing pedestrian anc Volunteers serve for two years,vehicle traffic on campus neces and receive, a living allowance sitates taking all possible pre to cover housing, food, clolhing cautions for safety and urges and other expenses. In addition,! drivers to observe all traffic regu ■ each volunteer receives $75 formations. New College Diner Downtow n Between J.h '■& Movies j' Now Maying at i;l5, 3:20, 5:25, 7:30, 9:35 iIATE THEATRE. State College, Pa. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1962 Six Cadets Picked As top Leaders I Six seniors have' been dcslß noted ns distinguished cadets Ir the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps unit. ' They lire Richard H. Boacham, !ScrantonJohn W. Diercks, Ten :neck. N. J.; Willinm J. Herman, 'Pittsburgh; Dougins \V, Schell, .Philadelphia; Richard D. Strom fors, Erie; and Richard E. Trcs sler, Bellefontc, Col. William J. Cain. Jr„ pro fessor ,of air Science', explained that the designation means the cadet may apply for a regular commission in the U. S. Air Force upon his graduation from the Uni versity. „ Seniors are chosen for the award tor having demonstrated outstanding -leadership in the corps of cadets, maintaining a high academic average and , fot having placed in the upjcr half ol their summer training unit. receiving Instruction from facul ty members, he said. ‘‘All classes lire taught in Span ish, while at the same time, the educators receive daily in instruc tion in English," Coulter said. mE' "HIGHOGBY o! ■’ ect is a six-week internship in a community in Pennsylvania. Dur ing the internship, the educators go to the school daily in the com munity where they are living to see American education in action, he~said. ’Coulter said that the educators also visit local schools and at tend national education confer ences during their 10-month stay in the United States. \ J During the Christmas vacation, the educators will spend a week in New., York City':wher<\.4hey will vis.it the United Nations, New York University and other educational and' cultural centers, he said. OF THE- 27 educators, 12 are from the Dominican Republic, 9 from Honduras, 2 from Paraguay, 3 from Columbia and 1 from Nicaragua, Coulter said. [each month 'of service abroad [when lie returns to this country. | TRAINING- for" several'mont hs prior to final selection' and' ite- Iparture for the host country 4n- Idudes classes in the customs, his tory, culture and . language of lhatcountry. j Over ,300 volunteers to teach English and science in elementary tschools in the Philippine Islands (were trained on campus from IJuly 1961 to June 1962. They were (trained in four groups. The first ‘group oflSO volunteer? was the ilargest. There W'ere 70 volunteers | in each of the other three groups. Fifteen graduates and . one ‘undergraduate of the University [have been selected for various [projects around the world since [the inception of thb Peace Corps in March 11)61. —TONIGHT-*- ALARD QUARTET 8:30 p.m. Schwab