Editorial Opinion Dismay in the South Vietnamese president Nguyen Van Thieu said-yesterday that to win the war quickly more U.S. troops are heeded in Vietnam. For the first time in recent years a Vietnamese request subtle as it is for increased U.S. involvement in the war might be falling on increasingly unsym pathetic ears. For if there has been anything at all encouraging about recent developments in the Vietnamese situa> tion it has been the growing trend among citizens and legislators toward a reappraisal of the American role in Vietnam. Senator Joseph S. Clark speaking here Sunday night made the kind of comment more and more of his Senatorial colleagues have made of late. Clark said that his recent fact-finding trip to Vienam convinced him that "our top people are living in a dream world in their thinking about Asian affairs." If top officials are still living in a dream world it seems that finally members of the Senate, even those who have been firmly committed to the Admin istration’s policy, are beginning to enter the real world. Clark’s views are echoed by Kentucky Senator Thurston B. Morton who has been quoted as saying that there is a decidedly negative reaction within the TODAY ON CAMPUS Arts and Architecture Student Panhellenic Council. 6:30 p.m., Council, 7 p.m., Hetzel Union 203 HUB , Building ballroom Peace Corps, 9 • a.m., HUB Chinese Class, 12:30 p.m., 214 ground floor; 2 p.m., 215 HUB HUB; testing, 3 p.m., 217- Circle K, 12:30 p.m., 217 HUB 218 HUB German Film Club, 6:30 p.m., Students for State, C a.m., HUB HUB assembly hall ground floor Greek Week College Bowl, 6:30 Spring Week, 8:45 p.m., 203 p.m., 215-216 HUB HUB Hillol, 8:30 a.m., HUB ground- Undergraduate Student Gov floor ' - eminent, 7:30 p.m., 214 HUB Interfraternity Council, 3 p.m., USG Administrative Commit -216 HUB tee, 9:30 p.m., 214 HUB Liberal Arts Student, Council, USG Senate Committee, 3:30 6:45 p.rri., 171 Willard p.m., 214 HUB On WDFM Radio-91.1 4-4:05 p.m. WDFM News 4:05-6 p.m. Music of the 7 ; 45.8 p.m. USG Press Con- Masters with Robert Smith {erence (W DFM and The (Mozart Violin Concerto Daily Collegian interview f s > K o sqn 0 °* ’ Quai ‘‘ USG Preside nt, Jeff Long) 6- p.m. WDFM News 84 °. p \ m - “ Tke Sound ° f F °J k 6:05-7 x>.m. - After Six (Pop- Muslc Wlth Dann >’ Estersohn ular, easy-listening) 10-10:15 p.m. WDFM News 7- p.m. Dateline News 10:05-12 midnight Symphonic (Comprehensive campus, na- Notebook with Dennis Winter tional and international news, (featuring Wagner, Vittalli, sports, and weather) Bruckner) 7:15-7:45 p.m. After Six 12-12:05 a.m. WDFM News Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 62 Years of Editorial Freedom Published Tuesday through Saturday during the Fall, Winter and Spring Terms and once weekly on Thursdays during June, July and August. The Daily Collegian is a student-operated newspaper, second class postage paid at State College, Pa. 1680], Circulation, 12,500. Mali Subscription Price: $3.50 a year Mailing Address Box <67, state College, Pa. 16801 Editorial and Business Office - Basement of Sackett (North End, Phone 865-2531 Business office-hours: Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Member of The Associated Press RICHARD WIESENHUTTER - DICK WEISSMAN ' Editor Business Manager Committee on Accuracy ,and' Fair Play: - Charles Brown, Faith Tanney,. Harvey Reeder. ■ ... PAGE TWO CAMPUS INTERVIEWS NEXT WEEK Graduates at all degree levels are urged to investigate the career opportunities at The world's largest center tor conquest of disease and improvement of human health (Continued) 'TUESDAY;: FEBRUARY 13, 1968 NIH The National Institutes of Health-NIH-is the principal research arm of the U.S. Public Health Service; and .conducts many of the most advanced programs in medical science today. These pro grams require specialists in a wide range of disciplines. Ex ample: Right now NIH has openings in the following areas: CHEMISTS . . . BIOLOGISTS . . . NURSES . . . MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS . . . SOCIAL WORKERS . . . LIBRARIANS .. . ENGINEERS . . . COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS ... MATH EMATICIANS . . . STATISTICIANS . . . SYSTEMS ANALYSTS . . . MANAGEMENT INTERNS . . . PERSONNEL SPECIALISTS . . ACCOUNTANTS . . . INFORMATION SPECIALISTS . . . MANAGEMENT ANALYSTS . . . CONTRACT SPECIALISTS These are permanent positions that offer high professional challenge and the benefits of career Federal employment. Start ing salaries are attractive and opportunity for advancement is excellent. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MARCH 5 An NIH representative will be visiting your campus next week to discuss these positions with interested students. You may arrange an interview during this visit by contacting the Place ment Office. Or, if you prefer, you may write or call College Relations Officer NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Senate r the termed "the continued bland and ' ,-r— -yan— gmw' 1 ' . jurate statements of confidence” issued ..S' | • iam C. Westmoreland, Deputy Ambas- J I W. Komer and. the White House. I 9 ,obert F. Kennedy added to the chorus .1 -w | J||||L ' ; week saying that the Vietcong’of fen- 8 | | jP|y -j/lgga :tered the masks of official illusion.” 0 n ’/» t th the growing disbelief in official re- »9 r\ lt ' *' 'ar's progress some Senators are begin- f | n id that the United States may already | gjt 111 j-n -J— -its commitment to the South Vietna- 1 Senate to wha probably inacci by Gen. Willi? sador Robert Senator R< of dismay last sive had “shat' Along will porls on the wi nirig to content have fulfilled ; mese governmi Failure of South Vietnamese forces to come to the defense of the American Embassy or beleagured provincial Capitols during the Tet holidays has cast considerable doubt on whether South Vietenam is carrying its share of the war effort. Senator Clark’s observation on the dreamworld existence'of our top officials is in agreement with much of the Senate’s thinking. Hopefully his state ment that the end of the summer will find the U.S. involved in peace negotiations will become a reality. If President Johnson is indeed the “political realist” Clark terms him, perhaps the growing legis lative dismay with the ,war many prove fruitful. Hopefully, from the dismay will come peace. Letters to the Editor The Traffic Is Terrific TO THE EDITOR: I think the traffic problem of the Uni versity has reached such proportions that it is time to call it to your attention. At eleven o’clock a.m., Tuesday, Jan. 23,1 drove around the campus and around the city for a half hour searching in vain for a legal place to park so that I might confer with a professor on the advisability of returning to college for a master’s degree. ' ' It is my honest opinion that the University is shifting the burden of the parking problem onto the city which- is unwilling to accept it. If you force cars off the University property, will people stop operating them? No! They, will find a place in the city to ditch them. Thus the problem is compounded. ’ •Both the city and the University say they take'cogni sance of the problem. Actually, they turn the problem into a profit by penalizing professors, students, and visitors to the area with numerous traffic laws, stiff fines, and park ing meters with short time limits. Has anyone ever estimated the amount of money taken in by selling parking permits and issuing .endless streams of tickets? Even rough conservative calculations result in staggering amounts of money. Why isn’t this money ear marked for solution of the obvious parking problem? A student would not mind paying a five,- ten or fifteen dollar fine if he felt it would eventually mean free parking or a place to park at reasonable rates in a parking garage built - for, students and professors. ‘ . I maintain that since the University has everyone associated with the University "over the barrel" no con structive and positive action will be taken to correct such a profitable situation! This generation, more than any other, is a'mobile gen eration. We should face reality with understanding and reason so that solutions for problems can be found instead of avoiding issues, postponing positive action, and antag onizing everyone. Bethesda, Maryland 20014 Phone; (301 J 496-4707 An equal opportunity employer, M&F Gary A. Wolfe '65 OH WELL, GOOD LUCK, BERRY’S WORLD -as; f J- ©mbyNEA, "Do you have the BEST SELLER, ‘The Exhibitionist,' or hasn't it been published yet?" The Big Deception TO THE , EDITOR: We feel that the U.S. Army is under mining the consciences ■ and minds of all Americans. Our soldiers wear uniforms with a great pride thinking that they are warriors protecting liberty, democracy, and free dom throughout the world. We feel this is a grave error. In order to compensate for this error we have devised a pian. We would suggest that the uniforms of our armed forces be changed so that the people will know exactly who they represent when they do Rattle. For example, if ihey are fighting in South America for freedom and democracy, they should have large let tering on their backs spelling out UNITED FRUIT! If in Thailand, CHASE MANHATTAN BANK; If in Peru, STANDARD OIL; If in Spain, TEXACO OIL; If in Chile, ANACONDA COPPER: If in Nigeria, MOBILE OIL, It would be a marvelous idea, .for our boys would no longer have any doubts about what they are dying for. The public would no longer be divided on the war. There would be no credibility, gap. Also, "when people watch the war on TV, they could actually see their favorite' companies doing battle. By having such uniforms, the stock market and Wall Street could change so that soldiers would be counted instead of points, eliminating the false notion that statistics lie. Who knows, people could gel extra dividends by in vesting their sons in corporations. Of course, some of our boys will get killed or wounded. But vou know,' business is business in America. Ttu Dally Collegian accepts letters to the editor regarding Collegian news coverage or editorial policy and campus or non-campus affairs. Letters must be typewritten, no more than two pages in length, and should bo brought to the office of The Dally Collegian in person so fhaf identification of the writer can be checked. If letters are received by mall. The colle'gian will contact the signer tor verification. The Daily Collegian reserves the right to select which letters will he oublishea and to edit letters for style and content. ( VOU'LL (NffiP IV.) Why should you confide in a guy you’ve never met before? y Laurey S. Peikov : 69 Edward C. Dicenzo, '69 LETTER POLICY f vou \ PfPN'T HAVE TOSAV Editor’s Note: “Reportage” columns give senior reporters a chance to speak out on important issues, many 'i)f which they meet firsthand in their reportorial jobs. Ominous expressed in reportage columns are not nec essarily .those of the Collegian Board of editors. The paradoxical nature of race relations was summed up, by Ebony magazine in August, 1965, when it devoted a special issue to “The White Problem in America.” The white problem is, in brief: How can the majority of the people knowingly and at times unknowingly sup press the economic, social and political advancement of a racial minority in the most prosperous, progress-minded democracy in the world? Hie white Anglo-Saxon Protestant majority in the United States is certainly not a collection of barbarians and racist tyrants. But it has accepted acts of barbarism and racist “tyranny inflicted on Indians, blacks and other minorities. And now, after four summers of riots, the affluent descendants of immigrants are losing their old sense of kinship with the people on the bottom of the social ladder. The white liberal, an affluent, educated, socially responsible citizen in the eyes of his peers, poses a grave challenge to American democracy. The New York Times, Dec. 17, 1967, reported that a substantial number of white liberals in the academic community agree with black nationalists that "racial separation" is (the best policy for advancement in the ghetto cities at this time, or as some contend, in the foreseeable future. Racial separation in Afrikaans reads apartheid. In the South it used to be called Jim Crow or segregation. The white liberals do not-like these terms. The white conservatives are too embarrassed to speak. It is ironic to find a Harvard scholar believing that separate development will not create new injustice or worsen the injustice already in existence in 1968, when only four years ago he attributed urban unrest to the segregated pattern of society. A sociologist here at the University said that urban riots , will hamper civil will “set the cause back.” This view is widely held by well-meaning people. In the first place, the exercise of civil rights does not cause riots. Riots are expressions of hopelessness, futility. The youth who loots a store is- not concerned with constitutional questions. Summer riots did not kill the proposed open-housing legislation in Congress, but they did provide an excuse for legislators to shelve an unpopular measure. The ghetto teenager who throws rocks at the police is not going to move next door. The middle-class black wants the house. But returning to the white liberal; what can be done about him? Bayard Rustin, long-time rights leader in New York, reminds us that the civil rights acts of 1964 and 1965 dealt only with legal equality and were passed a century after emancipation. A situation which was allowed to deteriorate for a century does not greatly improve over night, Martin Luther King, the symbolic leader of the civil rights movement, said in 1965 that the white liberal must come to grips with his own racial prejudice, instead of seif-righteously denying he-has any hate or antagonism. Malcolm X, while no apostle of brotherly love, said the races do not love each other and there is no reason they should, but the races should respect each other on the basis of deed. University students are notorious for patronizing blacks, quite unintentionally. The black on campus is still a new experience for many students. If he is not inte grated into college life, it is because lie is not integrated ' into soeiet'y at large. But progress is being made. The solution to the racial problem may ultimately" 1 , lie in education, for black and white. Only through the schools can a meaningful dialogue between persons take . place. The races have stared at each other, cursed each . other and shot at each other. They should now read about each other. Because the guy we’re talking about is a college recruiter from Alcoa. And the only way to play it' is honestly. He’ll be on campus in a couple of days. And here’s what we recom mend you do at the interview. First, lay your cards on the table. Tell him what kind of work would really turn you on. Then, sit back and listen while he explains how your plans figure into Alcoa’s plans. (You’ll be surprised how versatile Aluminum Company of America can be.) Change for the better with Alcoa reportage mi An American Dilemma-. The White Problem So make i t a point to meet Alcoa’s recruiter. He’s a confidence man you can really trust. Interview date: February 15 An Equal Opportunity Employer A Plans for Progress Company □ALCOA riehard revitz