newscope senate hears walker, rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell...

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Senate Hears Walke r, Rules Walker Ad dr esses benate; 'Mi g ht Suspend Inj unction ' Senate A pp roves Changes In Student Conduct Rules The University Senate yesterday approved recommended changes in the wording of Senate Rules W-ll and W-13, both dealing with student conduct and discipline. The changes , presented at yesterday ' s Senate meeting by La urence H. Lattman , professor of geomorphology and chair- man of the Senate Committee on Undergraduate Student Af- fairs , were introduced because of criticism by many faculty an d student groups that Rules W-ll and W-13 were too vague and general. ' A bill proposing the adoption of a Uvo-se . mester plus s um- mer-term calendar was also presented at the meeting. The recommendation was made by the Committee on Resident Instruction and was introduced by the committee ' s chairman , Allen R. Gray, professor of health and physical education. Proposal for Delay The committee proposed that the Senate discuss the recommendations at yesterday ' s meeting but hold off a final vote unt il the June meeting in order "to provide time for faculty, students and all divisions of the University to examine the proposal before action is taken. " After two motions to delay voting until as late as Winter Term 1970 failed , the Senate passed a motion by Lattman to table the bill until the June meeting. Robert J. Scannel. Senate chairman, pointed out that a final vote would not be necessary even then. In discussing the bill , several members , including Joh n J. Coyle, professor of business administration , and Donald H. Ford , dean of the College of Human Development , mentioned the great cost that would be involved in changing the present calendar system. Suggests Deletion In recommending changes for Rules W-ll and W-13, Latt- man ' s committee proposed that the controversial clause which gives the University the power to dismiss students " whose conduct is prejudicial to the good name of the University, " be deleted . Lattman pointed out that this phrase could very well apply even to a halfback who fumbles during a football game. Ru le W-ll also states that no student may be subject to discipline under the general charge of unethical , immoral , dishonest or destructive behavior. All charges against students must cite a s pecific alleged offense or offenses. No Additional Furor Referring to the opposition of many students to the pre- vious wording of Rule W-ll , student member Galen Godby, of Lattman 's Committee, expressed approval of the new recom- mendations. "This resolution will clarify the situation so the furor will not arise again , " he said. Several members pointed out that the bill does not cite a specific court or disciplinary board which would review the cases of students who are charged with an offense. Lattman explained that the- whole disciplinary system is being reviewed by many committees and "there is certain to be change in the s ystem." Organizations Responsible Rule W-13 now reads , "Student organizations shall be held responsible for the good conduct of all persons at all University-related functions under their direction and sponsorship, and for conformance (sic ) to the laws of the municipality Commonwealth and nation. " Lattman said that the student organizations also will be responsible for making an attempt to control outsiders who at- tend their functions and" cause disruption. The Senate also passed a bill introduced by Stanley Wein- traub , professor of English and chairman of the Committee on Research and Graduate Study. The bill calls for the University to review supported research contracts which might place restrictions on researchers in the publication of their results and in selectin g their fields of inquiry.—R.B. —Photo by Glenn Kranxley Walker Addresses Senate UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Eric A. Walker told the Uni versity Senate yesterday that the injunction barring siu dents from massing in Old Main may be lifted. By RHONDA BLANK Collegian Stall Writer University President Eric A. Walker told the University Senate that the Administration is considering lifting the in- junction that ivai issued to break up the Feb. 21 Old Main sit-in. In an address at yesterday 's Senate meeting Walker said. "It now appears probable thflt the emergency of two months ago has passed and that it will not be necessary to use it (the injunction) to maintain calm and orderly discussion, debate , and dissent. " In his speech . Walker also said that because of the many bills currently in the State Senate . "It is almost sure that we won 't have our (slate) ap- propriations by June 30. " "The University will be working on credit . " he said , by borrowing money to meet the needs of the University ' s ex- tended programs, and in- creases in costs and salaries. Walker pointed out that the appropriations bill currently before the Senate "will give us the same amount of money we had last year, " even thoug h the University will be taking on 2,000 more students next year. "1 am worried, but not scared. " he said about the situation. He added t h e U n l versity 's appropriations will depend on the " general tenor of the nation. " what the people and taxpayers are say- ing about the current situation on college campuses. Walker said . "The American Univer sity is troubled, that there are groups who resort to force to enforce their de- mands. " He added that universities must learn to govern themselves if they do not wish to find themselves governed by an outside group. Speaking of the injunctive process used to break up stu- dent demonstrations . Walker said when he proposed the idea to a group of university presi- dents a year ago. they were not ve ry impressed , but now , "this mechanism is getting to be a very popular one: not only with university administrations but with student groups t hemselves. " Walker said the advantage in getting an injunction issued is that "the burden of taking ac- tion is shiltcd from the university to the civil govern- ment. " He said the injunction of Feb. 24 . which was issued to break up the demonstration at Old Main , docs not itself legal- ly penalize those named in the injunction. Only violation of the injunction brings about legal action, he said. Referring to the Special Judiciary Board which he organized to examine the cases of five students who par- ticipated in the Old Main sit-in . Walker said he felt such action was necessary because of the inadequate disciplinary system presently within the University. . - ' Oifenses such as disruption affect the whole University students, faculty, staff , and ad- ministration. It is also the type of offense that docs not involve merely the conduct of the single student or a few of his companions. It involved many students , and offenses such as this result in much more being at stake and therefore I felt they should be adjudicated by all segments of the University t hrough their representatives, " he said. Wa lke r urged the Senate to consider a whole new disciplinary procedure for the Un iversity and to try to work faster to meet student pro- blems. NewScope The World Czechoslovaks Stage Demonst rations PRAGUE More than 2.000 Czechoslovaks, some car- rying American and British flags and others hurling rocks at police, sta ged defiant demonstrations in Pilsen Monday ni ght , 24 years after U.S. forces liberated the city from Nazi Germany. Reports from the western Bohemian city said nearly 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arreste d and three policemen were injured , Czecho- slovak informants said. In Prague , the Communist party newspaper Rude Pravo blamed the disturbance on " criminal elements" fo- menting " anti-state actions. " But accounts from Pilsen indicated participants were mostly students and office and factory workers venting displeasure against the government' s renewed pro-Soviet policies and attempts to minimize the role of the Western Allies in World War II. * North Vietnamese Shell U.S. Bases SAIGON Aggressive North Vietnamese troops shel led three U.S. bases northwest of Saigon yesterday but when t hey tried to overrun one camp they, left their dea d stacked on the battlefield and fled " back into the bamboo jun gle. In trying to overrun a U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division base 65 miles northwest of Saigon , the Nort h Vietnamese ran into point-blank fire from 12 artillery pieces and a storm of metal from helicopter and plane gunships and fighter-bombers. The battle pitted about 900 enemy troops against 300 dug-in cavalrymen, and while the assault broke through the bar bed wire perimeter at several points, the North Vietnamese could not stand the concentrated fire. The Nati on Kennedy Calls Proposed ABM Ineffective WASHINGTON A 344-page study commissioned by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy on the Safeguard antiballistic missile concludes that the system proposed by the Nixon administration " cannot per form effectively the missions suggested for it." "Our principal conclusion is that there is no need for a dec ision to deploy the Sentinel-Safeguard ABM system at th is time," said t he four main authors, Abram Chayes of Har vard Law School and Jerome Wiesner, George Rath- jens and Steven Weinberg of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Kennedy suggested the report in February, before the Safeguard go-ahead was announced by President Nixon. The announced purpose was to give the public and Con- gress the benefit of hearing the nonmilitary side of the argument. * * Joint Chiefs Label ABM "Insurance " WASHINGTON A report by two prominent scien- tists and a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff ca lls the Safeguard antiballistic missile ABM system "in- surance against war." It says, "It ma y well be, in fact , the single most important step the United States can take toward a real and lasting peace at this moment in history." "Ant imissile defense is an essential component in the network of military systems designed to give the Ameri- can people a seamless garment of security in an age of acute danger, " the report says. • • No Punis hment in Store for Puebl o Crew WASHINGTON —• "They have suffered enough" Sec- retar y of the Navy John H. Chafee declared yesterday in overriding the Navy brass to save Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher and two other Pueblo officers from possible punishment because of North Korea ' s seizure of their spy ship. At the same time the Navy' s civilian chief blocked official reprimands against two senior naval officers, in- c luding Rear Adm. Frank L. Johnson , who commanded U.S. nava l forces in Korean-Japanese waters at the time of the incident Jan. 23. 1968. "I make no judgment regarding the guilt or innocence of any of the officers of the offenses alleged against them." the Navy secretary said. Chafee disclosed that a court of inquiry, composed of five admirals, had recommended a general court-martial on five charges for Bucher. * Notre Dame President Views Disruptio n SOUTH BEND, Ind. The Rev. Theodore Hesburgh , University of Notre Dame president , said America' s col- lege students " need better leadership than we or the fac- ulty have been giving them." We need a rebirth of great academic, civic and poli- tical leadershi p—a sharing of these youthful ideals and dreams, whether they' re impossible or not ," Father Hes- bur gh added in an interview. "This might help us remove some of the key problems that underline most of the unrest." ~k * ~k Rocket Firm Pleads Guilty On Charges WASHINGTON The nation ' s leading suop li?r of rocket launchers used on aircraft in Vietnam has pleaded guilty to inflating the costs of a ?14.7-million defense con- tract the firm received in 1966. Alsco Inc. of St. Louis entered the plea Monday in U.S. District Court here. It was indicted by a federal grand jury last August. Th e State Senate Passes Ban on Firearms on Campus HARRISBURG The Senate passed by 41-5 yesterday a bill that would ban , 1 with certain exceptions, firearms on college campuses in the state. The bill , sparked by a recent incident at Cornell Uni- versit y, was sent to the House after four speakers debated its necessit y. "I don 't disagree with the intent of the bill , but I think we' re being stampeded into doing something totall y unnecessary," said Sen. Donald O. Oesterling, D-But ler. "It' s just giving these young people something else to say: ' you ' re picking on us again.'" Oester ling said the state could just utilize already existing laws to handle incidents of guns on campus, like that at Cornell . At t hat Ithaca , N.Y. campus, a group of black militants seized a bui lding and later emerged with shotguns and rifles. Sen. Clarence D. Bell , R-Delaware, chief sponsor of the bill, said existing laws were not strong enou gh in this area. Students Voice Demands at Coll ege WASHINGTON. Pa. Students at Washington & Jefferson College called yesterday for the resignation of W&J President Boyd C. Patterson, saying he was un- responsive to their demands. The students also called for a meeting with the faculty and board of trustees for May 12 and threatened to stay away from classes Thursday if the university didn 't accede to their request. The students' demand came from Mark Summers, student government president, and Robert Sommers, for- mer student government president, at a news conference durin g an orderly demonstration on the campus. Some 300 students gathered in the quandrangle at noon. Several carried si gns. Summers and Sommer said Patterson has blocked all attempts for discussion among the faculty, administration and students. What ' s Inside Col umns, Colu mns, Columns Page 2 Black Arts £ a 3 e >j Challe nge 70 Page 4 Ham Rad io Club Page 5 Walt Garris on Lead s Baseball Page 6 Search for Tight End •. Page 7 Notes , . . Pa 9 e8 TIM Travels to Harnsburg To Lobby for Housing Bill s By DON NAUSS Collegian Staff Writer Three members of Town Independent Men 's Council met yesterday in Harrisburg with Rep. Max Homer (D-Allegheny) to discuss his proposed housing bill. The bill calls for university approval of off-campus housing for health and safety standards , rent controls, and the elimination of discrimination against students. The group which consisted of Rick Wynn . TIM president; Jeff Lobb , TIM vice president, and Dave Rhodes , TIM secretary- treasurer, discussed with Homer the weak- nesses of the bill and the possibility of strengthening it. Main Weakness The main weakness of the bill is the use of the term "undergraduate student ," according to Lobb. "Stated thus, the bill does not provide for the distinction between undergraduate and graduate housing dis- crimination. The council suggested replacing ' undergraduate student ' by the term 'full- time student , ' " he said. The bill was released by the Education Comm ittee this week and is presently on the floor in its second reading. The house will recess this week for elr-tion, however, and will not reconvene until May 26. Because of the recess . TIM will probably postpone a campus-wide referendum on the bill. The referendum is to demonstrate stu- dent support for the bill in the state cap ital and in the University Administration, ac- cording to Rhodes. "The referendum will probably be run after May 26 or the beginning of fall term when the bill will be in the Senate and un- dci stricter opposition . " Wynn said. The group was satisfied with the accom- plishments of the trip, according to Rhodes. "Homer appeared to have a sincere interest in the bill and the students concerned. He indicated he would consider all of our criti- cism and amend the bill if possible," he said. The council also plans to continue dis- cussions with the Administration on the implications of the bill. Several members of TIM mei last week with Charles L. Lewis, vice president for student affairs, in an at- tem pt to find the administration 's react ion to t he bill. Creation of Board "If the bill is passed. TIM would like to see a board created to settle any disputes or violations of the bill , " Lobb said. "The board would hopefull y consist of University officials . TIM representatives and members of the Board of Realtors. The passing of this bill would be another step toward achieving lair leasing practices in State College. " Tickets Go on Sale for Collo quy Vanocur , C app , Clay To Sp eak SANDER VANOC UR NBC Newscaster By LAURA WERT HEIMER Collegian Staff Writer Tickets for thie Rec Hall ap- pearances of Al Capp, Cassius Clay, and Sander Vanocur, the lead speakers for Colloquy . . . The American Dream; Conflict '69, will go on sale today in the Hetzel Un ion Building. A ticket for all three of the performances will be sold to stu- dents, faculty and State College resi dents for two dollars. This will cover admission ¦ to Vanocur, Tuesda y. May 20 at 8 p.m. to Clay, Friday May 23 at 8 p.m., and to Capp, Saturday May 24, at 9 p.m. Tickets to single perform- ances will not be available until a week before Colloquy. They will cost one dollar for each speaker. Sander Vanocur , the nation- ally known television news com- mentator, will present the open- ing address for Colloquy. Van- ocur was a, pioneer in the field of news commentary, and his pro- gram, on the National Broadcast- ing Corporation , is received by mi llions of viewers around the nat ion. Cassius Clay, former World Heavyweight Champion and Mus- lim Minister , is well known for his spectacular and colorful career as a prizefighter. H is innovation of the "Ali Shuffle" and im- promptu poetry, as well as his well-publicized pre-fight witti- cisms, brought him more atten- tion on the national scene than is normally given to top fighters. Clay is currentl y under in- dictment for refusal to serve in the armed forces. His refusal to comply with the draft caused the heavyweight title to be taken from him by the World Boxing Association. Since his conversion to the Muslim religion, he has toure d the country as a Muslim Minister and spoken to church an d local groups as well as col- lege audiences. During a recent falling out with the leadership of the Muslim Church , Clay, who changed his name to Mu hammed Ali while he was a Muslim, gave up his min- istry and began using the name Cassius Clay again. His speech will be the first major address given by a Black Mus lim at Penn State University. After his talk on Friday night . Colloquy will sponsor the firs t round of Oxford style panel dis- cussions with panelists from all over t he country. Clay is expected to appear at the Festival on the HUB lawn Saturday afternoon , where stu - dents and guests will have an op- portunity to meet and hold in- formal discussions about topics of cur rent national and campus in- terest. Al Capp, the cartoonist-cre- ator of Li'l Abner . hps b-—n !o-ig known as a humorist and is re- cently acquiring a considerable reputation on campus as social cr itic and satirist. His talk on Saturday night is expected to be as much satir ical comment on so- ciety as conventional humorous enterta inment. Capp was born in New Haven , Connecticut. His family was poor , and Capp was expelled from three ar t schools for non-payment of tuition. CASSIU S CLAY Former Heav yweight Champ He worked for Associated Press drawing stock cari.-j-is . and later worked as an assistant to Ham Fisher, t he creator of Joe Pa looka. Accor ding, to Capp. he wasn't "the assistant-type kid" and he finally left Fisher, moving to United Feature. He sold his first Li'l Abner stri p to them for S50 a week. It was an instantaneous success, soon appearing in 400 newspapers and earning Capp 52,000 a week. Capp is also a contributor to NBC Radio ' s Monitor weekend program , and lectures before com- munity and professional audiences t hroughout the country. His fame as a lecturer is derived from his abi lity to translate profound in- tellectual concepts into simple contemporary terms, often em- phasizing the humor of situations which on other levels are more serious. For this reason he re- lates well to both university and local audiences. Nineteen diffeient topics have been listed for Colloquy, to ensure dialogue and clash of ideolo ies on most subjects on the contempor- ary scene. The guests, selected for their competence in their own specialty as well as for the var- ious viewpoints they represent, will be distributed among the va rious panel discussions. The topics are: The Rape of Higher Education; Does The Media Mold Mankind?; Sexual Freedom The Old-New Moral- ity ; The Cities Will America' s Sweltering Pot Survive?; Politics '69 The Machined Democracy?; The Draft—Complicity or Resis- tance . . . the Alternatives; The Muddled Middle East—More Than A Local Problem; The Cold War World Now You See It , Now You Don 't; mriusti'v. Military, and the World—The Money Game; The Ssv. 'iMfic Conscience. The New Necessity? . For Black To Be B v.utifui—Mmt White Be Ugly?; 1 > . -u ;»—II" .. ' The College Student Con-o To PotV; Law and Order— The Paper Issue; Student Unrest Have Students Gone Too Far or Haven ' t Schools Gone Far Enough?; Overpopulation The Pi ll . . . preventing People or Producing Problems?; The Right and The Loft—Magnetism At The Polos; Ob=cenity—An Ordering of Loiters ; Pollution—What Do We Breathe When The Air Is Gone? Accordin g to Larry Ruben- stein, Colloquy Chairman , the pane ls will not only present dis- cu ssions between guests, but they will also feature dialogue be- tween speakers and audience. "Colloquy is not merely panels, it is colloquy . . . the continual interaction of minds and ideas." "It' s no secret that we' re in- terested in academic reform . " Ru benstein continued. "The real issue on th is campus is education. That' s the primary interest of all segments of the University, the students, the faculty, and the administration. This is the reason we ex ist—the academic commu- nit y. "I see Colloquy ' s main purpose as bringing together all of the interest in education, bringing it to the forefront. Before anyone actually discusses the particulars of educational policy, we must first cause an attitude change on the part of the students, towards AL CAPP Creator of Lit' Abner a greater interest in their own educat ion. "Colloquy , by providing an opportunity for all segments of the University to sit down and discuss relevant issues, relevant to the nation and to the Univer- sity, and by bringing in people from all over the country to legitimize such discussions, by doing this Colloquy will spark the almost dormant attitude on the part of some segments, and ignite a real educational experience at Penn State. "By lessening the communi- cations gap between students, fac- ult y and administration, by talk- in g as people to people, then we can begin to discuss education on this campus. "Once new channels are built, then we can discuss the reform of education , the establishment of an independent studies program, curriculum reform, weekly panel d iscussions, other specifics. But first we must awaken the urge for education in the students them- selves. I expect Colloquy to hel p with t his tremendously, " Ruben- stein said. piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii miii associated press uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinyj

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Page 1: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

Senate Hears Walke r, RulesWalker Ad dr esses benate;'Mi ght Suspend Inj unction '

Senate App roves ChangesIn Student Conduct Rules

The University Senate yesterday approved recommendedchanges in the wording of Senate Rules W-ll and W-13, bothdealing with student conduct and discipline.

The changes, presented at yesterday's Senate meeting byLaurence H. Lattman, professor of geomorphology and chair-man of the Senate Committee on Undergraduate Student Af-fairs, were introduced because of criticism by many facultyand student groups that Rules W-ll and W-13 were too vagueand general. '

A bill proposing the adoption of a Uvo-se.mester plus sum-mer-term calendar was also presented at the meeting. Therecommendation was made by the Committee on ResidentInstruction and was introduced by the committee's chairman ,Allen R. Gray, professor of health and physical education.

Proposal for DelayThe committee proposed that the Senate discuss the

recommendations at yesterday's meeting but hold off a finalvote unt il the June meeting in order "to provide time forfaculty, students and all divisions of the University to examinethe proposal before action is taken."

After two motions to delay voting until as late as WinterTerm 1970 failed, the Senate passed a motion by Lattman totable the bill until the June meeting. Robert J. Scannel. Senatechairman, pointed out that a final vote would not be necessaryeven then.

In discussing the bill , several members, including Joh n J.Coyle, professor of business administration , and Donald H.Ford, dean of the College of Human Development, mentionedthe great cost that would be involved in changing the presentcalendar system.

Suggests DeletionIn recommending changes for Rules W-ll and W-13, Latt-

man's committee proposed that the controversial clausewhich gives the University the power to dismiss students"whose conduct is prejudicial to the good name of theUniversity," be deleted .

Lattman pointed out that this phrase could very well applyeven to a halfback who fumbles during a football game.

Rule W-ll also states that no student may be subject todiscipline under the general charge of unethical , immoral,dishonest or destructive behavior. All charges against studentsmust cite a specific alleged offense or offenses.

No Additional FurorReferring to the opposition of many students to the pre-

vious wording of Rule W-ll , student member Galen Godby, ofLattman's Committee, expressed approval of the new recom-mendations.

"This resolution will clarify the situation so the furor willnot arise again," he said.

Several members pointed out that the bill does not cite aspecific court or disciplinary board which would review thecases of students who are charged with an offense. Lattmanexplained that the- whole disciplinary system is being reviewedby many committees and "there is certain to be change in thesystem."

Organizations ResponsibleRule W-13 now reads, "Student organizations shall be held

responsible for the good conduct of all persons at allUniversity-related functions under their direction andsponsorship, and for conformance (sic ) to the laws of themunicipality Commonwealth and nation. "

Lattman said that the student organizations also will beresponsible for making an attempt to control outsiders who at-tend their functions and" cause disruption.

The Senate also passed a bill introduced by Stanley Wein-traub, professor of English and chairman of the Committee onResearch and Graduate Study. The bill calls for the Universityto review supported research contracts which might placerestrictions on researchers in the publication of their resultsand in selecting their fields of inquiry.—R.B.

—Photo by Glenn Kranx ley

Walker Addresses SenateUNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Eric A. Walker told the University Senate yesterday that the injunction barring siudents from massing in Old Main may be lifted.

By RHONDA BLANKCollegian Stall Wri ter

Univer sity President Eric A.Walker told the Universit ySenate that the Administrat ionis considering lif t ing the in-junction that ivai issued tobreak up the Feb. 21 Old Mainsit-in.

In an address at yesterday 'sSenate meeting Walker said."It now appears probable th fltthe emergency of two monthsago has passed and that it willnot be necessary to use it ( theinjunction ) to maintain calmand orderly discussion, debate ,and dissent."

In his speech . Walker alsosaid that because of the manybills currently in the StateSenate . "It is almost sure thatwe won 't have our (slate) ap-propriations by June 30."

"The University will beworking on credit ." he said , byborrowing money to meet theneeds of the University 's ex-tended programs, and in-

creases in costs and salaries.Walker pointed out that the

appropriations bill currentlybefore the Senate "will give usthe same amount of money wehad last year," even thoug hthe University will be takingon 2,000 more students nextyear.

"1 am worried, but notscared." he said about thesituation. He added t h eU n l versity 's appropriationswill depend on the "generaltenor of the nation. " what thepeople and taxpayers are say-ing about the current situationon college campuses.

Walker said . "The AmericanUniver sity is troubled, thatthere are groups who resort toforce to enforce their de-mands." He added t h a tuniversities must learn togovern themselves if they donot wish to find themselvesgoverned by an outside group.

Speaking of the injunctiveprocess used to break up stu-dent demonstrations. Walkersaid when he proposed the ideato a group of university presi-dents a year ago. they werenot very impressed , but now,"this mechanism is getting tobe a very popular one: not onlywith university administrationsbut with student g r o u p sthemselves."

Walker said the advantage ingetting an injunction issued isthat "the burden of taking ac-tion is shiltcd from theuniversity to the civil govern-ment." He said the injunctionof Feb. 24. which was issued tobreak up the demonstration atOld Main , docs not itself legal-ly penalize those named in theinjunction. Only violation ofthe injunction brings aboutlegal action, he said.

Referring to the SpecialJudiciary Board which heorganized to examine the casesof five students who par-ticipated in the Old Main sit-in .Walker said he felt such actionwas necessary because of theinadequate disciplinary systemp r e s e n t l y within theUniversity. . -

' Oifenses such as disruptionaffect the whole University —students, faculty, staff , and ad-ministration. It is also the typeof offense that docs not involvemerely the conduct of thesingle student or a few of hiscompanions. It involved manystudents , and offenses such asthis result in much more beingat stake and therefore I feltthey should be adjudicated byall segments of the Universitythrough their representatives,"he said.

Wa lker urged the Senate toconsider a whole n e wdisciplinary procedure for theUn iversity and to try to workfaster to meet student pro-blems.

NewScop eThe World

Czechoslovaks Stage Demonst rationsPRAGUE — More than 2.000 Czechoslovaks, some car-

rying American and British flags and others hurling rocksat police, staged defiant demonstrations in Pilsen Mondaynight, 24 years after U.S. forces liberated the city fromNazi Germany.

Reports from the western Bohemian city said nearly400 police using two water cannons were needed to quellthree separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstratorswere arrested and three policemen were injured , Czecho-slovak informants said.

In Prague, the Communist party newspaper RudePravo blamed the disturbance on "criminal elements" fo-menting "anti-state actions."

But accounts from Pilsen indicated participants weremostly students and office and factory workers ventingdispleasure against the government's renewed pro-Sovietpolicies and attempts to minimize the role of the WesternAllies in World War II.

• * •North Vietnamese Shell U.S. Bases

SAIGON — Aggressive North Vietnamese troopsshelled three U.S. bases northwest of Saigon yesterdaybut when they tried to overrun one camp they, left theirdead stacked on the battlefield and fled "back into thebamboo jungle.

In trying to overrun a U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Divisionbase 65 miles northwest of Saigon, the North Vietnameseran into point-blank fire from 12 artillery pieces and astorm of metal from helicopter and plane gunships andfighter-bombers.

The battle pitted about 900 enemy troops against 300dug-in cavalrymen, and while the assault broke throughthe barbed wire perimeter at several points, the NorthVietnamese could not stand the concentrated fire.

The Nati onKennedy Calls Proposed ABM Ineffective

WASHINGTON — A 344-page study commissioned bySen. Edward M. Kennedy on the Safeguard antiballisticmissile concludes that the system proposed by the Nixonadministration "cannot perform effectively the missionssuggested for it."

"Our principal conclusion is that there is no need fora decision to deploy the Sentinel-Safeguard ABM system atth is time," said the four main authors, Abram Chayes ofHarvard Law School and Jerome Wiesner, George Rath-jens and Steven Weinberg of Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology.

Kennedy suggested the report in February, before theSafeguard go-ahead was announced by President Nixon.The announced purpose was to give the public and Con-gress the benefit of hearing the nonmilitary side of theargument.

• * *Joint Chiefs Label ABM "Insurance "

WASHINGTON — A report by two prominent scien-tists and a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staffcalls the Safeguard antiballistic missile ABM system "in-surance against war."

It says, "It may well be, in fact, the single mostimportant step the United States can take toward a realand lasting peace at this moment in history."

"Antimissile defense is an essential component in thenetwork of military systems designed to give the Ameri-can people a seamless garment of security in an age ofacute danger," the report says.• • •No Punis hment in Store for Puebl o Crew

WASHINGTON —• "They have suffered enough" Sec-retary of the Navy John H. Chafee declared yesterday inoverriding the Navy brass to save Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucherand two other Pueblo officers from possible punishmentbecause of North Korea's seizure of their spy ship.

At the same time the Navy's civilian chief blockedofficial reprimands against two senior naval officers, in-cluding Rear Adm. Frank L. Johnson, who commandedU.S. nava l forces in Korean-Japanese waters at the timeof the incident Jan. 23. 1968.

"I make no judgment regarding the guilt or innocenceof any of the officers of the offenses alleged againstthem." the Navy secretary said.

Chafee disclosed that a court of inquiry, composed offive admirals, had recommended a general court-martialon five charges for Bucher.

• * •Notre Dame President Views Disruptio n

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The Rev. Theodore Hesburgh ,University of Notre Dame president, said America's col-lege students "need better leadership than we or the fac-ulty have been giving them."

We need a rebirth of great academic, civic and poli-tical leadership—a sharing of these youthful ideals anddreams, whether they're impossible or not ," Father Hes-burgh added in an interview. "This might help us removesome of the key problems that underline most of theunrest."

~k * ~kRocket Firm Pleads Guilty On ChargesWASHINGTON — The nation's leading suopli?r of

rocket launchers used on aircraft in Vietnam has pleadedguilty to inflating the costs of a ?14.7-million defense con-tract the firm received in 1966.

Alsco Inc. of St. Louis entered the plea Monday inU.S. District Court here. It was indicted by a federal grandjury last August.

The StateSenate Passes Ban on Firearms on Campus

HARRISBURG — The Senate passed by 41-5 yesterdaya bill that would ban ,1 with certain exceptions, firearms oncollege campuses in the state.

The bill , sparked by a recent incident at Cornell Uni-versity, was sent to the House after four speakers debatedits necessity.

"I don 't disagree with the intent of the bill, but Ithink we're being stampeded into doing something totallyunnecessary," said Sen. Donald O. Oesterling, D-Butler.

"It's just giving these young people something else tosay: 'you're picking on us again.'" Oesterling said thestate could just utilize already existing laws to handleincidents of guns on campus, like that at Cornell. At thatIthaca, N.Y. campus, a group of black militants seized abuilding and later emerged with shotguns and rifles.

Sen. Clarence D. Bell, R-Delaware, chief sponsor of thebill, said existing laws were not strong enough in this area.• • •Students Voice Demands at Coll ege

WASHINGTON. Pa. — Students at Washington &Jefferson College called yesterday for the resignation ofW&J President Boyd C. Patterson, saying he was un-responsive to their demands.

The students also called for a meeting with the facultyand board of trustees for May 12 and threatened to stayaway from classes Thursday if the university didn't accedeto their request.

The students' demand came from Mark Summers,student government president, and Robert Sommers, for-mer student government president, at a news conferencedurin g an orderly demonstration on the campus. Some 300students gathered in the quandrangle at noon. Severalcarried signs.

Summers and Sommer said Patterson has blocked allattempts for discussion among the faculty, administrationand students.

What 's InsideColumns, Columns, Columns Page 2Black Arts £a3e >jChalle nge 70 Page 4Ham Rad io Club Page 5Walt Garris on Lead s Baseball Page 6Search for Tight End • . Page 7Notes , .. Pa9e 8

TIM Travels to HarnsburgTo Lobby for Housing Bills

By DON NAUSSCollegian S t a f f Writer

Three members of Town IndependentMen's Council met yesterday in Harrisburgwith Rep. Max Homer (D-Allegheny) todiscuss his proposed housing bill.

The bill calls for university approvalof off-campus housing for health and safetystandards, rent controls, and the eliminationof discrimination against students.

The group which consisted of RickWynn. TIM president; Jeff Lobb, TIM vicepresident, and Dave Rhodes, TIM secretary-treasurer, discussed with Homer the weak-nesses of the bill and the possibility ofstrengthening it.

Main Weakness

The main weakness of the bill is theuse of the term "undergraduate student ,"according to Lobb. "Stated thus, the billdoes not provide for the distinction betweenundergraduate and graduate housing dis-crimination. The council suggested replacing'undergraduate student' by the term 'full-time student ,' " he said.

The bill was released by the EducationCommittee this week and is presently on thefloor in its second reading. The house willrecess this week for elr-tion, however, andwill not reconvene until May 26.

Because of the recess. TIM will probablypostpone a campus-wide referendum on thebil l . The referendum is to demonstrate stu-dent support for the bi ll in the state capitaland in the University Administration, ac-cording to Rhodes.

"The referendum will probably be runafter May 26 or the beginning of fall termwhen the bill will be in the Senate and un-dci stricter opposition ." Wynn said.

The group was satisfied with the accom-plishments of the trip, according to Rhodes."Homer appeared to have a sincere interestin the bill and the students concerned. Heindicated he would consider all of our criti-cism and amend the bill if possible," hesaid.

The council also plans to continue dis-cussions with the Administrat ion on theimplications of the bill. Several members ofTIM mei last week with Charles L. Lewis,vice president for student affairs, in an at-tempt to find the administration 's react ionto the bill.

Creation of Board"If the bill is passed. TIM would like

to see a board created to settle any disputesor violations of the bill ," Lobb said. "Theboard would hopefull y consist of Universityofficials. TIM representatives and membersof the Board of Realtors. The passing of thisbill would be another step toward achievinglair leasing practices in State College."

Tickets Go on Sale for Collo quyVanocur , Capp , Clay To Speak

SANDER VANOCURNBC Newscaster

By LAURA WERTHEIMERCollegian Sta f f Writer

Tickets for thie Rec Hall ap-pearances of Al Capp, CassiusClay, and Sander Vanocur, thelead speakers for Colloquy . . .The American Dream; Conflict'69, will go on sale today in theHetzel Union Building.

A ticket for all three of theperformances will be sold to stu-dents, faculty and State Collegeresidents for two dollars. This willcover admission ¦ to Vanocur,Tuesday. May 20 at 8 p.m. toClay, Friday May 23 at 8 p.m.,and to Capp, Saturday May 24,at 9 p.m.

Tickets to single perform-ances will not be available untila week before Colloquy. They willcost one dollar for each speaker.

Sander Vanocur, the nation-ally known television news com-mentator, will present the open-ing address for Colloquy. Van-ocur was a, pioneer in the field ofnews commentary, and his pro-gram, on the National Broadcast-ing Corporation, is received by

millions of viewers around thenation.

Cassius Clay, former WorldHeavyweight Champion and Mus-lim Minister, is well known forhis spectacular and colorful careeras a prizefighter. His innovationof the "Ali Shuffle" and im-promptu poetry, as well as hiswell-publicized pre-fight witti-cisms, brought him more atten-tion on the national scene thanis normally given to top fighters.

Clay is currently under in-dictment for refusal to serve inthe armed forces. His refusal tocomply with the draft caused theheavyweight title to be takenfrom him by the World BoxingAssociation. Since his conversionto the Muslim religion, he hastoured the country as a MuslimMinister and spoken to churchand local groups as well as col-lege audiences.

During a recent falling outwith the leadership of the MuslimChurch, Clay, who changed hisname to Muhammed Ali while hewas a Muslim, gave up his min-istry and began using the nameCassius Clay again.

His speech will be the firstmajor address given by a BlackMuslim at Penn State University.After his talk on Friday night .Colloquy will sponsor the firs tround of Oxford style panel dis-cussions with panelists from allover the country.

Clay is expected to appear atthe Festival on the HUB lawnSaturday afternoon , where stu-dents and guests will have an op-portunity to meet and hold in-formal discussions about topics ofcurrent national and campus in-terest.

Al Capp, the cartoonist-cre-ator of Li'l Abner. hp s b -— n !o-igknown as a humorist and is re-cently acquiring a considerablereputation on campus as socialcritic and satirist. His talk onSaturday night is expected to beas much satirical comment on so-ciety as conventional humorousenterta inment.

Capp was born in New Haven ,Connecticut. His family was poor,and Capp was expelled from threeart schools for non-payment oftuition.

CASSIUS CLAYFormer Heav yweight Champ

He worked for AssociatedPress drawing stock cari.-j -is . andlater worked as an assistant toHam Fisher, the creator of JoePa looka.

According, to Capp. he wasn't"the assistant-type kid" and hefinally left Fisher, moving toUnited Feature. He sold his firstLi'l Abner stri p to them for S50a week. It was an instantaneoussuccess, soon appearing in 400newspapers and earning Capp52,000 a week.

Capp is also a contributor toNBC Radio's Monitor weekendprogram , and lectures before com-munity and professional audiencesthroughout the country. His fameas a lecturer is derived from hisability to translate profound in-tellectual concepts into simplecontemporary terms, often em-phasizing the humor of situationswhich on other levels are moreserious. For this reason he re-lates well to both university andlocal audiences.

Nineteen diffeient topics havebeen listed for Colloquy, to ensuredialogue and clash of ideolo ies onmost subjects on the contempor-

ary scene. The guests, selected fortheir competence in their ownspecialty as well as for the var-ious viewpoints they represent,will be distributed among thevarious panel discussions.

The topics are: The Rape ofHigher Education; Does TheMedia Mold Mankind?; SexualFreedom — The Old-New Moral-ity ; The Cities — Will America'sSweltering Pot Survive?; Politics'69 — The Machined Democracy?;The Draft—Complicity or Resis-tance . . . the Alternatives; TheMuddled Middle East—More ThanA Local Problem; The Cold WarWorld — Now You See It, NowYou Don 't;

mriusti'v. Military, and theWorld—The Money Game; TheSsv.'iMfic Conscience. The NewNecessity?. For Black To BeB v.utifui—Mmt White Be Ugly?;1 > .-u ;»—II"..' The College StudentCon-o To PotV; Law and Order—The Paper Issue; Student Unrest—Have Students Gone Too Far orHaven't S c h o o l s Gone FarEnough?; Overpopulation — ThePi ll . . . preventing People orProducing Problems?; The Rightand The Loft—Magnetism At ThePolos; Ob=cenity—An Ordering ofLoiters; Pollution—What Do WeBreathe When The Air Is Gone?

Accordin g to Larry Ruben-stein, Colloquy Chairman , thepanels will not only present dis-cussions between guests, but theywill also feature dialogue be-tween speakers and audience."Colloquy is not merely panels,it is colloquy . . . the continualinteraction of minds and ideas."

"It's no secret that we're in-terested in academic reform."Ru benstein continued. "The realissue on th is campus is education.That's the primary interest of allsegments of the University, thestudents, the faculty, and theadministration. This is the reasonwe exist—the academic commu-nity.

"I see Colloquy's main purposeas bringing together all of theinterest in education, bringing itto the forefront. Before anyoneactually discusses the particularsof educational policy, we mustfirst cause an attitude change onthe part of the students, towards

AL CAPPCreator of Lit' Abner

a greater interest in their owneducat ion.

"Colloquy , by providing anopportunity for all segments ofthe University to sit down anddiscuss relevant issues, relevantto the nation and to the Univer-sity, and by bringing in peoplefrom all over the country tolegitimize such discussions, bydoing this Colloquy will spark thealmost dormant attitude on thepart of some segments, and ignitea real educational experience atPenn State.

"By lessening the communi-cations gap between students, fac-ulty and administration, by talk-in g as people to people, then wecan begin to discuss education onthis campus.

"Once new channels are built,then we can discuss the reformof education, the establishment ofan independent studies program,curriculum reform, weekly paneldiscussions, other specifics. Butfirst we must awaken the urge foreducation in the students them-selves. I expect Colloquy to helpwith this tremendously," Ruben-stein said.

piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii miii associated press uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinyj

Page 2: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

\y ui Tss?~*'A0>*~*

[HIS IS "BEKIND TOANIMALSWEEK

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Sunday's FunniesBy MARC KLEIN

Collegian Assistant City EditorThe Sunday paper sat there on the desk

scattered in its many, sections. It would not belong'until the sponges would come and soakup what they call news. The sponges are stu-dents paying visits to those in the dormitorywho buy the paper every week. The spongesrefuse to buy 'their Town paper because theya s k , "w h a t ' sworth reading in m BBHHHflHnBMH"The only I^H^H^^HHHHthing I'm inter-ested in is thecomics and thesports section."

And this ishow it is everyS u n d a y . Thesponges come in,r e a d throughthe comics andthe sports sec-tion, and go backto their trivialworld of soakingup the sun's rays.Who are thesesponges? S o m e KLEI Nare. from small towns. Others are from thebig city. The one thing they have in com-mon is that they are all at University Park,as far away from what's happening as pos-sible.

The front page of that Sunday paper opensthe door somewhat to an outside world. It is nota pleasant outside world, but life is not as rosyas the third grade teacher pictures it. Oh it isso easy to ignore the front page. Heck, we'reeducated. We're in college. We know all thereis to know.

But what do we know outside of that fiveminute newscast that beckons us to changethe station. What do we know outside ofpolitical science class where we might get asmall glance of a world outside of State Col-lege? Sure we know there is a war in Vietnam.Our draft board keeps reminding us. We'veheard that there are riots on other campuses.Our friends at Cornell , Harvard , Northwestern,Columbia , San Francisco State and Berkeleyhave written to us about them. We've heardthat black people want more rights, but we'renot the ones standing in their way.

We're far away from Philadelphia andPittsburgh . We're in the. safety of a never, neverland where narrow-minded Shylocks extractpennies from us every day as we go marchingalong in our happy ignorance. Students for aDemocratic Society and black student groupsmay be waging a war on other campuses, butnot here. Need we be concerned? Oh we'veheard tell that only one percent of the enroll-ment here is black, but that's because blacksdo not want to come here. That's what we tellourselves.

Why be concerned with urban problemswhile we're at University Park ? Most of us

Successor to The Free Lance , est. ISS7

here have never been in black, neighborhoods —not just passing through in a car but actually inblack houses. We've never experienced a little,half-dressed black child' pulling at our slacksbegging us for pennies which parents can t at-ford to give him.

Oh we've heard that those black peopledon't have any money, yet we've seen thembuy new televisions and new furniture We venever stopped to realize that maybe they, toowould like to share in the so-called Americanaffluences. They just might want to taste a.lit-tle of the better life too. but they can t wait un-til they reach the wonderland of middle classstatus. So they carry that new television into aroom where the paint is scraped off the wallsand th°rc are holes in the ceilings and on thefloor. They will sit and watch that newtelevision psychologically feeling t h ey ye"made it" and in reality knowing they are a lit-tle more in debt.

Why do black students bring guns ontocampus? As we read the Sunday funnies such aquestion never enters our mind. We never stop-ped to think of the many blacks who have beenbeaten on the streets while engaging inpeaceful demonstrations. No, this is front pagenews and we never read it and nobody everwrote to us about it. Why watch beatings in thestreets when Huntley and Brinkley can show usa real war in Southeast Asia every night?

The Kerner Report noted that blacksgraduating from college earn on an average $13more per year than white high schoolgraduates. But we couldn't know that becauseit was on the front page of the newspaper. Allwe've read about is that black baseball playerwho is getting a few thousand dollars more thisyear.

The black college student does not see, amuch brighter future than his friendspitching pennies in the ghettos. Maybe thiscould be the reason he wants to rebel againstsociety. The college represents to him anestablishment of that society, consequently arebellion against the institution of higher learn-ing is imminent.

But we've got our own problems. We haveto find a way to avoid the draft. Every man forhimself. If a riot starts in our city we'll shootthem. If it starts at the University, we'll bringin the police and beat them up. -As long as ourpeaceful solitude at University Park is notdisturbed , to hell with the rest of the world.

It's Sunday night and the paper lies in thetrash. Mostly everyone is familiar with DickTracy's exploits this weekend , but what aboutthe hospital workers in Charleston and the NewYork City high schools and colleges being tornapart by blacks and Puerto Ricans demandingmore rights?

The bull session goes on in the dormitory.The topics are Saturday night dates, this af-ternoon's baseball scores and all kinds of triviathat make up the normal conservations of theeduca ted college student.

The front page screams of misery, but allwe do is reflect the laughter of the Sunday Fun-nies.

Political RetaliationThere are still some unan-

swered questions about the YoungAmericans for Freedom injunction.Comments by YAF members thattheir injunction was necessary havenot given the needed answers.

An unexpected side-effect ofthe injunction fiasco is that it mayhave created additional conflicts inthe already heated relationship be-tween YAF and the Students for aDemocratic Society.

What is not understood is whyYAF felt the need for an injunc-tion when the Administration al-ready possesses one.

YAF's injunction was taken outto prevent students who were pro-testing against military recruiterson campus from interfering withother students' attempts to see therecruiters. It apparently was doneto keep fight s and other violencefrom occurring. According to YAFmembers, it was done to ensure thatany student who wanted to see themilitary recruiters could, without

having to be harassed by the pro-testers.

Yet we are sure that , had eitherof these events occurred , the heavyhand of the Administration wouldhave crashed down upon the dissi-dents in the Hetzel Union Buildingand stopped any disruptions.

YAF leaders seem unable tounderstand that the HUB, althoughbuil t largely by student funds, isstill a University building. Theyfelt that one injunction was notenough, that they had to have an-other one "for good measure."

The YAF injunction was awaste. It served no purpose, and inaddit ion, even if it had served somepurpose, it would have been uselesssince it was served an hour afterthe second and last military recruit-ing protest had started.

The Hetzel Union Board , com-posed of students, faculty and ad-ministrators, governs the runningof the HUB. On Friday morning itset up guidelines to keep the HUBrelatively free of confusion by sta-tioning student monitors in front of

Greek Painters in HUB

the recruiters, and the monitorswere able to prevent confusion infront of the recruiters' tables. Themonitors kept areas of ingress,egress and regress open, not YAF'sabsurd and useless injunction.

Our second question concern-ing YAF's rationale for the injunc-tion is this: if YAF thought therewas due cause for the injunction ,why did it not follow through withlegal procedure and try to have theinjunction made permanent inCentre County Court yesterday?

Because of the fragile rationalewhich YAF has presented to sup-port its injunction , we feel that theinjunction was unadulterated polit-ical retaliation.

It was sought for one reason,and that was to try to "put down"the protesters and SDS. It wassought in the name of freedom, yetthe injunction is a purely repres-sive measure.

Injunctions are not legal de-vices to fool with. Nor should theybe used as a weapon for politicalretaliation.

patPAT

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YOU MEAN. THAT'S IT?

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Some People Painted WindowsBy DAVE NESTOR

Collegian City Ed itorYou can always tell when spring reaches

State College. If there are no other signs, you cantell by the windows of the downtown stores.During spring it is impossible to walk down Col-lege Avenue without being forcibly subjected tothe art work of the Greeks advertising theirSpring Week.

Last Friday they were all busy painting theirwindows, not only downtown, but on the groundfloor of the HUB.

But something elsewas taking place in theHUB last Friday after-noon, something be-sides t h e windowa d o r n m e n t . Therewere near ly 500 peo-ple gathered aroundthe table of the Navyrecruiters. Some ofthem were protestingthe war in Vietnam,and some of them wereprotesting the protest-ers. NESTOR

And some people pain ted windows.

Those who were protesting the war werefighting for something. Those who were protest-ing the protesters were fighting for something else.But both of them were fighting for a thing theyfervently and deeply believe in.

Whether you agree with one side or the other , orfor that matter, neither, is of little consequence. Thefact remains that they were there and they wanted toaccomplish something.

SDS, YAF, left and right , each was try ing tochange the world for what they think to be the better.

Both groups seemed to be willing to listen to whatthe other group, or any interested individual had toj ay. Both groups knew what they wanted to do andwere working toward those ends.

And some people painted windows.

Both conflicting groups realize that there is a worldoutside of Nittany Valley. Both groups know thatthere are problems that must be dealt with, terribleproblems of hunger , war. hate and poverty. Theyrealize that they are part of that outside world eventhough they are isolated here at Penn State. Theyrealize that they must start now if they are to beready when the time comes when they must reallyrun this world.

And some people painted windows.What do the window painters believe in? What do

they know of the outside world? Saturday they had acontest to see who could run to six bars and drink aglass of beer fastest. If you ask any of them, theywill tell you that they did it to raise money forcharity, and they will be the first to tell you how won-derful it was that they did this.

They not only think they are being philanthropic,they think it is great that they should relinquish theirvaluable time to help the poor and downtrodden.

And some people painted windows.This is supposed to be a participatory democracy.

This is supposed to be a country in which each voiceis important and deserves to be listened to.

Some people in the HUB on Friday were trying totake part in the democracy of the nation. Some werevoicing their.dissent at what is going on in the world.Others in the HUB were fighting for their rights thatthey thought were being infringed upon.

Some of the people there were merely curiousonlookers. Some of these were sincerely interested inwhat was going on. trying to decide for themselveswhere the answers lie, be it with SDS, YAF orsomewhere in the middle.

And some people painted windows.Some of the people present in the HUB had no idea

of what was happening 'beyond those windows theywere painting. They -were painting glass, but couldnot see beyond it.

2Jtj? iathj (Enliratatt64 Years of Editorial Freedom

PubVirnSTTuMday through Saturday during Hit Fall, winter and Sprin g Ttrim, and ~fhurs day during tht Surnmirform, by studtnti of Tha Pannsylvanla Statt Unlvanlty. Second dau poito go paid at Stata Colleg o, Pa. 14101.Clreulatlan: i;,5W. ;

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Business Manager Commlttt o on Accurac y and Fair Play: John R. Zlmmorman , Thomas M. Goldtn.

PAGE~ TWO ' ' WEDNESDAY,' MAY~7," 1969

Film CritiqueJane and John—Up Against a Wall

By MARGE COHENCollegian Feature Editor

Sitting in the booth at the Corner, herhair flipping up at her shoulders, Jane Doefingered the straw in the coke while sheremembered her afternoon in the HUB.

John, beside her, across from me, litanother cigarette—and, also thought aboutFriday afternoon's sit-in an d resultant in-junct ion.

The future for the two of them wasbleak—John and Jane Doe. named defend-ants on two injunctions—one against a sit-inat Old Main Feb. 24; the other, against"trouble"—if anything happened—at a sit-inin the HUB Friday afternoon.

Taking a long drag from his cigarette,John answered my question: why is it thatboth of you havenot only partici- ¦> * ¦<•' •¦•¦¦¦ ..-¦¦ j :. w . ¦ 1pated in two pro-test demonstra-tions, but alsoended up as de-fendants a f t e rboth efforts?

"W e 11, it'slike t h i s," hestarted. J a n e,w a t c h i n g himand then me forreaction, was si-lent. "The facists.They're e v e r y -w h e r e . Can teven sit here;om f o r t a b l ywithout thinking MISS COHENthey are infiltrating the booths.

"Anyway, I have to fight them. Theytell me one thing in class, and another in aSenate meeting before their 'esteemed col-leagues,' " he said sarcas'.ically.

"But you still haven't answered myquestion ," I interrupted.

"I'm getting to it ," John said , brushing hishair back across his forehead.

"Old Main was an emotional thing —I agreed with the demands of the Steering Com-mittee (the Steering Committee to Reform theUniversity) so I went there . But then , afterMurphy (Raymond 0. Murphy, dean of stu-dents) blithered his thing about having nopower to tell us anything while Lewis (CharlesL. Lewis, vice president for Student Affa i rs )and the others scurried around like rats in THEOFFICE, I was really insulted — No power toeven ta lk to us? That's too bad ," he said in-dignantly.

Meanwhile, Jane was shaking her head inagreement.

Decided To Stay"So we both decided to stay — no matter

what happened ." she asserted. "It was spiteful ,in ,a way — like when I fight with my parentsand just sit in the living room , looking at them ,making them feel uncomfortable and realizemy feelings."

"But what about the sit-in Friday? Youdon't mean to say that blonde recruiterreminded you of your mother?" I asked.

She smiled. "I wish...but that was different.Like how is John supposed to think about afuture with that damn war against who-knows-who or what when THEY are trying to gethim?"

"Wait a minute," he sa id. "The war — anywar — is wrong; but this one...I doubt if Nixoneven understands it — of course, that's not say-ing too much. But a university is no place tomake people ready for wars — we are supposedto be prepared to live , not to fight forsomething America doesn 't even have.

"It's bad enough we need an army fordefense anyway, but why can't we stay here

and clean up some of the shit that covers thisplace?" he questioned.

"He's right," Jane said. "Not just in theghetto either. I am talking about good old mid-dle-class suburbia. There are so many pro-blems right here — people starving whilesurplus food is burned: children running aroundin streets because schools won't let them inbecause they are black; institutions perpetual:ing moral wrongs against people again becausethey are black or 'different' somehow...."

"Universities could do something — com-munity-based programs, relevant educationalprograms, stimulating experiences," John add-ed. "You tell me what creative or even intellec-tual thing those guys can get into in Wagner —ROTC is provocative?" he laughed. "Shit."

"And now they will probably do something tothose guys who burned cards ." Jane put in.

"When that black boy burned his card ."John said , "all I could think of was that onesong from "Hair" and the line 'I'm not dyin'for no white man.' I don 't blame him."

"What about the injunction , the one YoungAmericans for Freedom got on Friday?" I ask-ed.

Administrators Can't Talk"You called them what?" he grunted. "Ha.

It was bad enough when administrators didn'tknow how to talk , but when other students — orlet's call them that — get an injunction againststudents — what are they trying to do? Makehistory?

"That whole thing was political. YAF andSDS always rub each other; Cooper just had tohave the last word," he said, referring to DougCooper , former YAF chairman.

"But his name was not on the injunction.He was only a spokesman for YAF," I inserted.

"Okay, baby. YOU believe that," heanswered. "But its the same difference. Eventhough anyone can recruit in the HUB, ac-cording to a rule of the University, it is a stu-dent union building.

IBM or the Army?"Only student organizations should be there

— Grange should be the place for planningwhat happens when you graduate — if you gowith IBM or the Army. They should get the hellout of the HUB," he proposed.

"Are either of you members of SDS?" Iasked.

Jane smiled. "Look, some of my sororitysisters were telling me I was crazy enough as itwas to even be at the Old Main sit-in...no. I'mnot in SDS. Neither is John. We are just con-cerned.

"If you could have seen the kids there,"she continued. Sure, some people thought bothplaces were parties; but it's no party. Asdefendants on both injunctions, I think we knowthat.

"But a lot of us are really concerned...andhow else can a so-called minority make itsbeliefs known if not through peacefuldemonstration?" she asked , turning to John.

Reaction at Home"One more question ," I said . "What about

the reaction at home? And , I guess anotherquestion: what's next?"

Jane's expression indicated the heat she isgetting from her family. "They just don't un-derstand ," she said.

"Oh, my folks aren't ecstatic." John said."But they don 't understand either. Only, I'minto a different thing — they may still paysome of my bills , but they know I am my ownperson — you know, they know I am going todo my own thing and I do."

"Okay, so what's next?" I asked again."Well , right now, I am going back to the

HUB," John said, finishing his coke and pickingup the check for the three of us. "ComingJane?"

She nodded. And they both looked at me, asI closed my notebook to join them.

,l BE KIND TO ANIMALS WEEK *15 HALF OVER...

AND NO ONE HAS ASKEDME OUT TO LUNCH! .

Colle gianLetter PolicyThe DiUy Collegian wel-

comes comments on newscove age, edilrriai policy andcampus or non-campus af-fairs. Letters must be type-written, double spared, signedby no more than two personsand no longer than 30 lines.Students' letters should in-clude name, term and majorof the writer. They should beb ought to the C ¦Mcgian of-fice, ci Ssckett, in person soproper identification of thewriter can be mane, althoughnames will be withheld by-e'quest. If letters are re-ceived by mail, Collegian willcon lac! the signer for verifl.cation. The Collegian reservesthe right to fairly se'ect, editan d condense all letters.

I

'Three in the Attic:Commercialism vs. Art

By PAUL SEYDOftCollegian Film Critic

In an article entitled "My, HoW Fast TheyLearn," which appeared in Playboy, May, 1967,Stephen Yafa said he wrote "Three in the Attic,"during his graduate-school days, "out of venemouscontem pt foe all the Hollywood claptrap I'd everseen that presumed to examine the sex life ofyoung Americans and succeeded only in villifyingour lower regions." That's worthy of a heartycheer, until you come to the end of the article,Where Yafa's venomous contempt gives way tobenign endorsement of the Hollywood junkyard.

His screenplay follows a similar path. Itstarts out bold , brash, and wise-cracking only towind up with a climax lifted straight from thelast Rock Hudson-Doris Day executive-suite farce.Watching "Three in the Attic" is like watchingtwo movies: a potentially good one persistentlypokes its head through the bad one that surroundsit. Like an unsuccessful miscarriage, neither sur-vives.

Paxton Quigley, a fraternity man, is, like most(rat men, a grown-up brat: smart, cocky, WASP-ish. really rather dislikable, though in an ap-pealing sort of way, „^especially to women, HhHSH^BHBB^Hwhom he has a knack ¦BH^HB8BB9 aH[9|for seducing. On.; day 'H^HBHK ainnHHhe meets a lively, sen-sitive and very niceblonde named Toby,who falls in love withhim. She really getsto him and leaves himconfused. Meanwhile,a gorgeous black .coedseduces him; then he Bfc" ' ^ £&c «... , ... = .. ....

^makes it with a neu- L " -rotic hippie. He wants ¦*to hang on-. to Toby, SEYDORbut he can't resist the ego-gratifying opportunity,urged by his brothers, to juggle three at once.

Now that's not a bad premise and it could beworked into a modest, unpretentious romance aboutone kind of growing-up experience a young man goesthrough. The theme is sexual; the movement of thestory should be toward his realization that sex alonedoesn't necessarily make an affair satisfying, that itmust work together with something deeper and.morepersonal.

That sounds embarrassingly corny and I'd pro-bably be one of the first to scoff it; but I think ifwe're honest we'll have to admit it's something most,if not all of us, go through in some way or another.What saves "Three in the Attic" from banality at thispoint is the basically realistic, healthy, unpuritan-nical attitude toward sex. (It's also one of the thingsthat raises it several hundred miles above "TheGraduate".') '

The most interesting moment, one that suggest*Yafa was glancing in this direction, comes when Pax-

ton tries to help an abused drunken slut his friendshave brought back to a fraternity party. His thanks isrebuke and humiliation, from them and her. Un-fortunately, the implications aren't followed up,which are that, for Paxton, the experience is aparallel to his relationships with the black and thehippie.

One reason for the failure to develop the scene itYafa 's refusal to abandon the central gimmick: thegirls getting their revenge by locking Paxton in anattic and seducing him twelve hours a day. This alsoexplains why certain crucial scenes — Paxton com-paring the girls' lovemaking techniques; them com-paring his; a reconciliation between him and Tobythat at least hints at the problems of readjustmentthey'll face — don't materialize.

Because Yafa was determined to move his storytoward that attic gimmick, he turned what at thebeginning is a comedic romance into a romanticcomedy. That was fatal , because, although Yafa iscapable of some brilliantly-funny lines, I don't thinkhe's really a comic writer, because he doesn't writein terms of cumulative situations. Both the attic se-quence and the parents' visit are pregnant with ex-plosive humor, but they fizzie.

Elsewhere, in place of organic humor, Yafa in-dulges in clever businesses, like a pipe-smoking deanof women who looks like Robert Taylor. Theimplications are obvious, but Yafa doesn't doanything with them. Instead he turns her into a big-sister type. ("See how cute I am?") That's sellingout; it's "The Graduate" kind of safeness; audienceappeasement.

And so, too, is the stupid foray into happily-ever-after land at the end. For all the touches of truth andartistry in this movie, it just reeks of commercialcompromises. For instance, there is an exchange ofdialogue about the hero's Yamaha that has no otherreason for being there than this: one of American In-ternational's promotion stunts is a series of contestsaround the country in which Yamahas are raffled offwhile the movie is playing nearby. Entrance blanksavailable at the box office. (Note : Before the localTwo-Cycle Shop refused to comply, A.I.'s publicityagent for this part of the country tried to encouragemy editor, Jim Dorris, into publicizing a still fromthe movie showing the hero perched atop his bike,the Yamaha label figuring in prominently. You'll runit straight, of course. Like a human interest item.You understand, don't you?)

This ambivalence between artistic and com-mercial concerns continues throughout, and theresulting tension is what makes "Three in the Attic"so maddening. Everytime Yafa redeems his trashwith a spark of truth , a gleam of somethingwelcomely subversive that might vindicate us all, hedashed them out with another supplicating falsity, anapologetic gesture of appeasement.

Yafa learned fast , all right; he learned how tosurvive in Hollywood. What apparently he didn'tlearn is that the price for survival is usually kitschand schtik in place of art and excellent entertain-ment. Poor Paxton excaped the ordeal in the attic ;it's the screwing he got from Yafa in the front officethat really did him in.

Happy Valley -Peop leEditorial Opinion

i*~

*-r

Page 3: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

ColloquyBB __

may 23-25

Conflict 69

J\eunote p eanerA

—Sander VanocurMay 20 8 p.m

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See A I Three for $2.00

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DUE MAY 16, 1969

First Jazz Bagpipe PlayerTo Appear at Arts Festival

By MIKE WOLKCollegian Staff Writer

Ru fus Harley. firs t and only jazz bagpipeplayer, will appear at 2 p.m. next Wednesday inthe Hetzel Union Building ballroom.

The free concert is part of the Black ArtsFestival , to be sponsored by (he Black StudentUnion next week .

Once Avante-Garde Jazz musicians , suchas John Coltrane became popular. Harley sayshe and other musicians were forced to turn toother instruments.

"After Coltrane and Sonny Rollins brokebig, the rest of us were in a funny place." hesaid. "After they put it through the horn , therewasn 't much any of us could do but get anotherinstrument." he said.

While at the funera l of the late PresidentJoh n F. Kennedy. Harley saw (he Royal WatchBagpipe Players from Scotland. He said theirsound impressed him. and lie decided then totry the bagpipes as a jazz instrument.

The bagpi pes are a close part of t radi t ionalAfrican culture ." said Harley. "I studied theorigin of bagpipes before 1 tried to play them. 1learned that they began in Egypt , which is partof Africa. They were used there a long time-befo re the Scots added some extra pipes andstarted playing." he added.

"So I guess I'm actually playing an instru-ment that has real identity with m> people andtheir culture." Harley said.

Harley and his sidemen oltcn appear forjobs, wearing authentic African garb.

His rhythm section consists of Oliver Col-lins on piano , Billy Abner playing drums andJames Glen on bass.

Many of his compositions are original, andwritten especially for bagpipe expression.

WDFM Schedule

i .05— Music of the Masters, withLinda Flenker

6— News6:05—Aflfr Six. popular music

v/ith Michael wolk7.30— Dateline News, with Si Sidle7:J5—Oatf line Sports7 .50—Comment . . on World

Affairs. The Soviet Prpss Re-vi ew

8—Sound of Folk MusicB.30—Jazz Panorama9— Two on the Aisle. Broadway

music9 30—Smaller . Down "t it<-

Jaw10—News10.05—Symphonic Notebook, with

Robert Specter12—News12.05—Signoff

TOMORROW6.30— Penn State Weekday, rock

with stevp Lueckel9 - 30—Sicinoft

Harley also favors baspipe interpretations olcurrent popular son^s by other composers.

Harley "s material docs not neglect hisability to play tenor sax and flute. Bagp ipenumbers arc often preceded by an introductionon one of these instruments.

Harluy 's first set of bagp ipes was purchas-ed at a pau nshop in Philadelphia for S120. It isthe only set he plays or owns today. He is oftenquestioned about the all-black coloring of thesot . since most bagpipe s are brightly colored,and have scotch plaid bags- His standardanswer to such a question is. "I had these blackones made special ."

Two of Harlry 's albums "Scotch Plaid, "and "Bagpipe Blues .'* are available on themarket . Both album* feature original andadapted compositions for bagpipe, tenor saxand riutc and employ a bagp i pe fingering styleinvented by Harle> . ,

A . th i rd album . "Tribute to Courage .* isforthcoming It features compositions writtenfor 'boscr Mohammud All and John Coltrane.

"The music on this album expresses theshuf f le and trouble of being black ." Har le>

When he fJa?./ . Hnrlcy sj a z z musician *

"None of llnil l liousht 1 wsaid.

Even worseings ,tl cl 'ibs heIhousht I \ \n « cthat no one eve

He ha «. anincluding The 1career was anFestival in IMGon national tele

first began using bagpipes lorsaid he was shunned by other

thorn would play wi th me. The;-was crazy, using bagpipes ," he

ic was his inabil i ty to get book-ie added. "The owners mutt havecrazy too. It was just somethingcr heard of before."opearec! on national televi sion .Tonight Show. A highlight of hi si appearance at the Berlin Jazz!G . At that lime he also appearedevision programs m Germany.

DAILY COLLEGIANCLASSIFIED AD

DEADLINE10:30 A.M. Day

Before Publiratior

Black Jews in AmericaDiscussed at Hille i Forum

A little old Jewish manboarded . a bus in the South ,and. upon seating himself , dida double take. There.sittingacross from him was a blackman reading a Y i d d i s hnewspaper.The surprised Jew asked.You aren 't-Jewish are you?"The black man answered ,What. I need that too?"With that anecdote. Hailu

Mosha Paris, assistant to therabbi of the Falasha JewishCommunity of the Bronx . NewYork , summed up t^ e situationof the black Jews of America.

Black Jews, according toPans, are caught in the middleof American society. Theywish to "integrate into theJewish community, " b u t eribecause of their race, they areviewed only as blacks.

Paris discussed "Black Jewsin America" at the HilleiFoundation earlier this week.A Falasha , or. black Jew. hewas born in Ethiopia but cameto this country during theMussolini invasion of h i shomeland.

Moses to SelassieDiscussing the origin of the

black jew. Paris explained thatrelationships between Israel«nd Africa go back to Biblical

times. The relationships rangefrom Moses, who is said tohave married the daughter ofan Egyptian whom he had kill-ed in self-defense to HaileSelassie, who claims to be the613th descendant of KingSolomon.

Judaism is p r e v a l e n tthroughout Africa, even tosome tribes of the Sahararegion . Paris said. The firsttribe of black Jews in NorthAmerica emigrated from theWest Indies. Black slaves pro-bably came into contact withSpanish-Portuguese Jews whosettled there after being ex-pelled from their homelandduring the Inquisition and con-verted to Judaism, he explain-

The black Jewish communityin the continental United Statesoriginated in the 19th centuryand grew during the 1920s, dur-ing the great influx o{European Jews to this country,Paris continued.

. Both Jewish, PoorThe culture of the black

Jews changed as they wereinfluenced by the customs andtraditions of the EuropeanJews, he said. The two groupshad much in common : bothwere Jewish and both were

HAILU MOSHA PARIS

poor.The white Jews, however,

moved into the middle-class,Anglo-Saxon world , while theblack Jews stayed in the ghet-to.

Since the 1920's. Paris saidthe black Jews have "tried to

Wilcox Assails the Structure

make an approach to the whiteJewish community" on threelevels: religious, cultura l andsocial .

He reported that the blackswere not warmly receivedpartly because that , as blacks,their Jewish heritage wasquestioned , but mainly becauseof a basic racial prejudice.

Plight RecognizedGradually though , the white

Jewish community began torecognize . the plight of theblack Jew. he added. Parismentioned several J e w i s horganizations 'that have giventheir attention to aiding theblacks.

An important effort is beingmade to organize the blacks asa community and to includethem in the American Jewishcommunity. Par is said.

"A Jew is a J e wautomatically, if born of aJewish mother, or if he con-verts , regardless of his color,"he noted.

Paris added that since thereare only about 10.000 blackJews in "the United States, theyare still "invisible" i nAmerican society. In order tobe accepted as members of theJewish community, they must

first overcome racial pre-jud ices.

And to do that , he said , "Wehave to . solve the blacksituation in Ameripa i ngeneral."

Paris attended the CityUniversity of New York andYeshiva University, where hehopes to continue his graduate,studies. He worked in theeducation unit of HARYOU(Harlem Youth Unlimited) andis now workin g in the SouthBronx Community.

He returned to Ethiopia for10 months in the summer of19G6, where he taught Englishand world history and madeimportant contacts with theEalasha community in AddisAbbaba.

Ethiopia has the largestblack Jewish community inAfrica.

Before going to Africa , Pariswas part of an educational pro-gram sponsored by the Con-gress of Racial Equality. Healso is associated with theCommission , for SynagogueRelations of the Federation ofJewish Philanthropies a n drecently became a member ofthe American Jewish Com-mittee.— RB

Racist Societ y Kills HumanismBy MARGE COHEN

Collegian Feature EditorWhile Rick Collins introduced him to the class on

American racism Monday night , Preston Wilcox glancedaround the room at the students assembled to hear him.

They in turn watched the tall , slender black man in thebrown turtleneck rise to take the podium as Collins describedhim as an "educator and a student."

But after his speech , the only description heard by thisreporter about Wilcox was "Great! What a man!"

Speaking about the American "system" and the affect ofracism on that system, the New York City educatorrepeatedly referred to an absence of "humanity" in America.

He talked of a struggle around the world "to establish theright of people to be human ," but asserted "that in thissociety, "it is illegal to be a human being."

Others 'Inhuman'"We have been conditioned to believe ourselves to be

human and other people to be inhuman without any evidenceto document it ," Wilcox said.

The society further conditions people through five specificmeans, he added. And, while conditioning, the societyperpetuates a racist attitude that cuts into personal efforts tobe human.

First of all , Wilcox explained , people at the top of thestructure "do not want to let people think for themselves : weare conditioned to depen d on other people to think for us."

Obviously master of his own mind . Wilcox struck out atthis , saying that the idea 'was no more acutely imbeddedanywhere in society than in the institutions for education."

The omission of black studies programs in predominatelywhite universities exemplifies that point. Wilcox continued. A

white institution that has systematically left out this studyfor 25.000 people is confused itself ," he said, referring to PennState.

Wilcox also pointed out that people are not taught to relateto each other on a person-to-person basis , to communicate.They are instead "conditioned to being unable to relate on anequal basis.".resulting in efforts for "brownie points ." to "putpeople down, to think for other people. "

"Most of us are conditioned to qualify our responses toother people," he asserted.

Work on 'Symptoms'Further, he said , people continually fail to deal with

cause of problems; rather, they work on symptoms. Conflictis not viewed as possessing any "positive social use," as "anindicator for potential for change," he added.

Instead , arguments are made over "law and order" andreasons for and possibilities of conflicts are ignored, he said.

The fourth area about which Wilcox spoke centeredaround institutions.

"Institutions tend to serve middle-class America and tooperate against the interests of other groups, particularly poorgroups and black groups." he charged.

"The very operation of institutions produces the very peo-ple I am talking about ," he added.

Must .Become 'Oppressor'"In order to make it in this society, you have to become

an oppressor." Wilcox said. And he continued to assault theeducational hierarchy for denying students an education inhulmane areas as opposed to the military-industrial complex.

Finally, Wilcox said society "teaches its members to beanti-black." This occurs, he said, "as a normal process ofsocialization ."

"It is impossible to be in this country and not be touched

by the cycle of racism , he asserted.Not only docs that cycle affect black-white relationships ,

but it also revolved around one's "frame of reference." ac-cording to Wilcox. The white person who enjoys "white skinsupremacy" is "really afflicted with racism," he said. And.the black person who views himself inferior because of hisblackness is reacting on the basis of his "experience in a whitesociety ."

'Myth of Supremacy'"The myth of white supremacy is indeed a myth." Wilcox

continued. But, he added that he has "no need for people withwhite skins to believe this."

In a true democracy, people should believe what theywant , he explained. If a man is a racist , fine — Wilcox said hedoes not want to \nakc decisions for anyone as long as people,in turn , do not deny him "the right to be a human being."

4

N BLACK ARTS FESTIVALBlack Student Union

of The Pennsy lvania State University

The WORLD'S ONLYJAZZ BAGPIPIST

Rufus 0$Harley fj ljAND HIS COMBO

Wednesday, May 14

2:00 P.M.

HUB Ballroom

Atlantic Recording artist

Rufus Harley plays six

instruments¦ MM

Hear him

raise the roof -us,

Wednesday

NO ADMISSION

WM

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SsKlllliF

PAGE THREE

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TODA Y

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Page 4: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

The Order of Diana Jkand £

The Brothers and Pledges a)of m

TAU KAPPA EPSILON Mwarmly welcome our new T33"LITTLE SISTERS" 2,

Jan Duf f y Natalie Noll „ ^mSusan Duvall Adiienne Soger umLydia Leach Marty Wallace UuLLynn McDonald Janet Yerkes W\

esnou afiEtHEQ aq^• • • TUOJ | {39i|S 3I{I

SSOJ3E 2j[ I93J M3J B

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j jn woAf jV3.it} y ooj j j tnof i • • •sa/fl;s unj g> Mn£ Ryfj ocn-n ag uojsn 99S 'P >Q f i aj j y dyf p > Binddoij spun Smddof s j ou auj ioli ji aq f irn unoR piq • ' • t,upip 9j f t -33iDjsnu n

noli ) aq j j japvui auoaiuos tiuiyi

^* ^Wft"^'),?*ff*"W 1'y« ** -,'.j*"!" i"t*t y-*'* WW,*TWHwawi ^M . .......j . ,j jamilli.L

Don 'f for get

Mother

On her special dayWe wire flowers

Woodring s Flowers117 E. Beaver Ave

Phone: 238-0566

••••••••••••6e«»»e«e«oe««o«*0«*e

JUNIORSPortraits for the 1970 LaVie

E-H May 5-May 31

This secti on will NOTbe taken again next fall

Portraits are taken without appointment from 9 a.m.-12 noonand 1-4 p.m. at the Penn State Photo Shop

(214 E. College Ave.—rear , 237-2345)

Men wear light shirt , dark jacket . he

Women wear jewel neck sweater and no jewelry

There will be a sitting charge of $1.85

E-H will NOT be taken againSO GET IT NOW

next fall

PHOTOGRAPHERS !/ __-X^^= Interested in newspaper photography experience?bS^-a=r The Daily Collegian is interested in supplyingj^JSSjsHB that experience. Photographers are needed for thisrffij^ tj- Sg term. The Summer Collegian needs a Photo Editor,

M([a jHfW\ io be trained this term".

'^SSjr Contact the Collegian Photo Editor20 Sackett Building, or Call: 865-2531

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BLOODBenefit yourself and

your communityROTS Merits or Recognition

Fraternity PlaquesRegistration: Monday, May 5; Friday, May 9

Ground Floor HUB. FUB. Waring

9:30 t.m. • 5:00 p.m.

IOTA ALPHA PIwelcomes

its new initiates

Barbara Altzman Cindy Poff enberger

Barbara Cooperman

Ellen Roth

Susan Tanner

Randi Taub

Ronna Scoratow

Zee Friedman

Susan Goldenberg

Elaine Kornblatt

Colleges TakeCheap Way Out

NEW YORK (IP) — Bayard Rustin, long-time blackcivil rights leader, has said that colleges are taking a cheapway out by agreeing to black students' demands for blackstudies programs.

Instead , he said , colleges need to develop massive—but expensive—remedial projects to improve the scholas-tic level of black students and to enable them to maketheir academic way.

In a question-and-answer session with a reporter onblack unrest on the campus, Rustin said that he deploredviolent protests and that it was humiliating to see collegeadministrators and faculty submitting to blacks with guns.

Submission lo GunsThey wouldn't submit lo "Klu Klux Klansmen coming

on campus with guns," he said , and suggested this in-dicated that the college officials didn't really considerblacks equal to whites.

"They say, well , it 's only blacks behaving that way.They wouldn't tolerate this from white students," he said.

Rustin , who organized the Marc h on Washington in3963 and now is executive director of the A. Philip Ran-dolph Institute, said blacks have made substantial gainsin educational opportunities.

'Tragic' Situation"It is therefore all the more tragic that instead of

taking advantage of the opportunity for learning, theyare reducing the situation to a series of courses that can-not really prepare them for the kind of life they haveto live."

The interview ranged over a spectrum of Rustin 'sviews on campus problems, black militancy and facultyreact ions and concessions.

The questions and answers:Q. How do you view the efforts to establish separate

black studies departments?-A: I am very much opposed to separation under any

circumstances and I'm also opposed to black studies. AndI believe it is a grievous mistake that there has not beenthe study of black culture history, but I'm opposed to itas black studies, because I believe there should be theintegration of black contributions into the American his-torica l forces, into the economic forces, and into otherforces. For example, I don 't think you should study theAmerican Revolution without studying Crispus Attucks.

No SeparationBut in this country, to try to separate the black ex-

perience from the American experience is ridiculous.Q. Do you think that the college militants, black or

white, have a valid protest?A. I think' there are valid reasons for protesting. I

think administrators have been insensitive to the needsof college students. I think that in a society where wehave war, racism and poverty, young people are justifiedin protesting.

But , I'm not interested in protest that is going tostrengthen rightist forces in this country. Nor am I in-terested in infantile leftism.

'Outlandish' ProtestThat's to say protest that is so outlandish that instead

of causing the society to move forward, that it causes thesociety to move in the opposite direction. Now, my criti-cism is not of protest per se, my criticism is of particulartypes of protest.

I could name a few. First of all I'm very much opposedto the use of violence as a means of protest—the appear-ance of youngsters on campuses carrying guns and at-tempting to get decisions while holding guns at the headsof the administrators is first of all very bad for thestudents.

Because they are being systematically taught in col-lege that social change takes place at the point of a gun.This is not true.

Sees HumiliationSecond, it is humiliating to me to see college profes-

sors and presidents so filled with guilt and so masochisticas to submit while they would not submit to Klu KluxKlanists coming on the campus with guns. Why do theysubmit to blacks? Because they really do not believe asyet that blacks are equal. They say, "Well , that's onlyblacks behaving that way." They wouldn't tolerate thisfrom white students.

'Brown Shirtism'Secondly, I'm against what I. call putschism, brown

shirtism. Any time 20 or 30 people seize buildings, whichmust be used by thousands of people, they're beingputschists. In addition, they're being elitist, that is to say,they think they have the right to make the decisions forthousands of people where no vote has been taken.

Who are they that they should do this? So I say vio-lence, elitism, putschism have no place in social protestin this nat ion and certainly not on the campus.

Q. There were reports that black students at Cornellarmed themselves from fear of an imminent attack bysome white students. You mentioned psychological -stressthat the ghetto student is under when he is dropped intoan Ivy League school. How are you going to resolve this?

A. That is a police matter or, better still, a matterfor the university to take care of. If the university cannottake care of it , then it's a police matter.'

The Philadel phiaOrchestra

EUGENE ORMANDY will conduct the PhiladelphiaOrchestra in Rec Hall Saturday night. The concert, part ofthe Artists Series, will begin at 8:30. Tickets for studentsare on sala at the HUB desk. •

Challen ge 70 Conti nuesBy JUDY" KRENZE L

Collegian S t a f f WriterMany women today are com-

bining careers with marriage.This and related issues were

discussed by Holly Sterneckert,assistant coordinator of EastHalls, in the second of a seriesof student-faculty dialogues onmarriage.

Mrs. Sterneckert, speakingon the "Bride and Her Career-What Happens to the Groom?"said . many women wish towork and establish a career.She said they feel that theyhave something to contributeto society and- have to fulfillsome of these needs. "Theywant to put their collegeeducation to use, instead , ofscrubbing floors and washingdiapers all day."

"We nb , longer , live 'in asociety where- the women, haveto stay home all the time andtake care of the house,'.' shecontinued. Since urbanizationand industrialization h a v espread , there seems to besome definite time period whenwomen wish to establish acareer. Traditionally, the wifestayed at home. But now, withso many job opportunitiesmore women are seekingemployment," she said.

Speaking about the groom,Mrs. Sterneckert said she feelsthat it is important for the

DATE

\

Stale College, P

%

groom to think about his work-ing wife and how should shecontribute to the home. If shechooses to work, it should be inagreement with her husband ,she added. •

Mrs. Sterneckert said thewife 's career should be subor-dinate to her husband's. "Thatis, she should go where herhusband goes and then find ajob," she said. "It is alsonecessary for women to thinkof their children and theamount of time they will haveto spend with them.

And now fro m Van Hauion... Paaiport 3(0 Man'a Toll otrlai

"A woman should also thinkof her role as a wife. Her jobshould not monopolize so muchtime that she is too exhaustedto be cheerful toward her hus-band ," Mrs. Sterneckert said.

Two other Challenge '70 pro-grams, sponsored by Pollock-Nittany residence area; theAssociation of Women Studentsand the Men's Residence Coun-cil are scheduled for thismonth.

All programs will begin at 7p.m. in the Pollock UnionBuilding.

New Democrat GroupOrganizes on Campus

A political group, the New Democratic Coalition, has beenformed on campus to reform the structure of the DemocraticParty.

According to Tony Berosh, president of the Penn StateYoung Democrats and member of the coalition, the membersare students and residents of Centre County who were sup-porters of Kennedy, McCarthy and Rockefeller.

The final draft of the NDC constitution was adoptedunanimously by the group.

Robert Slobod, (lOth-political science-Centre Hall) waselected president and Mike Brint (9th-business administrationand economics-Bala Cynwyd) was voted vipe president.

Berosh said the NDC plans to unify such minority groupjas blacks. Indians and agricultural workers into an effectivepolitical force.

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Eugene Ormandy To DirectPhiladelphia Orchestra Here

The Artists Series w i l lpresent t h e PhiladelphiaOrchestra in concert at 8:30p.m. Saturday in Rec Hall.

The program will includeworks by Wagner , Ives andMahler.

Student tickets will be onsale today from 9 a.m. to 5p.m. at the Hetzel Union Build-ing Main Desk. General saleswill begin at 9 a.m. tomorrow.

The orchestra was bom atthe turn of the century when afew people, determined thatPhiladelphia should have- itsown professional symphony,asked German musician FritzScheel to become permanent

conductor. Both Scheel and hissuccessor Carl Pohlig laid firmfoundations for the orchestraof today.

In 1913, at the beginning ofthe orchestra's 13th season,Leopold Stokowski was engag-ed as conductor and remainedw i t h t h e s y m p h o n i corganization for almost a quar-ter of a century.

Eugene Ormandy, who in1966 observed his 3Qth an-niversary on the Philadelphiap o d i u m , b e c a m e t h eorchestra's fourth conductorand will direct Saturday's con-cert.

Ormandy and Stokowski arecredited with having built the

Philadelphia Orchestra into aworld-renowned ensemble. Or-mandy's unique contributionsare his superb judgment inmaintaining a balanced reper-toire for the o r c h c s t r a ' saudiences and a spccial' gift forselecting distinguished, first-desk personnel who blend intot h e t r a d i t i o n of " t h ePhiladelphia Orchestra sound".

The orchestra is one of theworld's most t r a v e l e dsymphonic organizations. Inaddition to having toured ex-tensively throughout t h eUnited States and Canada, ithas played in Europe on threedifferent occasions. In 1966 thePhiladelphians presented theirfirst concerts in Latin Americaduring a five-week. 15,000-miletour. A year later, t h eorchestra made its debut in theFar East.

The Philadelphia Orchestrawas the first to make record-ings under its own name withits own conductor, and it wasthe fi rst major orchestra tobroadcast over a radio networkfor a commercial sponsor. Italso was the first symphonicorganization to be televisednationally and to be featured infilms.

North Halls GovernmentEnacts New Leg islation

By LIN DA McCLAINCollegian Staff Writer

The North Halls Associationof Students launched its careerlast night by passing bills con-;cerning legislation for North iHalls residents and the ac-|quisition of new s p o r t s !equipment for that area. I

NHAS evolved out of theAssociation of Women Studentsand the Men's Residence Coun- 'cil of North Halls area . The or-ganization has taken the place;of the former North HallsCouncil.

NHAS is the f i r s torganization of this tyo'" oncampus. The East and Westresidence areas are working as !similar systems.

NHAS members v o t e d 'unanimously to pass a bill Iwhich stated that all legislationpassed by NHC, AWS and MRCwould continue to be effective 'for the residents of the North [Halls area "unless otherwise jamended o r overridden b yNAHS."

Members approved anotherbill which provides for the Iallocation of money to replace jthe worn-out sports equipmentin North Halls.

NHAS also decided to donatefunds at the appeal of groupssuch as the Black StudentUnion , Colloquy, the S.S. Hopehospital ship and the Un-

dergraduate Student Govern-ment Spring Arts Festival.These funds will be donated af-ter NHAS has paid off theirpresent expenditures.

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Page 5: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

Lolim COLLOQUY

GENERAL MEETING

7:00 P.M. WEDNESDAY

MAY 7th

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Amateur Radio Operators 'Ham It UpBy BETTI RIMER

Coltenian S t a f f WriterOne-hundred fifty Penn State

students have something incommon with Barry Gold-water, the Prince of Sikkimand University President EricA. Walker.

All are amateur r a d i ooperators or "hams." a possi-ble derivation from t h eCockney p r o n u n c i a t io n"hamateur," as they prefer tobe called. Add to the list Gen .Curtis Lemay, Arthur Godfrey,Herbert Hoover Jr ., David Sar-nof f and Laurence Lattman ,and it becomes clear that PennState's hams are in good com-pany.

Penn State's hams are eagerto teach the public more abouttheir hobby and to provide aservice to i n t e r e s te d in-dividuals. With these goals inmind the club will sponsor anexhibition in the Hetzel UnionBuilding Monday t h r o u g hThursday.

Radio Chess GameHighlights of the exhibition

Will be a radio chess game inwhich Penn State's chess clubwill compete with other clubsIn various universities, usingcode. Information on hamradio also will be distributed.

Amateur radio, the art oftwo-way communications andexperimentation , is the onlyhobby provided for by • in-ternational law. Amateur radioenthusiasts number 200,000 inthe United States and another125,000 throughout' the rest ofthe world.

For these hams, amateurradio is a way of life. Fromsimply "ragchewing" to relay-ing crucial emergency " com-munications the life of the hamis an exciting one.

Broadens HorizonsBlair Bates, the club's for-

mer president , and DaveColker, secretary - treasurer,said they consider ham radioand excellent means o fbroadening one's horizons andmeeting people throughout theworld, without having to stepoutside of one's home orstation. Bates contends that hebecame interested in hamradio as "a defense againstsmall-town life."

The f e d e r a l government,recognizing the significant roleof the amateur in the develop-ment of radio as a public ser-vice, has set aside certain fre-quencies d e s i g n a t e d asamateur bands to be used byhams:

The bands are d i v i d e dfurther into AM bands and CWbands. AM designates phonecommunications, which are byVoice, whereas CW (continuouswave) means communicationsby code.

Originally, all amateur radiocommunication was in codeend some of the older hamswere reluctant to recognize thenew phone methods. Moon-bounce, a system by whichsignals are bounced off themoon's surface, also is beingexperimented with by stationsh a v i n g s u f f i c i e n t l ysophisticated equipment.

Anyone can become a ham.All it takes is an interest in

Q <>

radio communications and alicense issued by the FederalCommunications Commission.There are several classes oflicenses according to the ham'sability as tested by .code andwritten examinations.' Once theamateur obtains his license theworld is his — literally. Theham can talk to fellow hamsanywhere on the globe.

Valuable ServiceAmateur radio provides a

valuable public service throughthe Na tional Traffic System.The ham sends p e r s o n a lmessages throu gh a series ofnets until the message reachesa ham who can phone themess3ge to the i n t e n d e drecipient. Hams have sent asmany as 100,000 messages amonth to and from Americanservicemen in V i e t n a mthrough this so-called ThirdParty Traffic system.

There also- are special netsfor emergency use. In the 1964Alaskan earthquake, h a m swere instrumental in relayingthousands of messages be-tween people involved in thedisaster and concerned friendsand relatives. Third PartyTraffic also is possible with 23countries in the W e s t e r nHemisphere plus Israel andLiberia. »

'Phone Patch'Associate 1 Professor o f

Engineering Virgil Neilly, aparticularly enthusiastic hamand the club s licensed trustee,specializes in the "phonepatch," a system by which theham provides a radio link bet-ween two telephones. Neillyhas made it possible for manylonely international students atPenn State to talk to relativesand friends at home.

Many _ hams are contestenthusiasts. The goal of a con-testant is to talk to as manystations as possible in as manydifferent countries as possiblein a given period of time. TheUnited Nations and t h eAlliance for Progress sponsorsuch contests in the interest offurthering international un-derstanding. '

At times, however, the hamis perhaps too dedicated to hisart. as in the case of theArchduke Anton of Austria.The Archduke sat in his castle,busily competing in an in-ternational amateur contestwhile world history was beingmade by the German invasionof Austria, he did not becomeaware of the world-shakingevents until the last minute ofthe contest had ended.

Other hams, known as "rag-chewers," simply like to talkand there is sure to be a cap-tive audience somewhere inthe world. What do they find totalk about? Girls, equipment,the weather — anything at all."If you can't sleep at night, allyou have to do is come down tothe station and call anotherham," Bates said.

Favorite Stories .Every ham has his favorite

story, and Steve Berbick .station director of the PennState club, is no exception.While trying to make a con-tact, Berbick overheard a hamin Montevideo, U r u g u a y ,desperately trying to make

Hammin g It UpIn the Radio Shack

contact with a doctor inRochester, N.Y., to inform thedoctor that his sister, who wasdying of cancer , seemed to bencaring the end. T h eUru guayan operator could notmake contact , so Berbickbroke in and relayed themessage to .the doctor.

Berbick heard no more aboutthe matter until three monthslater when he again heard theUruguayan operator talking,about the incident. The doctorhad flown to Montevideo anddiagnosed the case as one thatmight benefit from cobalttreatments. He immediatelyflew his sister to New Yorkwhere she was given the treat-ments which saved her life andwill enable her to live forseveral more years at least.

Club's Long HistoryBerbick said .of the incident,

"No one knew who relayed theinitial message, but you canimagine the feeling I got whenI heard the results."

The Penn State AmateurRadio Club has had a long andeventful history. In 1912, adisastrous storm focused , at-

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—Collegian Photo by Pierre BalllclniTWO MEMBERS OF the Penn State Ham Radio Clubtwist dials and turn knobs trying to reach India or Russiaor maybe Barry Goldwaler. Amateur radio operation is theonly hobby governed by international law.

tention on the urgent need forwireless

^ methods of com-

munication for industrial pur-poses. Before that time theDepartment of E l e c t r i c a lEngineering had done somework on code transmission.

After the storm, the- Penn-sylvania Railroad asked thedepartment to carry o ninvestigative work in radiotelegraph. The railroad provid-ed a 270-foot tower and a sparktransmitter, the class ci 1912provided the money for thebuilding and the Penn StateClub made history.

First Licensed ClubCall letters 8XE and under

the leadership of G i l b e r tCrossley. a former professor ofelectrical engineering, i tbecame the first licensed clubin the nation.

The club went on to do big-ger and more i m p o r t a n tthings. In 1934. it served as theofficial contact with. AdmiralByrd 's party at L i t t l eAmerica. In 1936, during thedisastrous statewide floods. Uilstation took charge of com-munications. For its work .

which involved being on the airfor 58 hours , the station receiv-ed citations from the Navy andfrom Western Union.

In 1947, the Penn Statestation under the call lettersW3YA-ALMA was the officialmeans of communication withthe Kon-Tiki expedition of sixmen who set out in a raft fromPeru for the P o l y n e s ia nIslands.

Reorganized in 19(15The club t e m p o r a r i l y

dissolved in 1960 but reorganiz-ed in 1965 and received itscharter in February of 1966.Penn State's hams operatefrom the Services Building, aformer storage area for ex-plosives. Originally, the clubhad expected a station in theHUB, but it was s o o ndiscovered that the HUB roof

% Treat your f avorite Mother% f or a delicious dinner£ f rom

was no place for the elaboratesystem of antennas needed.

The club, under t h eleadership of John Portelli ,president , Blair H. Shaffer,vice president, and Dave Col-ker, , secretary-treasurer, isready and willing to relay

.":i-r'--*;'_;Ksjs9,::*r ;-'.!»-*. ¦»»•/ >-.* "<

! YDs Vote 1To Write I T° Addres s Faculty Luncheo n

Legislators |The Penn State Y o u n g

Democrats voted last night towrite to key Congressmen andstate legislators to urge theirsupport of existing and pendinglegislation intended to helpcombat racism.

The legislation includes Bill165 of the P e n n s y l v a n i aGeneral Assembly, w h i c hwould make Martin LutherKing's birthday a s t a t eholiday. Bill 196 provides forthe inclusion of black con-tributors to history in publicschool curriculums.

Other legislation, b o t hnational and state, provides forthe curtailment of the U.S.sugar qu ota to the Union olSouth Africa , continuation ofJob Corps centers ana ap-proval of University PresidentKric A. Walker 's request for SImillion to support a plan forthe recruitment of 500 blackstudents here.

In other business, membersdiscussed a questionnairewhich was sent to potentialgubernatorial candidates todetermine where they stand orvarious issues. The purpose ofthe questionnaire is to compilea summary of the candidates'positions.

personal messages - free of station operates under the callcharge, of course. number WA3HCG . or m ham

Don't be surprised, however, language. Whiskey Alpha., 3by the strange words you Hotel Charley Golf,might hear in the station. The club will send shortHams have a ja rgon all their messages anywhere m the„„ United States or Canada and to

For instance, Penn State 's servicemen overseas.

* • •

'Ham' Radio Club Ad visers

V. E. Nei lly, associate professor of engineering, willdiscuss "Peop le to People via Amateur Radio, or the Wormin Mv Basement" a' t he Faculty Luncheon Club.

the luncheon will be held at 12:15 p.m. Monday inDining Room A of the Hetzel Union Building.

A licensed amateur radio operator for more than _oyears. Neilly serves as trustee of the Penn State AmateurRadio Club's station. WA3HCG, and is a member of theNittany An ateur Ra dio Club and the American RadioRelay League, nat ional organization of "hams.

For the past five years he has made it his specialhobby to bring Latin-American families together via radioand has helped many local residents and students fromSoupi and Centra l America to keep in touch with theirfami lies back home. , , . .- .. •

Such "traffic ," as the hams call this activity is per-mitted only with countries with which the United btateshas special agreements. These include the Latin Americannat ions, Canada, Israel and Liberia .

A member of the University sta ff for the past 20 years,Neilly served in the Department of Continuing Educationin Engineering until 1965, when he joined the staff 01the dean of the College of Engineering.

Students Enth usiastic Over Hobb-Hty.

1

Page 6: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

Si*vP

B>*

The Brothers and Pledgesof

TAU KAPPA EPSILONpr oudly ann ounce

LYDIA LEACH*

Chapter Sweetheart

ȣ*

Colloquy Meetin gFOR HOSTS AND HOSTESSES

FOR ALL THAT HAVE APPLI EDAND

FOR THOSE WHO AR E INTERESTED

THURSDAY, MAY 8th9:00 P.M. HUB READING ROOM

i THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1969 - TOMORROWI THE STRATFORD SUBWAY

p resen ts

GALLERY (PART 7)I AN EXPERIEN CE FOR THE MIND

OR WHATEVER . . .

AT

TEDDI 'S119 S. BURRG'WK

IN BACK OF SEARS

Grinning 'Gator' Leads Off

j

By DAN DONOVANAssistan t Sports Editor

Bill Micsky walked off the mound after aninning in a recent Penn State baseball game,put his glove on the bench and took off his cap.Before he had a chance to sit down he heardthe crack of a bat.

He turned to the field just in time to seeWalt Garrison making the turn around firstbase and the centerfielder picking up a baseball."Damn ," said the hurlcr sarcastically, "is thatGarrison on base again? Can't they ever gethim out-""

Garrison is the kind of batter most pitchersonly like to see swinging when they have aseat on the bench. Rarely does he ever strikeoutand he always seems as if he's running thebaserj aths.

The "Gator" as his teammates call him . hasbeen an extremely effective leadoff batter forthe Lions. He is batting .326 and already hasdriven in ten runs.

Scoring LeaderThe most remarkable statistic about Garri-

son is his ability to get across the plate. In 13games this season, he has managed to score 12times. Last Saturday he seemed to put a hex onthe Temple shortstop. Garrison hit two ground-ers right at him , but both seemed to jump highinto the air just as they approached the Owland bounced out of the grasp of the strainingfielder.

Garrison is not always this lucky, hut suchan incident demonstrate* his uncanny ability toget on base. Unlike Willie Mays, the "Gator"enjoys his leadoff position. "I'm not a powerhitter." the third baseman said. "I just try toget base hits."

Penn State's leadoff hitter uses the samephilosophy of most of the well-known leadoff

WALT GARRISON. . . reacts qmcklv at hot corner

hitters—Matty Alou. Maury Wills, Lou Brock-he just tries to meet the ball.

"I just try to get the bat on the ball ," Gar-rison said. "I rarely try to place it anywhere."

The reason Coach Chuck Medlar has Gar-rison in the No. 1 spot in the lineup is his abilityto avoid strikeouts. "He has a pretty good ideaof the strike zone," the coach said. "He doesn'tswing at bad pitches."

The affable "Gator" is one of the reasonsfor the good spirit on the Lion squad. His con-tinu al bantering with teammates such as TomDaley. Mike Egleston and Gary Manderbachsets the stage for a relaxed, loose atmospherethat gives the team that feeling that playing avarsity sport can be fun.

"We get along pretty well," the smilinginfielder said. "We always have some sort ofkidding going around."

Always SmilingGarrison 's teammates are ., amazed at his

ability to always keep a smile on his face and aneedle in his words. The only thing that seemsto faze the "Gator" is making an out, and thenhe rebounds quickly from the setback.

Only a person with such a disposition couldplay third base. This position is called the .hotcorner for a simple reason—just -about all theballs hit that way are smoking liners.

"It's all reaction ," he said. "At third, eitheryou get to the ball or you don't. You don't havetime to think."

Medlar likes Garrison 's glove. "He has agood pair of hands," the coach said, "and he'canmake the play on the ball hit towards thepitcher."

The 5-10 infielder looks forward to a pro-ductive season with the Lions. "We're going toget good pitching and win a lot of games fromhere on out." he said.

Garrison will try to keep the pace he hasset so far , and he has a pretty good chance tosucceed. Everyone knows it's hard to stop asmiling "Gator."

'?

LaXers Seek 4thAt Lehi gh Today

By WARREN PATTONC&Heffian Sports Writer

After a week layoff from the lacrossewars, the Penn State . LaXers are preparedto do battle with intellectuals of the sport,the Lehigh Engineers. The Lions have alsohad a one year vacuum since they last metthe Engineers on the field of play but thatshould have no telling effect today. Otherthan revenge.

The last time Penn State met Lehigh ,the Staters came out on the minus side of a6-4 score. Though the actual deficit was notlarge, rumor has it that many Engineerssubtlely rubbed it in by replacing theirlacrosse sticks for slide rules midwaythrough the fourth quarter. Though theystick-handled poorly and shot even worse,they calculated well and gave a quick addi-tion to the Lions' loss column for that year.

Outstanding Team"This year, they are having their best

season in years," Lion coach Dick Penceksaid. "They've got a really outstanding at-tack and have been beating everybody bylarge margins. The bad thing about theirattack is that they have good balance—youcan't stop one guy, you've got to stop allthree."

Of course, like most other good teamsthat the Lions face, Lehigh likes to rough itup a little, out on the field. Maybe not somuch like the Syracuse goliaths who wouldrather go through a brick wall than aroundit, but they hurt you just the same. Psncekcompares them to Lebanon Valley—minusthe wooden shoes—in their style of collision.

Injuries Plague LionsOf course, there are other problems to

sweat about, ,too. The Lions are still minusthe services of their solid midfielder DaveMcKeever, who suffered a knee injury threeweeks ago. Pencek saw McKeever runningfor the first time since the injury in practiceyesterday but still expects him to be at top

f inn I nVarc READY OR NOT, here I come, is what Hick F.uf appean¦¦'Off tOVver S j0 j ,e implying as he prepares lo dodge two Syracuse de-

ll* A ** ¦ I lenders. The senior midfielder has had.two games of better

mOVe On Mt taCK ihan three goals for the Lions this year.

speed for only the last two games of theseason. . .,_

As if that's not bad enough, the boysfrom under the shadow of the Lion, whohave already given pounds of flesh to theState College merchants, must prepare tosacrifice their lungs to the Lehigh Alps.

If anyone has never had the opportunityto travel to Lehigh, he has missed a campusof yodelers, St. Bernards and other aspectsof life associated with .the rigors of moun-tain climbing. Sometimes when the landbuckles, emergency measures are installedand midfielders end up passing to attack-men from cable car to cable car. It may notbe conducive to good lacrosse but it givesthe mountain goats a laugh.

Pencek looks for Lehigh to be possiblyrunning his charges into the ground—olabyss, in this affair.

Top Condition"From the people that have seen them,

thev say that Lehigh is one of the bestcrnditioned *eams that we'll run into thisyear," Pencek said. "That means we'll haveto play better than we did against Bucknellor Lebanon Valley if we hope to pull thisone out."

This could be troublesome since theEngineers like to "give it to the other guysbefore the other guys give it to them. "We'llhave to play heads up ball or we're going tohave problems," Pencek surmised.

'Must Game'It won't just be a bloodbath or a bunch

of wild-eyed lacrosse players reaping theirsanguinary revenge today, but this is whatPencek calls a "must game."

"We've got to win this one," he said.Then he added, "It seems funny, but thisyear everyone on any given day appearsto have the ability to knock the other guyoff . Of course, that day hasn't come to usyet," he laughed.

It's not the season for giving yet, but itwould be proper that the Lions institute »period of taking.Major |ML J,1^01*1*14

AMERICAN LEAGUEEast

BaltimoreWashingtonBostonDetroitNew YorkCleveland

MinnesotaOaklandKansas CityChicagoCaliforniaSeattle

Yesterday s ScoresIndians 1. Twins 0White Sox 1. Orioles 0

W. L. Pet20 9 .68916 11 .39314 10 .58311 13 .45811 15 .4234 18 .182

West16 8 .66714 10 .58313 11 .5429 11 .4508 13 .3818 15 .348

Coed Competition

GB

3'.i478

12 <i

2356'iV.2

NATIONAL LEAGUEEast

W. L. Pet. GBChicago 19 9 .679 —Pittsburgh 15 11 .577 3Philadelphia 12 11 .522 4New York 11 14 .440 6!2St. Louis 10 15 .400 7UMontreal 9 15 .375 8

West

At lanta 17 8 .680 —San Fran. 15 10 .600 2Los Angeles 15 11 .577 2lzSan Diego 13 16 .448 fiCincinnati 11 14 .440 6Houston 8 21 .276 11

Yesterday's ScoresCubs 7. Dodgers 1Padres 4. Pirates 2Phillies 5, Astros 4

Eagles Appoint RetzlaffPHILADELPHIA (AP ) —

Pete Retzlaff . a former All-National Football League end,took over yesterday as vicepresident and general managerof the Philadelphia Eagles un-der a three-year contract.

Retzlaff , who played 11 yearsfor the Eagles before retiringtwo reasons ago. was givencomplete authority by newEagles' owner Leonard Tose torebuild the club.

"Mr. Tose has given mecomplete authority, " the 36-\ ear-old Retzlaff told a newsconference. "I'm going to runthings my way. If this babydoesn't grow up. it means Ihaven 't fed it right. It will bemy fault."

1

&

m," -IlllWaV** ***"

Here He Comes AgainSCORING ONE of his 12 runs is Lion third basemanWalt Garrison. The ability of the junior to get on base isone of the reasons the Lion baseball learn has compiled asurprising 8-5 record in early competition.

Tose last week fired JoeKuharich as genera l manager-coach of the Eagles after afive-year record of 28-41-1, withfour losing seasons. Retzlaff'sfirst big job will be to find acoach to succeed Kuharich onthe field.

Wanted WilliamsRetzlaff wanted J e r r y

Williams , the coach of theCalgary Stampeders in theCanadian Football League, butwas refused permission by theCalgary board, of directors tonegotiate with Williams whorpcratly signed a four-yearcontract. The NFL has a work-ing agreement with t h eCanadian League, and Retzlaffindicated he must - l o o k

ISllSllslllil

Collegian Photos by Piarrt Bellic inl

elsewhere for his coach.Leading candidate for the

job is Charley Gauer, a formerColgate star who played threeyears for the Eagles in the1940's and -has been an assis-tant coach or scout for the clubsince 1946. He was an assistant— the offensive coach — of the1960 Eagles ' NFL champions.

Seven CandidatesRetzlaff indicated , however,

he had at least seven good can-didates for the job. Suchnames as Bart Starr and John-ny Unitas were rumored, butRetzlaff indicated he wanted aman with NFL coaching ex-perience.

Retzlaff said he felt theEagles had a great deal , ofpotential despite their 2-12record of 1968. "We have a lotof talent which hasn 't- beendeveloped , players perhaps outof position'. We had an ex-cellent draft. The nucleus isthere. If we can get the rightplayers the potential exists loran immediate turnaround."

Develop Winning AttitudeThe new G.M. said he felt 90

percent of his job was todevelop a new a t t i t ud ethroughout the organization, awinning attitude.

"We had it in 1960," saidRetzlaff who played on theEagles' title team that year."We were the fourth or fifthbest team in the league but wewon because we had that cer-tain attitude."

He promised trades i fnecessary to achieve com-patibility. "You don't have awinning attitude with unhappyball players," he observed.

Offered Coach's JobRetzlaff could have been

general manager-coach, butturned down 'Tose's offer of thefield job. He favored separat-ing the two posts and said hefelt he didn 't have the coachingexperience.

Retzlaff was purchased forthe $100 waiver price by theEagles from the Detroit Lionsin 1956. A fullback at SouthDakota State College, he wasconverted into an end. and in11-years caught 452 passes for7,410 yards. Upon his retire-ment he was the fifth best passreceiver in NFL history. Heplayed in five pro bowl games.

Golfers 4th in East' The Penn State women golfers placed fourth in the

Eastern Championships held last Thursday and Friday.Ten schools competed in the event. Leading the way forthe women was Vivian Brownlee with a 36 hole total of187 for a seventh place finish.

The Lion team of Miss Brownlee and Sally Smithfinished 25 strokes off the pace set by Cornell University.Individual winner of the tourney was Suzanne Raper fromSkidmore College.

• * •The women'slacrosse team lost to East Stroudsburg

State College. 9-6. last Saturday. The loss made the team'srecord 1-2. Leading the scoring was co-captain DebbieSheldon with three goals.

Lynn Davis scored two goals and Shirley Troxler onefor the Lady Lions. Leading the defensive play were HelenKitchel, Sally Manson , and co-captain Wendy Kinnear.

Five goals by East Stroudsburg's Nancy Johnson gavethe visiting team the winning margin.

* * *Two Penn State women made the semifinals of the

Middle States Intercollegiate Tennis Singles champion-ships. Missy Neibel lost to Sally Ride, 6-2. 6-1 after up-setting the No. 1 seed in the tournament. Kathie Mullanwon her match but lost in the finals to the same MissRide, 6-1. 6-1.

Go to bell !

What's the last word in men'sslacks? Flared leg pants, ofcourse! And h.i.s has them.They cling, way down. Thenwithout warning, they flare out.They come in great new fashionfabrics. At prices to be laughedat.'.. fr&m only $6. Soundit out in a pair of BellBottoms by...

&7

Pf- VMEN'S STORESTATE COLLEGE

«f *u Garrison Sparks Baseball Team (<S,&£H ^ZSx&M'&t. w^fow

t?s~

Gets 3-Year Contract

If"M

PLACEMENT INTERVIEW SCHEDULERepresentatives of the following business firms and school district s will be on campus to interview studentsinterested in applying for currently listed positions. Curriculum abbreviati ons 'following the intervi ew daterepresent majors tne firm desires to Interview, and not specific |ob titles. Additional Information on listedpositions is available in Room 12 Basement, Grange Building. An appointment card and personal informationsheet should be submitted approximately ten days prior to the date of each interview desired in GeneralPlacement. Sign-up sheets are available for ' desired interviews in Educationa l Placement.

GENERAL PLACEMENT

Hallmark Cards. May 8, ArtEd . CommArt, FashDes, Fine Art , GraphicArt, IndDesPratt & Whitney, May 8, AeroE, ME, CE (structures only)Trans World Airlines, May 9, Any major for Flight HostessFlorida Agricultural Extension Service, May 21, Most Ag majors, all degrees for

Extension work.

EDUCATIONAL PLACEMENT

South Butler County, Saxonburg, Pennsylvania, May 12Prince George's County Board of Education, Upper Marlboro, Maryland, May 12Harrisburg School District, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, May 14Penn Hills School District, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, May 14Hartford Board of Education, Hartford, Connecticut, May 16Educational Institute of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, May 19Turlock Joint Union Schoui District, Turlock, California, May 20Radnor Township School District, Wayne, Pennsylvania, May 22Marple Newton School District, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, May 30 Use Collegian Classifieds

Page 7: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

a

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IS SHE WOMAN...OR BNIMB1P

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INTRODUCING ERICA GAVIN AS VIXEN. RAJ^RESTRICTED TO ADULT AUDIENCES. IN EASTMAN COLOR. -*«¦ 'PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY RUSS MEYER . AN EVE PRODUCTION.n° persons raKsantfu nam imnunder is l r rai w [ 1 a f ii i l m madmitted k Jg J&fegfoi 7.nn.«.M.tn.nn

sun. mon. tue. 2 Greta Garbo Triumphsmay n-12-13 "Camille ' also "Grand Hotel"wed. thru sat. » "The Good Earth"

may 14-17 and "Go West "coming "Little m "David

may 18-20 Women " Gopperfield"

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"Play it again , Sam."

No, Bogey really

didn't mutterthis famous line.

but who knows

what gems lurk

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Lauren Bacall in

BIG SLEEPTonight & Thur

TWELVETBEES °-| i. & Sat.

237-2U2 6.B.10.12

The Search To Replace KwalickBy DON McKEE

Collegian Sports Editor

When the great lefthander Warren Spahnwas pitching for the Milwaukee Braves,manager Fred Haney called him , "my go tosleep pitcher." The implication was that Haneydidn't need to\ do any worrying or lose anysleep when Spahn was scheduled to take histurn on the mound — Spahn would do all thenecessary thinking and would more than likelydo the job, too.

For the last th ree years Penn State has hadwhat could be termed a "go to sleep" footballplayer. For three straight seasons no one fromcoach Joe Paterno to the managers or thewater boy ever had to worry about tight end.The Lions had Ted Kwalick, twice an All-American and a talent whose feats ' coveredmany inches of type in newspapers andmagazines.

All-American LeavesBut now Kwalick has graduated and will

display his gridiron ability for the San Fran-cisco 49ers of the National Football League.And the State, coaching staff is probably losingsome sleep about finding a replacement.

Before spring practice began. Paterno jok-ed that everybody on the squad was being triedat tight end. Assistant coach Bob Phillips callsit a "toss-up" between two players and asked,"do you have any ideas?" Obviously, Kwalick'stalented shoes are proving very hard to fill.

Toss-up ChoiceA trio of underclassmen .is currently

dueling for the spot. "Right now it's a toss-up

between Jim McCord and Craig Lyle," Phillipssaid , "with Wayne Munson third."

McCord may have an edge since he'splayed one year of varsity ball. Last season, asa soph , the 6-2, 210-pounder was a linebackeruntil suffering an injury. He had what Phillipstermed a "pretty good" scrimmage Saturday.

May Start Soph. Lyle and Munson are both attempting to

break into the starting lineup as sophomoresand both have the size needed to control enemydefensive ends. Lyle is 6-3, 225 and Munsongoes 6-3, 215.

That size will come in handy next fall."We're looking for a blocker first ," Phillipssaid, "and a receiver second. They 'll all catchthe ball. We want to see what else they cando."

Split End in SightSplit end is also in an uncertain state, but

the hole is nothing like the gap created byKwalick's graduation. Leon Angevine has mov-ed on to a job with the Philadelphia Eagles, buta more than adequate replacement appearsready to take over.

During Saturday 's scrimmage a tall ,gangly figure broke loose to make twotouchdown catches. It was Greg Edmonds, asometimes starter last season and the odds-onchoice to win the split end job this year.

"Edmonds had a good scrimmage."Phillips said. "He has good speed, good handsand has developed some moves."

The 6-3, 190-pound junior was used as a

rotating end last season to carry plays in from Phillips is starting lo work his cliargesthe bench. This season he appears ready to toward the May 17 Blue-White game. "We'retake over by himself — and let someone else hoping that this week and next they 'll start torun in plays. ' put things together ." he said .

Backing up Edmonds are senior Wally Phillips has some things to put in orderCirifesi (6-2, 180) and junior Charlie Adams (6- again , too. After' three years of relative rc-lax-0, 185). Cirifesi , a former quarterback and ation he has to worry about tight end. By nextdefensive back , was having a fine spring until fall one of the three candidates will haveslowed by a bad back. He could be back for the emerged as the successor to Kwalick — but itBlue-White game, however. won't be the same.

«"_ • ' iT-__ijjfc-- i- ,,T—T*—:sV!«r . »-*¦!!?" ' -W WmmUUbLvX' H!rT ftr> .MtmtlIff F. JJMtr ^^j T.VBl

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AS FULLBACK Don Abbey (36) stops and irys lo changedirection, junior defensive halfback John Andersen (45)moves in lo make the tackle. Stale has held three informalscrimmages and will work oul again Saturday.

olleglan Photos by Pierre Bellicinl

~ M

K,I O S i ng in direction, junio i_ I T i l * moves in lo makrOf the JaCkie scrimmages and

Eig ht Footballers Out

Celtics Celebrate WinIn NBA ChampionshipBOSTON (AP) — T h e

leprechauns are dancing. RedAucrbach and Bill Russell aresmiling — and the amazingBoston Celtics still a r echamps.

For the 11th time sinceAuerbach pulled off a deal toacquire draft rights to Russell13 years ago, the Celtics reignas kings of the NationalBasketball Association.

Written off as a bunch of oldmen during the regular season,the Celtics came throughagainst the odds once again

Monday night and retainedtheir title with a 108-106 victoryover Los Angeles' frustratedLakers in the seventh anddeciding game of a pressure-packed series.

The Celtics proved againthat the combination of Auer-bach and Russfll , nUi« the '""kof the Shamrock, is just a littletoo much to overcome, xaeLakers should know — they 'velost six straight championshipshowdowns to Boston.

Smart MoveAuerbach made the smartest

move of his career when hetraded Ed Macauley and CliffHagen to St. Louis for the No.1'draft rights to Russell April30. 1956. His second smartestmove was signing Russell afterthe San Francisco A11 -American led the United Statesto an Olympic Gold Medal.

Build- DynastyWith the 6-foot-9 Russell as a

defensive ace revolutionizingthe pro game, Auerbach built adynasty, coaching nine NBAchampionship teams. Then hemoved into the front officefulltime, naming R u s s e l lplayer-coach.

The Celtics were dethronedby the Philadelphia 76ers in1967, but rebounded to regainthe crown the last two seasons.

"We never thought of los-ing," Russell said after theCeltics became the first teamever to lose the first t w ogames of a final series andcome back to win.

Injuries Hit StatePenn State's football team has been hit by a rash of in-

juries, both major and minor, during spring practice. Thelatest on the list of those sidelined are senior split end WallyCirifesi, who has an injured back; junior defensive endsGeorge Kulka and Doug MacArthur, both with knee injuriesan d Bruce Kordic, sophomore tight end who also has a kneeinjury.

It was announced earlier that seniorJohnson and Dave Rakiecki had sufferedSophomore split end Tom Bryant also hasand will miss the rest of spring practice.

Senior running back Charlie Pittman,(cam in rushing for two straight seasons, ispractice for the rest of the spring because ofinjury.

linebackers Petefractured hands,

a fractured hand

who has led thebeing kept out ofa recurring ankle

With financial s e c u r i t ycomes the freedom lo do allmanner of important Ihings.Like sending kids throughcollege. Yes, and like sayingit with ' flowers wheneveryou've a mind lo.

And one of the first be-getters of financial securityis a well-tailored life in-surance program. Not justfor your beneficiaries—bulfor NOW! Because it pro-vides a solid , foundation forany e n d u r i n g financialstructure.

Provident Mutual designsprograms specifically f o rcollege men and women. Sogive us a call. Or stop byour office today and visitwilh one of our trained pro-fessionals. Man does not liveby bread alone, perfectlytrue. But it is wise to havesome baking in the oven.

Mike Sfraile yUniversit y Towers

238-0544

Rugby Club Wins 1stIn its home opener, the Penn

State rugby football teamdefeated t h e PhiladelphiaF—"by Club, 13-3, last Satur-day. ¦

btate led 8-0 at the half , witha try by Dave Brown and apenalty kick and conversion bySandy Kime.

Philadelphia's only score !was on a penalty kick made by IEllery Seitz late in the second ihalf. Seitz was a three yearletterman in football at PennState.

The PSU ruggers came rightback after the "Philadelphia-score with a try by Tim Sharp

and a conversion by Kime toclose the scoring. Penn State'sdefense was anchored byAustralian fullback, Lee Webb.

Saturday, the State Club willhost the Pittsburgh RugbyClub. It may prove lo be abloody grudge game.

PROVIIDFNT It 's ALL HAPPENING NOW at your

MUTUAL ^bs LIFEINSURANCE COMPANY OP PHILADELPHIA

(S)

Km

Udr

my.

CUtl "P

UNIVERSlTYof Ell]Summer Sessions s r

Roo m 15, College HallPhiladelphia , Pennsylvania 19104

To get a good job, get a good education

PuMMim! m a winlic service in cooperation with The AdverrMrfe - Counc sS

OISSI tor **• Hvw Ynfc Timw C«. llaprlntad fey pcrmliiflla *.

Jobs demand it, Employers insist on it. So you'dbetter plan on having what it really takes to get thekind of job you want.

Today, there 's no fooling about schooling. Yo«honestly need a good education to get a good job ...a good paying job . . . a job with a good future.

So, if you're in school now . . . stay there! Leantall you can for as long as you can. If you're out ofschool , there are plent y of ways to get valuabl etraining outside the classroom. For details, visitthe Youth Counsellor at your State EmploymentService. Get a good education . . . you can't getahead without one.

¦ r tt.%:iAoKtT&!aWr^r!tOyfvje«Tj.:|NfRAN$E%

V«V iff* i lOjF *'f^sa&tt ^~Ay-A-y'A-t"**nsck &H£45»-<v,°tt7tt ,'l D"o pouts j*B&''- -''wv**^

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Lion Tight Ends Inexp erienced

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Page 8: NewScope Senate Hears Walker, Rules · 400 police using two water cannons were needed to quell three separate demonstrations. Forty-five demonstrators were arrested and three policemen

OPENING THIS THURSDAY

> -*-*-«3l_J

ARNIVALaward win ning Broadway musical

PENN STATE THESPIANSpresen t ON STAGE

at Schwa b Auditorium

THURSDAY , FRIDAY & SATURDA YMay 8. 9, 10

Curtain Time: Evenings, 8:30; Saturday matinee, 2:30

TICKETS AT HUB DESK

Thursday $1.50 Saturday $2.00

Friday $1.75 Sat. Matinee $1.50

•Bi Sa St Hs 'W Bs Sa Rs R's SH UK S a i r a R s lss RS Rj

You Too Can Be aBig Wheel in the

Jazz Club

Applications tor Executive fc

Board Posi tions Now Available

At the HUB Desk

«i H t« « ( » ii « » i » ( ! r<i » i n a iJi i * B i S »i

COLLOQUY

GENERAL MEETING

7:00 P.M. WEDNESDAY

MAY 7th

HUB READING ROOMt

Whitehall Plaza Apartments424 Waupelani Drive (Phone 238-2600)

FURNISHED

Efficiencies and One & Two Bedroom Apartments

All Students—Undergraduates & GraduatesINVITED

FREE: Direct Private Bus Transportation To& From Campus—Tennis Courts—

Air Conditioning—Gas For Cooking.

Fully Equipped Kitchens • Walk-in Closets • LaundryRooms • Individual Thermostat Controls • Ample

Off-Street Parkin?.

Summer and September Rentals Available.

We invite you to visit our Management and Renting Of-fice in Bldg. H . . . See Mr. Nowak, Resident Manager,who will assist you in your quest for a "Home Away

From Home."

it

*

CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING POLICY

DEADLINE10:30 A.M. Day Before

Publication

RATESFirst Insertion 15 word maximum

$1.2!Each additional consecutiveInsertion 3SEach additional 5 words .15 per day

Cash Basis Only!No Personal Ads!

OFFICE HOURS9:30 A.M. -4:00 P.M.

Monday through Friday

Basement of SackettNorth Wing

'"'" FOR SALE •IOAgVeS, HOAGIEs! "hOAGIES—Regu-ar. Tuna. Ham and Chicken, all 70c.4am & Cheese Sandwich 35c. Dean's¦east "Delivery. Dial 238-8035 or 237-1043—X D.m. to midnights

62 TRIUMPH Bonneville, 650 cc. Ab-solutely A-l. Must sell. S500. 238-6*77.¦964 MG-B — sell, trade tor larger carsf similar value. Call Tom 237-7833 after5:00.

NEW AND used Motorcycles now avail-able at Two Wheels Cycle Shop, 1311E. Colleae Ave. 238-1193.

PART TIME WORKS65 per week—evenings &weekends—3 days a week—have choice, call Mr. Brown238-3631 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.

40 WATT MAGNAVOX Stereo Receiverand matching Turntable, both componentsonly one year old, $175. Will sell separate.237-0651.

COM ING SOON — The Norton SportCommando — crossover pipes andchrome, 750 cc, S. 60 rubber-mounted,horsepower. Cyclerama. 238-5111.

COLLINS 32-S3 plus pwr. S. HallicraftersSX101A Johnson Viking Courier 500 wLinear. Call 238-5210 after 6-00 p.m.

1967 HONDA 305 Scrambler. Excellentcondition, low mileage. 1967 Yamaha 250Scrambler. Call Larry 865-4982.

1968 SUZUKI 500. 2,000 miles, never raced,mint condition, many extras. Must sell.237-2833.

STEREO TAPERECORDER, Pentron,beautiful condition. Two Scuba tanks andregulators. Quite reasonable. Must sell.865-4086.

ZIEGLER Sm-E^ Ltd. CustoirwiiadeSCCA FIAT 5PYDER ROLE BAR $35;1960 Chev. 5175. 238-2710.

'66 PONTIAC TEMPEST, Tdri Hdtp.,white with red interior, OCS-power of aneight with mileage of a 6, original owner,excellent condition. Call- 237*9136.

'61 MERCURY. Rddio, air, good tireRuns very well. $375. 865-2130 or 361371.

GROOVY TRIP on Honda 150 or HarleyM-50. Both in excellent condition. Cal422-8251.

1966*ALLSTATE SCOOTER, 125 Cz 'ttektreasonable offer and it's yours. 865-524!after 6 p.m., Bruce.

1946 HARLEY DAVIDSON—750 cc. Run:good, recent inspection, H8.A, helmet-first S180. Geoff 865-9367.

1962 MGA 1600 MKII. Excellent condllion, recently rebuilt engine, new top,Call Ron 237-0588.

PORTABLE STEREO, like new. MI sell. Call 235-1493 after noon.

1966 HONDA 305 Scrambler. New paipoints, battery, etc. 9,000 nitres Pho

[Rich 865-5824.

; STUDENTS: WE provide prompt Insur-ance for autos, motorcycles, motor-

scooters, travel; valuables, hospitalization.- , Phone Mr. Temeles, 238-6633.I, FREE CYCLE RIDING~7essonsrWe~~fur^,;nish the bikes. Every Sat. afternoon

j Cyclerama, your authorized Suzuki-Nortonjdealer, 1611 N. Atherton. 238-5111.

' SUZUKI — SEE and ride the hot linei In '69. Cyclerama 238-5111.

, COMPLETE CYCLE SERVICE. Prompt. and guaranteed parts and service. Cvcle-,rama, 1611 N. Atherton. 238-5111.

, HONDA CB450K1 late '69 model, 4,000' miles, best offer. Terry 237-2585.

, MANOR" MOBILE HOME 1966. 12'xsT*, furnished, two-bedroom, on lot. Large

j' step-up kitchen, carpeted livingroom.Available beginning summer term. 236-6298.

IT'S ALL happening at Two Wheels CycleShop, 1311 E. College Ave. 238-U93.

'62 AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite S450~

Lo"v^able and sound. Call Bruce 237-0208between 5-6 p.m.

USED T.V. 20" floor model. Excellentreception and condition — S45.00. StevenBottiger 865-7940.

TEMPEST '65. Immaculate condition,I six, stick, black sedan, red interior. S995.238-4616 or 865-7627 ask for Mr. Winter.

DUCAT( 160 cc. Excellent condition. Besti offer over S275. Call Wayne 238-8211.leave name and phone.

FOR" RENT .SUBLET"TuMMER"th"«

"niyn/ two bed-room Apt. Air condr., T.V., pool, bus,utensils. Call 237-1106. ___

,AMBASSADOR BLDG. 2-3 man SummerSublet. Willing to bargain. Great location.Call 237-1093.

COOL AND~~

CHEAP~

Efficiency Apart-, ment for Summer term, 45 second walkifrom campus, air-conditioned, June rentpaid, two (wo)man can live comfortably,

j S216 for the Summer. Call Paul, 238-4235.

'SUMMER SUBLET: 2 bedroom Pent-house w/ideal location, air-conditioned.

,TV cable, furnished, cheap. Call 237-6736.

BARGAIN — SUMMER Sublet, acrossfrom Old Main. Two bedrooms furnished.S350 for Summer. Jim 238-3103.

SUBLET SUMMER: Furnished one manApt. S70/month. Tom 238-9634.SUBLET COOL 2 (wo)man apartment,one block from campus. Utilities and ,June rent paid. Phone 237-6313.

SUMMER SUBLET, Fall option, 2-3 man,Sl35/mo. Close campus, free parking.:Call 237-6868. __ ,

SUMMER SUBLET: Three (wo)maniapartment, \t block from Mail, S310 for;summer term. Air-conditioned. 237-6939. ,

FURNISHED ONE MAN Apt. S70/month.Tom 238-9634.

HH > i! 11 r 11111 iliTiTii 11 n 111111 f i f 1111111£

= 4 Week Special |= To Euro pe =:?SU Faculty/ Staff , Students, Famine-:: N.Y./LONDON JUNE 18 :: LONDON/N.Y. JULY 16 =: $245.00 ADULT :: $122.50 CHILD j¦ —via. TWA Jet :: CALL :: HOWARD KINGSBURY :: 23P-C219 :: o- t : s;o Due no'w :

ll l l l l l l l l l l f f l l l l l l l l ll l l l l l l lfl l l l l l llt l

SUMMER SUBLET: 4-man Apt. Fur-bished, June rent paid, air-conditioned,pool, free bus. Fall option. S90 month.

j 237-4075.

COOL SUMMER, Bluebell S-Bldg., 3' bedrooms, 2 baths, dishwasher, air-conditioned, many extras, cheap. 238-3956.

I GET THE BEST for Summer — Univer-sity Towers, 5th floor, sunny side. Fall

jopfion. Frank 238-0421.

' SUMMER SUBLET - Fall option: Modern:4-6 (wo)man apartment. Air-conditioning,!pool. bus service. Will bargain. 238-2273.! SUMMER SUBLEASE: Large 2 bedroomj furnished apartment. Air-conditioning,1 carpeting, dishwasher, S170.00/month, in-cludes utilities. Call Sue after five 238-[3818.

-SUBLET FOR summer — 3-man, 2-bed-, room Apt., close to campus. Call 237-,3308.

;LIVE IN LUXURY this summer in ~

a1 2 bedroom mansion in beautiful South-igate; reasonable rent, air-conditioning,¦dishwasher, balcony, and many manyj extras. Call 237-0441.

2 - 3 MAN A PT7~WhitehalI. Alr^cond.,T.V., Bus service. $350 for summer term(Fall option). Call 238-1148.

TWO BEDROOM Apt. for summer. 2-3.persons — men, ladies. 2 blocks fromcampus. Furnished. Must see other assets.

[Call 238-2993 after 5.'TWO BEDROOM Apt., summer termonly. Also 12 x 46' Mobile Home; 10 x 50Mobile Home. Both available Summerterm with Fall option. Call Tom 238-6645between 6 & 9 p.m.

1 SUMMER SUBLET, air-conditioned three(3) bedroom, free bus, pool. Great rent poo|, air-cond., S65/mo., summer, fall-reduction. Call 238-0378. option. Ph. 238-5568.SUMMER SUBLET, 3-4 man-woman 2-3 MAN APARTMENT

~for Summer "witri

apartment. Must see to appreciate. Good Fall option. Air-cond., pool, free bus.location. Call Lenny 237-0152. 237-0078.

SUMMER SUBLET: Whitehall 2 bed-room furnished Apt., air-cond., pool,free bus, tennis courts and much more.Reasonable. Call 238-7308.

SUMMER SUBLET, University Towers,three-man, air-conditioning, dishwasher.Willing to deal. 238-7808.

SUMMER SUBLET — 2-man air-con-dltioned apartment. Close to campus andreasonable rent. Call 238-1078.

SUMMER SUBLET. Furnished Efficiency !for two. S152 plus security takes alt. Yearjoption, Next to Skellar. No status seekers.!Apply Apt. 2, 112 S. Pugh after 7.

FURNISHED TWO MAN Efficiency, alr- |conditioned, with batony, to sublet sum- 1mer term. S150 each for entire summer. ]University Towers. 237-1130. jSUMMER SUBLET: One bedroom fur-nished apartment, 4 blocks from campus. '¦S120 a month. 237-2203. jCHEAP! UNIVERSITY TOWERS — air- iconditioned 5th floor, good view, rays 'easily caught. Wilt bargain. Call 237-6639 'anytime. 1

EPISCOPAL STUDENTS

Holy CommunionWednesday, 5:15 p.m

Eisenhowe r Chapel

There will be a "discuss-in"with Donald H. Ford, dean ofthe College of Human Develop-ment, at 2 p.m. tomorrow inthe Living Center.

Willard . His topic will be"Writers of Protest: TheNegro Intellectual f r o mD u B o i s to Malcolm X."Walden 's talk is b e i n g

SUBLET SUMMER: Two bedroom, living-room, full kitchen i, large balcony; 10minutes from HUB. Call 238-4439. Cheap.

SUMMER SUBLET: University Towersone bedroom, air-conditioned, dishwasher,balcony; across from campus. Call 237-1583.

SUBLET SUMMER: Two bedroom Apt.Free television. Very reasonable. Callafter 6:00 238-7737.

SUMMER SUBLET: 4 wo(man) apart-ment. Park Forest Villas. Air-cond.,SlOO/man for summer. Call Joe 237-4005.

ARMENARA PLAZA 3-4 man, summer,air-conditioned, dishwasher. Call 238-3978.

SUMMER SUBLET: 4-6 Wotman) Blue-belt apartment with terrace, air-con-dltionlng, bus, pool, stereo, and color TV.238-6913.

FOR RENT summer term. Efficiency,across from South Halls. Available June12. Calt 238-1693.

UNIVERSITY TOWERS Apartments . , .available for summer. Efficiencies andone bedroom furnished units . . . $135and S165 a month includes all utilities,air-conditioning, balconies, plus TV cable.Call 238-0534.

FEMALE GRAD STUDENT wanted toshare apartment. Parkway Plaza. Call238-7627 after 4 p.m.

IDEAL FOR Summer, comfortable 3-4wo(man) furnished apartment. Air-con-ditioned, 30 sec. from Mall. 237-6403.

GRADUATE, MATURE male, third man,new, two-bedroom, Nittany Gardens,

DON'T SWEAT summer swinlns ex-travagantly. Air conditioned furnishedapartment cheap. Whitehall Plaza. 237-6858 evenings.

FURNISHED WHITEHALL Efficiency tosublet Immediately or summer term.Fall option. Air-cond., next to pool. Willunder-rent. 238-8632. SUBLET SUMMER: University Towers,air-conditioned, dishwasher, all utilitiespaid. Tremendous view. June paid. 238-7604.

JFOR SUMMER RENT: One (1) bedroomjApt. Armenara Apts. CaM 238-1478.

^! FEMALE ROOMMATE to share one-bedroom Apt. Call 237-7167 after 5:00 p.m.

[SUMMER SUBLET: University Towers.Air-conditioned, furnished, dishwasher.

jS150'month. Call 238-5452.

SUMMER SUBLET. One bedroom apart-iment. Fully furnished and air-conditioned.j Half block from campus. Americana'House. Call 237-9165. 'SUMMER SUBLET. Two man semi-i bedroom, air-conditioned Armenara, fur-inished. Occupancy June 20. Ricfc 238-5727.

Town and Campusfor

Sexy or Demure Bikinisand Coverups

TOWNHOUSE SUMMER Sublet—3 bed-rooms, furnished, dishwasher, washer anddryer, air-conditioned, $500. 237-6824.SUBLET FOR Summer with Fall option.Furnished, air-conditioned, 5120/month,grad students or married couple. Call237-4126.

FOR RENT: 2 - 3 man apartment, air-conditioned, furnished, located beautifuldowntown State College. 238-4845.

TWO BEDROOM apartment — Bluebell—summer. Closest apartment to pool. Air-conditioned, bus. 237-6646.

SUMMER SUBLET. Bluebell, 3 bedrooms,2 baths, dishwasher. Fall option. Manyextras. 238-3956.

TWO BEDROOM unfurnished apartment,available May 24. Carpeted, dishwasher,disposal. Sutton House. 237-9234.

ONE MAN Efficiency June 15 - Sept. 15.College Ave. across from Old Main.Call Irv 237-6826. SUMMER PLACE — 2-3 (wo)man Apt.Furnished, cool, 2 bedrooms, below SouthHalls. Fall option. 237-2151.

FOSTER AVE. Apartments. Availabilitiesfor summer include furnished and un-furnished one bedroom units. All utilities,air-conditioning, plus TV cable includedin rental rates. SU5 and $145 a month.One available May 15; others June 158. 30. 238-0534.

" " wj5raD",,M

1 OR 2 ROOMMATES wanted for fourman apartment, Beaver Terrace, startingFall term. Call Dan 865-5204 or Larry865-8644.

ROOMMATE WANTED for summer and/or next year. One bedroom UniversityTowers apartment. Graduate student pre-ferred. Tom 238-2536.

NEAT STUDIOUS roommate wanted fortwo man apartment Fall term. HarbourTowers. Call 238-9594.

! ROOMMATE FOR Summer. Own bed-Iroom — large furnished Apt. Bus service,washer-dryer. S70/month. Cindy 237-4515.

CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED. WSI,fencing, nature, sailing, group leaders,music, all camp specialties. Write toMax K lei man. Box 636 Middle town. Conn.Camp Hadar.

ROOMMATE (MALE} to share 3-manapartment S45/mo., all utilities. Rightoff campus, starting summer or fall.Call 238-4627 after 6:00 p.m.

ROOMMATE FOR summer, 2 man 2bedroom Apt. $150. Also 2 roommatesfor fall term. Two bedroom, 3 man Apt.If Interested call Steve 237-1265.

STUDENT TO LIVE In Boalsburg homefor summer term to do yard work. Pri-vate room and bath, pool privileges. Canstart now. Call 466-6666.

ROOMATES FOR Summer term for twobedroom Holiday Towers apartment, IViblocks from Old Main. Air-conditioned,free utilities. $53.00 per month. 237-6014.

INEXPENSIVE 3-BEDROOM Apartmentor Hobse. Fall term. $30 reward for In-formation leading to such. 237-0655.

COPPER KITCHEN HELP wanted forsummer term. Waitress or waiter. Call238-2496 for appointment.

ROOMMATES (2); AMERICANA House;across from Atherton; utensils, T.V.,air-conditioner, two bedrooms, furnished.237-2669.

TRUTH !

Koinonia , a men's residencecommunity, is accepting ap-plications for next year." Ap-plications are available at theKoinonia house, 117 E. NittanyAve., or at the United CampusMinistry office, 208 EisenhowerChapel.

nus Award of Lebanon ValleyCollege.

* * *Robert E. Henshaw, assis-

tant professor of biology, hasreceived a grant of $3,800 fromthe Arctic Institute of NorthAmerica to support h i sresearch on dynamics o fperipheral vascular circulationin body heat loss.

A second grant from theArctic Institute will provideS3.000 to support the work ofLarry S. U n d e r w oo d(graduate - zoology - State Col-lege), who is working underHenshaw's supervision. Un-derv.xod will spend the coming

ROOMMATE — SUMMER, two man, twobedroom furnished apartment. Rent $56.Call Tom 237-7833 after 4:00.WANTED: 3rd party to split lease, ownroom, male or female, bargain Apt.Call 237-6701.

R OOMMATE WA NTED Summer "term!Sixth floor corner Apt. University Towers.Elliot or Gary 237-1005.

ROOMMATES WANTED * Summer " term.Three bedroom Bluebell 'apartment, air-conditioned, dishwasher, pool, utensils.Phone 23B-653B.

ROOMMATE WANTED immediately.Vacancy in two-man apartment. MountNittany Apartments, rent reduced to $50.All furnishings, appliances provided.237-0506. ROOMMATES WANTED Summer terrnTThree bedroom Bluebell Apartment, air-conditioned, dishwasher, pool, utensils.Phone 238-6536.

ROOMMATES WANTErTs"ummerT'$8o"forentire term. Call 237-6707.

ELVES TO HELP desperate shoemaker.Apply Theta Phi Alpha, Sigma Tau Gam-ma, Spring Week '69.GIRL WANTS female roommate andapartment for summer in Pittsburgh.237-6471.""" ATTENTION CUSTOM HAND-MADE clothing: skirts,shirts, shifts. 237-6137.

ALL VETERANS: Smoker! Stone ValleyForestry Lodge, Tues. May 13, 7:30 p.m.Plenty of refreshments. 'THE RETURN of Arthur Braun, theBoss Guitar with his fabulous backupband on Exotic and Buddha Records,New York City, May 17., Representativesof special organizations will be refusedadmission unless pre-reglstered withMike, 238-6354.RE CENTLY" PINNED, engaged or mar-ried? Couples In love needed for psy-chology experiment in perception. Call865-2584 Monday - Friday 8-5 or 238-1387other times.

HEAR THE dazzling voice of PeterWhitehead Monday night. Teddi's ShoBar.CO-EDS: OPENING'S available at

~~Col-

lege Co-op for summer and/or fall terms.For Information call 237-3B44.

"DRAFT INFORMATION" New servicefor students. Call 865-7627 and make anappointment. Evenings call 238-2839.TRAILER 8 x 45. Live cheaply! Patioand awning! Yard with fence! For in-spection call Bill 237-1023. Married couplesonly. 'ARAB CLUB present symposium "Pale-stine and the Arab World," April 19,101 Chambers, 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. DinnerS2.00. Call 237-3918 for information.

Harbour Towers710 South Atherton strati

Stata College, Pa.

• Furnished EfficiencyApartments

• Furnished and Un-furnished . One BedroomApartments

Call or writeALEX GREGORYAssociates Inc.

238-5081Holiday Inn

Slate College, Pa.

ALTERATIONS AND Sewing, Knitting,and Crocheting by Carole. Phone 238-1680.CHROMATOGRAPHY SUPPLIES andaccessories. Materials for Lipid Research.Call us . .. we deliver daily on campus.Supelco, Inc., Bellefonte, 355-5518.TREAT YOUR favorite Mother to adelicious dinner from India Sunday, Maynth. Wesley Foundation, 6:30 p.m.Tickets $2.25, HUB desk.

UPPITY WOMEN UNITE! Women's'

Liberation meeting — Sunday 8:00, 214HUB. Information: call Barb 238-1792after 5 p.m.

LOST "'"' "

PINK SAPP-'">E Lady"s""RVng,""oi'd'

fashioned -- o. Great sentimentalvalue. Lost v ii!y Rec Hall Saturday.Reward!! F'' j call Carl 865-0156.REWARD FOR return of

~Gold-

CharmBracelet. Sentimental value. Please call237-6348.

LOST, IN Pollock Area: Lady's GoldElgin Watch. Extremely high sentimentalvalue. Reward!! Please call 865-8095 or238-5898.

TORTOISE SHELL-

GLASSES betweenChambers and Forum on Thurs. Evt.May 1. Call Jon 237-2161. Reward.

FOUND FOUND: MEN'S watch at Beaver sta-dium I.M. Field. Claim by identification.Call 237-6337.

baha Tfaith' FIRESIDE INFORMAL discussions of theBaha'i World Faith. Wednesday, 418 Mar-tin Terrace; Thursdays 0-206 WhitehallPlaza; Fridays 1131 S. Pugh. Call 237-7506,237-1210 or 238-6505 transportation.

"'' miscellan eous FOR INFORMATION leading to returnof stolen trophies, plaques from SigmaPi. Call 238-9949.

NEW SHIPMENTOF

HANDMADE SANDALSFOR

MEN AND WOMENYour Spri ng Thing

is at

Guy Britt o n(Next io Murphy'i '

on S. Allen).

Come and See thebigger than life

Handmade Sandalin front of our store

Coalition for PeaceTo Hold Draf t

The Coalition for Peace will sponsor a address the conference. "The Cantonville Resistance, alternatives for 18-year-olds,'[.conference on the draft from 10 a.m. to 8 Nine" is a group which removed and federal prisons and the non-cooperator,' p.m. Saturday on the Hetzel Union Build- burned draft records from a Cantonville , and others.>ing lawn. Md.. Selective Service office as a protest Belter Solutions

TTip rnnfnrenro will feature socakcrs to the war in Vietnam. Melville is ,a for-and workshops on a ternat ives to thl mer Roman Catholic priest who served in A letter was sent by the group to

' rira ft alternatives io uie

Guatemala. juniors and seniors in local high schools,> "¦' . , .„ , „ , „ , inviting them to participate in the con-Opcmng speaker will be Bob talon , a Tom Cornell , co-secretary of the j erence.former first mate on t

^he Phoenix a ship Catholic Peace Fellowship and a dra ft A spokesman said the Coalition for;which used to carry civilian supplies to rcSistcr, will speak at the evening session pcacB ;, "a er0Un of State College Areapeople in Vietnam Eaton a member of of the conference.

» J

° nSt^a^eg

anAr

a• r^s S time 'with Z^ac^m

*em" n± After the opening speech, informal out- -osphere in which those who are sin-. in London He has been indict for draft door workshops will be held , "led by cerel v committed to finding a better wayresisTance and soon will be sentenced. young people actively concerned with the °f *o vmg the world s problems, can be

cc -it w • draft , including peace workers and Viet- neaici.L-antonvmc i\me ram vclel.ans _ " a spokesman for the A covered dish supper has been plann-

' Thomas Melville and his wife Marjoric , Coalition for Peace said. There will be ed for 5 p.m. In case of rain , the con-bnlh of "The Csntnnville Nine. " also will workshops on non-violent action , the ference will be held in 10 Sparks.

Debate Team Takes FirstFive members of t h e

Un iversity debate learn wonfirst-place award s at recentcompetition s in debate and in-dividual events. The Universityteam lied for first place inoverall sweepstakes with theUniversity of Maryland in theDelaware Valley Debate Tour-nament. The debate tourna-ment was held at the CamdenCampus of Rutgers UniversitySaturday.

The affirmative debate teamof Jeanne Dutton (5th-politicalscience-Butler) and B o b b eFerens (7th-foreign service-West Mifflin) and the negativeteam of Lydia Nadalny (6th-political science - Pittsburgh)and Lynn Mack (3rd-spcech-Erie) tied in their respectivecategories for f i r s t - p l a c eawards. The affirmative teamwon two and lost one debate:the negative team won allthree.

At the Third Allegheny In-dividual Events Tournament

lllllllllllllllll llllllllll lllll lill llilllll llll lll llll ll llll llll lllll lll llllilllllll llll lll llllll ltlllll iilll lll lllllll IIIIll»lliIIIIIIIIIIIIIfI ilIIIl llIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIII IIlIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIliIIIIIIHIIllI11III IIIIIII IllllllllIIII IIIIIllllll llIlllll lIllllllIIIIIIIIIIII IIllllllllllIII IIt1IIIIIIIiII II|Il| ||III|tl IIIIIII||| ]? COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS <

held at Frostburg State Col-lege. Frostburg, Md., lastmonth, the University team, incompetition with 24 otherschools, captured the over-allsweepstakes trophy.

Joan Kalcljta (6th-specch-bi'oadcasting-Shamokin) w o nthe Pcntathalon t r o p h y ,amassing the greatest pointtotal in five different events.She was a finalist in oratory.ONtemporaneous speaking andpublic address.

Debora h Atwater ( 7 t h -s e c o n d a r y e d u c a tion-Pittsburgh) won second-placehonors in oratory. AnthonyCiotola (12th-speech-Hazleton)captured finalist honors in oralinterpretation and Janet Tkack( 1 2 t h-secondary education-Coraopolis) in extemporaneousspeaking.

Also pa rticipating in theFrostburg tournament wereHoward Schwartz ( 9th-businessa d m i n istration-Pittsburgh).Lynn Mack and Bobbe Ferens.

Evaluation CommitteeClears TKE, Chi Phi

University chapters of Tau Kappa Epsilon and Chi Phifraternities were cleared yesterday of all responsibility inthe April 20 theft of the Spring Week over-all trophy.

The fraternities were exonerated at an evaluation com-mittee meeting composed of Donald Saubel , treasurer ofAssociated Student Activities: William Fuller, ASAmanager; Bob Brown, University Chi Phi president; MikeGehling, Spring Week chairman , and Ken Waetzman ,Spring Week vice-chairman.

Under Spring Week trophy regulations, "the completecost for any damage or replacement of a trophy during theyear in which a group has it , will be paid by the group inpossession of it at the time."

According to Gehling. the committee decided to overlookthe rule in this case. The committee's statement said , "ChiPhi and Tau Kappa Epsilon had nothing to do with the theftof the trophy and will not be held responsible for repaircosts."

Gehling said the North Carolina chapter of Chi Phi .whose pledges took the trophy from Tau Kappa Epsilonfraternity, will be billed for all costs, including shippingcharges.

The trophy was assessed at S650 by a representative ofMoycr Jewelers. Repair costs were estimated at S200.

"The committee decided to have the trophy repairedinstead of replaced because it would only have been in usefor two years after this year," Gehling said. "It is theopinion of the committee that a sturdier trophy model isneeded." The trophy will be refurbished, "hopefully in timefor Awards Night May 19." Gehling added.

**

ForumPianist To Give Recita l

Donald Currier, pianist, willperform at 8 this evening inthe Recital Hall of the MusicBuilding. Currier will presentselections from Schumann,Beethoven and others.

Currier has long b e e nassociated with the Y a l eSchool of Music. He has per-formed in many of the musiccapitals of the world , includingNew York City, B o s t o n ,Amsterdam, London a n dParis. He also has presentedrecitals at Harvard Universityand the Universities of Con-necticut and of Virginia.

* * *The Association of Women

Students will meet at 6:30tonight in 203 Hetzel UnionBuilding.

* * *Interlandia Folk Dancers

will perform at 6:30 p.m. todayin East Halls and at 6:30tomorrow night in North Halls.The group will hold a meetingat 8 p.m. Monday at theWesley Foundation. O p e nhouse will be held at 10 p.m.Monday at the home of AlanDraper, 245 E. Hamilton Ave.

* * *There will be a Colloquy

meeting at 7 p.m. today in theHUB reading room.

¥ * *The student council of the

College of Human Develop-ment will meet at 7 tonight inthe Living Center.

* * *Daniel Walden , associate

professor of American studies,will speak at 7 tonight in 62

sponsored by Alpha KappaDelta , honorary s o c i o l o g yfratern ity.

* * M>

The Penn State Dames willmeet at 7 tonight in the HUBballroom.

* * *Alpha Phi Omega , men's

service fraternity, will meet at7 p.m. today in 215-216 HUB.

* * *There will be a meeting of

the Psychology Club at 7:30tonight in 214 HUB.

* * *The University chapter of

Delta Nu Alpha, nationaltransportation fraternity, willmeet at 7:30 tonight at SigmaPi fraternity. Peter Carnes,director of economic planningfor American Airlines, willspeak.

* * *Norman Lundin. associate

professor of art at t h eUniversity o f Washington,Seattle , will deliver a nillustrated lecture at 7:30 p.m.today in 26 Mineral Sciences.

His talk is entitled "Drawingin the 60s."

* * *Joseph Flay, assistant pro-

fessor of philosophy, will speakat tonight's meeting of the Un-dergraduate Philosophy Club.The meeting will be held at7:30 in 214 HUB.

* * *The Chess Club will meet at

8 tonight in the HUB card-room.

¥ * #

T h e Undergraduate Con-gressional • Student A f f a i r sCommittee will meet at 8:45tonight in 216 HUB.

* * *Young A m e r i c a n s for

Freedom will hold a meetingat 8:45 p.m. today in 217 HUB.

¥ * IK

There will be a meeting ofthe Episcopal S t u d e n tAssociation at 8:45 tonight ia215 HUB.

John M. Harrison, professorof journalism, will speak to theMaumce V a l l ey HistoricalSociety in Toledo, Ohio, tomor-row on "David Ross Locke,Editor and Satirist."

• * *Hans Freudenthal. visiting

Ero fessor of mathematics, haseen designated a knight in the

R o y a l O r d e r o f t h eNetherlands Lion by QueenJuliana. The award is thehighest royal honor in theNetherlands.

* * *C. I. Noll , dean of the Col-

lege of Science, has receivedthe 1969 Distinguished Alum-

year at Barrow, Alaska, eon-ducting research on the bio-energft ics of the arctic fox.

* * \ *The Penn State Singers will

perform madrigals, catchesand rounds at 6:30 this eveningin Findlay lounge.

¥ # *The Penn State Swingers, a

60-voice group ensemble, willsing popular songs in WaringLounge at 7 p.m. this evening.

i Who Is II Harpago n? ;

Who is Harpagon?Those familiar s t i ck e r s

you've seen all over campusaren't campaign material for aprospective senator, but forthe world's stingiest character,Moliere's "The Miser".

Last fall's U n i v e r s i t yTheatre production of "TheMiser" has been chosen to par-ticipate in the first AmericanCollege Theatre Festival inWashington , D . C ., thisweekend.

The play was chosen fromabout 200 entries from collegesthroughout the country as oneof the 10 finalists. The per-formances in Washington willbe representative of America'sbest college theatres.

iiiiiiiMiiniiiiHinmiiiiiiuiiiiiimiiiMiiMmiiiiiiiim""FOR SALE | FOr 'sALE FOr'"'hENT FUr''re*T FOr'rENT i WANTED I NoficE

ZIEGLER SALES, LTD. Sports Caraccessories, radio and tires, helmets,maq wheels. Discount prices. 238-2710.

'68 SUZUKI 80 cc, under 1,800 miles.Perfect condition. Cost $350 but will sellfor S180. Need money desperately. CallRon, 238-9144

FURNISHED APARTMENT, summerterm, 5 rooms, 2-3 (wolman, across fromOld Main. S250/summer. 237-3782.

SUMMER SUBLET: Whitehall 1 bed- park FOREST furnished two-man Apt.,room furnished, air-condition, free bus. sublease summer, fall option. Air-con-;si50/ summer. Call 237-9242. ditioned, pool, very reasonable. 237-4945.JYOUR PLACE IN THE SUN. Spend the IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY — two man! summer in a Southgate Townhouse, apartment. Nicely furnished, close toj Openings for three roommates. You'll[enjoy our air-cond., dishwasher, washer!' and dryer and much more. Call now1237-2725 or 237-2714.

SUMMER SUBLET: Two bedroom apartment. Furnished, air conditioned, dishwasher, TV. Park Forest. 237.13.W.

campus. $150.00 month. Call 237-4113238-3593.

Colleg ian Nofes

RENT WHITEHALL one bedroom apart-ment. June rent paid. Free bus servicelo from campus. 237-0788.

WANTED: FEMALE roommate — Kingof Prussia area starling this summer.Call Terry 237-1709.

HEAR THE daziling voice of PeterWhitehead Monday night. Teddi's ShoBar.