EDITORIAL OPINION End the exodus At noon each day a strange hush settles over the University and all official activity ceases for precisely one hour. Not so peaceful are those students Who find themselves unable to contact academic department 6, University officials and administrators. Ironically, this is the one. time between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. when most students have time to trek across a. campus for businesd•matters. • Still, the mass exodus from departments to lunchrooms continues, ' short-changing students. Unlike most University associated problems, this is one dilemma which could-be solved quite easily. A little cooperation and concern from the University in areas such as this could help smooth rough spots in other The solution is simple. Secretaries and others within each department should stagger their lunch hours at four one-half intervals between 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Granted, secretaries would not be able to eat lunch together, but student needs should be more important. The University exists primarily for the education of students, much of which is dependent on effective channeling of information. If a noon shut-down was avoided, the, - flow of information would improve. - The Office of Student Affairs has recognized this: and has staggered the lunch hours of those within the departments so that someone is available throughout the noon hour. Other ma unumon, RN Wle the. University, y academic hould follow that segments of, particular departments, example.! No one deni functioning an i function ups system. Bu t; especially ones large univer continually ev. , , regard to lefficl es the University is dwill continue to .er the present lan' organizations, as complex as a -ity, should be : t luating itself with lent service. Staggering I lunch hours to permit maximum access for students is a minor change, but one that i$ easily accomplished. Those oh the lower levels of the University hierarchy have often complained of their inability to affect , l University policy. Secretanes and others should take this oppotlunity to suggest a change of their,own : staggered lunch hour's. Bon appetit. IYHM WE S( James J. Kilpatrick An autumn coolness As slowly and imperceptibly as summer shifting Into fall, we may be witnessing a change of seasons in foreign policy also. It may be no more than imagination at work it may be a product more of hope than of reality but In the field of U.S. -Soviet relations, one senses a welcome hint of autumn in the air. The impression arises from a dozen sources: Soviet Jews. Wheat. Solzhenitsyn. Sakharov. Radio Liberty. Jamming. The , National Academy of Sciences. The Kissinger confirmation. Signs and portents drifi through the news like falling leaves. After years of sunny weather with the Soviet Union, the barometer is falling and the nights are turning cold, Let me try to pull all this together. For the past 30 years, more oNiess, the makers and shakers of American foreign policy have been divided into two 111-defined camps: on one side the Tolerants, on the other the Intolerants. It Is fair enough to speak of the Intolerants as anti-Communists. It never has been accurate to speak of the apposition as ';pro- Communists," for their principal leaders Senato'r J. William Fulbrtght, for one are not pro-Communist. Their guiding rule is toleration. They regard the Intolerants as paranoids, red-batters, and bores. • What is happening or what seems to be happening is a remarkable awakening and reexamination in the Tolerant camp. The process started a year or so ago, when the persecution and harassment of Soviet Jews at last shook the complacency of opinion leaders here. This persecution had been going on for years. There was nothing especially new about it. But now the protest swells and takes tangible form: The passage of new trade legislation, granting concessions and„"most favored nation" treatmfrit tg the Soviet Union, will depend upon the , Kremlin's course' of action toward its Jewish people. Those of us in the Intolerant camp have written billions of words over these 30 years about the denial of human rights in dzPollegi6l) Editorial Staff: 865-1828 Business Staff: 865-2531 Sports Staff: 865-1820 COLLEGIAN EDITORS: MANAGING EDITOR, Steve Ivey; EDITORIAL EDITOR, Rich Grant; CITY EDITOR, Rick Nelson; ASSISTANT CITY EDITORS, Pat Hunkele, Diane NottIe;'LAYOUT EDITOR, Betty Holman; COPY EDITORS, Maureen Keely, Nancy Postr_eg Terry Walker; SPORTS EDITOR, Ray. McAllister; ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS, Mark Simenson, Rick Starr; PHOTO EDITOR, Randy Woodbury; ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR, Joe Rudick; GRAPHIC ARTIST, Jennie Atty; BOARD OF MANAGERS: ADVERTISING MANAGER, Ed Todd; ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER, Cindy Ashear, Jan Franklin; NATIONAL ADVERTISING MANAGER, Steve Wetherbee. ATTENTION IMPORTANT NOTICE ATTENTION Student treasurers and/or advisors of the following organizations are requested to attend a meeting with personnel of the Office of Student Activities to review the accounting procedures for use of University allocated funds. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 7 p.m. Room 216 HUB Alpha Phi Omega Gainma Sigma Sigma East Asian Study Soc. Friends of Asia Ukranian Club Homophiles Keystone Society ECO Action Glee Club Symphony Orchestra 8 p.m. Room 216 HUB Free University On Drugs P. S. Amature Radio Veterans Organization Atherton Hall Centre Halls East Halls , North Halls Pollock-Nittany South Halls West Halls the Soviet Union. The Tolerants have responded with yawns or with embarrassed apologies for our bad manners. The brutal treatment imposed upon Andrei Sakharov, the physicist, and Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the novelist, has changed all that; the wind shifts to unexpected quarters. The National Academy of Sciences, - never before identified with anti-Communist activism, is moved to send a bristling warning to l Moscow: "It is with great dismay that we have learned of the heightening campaign of condemnation of Sakharov..." The developing coolness was clearly evident in the Senate two weeks ago. By an overwhelming margin of 76-10, the Senate voted to revitalize Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, and to authorize more than $5O million for their operations in the current fiscal year. The two netwdrks, despite furious Jamming by the Soviets, reach an audience of millions behind the' Iron Curtain. This changing weather offers a tremendous opportunity. Even the most tolerant of the Tolerants must be shaken by Sakharov's courage in urging the United States not to pursue detente unless there is' some "simultaneous liquidation of Soviet isolation." Closer ties between Washington and Moscow must be made to depend upon internal reforms within the Soviet Union. Such intervention should not come hard to the Tolerant camp. After all, those who have gazed with equanimity upon the internal policies of the Soviet Union have not hesitated to bring pressures upon South Africa, Rhodesia, and Greece. The despotism, practiced in the Soviet Union is a thousand times more ominous. Henry Kissinger, as astute diplomat, can make great capital of these events. So long as the Tolerants were in command, he was bound to attitudes of conciliation, one way detente, and general sweetness and light. If we have indeed reached the end of a long lazy summer, a wiser and harder line will be possible now. Business Office Hours:- Monday through Friday 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m SLAUGHTERHOUSE= FIVE A Universal Picture in TECHNICOLOR° NI CD Coming to Waring- this week WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 7 p.m. Room 216 HUB A.W.S. I.F.C. 0.T.1.5. Pan Hel ARHS U.S.G. U.U.B. G.S.A. University Choirs University Swingers Letter Policy The Daily Collegian welcomes comments on trews coverage, editorial policy or noncampus affairs. Letters should be typewritten, double spaced, signed by no more than two persons and no longer than 30 tines. Students' letters should include the name, term and major of the writer. Letters should be brought to The Collegian office, 126 Carnegie, in person so proper identification of the writer can be made, although names will be withheld by request. If letters are received by mail, The Collegian will contact the signer for verification. 8 p.m. 216 HUB Ag. Student Council Business Student Council Earth & Mineral Sci. Student Council Engineering Student Council Human Development Student. Council Liberal Arts Student Council Science Student Council Women's Liberation Women's Recreation Asso. Sports Cluster