opinions editorial opinion Ideas for a general Members of scholarly communities like to discuss who they should be and what direc tions they should follow. That's why they hold conferences. And that's why last year the University conducted two conferences on general education. But those conferences were different from most. The discussion didn't end with the Conferences. Instead, a committee formed to further discuss the challenges and goals of general education and to make proposals for improving it. Now the results are in. And for a change, jawboning has been translated into workable ideas. General education is probably the most esoteric concbpt in education. Basically according to the committee's report —grad tes should be able to communicate, to perceive the world with an international and cross-cultural awareness, and to integrate the relationships between natural and social sciences and the arts and sciences. These ideas are now represented by basic degree requirements. After one wades through the philosophical jargon in the report, one can see some good ideas by the Ad Hoc Group on General Education. Rather than just the University-wide re quirements in general education, the com mittee proposed two tracts one ,University-wide tract and one college-spe :cific tract constructed by each academic college. The colleges of Agriculture and of :Earth and Mineral Sciences volunteered•to be pilots for the program. A proposed advisory committee would ,ieview the college programs. The commit :tee of six faculty members, one student and the vice president for undergraduate stud ies mould also develop new ideas for provid . ing general education. In addition, the committee said colleges -should provide programs, possibly semi . ;pars, that would introduce freshmen to their :colleges and majors. Blurred budgetary Congress is sending President Reagan a message: We don't think your budget priori • ties are in the best interest of this nation. And Congress has backed up that • mes sage with recent votes on Reagan's 1984 budget propbsals for defense and domestic spending. It's about time that Congress stood up to Reagan. Last week, a Republican-dominated Sen ate Budget Committee cut Reagan's pro posed defense buildup in half. Earlier this Week, the same committee approved more than $l2 billion in domestic spending over what Reagan had asked. And on Wednesday, the committee voted - to increase money for a host of education programs, including loans for college stu dents, vocational education, improved tea ching. of mathematics and science and assistance to high schools and colleges. For his first two years in office, Reagan has had his way in the budget process. The results: ever-growing deficits. And yet Rea gan continues to ignore these huge deficits while insisting on building up the military. The threat of enormous budget deficits which will surely destabilize the economy pose a much greater threat to this country than the Soviet menace Reagan is so scared about. The Senate has taken the right approach in this year's budget process they have ignored Reagan's unfair, insensitive and potentially ruinous spending requests. The days when Reagan's budgets passed through both houses of Congress without careful consideration are over. Reagan will have to fight for every cut he proposes and for every new Pentagon toy. t a i g d Collegian Friday, April 15, 1983 (c)1983 Collegian Inc Suzanne M. Cassidy Judith Smith Editor Business Manager The Daily Collegian's editorial opin• lon 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 publlca- Also, seminars, research projects or com prehensive examinations should be re quired for seniors to integrate the knowledge they have acquired. The report proposed methods to reward outstanding students, such as a "Scholars Hall of Fame," and an undergraduate jour nal for research papers and theses. And to address the need for a more scholarly life for students outside the class room, the committee suggested making cultural programs more visible and increas ing financial support for honor and profes sional societies. But for general education to work, the faculty must be commited to it. One often-heard complaint is that faculty members are not rewarded for teaching general education courses. Therefore, the report recommended including a clause in the University's promotion and tenure poli cy' to state that participation in general education is equivalent to participation in specialized activities. AlSo suggested were programs and pro fessional opportunities for general educa tion instructors. Overall the committee stressed the need for adthinistrative support for general edu- Cation. The support must come in the form of words, actions and dollars. The report has been sent to delegates of the general education conferences, who haVe returned their suggestions and com ments to the University president. The president is expected to meet soon with the committee members to discuss those suggestions and then decide what action to take. The University community seems com mited to the idea that a general education is necessary to help graduates meet the needs of a rapidly changing society. However, commitment means nothing unless it is coupled with action. The ad hoc group his taken the first step. vision Reagan had proposed a so-called spend ing freeze on hundreds of domestic pro grams, but the freeze is blatantly unfair, with Reagan's favorite programs receiving more money while housing, education, law enforcement and enviromental programs suffered the deepest cuts.. The House saw through the president's budget screen last month when it passed a Democratic version of the budget one that included $650 million more for federal student aid programs. In the Senate, the budget committee voted to provide $1.7 billion more for education than what Reagan had asked for. The Dem ocrats on the committee had requested even more funding. for education. And the com mittee's recommendations for a 2 percent increase in domestic spending will go to the full Senate later this month. • Last week, the Senate budget committee voted 17-4 to cut Reagan's proposed 10 percent after-inflation defense buildup by 5 percent. The Senate is facing the reality of a $l9O billion deficit in the 1984 budget. And unlike the president, the Senate is not willing to sign a blank check for the Penta gon. Defense spending will still increase in coming years, but not at the astronomical rates Reagan has proposed. In these troubled economic times, the Senate has finally stood up to the president and said no to severe cuts in domestic programs, while the military basks. in bil lions. The defeat of the Reagan budget propo sals in the Senate, coupled with last month's defeat in the House, is a clear sign that Reagan's vision of America's future is not shared by the Congress, or the people. tions, is a separate corporate insti tution from Penn State. Board of Editors Managing Edi tor: Lisa Hill; Editorial Editor: Re nae Hardoby; Assistant Editorial Editor: Marcy Mermel; News Edi tors: Ron Crow, Rosa Eberly, David Medzerian; Sports Editor: Ron Gardner; Associate Sports Editor: Greg Loder; Assistant Sports Edi tors: Liz Kahn, John Severance; Photo Editor: Eric C. Hegedus; As sistant Photo Editor: Paul Chiland; Arts Editor: M. Lee Schneider; As sistant Arts Editor: Ann Fisher; Campus Editor, Dina DeFabo; As sistant Campus Editor: Mary Ste phens; Town Editor: William Scott; Assistant Town Editor: Rebecca Albert; Graphics Editor: Gary Feiss; change Copy Editors: Dana Buccilli, Mark Featherstone, Anne Gallagher, Kathy Munn, John Schlander, Stella Tsai; Weekly Collegian Managing Editor: Brian Bowers; Weekly Colle gian Assistant Managing Editor: Lori Musser. Board of Managers Assistant Business Manager: Mary McCaf frey; Office Manager: Kimberly Fox; Assistant Office Manager: Colleen Waters; Sales Manager: Terri Alvi no; Assistant Sales Manager: Mark Rebhoiz; Layout Coordinator: Ka ren Rader; Creative Director: Randy Rigdon; Marketing Manager: Barry Reichenbaugh; National Ad Man ager: Donna StreletZky; Assistant National Ad Manager: Lynn Mc- Laughlin. reader opinion Qualified? The Penn State Athletic Depart ment has failed to give the University and the community the basketball program it deserves. The hiring of Bruce Parkhill shows that the athlet ic department has based its decision upon factors other than basketball. , Parkhill had a mediocre record at William and Mary of 89-75, which surely couldn't have been the major reason he was hired. Being a local resident and a Penn State alumnus are hardly pertinent qualifications. If the athletic department believes that his local background will help the sagging attendance at home games they are wrong! ! What will put fans in Rec Hall is an outstanding team. Parkhill has stated his beliefs con cerning the integration of academics and athletics, University policy that has long been respected. However, it is rather redundant since Head Foot ball Coach Joe Paterno long ago instilled this quality in the athletic program at University Park. One has to wonder why Penn State didn't take the chance to hire one of the top name coaches who have switched jobs this year, such as Lute Olsen, George Raveling, Abe Lem mons and Frank Arnold. These men are all proven winners and could possibly have improved the basket ball program at Penn State. The athletic department needs to realize that the community wants a program at Penn State that they can be proud of and that can possibly bring home another national championship. Michael C. Strasser, 11th-education Jeffrey J. Swab, 13th-ceramic sci ence and engineering April 12 . Death of the average American The small article didn't take up very much space on the crowded page. It didn't boast a large, bold headline. It didn't have a picture or a special box around it. It was a very ordinary obituary. And probably not too many people noticed it. After all, it didn't flash around the world, transmitted by high-speed AP wires. It was quite an ordinary death. The specifics go something like this: Mr. Herbert 0. Hiller, 87, formerly of 835' Pristley Ave., Lawrence Park, died Thursday at Corry Memorial Hospital. Nothing that would make world capitals shake or financial markets tremble. Yet, Mr. Herbert 0. Hiller, (always Mr. Hiller to me), represented more than himself: He embodied everybody's favorite picture of the "average" American. As his obituary notes, he lived in Lawrence Park all of his life. He worked at the General Electric Company Anne Conners is a 9th-term journalism/English litera for 38 years. He was a member of the Lawrence Park ture major and a member of The Daily Collegian's United Methodist Church, the GE Quarter Century Board of Opinion. THE. MONTH 71-147 ROARED Myopic I do not have the patience to dignify Kelly Fracassa's sophomoric ravings of April 7 (ERA: Can't Legislate Equality) with rebuttal. This I leave to cooler heads with better debating skills. I would like instead to propose a little exercise in comparative se mantics. I invite the readers of The Daily Collegian, along with Fracassa, to reread his column making the follow ing alterations: Substitute the names of Marty King and Stokey Carmi chael for Betty Friedan and Ellie Smeal; replace ERA with Civil Rights Act; wherever you encounter the words men or boys, substitute whites; for women and girls, substi tute the word blacks; replace the words sexism and sex with racism and race and insert white in front of the word employers. And don't forget to sing praise to the competent few who have risen above to prove themselves a credit to their sex - (race). Now let's look at what we have. Are you paying atten tion, Fracassa? It doesn't sound so good, does it? It sounds like poll taxes, literacy tests, Selma and Watts. I submit that if Fracassa held simi lar attitudes toward blacks and civil rights as he does toward women and the ERA, he would not dare to publish his views in print. He would be fully aware that the black community, to put it mildly, would never stand for it. , Well guess what, Fracassa? Wom en won't either. Our patience is wear ing thin with smug little boys who sit holding forth on issues they have neither the experience nor the wits to comprehend. Just tO clue you in, we are struggling for survival in the same wretched economy as everyone else. So to you and your ilk I say "Get AAhdv‘i‘ , ' Le•i‘,o4B-A'A'l4 10 The Daily Collegian back." Because women won't stand for your bird-brained myopia any more. C.A. Wilson State College resident Don't fragment When will all the attention given to , minority recruitment stop? Minority recruitment should not exist, yet alone be expanded. Recruit ment exists at Penn State for keeping enrollment up and attracting qual ified candidates to the University. • Candidates is the key word here. 7, People should be recruited not % 4 whites, not blacks, not hispanics or any other race. The purpose of the Civil Rights movement is to insure proper treatment for everybody in the United States. The utopian world that society now strives for sees no e. color but has every person living together in harmony. 11 Minority recruitment defeats this purpose by giving preferential treat ment to minorities. This singles them out, thereby setting them apart from ' l ' the rest of the community., The calls for more black instruc tors and a better black social life at Penn State help differentiate, not integrate, all races. t Wake up, Pennsylvania! It is time to stop letting the affirmative action mood of the country cloud clear think- ..`1 ing. Minority recruitment may help mi- 11, , norities, but it helps keep society , " fragmented, instead of united. Tony Pityk, 9th-mechanical neering April 13 Club and the GE Retired Employees Association. No, Mr. Hiller didn't discover the cure for cancer or unravel the solution to inflation or paint a great masterpiece. But maybe what he did do is more important. He kept his family together; he loved his wife. He planted rose bushes in his back yard and faithfully trimmed the hedges in his front yard. He served his country in World War I and was a member of the American Legion (Carl Neff Post 571). For 38 years, Mr. Hiller got up in the morning and faithfully went to work. Every Sunday Mr. Hiller could be found in his pew at the. Methodist Church. Once every two years, his front porch got a new coat of paint. He always donated money during the fire company's annual fund drive. He was a good American citizen. But the order, the stability that Mr. Hiller was an intrinsic part of is slowly fading from the American scene. The question is: What's it being replaced with? Who will be the Mr. Hillers of the 21st century? What clubs will the new order belong to? What moral and social web will they entwine themselves in? What will they proudly represent? I know what being an American meant to Mr. Hiller I don't know what it means to our generation. I only know that I'll miss Mr. Hiller. Friday, April 15 / 7 1 I ; ik. ,I ; II Liberty insured by firearm freedom "A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United Statei. "Political power grows from the barrel of a gun." —Mao Tse-Tung, Selected Military Writ ings. Surpassed only by the issues of nuclear power and strategic weapons control, the topic of gun control has evoked more emotional debate, slo gans, name-calling and political maneuvers than anything else in recent years. The right to own firearms is not the right to shoot burglars or to "defend our homes." Conver sely, it seems a little hysterical to suggest that we should melt all our guns into a lump and bury them at sea. The problem is just not that simple. Recently the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on the Constitution, chaired by Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, arrived at some interesting conclusions about the Second Amendment. Most of the following dis cussion was obtained from their report to the Senate. The right of American citizens (except felons, drug addicts and mental patients) to own fire arms is well supported by history, tradition and law. From the dawn of written history, common law has recognized the individual right to keep and bear arms for personal as well as the common defense. Even opponents of private firearm own ership recognize the necessity of these provisions in their time. THE DELI itt• 4 4 Fri & Sat Fred Heide Today at t he Br ewery Happy Hours with 0 4 Terry Whitlock 0 Later TAHOKA FREEWAY Saturday enjoy the music of HEART BREAKER Serving Pepsi• Cola In the colonies the ownership of firearms was more than tradition, it was law. • In 1623, Virginia enacted a resolution that absolutely forbid travel unless the subjects were "well-arMed." Further legislation required the colonists to bring their firearms to church and practice with them en masse on Sundays. • In 1673, Virginia required every householder to own a functioning firearm and if they were too poor to provide it themselves, the government would purchase one for them. • Massachusetts, during its first legislative session, enacted a severe six shilling fine upon any citizen, freeman or indentured servent who failed to equip himself with a firearm in good working order. (Sorry ladies, but women weren't citizens). When the anxious British began to increase troop levels in the colonies, the call went out for the citizens to take up arms in self-defense. During Patrick Henry's impassioned "Give me liberty or give me death" speech he also said, "That a well-regulated militia composed of gen tlemen and freemen is the natural strength and only security of a free government." One of the many arguments against the private ownership of firearms is made from a misinter pretation of the clause "well-regulated militia." Opponents of firearms ownership would have us believe that this militia is an organization of government like the present-day National Guard. The colonists themselves firnily rejected this notion following the revolution. Richard Henry Lee, in his popular pamphlet "Letters from the Federal Farmer to the Republican" stated: "Should one fifth or one eighth part of the people capable of bearing arms be made into a select militia. . . those young and ardent parts of the community, possesed of little or no property, the former .( the militia) will answer all the purposes of an army, while the latter (the community at large) will be defenseless: "The Constitution ought to secure a genuine, and guard against a select militia." Finally, he said, "to preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them." In short Lee believed that a militia, like the SAL I S PLACE LARGE PIZZA if 32oz® COKE 4 , $ . EXPIRES APRIL 30 234-1033 FREE DELIVERY Nosnisismsammi ATTENTION 4th-9th Term COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION STUDENTS Pre-Professional Internship Program Informational Meeting for 1983-1984 Academic Year Tuesday, April 19, 1983 7:oopm 102 Forum Building National Guard, composed of young men with little or no actual stake in the community might act against the interests of the community at large. l'Or those of you who disbelieve Lee's premise, I only have two words: Kent State. Noah Webster, great orator and politician, was attempting to sway the Pennsylvania legislature toward the ratification of the Constitution when he said, "Before a standing army can rule, the , people must be disarmed; as they are in almost every kingdom in Europe "The supreme power in America cannot en force unjust laws by the sword, because the whole body of the people are armed, and consti tute a force superior to any band of regular troops that can be, on any pretense, raised in the United States." The states themselves called fora protection of the private right to own firearms. Here in Pennsylvania delegates proposed, "the people have a right to bear arms for the defense of themselves and their own state, or the United States, or for the Orpose of killing game and no law shall be passed for disarming the people or any of them, unless for crimes committed, or a real danger of public injury from individuals." In my opinion, more than for sport, hunting or any other reason, the freedom to possess fire arms is the final insurance for our civil liberties. This basic right of free men and women to break the contract by which the democratic government rules is placed in jeopardy when the people have no viable means to resist. This is not to say that there exists in this country, at this time, any urgent and specific reason which requires the necessity-of an armed civilian population taking action. The right to keep and' bear arms may have little or no consequence on the quality of life or the liberties that you and I sometimes take for granted, today. Unfortunately, there exists among us no one who can safely foretell what the future holds for us, tomorrow. Eric Ewing is a 12th-term administration of justice major and a sports columnist for The Daily Collegian, reader opinion Good and bad A few pressing issues here. I will address the least important one first. In his letter printed in The Daily Collegian on March 31, Jon Peters charged me with "election bias" and urged that I resign my position as Undergraduate Student Government Elections Commissioner. Well, Jon, here's some good news and some bad news. I will give up my position in a few days, but not at your request only because the election is over. As for the matter of "election bias," I think Peters should realize that it's sort of difficult to express bias witout ex pressing an opinion, and my statement in the March 21 issue of the Collegian contained no personal opin ion, but Merely a painfully obvious fact that one platform in the recent USG presidential election did deal with relevant issues, ones USG could tackle, while the other dealt with issues USG couldn't do anything about. _ _ _ . So, Jon, unless you argue that USG has the funds and/or political clout to raze Old Main and replace it with an MX dense pack, then you should probably do a bit more thinking be fore you submit your next editorial comment to a newspaper. Now, on to more important stuff. You can't have a USG election with out an elections commission. As usual, the people comprising the elec tions commission this year did •an incredible amount of work in publiciz ing and ruuning the election, conduct ing the debates, attracting senatorial candidates; and, as usual, little rec ognition was theirs. Since plastering posters and the like isn't the sort of thing that will bring the Collegian USG beat report er running to do a front page feature, it looks as if this is the only way to give credit where credit is due: To Carin Goodall, assistant head com missioner, who always knew what the •classes start APRIL 24 for the June 4 SAT Aar" • Parents' Orientation Night, April 21 PREP COURSE Ask about SCORE MORE'S comprehensive program, outstanding faculty, small classes, quality facilities all backed by a WRITTEN GUARANTEE!!! e (131 CALL TODAY HAPPY HOURS all week 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. Pitchers of Mixed Drinks The Daily . Collegian Friday, April 15, 1983-11 , rest of us were forgetting; to Hildg Hauver, town commissioner, wife was faced with the seemingly insur mountable task of staffing six town polling locations for 10 hours for each of two days, and accomplished this , feat without almost any problems. To Ellen Bonder, publicity commis sioner, who supplied all the artwork, advertising and other publicity work so vital to this election; to Deirdre Kane, who coordinated the election in all three of East Hall's voting dis tricts; to Craig Riedinger,•fraternity commissioner, who helped greatly with the "dirty work" ( that is, put ting up posters, setting up the election and closing the polls after the election was over); and to Jim Metzgar, de bate commissioner, who, by all counts, handled the two debates flaw lessly and fairly all I can say to all of you is thanks for and congratula tions on a job well done. Special thanks go also the the fine people making up the South Halls Residential Association and its presi dent, Dave Labuskes, who covered the election for us in South Halls with an 11th-hour notice and did all they could to ensure that the election there went smoothly. We owe Labuskes a debt of gratitude. One more thing: When the final tabulations were made, we found that only 5 percent of all town students bothered to vote. Why? I'd like to present a report to USG before the term ends that, in part, describes how to increase voter turnout. If anyone has ideas on how to get more people to vote in the USG elections, please tell me about them. I'd appreciate it. In closing, I'd like to thank, of all people, Jon Peters, who became the first person in history to attack me in a letter to the editor. Maybe the second person will have something legitimate to beef about. James Marra Former USG Elections Commission er • HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORS - SCORE MORE'S 11 r :: : I I CALL collect for a BROCHURE STATE COLLEGE 237-0812