Editorial Opinion Rights and Awareness xjast week The Collegian reported that the Uni versity administration is studying a bill of rights for students. The work of 10 national educational groups, the bill stipulates rights of students from the time they enter their school until they are ready to leave. The bill of rights makes no new revelations of what students have been asking for some time now. Like any expected bill of rights of this type, it says that “freedom to teach and freedom to learn are inseparable facets of academic life. The freedom to learn depends upon appropriate opportunities and conditions in the classroom, the campus and the large community.” It further notes that students should exercise re sponsibility with this freedom—“each college and uni versity has a duty to develop policies and procedures which provide and safeguard this freedom”—to use the exact words. This clause, of course, is open for a wide range of interpretation. Hopefully, colleges and universities, while eagerly embracing this bill of rights, won't find an easy way to continue various restrictions with the cry that they are "developing policies and procedures to provide and safeguard" the freedoms they want to allow. The bill of rights is a neutral one. It can really offend no one. It rambles on about what freedom TODAY ON CAMPUS AWS, WRA, Fanhel Elections, Military Ball, 7:30 p.m., 203 11:30 a.m., in each residence HUB hall Nittany Pivots Meeting, 7 p.m., Faculty Women Club Dessert 60 Willard Reception, 12 noon, Hetzel Pi Lambda Theta Invitation, 4 Union Building Main Lounge p,m„ HUB Reading Room Film: “City of Eilat," 7:30 Review Board Interview s. -9:45 p.m., Hillel Fou dation p.m., 217 HUB Greek Week College Bjwl, 8:45 Spring Week, 9:45 p.m., 218 -;\m., 214-215-216 HUB HUB HUB Arts, 7 p.m., 216 HUB Student Faculty Dialogue, 8 Keystone, 7 p.m., 214-215 HUB p.m., Jawbone Lutheran Vespers, 6:30 p.m., USG College Bowl 7:30 p.m., Eisenhower Chapel HUB Assembly Hal' On worn Radio-91.1 4-4:05 p.m. WDFM News 4:05-6 p.m. Music of the (Continued) Masters with Kathy Bradley 7:45-8 p.m. Focus (featuring Beethoven, Men- 8-10 P.m. Two on the Aisle delssohn, Chopin) with Don King (Music from 6- om WDFM News film and Broadwa • Theater) b b.ua p.m. - wur ju news 10 . W:0 5 p.m. - WDFM News' 6:05-7 p.m. After Six (Pop- 10:05-12 midn.ght Symphonic ular, easy-listening) Notebook with Alice Patter -- p.m: .Dateline News son (Schuman Sym. #8; (Comprehensive campus, na- Liszt—Piano Concerto #1; tional and international news, Shostakovich—Sym. #5) sports, and weather) 12-12:05 a.m. WDFII News Successor to The Free Lance, est. 188 7 ©ljp Saihj (Enltenimt 62 Years of Editorial Freedom Published Tuesday through Saturday during the Fall, Winter and Spring Terms and once weekly on ThurSdeys during June, July and August. The Daily Colleglen is a student-operated newspeper. Second class postage bald at State College, Pa, HIM, Circulation, 12,500. Mall Subscription Price: ss.so a year Mailing Address - Sex «7, State College, Pa. ltooi ■dltortai and Buslnass Office - Basement of sackelt I North End, Phone 065-2531 Buttons olflo hours: Monday throush Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Member of The Associated Press RICHARD WIESENHUTTER DICK WEISSMAN Editor Business Manager Managing Editor, Suo Diehl; City Editor, William Epstein; News Editors, Martha Haro and Mika Serrlll; Editorial Editor, Andrea Fallen; Editorial Columnist, Jay Shore; sports Editor, Paul Levine; Assistant Sports Editor, Ron Kolh; Pho tography Editor, Mike Urban; ■ Senior Reporter, Richard Ravlti, Personnel Director-Office Manager, Phyllis Ross; Weather Reporter, Elliot Abrams. UTTER POLICY Th» Dally Collegian accepts Utters to tin editor regarding Collegian news coverage or editorial policy and campus or non-campus affairs, tetters must ba Commute* on Accuracy and Fair Play: Charles Brown, Faith Tanney, Harvey fVPewrittßn/no more than two pages in length, and .should be brought to the office Reeder. The Dally Collegian m person so thatJdenMicatiOn of the writer can be PAGE TWO Depends on the giant. Actually some giants are just regular kinds of guys. Except bigger. And that can be an advantage. How? Well, for one thing, you've got more going for you. Take Ford Motor Company, A giant in an exciting and vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About market' ing Mustang. Cougar. A city car for the future. Come to work for this giant and you’E begin to think like one. Because you’re dealing with bigger problems, the consequences, of course, will be greater. Your responsibilities heavier. That means your experience must be better—more complete. And so, you'll get the kind of opportunities only a giant can give. Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals. Men that you’ll be working with, and for. Marketing and sales pros working hard to accelerate your advancement. Because there’s more to do, you’ll learn more. In more 7:15-7:45 p.m. _ checked. II ielters'sre received by 'maii, Tlie coileglan will confect tha signer WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 14 1968 verillcßjion. The Daily Milesian reserves the rishl Is eelect which letter* vvcl/inlouam , rcoRUMKT iyoo w m eU hU«hed and f« edit tetter* tsr style and content. What’s it like to sell for a giant? everyone should have, and makes pleasant reading for high-ranking university officials. We think they should study it all they want. We also thought that most colleges and univer sities had passed the stage where student rights, which should have started when the schools built, needed to be clarified in a document sweated over by 10 national education groups. - But more important than a student bill of rights at this time is a bill calling for student awareness. At a time when the world needs a strong effort for peace, when domestic problems are increasing, it; is necessary that students, who hold the future of the country in their hands, realize their responsibilities to it. ' It is necessary for them to know; what their rights are—rights which if learned now in college will enable them to contend with this future. If students will demand a complete university ex perience, chances are they will make the same de mands from .the world. In other, words, participation and concern now means a good chance of participa tion and concern later when it really counts. A bill of rights 1b fine. A bill to prod awareness, however awareness can be prodded in the first place, is even better. We, think that should be given some study, too, Letters to the Editor And Thereby Hangs a Tale TO THE EDITOR: As members of Penn State’s black com munity, we had to laugh' when we read the letter in Thurs day’s Collegian entitled “What Price Honor.” Here is another poor, brainwashed individual (a white person, we presume) who actually thinks that this baßtion of white, fascist, racist imperialism is great. As far as we are concerned, this country's greatness and honor ceased to exist in the year 1777. This person has the nerve to talk about “losing the world piece by piece.” Whatever made you think that the-world belonged to you in the first place? The North Koreans, The National Liberation Front, the people of Angola. Mozambique, Guatemala, and the black people right here in this prison (we are referring to the "land of the free and the home of the brave") are telling you Americans in the only language that you understand that you don't own as much as you think. People all over the world are starting to wake up to what you have done. Your country is in trouble no matter where you turn your head. Your emissaries are being spat on, your flag burned, your embassies sacked, even your sp-called Allies are laughing and ridiculing your so-called leadership. De Gaulle is messing with your gold, Wilson tells you that the “defense of the Far East from Commu nism" is your baby, your South Vietnamese allies are telling you that it is your war. Your cities are being burned; your property destroyed and your prestige smashed by black people who are saying that empty promises just don’t make it any more. After Six As far 'as a better world is concerned, we too, want a better world. So do the people of Harlem, Newark, Wails, North Philly, Saigon, Hanoi, Guatemala, Bolivia, the U.A.R., Syria, and the North Koreans. As far. as they are concerned, America is the barrier to a belter world. This is Why they are taking care of business.' They can see, if you can't, that America has made a farce cut of its affairs, both infernal and international. In closing, we wish to stress the importance that you do not lean too heavily on your “solid pillar of greatness.” You may suffer a nasty fall. Ken Waters '7O Dan Butler '7l Jim Grant Graduate areas. You may handle as many as three different assignments in your first two years. You’ll develop a talent for malting hard-nosed, imagina tive decisions. And you’ll know how these decisions affect the guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you’ll have been there. If you’d like to be a giant yourself, and you’ve got ,better ideas in marketing and sales, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus. Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, College Recruiting Department. You and Ford can grow bigger together. AMERICAN ROAD, DEARBORN, MICHIGAN AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER* Actually I’m. quite big on it. WfSilD : Once upon ; name of the^sea^ v. ideals we wish our own. As yi } You should be *Valentine cards are running; 56 per cent'flattering 44 per cent 'insulting'!" A Growing Menace TO THE EDITOR; I am writing to point out a growing menace on campus people who are not afraid to think for themselves or be different from others, those radicals who insist on knowing the truth, those who take nothing for granted, those who truly strive for a real education, people who do not,readily fit Nietzsche’s definition of modern man as “an uncreative conformist and complacent hedonist.” . 1 Already some of these people are appearing on campus. Action must be taken ■ now to prevent this dangerous minority from infecting the majority of Penn State students. LBJ, FDR and Mao TO THE EDITOR: The quotes from "Chairman LBJ” illus trate that the courses of action taken by our Chairman are more likely to be compared to the actions of Mao rather than those of LBJ’s avowed idol, FDR. lam reassured knowing that LBJ is seeking'(a?) Peace rather than War. Otherwise our soldiers would occupy Southeast Asia and Minnesota. Long Live Lyndon! If only to protect us from the reign of what s-his-name”. (Hubert somebody) (V) •» -■ \ \ Astronomers* salesmen,designers, programmers,chemists, p^chotagists,writers, sociologists,economists, metaHurgists,lartists, accountants,physicists* mathematicians, General Electric \ is made of. \ General Electric is made up of a lot more than just engineers—because it takes a lot more than engi neers to tackle the problems we deal with. Like helping to unsnarl traffic jams in our cities, fight ing air pollution or finding new ways to provide power for underdeveloped nations. It takes sociol ogists, meteorologists, astronomers, writers—in fact, it takes people with just about every kind of training. But, more than any of this, it takes people Bernard Brean 70 Corry Stevens '6B etc, etc, etc. That’s what J. Robert Shore a sea, sailed a ship. It doesn’t matter the or ship because by any name, they’d still iuffice it to say, the great ship came from imprised of a great populace, the greatest the leaders. asn’t so great. But it was big and some wd rough and deep and blue and every >t so great sea is. je ship that sailed the sea was, of course, ■at men, captained by. the greatest of men the greatest of ideals. Now you may ask is such greatness doing on a not so great tod question. It was raised by a minority of 10 stayed home in. the great land. They ir the query, but the great leader who ship set most of his people straight, people are sailing this great ship to greet ire our greatness. Needless to say, the great to bestow upon the untortunates are all ou know, our greatness is not tinged with in, but reflects entirely our great culture, proud and honored that we brave men have the courage and generosity to give others our great ness." So spoketh the leader. It came to pass (doesn’t everything?), that this ship and crew fell upon some unfortunate few. Unfortunate in that these people were ignorant of the great ways of the great people. "We will help these people become great," pro claimed the leader. "We will show' them the way, not just because it's our religious duty, but because we want to." And so cheered the crew ail but a few who thought it wiser to think than to spew. And lo and behold, something stranger than the mouse that moved the elephant came to pass. The great people (pachyderms) failed to budge the unfortunate ones (peromyscus or microtus). The crew, knowing it was great, thought something was wrong with the leader. “Why should it be so hard to help people? It must be the fault of our leader,” thought the crew. "Why should it be so hard to show these people the light? I mustl not be getting enough support," pondered the leader. “Why must these big goons bug us? 1 We were happy until these huge ones infiltrated our island,” cried the unfortunate ones. And so it went. The ,great people meant no harmj they came to share iheir greatness. But they found them selves rejected. Finally, the already battered ship set sail for home and almost didn't' make it because the ship was headed for the rocks until the latrine boy re lieved the beleaguered captain of his navigational chores. On dockng at home, the weary, but great leader found his land troubled and ruined because it had gone unattended for too long. Where the people once played, they now threw stones and shot guns and committed in numerable crimes. Where the land was once green, it was now strewn with garbage and weeds and everything unwanted. Where the populace was once happy, it now cried and screamed and grew frustrated and angry and sick. "What has happened?" bellowed the leader. He knew not what to do. He tried everything everything he used on the 'unfortunate ones, everything great. But his response was negative. Finally, as a last resort, he once again followed the wisdom of his latrine boy. No, he didn’t dean up the mess. The great leader took his great and sick people to the unfortunate land whereby he colonized it with great ness and within time, eradicated the poor natives who did not change to the great ways. Reasoned the leader, “If they are not bright enough to see the way, they are blind and deserve the fate we have accorded them.” Nobody lived happily ever after. with nerve, gumption, intellectual curiosity— people who care about what happens to the world. So it’s not only your major we’re interested in. It’s you. Why not see our interviewer when he comes to campus and find out whether you’re'the kind of person General Electric is made of. ELECTRIC ■An equal opportunity employer Ship of Fools; Ship of State