opinions editorial opinion How 'bout Penn State? Many high school students apply to Penn State because it's cheap. Because they've heard the name before. Because their big sister went there. After they've been accepted, some high school students are embarrassed by their choice. Penn State is just a state school. It has no name. A president never graduated from it. But once they get to the University, many students quickly change their opinion. Penn State vibrates; it's exciting. The University and the community are a thriving laborato ry where students can continually test themselves. Unlike many smaller schools, Penn •State's offerings are diverse and varied. Students can major in such fields as rural sociology, nuclear engineering, Portuguese or individual and family studies. They can choose from hundreds of student organiza tions to get involved with. They can mingle with professors of national stature. They can do, be or think just about anything they want. • Where else but Penn State can you: • Study in the No. 1-ranked progams of meteorology, architectural engineering, art education or nutrition? • Meet professors who have won presti gious international awards, such as John 0. Almquist, who received the 1981 Wolf Foun dation award for his pioneering research in artificial insemination of livestock. o Participate in ap AG Hill Festival or the Little International Livestock Exposi- op-ed/what is Penn state? Outstanding program I'm pleased to be a graduate of the College of Health, Physical Education and Recre-, ation, which has several programs widely recognized as being No. 1. In national surveys conducted both in 1980 and 1982 of the overall quality of doctoral programs in physical education in the United States, Penn State was rated as No. 1. These findings supported data compiled by a pro gram review committee of Penn State's grad uate school that concluded "it is probably the leading overall graduate program in health and physical education in the world." - • The Health Education Athletic Training Option was ranked by a 1982 accreditation team as the top athletic training program in the country. The School Health Certification Option in Health Education was ranked by the Pennsyl vania Department of Education as the best health education professional preparation program in the state. • Penn State's Health Education Depart ment serves more people through continuing education programs than any other health education program in the country. The extraordinary sport and recreation facilities of the college are the most extensive and diverse of any university in the nation; they contribute greatly to Penn State's supe riority in activity classes, intramurals, inter collegiate athletics and club sports. Research facilities are similarly without parallel, and the Noll Laboratory for Human Performance Research is No. 1 in the United States and world-class in program and capability. Most importantly, the national and interna tional recognition of the outstanding achieve ments of both the faculty and the students in the College of HPER help make Penn State a byword for quality.. For example, biomechan- Part of what keeps Penn State so vital is that it is a leader in science and technology. One of the best observatories of seismic activity in the United States is located in the basement of Deike Building where the earth's rumblings are observed, recorded and sent to the National Ocean and Atmo spheric Administration. In another sphere, the space shuttle Co lumbia carried a Penn State experiment into space. In the medical field, a University professor helped develop a cancer detection test. The list could go on and on . . . But Penn State isn't just University Park or the Commonwealth campuses; it's the whole state. A professor from Penn State serves on the Nuclear Regulatory Commis sion Panel on the Decontamination of Three Mile Island. The University's agricultural extension service provides services for thousands of farmers. When the Nittany Lions defeated the Georgia' Bulldogs on national television, viewers got only a small taste of what it's like to be Penn State Proud. We're proud of our football team, but we're equally proud of our school. After that stunning victory, the phrase heard in the streets of New Orleans quickly became "How 'bout them Lions?" replacing the outworn drawl of "How 'bout them 'Dawgs?" But Penn State, as Joe Paterno will readily admit, is more than football. What everyone should have been asking was "How 'bout us? How 'bout Penn State?" ics Professor Richard C. Nelson is the 1982-83 Alliance Sch(Mar for the 40,000-member American Alliance of Health, Physical Edu cation, Recreation and Dance. Joe Paterno is right, "We're No. 1 in many, many things . . . . We are Penn State!" Ron Avillion, Resident Assistant, Classes of 1965, '1966 Jan. 8 WHO SIYS PENN SLATES OM NUMBER ONE IN. FOOTBALL World class Probably the most important indigenous commodity from the state of Pennsylvania, with the obvious exception of the national champion Nittany Lion football team (how 'bout them Lions!), is coal. And with respect to coal science in particular, and fuel sciences in general, the fuel science program at Penn State is certainly also deserving of a No. 1 RaC7bo VISITS FLOOD 01616q11ER AREA. Wevds rrelA ranking. A Department of Fuel Technology was established at the University in 1932 in recog nition of the importance of fuels to the welfare of the citizens of Pennsylvania. Penn State has today what is probably the most extensive expertise on coal and carbon aceous materials of any university in the United States. It is also eminent in the field of combustion. Work in the Penn State Fuels and Combus- occrißf- camm The. Daily Collegian Tuesday, Jan.' 11 tion Laboratory, which is part of the research facilities of the fuel scince program, has achieved worldwide recognition, as has the work on the fundamental processes in flames that is carried out in other laboratories of the program. Fuel science is an applied science of fuels and energy that is concerned with the opti mum use of our energy resources. Over the last decade, it has become apparent that the supply and consumption of energy have a major impact on all facets of society. The use of coal in combustion and carboni zation, and its conversion to gaseous and liquid fuels plays an important part in the program. However, fuel science is also con cerned with origin, characteristics, purifica tion and utilization of all fuels. - Now the fuel science program offers oppor tunities for graduate and postdoctoral study. The program includes about 50 graduate students who are supported by grants from both private industry and government agen cies. Nine distinguished faculty members are affiliated with the program. In the past 20 years, faculty and students have published about 400 research papers. Since 1950, about 100 masters and 120 doctorate degrees in fuel science or fuel technology have been awarded. Along the lines of being No. 1, Penn State granted the first bachelor of science degree in fuel science in the nation in 1934: Although the undergraduate program was not offered from the early 1970 s until 1983, the bachelor of science program in fuel science has recently been reinstated (Fall 1983) because of in creasing recognition of the importance of energy to the economy and environment. Penn State should be proud to be associated with such an important research and educa tion program. The fuel science prgram should certainly be included among Penn State's claims to No. 1. Timothy Golden, graduate-fuel science Jan. 7 gi; Collegian Tuesday, Jan. 11, 1983 ©1983 Collegian Inc. Phil Gutis Paul Rudoy Editor Business Manager The Daily Collegian's editorial opin ion is determined by its Board of Opinion, with the editor holding final responsibility. Opinions ex pressed on the editorial pages are not necessarily those of The Daily Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The Pennsylvania State University. Collegian Inc., publishers of The Daily Collegian and related publica tions, is a separate corporate insti tution from Penn State. Board of Managers Assistant Business Manager: Judy Smith; Office Manager: Kimberly Fox; As sistant Office Manager: Colleen Waters; Sales Manager: Sue Beni nati; District Sales Managers: Jodi Shubin: Jon Kaplan; Layout Coordi nator: Karen Rader; Creative Direc tor: Randy Rigdon; Co-op Coordinator: Sue Kiser; Marketing Manager: Barry Reichenbaugh; Na tional Ad Manager: Donna Streletz ky; Assistant National Ad Manager: Lynn McLaughlin. op-e , I 1 i.I Overcoming a state school inferiority compl-x Editor's Note: Bruce A. Murphy, Univer sity assistant professor of political science, is the author of "The Brandeis/Frankfurter Connection: The Secret Political Activities of Two Supreme Court Justices," a book that achieved national prominence after its release early last year. The following is excerpted from a speech he gave at the spring Honors Convocation. By BRUCE A. MURPHY Researching and writing "The Bran: deis/Frankfurter Connection" was one of the most challenging and thrilling adven tures of my life. Spending the last quarter of my life paging through thousands of docu ments in libraries all over the nation has helped me to appreciate problems faced by scholars in every academic field. As I reflect on the relevance of that effort, and of my career, it becomes clear that beyond the story of the publicity surround ing the book there is another, perhaps more meaningful, story that is not being told. It is that story that I frequently. tell my own students at the University. While I am not that much older than my students, it seems that we are from very different college generations. My peers pro tested the war in Vietnam, helped launch an Equal Rights Amendment and professed a concern for pursuing a humanistic college experience. Now it seems that students worry about the nuclear holocaust, protest tuition hikes and are far more concerned with whether their degree will be a ticket to a high paying job after graduation. Even though students in our two genera tions have many differences, they also have some great similarities. I see in my students the same sense of confusion I had about how to get the most out of a college education. But after attending the University of Massa chusetts at Amherst and teaching at the University, I see that many students also suffer from the same affliction that .my peers and I had. Many of them are victimized by a "state school inferiority complex." The symptoms are all too familiar. The students here are told by some, as I was in Massachusetts, that Penn State only offers an inexpensive education, the potential for a good social life and a great football pro gram. Perhaps many feel, as I did years ago, that they had to come to Penn State because they couldn't afford to go to an Ivy League school. As a result, my students lack what I lacked, a sense of self-worth about their educations and a sense of self-confidence. I face these symptoms and battle them on forum what is penn state? an almost weekly basis when talking to my students. In my first year of teaching here a dozen women came into my office for advice about their careers in law. Imagine my horror when they told me that despite their superior qualifications (all had better than 3.5 grade-point averages and more than 650 out of 800 on their Law School Admissions Tests) they all wanted to become parale gals. Why? Because, they told me, they did not feel they would be able to compete with representatives from other schools. After counseling by my wife, who is an attorney, and me, eleven of the twelve went on to do distinguished work in law school the twelfth chose to delay her legal career. Moreover, I am continually dismayed each spring when my graduating seniors express many of the same doubts about how they will fare in competition with students from Ivy League schools. But it turns out that they can equal and often exceed the efforts of those other students. These symptoms are not unique to stu dents. The Newsweek Magazine reporter doing the story on my book asked me,. "If you are so good, why are you teaching at Penn State? Why aren't you teaching at Harvard or someplace like that?" How does one respond to such foolishness? Perhaps by asking, "If you are so good, why don't you write for 'The New Yorker'?" Knowing that you will probably face such insults in the future, if you haven't already, perhaps a few words about my experiences coping with the "Ivy League Syndrome" (a contributing cause of the '"state school infe riority complex") will be useful. The worst day of my life, or so I thought at the time, was as a high school senior on April 15, 1969. On this day, the reporting day for college admissions, I knew that I would not be able to afford to go to an Ivy League school. That meant that I would only be able to go to UMass, where I had applied simply because the application was free. Despite the fact that my high school guidance counselor told me that I was letting down the entire school by not going to an Ivy League college, it turned out to be the best non-decision of my life. UMass had a real strength in political science, especially in constitutional law (which became my major field of interest even though I origi nally intended to go to law school). More over, the sheer size of the university made it possible to partake of a wide diversity of programs that might not be available else where. quickly discovered, however, that UMass had another advantage. Despite its large size, I found the doors to various professors widely open and they were will ing to discuss anything. This sort of personal counseling was indispensable to someone coming from such a small high school. Over time, I developed personal relationships with two professors Dean Alfange Jr. and Sheldon Goldman and they have guided the major steps in my career. Even though I received all these benefits, I was continually haunted that perhaps because . of a lack of money I was not getting as good an education, or as prestigious degree, as I might get else where. When it came time to choose a graduate school the choice came down to two pro grams Harvard's or the University of. Virginia's. Virginia, the state school, had one of the foremost experts in my field of constitutional law. Heniy J. Abraham had already made it clear that I would be able to enjoy the same close working relationship with him that I had with my two advisers at UMass. Virginia was clearly the better place for me to go. So naturally I chose Harvard. Here, finally, was my chance to make up for what I believed to be a lack'of prestige of my undergraduate school and to compensate for what I knew had been an inferior educa tion. 'The real irony is that your reputation does not depend upon the school's so much as the school's reputation depends on you.' I don't mind saying that the choice was an unmitigated disaster. After two weeks there I knew I had made a mistake. There was no close personal attention either for me or, from what I could see, for the undergrad uates. Now I waited in the hall hoping for five minutes of the professor's one office hour a week (if he. was campus at all that year.) The whole experience can be summed up by one story. In one seminar the professor told a story about how the Army had messed up its administration. Knowing everyone in the seminar knew everyone else's background, he commented, "The problem with the Army is that they take the best and bright est boys, like the ones from Harvard Col lege, and they are picking up butts in the street. On the other hand, the real dolts, the intellectual scum of the earth, like the graduates of the University of Massachu setts at Amherst, are placed in the top posts." I decided very quickly that if this was what a prestigious education was all about, I could study elsewhere: And so I ended up at the University of Virginia. Here, I was once again able to enjoy a close working relationship with professors. Furthermore, I was able. to observe undergraduates being treated to the same open-door policy that I had enjoyed at UMass. But most importantly, I was able to dupli cate my experience at UMass by finding two other personal advisers professor Abra ham and Robert J. Harris. These two men took a very nervous student, quite burned by the experience at Harvard, and cared enough to carefully rebuild his confidence so that he could resume a career of study leading to college teaching. One of professor Abraham's kindnesses in that first year was to offer to be co-author of an article with me, a very unusual offer for a young graduate student. It was this article that became the forerunner of the Brandeis- Frankfurter book. Quite frankly, it is be cause of his hours of work with me, and the careful attention of the other three advisers, that I am now in this career. By the time I was launched on this book I had learned my lesson. There were times when eminent scholars told me the idea just wasn't important enough to pursue, or that there just was not enough material to fill a whole book. My solution was to listen closely to my four advisers who were saying that the project was worth doing. Now I am teaching at Penn State. And one of my roles, as I see it, is to keep my students from making the same mistakes I made. I think it took me until I was in graduate school at Virginia to realize the value of the education I had received at the state universities. I knew then that the best day in my life was when I decided to go to the University of Massachusetts. I decided at that time to pursue my teaching career at a state univer sity, if at all possible, in order to re-create for my students some of the experiences I had enjoyed. In that way, I felt I could repay the four advisers who had spent so much time with me. How does one cope with the "Ivy League Syndrome?" How does one conquer forever the "state school inferiority complex" in the face of some people who will always believe that such public institutions are just not worthy? After 13 years of facing these snobbish skeptics I am simply sick and tired of hearing their nonsense. The argument seems to be that the quality of an education is somehow equal to the expense of that education, or the exclusivity of the school. Because some of these schools now cost more than $13,000 a year to attend, and Penn State costs less than three times that ($2,118 for in-state tuition and $2,274 for room and board for a three-term academic year), I guess these pundits would say the education at the other school is three times as good. What it proves to me is that the other school's education is three times as expen sive. The quality of the education a student gets at any school can only partly be attributed to the resources of the school itself its teachers, its library, its administrators and The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Jan. 11 its physical plant. An equal part of the education's quality comes from the individ ual student. What does he or she do to seek out and use the resources of the school, and what is done with the education after grad uation? The real irony is that your reputa tion does not depend upon the school's so much as the school's reputation depends on • you. You cannot go through life feeling you are less well educated than those who have attended exclusive private colleges. If our students feel that they must apologize some how for attending a state school no matter how foolish that view may be they nec essarily diminish other's perceptions of this school in making excuses. Like other types of prejudice, though, this one cannot be beaten by mere argument. It can only be conquered by example your example. What, then, can we do by example to change the views of others? The answer is to change our own perceptions. Don't either undervalue your education or underesti mate the extent of your own ability. You are easily equal to, if not superior to, the best students at every other campus in America. ' I am afraid that just writing this and relating what I have faced over the years isn't going to be enough when you are in situations where others from exclusive schools will be trying to intimidate you. They will try their best to make you feel that you are at an initial disadvantage. During those times, the solution is very simple: Have coofidence in yourself. Know how good you are and what you are capable of • doing. While others are telling you how good they are, you can quietly show them that the game of life is to be played and not de scribed. Your only competition should be not with others but with yourself. Set high standards for your work,and do your best to exceed them. The truth is that Ivy League snobbishness can be useful. Let these people think what they will about the value of their degrees. You can quietly do your work and wait for the opportunity to show your real worth to your employer, your professor or whomever oversees your efforts. When that moment arrives and you do excel, the snobs will have never expected it and you will catch them terribly unpre pared. In the long run, perserverance, will ingness to work and quiet confidence are what will make the difference in the success of your efforts. Justices Brandeis and Frankfurter and all of the other Ivy League alumni are proud of their schools. And they have every right to be. But students in our state universities must be equally proud of their schools and the value of their educations. My charge to you is to join me in launch ing a counter movement. The time has come for more people to be state school chauvin ists. There is a wonderful slogan on this campus: "Be Penn State Proud." I would just expand that a bit to say let's "Be State School Proud." And why not?