Lohh Crficizes Failure To Make 'Solid Reco mmendations

The World Boa rd Report Raps Sun, TIM Troops Clash in Skirmishes Near Saigon By DON NAUSS Sun released in February in which he claimed he ooard for "making no solid recommendations or con- SAIGON — U.S. 25th Division troops fought a series clusions." of skirmishes yesterday with North Vietnamese troops in Collegian Staff Writer was operating at a loss. ¦ ¦ touchy area northwest of Saigon where the enemy is A report investigating the housing operations In a summary of the report the board stated, Referring to the arbitration board's criticism of reported being withdrawn in preparation for new attacks. and f inancial report of Shio-Chuan Sun was released "Th e Committee found Sun's financial report not a the council, Lobb said , "In the past TIM has assumed In chasing the enemy through the Boi Loi Woods, 35 a 'constructive role' in relationships with landlords miles northwest of the capital, the U.S. infantrymen turned yesterday by the Town Independent Men's Council. realistic one." Among the failures of his financial Up a 19-ton cache of rice. They reported killing 38 North The report was prepared by an arbitration board report, the board cited "no indication of his true fi- and tenants." He sighted the TIM "Guidebook to Off- Vietnamese. formed by mutual agreement between Sun and TIM. nancial position, no indication of his actual profits, Campus Housing" and TIM's arbitration in many dis- "They've crawled back into the wood," one military Sun, who is a professor of mineral preparations and insufficient evidence on cash receipts and expendi- putes between tenants and landlords as examples of source said of the North Vietnamese. this role. "We've run into their base camps in the past few owns 13 apartment buildings in the State College tures and no indication of real value of properties." area "TIM also makes constant use of both its faculty days with the fires still going and nobody there. They , agreed to abide by the recommendations of the The board inspected several of Sun's apartments, are just running and hiding from us." , board. adviser, Charles G. Fisher, dean of student staff , and The source said intelligence reports indicate the North talking with tenants concerning their complaints. its lawyer. Reed McCormick," Lobb said. Vietnamese are expected to resume their attacks against TIM suggested the formation of the arbitration Most of the complaints received concerned excessive 25th Division fire cases along the Cambodian border board' because of student complaints that Sun did TIM has accepted an offer by William J. May 15. rent rather than poor physical conditions of the apart- Schrader, professor of accounting, to work with him not make necessary repairs and improvements. Sun ments. The board itself believed there was sufficient allegedly also charged excessive rental rates. on a case study so it may become more aware of the • • • reason for more complaints of physical conditions. problems that landlords face, according to Tom Arab Guerrillas Beseige Lebanese Village The board also investigated a financial report MIDEAST — A Lebanese border village is under siege The report also critiziced TIM for failing to Green, TIM housing committee chairman. by about 2,000 Arab guerrillas, government sources in Lobb said, "We (TIM) do appreciate the effort Beirut said yesterday. The Lebanese accused a Syrian "understand the financial situations of landlords and commando outfit of masterminding the assault. property owners in State College." It specifically re- of the board in trying to mediate the problems that A Lebanese communique said the mountain village of To Take Post at B.U. ferred to TIM's lack of general knowledge of interest arose between us and Sun. I hope that we can con- Hasbaya, close to the Israeli border had been virtually tinue to work together for the betterment of hous- encircled by guerrillas of the Al Saika-Thunderbolt organ- rates, property value, real estate taxes, water and ization affiliated -with. Syria's ruling Baath party. sewage rates and maintenance costs. ing conditions and relations. I do believe that Sun The charge brought a sharp denial from Al Saika head- is sincere in his concern with the student complaints ?tuarters in Damascus and a warning to Beirut not to inter- The summary further recommended "that TIM and is doing his best to alleviate the problems." ere with the commandos' forays against Israel. Schlow To Leave assume the responsibility for a constructive role in Included on the board were Charles T. Davis, Al Saika proposed that a commission be set up with the relationship between landlord and tenants. By LINDA OlSHESKY There were alleged arguments " It professor of English; William J. Schrader. professor the Lebanese army and various guerrilla organizations to suggested that the council also better utilize the ser- investigate responsibility for the incidents in southern Collegian Staff Writer within his department concern- of accounting; Harold Zipser , of Schlow Lebanon where the Lebanese army has been under attack ing the methods he used to vices of faculty advisers. Enterprise and the late Charles E. Woodring, for several days. Stephen Schlow, theatre art present his courses. instructor, has announced he Schlow will be working Jeff Lobb, TIM vice president, criticized the former president of University Realty. • • * will resign his position as o£ toward his Ph.D. in philosophy Western Currencies Drop in Trading Sept. 5. He said he will accept while teaching at B.U. LONDON — Holders of dollars and other major West- a teaching fellowship in the His reason for switching into ern currencies sold them off for West German marks in philosophy department a t the philosophy department was hectic trading in , Europe yesterday. They were betting an Boston University starting Fall that "it seemed to be the place Tho mpson To Assume Presidency upward revaluation of the mark was in the offing. Term. to find answers to questions A record $106 million flooded into West Germany in Explaining his resignation, concerning the mass media, an hour of trading, banking circles in Frankfurt reported. Schlow said "I feel I have and people in general." Seriously under pressure were the British pound and the reached a point in my own Small Classes French franc. personal world where more The steadily increasing run for marks began after concentrated study in my field The size and type of class Charles de Gaulle resigned as president of France April 28. is needed if it is to grow. that Schlow will be teaching Toni ght will be far different from those To Install Since then $1.5 billion worth of foreign currencies has USG "Basically, there are a num- flowed into West Germany in exchange for marks, dealers ber of people at B.U. who I ad- he has taught here. One of his By PAT DYBlIt Newly elected class presidents also history-State College). estimate. classes will be a freshman will assume their seats on Congress Saul Ed Squire (9th-zooIogy-Glcn Mills) mire and want to study with." seminar in the Humanities Collegian Staff Writer Buyers of the marks were speculators, investors and 'Where It Wants To Be Solomon, senior class president, Mike has been appointed to the Senate Com- businessmen hoping to profit from any rise in the value ' with an enrollment of 20, he Undergraduate Student Government Klceman, junior class president and Sid mittee on Resident Instruction. of the mark. When asked for his opinion said. executive officers for 1969-1970 will be Gol d , sophomore class president will be The student member of the Senate on the future of Penn State, Schlow said he is pleased installed tonight. installed by Harry Hill , new USG Committee on Library and Other In- Schlow replied, "The problem with the arrangement because , Aron Arbittier and Supreme Court Chief Justice. formation Sources is Charles Sharbaugh Tne Nation is, Penn State is where it it provides an opportunity for Ted Thompson wants to be right now. I don 't Ted Itzkowitz will be sworn in as USG Congress will act on a resolution (6th-business administration-Ebcnsburg). Navy Postgrad School more interchange between president, vice president and treasurer, calling for USG to participate in a two- Ann Steinberg (9th-political science- Bueher To Attend know if the students are aware faculty and students. May WASHINGTON — Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bueher will go of this, or are capable of doing Schlow said he plans to teach respectively. week vigil and fast at the end of State College) has been named to the to school and 43 of his Pueblo crew members have drawn anything about present con- for at least the next three Thompson's inaugural address; protesting the war in Vietnam. The Senate Committee on Academic Develop- new assignments outlined by the Navy yesterday. ditions. years. He said, "The university released to The Daily Collegian last resolution , originated by USG Town Con- ment. Thirty-nine of the original crew members of the cap- "Even with the ' aid of is a good environment to exist night, states "Our constituency, the stu- gressman Bob Lachman, is co-signed by Student appointment to the Senate tured intelligence ship who survived North Korean several active faculty mem- in. Students keep me aware of dent body of Penn State, is impatient for several other members of Congress. Committee on Academic, Administrative imprisonment already have left the Navy or are in the bers, the very conditions at my surroundings and the action — they are tired of inaction — Action also will be taken on a bill to and Athletic Standards is Gwen Berman process of doing so. Penn State are contrary to the world." they want USG to move, and justifiably transfer the jurisdiction of social events (7th-secondary education-Pittsburgh). Bueher, 41-year-old former skipper of the ship, will idea of the university or of Schlow recently has been in- so. such as Spring Week from USG to the George Myers (3rd-cngineering- attend the one-year Naval Postgraduate School in Monte- human condition in many volved in a Bellefonte High "Too long have we dealt with pre- University Union Board. Mike Alexander, Wiilow Street) has been named to the rey, Calif. This will prepare him to move into one of the ways." School film-making project. dominantly internal matters. These ac- UUB president, is sponsor of the bill. Senate Committee on Faculty Affairs. Navy's senior management posts. Concerning the student- Students in an English class tions are necessary at times but it should Senate Appointments Student members of the Senate Com- Bueher requested assignment to the training billet, teacher relationship," Schlow have bee'n working on ' a film not be "our sole purpose for existence," Thompson last night announced stu- mittee on Continuing Education is Lilliam which naval officers described as a highly sought-after said, "The interaction with stu- dealing with the problems of Thompson states. dent appointments to the University Perez (10th -anthropology-Roaring dents is about the best, most purchasing a marriage license 5 Areas for Action Senate. Springs). assignment, Student members of the Senate Com- + ¦*- ¦*¦ meaningful activity I can have. at the Bellefonte Courthouse. Thompson's address lists five major Larry Rubenslcin (6th-political sci- The continual work with stu- Schlow soon will be leaving areas for positive action : black student mittee on Undergraduate Student Affairs encc-Totowa, N.J.) has been appointed to CCNY Closes as Black , White Students Battle dents has given me the ability these filmic activities behind, ultimatum, community action , academic are David Harris (9th-general arts & the Senate Curriculum Committee. Negro students fought with white students yesterday to keep up,with my own sub- but he said he is looking for- reform, legal reform and administrative sciences-Farrell); Geoffrey Thomas Student members of the Senate Com- at the gates of the City College of New York and state ject area, film." ward to the move to Boston reform. ( 1 0 t h - f i nance-Philadelphia); Bruce mittee on Open Expression are Barry troopers from New Hampshire and Vermont broke down Winter term it was rumored because "the film-making op- He also stresses Congressional unity Wagner (6th-psychology-Schwcnksviile); Stein (12th-.marketing-Broomall); George doors at Dartmouth College to eject student demonstrators. that Schlow was bei n g portunity is even greater in and calls fo r energies and ideas to be in- Ted LcBlang (7th-political science- Terell (6th-division of counseling-Wayne), Their heads and faces streaming blood, seven white pressured to leave Penn State. that area." dependent of past events. Philadelphia), and Galen Godbey (12th- and Janet Kelly (6lh-journalism-Duryea). •tudents were taken from the CCNY campus to nearby Knickerbocker Hospital after the battle at the gates. CCNY President Buell G. Gallagher ordered the 20,000- student school shut down for the second time in three weeks. A spokesman said later CCNY will reopen today with "adequate police protection on campus." Earlier yesterday, state police, helmeted but without Black Art s Set for May 12-18: clubs, dragged and carried out some of 60 Dartmouth stu- dents sitting in to protest the Reserve Officers Training Corps. Others left the administration building in Hanover, N.H., peacefully. * • * , Colorado Senate , Drama Disrup t Spea Demonstrators Features Music ke rs DENVER, Colo. — The Colorado State Senate was dis- "*~*gj &V~

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taliation" contains four assertions which are used to build All She Wanted Was the conclusion that "We feel that the injunction was una- Greeks Criticize Column dulterated political retaliation." TO THE EDITOR: It is with a slight degree of incredulity One point states that the injunction was not (s -»ht on y because I am familiar with his writing) that I needed since there already is an injunction. Further the .• . • "' ' used Honest u " ' en "Vlr. ostor s Collegian column of May 7. first point states that the Administration would have Just a Coke. ; His bl-.mkot condemnation of Spring Week window painters their injunction if violence had occurred or if students had Few windows were open on the ground were pushing and shoving. I was pushed is iinforti i>:-tcly tvpical of those junior left ists ~nd junior been halted from seeing the recruiters. By SANDY BAZONIS floor. People were painting the others , in against the wall. rightists who would settle the Vietnam problem by fist-fighting The problem with this first assumption is that the Co'legian Staff Wriler :~ - Three guys jumped on the guy who - .- III ?-. Tl'ose who really care will attempt -to sec as injunction obtained by the Administration in February Heck, al! I wanted was a coke — a 10 keeping with the theme of Spring Week — rr.any facets They sat of a situation as possible before reaching a ver- would not cover the specific problem involved with the ' "The Wonderful World of Childhood ." t hrew the punch to calm him. dict and rmy Y;irn something in the process. Mr. Nestor has cent coke from the Lion s Den. No. I , , HUB recruitment case. Further, the willingness of the Many of the paintings were very well him down beside me. He covered his face 1--1J - - or _ =n nor ]carncc j couldn 't settle for a machine coke from * Administration to step in and protect the rights of students " a lot with his hands and remained silent. The Ir'l :o ope-T.'d his eyes. Mr. .Nestor might have seen the is something that the Collegian seems very anxious to Willard. done. It must have cost the "artist Many Gi.— ! student beside him continued to study his j>s who v:cre inside Old Ma n last winter, not as assert, while most of the activists here view that willing- So, I walked over to the HUB Thurs- of time and effort. rc'ortcrs .- ' as "art'emants. He might have seen some of the ness as very small indeed. If the Collegian supports the math notes, despite the brown footprint n-;iry day afternoon after class. As usual, the Someone beside me also was watching Greer^; who attend rap ns, sleep-ins. teach-ins and court use of a blanket rule rather than specific as the editorial plastered on the page. h p ™- " .' :-i . .-rr-tutors but os students . ground floor the art exhibit. "How do you spell Pinoc- today seems to suggest then let that be noted. It is my At 4 p.m. the recruiters left, and so ad he epenod his mmd. Mr. Nestor might have learned view that the Administration would not have acted to w a s mobbed chio?" he asked. thii art ar-1 .- • Kn -ire did the protestors. not mutually exclusive, and that not all protect the rights of students either day. Even if the with- students. Two hours later, a group o f -.ho: 3 who paint g'a s paint it rose. original injunction was able to apply (which is was not) Both groups returned the next day . iinnark p' But this rrowd demonstrators sat in front of the recruit- ' -rre the rights of the majority of students would have been and so did I: so did the spectators and Secretary, Thcla Xi \v a s different ing table, to prove further their lost as -usual. window painters. People still played the TO T"E ED-TOR: With a world fui' of troubles and problems. The second assertion is that the YAF injunction was from the usual dissatisfaction with the recruiters ' J (• -1 \ii-p pinball machines and some still searched C' i :! ' f"-i ior one day? Is it such a crime to a waste since it was not served until Fridav afternoon. flow of HUB presence. I followed them and stood have a 1 T- 'ne-ryment and laughter amid the strife on is for rides home that weekend. This view completely overlooks what an injunction patrons. beside the table. At least 15 students sat today 's campuses? supposed to do and overlooks the actions from Thursday Friday's demonstration had more an- n rrWon-e' to the column about painting windows in the in front of the table A-hile more than a at 12:30 on. Beginning at 12:50 Thursday. SDS leaders Last Thurs- ti-war and protest songs than rousing HUB for Spring Week, is it so wrong to bring laughter and were active in making sure that all their followers were day a group of dozen stood behind them. A crowd fun '- *1 rv~s rf orphans speeches , but it was still hot and stuffy . -"* 74 v hHi Spring Week sponsors? aware of the injunction. As a result, I personally heard students pro- remained behind the table. Is it such a crime to give out ALL of the 527,050 profit that many times that afternoon SDSer's urging people not to When the guitar player exhausted his tested military of the Spring Week has accumu'a ' ^d to ho'o needy students through block the aisles. While some of the more emotive persons It was hot and stuffy . One repertoire, he asked members of the college? Is it such a crime to laugh? , the SDS leadership recruitment in demonstrators loaned over and said , "We " there did block the aisles for a while crowd for suggestions. Somebody yelled ^AF. SDS. and others have goals of their own: Spring was clearly concerned about the injunction that afternoon. the HUB. " are not all SDS members. out "Melancholy Baby ." Week has only one goal , to increase the scholarship fund The appearance of vellow-armband aisle clearers was Crowds . throu gh the Soring Week profits — even if one has to paint There I was. standing in the middle of due to the YAF injunction. The need for SDS to have swarmed MISS BAZ ONIS At I p.m. the Sheriff was formally in- windows to obtain it. Friday a protest against military recruitment. I its members form a wall to keep the HVB clear around a microphone, t .-plaining to the troduced to the crowd, and he read the Michael Gehling was due to the YAF injunction. looked around at the others. Most of Chairman-Spring Week crowd why there was a demonstration : injunction while the crowd booed and Finallv the positioning of the anti-war rally behind them were not hippies , as some members TO THE EDITOR : In response to Mr. Nestor's column con- So, I walked over to the HUB Thursday jeered and continued singing. cerning Spring Week the recruitment table rather than in a position which of the older generation would like you to , may I proudly say that: due afternoon after class. As usual , the One of the marshalls. who was direct- I painted windows. would disrupt the normal operation of the HUB was believe. Most of the students were what to the YAF injunction. ground floor was mobbed with students. ing traffic, yelled at a man who was Ho rhetorically asked what the window painters believe in they would call "straight" kids who and what they know of the outside world. As a non-Greek, he The third assertion of the editorial today stated that But this crowd .'as different from the standing in the aisle that was to be kept the HUB officials, and members of the HUB Board, were " wanted to voice their dissatisfaction with then had the audacity to answer for the over 4000 Greeks at usual flow of HUB patrons. clear. Penn State. responsible for maintaining order in the HUB. YAF cer- society and its institutions. injunction. " the tainly is thankful that the monitors were able to help us Last Thursday a group of students pro- "You are violating the I, am curious as to the bases for Mr. Nestor's implication Other students grouped together on the that Greeks are unconcerned with "hunger, war, hate, and in our effort to maintain a neaceful demonstration. The fact tested mi'i'.ary recrni'm»nt in the HUB. marshal! said. The man turned around; it remains however, that SDS decided that they would have other side of the table. They were paging poverty". Greeks are dying in Vietnam , joining the Peace Crowds r.\ rrmed proline' a student talk- was the sheriff. Corps, educating ghetto children, trying to keep a confused their members form a wall of people to keep an aisle of through the daily ride sheets. The crowd dwindled at about 3 p.m. flow open to the HUB and that they did this because of ing oie- -. rr.i..-oph' :ie. explaining to tb» world population from destroying itself. I can support these More students sat in front of the table. Seeing no action, many of the spectators statements with facts. I challenge Mr. Nestor to do the same one factor—the YAF injunction. crowd why 'here v.-as a demonstration: for his. The efforts of the HUB monitors would have been "The ir'litary is killing young men...If Twice the recruiters had to move the became bored and went to class. We are not beer-chugging, insensitive robots : we are in vain if SDS had not reacted to our injunction by acting the recruiters would te'l you the truth , table back. It was crowded. One guy sat At 4 Friday afternoon , the recruiters human beings and. unfortunately, just as fallible as you. somewhat responsible in the instance. they wouldn't get a single beside me studying his math notes. left . again to cheers from the Some people did paint windows. The fourth and final point of the editorial was that butcher...Thousands are dying in Viet- The group was relatively quiet, ex- demonstrators. Some people sat in offices preparing lectures. Some people YAF. if it thought that there was a need for an injunction, studied in the HUB lounge. Some people worked in the Collo- should have had it extended. This of course shows a lack nam. Stop the war now." cept for an occasional chant of "Hell no, I left too. I was tired. It had been hot quy office. Some people ate lunch . Some people wrote columns of knowledge of injunctions. The success of the injunction It was hot in the HUB. and after four we won't go" and "Stop the war now". and stuffy in the HUB. And besides, it for the Collegian. was that knowledge of it persuaded SDS to keep their or five speakers, speeches were getting Ringing of HUB pinball machines and the was a beautiful day outside. People, far Not everybody wants to improve the world by wearing a demonstration somewhat orderly. protest button and polishing the floor with his pants. repetitive. It was really stuffy. I kept Book Exchange cash register interrupted away from the HUB. were sun-bathing. Damn them all if you wish, Mr. Nestor, but don 't single Thus there was no need to take people to court. Since And soldiers, far away from the bathers, the recruiters will not be back this term, there is no thinking, why didn 't they hold the protest the chants. out the Greeks. Suddenly there was an argument at were dying in the sun. Jane-Perry Shoemaker i.eed to have the injunction, as any thinking person should outside? It was a beautiful day, and there lOth-English-journalism-Camp Hill realize. was a slight breeze. the table. A punch was thrown , people And all I wanted was a 10 cent coke. TO THE EDITOR: We are generally apathetic sorority Thus all four of the "arguments" presented are invalid women, and do not supp ly any support for the conclusion the peter andyly dave dark John Berry • -but we took time off from painting our window to the comment that a result of the reply to Mr. Nestor's colum. We could not concur more heart- editorial draws. As for injunction was to create additional conflicts between YAF ily- <-an be no compromise Representatives We have been Greeks for two years and the difference is and SDS. let it be noted that there Commonwealth Campus really incredible. Everytime we put on our pins, our eyes between freedom and collectivism. There can be no middle cloud over. We have particular problems with windows. The ground between the forces of individual rights and those on Standing Committees of the Svcacia, 5 a days we don't wear our pins to class, we are enthusiastic stu- of mob rule. dents. But on the days we do, our poor eyesight gives us little Don Ernsberper University Senate 1969 70 recourse than to sit and carve Greek letters in the desks, Young Americans for Freedom congratulates o ly every organization on campus. It is also true that sorority EDITOR'S NOTE AND OPINION: In order to ensure fair a) undergraduate studen t affairs ly every organization on ca.mpus. It is also true that sori comment, we are printing Ernsberger' s letter. But in all newest daughters of l»«wr'* ^^¦rfr 77^rr^^^"^¦7^'v?^^?w'^^?^ :^w•*^ dividual rights, it's SDS. Now look at the way they Ernsberger further stated that "knowledge of the YAF injunction" persuaded SDS to keep their demonstration encroach on the rights of others. As if ROTC and the " Logical reasoning leadr its to believe recruiters have no right to do "their thing!" " somewhat orderly. that if YAF says their injunction kept the protesters I haven't heard anyone denying SDS their right to " why wouldn't the l/?iiuersity's injunction obtain, have a table in the HUB, or even to exist as a group on " order ly. this campus. We "square, conservative" students haven't the same effect. ACES Ernsberger does it begrudge you to say TR We toonder, . given SDS a rough time. But when they take their rights anything at all complimentary about SDS. even if it' s true? ¦ for granted, and ignore the rights of the rest of society, ¦/¦ ¦ ' ' Ca lling the YAF injunction " political retaliation ." as we of Love... ¦/ ' - ' ' ¦: y." I say it's time we "stomp their ass". did yesterday, is perfect ly appropriate. This is exemplified Of course, they'd be "triumphant martyrs" and cry in the last paragrap h of Ernsberger 's letter when he stated injustice all over again, like a bunch of spoiled brats after that there can be " n o com promise" and " no middle ground." faded photograph, covered how withjlnesvod / a spanking. We reject the opinion that there are black and white sides Larry Garber to every issue. Has Ernsberg er ever heard of shades of creases.' 'Tickets torn in half , memories in bits and Ct li-a-. r.,- .... .al eelucatio-n-Elizabethtown grey? Mr. Ernsberger ' s begrudging use of terms like " some- pieces. Traces of.love long ago that didn'twork '' what orderly " and " somewhat responsibly" shows a lack out right, Traces of love. -' ' . - '. , - ' < Ernsherger Criticizes of objectivity on his part. TO THE EDITOR: Here we go again. The rhetoric of the We try to remain objective when viewing campus of Collegian must be examined, broken down and disposed issues, and will continue to comment on each issue as we Ribbonsirom her hair,souv enirs of like always. Today's editorial entitled "Political Re- see it. together. The ring shp iisedto wear,

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There s even a new When it comes to pacesetting, it's pretty clear you can order. It opens on Super Scoop hood that Camaro knows its way around. nm , pouring cooler air into_the engine for acceleration Start setting a pace of your own. At your more go power. 's now. The SS version of the Hugger grips the road with dealer wheels, beefed- Putting you first , keeps us first. J1S8 wide-oval tires on 14 x 7-inch-wide £2iml^Smi&Pacesetter Values at our Sports Department Colle gian Ads Bring Results Text of Walker ' s Senate Speech O. of Following is the text of the nate members. Applicants for student court been my impression that the reaction time Qm (Editor's Note: membership are interviewed "and selected the Senate aud its committees is too long, and 1 speech fliuen by University Prtident Eric A. longer than it really is Tuesday ' s University Senate by a committee composed of court mem- imagine it seems much Walker at bers, a member of the respective area stu- in the eyes of our younger contemporaries. eeff meS dent government, and a member ot the I realize that the Senate during the past Walker prefaced these remarks by sav- pro- sure that the University Office of the Dean of Student Affairs. The year has devoted a great deal of time to ing he is "almost applicants blems identified by students, but we must con- will not have its budget by June 30." names of the recommended by this w some way of pro- June 30 is the end of the current fiscal committee are then submitted to the respec- tinue to work on this and find the University will have tive area student government for ratification. viding orderly, thoughtful and early response to year Walker said If a student under charge is not satis- students when they present matters for con- to operate on credit, as it has done mit the p ast. This pose s no big problem. Walker fied with the findings of the student court sideration. our credit is still pretty or the findings of the office of the Dean safe]; because " of Student Affairs, he may then make writ- Looking for Mechanism green.") ten request for an appeal to the chairman I would like to point out once more that we < There are several items that I would ot the Senate Committee on Appeals. This are still looking for a mechanism by which the like to discuss with the Senate, both to bring Committee consists of three faculty mem- majority of students can make their voices you up to date and to give you some ap- bers, the President of the Undergraduate heard. We tried during this past year to preciation ot the problems we re going to Student Government, or the Association of emphasize the role of student government as face. Just three weeks ago I attended the Women Studen ts, depending upon whether the spokesman for the students, even though meeting of the American Association of Uni- the student is male or female. In the case we recognized the fact that the officers were >¦ X vTrsiUes.This is the Association of 38 Ameri- of a verdict for dismissal or suspension, the not elected by a majority of the student body. can universities which have the most dis- student also has one other avenue following But we also recognized that they probably had tinguished graduate schools, and it includes the Senate Committee on Appeals and that the best right of ail groups to represent the stu- molt of thl Ivy League, the . University of is an appeal to the President. dents since students were given the right to lA g al ech , Wisconsin, Illinois and < o California, C T vote, even if this right was not exercised. This Penn State among others. It is also a meet- Many Not Satisfie d was the reason we chose to use the student ing whore onlv the college presidents attend Now there are many, including myself, government as ' a mechanism for com- so that they have some chance to discuss who are not satisfied with this procedure in munication and as a mechanism for discussion. problems with frankness and without re- handling all cases of 2 student misconduct. But as long as enough students do not accept w § straint. Nat Pusey of Harvard was not there In the first place, which court do you , this is not a H use the role of student government because of the troubles on his campus. Andy if there are several students coming from very useful solution. Cordier had to leave one hour after the different living areas? Moreover, our civil Therefore , recognizing that most, if not all meeting started to return to Columbia Levi courts recognized long ago that there was student groups should be heard, and if possible of Chicago started to the meeting but had to the Senate need for different courts for different de- their viewpoints be reconciled , I was not averse 1 § turn around and go back and Jim Perkins Walker at grees of offenses. That is why cases involv- to the mediation process suggested by Mr. Sfi £ still had no idea of the trouble he was going ing traffic fines, for example week. UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Eric A. Walker , are handled Theodore Kheel. to run into at the end of that same under a different legal arrangement than Mr. Kheel recommended that an Officer called for the members of the University cases which are of a American University Troubled in solving student real serious nature. We of Student Discussions be established at Penn Senate to act quickly do not have similar discretion. State, and I concurred with his recom- g agree that the American univer- "• We all also suggested that he may ask Our present regular CY demands. He procedures concerning mendation. He expressed the hope that such an 55 is troubled, that there are groups who sity , Centre County Criminal Court to vacate the student misconduct. I believe, are cumbersome office would contribute significantly to a resort to force to enforce their demands but more importantly they do not all agreed that the American uni- injunction the University obtained at the include all climate of open discussion among students, and we may elements of the University that should be faculty and Administration . versities are in trouble and that they Feb. 24 fit-in in Old Main. He received a included in hearing and judging those offences eventually find themselves governed from Dr. Jacob Kaufman, who was instrumental our- lengthy ovation from the senators as he left that have an effect on the total university. This in suggesting the mediation process, was g the outside if we do not learn to govern latter reason ago I described to these the podium. more than anv other is one where recommended as director of the new office by H3 selves A year I establish the Special Judiciary 5 Board. It both Kheel and his assistant Mr. Lewis B. presidents the injunctive process that we seemed to me that in case we got a sit-in. the orderly processes of Kaden, after discussions on the subject with were considering the rights of the majority, which still recog- University life were at issue and that a students and faculty. This is an experiment and a They were not impressed, but I noticed that nizes that the minority have some right to rosnonse from major j£ getting to be a very- segments of the will be evaluated in the light of experience. . V now this mechanism is university ad- protest, as long as that protest does not dis- University community would be helpful in com- popular one, not only with rupt nor take away the rights of others to ing to a decision with respect to the sit-in. Could Get Petition ministrations but with student groups them- My seems to be that carry on their business, will be enacted. It is perfectly obvious that if we could get a _, Part of the problem § selves only worry is that there may be too many Disruptio n as Affects Everyone when police are brought in, there is likely laws passed either in Harrisburg or in Wash- position which could be supported by the ma- >- overreaction which leads to disaffection jority of students, and a similar position which to be ington which will penalize the innocent as Offenses such as disruption affect the among the large majority of uncommitted whole University could be supported by the majority of the facul- Yet, at some time it well as the guilty. — students, faculty, staff and students and faculty. Now let me return to some of our own Administration. It is also the type of offense ty, there would not be much room for major seems apparent that police must be brought University actions. As you must know by disagreements. But such positions, supported that does not involve merely the conduct of the by the majority, are still eluding us as much as in. now the Special Judiciary Board , consisting single student or a few of his companions. It in- Taking Action Shif ted of st ud ents, faculty and Administration, volved many students, and offenses such as this we would like to find them. This is one of the Burde n of which I spoke of in the Senate meeting early probl ems we still have before us. _ result in much What we foresaw was that by getting more being at stake and However, we are going to give it a try and o i in March, has forwarded its report and an injunction , the burden of taking action therefore I felt they should-be adjudicated by see how far we can get. Working together, "»» "4LLI recommendations concerning the five stu- all segmen is shifted from the University to the civil ts of the University through their hrough a io al disco se dents involved in the sit-in in Old Main, representatives. Now in addressing the Senate t r t n ur , I believe we can government. The judge issues the injunction Feb. 24. solve most of the problems we face. and civil authorities must decide if the in- on March 4, I asked that this body provide a The Board did not recommend expul- considered mechanism for emergency It has become more and more apparent junction is bein g violated, and to some ex- sion or suspension of any of the students, through the difficulties in evidence at other col- tent this is an admission that we cannot situations and for major cases. I believe there but it did recommend that one be placed is a need for a real overall look at how o leges and universities that the faculty can be, govern ourselves, and we're asking for out- on disciplinary probation until graduation, ur and often is, the major force for either continu- side intervention. However, I should like to disciplinary cases are handled. Now I recognize and further be denied the right to register that there are several ing", or curing, student disorders. point out that the injunction we got on until one year after graduation. Three were student and staff com- Feb. 24 does not itself legally penalize the mittees studying disciplinary procedure and Lunch With Mansfield to be placed on disciplinary probation and that the Senators frequently acted on specific £ persons nor any of the so-called > named the fifth to receive a warning. John Doe's. It is only the violation of the parts of our standards and policies in recent Last Tuesday, I had lunch in the office of injunction that produces that result. But an Every Opportunit y Given weeks. We have looked at individual cases but Senator Mansfield. Senator Kennedy was also injunction does place the names of peop le not at the whole question of how we handled there, as was President Pusey, who told me he ¦BB H on record and makes it more perilous for Now the thoroughness of the hearings, discipli ne. The current procedure as I say was off-campus for the first time in three them to continue an activity that they have the extraordinary efforts made to give each brings the faculty in too. late in major cases weeks. President Perkins of Cornell was sup- been enjoined not to pursue. One of the student every opportunity to respond to the and it fails to recog nize differing degrees of posed to be the fifth person — he was not there. reasons that we will move to take injunctive charges, the manner in which the hearings violation, with the same procedures being used We were meeting to tell the two Senators, as action was that the Pennsylvania laws of were held confirm my belief that this was regardless of the magnitude of tbe;charge. representatives of the private university, a trespass are not very well spelled out. Our a proper course of action for the problem public one, and a hybrid, how much we needed system of laws depends mostly upon English that was before us. The caliber of the Board federal money without strings attached if we .o Judiciary Board in Limbo common law, and the subject of trespass members and the sense of integrity and con- were to solve our problems. We never really on public property has always been a hazy cern they brought to the hearings also sup- Now in addition to placing the Special got to the subject. Senator Mansfield wanted to one as indeed is the question of what is ports my conviction that the University is Judiciary Board in limbo, we are now consider- tell us that the public was disturbed and arous- z public property. Therefore, when the State still able to govern itself from within. ing asking that the injunction issued by Judge ed and that unless universities showed pretty Senate started to put together a law against I have considered the report with great Lipez be vacated . It now appears probable that quickly that they could govern themselves and such trespass, I for one could see some care and have acted upon the lines recom- the emergency of two months ago has passed give those who wanted a chance to get an < merit in it. The opponents of the law mended by the Board. With this task fin- and that it will not be necessary to use it to education .to get it without disruption, then not pointed out that such a law was aimed at ished. I do not plan to refer any other dis- maintain calm and orderly discussion, debate only would we find money hard to get but we students. Nevertheless. I must remind you ciplinary problems to the Board unless there and dissent. might find rules and regulations imposed upon that the word student is not used in the are unusual circumstances which arise be- But I still believe that one of our major dif- us that we did not want. proposed law at all. The law is aimed at dis- fore we are ready to provide substitute ficulties concerning students on the one hand I think Penn State's record so far has been turbances at college and university property mechanism. Our regular disciplinary pro- and University procedures and regulations on an enviable one. I did not have to take the caused by anyone—students, visitors or any- cedures will continue to be used until such the other has been in our long reaction time. lashing that Nat Pusey did , or that Jim Perkins one else. Personally, I f elt that such a law, a time that the University Senate suggests Students of today,' being part of the "now might have taken if he was there. So far we as written, was too narrow, and that it ought a different set of procedures, which "inci- generation," expect immediate action on have come out pretty- well and I believe that to be broadened so that it would not point dentally I think ate badly needed. question and problems that affect them. Many the action of this faculty Senate coming up with a finger at colleges or universities. It might Under our regular procedures, a student of the demands persented to me over the past solutions to the problems we face, will to a be drawn to cover any property opened to charged with misconduct has two initial year would have been addressed more properly great extent, probably more than most of us the public, such as libraries, churches and courses of action. One, he can choose to to the fccnlty and to the Senate. But it is ob- realize, chart the future course for ecucation — so on. have his case heard by a court made up of vious that students expect a very quick answer not just here at Penn State but possibly Some Favored Law students, or two, he can ask to have his case and this the Senate finds very hard to do. It has throughout the nation as well. heard by the division of student standards, The House mistakenly at first believed in the office of the Dean for Student Affairs. that no college would favor such a law but some colleges did. When it was pointed out Seven Student Courts that there were not adequate trespass laws, Now there are seven student courts certain House members agreed to word the operating at the University Park campus bill so that it might protect the colleges during the regular school year. One for each Walker Tal ks at Luncheon and universities but not single out students of the five campus residence areas and one alone as the possible miscreants. for students residing off campus and one University President Eric A. Walker, who of Law, the desirability of a College of I do not know what will happen to this for students in fraternities. There are seven has announced plans for retirement in 1970, Veterinary Medicine, a College of Life bill, whether it will pass or in what form. permanent members of each of these stu- yesterday discussed some of the unfinished But I do think that such a law to protect dent courts and varying number of alter- ^ ¦^ ? £$ ^ S3a&*S£. business of the University at the 20th an- monwealth Campuses and construction of a niversary luncheon of the Faculty Women's student recreation building. Club. Noting that the Penn State Foundation and "We have a great deal to do to meet our the Board of Trustees have approved a Faculty commitments for the futu re." he said. He then Club, which was proposed several years ago, he discussed the need for a Faculty Club, a School (Continued on page ten) THE BROTHERS AND PLEDGES OF

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Downstairs , (fl ffl Look for the signs above stairs Hai Karate-be carefu l how you use it. 55 ®1969 Leeming Division, Chas, Pfizer & Co., Inc., New York, N.Y Final Exa m Sched ule for Sprin g Term 14.1,2 108 Cham 410 T 8:00 T 8:00 314 H B 275 Rec S 3:40 162 Wll 14 II H Dev T 8:00 413 M 1:30 21S Bor M 1:30 151 Wll Labor Management .3 108 Cham 500 Appt 520 Appt W 1:30 67 Wil Relations (L M R) 272 Rec T 10:10 Rec 14.4 T 10:10 allurg y (METAL) 104 Cham 508 Appt M 1:30 Family Economics and S 1:30 201 Wll 3 W 3:40 232 H B S 1:30 101 Cham S 1:30 Rec 106 104 Cham 511 Appt IPH SO W 10:10 See Llsl S 8:00 Home Management (FE HM) S 1:30 245 Wll 100 T 3:40 251 Wll ¦W 7:00 225 M I 216.1 105 Cham Community Development M 8:00 445 S 8:00 S205 H Dev M 1:30 217 Wll 433 W 7:00 271 Wll See List M 3:40 60 Wil 216.2 T 10:10 225 M I 105 Cham (COM D) T 8:00 515 S 8:00 5127 H Dev T 3:40 309 Wll 455 W 1:10 273 Wll S 9:10 225 M I M 7:00 Schwab 221 104 Cham T 1:30 See List T 8:00 109 Cham T 3:40 S207 H Dev T 3:40 544 A ppt W 8:00 313 E E W 498 Appt T 3:40 301 Wll 301 T 10:10 S109 H Dev S 1:30 550 T 3:40 S127 H Dev T 1:00 203 E E W Landscape Architecture (LARCH) T 7:00 121 Sparks M 7:00 See List 404.1 S 1:30 219 Wil 106 Cham W 3:40 S207 H Dev M 1:30 Family Housin g and W 1:30 203 E E W 58.1 T 10:10 316 Sac 319 Wil M 10:10 See List M 10:10 262 Wll 404.2 T 3:40 119 0 L 104 Cham S 8:00 S103 H Oev W 8:00 Heme Art ( FHHAR) W 8:00 201 E E W 58.2 T 10:10 321 Sac T 10.10 301 Wll M 10:10 T *:00 73 Wll 414.1 104 Cham See Li st W 8:O0 SI03 H Dev Appt M 1:30 203 Wll 58.3 T 10:10 322 Sac S 1:30 171 Wll T 1:30 S 1:30 162 ' Wll 414.2 104 Cham Appt S 10:10 122 Music W 1: 30 309 Boucke Appt M 1:00 203 Wll 420 M 1:30 See List eorology (METEO) 420 105 Cham W 1:30 S103 -H Dev Appt Appt 427 W 8:00 See Llsl T 8:00 111 Boucke Appt 434 106 Ch am 1 M 1:30 113 E E W 73 wll S 1:30 Appt 434 M 8:00 124 Sec 2 W 1:30 22 Deike S 9:00 ¦s pace 436 06 Cham T 8:00 145 Wll T 8:00 Appt 462 M 1:30 See Llsl W 1:30 365 Wll ¦Ineering (AERSP) 487 3 M 8:00 102 Forum 113 O L 06 Cham S 1:30 49 Wil W 1:30 APPI 472 T 8:00 324 Sac 4 T 3-40 See List W 1.30 S 8:00 326 H B 489 06 Cham 113 O L W 1:30 18 Sparks S 8:00 Appt 473 M 8:00 See List 1 M 1:30 115 E E W T 10:10 T 10:10 60 Wll 504 S 8:00 06 Cham T 10:10 12 Sparks Appt Appt Latin (LATIN) S 1:30 ' 73 Wll ' W 8:00 158 Wil 514 M 1:30 04 Cham 2 W 1:30 22 Deike 112 0 L S 8:00 2 Sparks Appt Appt 3 W 1:30 12 Sparks 3 M 8:00 102 Forum S 8:00 S 7:00 158 Wll 516 W 8:00 05 Cham Appt Elementar y Education Food Service and Appt 4 M 1:30 13 Sparks T 8:00 113 0 L 520 T 3:40 4 T 3:40 See List 106 0 L T 3:40 271 Wil 08 Cham Appt 211 Appt Housing Administration (FS HA) 23 M 8:00 1 Sparks 219 Wll M 1:30 M 1:30 152 H B 535 M 1:30 08 Chem 5 S 8:00 319 Wll Science (CMPSC) 311 Appt 50 Appt 430 Appt 6 W 2:40 360 Wll M 8:00 AA 1:30 212 H B 597 Appt T 3:40 111 Forum 312 Appt 316 S 1:30 101 H Dev 498 Appt T 3:40 106 0 L 598 T 9:10 7 S 8:00 304 Wil S 8:00 75 Wll 08 Cham S 10:10 105 Forum 326.1,2 T 1:30 HI Boucke 320 W 8:00 S209 H Dev 501 Appt I W 3:40 219 Wll 457.2 Appt W 1:30 232 H B Art HiI story (ART HI S 10:10 362 Wll 326.3,4 T 1:30 240 Wll 330 W 3:40 14 H Dev Law Enforcement end 271 Wll 447 W 1:30 31! Wll W 8:00 324 H B 310 T 8.00 105 0 L 100 aa 10:10 See List M 1:30 321 Boucke 341 M 7:00 111 Forum 402 T 3:40 14 H Dev Corrections (L E C) 390 Appt 470 T 3:40 T 10:10 232 H B no M 1:30 1 Forum S 3:40 10 Sparks 352.1 T 7:00 217 Wll 425 S 8:00 S209 H Dev 5 T 7:00 Schwab 304 Wil 509 Appt 403 W 8:00 11« 0 L S 1:30 124 H B 120 T 8:00 1 F orum W 1:30 260 Wil 352.2 T 7:00 271 Wil 461 T 10:10 117 H Dev 212 W 3:40 $130 H Dev 404 T 10:10 21 Deike 513 M 1:30 Appt 211 S 1:30 1 F orum T 8:00 Rec 352.3 T 7:00 369 Wll 502 Appt 302 Appt 533 T 10:10 319 Wll 432 W 1:30 103 M E 109 O L Agricultural 300 ' Appt S 1:30 260 Wll W 1:30 106 Cham Food Science (fd SC) 203 Appt 433 S 1:30 21 Deike 558 T 3:40 Economics (AG EC) 305 S 8:00 1 F orum T 10:10 240 Wll W 7:00 362 Wll 510 Appt 352 M 1:30 S130 H Dev 433 T 10:10 105 M E 560 A ppt 1 T 10:10 117 Bor 312 S 1:30 60 Wil T 8:00 109 M B T 9:10 107 Cham 520 Appt 353 T 10:10 S207 H Dev 561 T 8:00 109 0 L 461 M 8:00 121 M I 113 O L 419 S 1:30 117 Bor 313 T 3:40 40 Wll S 1:30 321 Boucke S 1:00 105 Forum 522 Appt 381 Appt 473 S 1:30 371 Wil 571 5 1:30 422 M 8:00 211 Bor 400 AA 9:10 230 Arts S 8:00 249 Wll S 1:30 201 E p c Food Technology (FD T) 480 T 10:10 367 Wll 575.1 M 8:00 101 O L 300 Appt T fl-00 104 O L 500 Appt W 7:00 230 Arts W 1:30 247 Wll S 7:00 128 Sac 401 S 1:30 113 F L 13 S 1:30 10 Tyson Liberal Arts (L A) Ap pt 575.2 502 (PHSIO) 504 W 1:30 21S Bor S 8:00 230 Arts T 3:40 113 M B S 7:00 203 Wil 402 T 3:40 113 F L 39 M 1:30 HI Tyson 15 W 3:40 203 E E W 506 S 1:30 21 Deike PhyPhysiologyi 305 T 10:10 215 Bor T 3:40 151 Wil App t S 7:00 217 Wil 421 Appt 52 W 3:40 108 Tyson 498.1 T 10:10 201 Wll 208 Wil 510 Appt 507 W 1.30 113 O L 507 Appt Appt M 1:30 120 Boucke T 8:00 201 E P C Foods and Nutrition (F N) 117 Appt 498.2 S 1:30 318 Wil 510 T 3:40 302 Wll 573 T 3:40 800 W 8:00 117 Bor Appt W 1:30 320 Boucke W 1:30 417 E P C 530 AODt 138.1 W 8:00 111 Tyson 498.3 M 1:30 14 Sparks Microbiolo gy (MICRB) 574 Appt Agricultural Appt T 10:10 321 Boucke W 9:10 417 E P C 138.2 M 8:00 202 Fran 498.6 W 9:10 201 Wil 1 T 3:40 See Llsl 585586 Ap pt Appt Education (AO ED) S 1:30 323 Boucke S 3:40 165 Wil 403 AA 8:00 10 Tyson 498.7 W 1:30 319 Wll 6 W 8:00 115 E E W 538 lv W 1:30 102 Aa Ed Appt S 3:40 101 Cham 444 Appt Library Science (L SC) PlanPlant Patholo gy (PPATH) 407 Appt 10-10 211 Bor 400V T 8:00 102 Aa Ed T 8:00 113 M B W 1:30 105 Cham 447 Appt 1 W 8:00 201 E P C 410 S 1:30 204 P B 410 T T 10:10 117 O L Appt M 1:30 201 E p C 501 App t Linguistics (LING) 411 W 8:00 211 Bor 4187 Appt 411 W 7-00 204 P B 11 Fran 420V W 8:00 102 Aa Ed Tl:30 See¦ List W 8:00 113 M B S 10:10 101 Chem 517 M 1:30 10 Tyson 100 T 10:10 132 E E E 416 T 10:10 213 B L 412 S 8:00 5 8:00 117 O L Consumer Services and S 10:10 111 Cham Hote l and Food Service (H F S) 101 W 1:30 132 E E E 518518 Apot 501V Appt 417 M 9:10 62 Wll 11 Fran 503V Appt S 1:30 117 O L Equipment (CS EQ) 520 ApptApp t 805 T 8:00 117 H Dev 102 M 8:00 131 Sac 507 M 1:30 204 P B 531 W 1:30 S04V S 8:00 102 Aa Ed Appt 213 M 8:00 117 H Oev 533 S 1:30 214 E P C 808 S 1:30 117 H Dev 503 T 8:00 120 Sac 215 Bor 556060 Apnl 512 T 8-00 (PLTSC) 524v M 8:00 102 Aa Ed T 8:00 215 Wil 403 S 8:00 223 H Dev 557 Appt 812 S 8:O0 S207 H Dev Lithuanian (LITH) PlanPlant Science T 3:40 104 O L 450 Appt 563 M 1:30 214 E P C 815 Appt 500 S 1:30 131 Sac EDOBOO T 10-10 110 O L Agricultura l 8-00 105 F L Engineerin g (AG E) Appt Consumer Studies (C S) 564 M 8:00 301 Wll Management (MGMT) 801 S Appt 310 M 8:00 36 M S 594 T 9:10 223 E P C 100 S 1:30 320 Boucke 80? W 1:30 213 B L 4 S 1:30 (PL SO 12 W 8:00 App t Counselor Education (CN ED) 593 Appt 110 T 3:40 See List Appt PolilPolitical Science 412 S 8:00 203 Wil Englneerfng (ENGR) 200 T 1:30 S209 H Dev 3 M 8.00 K'C 14 S 8:00 Appt 10 Sparks 24 S 8:00 W 1:30 60 Wil Cultural Foundations of 10 Appt 210 M 8:00 111 Boucke ral Preparation (MN PR) 10 T 8:00 W 8:00 113 F L Education (CF ED) 12 W 7:00 Rec 220 T 10:10 111 Boucke 11 T 3 40 207 SAC 103 T 10:10 S 1.30 203 E E W 203 Sec 400 Appt S 10:10 42 Wll S 1:30 108 Forum 100 M 3:40 128 Sac 230 T 3:40 See List T 8:00 211 M E 17 W 1:30 T 10:10 113 F L S 8:00 108 Forum 101 W 8:00 101 E E E 232 T 1:30 214 Boucke 14 w 1:30 105 Forum 407 W 1:30 T 3:40 211 M E 262 Wil Appt M 8:00 201 E P C 500 Appt 310 AA 1:30 113 M B M 1:30 302 M I 20 T 10:10 408 W 8:00 Appt 409 T 8:00 W 8:00 105 F L Wl:30 112 Cham Engineering Acoustics (E ACS) 330 T 7:00 115 E E W Appt 300 Appt T 1:00 349 Wil 501 Appt Appt Human Development (H 430 T 7:00 111 Boucke 403 M 1:30 109 Cham 410 T 3:40 Appt 112 Cham 413 W 1:30 W 1:30 113 F L M 9:10 " 224 E P C M 7:00 358 Wil I 321 Appt 432 W 1:30 323 Boucke Appt 411 M 1.30 T 3:40 105 F L M 9:10 417 S P C Engineerin g Graphics (E T 8:00 367 Wil ! 400 S 10:10 SS209 H Dev 510 S 1:30 316 Boucke 412 T 8:00 118 Sac 423 M 9:10 Mineral Sciences (MN SC) See Llsl S 1:30 213 BL S 8:00 417 E P C 10.1 S 1:30 S 8.00 265 Wll Humanities (HUMAN) 530 T 3:40 320 Bcucke 216 H B 416 S 1.30 SOS Appt 4IIA T 8:00 1-30 111 Cham 507 Appt Heal th (B H) T 10:10 417 E P C 10.2 M 1:30 M 1:30 12 Spares l.l V 10:10 251 Wll 411B T 8:00 214 H B 417 W S 3:40 S209 H Dev 11.1 T 10:10 T 8:00 365 Wll ! 1.2 S 1:30 232 H B 120 T 10:10 317 Wll 419 S 1 30 105 Frqn SOS Appt 431 T 3:40 226 E E W 271 Wil Science (Bl SO S 8:00 215 Bor 11.2 T 10:10 Appt 1.3 T 8:00 152 H B 121 T 8:00 21 Deike 530 W 1:30 227 E E W 433 W 7:00 520 Appt Appt 11.4 S 1:30 " -30 109 Cham Agri culture- S 7:00 See List T 3:40 165 Wil 1.4 M 1:30 232 H B 122 1 M 7:00 371 Wll Mineralogy (Mm: 441 S l M 10:10 See List W 7: 00 211 Bor 11.5 S 1:30 Appt 1.5 S 8:00 21 Deike 122.2 M 7:00 73 Wil 442 S 8:00 26 M S General (AG) 484 W 3. 40 302 M I 109 Cham 273 Wil S 8:00 See List Appt 11.6 S 1:30 M 1:30 218 Wil 1.6 W 1:30 21 D"ike 122.3 M 7:00 71 Wll 501 Appt 444 W B:00 400 S 1 :30 Appt 259 Wi| Agronomy (AGRO)I 11.7 S 1:30 S 1:30 12 Sparks 1.7 W 8.00 !204 E E W 122.4 M 7:00 271 Wll 510 M 8:00 311 M E 453 T 8:00 M 8:00 See Llsl Appt 11.8 T 8:00 T 10:10 13 Sparks 1.8 W 8:00 :323 Boucke 122.5 M 7:00 69 Wil 457 T 3-40 109 Cham I T 8:00 112 B L Mining (MNGI 105 Frgn T 10:10 105 Forum App t 11.9 T 8:00 S 8:00 218 Wil 1.9 M 8:00 21 Deike 122.6 M 7:00 220 Wll 319 Wll 460 T 8-00 28 S 8:00 213 B L Ap pt 33 W 8:00 105 Frgn IS Tyson T 3:40 Schwab 11.10 M 1:30 T 8:00 2 Sparks l.io T 3:40 21 Deike 224 S 1:30 358 Wil 280 Appt 462 T 10:10 416 W 8:00 Appt 11.11 M 1:30 S108 H Dev 473 S 8:00 105 Fran 490 T 3:40 15 Tyson W 8:00 47 Wil W 1:30 2 Sparks I 1.11 s 1:30 S 225 M 10:10 109 M B 452 M 1:30 211 M E S 8:00 71 Wll 11.13 S 8:00 T 3:40 2 Sparks 1.12 T 8:00 SS108 H Dev 324 S 8:00 271 Wll 500 T 3:40 204 Sec 503 W 7:00 15 Tyson 11.14 S 8:00 531 Appt 120 Sac 15 Tyso n T 3:40 112 B L Rec Fuel Scienceice (F SOSC) 1.13 s 8:00 SS108 H Dev 325.1 S 1:30 319 Boucke 580 Appt 512 M 1:30 518 S 1:30 See List 11.15 S 8:00 400 Appt 2.1 T 10:10 303 Wil 323.2 M 1:30 317 Boucke W 1-30 131 Sac 550 Appt W 1:30 10 Sparks 590 W 7:00 201 Wll SJ8 - W 8:00 111 L S See List 11.16 W 1:30 431 W 1:30 302 M I 2.2 M 1:30 303 Wil 424 M 8.00 317 Boucke 546 T 10:10 131 Sac 582 W 1:30 15 Tyson 11.17 W 1:30 217 Wil Music (MUSIC) Appt (AIR) M 1:30 111 L S 511 Appt 2.3 W 1:30 500 W 7:00 319 Boucke 5 S 8-00 See Lisl 573 Air Force ROTC 108 Forum 11.18 W 1:30 514 T 3:40 302 M I 2.4 M 8:00 217 Wll 578 W 7:00 131 Sac 3:40 101 Waaner T 3:40 111 L S 504 Appt M 1.30 103.1 T 362 Wil 11.19 W 8:00 Geochemistrytry (GCHEM(GCHEM)I 2.5 T 8:00 209 Wll 520 W 7:O0 320 Boucke poultry Science (PTYSC) 103.4 W 3:40 105 Waaner Appt Appt M 1:30 112 B L See List 11.20 M 8:00 509 Appt 101.1 T 8:00 217 Wll 540 T 3:40 106 M B 401 M 1:30 203 Wea 203.1 T 3:40 102 Waaner 11.21 T 3:40 Appt 102 Wagner M 8:00 213 B L 115 E E W 510 Appt 101.2 S 8:00 217 Wll Mathematics (MATH) Ap pt 505 Ap ot 203.3 W 3:40 See List 517 Appt 101.3 Wl:30 165 Wll 6 M 8:00 102 M B psychology IPSY) 303.1 S 1:30 102 Wagner S 1:30 165 Wil Appt Appt 64 Wll I 30 W 3:40 306 H 518 Appt Individual and Family 9.1 W 10:10 69 Wll 7 1 T 10 10 Schwab S03.3 M 1:30 102 Waaner Rec Engineering Mechanics (E MCI 520 M 1:30 Appt See List Wagner Appt M 1:30 210 H B Studies (I F SI 9.2 W 10:10 271 Wil A ppt 2 2 T 8:00 S06.1 T 8:00 102 10 Sparks 11 M 7:00 115 E E Geography (GEOG) 15 S 7:00 108 Forum 102 Waaner T 3:40 See List See List 9.3 W 10:10 165 Wil M 1:30 2S8 Wll 23 W 1 30 S06.3 S 8:00 323 Boucke 12 T 1:30 See Li 2 M 8:00 105 M E I 18 T 3:40 See List 9 4 W 10:10 371 Wil 2 4 W 7:00 121 Sparks American Studies (AM ST) M 1:30 201 Wil T 9:10 115 AAusic M 1:30 108 Tyson 111 Boucke 13 T 7:00 162 V 19 T 3:40 108 Forum I 129 M 10:10 See List 17.1 AA 3:40 251 Wll 13 M 3 40 See List 100 T 8:00 303 Wil 167 Wil W 1:30 115 Music 112 B L W 7:00 8 L S 14 S 7:00 R 20 M 10:10 Schwab 318 S 10:10 121 Sparks 17.4 M 3:40 317 Wll 115 Music 101 M 7.00 402 Appt 317 Boucke 112 T 8:00 202 E E 24 T 3:40 105 Forum T 3:40 7.00 16 Sparks W 1:30 111 L S I 319.2 T 8:00 62 Wil 17.5 M 3:40 115 M B W 9:10 367 Wil 300 W S 1:30 111 Tyson 203 Wil 399 Appt M 1:30 211 Bor W 910 1-30 16 Sparks S 1:30 211 Bor M 8: 00 111 L S ¦ • W 9:10 113 Music 401 M Appt ' /.'-A.„ »<• - 406 W 1-30 16 Sparks M 8:00 8 L S Ap pt 10-10 17 Sparks S 1:30 215 Bor M 1:30 215 Wll Appt 408 T W 1:30 15 Tyson 410 W 8.00 12 Sparks Appt Appt See List Appt 273 Wll 412 S 700 S 1:30 ILS S 8:00 7-00 12 Sparks Ap pt T 3: 40 215 Wil T 9:10 117 Music 413 W Appt 415 T 8.00 117 Bor Appt W 9:10 117 Mullc See List App t M 9:10 365 Wil 417 S 8.00 Appt 426 W 8.00 See List Appt Biophysics (BPHYS) 167 Appt 100 S 1:30 HI L S 431 S SCO 117 Bor 200 Appt See List 410 Appt 220 Appt 437 T 10:10 430.1 M 1:30 312 Boucke Exams Begin June 7; 438 T 3-40 117 Bor 228 Appt 440 Appt nimal Scienc e (AN SO 475 S 8:00 HI L'S 229 Appt 580 Appt 441 M 1-30 76 M S M 1:30 362 Wil 240 App t 22 Deike 262 Wil 583 Appt 256 T 10:U10:10 369 Wll 450 S 1.30 !J T 8:00 474 T 8.00 108 H Dev T 8:00 See List 584 Appt 369 Appt 585 M 1:30 201 Wll 482 W 1.30 360 Wil T 10:10 362 Wll 399 T 10:10 214 E P C 7.00 21 Deike S 8:00 158 Wil Administration (B A) 407 S 8:00 214 E P C 500 W 505 Ao pt I Appt T 10:10 371 Wil May 412 W 1:30 214 E P C Conflic ts Due Sparks 76 509 M 1.30 15 M 1:30 260 Wil T 8:00 301 Boucke 416 S 1:30 309 Wil S 8:00 301 Boucke 511 w 9-10 15 Sparks W 1:30 128 Sac The Spring Term schedule will meet for their regularly Students with three final M—Monday, June 9 429' Appt T 10 10 15 Sparks T 3:40 304 Boucke 433I App t 515 S 8:00 67 Wll for final class periods and scheduled times. Saturday class periods in the same day T—Tuesday, June 10 Appt ! S 1:30 121 Sparks Appt 455! Appt 518 Education (BUSED) examinations was released yes- morning practicums will meet may.file for a conflict if they 529 T 9:10 S207 H Dev 12 S 1:30 303 Wil W—Wednesday, June 11 457' App I "Appt ' " I 535 T 3:40 15 Sparks 10 M 8:00 101 Walnut terday by the University s in " their regularly scheduled wish. ' 8—8 to 9:50 a.m. 459 App t 14 Sparks Walnu t 466 Appt 537 S 8:00 17 W 1:30 101 Scheduling Office. rooms on Friday afternoon. Grades for students who ex- 10:10—10:10 to 12 noon 540 M 9:10 15 Sparks 3 S 1:30 101 Walnut 467 W 3:40 319 Wil 15 Sparks Final class periods of 110 Friday afternoon practicums pect to graduate at the end of 1:30—1:30 to 3:20 p.m. 468 Appt 545 W 1.30 i7 T 3:40 114 Walnut will meet Friday evening in 555 T 8:00 17 Sparks I! Appt minutes have been set for this term must be reported to 3:40—3:40 to 5:30 p.m. 503 Appt 1-30 17 Sparks \A Ap pt 243 their regularly scheduled 511 A ppt 559 S 244 Saturday, June 7 through the records office not later 7—7 to 8:50 p.m. 560 S 8-00 17 Sparks Appt 520 Appt 17 Sparks * B u siness Logistics (B-LOG) Wednesday, June 11. rooms. than 9 a.m. Friday, June 13. 9:10—9:10 to 11:00 p.m. 531 Appt 561 W 1:30 10 Appt 569 T 8-00 104 Cham- 102 S 7:00 See List A"y h 544 Ap p t il Appt As before, the classes for the Any graduating senior who The time and place of the 590 Appt i W 7:00 101 Wal nut 204 T 8:00 373 Wil pv s?'^i"L7lr «£ Smi 358 Appt 308 S 8:00 371 Wil last two days of the final week J**™ has a final scheduled for 591 Appt 1 Appt time or more^?i t*than threet in.n the+T» final class meeting period listed Mu:sic Education (MU ED) S 7:00 171 Wll u«.,~ i,««« «««««ti«,4 L £ Wednesday. June 11 should 49 Appt Quantitative Business 2 Appt 420 have been cancelled. = . "Appt" will be arranged by the (O B Al 504 Appt same d shouU fi]e for a con A ppt Analysis s piled Mathematics (A M) file for a conflict. instructor at a mutually con- 50 101 W 10:10 See List 538 W 1:30 301 Boucke Double or triple period lab- A DPt 5 T 10:10 267 Wil fiict at the University Sched- 51 10? S 3:40 Schwab Wil Ceramic Science (CERSC) oratory classes normally sched- The interpretation of the venient period. 85 S 1:30 7 S 1:30 267 uiing Office, 110 Shields Build- 301.1,2 S 8:00 112 B L 5 M 1:30 262 Wil 81 T 8:00 60 Wil time designations used in the 86 W 10:10 402 M 1:30 225 M I uled for Friday, June 6, or ingi between Monday, May 12, Instructors have been in- 301.3, 4 W 1:30 215 H B 1 S 3:40 See List final class meeting schedule is 95 M 8:00 403 T 10:10 157 Wil 408 W 1:30 225 M I Saturday, June 7, will meet on an(j Friday, May 16. A fee of structed to announce T 3:40 1 S 3:40 258 Wll room as- 199 404 S 1:30 110 O L 1 S 8:00 103 M B 409 T 3:40 225 M I Friday, June 6. as follows: 469 M 1:30 410 S 8:00 302 M I $10 win be charged for late signments for final class 490 Appt 1 M 1:30 104 M B 480 S 1:30 40 312 Boucke 425 Appt Friday morning practicums requests. S—Saturday, June 7 =e List." 487 M 1:30 501 T 3. J T 8:00 103 M B 521 S 8-00 232 H B 0 Appt 430 S 1:30 - 302 M I Appt 510 Appt Real Estate IR EST) ' chttectural Appt 100 T 10-10 26 M S ngl neerlng (A E) 515 Appt M 1:30 516 Appt Appt 400 W 8-00 208 Wll T 10:10 302 Eng A Recreation and Parks (RC PK) S 1:30 128 Sac Chemicil Engineering (CH E) ROTC (NAVY) 42 W 8:00 145 Ch E 433 T 3:49 123 Boucke IB T 10.10 102 M B t T 3:40 115 E E W 450 T 8:00 247 Wll 20.1 T 1:30 69 Wil 1 W 8:00 302 Eng A 121 M 8:00 371 Wll W 8:00 371 Wll 451 M 1:30 373 Wll S127 H Dev 20.2 T 1:30 102 M B 3 S 1:30 107 Sac 131 S307 H Dev 103.3 M 8:00 412 T 10:10 373 Wll 441 T 3:40 203 Wll 20.4 T 1:30 271 Wll 2 Appt 491 W 1:30 119 Boucke 101 E E E 20.5 T 1:30 273 Wil 203.1 T 10:10 3 S 8:00 107 Sac 415 T 10:10 271 Wll 203.2 W 8:00 T 8:00 140 Ch E 500 W 1:30 303 Wil 132 E E E 20.6 TT 1:30 371 Wll 6 M 1:30 107 Sac 420 203.3 W 8:00 445 Appt 502 M 1:30 323 Boucke S127 H Dev 20.7 T 1:30 117 M B 2 Appt 506 T 9:10 320 Boucke 215 H B 21.1 TT 7:0O7:0O 73 Wil 303.1 S 1:30 460 S 1:30 145 Ch E 303.2 M 8:00 5 Appt W 7:00 145 Ch E 507 Appt 117 H Dev 21.2 T 7:00 317 Wil 2 Appt 500 313M M 8:00 508 M 1:30 145 Ch E 308 Appt Appt 21.3 T 7:00 102 AA B chltecture (ARCH ) 510 T 8:00 303 Boucke Appt 213 H B 44 402 Appt .521 S 8:00 145 Ch E .1 W 10:10 303 Wil S 8:00 . . 124 Sac 51J Appt A ppt S108 H Dev 44 .2 W 10:10 273 Wil 403.1 S 1:30 S 8:00 302 Eng A 11 T 8:00 121 Sparks 403 3 M 8:00 W 1:30 See List 516 T 3:40 319 Boucke W 1:30 218 Wil S127 H Dev 44.3 W 10:10 103 M B T 3:40" 309 Sac 12 413M Appt 13 S 8:00 See List 522 Appt logical Science (G SC) S207 H Dev 44.4 W 10:10 251 Wi l M 1:30 110 Sac 524 Appt 22 Deike T) 41.1 W 10:10 373 Wil Nuc lear Engineering 14 S 1:30 109 O L M 8:00 400 Appt Ml:30 162 Wll 525 M 1:30 319 Boucke T 10:10 22 Deike 204 E E W 41.2 W 10:10 71 Wil (RL ST) M 9:10 128 sac 15.1 M 8:00 204 Ph Sc 401 S 1:30 15.2 W 3:40 204 Ph Se 331 M 1:30 147 Wll M 1:30 371 Wil 211 E E W 41.3 W 10:10 73 Wil Schwab S 1:30 262 Wll 371 Wil 42.1 S 10:10 73 Wil 407 S 8:00 See List 23 T 10:10 Sf» List Education of M 1:30 132 E E E 415 S 1:30 T 8:00 362 Wil ¦ S 7:00 See List 201 E E W 42.2 S 10:10 71 Wll 108 Tyson M 3:40 US E E W 31 T 8:00 119 O L Exce ptional Children (E o 430 Appt 34 M 8:00 . See List 400.1 T 10:10 111 Cham W 3:40 105 Forum 132 E E E 42.3 S 10:10 69 Wll 111 Boucke , W 8:00 117 Sac 42.4 S 10:10 271 Wll 501 T 8:00 124 Sac 36.1 T 10:10 ' 215 Whit 400.2 M 1:30 111 Cham T 8:00 302 M 1 201 E E W 50? W 8:00 App t 112.1 T 8:00 219 Sac S 1:30 S209 H Dev 201 E E W 62.5 S 10:10 273 Wi l 203 Sac W 8:00 128 Sac 36.2 M 8:00 215 Whit 401 W 1:30 109 Cham S 1:30 See List 112.2 W 1:30 219 Sac Appt 101 E E E 42.4 S 10:10 371 Wll 167 Wil App t 410 405 Appt 424.1 M1:30 113 O L 472 S 8:00 201 E P C 112.3 T 3:40 219 Sac Appt 62.7 S 10:10 102 M B 201 Wll W 8:0O 112 Sac 113 T 9:10 230 Sac 42.9 S 10:10 75 Wil Appt 424.2 W 8:00 113 O L 500 W 7:00 201 E P C 452 T 10:10 273 Wll 502 Appt 115 T 3:40 225 Sac 62.10 S 10:10 251 Wil ROTC (ARMY) 116.1 T 3:40 221 Sac 43 S 3:40 See List Rural Sociology (R S0O W 10:10 362 Wil 453 T 8:00 151 Wil 509 Appt 458.1 S 8:00 113 O L 510 T 9:10 201 E P C 116.2 W 3:40 221 Sac 71 M 1:30 358 Wil 11 M 1-30 See List S 8:00 104 Waaner ° ™ *W| 72.1 S 7:00 401 Appt Wagner 458.2 M 8:00 113 O L 570 T 3:40 201 E P C 117.1 S 1:30 315 Wil M 8:M 302 Mi S 7:00 71 Wil I w 7:00 104 30 225 Ml *«* . 72.2 S 7:007:0O 117 M B 444 T 10:10 203 Wea W 10:10 111 Forum 458.3 W 3:40 113 O L 580 M 9:10 201 E P C 117.2 M 1:30 313 Wll S,: gj „ 41 458.4 M 8:00 151 Wll Educational- Psycholo gy 117.3 S 8:00 315 Wil PP 559V M 3:40 41; 81 M 1:30 103 M B 513 Appt W 10:10 108 Forum * I 100.1 M 7:00 109 M B 551 App t 458.5 W 3:40 151 Wil (ED PSY) 117.4 M 8:00 315 Wll Appt M 7:00 217 Wil S109 H Dev ART) 119.1 T 10:10 315 Wil App t Industrial Engineering (I 100.2 M 7:00 Russian ( RUS) T 10:10 HI Arts 458.6 S 8:00 151 Wil 14 M 3:40 See List 273 Wil S109 H Dev 399 M 9:10 108 Forum 119.2 S 1:30 215 Wil Aj pt H4 T 3:40 100.3 M 7:00 269 Wll 1 S 7:00 124 Sac M 1:30 111 Arts 489 Appt 124 T 3:40 362 Wil 500 Appt 400 M 8:00 340 Wil 119.3 T 8:00 313 Wil Appt 100.4 M 7:00 373 Wil 108 H Dev 2 W 8:00 232 H B W 1:30 111 Arts 11» 131 w 3:40 100.5 M 7:00 26 T 3:40 108 Tyson T 3:40 111 Arts 501 Appt 404 M 9:10 321 Boucke .4 M 1:30 304 Wil hyslc a (GPHYS) M 7:00 102 M B S109 H Dev 502 Appt 421 S 8:00 111 Cham 119.5 S 8:00 215 Wil T 10:10 302 M I 301 S 8:00 105.1 M 7:00 251 Wll 3 S 7:00 108 H Oev W 8:00 111 Arts 315 S 8:00 225 105.2 M 7:00 203 H Dev 6 T 3:40 108 Tyson T 3:40 112 Arts 503 Appt 450 S 1:30 22 Deike 119.6 W 1:30 215 Wil S 8:00 225 M I M 7:00 103 M B 18 H Dev 511 474 M 8:00 417 E P C 119.7 W 8:00 215 Wil Appt 322 T 8:00 200.1 T 7:007:M 117 M B 100 S 8:00 258 Wil T 9:10 112 Arts 327 S 8:00 200.2 T 7:00 203 H Dev 110 M 1:30 165 Wil T 10:10 216 Arts 524 501 T 9:10 224 E P C 119.8 M 8:00 215 Wll Appt T 7:00 109 M B Petroleum and 531 507 M 1:30 417 E P,C 119.9 T 3:40 315 Wll Appt 328 S 10:10 200.3 T 7:00 165 Wll 143 T 8-00 204 Sac T 8:00 217 Arts 337 T 10:10 201 M 8-00 Natural Gas (P N G) 536 324 W 1:30 108 Cham 119.10 S 1:30 304 Wil Appt M 8-00 103 M B 169 Wil 204 W 1:30 204 Sac M 1 : 30 217 Arts 350 W 1:30 202 T 8:00 20 T 8:00 224 S 8:00 120 Sac W 1:30 217 Art s 560 550 S 1:30 417 E P C 123.1 S 1:30 105 Cham an (GER) T 8:00 104 M B 420 T 8:00 320 Wil 563 591 Appt 123.2 T 8:00 318 Wll S 3:40 102 Forum 400 T 8:00 201 300 AppApptt 250 T 3:40 120 Sac W 8:00 217 Arts Wil 402 M 10:10 225 340.1 M 3:40 485 W 8:00 320 Wil 426 S 8.00 131 567 123.3 T 3:40 318 Wil S 8:00 208 M 3:40 73 Wil 171 Wil Sac T 3:40 217 Arts ' 404 S 3:40 340.2 M 3:40 493 S 8:00 450 Apot W 8:00 S B N A 408 M 1:30 123 Cham 131 S 8:00 318 Wil S 3:40 105 Forum M 3:40 215 H B 512 T 8:00 171 Wll 409 T 3:40 123 .Cham 133.1 T 10:10 203 Wil W 1:30 203 Wll 405 S 7:00 400 T 8:00 49 Wil 542 T 3:40 131 Sac T 3:40 S B N A Sparks 406 T 8:00 225 405 T 10:1! 515 Appt School Psychology (S PSY) 500 Appt 410 W 8:00 107 Cham 133.2 S 1:30 64 Wil S 3:40 121 T 10:10 247 Wll 519 W 1:30 304 Wll S 1:30 S B N A 422 W 1:30 223 410 T 8:00 500 M 1:30 18 Sparks W 8:00 S B N A 529 T 9:10 S207 H Dev 504 W 1:30 123 Cham 133.3 M 1:30 64 Wll S 3:40 26 M S T 8:00 265 Wil Philosophy (PHIL) 530 Appt 307 W 3:40 107 Cham 133.4 W 1:30 317 Wil T 8:00 13 Sparks 423 S 8:00 414 W 8:00 102 M B 504 Appt T 3:40 5 B N A Sparks 425 T 3:40 101 417 S 1:30 S 10:10 See List 508 Appt S 1:30 214 Arts 536 T 10:10 S205 H Dev 508 S 8:00 201 Wll 133.3 W 8:00 301 Wil T 8:00 14 S 1:30 267 Wil M 3:40 See List 548 W 8:00 S207 H Dev 509 Appt 133.6 M 8:00 165 Wil S 1:30 2 Sparks 428 S 1:30 418 M 1:30 262 Wil Secondary Education (SECED) T 3:40 214 Arts 501 Appt M 3:40 101 Cham Chinese (CHNS) 511 Appt 133.7 T 10:10 215 Wil Appt 420 M 10:1010:1 26 M S M 7:00 See List 11* S 6:00 107 Cham S 1:30 215 Arts Sparks 503 Appt 421 W 331 Appt S 8:00 215 Arts 3 S 1:30 1 Sparks 512 Appt 149 T 8:00 360 Wil S 8:00 1 W 1:30 117 M B T 3:40 265 Wll 203 M 1:30 1 Sparks 513 Appt 189 W 1:30 169 Wil M 1:30 209 Wll 504 S 1:30 428 S 1:30 117 M B 389 Appt T 3:40 215 Arts 510 S 8:00 204 206 W 1:30 214 Boucke Civil Engineerin g (C E) 345 W 8 :00 417 E P £ 300.1 S 8:00 319 Wil S 8:00 13 Sparks 441 S 3:40 See List 365 Wll 400 T 8:00 417 E P C M 8:00 215 Arts Wil 454 W 208 S 1:30 426 T 10:10 S 1:30 213 Arts 14 M 1:30 124 Sac 544 Appt 300.2 M 8:00 171 Wil W 1:30 301 instructional Media (INS W 1:30 103 M B 218 T 8:00 203 Wll 108 Cham 15 s 1:30 124 Sac 347 Appt 300.3 Appt M 9:10 301 Wll 435 M 7:00 101 470 T 8.00 102 M B 433 M 10:10 108 Tyson T 3:40 213 Arts 221 M 1:30 367 Wll 438 M 10:10 21 T 10:10 v 124 Sac 548 T 3:40 214 E P C 406.2 M 8:00 304 Boucke C (GREEK) 437 M 1:30 22 472 M 8:O08:00 152 H B T 10-10 318 Wll 106 Cham W 8:00 17 Arts ' 473 W 224 ¦" 3 S 1:30 S B N A 24 M 1:30 \131 Sac 552 T 3:40 417 E P C 407.1 M 1:30 318 Wil S 1:30 320 Wll ..„„„.„ ,,„,N C l W 1:30 219 Wil 408 S 1:30 312 Boucke T 7:00 10 Sparks S 3:40 223 E P C 407.2 S 8:00 320 Wll T 3:40 201 Wil " " """ * .J J' 480 M 8:00 451 T 1:30 10 Sparks S 8:00 S B N A 41 T 8:00 555 1 ' ¦ "" '" 100 T 7:00 M 8:00 104 M B 410 W 7:00 312 Boucke 42.1 S 1:30 545 M 9:10 223 E P C 407.3 T 3:40 320 Wil , 481 T 3:40 103 M B 453 M 10:10 260 Wll T 3:40 S B N A ?P?; 110 M 1:30 309 491 App t 411 M 1:30 251 Wil 497.2 M 9:10 W 8:00 S B N A 42.2 T 8:00 571 M 8:00 214 E P C 408 T 8:00 219 Wil 200 M 8:00 309 Appt 420 T 3:40 321 Boucke 108 Forum 44 W 8:00 574 W 3:40 417 E P C 412 T 9:10 219 Wll aSS! 498 W 3:40 103 M B 497.3 M 1:30 107 Cham l,J T 10:10 237 Arts «° * J 428 S 1:30 -309 Boucke 45 S 1:30 578 M 8:00 201 Wil 413 T 9:10 219 Wil h Educ t ion (HL ED) J',; " 501 M 1:30 115 M B 526 Appt 52 App 430 Ap pt 539 Appt 46 T 10:10 391 Appt 418 Appt S 8:00 69 Wll 520 W 3:40 113 M B 435 S 8:00 309 Boucke 51 T 10:10 596.1 S 1:30 301 Wil 422 W t :30 320 Wil M 1-30 369 wil International° Business' (1 531 S 8:00 104 M B 550 S 1:30 524 E P C T 3:40 216 Arts ' 501 S 1:30 312 508 M 9:10 309 Boucke 551 S 1:30 61 S 6:00 596.2 T 8:00 301 Wll 432 M 1:30 320 Wll T 3: 40 275 Rec 537 T 3:40 104 M B T 3:40 351 Wll M 1:30 S B N A 434 S 1:30 360 Wil 503 Appt 553 T 8:00 512 309 Boucke 553 M 1:30 219 M 1:30 214 Arts 42.1 M 8:00 596.3 Ml:30 301 Wll W 3:40 275 Rec T 8:00 106 M B 515 W 9:10 309 Boucke Wil 62.2 T 3:40 596.4 S 8:00 301 Wll 437 T 3:40 208 Wil T 3:40 274 Rec 504 Ml:30 308 557 S 1:30 103 M B 585 T 10:10 219 Wll S 1:30 215 Arts 530. 1 M 9:10 320 Boucke 594 T 3:40 S 8:00 215 Arts 63.1,2 W 3:40 596.5 W 3:40 301 Wil 442 S 1:30 18 Sparks h Planning and International Understandin 542 W 1:30 113 M B 530.2 219 Wll 63.3 M 1:30 596.6 Appt 444.1 T 10:10 2 Sparks nistr ation (H P A) (INT U) 544 Appt 598 Appt M 8:00 215 Arts Physical Short Hand (SHORT) T 10:10 213 Arts 70 W 8:00 596.7 Appt 444.2,3 T 8:00 317 Wll T 10:10 S127 H Dev 300 M 7:00 ! 545 M 1:30 319 Wll 53A 443.1 T 8:00 12 Sparks 571 AApptppt 4 M 1:30 T 3:40 17 Arts 71 S 1:30 598 Appt M 1:30 S207 H Dev 598 W 3:40 1 33B 234 Cham 90 T 3:40 Electrical Engineering (E E) 445.2 W 8:00 1 Sparks iw (HEBR) Italian (ITI 572 T 33:40: 40 11 7 M B Slavic (SLAV) T 3:40 114 Arts 53C 560 Appt T 10:10 17 Arts 114 T 3:40 a T 6:00 128 Sac 448 W 1:30 1 Sparks T 3:40 362 Wll 3.1 T 8:00 211 574 Appt 575.1I Appt 530 Social Science (SO SO T 10:10 S B N A 144.1 T 10: 10 9 T 8:00 S209 H Dev 449.1 M 1:30 2 Sparks ry (HIST) 3.2 T 8:00 225 58 M 1:30 S B N A 144.2 S 1:30 104 Sac 41 T 10:10 117 Sac 449.2 T 3:40 1 Sparks S 8:00 102 Forum Journalism (JOURN) 575.2I T 8:00 319 Wil 100 1-1 T 10:10 108 Tyson ' 578 Appt 1-2 S 1:30 W 8:00 ' 237 Arts 400 T 3:40 104 Sac 47 M 1:30 117 Sac 455 T 8:00 1 Sparks T 6:00 122 Music \ 200 W 3:40 115 103 A T 3:40 105 M E 108 Tyson 401 Appt 52 W 1:30 124 Sac 441 T 10:10 1 Sparks T 10:10 269 Wil . 213 M 1:30 580 Appt 1-3 M 1:30 105 Frgn Appt 401 ¦ 103B S 8:00 275 Rec 423 S 8:00 104 Sac S3 T 1:30 342 Wil 475 M 8:00 12 Sparks M 1:30 73 Wil 240.1 T 8:00 Mechanicalhanlcal EngineeringEnali (M E) '•< W 1:30 111 Tyson Appt ; 103C T 8:00 26 M S 1.5 M 8:00 W S:00 214 Arts 448 S 8:00 108 Sac 41 S 10:10 242 Wil 478 S 8:00 12 Sparks S 1:30 115 E E W 240.2 S 8:00 M 3:40 See List 103D W 8:00 111 Boucke 232 H B T 3:40 237 Arts 451 S 8:00 203 Sac 42 S 10:10 142 Wll 490 S 1:30 14 Sparks M 8:00 358 Wll ; 260 T 8:00 M 7:00 See List 1.S T 3:40 220 Wil 109 W 3:40 274 Rec S 1:30 M 1:30 % B N A 465445 S 8:00 219 Sac 45 Ml:30 128 Sac 491 W 1:30 14 Sparks T 8:00 115 E E W I 304 M 1:30 M 10:10 See List 125 T 3:40 111 Boucke 1-7 140 Ch E M 1:30 214 Arts 500 W 3:40 219 Sac 67 S 3:40 115 E E W 524 M 8:00 14 Sparks W 1:30 115 E E W 320 W 8:00 S 10:10 See List 181.1 T 10:10 275 Rec '•! T 8:00 117 Sac Arts 501 Appt 41 S 3:40 128 Sac 540 W 3:40 14 Sparks T 3:40 262 Wll 341 Ml:30 S 7:00 See List 1-9 M 1:30 140 Ch E S 1:30 215 181.2 T 3:40 273 Rec 1.10 S 8:00 S 8:00 215 Arts 552727 T 10:10 219 Sac 49 S 7:00 24 M S 542 T 9:10 14 Sparks S 1:30 102 Forum 344 S 1:30 - W 10:10 124 Sac 203C Appt 308 Wil M 8:00 215 Arts 542 Appt 108.1,3 T 3:40 204 E E W 545 S 1:30 13 Sparks W 1:30 122 Music 344 T 10:10 T 7:00 362 Wll 203D Appt 2.1 T 10:10 111 Tyson T 10:10 213 Arts 545 S 1:30 203 Sac 108.2 Appt 546 S 1:30 15 Sparks M 8:00 303 Wil 372 S 1:30 T 1:30 152 H B 212 S 1:30 373 Wll 2-2 T 8:00 111 Tyson 550 W 8:00 104 Sac W 8:00 211 E E W 549 T 9:10 IS Sparks W 8:00 351 Wil 406 S 8:00 2.3 S 8:00 108 Tyson T 3:40 113 Arts ¦ 109.1 ¦ T 8:00 313 H B 223A M 8:00 367 Wll M 1:30 113 Arts 573 Appt 109.2 W 8:00 226 E E W 555 M 8:00 15 Sparks S 8:00 See List ' 419 T 10:10 M 1:30 216 H B 223B W 1:30 2.4 M 8:00 167 Wll 245 Wl l 2.5 T 3:40 Appt S7S575 T S'.OO . . 104 Sac 109.3 W 8:00 227 E E W 556 M 8:C0 13 Sparks M 1:30 317 Wil 421 M 1:30 S 10:10 313 H B 223C T 8:00 251 Wll 351 Wll UNA Classic (CLASS) 109.4 W 3:40 227 E E W 562 W 3:40 13 Sparks T 8:00 22 Deike , 422 T 3:40 S 1 : 30 21 1 M E 223D T 3:40 2.6 T 10:10 140 Ch E T 10:10 169 Wll 2.7 T 8:00 T 3:40 238 Arts 33 S 8:00 115 E E W 141 W 8:00 202 E E W 544 Appt S 1:30 112 Cham 424 1 S 1:30 T 8:00 124 Sac 3220 S 8:00 274 Rec 110 O L 408 T 8:00 ' 18 Sparks 147 T 3:40 227 E E W 582 S 8:00 15 Sparks M 8:00 317 Wil 424.2 W 3:40 S 8:00 211 M E 223A 2.1 M 1:30 110 OL Appt - ¦ • T 3:40 317 Wll Sociology (SOC) Appt Clothing «nd Textile! (CL TJO 163 W 7: 00 225 E S W 390 Appt W 1:30 121 Sparks 442 W 1:30 S 8:00 313 H B 323B S 8:00 165 Wil Appt 10 W 3:40 S209 H Dev 144 W 3:40 128 Sac 391 Appt Appt ! 443 M 9:10 W 1:30 315 H B 400.1 T 10:10 214 Bo ucke 1 S 10:10 See List Appt 102 S 8:00 117 H Dev 221.1,2 T 3:40 203 E E W 593 Appt Appt ! 463 W 3:40 W 8:00 313 H B 400.2 T 8:00 371 Wll 3 T 3:40 See List Appt ¦ ¦ 111 M 3l30 . . , S209 H Dev 221.3,4,5 W 3:40 225 E E W 597 S 8:00 14 Sparks S 1:30 317 Wll I 481 M 8:00 M 8:00 317 H B 460 *" M 8:00 S S 1:30 122 Music 273 Wll 7 W 7:00 Appt 201 T 10:10 S209 H Dev 223 W 8:00 201 E E W 398 Appt W 1:30 211 M E 480 W 8:00 275 Rec 360 Wll (A ED) 400 T 3:40 IS H Dev 200 W 1:30 26 M S Entomology (ENT) Appt 490 13 M 1:30 See List duc allon W 8:00 269 Wi IS T 10:10 W 8:00 HI Cham 406 W 1:30 117 H Dev 340 W 8:00 112 E E W Appt 491 S 1:30 42 Wl i See List T 1:40 111 Cham 4« M 8:00 S209 H Dev 421 Appt S 1:30 315 H B 500 Spreads Word of Universit y ' s Effo rts 1rials Schedule Announced Cor tnued from page five) 300 4515 M 1:30 303 Bouck- ' Vita l < 200. '. * S 8:00 323 Boucki Recruite r s Jo b: 19 T 3:40 158 Wi 200. .57 W 1:30 307 Boucki administration W 1:30 110 O L of arts degree in school 21 200. 13 w 8:00 319 Boucki ing black students could identify or talk M 1:30 101 Charr By BILL HENCE M 200. N> W 8-00 316 Boucki adjustment. " from Florida A. & . 30 T 10.10 258 Wil during the period of 200 n M 8.00 308 Bouck* Collegian Staff Writer in the Florida 55 W 8:00 64 Wii This period of adjustment is a difficult He also has worked 200. '2 M 8:00 307 BoucM as an 3!0 Appt system for 12 years 200 '3 7 3:40 303 Bouck' time for any student , he explained. But it public school 400 M 1:30 105 Charr Communication and identification are ducation 200 M T 3. 40 301 Bouck* the student teacher, a county art e 403 W 8W> 365 Wil is particularly irksome for art . 200. '5 T 3.40 306 E E V, the two concepts forming the keystone ol principal and the 413 T 3.40 101 Cham who is a minority group member, he supervisor, an assistant 200. '6 W 7.00 323 Bouck* o o 1 416 Secondary S c h M 8 00 107 Cham 203.' T 3:40 17 Spark) the University's policy on recruitment said. director of the 419 federal W 700 ioeI Tyson 203.:t Appt Program, a 426 and admission of black students. One of Remedial T 8 00 67 Wil 205 S 1:30 304 Rouck» For this reason , Glenn said he foresees 427 government-sponsored project. S 3-40 367 Wil 250. I M 8-00 306 Bouckd the principal advocates of these concepts the need for more black adults, "black ««t1 Appt 250 :t T 3.40 101 E E W 428 2 professionals " as he describes them, to Student Problems 2 M 910 108 Forurr 252 T 10:10 317 Bouckd is Hodges Glenn Sr., black recruiter. . No Strange r to 429 T 8.00 112 O L 2P0 W 8.00 312 Bouckf assist him. his associate George Culmer 430 Since September, when Glenn accepted his doc- W 1 30 318 WI 300 Appt and the volunteers from the Black Stu- Currently, he is working on 414 S 8 00 709 Wil 301. 1 T 9.10 312 Boucke education. Obviously, 453 his position as admissions counselor in dent Union in providing identity figures torate in higher S 1.30 308 Boucki 301 : T 9-10 309 Bouck* stranger to the problems of 455 W 1 30 273 Wi 3ni.:I W 9.10 308 Bouckf the Director of Admissions Office , he has for young blacks. Glenn is no 4j& Appt students. 301 • I W 9 .10 31? Boucke visited many public school systems. His hi=h school and college 505 W 7-CO 308 WI 310 S 1-30 303 Boucke in art 506 T 8 00 3 OS Bouckf Favors 'Equal Chance' In addition to his background 325/ T 11:00 317 Boucke - ^ basic mission has been to establish a a master 510 Appt 325 ;! S 8:00 321 Boucke education , in which he earned 523 T 3 40 308 Bouck* "vital communications link" in order to Regarding admission of black students, Glenn 352 W 1:30 306 E E W of arts degree from the University, 525 Appt 402 W 1.30 262 Wil Glenn said. "I believe that the black stu- 555 Appt impress upon black students the idea that accomplished painter. 412 T B.00 316 Roucke dent should be given an equal chance to is an 574 T 10 '0 308 Bouckt 419 T 10 10 201 C B the University and the black students." commercial artist ' I'm in favor of He has worked as a So ldd state Science (S S S) 435 S 130 308 H B reach his potential. Examples 03 Ani; ' for severa l advertising firms. 437 W 340 330 Boucke University: 'Seriously Concerned' whatever it takes to give him that seen in the panish (SPAN) 450 S 6:00 330 Boucke " of his artistic ability can be .1 w 10:10 IB Sparks chance. life m the 460 M 8.00 306 E E W "In my work I have tried to be honest murals depicting University 2 W 10:10 Sparks 496 M 9:10 319 Boucke He also implied that he does not favor Waring .3 W 10 10 Sparks Pollock Union Building and in 40 J) Apot in my dealings with the problems facing a lowering of admission standards for 4 W 10 10 Soarks 500 S 1:30 16 Sparks Hall; 5 W 10 10 Sparks 508 M 1-30 306 E E W the University and the black students," blacks. He said most blacks do not want extensively. T 7 00 Sparks 520 T 9 10 308 Boucke to see standards lowered either. They Glenn also has traveled T 7 00 S parks Glenn said. "I have carried the word that France, 555 T 9-10 306 E E W just want an "equal chance," Glenn ex- While in the service, he visited T 7.00 S parks 575 Appt Penn State is seriously concerned with Holland. Dar- T 7 00 S parks Germany. Switzerland and Spec ch Pathology and plained. T 7 1)0 Sparks , a commercial artist and Audi olog y (S P A) raising the educational level of all youth in" his career as T 7 00 S parks 'To sum up the University's obligation traveled to nearly every T 7 no Sparks 346 S 1-30 369 Wil especially the black and the disadvantag- educator, he has 439 T 3- 40 304 Wil to the black students, Glenn said. "Now T 1 10 Sparks major city in the United States. 440 T 10-10 304 Wil ed. T 1 20 S parks that more black students are coming to 444 M 8:00 365 Wil geographic location of T 1.10 Sparks Penn State, we need to move in a positive Glenn views the 449 W 1:30 209 Wil "I believe I have been successful in T 1 .10 S parks resulting in special dif- 461 40 304 Wil Black Recruiter direction to receive them and to give the University as 3.6.7 T 1 30 V, Sparks W 3. convincing segments of the black com- disadvantaged 463 S 8-00 220 Wll for the poor and 3.3 T I 30 V. S park*; them the needed supportive services that ficulties 465 W 7-00 270 WM j s , and I hope and their relative 3 9.10 T i :n u 4 Cham munity that this true will enable each student to complete his student Because of 466 HODGES GLENN, admission counselor in the Director oi 301 M 7 00 75 Wil M 3 00 304 Wil people in State College have 469 feel confident that the University will program and to adjust to the academic isolation, the 302 T 3 40 II Sparks Appt black student 530 Appt Admissions Office, has said his basic mission is to establish understanding the 353 M 8 00 i; S parks support my effort." he added. In this and social environment. trouble 538 Appt explained. 354 S I 30 101 E E E from urban areas, he 541 S 1 30 308 Wll a 'vital communications link' in order to impress upon way. he has succeeded in filling one re- 400 T 3 40 16 Sparks "However, for the University to fulfill 544 T 3- 40 171 Wil empathy makes it even 413 S 8 00 IB Sparks quirement of his position, that of recruit- its obligations and commitments, each in- This lack of 543 T 10:10 171 Wil the black students the idea that the University is con- 414 M 1 30 203 E E W student to ad- 549 W 8 00 171 Wil coming student must be willing to accept difficult for the black 459 T 8.00 K i Chf»m ing black students. more 5 8-00 319 Boucke cerned about and with them. Glenn has visited school may to 4S0 M 8.00 IS S parks 550 the necessary support so that he college society, according SI Ah sties (STAT) just to the 515 W 1-10 13 Sonrks But there is a second, and perhaps succeed," he added . the 200 T 10 10 See Li

¦ 2 2 i¦ if r COUPON "A" I COUPON "B" OUR POLICY I for Western Pennsylvania Residents I for Eastern Pennsylvania Residents I Reading Dynamics will refund the tuition I EVELYN WOOD . EVELYN WOOD I of any student who fails to at least triple 1 | READING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE " his reading Index (reading rate multiplied READING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE ..,.uhichside by comprehension percentage) as measured I William Penn Hotel I H9 York Rd. tests, or | nillvou be on? by the beginning and subsequent Pittsburgh, Pa. 15219 I Jenkinstown, Pa. the student may retake the course tree ol f charge. A refund is conditional upon the Please send me Free Brochure | Please send me Free Brochure I ail the classes or having student attending I Class Schedule for made up missed classes. The student must and Summer Class Schedule for and Summer ' also have practiced the required number ol ¦ Western Pa. Thank you. I Eastern Pa. Thank you. I MALCOLM-McOOWELL CHRISTINE NOONAN RICHARD WARWICK-DAVIDWOOD hours as outlined by the teacher. Any stu- ScwcrJybyj toeuitH rTOAjCguEPf dent who must withdraw from the course ¦ ¦ NAME I NAME... . ¦ ROBERT SWANN DAV1D SHERWIN • LINDSAYANDERSO N- MICHAELM E0W1N ^ lor any reason may re-enter at any future | session at no additional cost. A refund must LINDSAYANDERSON -COLOR-A PARAMOUNT PICTURE (ggiftl H be requested In writing within two weekl ¦ ADDRESS I ADDRESS s after the course Is completed. -COMING THIS SUMMER- ¦ CITY, STATE ZIP 1 CITY, STATE • ZIP ¦ TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU! Human Relations Labs Center On Interaction By SANDY FISCHIONE in groups is basic to all we do. Collegian Staff Writer "The conditions which we build into the life of any group determine how much the group can do to 'fulfill our needs as Forcing people to think might sound like some sort of members and the tasks we seek to do." totalitarian idea. But not at Penn State's Human Relations Training Laboratory. Self-Analysis "We spend most of our lives in groups," James V. Watkins, director of the project, said. "We socialize in groups. Human Relations Training is one type of experience-based We work in groups. We play in groups. Knowing how to work learning. Participants work together over an extended period of time, learning through analysis of their own experiences, including feelings, reactions, perceptions and behavior. According to Watkins, the program is part of a longer range HUB Hours Petition objective of the Student Activities Division , which is to offer leadership training to all interested students. "This program should eventually lead to the development of personal and institutional vitality," he said. Gets 300 Signatu res The personal growth objectives of the training include ac- quisition of increased sensitivity in personal communications A petition to keep the Hetzel committee, said the petition skills Union Building open o n will have the support of , developing self-awareness and learning how' to learn weekends until womens* cur- University President Eric A. and what obstructs learning. few has attracted 3 0 0 Walker. Justice of the Peace Other objectives include group processing: understanding signatures in two days. Guy Mills of State College, the meaning of group membership and being aware of the shared functions of leadership. The petition, circulated by. called the proposal an "ex- a cellent idea. Young people group of six students, is part of Affective Learning a campaign of letters and should have a place to go." meetings to gain support for Champ Storch, director of Champ R. Storch , director of student activities and super- an extension of hours in the student activities, and Mike visor of the program, emphasized that human relations is not HUB to 3 Saturday mornings Alexander, president of the group therapy. "It's a new kind of approach to affective learn- Harpagon Runs and to 4 Sunday mornings. The University Union Board, ex- ing. HUB currently closes at 12:30 pressed concern over funding for the extra hours. A skeletal "People are thrown off balance and are forced to think." HARPAGON FOR CONGRESS? Students have been Friday and Saturday nights. he added. "It's really not much different than a class with an staff would be needed to pro- •topping to stare at Harpagon for Congress stickers around The petition requests that at vide security, management, exciting professor. He is in many ways like a facilitator (a Theatre Toni g ht least the most frequented janitorial and food services. staff member who serves as a trainer). He incites. He con- campus. The stickers were a promotion '¦ampaign for FIVE O'CLOCK THEATRE players perform a scene from stantly challenges. areas of the HUB, such as the Storch said , however, that if "The Miser." "Suite; In Three Movements" by John Orlock. The play Television Room, Lion's Den sufficient student support is "Most professors realize that they cannot teach a student will be performed tonight and tomorrow night at 5:20 at and Game Room, remain open. shown, an extension of HUB all there is to know about his subject. But if the professor can Barb Wakshul (3rd-liberal the Playhouse. hours might be tried on an ex- get the student to continue learning after leaving his arts-Phila.). a member of the perimental basis. classroom, then he's been a successful teacher. "This may very well be the goal of education," Storch ad- ded. Mise r Performance 1st Place Winner To Receiv e Gold-p lated Bowl Fifth Year Held The human relations labs have been conducted for five years. The next lab will take place over the May 23 to 25 Schedu led for Festival weekend. This year the emphasis is on affective learning, which is only one part of the human relations Harpagon and the rest of Ihe cast from the University concept. The Theatre's production of "The Miser" will perform in other part, cognitive learning, or skill development, will be emphasized next year. Washington , D.C., this Saturday in the first American College Bowl Finals Toni ght Theatre Festival. "We've been getting a lot of good feedback from people By LAURA WERTHEIMER He said he was surprised at the extent of favorable attention •who have participated in past labs," Storch said. He added For the past week the cast has boon distributing "Harpagon Collegian Sta ff Writer given the College Bowl by the student body. "There has been that this does not necessarily mean that all persons have had for Congress" stickers across the campus, advertising its "What is epistemology?" only a small amount of publicity in the Collegian and around good experiences. "You've got to go in with a positive learning Washington trip. The publicity campaign was the brainchild of "Who are the three candidates running for president of campus, but a great deal of interest in it," he said. attitude." Richard Bakkerud of the Theatre Arts Department. France?" Pockrass said he favors the idea of getting a Penn State He said that some people are critical of the human "Who wrote Rosemary's Baby?" team on the College Bowl television program. "This could be a relations labs , but "I see the v alue of the program. There is Centre County Congressman Albert Johnson commended the If your immediate response to these questions is the branch campus-wide elimination contest," he said. Only one team potential for real growth." cast and the entire Theatre Arts Department Tuesday in the of philosophy dealing with theories of knowledge, George from Penn State ever has competed on the General Electric U.S. Congressional Record . He praised the company as a Pompidou, Jacques Duclos and Gaston Defferre and Ira Levin, College Bowl and that was in 1966. whole and announced the Saturday performance. s you should have participated in the University Union Board' SDSer Calls 'Perverted' during the past Johnson especially sighted Paul Villani , the title character, College Bowl competitions on Tuesday nights and Christopher Murney for their acting achievements. Mur- several weeks. A . member of one student organization was cited in Philade l hia Philharmon ic The Daily Collegian as stating, p ncy and Villani came in first and second places respectively in Final Contests Tonight "College Bowl has a perverted the Theatre Communications Group's audition . The company entirely student-run, involved 53 teams of concept of Education." Cotler said The College Bowl, he inferred from the helps actors contact various agencies throughout the country'. five students each. Final competitions, to be held at 7:30 remark that emphasizing the ability to recall memorized fac- Together Mu rney and Villani received over 15 third and tual data, job offers, tonight in 102 Forum, will decide first, second, as is done in College Bowl, is indulging in an Set for Satur day Concert including one from the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in On- fourth place teams. ' "educational evil." tario. Finalists are Dorfman Independents, North Halls, Pi "I believe that education can best be described as a con- Freedom. tinuum with facts on one Three major compositions "Die Meister singer von Lambda Phi fraternity and Young Americans for end and concepts on the other, with will be included on the pro- Nurnberg" by "The Miser" was chosen to participate in the festival from Members of the College Bowl Executive Committee, Gary the middle ground, a blend of both , W i 1 h e I m being the most desirable," gram for The Philadelphia Richard Wagner, followed by about 200 entries from college* throughout the country. It will Cotler, chairman, and Emily Stover and Ken Rosenstein, will he said. be the anchor performance of the festival which began on including a gold-plated bowl "To get there Orchestra in its concert here Symphony No. 3, "The Camp act as moderators. Four trophies, we must take our ideals, which may be in Saturday night. Meeting," by Charles Edward April 28. for first place, a smaller cup for second place and engraved abstract form, and apply to them our absolute facts. The out- With Eugene Ormandy on Ives. The festival is the product of placques for third and fourth places, will be awarded. come will then be a realistic and practical alternative," he ad- the podium, the Orchestra will the joint efforts of the Last year's championship was won by Young Americans for ded . Symphony American Educational Theatre Association and the American play at 8:30 in Recreation Hall. No. 1 in D major, National Theatre. Freedom. Twenty-four teams competed, 19 less than this year. Cotler said that as College Bowl chairman he recognized the The concert was arranged as "The Titan," by G u s t a v The main objective of the festival is to National T.V. Show importance of conceptual knowledge but -that conceptual Mahler, will be heard following recognize and to encourage the excellence and force of college a special event by the drama. Efforts are being made to contact General Electric College answers or opinions could not be asked easily because of the University Artists' Series and intermission. Bowl to get Penn State's team on the nationally televised Col- difficulty of judging them right or wrong. the sale of tickets continues at lege Bowl program according to Cotler. _ "We chose to follow precedent and ask for facts," he said. the Main Desk of the Hetzel Robert Pockrass , associate ' professor of journ alism, has 'Some people might call that perverted or evil — I think that Union Building. GIFTS a FCC been moderating College Bpwl tournaments. According to the 250 people who participated would call it good clean fun," To open the concert, the Pockrass, the real purpose of College Bowl is entertainment Cotler added. Orchestra will play Prelude to and fun. "Like any other activity^.xQifcget.out of it what you put into it. Some of the participants seem" to be enjoying it a great deal," he said. "A person's speed in answering factual questions is not necessarily an indication of his intellectual ability, his ability to handle concepts. I would hardly call College Bowl DAY the essence of college experience.- But this doesn't mean it COLLEGE BOWL should be discounted. A complete selection of f ine gifts f or 'Alert' and 'Aware' someone "Certain kinds of people do well in it," Pockrass continued. CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH "Generally people who are well read, alert to what's going on Yi in the world, have good memories." He added that the wide too-nice and too-important to be f orgotten range of topics covered in the matches made it unlikely that any individual would know .most of the answers, but having a good grasp of the basics of several areas of learning and of TONIGHT 102 FORUM current events generally showed up in the competition. "There are quite a few good, competent, alert teams com- The winners of last night' s matches peting this year," Pockrass said. r ' • • YAF vs. Dorfman (Ind.) mover jewelers 216 EAST COLLEGE Here's your opportunity to take and AVENUE your favo rite girl out for a great evening Pi Lambda Phi vs. Tau Epsilon Phi of bowlin g and money! will meet for the championship at 8 p.m. consolation match at 7:30 p.m. sponsored by un iversity union board mub ) *l[ : Friday Nights, at Armenara Lanes, for every game you bowl, your date may bowl a game free © 9 of charge! That's tomorrow night, for each game 9 9 a guy bowls his date bowls a game free.. So fellows, • ^ a take your favorite girl to. It's been single-edged ,double-edged , Armenara Lanes JUNI OR S In Armenara Plaza , on Sowers Street, banded , injectored , plastic -coate d, and you can both bowl for the price of one. Portraits for the 1970 La Vie and now electro -coated. E-H May 5-May 31 The Nation 's No. 1 Entertainer !• This section will NOT © N S be taken again next fall 3 But it's still straight • ' • • 9 PERSON !• Portraits are taken with out appointment from 9 a.m.-12 noon • !• and 1-4 p.m. at the Penn State Photo Shop • The Wade. in two out of three shaves in an inde- your cheeks. Automatically. And with- JAMES iS£ i(214,ci4 E.c Collegeuuncge Ave.—rearhvc.—rccjr, 237-2345)t,Qi-e.o*v/ £1 Whatever else they've done to pendent lab test. out.a nick , pull or scrape. it, one thing hasn't changed. And you get a comfortable The new Norelco has a hidden It's still straight. shave because the Norelco floating trimmer that pops out for sideburns , And your face still isn't. heads curve with your chin, bend with and a push button for easy flip-top BROWN • JWen wear light shirt, dark jacket , tie— •? It's round. your neck, and even straighten out tor cleaning. It also comes in a recharge- J The new Nor'eico Triple- able model that gives almost twice as header gets around this problem. many shaves per charge as any other • Women wear jewel neck sweater and no jewelry— • We put our unique rotary rechargeable. With Show • 9 blades into three floating heads that Wecan 'tseeyou changing follow your face by going in where the shape of your face. ¦ for entire your face goes in. And out where your Biitvye.-can see you changing 5• . There will be a sitting charge of $1.85 •5 face goes out. to Norelco. ' • . 9 This way the new Norelcc f amily !• gets close enough to shave you as 9 • close or closer than a blade. As found norelco* you can't get anycloser - icket priteS! Date: May lSthJ 1969 J Students: S2.50 | | GET IT NOW- 2 Show Time: 9:00 P.M. SiM Children-^^ under _. 12 Yrs" 99c Place: Penn- State^. . 1 AVOID THE RUSH THE FINAL WEEK | University at 0n Sale At. The HUB Rec Hall • • ©1969 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New.York. N.Y. 10017 : ¦• a " ' Hibsch man in Easterns '"- •-—-^^ *^ -^ LaXers Edge Lehigh; Aim sApparently, for following his poorTitle showing in the high I GolferBy JOHN PESOTA school championships, Hibschman applied the old adage . Writer ' Collegian Sports "if you can't beat it, join it." Everyone associated with I The Penn State golfers, riding the crest of a six the Penn State linksmen is glad he did. : Straight , 8-6 overall, Win 2nd match winning streak and holding a 7-1 record alive the old depart from State College today for a trip to the Like all other linksmen, Hibschman has a favorite j By WARREN PATTON ' Pencek's squad and has kept golf course. "Without doubt the finest course I played : , 3 axiom that "seeing is believing . Eastern Championships at Ithaca, N.Y., this weekend. ". ' Collegian Sports Writer Leading the squad into battle will be team captain on was at Saucon Valley this year against Lehigh," he • yr : ';. :0::l . S- . ; Difficult Game Bob Hibschman. said. "I didn't believe a course could be in such good : Basking in the starshine of the an easy battle for the shape. Aronimink is also a fine course. They held the It was not Hibschman, with a record of 8-0, has been the disconnected light on top of Mount Lions in the Slavic Alps. Tim Turner linksmen this season. He is the PGA there a few years ago, when Gary Player won it. times lor mainstay of the Lion the Penn State LaXers burned Jim McGuone three only undefeated member of the squad and any chances But I think Saucon Valley has to be the best I've Bethlehem, jor show in the played." 8-6 vie- scores as the ma of a State victory at the Easterns will rest in good part twinkled their way to a radiating floodlights for Lehigh. He and his mates on his performance. At State, Hibschman really began blossoming last i . tory over the moonstruck Lehigh kept the relatively close throughout Hibschman, like many successful golfers, got his year as a junior. He posted a 9-2 record and accom- » ' Engineers yesterday. It .may not have the first half and through much of the start as a caddie. But he was not born with a golf club by the panied the Lions to the Easterns. The Lions finished i ' been the Lions' sunniest performance, fourth quarter when a comeback in his hands. "Neither of my parents played golf ," third behind two Ivy Leaguers — Princeton and the :,' Engineers eased a 7-3 deficit. Hibschman remarked. "I lived next to a golf course, but such is the problem when a big school Harvard champions. In individual competition Hibsch- Probably the premier reason for the the Williamsport Country Club, where I caddied and man failed to make the cut for the playoffs by a single :' - meets a smaller version which sprinkles clock layed every chance I got. I guess I started when I t large lead was the 'round the p stroke. This year though, he has hopes of doing better, ' , its pixie dust in fervent hopes of a shining bombing to which Lehigh goalie Tom was 10 or 11. both for the team and as an individual performer. : Pro Helped Him V , hour. Ludlum was subjected . The Engineer and "The pro at Williamsport County Club really helped "At the beginning of the season I thought I was his defensemen faced 53 shots, 22 of going to have a good year. I was playing real well. Unfortunately for .Lehigh, it had not which were on goal, eight of which he me along. He got me a reckoned on a pixie-sized attackman who job in the golf shop I've also gotten a few good breaks during the year," failed to stop. Hibschman said. has led the Lions in scoring all year. Bob which allowed me to play Schoepflin, who at times appears to be McGuone Tough on the course. He really Can Win Easterns losing a battle of size to his stick , scored Jim McGuone, on the other hand, helped me with my three times and dished out two assists. game." "I feel that if I play well in the Easterns I could faced but 29 shots with Lehigh's control eight of Following his early win there. I also think that our team is good enough ' - He was not alone in the limelight, offense, 14 of which were on goal, training Hibschman be- to win the Eastern championship. Then we would get \ STATE'S STELLAR stopper, goalielalio however. Rick Ruf burned goalie Tom which he stopped. Considering the target a bid to compete in the National Championships at " practice, it wasn't McGuone who was gan his competitive ca- : Jim McGuone, did the job again yes- Ludlum twice for scores to maintain the reer playing for his high Colorado Springs, Colo. This is my main ambition for off the field mumbling incoherencies »«..»=„ «»™;™ -,:~j .» t ¦>,:_>, .hr,»c ;« optometrists influence in sports. Ihe school team, which he ^ *&s this year.'' terday, stopping eight Lehigh shots in bespectacIed midfielder at times has about shots "coming from everywhere". captained in his junior Following graduation in June. Hibschman event- an 8-6 Penn State lacrosse win. been an explosive scorer for Dick Leading that tough defense for the year. He won district ually hopes to establish himself as a professional, but Nittany squad was Gerry Curtin, who has championships twice but like" just about all graduates there are other consider- been described as "keeping us in the in the state champion- ations which will weigh upon him first. "I suppose I'll In First Press Conference game on defense". Which is tough when ships, held at the Uni- graduate into the Army, but I'd like to play pro some- you're stopping shots and dodging irate versity golf course. day." Hibschman said. "I hope somehow to get a chance skyhawks at the same time. Hibschman failed to to play a lot of golf in the Army." make the cut on either Lot oi Dodging occasion. "I could never One thing is certain—the Lion golf captain will get Retzlaff Speaks Frankly The Lions had to do quite a bit of " a chance to play a lot of golf this weekend at Ithaca. put it together here. PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Pete "I' ve been working on this unofficial- dogging in the contest. The Engineers Hibschman said. "But our If he, along with the remainder of the Lion linksmen took to some illegal contact from the can keep the momentum going. State could very well Retzlaff has added a dimension long lack- ly for two or three weeks. We have seven area couldn't compare BOB H IBSCHMAN ing in the Philadelphia Eag les or eight candidates. I would expect to outset and were assessed with 10 in- with golfers from Phila- . . . golf leader return to State College next week with two champion- fractions. The ones that got away, Pittsburgh." ships, in individual and team competition. organization — frankness. After five have our man within a week to 10 days, delphia and years of nearly total blackout on in- However, we are not going to let time however, probably numbered in the formation. Retzlaff lifted the shades at dictate to us. We want a head coach with teens. his first news conference after being assistants who are all potential head This may have been a reason for named general manager of the Eagles. coaches themselves. It is up to the head Lehigh's comeback. Down 7-3 in the You asked a question; you got an answer, coach to command respect by his football fourth, the Engineers started hitting and Top Kni g ht straight between the eyes. knowledge from his assistants and the scoring and dropped the deficit to a Brown Unhappv players." single goal in two minutes time. The ' wha t does he think of Norm Snead as Lions then switched to a control offense In Preakness Bob Brown, the Eagles fine offensive f tackle, was reported ready to quit a quarterback? and maintained that until Ruf took a pass, who finished because he didn't care for the changeover .. .. Snead Not Developed dodged a sharp edged slide rule and Top Knight , Mechanically, Norm is as fi ne a shoveled the Lions' eighth score of the fifth in the Kentucky Derby but in ownership and front office personnnel. How about that Pete? quarterback as we have in the league game into the net with just 11 seconds second choice in the wagering, ,,_ , _ ., . . ,. Unfortunately he has not been developed remaining in the game. will arrive at PirrJico tomor- Bob Brown is the best offensive to his fuli potential. It is not his fault. We Two Straight Wins. row to prepare for the S150.000- lineman m the National Football and wffl have six or seven quarterbacks in added Preakness May IV. A™er!=f" Football leagues, Retzlaff Raymond Metcalf, who camp two weeks be£ore the rest o£ the That win not only gives the LaXers a said. We want him with us in building a team reports " two game winning streak, it also pushes trains Top Knight, advised championship team. However, my policy ut the of Pimlico officials by telephone How ab^ signing Leroy them to the .500 mark for the first time is that anybody is expendable. If he s not Reyes, the Eagles' No. 1 draft choice? since the Syracuse loss. The upcoming yesterday from Garden State happy, he s not contributing any!;¦•¦? to -^ - - that he expects his 3-year-old don t know wnat he s aski but schedule cannot be termed the championship effort. Bob can play an hell get substantially more than I got as " to run a much better race in instrumental part. jn roughest" due to consistency of difficul- the Preakness than he did in a rookie s5 700 j do not b^ve n0.cut ty, but with a little incentive gained the Derby. How long will it take him to replace contracts. I won't give out no-cut con- yesterday, the spotlight on the Lions Top Knight , last year's 2- fired head coach Joe Kuharich? tracts." could be centered on the victory circle. year-old champion, is to be given a serious workout at ¦ ¦ ¦ Pimlico Sunday. The mile and — • v-"-"-™- • ' •»*¦¦• ~'v three-sixteenths Preakness is •* the middle leg of racing's Der- by-Prcakness-Belmont Triple Crown. -£C!Al Pimlico officials are expect- > ing a starting field of at least 10 for the 94th running of the HOLIDAY race. ' INN Majestic Prince and Arts —Collegian Photos by Pierre Belllclnl Share the and Letters, winner and WITH THIS diving lunge al the ball, junior runner-up in the Derby, defensive BUFFETS already are at Pimlico. Dike, Fly ing Tackle halfback John Andersen (45) blocked a field goal attempt the Derby No. 3 horse, also by place kicker Rusty Garthwaiie (37). The action took was brought here but was Blocks Kick place as the Lions scrimmaged last Saturday. scratched for the preakness FRIDAY worldrathyour and taken on to New York . FISH LUAU Dodgers Down Cubs ALPHA CHI OMEGA SZ.50 per person fellow zhari. $1.25 children On Davis ' wishes to thank the following for making under 12 our Orphan CHICAGO W> — Wi llie Davis' second homer of the ' s Day a big success: game capped a three-run spurt in the 12th inning yesterday for a 4-2 Los Angeles Dodger victory over the Chicago Richard Shoemaker Graham's Cubs. The Cubs rallied in the last of the 12th for a run Our Alums and Brothers Pennsylvania Book Shop on a-double by Randy Hundley and a pinch single by of Hermes McLanahan's Willie Smith. The game ended when pinch runner Nate Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity Oliver was picked off first. Student Book Store Then Sizemore opened the 12th with his third single Andy Hi-Way Pizza Riverside Market rr r- tt-v-hm and moved to second on Paul Popovich's single. Willie Char-pit RESTAURANT Crawford's sj/gle scored Sizemore and Davis homered Weis Market into the right' field seats, the eighth homer off loser Fergu- The Lodge Armenara Bowling State Pa. son Jenkins this season. Hickey' College * The Cubs broke through for a run off Claude Osteen s Lanes with two out in the fourth on successive singles by Billy Williams. Ron Santo and Ernie Banks. It was the 1,499th

Distin guished Service Awa rd Nominatio ns Colloquy Meeting AWARD PRESENTED ANNUALLY TO THAT FOR HOSTS AND HOSTESSES MEMBER OF THE UNIVERSITY FACULTY OR FOR ALL THAT HAVE APPLIED STAFF WHO HAS CONTRIBUTED MOST TO ~yfiJ 81HBr *•<¦ ffMwT^Minff'' * i. THE CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY AND WSBHm. Nominations Accepted: FOR THOSE WHO ARE INTERESTED Thursday, May 8 and Friday. May 9 Ground Floor HUB THURSDAY, MAY 8th Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega 9:00 P.M. HUB READING Men's Service Fraternity ROOM

OPENING THIS THURSDAY £=S§ NOTICE :onaa panes in sp k on a ARNIVAL The last Human Relations Lab this year will be held . Runs around all MAY 23-25, 1969. Facilit ato rs from on and off campus award winning Broadway musical will be utilize d as trainers. PENN STATE THESPIANS H.R. t rainin g is designed to improve the participant 's present ON STAGE awareness , communication , and leadership skills. It deals Hond k at Schwab Auditorium with the processes of recallin g, and responding to the THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY dimension s communi cated in the group via sensing, feel- May 8, 9, 10 ings , and speaking. It provides an opportunity to increase HONDA Cuiiain Time: Evenings, 8:30: Saturday matinee, 2:30 self-awareness , practice new ways of behaving, and learn- Honda dealer for a color brochure, safely Damohlet and "Invisible C TICK ETS AT HUB DESK ing how to learn with other students, faculty, and staff. Thursday $1.50 Saturday $2.00 Due to incre ased interest , application s cannot be accept- Willi amson Sports Motors Your authorized dealer for Frid ay $1.75 Sat. Matinee $1.50 ed after May 10, S969. 120 S. Pugh St. HONDA State College NBA Presentation: Weight Men 'Lift ' Trackmen The 4th Place Celtics Shot Puttin g and U.FO.s Saturday s Big! By PENNY WEICHEL The producer took time out to casually By JAY F1NEGAN weight crew surrounds itself in legend. Mike Held handles the chores in the discus. In Collegian Sports Writer mention that it" was "a nice play by Jones, especially. 4" meet, Kingston bettered 150-feet, a notch ahead of but that by play by Havlicek..." And then Collegian Sports Writer Now, Mike Reid was a contemporary folk hero Mike Reid. < The World Champion Fourth Place Boston towards the end of the game he noted that Scott Hagy was seated at a booth, sequestered in before al! this. Everyone's heard the stories. How Tack onto this list javelin man Dick Richardson the 76ers John Glass ; Celtics. , who won by about 30 points, have the provincial atmosphere of a delicatessen in the Reid went out for wrestling one year and advanced to and hammer-shot putters Al Muccilli, "a great club but you have to admire these the national semi-finals before losing to a twisted Tom Pavlick and Joe DcStcfano and you've go! the King of Prussia Plaza. After a day of flexing limb The' Second Chance Champion Boston Celtics..." Nag. Nag. Nag. Now do you un- knee. Or how he raps ball carriers cock-eyed into the task force which cannot only win meets, but could Celtics. derstand why I hate the Celtics? and bleep in the April sun, his face was the color of a S6 seats at Beaver Stadium. During the winter he probably have made Ghengis Khan's horde look like; good bottle of Italian Chianti or an August tomato. does the local circuit, captivating audiences with his the girls who model panty-hose for Sears and 1 Since Boston won another NBA cham- If you think I hate the Boston Celtics — His eyes were as blue as the Gulf of Mexico and fixed dexterity on piano. Roebuck catalogues. pionship (he other night, I knew we'd have But when you're built like the Pillars of Hercules, you're right. If you think this 'is going to be themselves upon the multitude of club sandwiches to sit and listen to the writers and broad- which Reid is. you like to keep fit. He came out for in- Couldn't Believe Their Eyes a very cutting article about the Boston which looked back from the table. casters go into their usual song and dance door track this winter and two week? later he smash- members of the Celtics and the NBA and its hideous playoff ed the State shot put record held by Roosevelt Grier. One afternoon, some routines reserved for the Boston "Old Men." After polishing off his second order of the same, ant hropology department wore snooping around at system — you're right. So read on and enjoy Hagy leaned back in his seat. Others were still work- Now he is continuing his exploits in the sunshine and The thing that bothers me however h- practice. Watching the troops put the shot, they your, nut crumb sweet rolls. , is that ing on their appetizers, while Hagy began speaking n'lded the d'scus to his agenda. Last Saturday at of the asslninc NBA Pitt he lobbed the shot to another mark, 57-2'b, which believed they'd happened upon survivors playoff system that has pam- with bashful optimism. "If we can beat Pitt and Ar- Dinosaur Age. Three days of weight trainim " re -iv The thing to do, when you hate any team pered the Celtics three out of the last four my," he said, "we can say it was a good season." cracks his own outdoor record. Although spring foot- ball practice is in session and draws some of his at- and immense meals do tend to make you look like the in professional sports, is analyze the years as Boston has failed to win its The "we" to whom ho referred was the Penp State missing link in the evolutionary scale. track team. The Lions were on their way back to tention , Reid vows to someday reach 60 feet. emotion. I tried it once and figured out ex- division title in the NBA, yet has been actly what I have ¦University Park, having dumped Villanova on its Kau ffman Powerful Big Appetite against the Boston Celtics. crowned World Champions. Olympic behind a couple of hours earlier. It's not any of their players and it's not real- "I took Mike (Reid) out to supper one night ." Members of the NBA play a grueling 82- Then, there arc the guys who step in to grab their ly the fact that they win all the time. It's the Weight Men Win own first places or back up the winners. One such coach Harry Groves said, " and he had steak. He ate game schedule which (1) eliminates six of it. fat and all. The waitress brought some extra food writers. And the broadcasters. They nag you the weaker clubs (less than one-half of the Hagy, a short, powerful sophomore, is a member man is Roger Kau ffman , a junior shot putter and hammer thrower. On a good day, Kauffman can hurl by mistake and Mike grabbed that, too. Ho cleaned into respecting the Celtics. They rub in their league) from play-off competition, (2) deter- of State's weight event crew , which had muc'i In do all the plate: around him.....W ith runner*, its bad to mines homecourt advantages for the play- with that victory and the others which have lifted the his hammer from Beaver Stadium clear down to the every victory. dairy barns. Once , it's flight was picked up by the eat before bed but these weight men can't sleep offs and (3) steals hard earned money from Lions to the promised land of the unbeaten. That unless they cat. For instance, fans in 14 NBA cities April Saturday, Army radar system down the road. They identified it once two years ago I was . Hagy sent his javelin on a 227-foot as swamp gas. "When wc go on the road , its like a plague of watching a Celtic-Philadelphia 76er game on pilgrimage for a first place. He was joined in the A jun ior, roaches coming across the land. They eat everything The remaining eight teams swing into winner's circle by several of his meaty companions. Kauffman set a school record this win- television. I .might add that I'm a 76er fan play-off action and the way the NBA has it ter with his 35-pound weight, which closely resembles in sight," he joked. but I don't commit suicide every time they set up, it s conceivable that a club who has They number about six. The Dirty Half Dozen. his hammer. Then he pulled his equi pment out of Who knows how far the wc.inons will fly before You would be amazed at some of their feats. Aside the end of the season. Only St. John's (this weekend) lose a game. At the time there was a strike played less than .500 ball over the regular moth balls this spring and aired it out with a 176-1 season could get from pulling several meets from the throes of defeat heave. Its all in the wrists. and Army will tell. Until then , anybody for a side of going on among TV performers hot and lucky and end up , so instead as Champions of the World simply by play- and turning others into upside-down mismatches, the Fred Kingston, a senior and eldest of the bunch , beef with ketchup — to go? of listening to Chris Schenkel we were stuck ing ball at a 57 per cent clip during the play- with some producer doing the play-by-play. of fs. (Figure it out. If a team wins all three play-off series by a 4-3 margin, that's 12 It was undoubtedly the most putridly bi- wins in 21 games for 57 per cent.) ased pro-Celtic performance since KDKA opened the airways with the broadcast of The Celtics weren't that bad. They won the Harding-Cox Owners Deadlo cked election returns. It was a more than half their regular season games double dose of Bob Prince plus three and were 12-6 in the play-offs for 67 per teaspoons of Harry Caray. Maybe even cent. But , as usual, they had their share of worse. luck. It will never cease to amaze me how Boston always manages to oppose the On Franchise Shifts Although the game was at the Boston Gar- injury-plagued clubs. Check it out. The den, the 76ers were stomping all over the 76ers' Luke Jackson, the Knicks' Walt NEW YORK (7P) — However, most of the owners before going into session National Football League club in both leagues favor a plan the AFL owners. Celtics. It was delightful, but still this pro- Frazier and the Lakers' Jerry West. And last season Billy owners met at the com- that would take three teams The teams most promincnt'y ducer-turned-announcer wouldn Cunningham's broken hand 't quit spelled nothing but championship for Boston. missioner's office yesterday from the 16-tcam NFL and mentioned as possible con- tinging the praises of the Celtics. It was bad discussing realignment pre- move them into the 10-tcam tenders for moving include enough then, but right in the middle of the Defenders of the play-off system argue paratory to the start of joint AFL. The problem is getting New Orleans and Atlanta, the discussions with their three teams to shift. game, with the 76crs leading by about 3900 that if the team that finished first during the two most recent NFL regular season American Football League col- Presumably. the NFL franchises; Philadelphia , now points, John Havclicck dove right into the is all that great it should be leagues this morning. under new ownership; Min- able to owners were trying to reach scorer's table, practically killed himself, prove it in a few additional contests. The meetings over realign- some decision along those lines nesota and Baltimore. knocked papers all over the place and I can only say that if a team (hat is crowned ment originally began at Palm blindly, miraculously and I might note, 100 champion after only 18 games, then Ihey're Springs, Calif., in mid-March., continued last week and were per cent luckily tip a potential Boston turn- the ones that should have to prove it and 82 "// you want anything, all games isn recessed asain at that time | over to a teammate. The ball was then 't asking too much. The Celtics without any firm plan over, didn you have to do is whistle." passed to some other Celtic who scored on 't even come close. realignment emerging. I the "play." To that, there are some who come back with, "The Celtics know how to play when Well. This producer was so overcame with the chips are down. They don' emotion that he delivered a half hour t care what they do during the regular season. Just so oratory chock full of the cliches usually they make the play-offs." Don 't Collegian employed by writers and broadcasters when care, huh? describing • the Celtics. "Havlicck ex- Then why should fans care ? Why should Classifieds emplifies...that great Boston spirit...that they spend money watching teams that give Bring Results great Boston pride...that great Boston hustle less than 100 per cent? Why should they let and drive...that great Boston tradition...that the NBA take advantage of their wallets great Boston determination...bla bla bla selling them meaningl ess ball games? bla." I was all set to puke when all of a sud- den, right in the middle of this guy's solilo- Well, they do. So ladies and gentlemen let quy accompanied by the cheers of the me introduce to you the act you've 'known Boston Celtic chorus, Wally Jones of the for all these years. The World Champion —Photo by Bill Shlilds 76ers made the same play. Fourth Place Boston Celtics. ¦ ¦ , . • ' • ./yj! "r > H r. .- -,;&*. ' ,~rr>m"v *V£ "'. ' : ' ' Newest Screen Star INTERVIEWING TACKLE Mike Reid for an hour-long special on Penn State football is Jim Learning of KYW-TV CINEMA I in Philadelphia. Included in the program will be inter- Major Yarboro ugh ' ' FOTHfj lnf ^ ?^ views with Charlie Pittman, "Denny Onkoiz and Chuck NOW PLAYING Bogey ' n Drive Zapiec. See the above story for Reid's activities with the League MM^dtM^MTo Pole track team. 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30 I 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE THE BIG SLEEP East East W. L. Pel. GB I... n Rebel.mvawa 400rw Tonight 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30 W. L. Pci. GB Chicago 19 10 .655 International Films Fri. Sat. 6-8-10-12 DARLINGTON, Baltimore 20 9 690 Pittsburgh 15 11 .577 2& S.C. (AP) — Presents Boston 15 10 600 3 Philadelphia 12 11 .522 4 C a I e Yarborough blistered Washington 16 12 .57 1 3% New York 12 14 .462 5i£ w e a t her-beaten Darlington New York 12 15 444 7 St. Louis 11 15 .400 7 Raceway's newly-paved sur- GIRL IN SLACK Detroit 11 14 .440 7 West face at a record 152.193 miles per hour yesterday to win the TWELVETBEES Cleveland 4 18 182 12 V4 Atlanta 17 9 .654 1956 GREECE 129 S. Arhe rton 237-2112 Los Angeles 16 11 .593 iy2 pole position for Saturday's West S. Francisco 15 11 .577 2 stock car race. Written and Directed By Michael Cacoyannis Minnesota 16 8 667 San Diego 13 16 .448 5Vi Yarborough, driving a team A shy daughter of an impoverished, once genteel, family Sunday ; Oakland 15 10 600 lVi Cincinnati 11 15 .423 6 Mercury, bettered the 20-year- Richard Lester 's PETULIA 21 is caught in the meanness, pettiness, and harsh standards Kansas City 14 11 560 ,4 Houston 8 21 .276 101 Vi old speedway's best previous of the village in which she lives. The film stands out Chicago 9 11 .450 5 Yesterday's Scores single lap by almost four miles for its simplicity and vibrancy. California 8 14 .364 7 Dodgers 4, Cubs 2 (12 in- per hour. The old_ mark of Seattle 8 16 .333 8 nings) 148.850 m.p.h. was set last year THURSDAY, MAY 8 by Ford's David Pearson. In NBA' s 2nd Round HUB AUDITORIUM 7 & 9 P.M. NOW 8 JUsf? a5fAM/ ,fl LiUl 2 TOP HITSI TICKETS 50c AT HUB DESK CUNT EAS1WQ0D Bucks Dra ft Heitz JUDY iS BACK 8, AND NEW YORK (fP)(f?) — Milwaukee picked a UCLA team- THURSDAY, MAY 1969 --- TONIGHT mate to go with All-America Lew Alcindor and the Phoenix COLLINS BURNiNfi AT Suns grabbed a pair of flashy twins ,from Colorado yester- Bucknell • University THE STRATFORD SUBWAY BOTH ENDS day as the National Basketball Association completed its 1969 college player draft. • May 12, 8:00 P.M. PRESENTS * "It was not a real good draft 'after the first two =Vmls by TECHNICOLOR [M~i& R«-r ete>s«d thru UllltBd APtt StS rounds," said Red Auerbach, general manager of the Tickets $4.00 at 3:50 - 7:40 P.M. o at 1:40 - 5:25 - 9:15 champion Boston Celtics. "There were some good players available at the door, GALLERY (PART 7) but over-all not as good as in other years." The first two rounds were staged April 8 by telephone .write Box 561, AN EXPERIENCE FOR THE MIND ... OR WHATEVER and there were 12 more yesterday, but several teams be- Bucknell University COLOR by Deluxe 11 gan passing early. San Francisco picked a girl, Denise UnitedArtists I k Long of Union, Iowa on the 13th round but the choice (checks made payable to AT JEep?s3ljt ^1| \ & 4 |^ BIB |IHIBBBiaiBBIia ,M ¦ ¦ XK ^HKj Linffll L iluUUM TrvnAY tl i».i CATIID riAV I^ was disallowed. % . . - . Bucknell Concert The Milwaukee Bucks, who' got Alcindor as their ,3 TOP first pick in the original draft and .then signed the tower- Committee) IoRo5cHo ^wc ™!^ if i 2 COMEDIES! I ing. UCLA star for $1.4 million, added Ken Heitz, a 6-3% Davis Gym TEDDI'S forward-guard. He was picked in the - fifth round. Two other UCLA players also: were chosen — Bill 119 5. BURROWES , 3 6-2% guard by Phoenix, Sweek , , and Lynn Shackleford, IN BACK OF SEARS CINEMAI HMUPIBROTHER! a 6-5 forward, by San Diego, both in the seventh round. Another UCLA' star, Lucius Allen, went to Seattle in the original draft. STARLITE Fxi. - Sat. - Sun. NOW SHOWING 2 SMASH HITS 1:45 - 3:45 - 5:45 - 7:45 - 9:45 flH CARTOON XH2AK THIS STUDENT STANDS OUT GRAHAM'S MARTIN FROM ALL THE REST A Paxton Quigley is a sun. mon. tue. 2 Greta Garbo Triumphs /MJr~™Jr*£, ROBERT She's one of many who have turned their prisoner of love... may n-12-13 "Cami lle' also "Grand Hotel " WITH OHN AH TNMTI I ISiTIH* ' ' canned opinions, and MiTcmnvr ba cks on ponies, and completely >A Enjoy Our FESTIVAL of WUSB/B Bauer Chocolates gimmicky review notes. For exams and fiSSHSSj NOW PLAYING exhausted! I -H7TR nf YESTERYEAR I m HAlWAJS ^68 term papers she uses TCIs—collections & Bavarian Mints FIRST RUN of the world's most outstanding literary criticism by the world's most outstand- , ;, ^ }K*.Vi - l -'^, for Mother's Day HIS totiM KAISED fl-v-A."/- -. * w ing authorities. And then she forms her ft' own opinions. You too can be an out- TONITE . . . 7:00-8:30-10:00 I I H^M-IN THE WEST ! ; * Y k standing literature student with TCIs. James rit e QHRX) Each: $1.25 ross mnm s vixen" cowd where are you? teSPEIl ' VERY WELL ¦ TWENTIETH BE THE BBwHBB^J pliSa g.™ T* ^ ^fe Graham's has Credit Cards 4ii liill MOST CENTURY Tj EXPLICIT Matric Cards, Draft Cards, I life d K^ Mtt WHIMrTFCWI— 0Vf Checkerboards, and/or nwtuwpwcoi ufPf INTERPRETATIONS I Driver's Licenses a.: i? mm ever made. Belonging To: ^wwm- M^mw Look for the TCIs you need. Among the many »»f books in the series: Twentieth Century "* tr RUSS MEYER'S George E. Maurer Interpretations of \E\l\ tm, Leslie J. Gaskin Adventures of Huckleberry Finn • Gulliver 's Ralph Graff 1 VIXEN MiM INTRODUCING ERICA GAVIN AS VIXEN. Travels ® Hamlet o Keats 's Odes • The Scar- ^^ iEUx 'J* ! Jtf,a Mrs. Carl Jacobs let Letter The Sound and the Fury o Walden mw GirSSopheilIoNeS ! RESTRICTED TO ADULT AUDIENCES . IN EASTHANCOLOR. .Z*. James Fife • PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY RUSS MEYER. AN EVE PRODUCTION. Available at your bookstore NO PERSONS UNDER 18 YRS. OF AGE ADMITTED & nuuyi swN 'Mirntoeotoii aHATHS Come To Graham s SPECTRUM 6§\ BOOKS A'» CACf - M«GSE'1M£7r- Nwc M*' ?*>,* W"" *«t^i - •#*** » 1t**vr#lt pj -*;j^n! Colleg ian Notes Adm issions Director App oi nted James T. McKcel has been business. fercd by the University in International Films will be The student chapter of the today and tomorrow In a appointed admissions director, McKeel primarily will be cooperation with Jefferson shown from 7 to 11 tonight in American Welding Society will conference at the HUB on advanced standing in the Ad- responsible for the admission Medical College. the HUB Assembly Hall. meet at 7:30 tonight in 215 "Psychotherapeutic Change." missions Office, T. Sherman of undergraduate students who • * • + * * Hammond. Samuel W. The conference is the fifth Stanford, director of academic have attended other colleges A meeting of the Episcopal The Penn State Dames will Gearhart, sales manager for annual spring symposium in services, announced today. and universities. He will con- Students Association will be hold a Fashion Show from 7 to the Birdsboro Corp., clinical psychology to be held He replaces Samuel W. Hag- tinue to work with the ad- held from 1:30 to 5:30 this af- 10:30 tonight in the HUB Birdsboro, Pa., will speak on at the University and is funded eerty, who resigned from the mission of students to the Five- ternoon in 215 Hetzel Union Ballroom. "Perspectives for Incorporat- by a grant from, the U.S. University to enter private Year Program in Medicine of- Building. * * * ing Steel Castings as Welded A meeting of the Town In- Parts in Product Designs." The United Campus Ministry dependent Men's Council will * * * will arrange rides to the free be held from 6 to 10:45 tonight Armin C. Braun, professor of lecture, "Separate but Unequal in 214 HUB. bacteriology at Rockefeller — Apartheid in South Africa * * * University, will speak in the and the United States," by Wal ker: Unive rs ity Plans The Chinese Club will meet Biological Science Lecture Bishop Edward Crowther , from 8 to 10 tonight in 214 series here at 4 this afternoon today at Juniata College. (Continued from page jour) Expressing a deep concern for what Penn HUB. in 108 Forum. Bishop Crowther was forced State should do in the field of religion, Walker # to leave South Africa because said that progress has been made, that the dis- said the University is exploring the question * * Braun's topic will be "The Minoru Yamasaki, ha! A meeting of the Chess Club of his outspoken opposition to tinguished architect, with three of four leading seminaries in the Muitipotcntial Cell and the apartheid; he currently is a made preliminary plans for such a building and will be held from 8 to 10:45 Tumor Problem." State. ¦ Fellow of the Center for the tonight in 217 HUB. * * • that these recently were tu rned over to the Study of Democratic University . "Our society needs men in our religious * * * Peter A. Frankcn, professor Institutions. A model of the building, which would be institutions and pulpits, as well as in many A meeting of the Christian of physics in the Harrison M. financed by the Alumni Fund and other private other social organizations, with a genuine and Science Organization will be Randall Laboratory of Physics grants, was displayed at the luncheon. compassionate concern lor the plight of the in- held at 6:30 tonight in at the University of Michigan, Public Health Service. Chair- Proposed site for the building is south oi dividual and his neighbor in an increasingly Eisenhower Chapel. will address the weekly man for the conference is the Hetzel Union Building between Home * * * Richard M. Lundy. professor complicated and mechanized society," Walker Physics Colloquium here of psychology and director of Economics South and Atherton. commented. The College of Human today. Noting the favorable response of the Development will hold a the Penn State Psychology University Senate to the proposal that a law Library Expansion "Discuss-In" with Dean Franken will discuss Clinic. ''Re sonance Fluorescence, * * * school be established. Walker said the next step Photo Electric Effect and the will be to seek trustee approval and approval of Walker also forecast continued expansion Koinonia, a men's residence The Student Council of the of library services both at University Park and community, is accepting ap- Photon Myth" at 4 this ' af- College of Business Ad- the legislature. ternoon in 310 Whitmore ministration has selected He said the Senate Academic Development the Commonwealth Campuses, including 2 plications for next year. Ap- million volumes by 1972; the start of a $12 plications are available at the Laboratory. Ralph H. Wherry as the Committee that made the :ecommendation did recipient of its 1969 Dist- so believing that Penn State is committed to million addition to Pattee Library; $50 million house, 117 E.' Nittany Ave., or * * * Goodb ye To Golf in library construction at the campuses and the at the United Campus Ministry J. Tichy, associate professor inguished Service Award. becoming a comprehensive, well-balanced first- of architectural engineering, that in the next decade or two, Hershey Medical Center; construction of a in 208 Eisenhower Chapel. The award is presented an- KATHY CAPLAN. president of Students for State, is rate University, research library and the establishment of a will speak on "Measurement of nually to the faculty member selling tickets for A Lucky Lions Lover Membership con- social problems will be of increasing im- Sound Power in Reverberation portance in American society and that a new undergraduate library in the East Halls Donald H. Ford from 2 to 3 or administrator within the test. The winner of the contest will receive Joe Palemo's area. Rooms" at the Engineering College who has distinguished school would add new and essential dimensions this afternoon in the Human Acoustics Seminar at 4 today golf clubs. Funds raised will be used for the purchase of a At the Commonwealth Campuses, Walker Development Living Center. himself by his service to stu- to the University's capacity to contribute a # in 71 Willard. dents. new Penn State lion mascot suit and for the Martin more effective solution to these problems. pointed out, there are $53 million worth of new * * buildings under construction, being designed or Harry Millstone, in- * * * Luther King Scholarship Fund. College of Life Sciences Rolf Eliassen, professor of recently completed. By 1975, he predicted, ternational representative of civil engineering at Stanford ] Wi th regard to the possibility o f enrollment at the campuses will jump from the the AFL-CIO Amalgamated University, will be the speaker | establishing a College of Life Sciences here. current 10.000 to 27,000. surpassing for the first Meat Cutters and Butcher for the fifth Graduate School 1 S .5 Walker said a large number of professionals time enrollment at University Park. Workmen of North America, Lecture Series of the 1968-69 1 a 5. *?* 5° trained in allied health fields will be required in Walker also said in closing that a new stu- will discuss "McCarthyism and year. i coming years due to the shortage of physicians Labor" at 8:15 tonight in 101 dent recreation building, restricted from use in Eliassen will speak on "Man j O CO Lion Love rs Contest in the ghetto or disadvantaged areas of cities. varsity sports is being planned for the main Chambers. ° 3 m O , and His Environment" at 8t 5? « o o « He also reported that the University was campus recreation area near Beaver Stadium. His talk will be part of a pro- tonight in 26 Mineral Sciences. 0 3 undertaking an extensive study to determine The facility, to consist of gymnasiums, courts, gram on "Senator Joseph * # * a o £ W " Seeks Scholarshi p Funds whether a College of Veterinary Medicine activity rooms, jogging tracks and student and McCarthy, The Man and The Graduate students enrolled ' j-T „ C rd o °° should be created to meet a growing demand staff offices, will be used solely to support pro- Movement" sponsored b y in the clinical psychology pro- H o _2 «2" * ! u TJ Students For State, the cam- journalism-Biloxi, M iss.): for veterinary services at all professional grams of informal or intramural physical ac- American Studies 402. gram here will participate ' « flj at A a pus spirit organization , is Harv Russakoff (7th-busincss levels. tivity for undergraduate and graduate students. X c** o „ o P< O sponsoring a Lucky Lion Lover a d m i nislration-Philadelphia) ° fc 2 a Membership drawing contest. and Jon , Fox (13th-public IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII llllimilllllllllimilllllllimilllllllllllllimilllllllimiimilllll %e S a So scrvice-Melrose Park). < x° -g. ro .2 . ft m ra CO Ol The purposes of the contest Over 800 Lucky Lion Lover fit! are to raise funds for the Membership The B rothers and Pledges of purchase of a new Penn State Cards already O have been sold by the contest ro u lion mascot suit and to in- SoU

m™.. iHi.H.Hiiniii mnmmMimn m COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS„«.™„.„ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii IllUI< IIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllll lllllllltll M M .„_™. ! FbTRENT' WANTED NOTICE CLASSIFIED I ZZ™^^ , , ZIEGLER SALES, LTD. Sports Car 6B SUZUKI 80 cc, under 1,800 miles. FURNISHED APARTMENT, summer SUMMER SUBLET- Two bedroom apart TOWNHOUSE SUMMER Sublet—3 bed- WANTED: FEMALE roommate — Kins '" ' ADVERTISING POLIC Y accessories, radio and tires, helmets, UPPITY WOMEN uNiTEr' W0TOn"s Perfect condition. Cost S350 but will sell term, 5 rooms, 2-3 (wo)man, across trom ment. Furnished, air ' conditioned dish rooms, furnished, dishwasher, washer and of Prussia area storting this summer. Liberation meeting — Sunday 8:00, 214 mag wheels. Discount prices. 238-2710. For S1S0. Need money desperately. Call Old Main. S250/summer. 237-3782.¦ ¦ washer, TV. Park Forest. 237-1359! dryer, air-conditioned, $500. 237-6824. Call Terry 237-1709. hub. Information: call Barb 238-1792 DEADLINE Ron* 23B*yl44. — -———¦—¦——*— ¦— " -¦-¦-¦¦— ,—^^_^^____^^______^^^^___^ after 5 p.m. 40 WATT MAGNAVOX Stereo Receiver — SUMMER SUBLET: 4-man Apt. Fur- cum -- «n.... ce». i- .. - w j ., , SUMMER SUBLET: 2-3 man Apartment ROOMMATE — SUMMER, two man, twc STUDENTS: WE provide prompt Insur- nished, June rent paid, air-conditioned, 10:30 A.M. Day Before and matching Turntable, both components room ful? Ken J laro. "nTA ™ "?,Americana House, air-conditioned, fur bedroom furnished apartment. Rent $56. only one year old, $175. Will tell separate. ance (or autos, motorcycles, motor- pool, free bus. Fall option. $90 month. ZtZ °"X : " Call Tom 237-7833 after 6:00. Publication minutesrSes tfromrom HUB.Him Callr, ? ™238-4439. Cheap. nished. Call 238*8581. LOST 537-0451. scooters, travel, valuables, hospitalization. 237-4075. 1 , PhonernuiiB Mr.mr. Temeles,leme es, 238-6633.^jo-o«jj . —— ———— ————— -,,,,-n .,,,.-,,__n -,,c,tn>„, „. . , _ WANTED: 3rd party to split lease, owr ' " """ ' ' : SUMMER SUBLET:. - University Towers SUMMER SUBLET: University Towers. PINK SAPPHIRE Lady s R lng, "' eld RATES COMING SOON — The Norton Sport .— COOL SUMMER, Bluebell S-Bldg., 3 ™ °r fCma e bar9! n Af fashioned setting. First Insertion 15 word maximum FREE CYCLE RIDING lessons. Wo fur- bedrooms, 2 baths, dishwasher, atr- ne bedroom, air-conditioned, dishwasher, Air-conditioned, furnished, dishwasher. cT237 ' 01. ' ' " " Great sentimental Commando — crossover pipes and ° value. Lost vicinity S1.Z5 nish the bikes. Every Sat. afternoon conditioned, many extras, cheap. 238-3956. balcony, across from campus. Call 237- S150/month. Call 238-5452. Rec Hall Saturday. chrome, 750 cc, & 60 rubber-mounted, 1583. ROOMMATE WANTED Summer term Reward!! Please call Carl 865-0156. Each additional consecutlva horsepower. Cyclerama. 228-51U. Cyclerama, your authorized Suzuki-Norton dealer, 1611 N. Atherton. 238-5111. GET ™E BEST for Summer — Univer- — — TWO BEDROOM apartment — Bluebell- Sixth floor corner Apt. University Towers. insertion J3 R EWARD FOR return Each additional 5 words .15 per day COLLINS 32-S3 plus pwr. S. Hallicrafters ——— — —-—-———— sity Towers, 5th floor , sunny side, Fall SUBLET SUMMER: Two bedroom Apt. summer. Closest apartment to pool. Air- Elliot or Gary 237-1005. of Gold Charrr SUZUKI — SEE and ride the hot line option. Frank 238-0421. Free television. Very reasonable Call conditioned, bus. 237-6646. Bracelet. Sentimental value. Please cat SX101A Johnson Viking Courier 500 w ROOMMATES WANTED Summer " 237*6348. Linear. Call 238-5210 alter 6:00 p.m. In '69. Cyclerama 238-5111. —-— after 6:00 238-7737 term Cash Basis Onlyl -- 7r =- r SUMMER SUBLET - Fall option: Modern SUMMER SUBLET. Bluebell, 3 bedrooms, Three bedroom Bluebell apartment, air 1967 HONDA 305 Scrambler. Excellent COMPLETE CYCLE SERVICE. Prompt 4t (wolman apartment. Air-conditioning, SUMMER SUBLET- 1 „ . [n ,,i ,„, 2 baths, dishwasher conditioned, dishwasher, pool, utensils LOST IN Pollock Area: Lady' s Golc No Personal Ads! and guaranteed parts and service. Cycle- pool, - . Fall option. Many condition, low mileage. 1967 Yamaha 250 bus service. Will bargain. 238-2273. mentmen Park Fnr«. vin J iJ ™? extras. 238-3956. Phone 238-6538. Elgin Watch. Extremely high sentlmenta rama. 7611 N.N AthertAihortonon. 23B37B-51115m . ____^ '* farn horesT villas. Air-cond. Scrambler. Call Larry 865-4982. s"»/man tor summer. Call Joe 237-400S value. Rewardll Please call 865-8095 oi SUMMER SUBLEASE: Large 2 bedroom ROOMMATE WANTED Immediately. 238-5898. MANOR MOBILE HOME 19M. 12'xSl' furnished apartment. Air-conditioning, ,„, ._ .,.„. TWO BEDROOM unfurnished apartment, Vacancy In fwo-man apartment, Mounl OFFICE HOURS 1968 SUZUKI SO0. 2,000 miles, never raced, ARMENARA PLAZA„, .,. 3-4. . man, summer available May 24. Carpeted, dishwasher, mint condition, many extras. Must sell. furnished, two-bedroom, on lot. Large carpeting, dishwasher, $170 00/month, in- Nittany Apartments, rent reduced to $50. TORTOISE SHELL GLASSES betweer step-up kitchen, carpeted livingroom. eludes utilities. Call Sue after five 238- ^-conditioned, dishwasher. Call 238-3978 disposal. Sutton House. 237-9234. All furnishings, appliances Chambers and Forum 9:30 A.M. - 4:00 P.M. 137-2833. — provided, on Thurs. Eve Available beginning summer term. 238- 3818. . „ ,. „ eD -, ,„, ,._ — ; , ——— 237-0506. May 1. Call Jon 237-2161. Reward. Monday through Friday $6298298. , t - i SUMMER SUBLET: 4-6 wolman) BlueBlue- ONE MAN Efficiency June 15 - Sept. 15. STEREO TAPERECORDER, Pentron, College Ave. across from Old - ~ --—— . — SUBLET FOR summer - 3-man. 2-bed- *f" »P«rtment with terrace, air-con- Main. ROOMMATES WANTED Summer term. LOST IN the vicinity of East H=iis oi beautiful condition. Two Scuba tanks and d'tionlng, bus , pool, stereo, and color TV. Call Irv 237-6824. Three bedroom Basement of Sackett regulators. Quite reasonable. Must sell. IT'S ALL happening at Two Wheels Cycle room Apt., close to campus Call 237- Bluebell Apartment, air- Recreation Hall pair of Black Rimmec Shop, 1311 E. College Ave. 238-1193. 238-6913. conditioned, dishwasher, 865-4086. 3308. FOSTER AVE. Apartments. Availabilities pool, utensils. Eye Glasses. Call Tom 865-0532. North Wing " ~ Phone 238-6538. '62 AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite i«0. Lov- 2 . 3 MAN APT , Whitehall. Alr-cond , F0R RENT summer term. Efficiency, for summer include furnished and un- ZIEGLER SALE*;. Ltd. Custom-made acr from South Halls. Available furnished one bedroom units. All "" " SCCA FIAT SPYDER ROLE BAR 535; able and sound. Call Bruce 237-020B T.V., Bus service, s.350 for summer term °ss June utilities, ELVES TO HELP desperate shoemaker. found between 5-6 p.m. I (Fall option). Call 238-1U8. II. Call 238-U93. air-conditioning, plus TV cable Included Apply Theta Phi Alpha, Sigma Tau Gam- 1960 Chcv. $175. 238-2710. _ " " ' " ~ - in rental rates. $165 and $145 a month. ma, Spring Week '69. FOUND: MEN'S watch a Beaver sta FOR SALE ¦66 USED T.\T. 20" floor model. ExcellentlTWO BEDROOM Apt. for summer. 2-3 UNIVERSITY TOWERS Apartments . . . One available May 15; others June 15 TEMPEST, 4-dr. Hdtp.. available for summer. Efficiencies dlum I.M. Field. Claim by Identification, white with red interior, OCS-oower of an reception and condition — $45.00. Steven persons — men, ladies. 2 blocks from and & 30. 238-0534. GIRL WANTS female roommate and Call 237-6337. HOAGIES, HOAGIES, HOAGIES— Regu- one mileage original owner, Bottiger 865-7940. " . . campus. Furnished. Must see other assets. bedroom furnished units . . . $135 apartment for summer In Pittsburgh. lar, Tuna, Ham and Chicken, all 70c. eight with of a 6, - - — ^nd $165 a month Includes all utilities, THREE (WOMAN Apartment, close 237-6471. excellent condition. Call: 237-9136. f_T; ip , T , .. ." SZ' r:. , , . ~TZrA7,7ZT Call 23B-2993 after 5. i to ' Ham & Cheese Sandwich 35c. Dean's TEMPEST '65. Immaculate condition, air-conditioning, balconies, plus TV cable. campus; summer sublet; fall option. bah Xi' faith six. stick, black sedan, red interior. $995. Fast Delivery. Dial 233-8035 or 237-1043— '61 MERCURY. Radio, air, good tires. -TWO BEDROOM Ant., summer term ! Call 23B-0534. Reduced rent, many extras. 238-6874. FOUR WOMEN Apartment for Fall 6 6 o ' B D.m. to midniahr. Runs very well. $375. 865-2130 or 364- 238-4 1 r 865-7627 ask for Mr. Winter, only. Also 12 x 46' Mobile Home; 10 x 50 — Term. Call Judy between 5:30-7:00, 865- FIRESIDE INFORMAL discussions of the ~ Mobile Home. Both available Summer FEMALE GRAD STUDENT wanted to SUMMER SUBLET: 2 bedroom Pent- Baha'i World Faith. Wednesday, 418 Mar- 1371. ! miraTi i«n ~ ev-.,.iTnt"^^ f.i„., 0..1 8135. '42 TRIUMPH Bonneville, 650 cc. Ab- ' 60 < C>» T m 23M S ar aP , arkWaV P"2a' Ca" house w/ideal location, air-conditioned. tin Terrace; Thursdays 0-206 Whitehall solutely A-l. Must sell. S500. 23B-6477. Harle yj Kve r ^tTJ SSr&SSRb™* <1 l " ', "%? ¦ ° " 2S8 7l27 ,^er p.m. TV cable, furnished, cheap. Call 237-6736. Plaza; Fridays 1131 S. Pugh. Call 237-7506, GROOVY TRIP on Honda 150 or leave name and phone i "T 1964 MG-B — sell, trade tor larger car M-S0. Both In excellent condition. Call ~ - 237-1210 or 238-6505 transportation. , ,„ , ,„ rmiiT;r r« SUMMER SUBLET, air-conditioned three IDEAL FOR Summer, comfortable 3-4 BARGAIN — SUMMER Sublet, across 3,3'"" " of similar value. Call Tom 237-7833 after 422-8251. ,™ n.uiiT . ^w,Tr »> wojman) furnished apartment. Air-con- from Old Main. Two bedrooms lT\r, S£ l. t LJr. SL^i :„,S K bedroom, free bus, pool. Great rent furnished. *" ™™*' 6-00. 125 cc. Make exce enl reduction. Call 238-0378. ) ditioned, 30 sec, from Mall. 237-6403. 8350 for Summe r. Jim 238-3103. CUSTOM HAND-MADE clothing: skirts, JAWBONE 1966 ALLSTATE SCOOTER, reniS; Must sell' 8S5-4585 " shirts, shifts. 237-6187. NEW AND usel Motorcycles now avail- reasonable offer and it's yours. 865-5245 , - ' - SUMMER SUBLET, 3-4 man-woman !GRADUATE, MATURE male, third man, SUBLET SUMMER: Furnished " ' "" " " ' " able at Two Wheels Cycle Shop, 1311 afteraiier 6o p m„m., Bruce.oruce. i niTTrlrn ionnur ynu l.. i o77Z7 one man ALL VETERANS: Smoker, stone VaTley GEOFF Dl MEGo pickln and slngin ' apartment. Must see to appreciate. Good ™", two-bedroom, Nittany Gardens, Apt. $70/month. Tom 238-9634. Friday night. Open 8:00 - 12:00. 415 Easl E. College Ave. 233-1193. S L. . . I. S ,.!.. y *, ™ 1P00I, air-cond., 565/mo„ summer, fall- C.E Lodge, Tues. May 13, 6:00 p.m. 1946 HARLEY DAVIDSON—750 cc. Runs ™«S tf^-lt. ' locitinr.. Cell Lenny 237-0152. Plenty of refre Foster Avenue. good, recent inspection, H8.A, helmet- 238-3550 evenings. /._ _ option, Ph, 238-5568. SUBLET COOL 2 (wo)man apartment, shments. 1965 HONDA 150 c c. Very qood con- " ' YOUR PLACE IN THE SUN. Spend the . ~ ~~ dition. Equipped with Barnett clutch. first $160. Geoff 865-9367. 1-j iTr.mS TTXnDR niAMN ..I^Z^ „ . i one block from campus. Utilities and THE RETURN of ' " SATURDAY NIGHT at the Jawbone hear ° "^.? ': summer in a Southgate Townhouse. ' 2-3 MAN APARTMENT tor Summer with June rent paid. Phone 237-6313. Arthur BraurC the Extras. Call Rich 237-1685. Dean.;?.r er LSAppraisal: ?S6£00. Asking>J™ KZ$400.i Also, . Boss Guitar with his fabulous backup Tom Thrall. Also try our Ice cream 1960 TR-3, good condition, $495. Call (0i , ,h roommates. You'll Fall option. Alr-cond., pool, free bus. "" multiole-input amplifier. Must see. 238- * ™ " band on Exotic and cones 10c. Greg, 238-6795. " ur °r .. c d _ disnw„n£' wa°Se "7-0078. SUMMER SUBLET: Three-man AparT- B uddha Records, 1964 FORD CONVERTIBLE, good shape j ^ ~ New York City, May 17. Representatives S65-9531 until 5 p.m.; 692-8192 after 5 p.m 1 / '' , land dryer and much more. Call now „. „., „„_„ . ment. Easy walking distance from cam- 1964 HONDA 90, inspected and running PARK FOREST furnished two-man AptApt. pus. Call 237-9198. of special organizations will be refused ' " HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER. Best offer. :237-2725 or 237-2714. ' . 11 J™'™". «"• miscellaneous 1962 MGA 1600 MKll. Excellent condi well. Also tape recorder, cuff links. Peter .|, sublease„ * ?.... summer,.™™ , fall option. Air-conAir-con- admission unless pre-reglstered with jc- Rfth 4017j/u-— _ RECENTLY " of stolen trophies, plaques from Sigma 1966 HONDA 305 Scrambler. New paint ,ree bus, tennis courts and much more. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY — two man PINNED, engaged or mar- points, battery, etc. 9.000 miles. Phoni offer. Csll 237-0108 ried? Couples In love PI. Call 238-9949. PORTABLE STEREO, like new. Must . ^__ . Reasonable. Call 238-7308. apartment. Nicely furnished, close to ROOMMATE FOR Summer. needed for psy- Rich 865-5824 Own bed- « rnent in perception. Call sell. Call 238-1693 after noon. . '63'63 FIAT 13001200 Convertible, red,red. second campus. $150.00 month. Call 237-4113. room — large furnished Apt. Bus service, S??!3K P"- trp, good condition. 238-3074 SUMMER SUBLET, University Towers, 238-3593. 865-2584 Monday - Friday 8-5 or 238-1387 . j washer-dryer. $70/month. Cindy 237-4515. other times. , three-man, air-conditioning, dishwasher. „^.„T f .., - .. .i : : "*" 238-7808. DON'T SWEAT summer swimming ex SIS SVSS. "' willing to deal. CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED. WSL THE dazzling FOR RENT travagantly. Air conditioned furnished fencing, nature, sailing, group !?,?*" voice of Peter leaders, Whitehead Monday night. Teddi' . SUMMER SUBLET — 2-man air-con- apartment cheap. Whitehall Plaza. 237- music, all camp specialties. s ShoBar. Close to campus and 6858 evenings. Write to Whitehall Plaza Apartments SUBLET SUMMER three man, two bed- ditioned apartment. Max Kleiman, Box 636 MIddletown, Conn. roomI UUMI Apt.F.,,1. AirFMI condt.,*.UIIUI.» T.V.,l.v.f pool,uuut, bus,UU3, , reasonable> taaw. muic rent.icm i. Call... 238-1078.— J nu,.. g_,l ¦ n ., ¦ ,. ¦ . .-n ...... r_^.-. .. .,... ¦ .— ...... • r CO-EDS: OPENINGS available at Col- FURNISHEDFU.omened WHITEHALLW TEHALL EfficiencyE^77lcl^-€nc tc,c Camp Hadar. utensils.utenslk Callrail 237-1104.MT.n nA ! , . , IS HE " » lege Co-op for summer and/or fall terms. j NEW SHIPMENT ! •* ""*• SUMMER...... ^ SUBLET. Furnished, r^ - SEfficiencyl^ sublet.?? immediately- J? „ P or summer term. 424 Waupelani Drive (Phone 238-2600) ROOMMATE (MALE) to share 3-man For informat ion call 237-3844. AMBASSADOR BLDG. 2-3 man Summer for two. $152 plus security takes all. Year Fall option. Alr-cond., next to pool. Will apartment $45/mo., alt utilities. Right Sublet. Willing to bargain. Great location, option. Next to Skellar. No status seekers, under-rent. 238-8632. off campus, starting summer or fall. "DRAFT INFORMATION" New service Apply Apt. 2, 112 S. Pugh after 7. _ .,, .,..-„ . _, Call 237-1093. FOR' SUMMER RENT:„-.,. , One„ (1)... bedroonr Call 238-4627 after 6:00 p.m. for students. Call 865-7627 and make an OF appointment. Evenings call 238-2839. ! | COOL AND CHEAP: Efficiency Apart- FURNISHED TWO MAN Efficiency, air- Apt. Armenara Apts. Call 238-1478. ROOMATES FOR Summer term for two FURNISHED : — *~" ment for Summer term, 45 second walklconditioned, with balcony, to sublet sum-irr- o^777,\' t= i-"" bedroom Holiday Towers apartment, ll' TRAILER 8 x 45. Live cheaply! Patio from campus, air-conditioned, June rentimer term. $150 each for entire summer. e ''ALE KOOMMATE *to share one a b£edroomJ Apt. Call 237-7167 after 5:00 p.m blocks trom Old Main. Air-conditioned, and awning! Yard with fence l For In- | HANDMADE SANDALS; paid, two (wolman can live 'comfortably, i University Towers. 237-1130. spection call Bill 237-1023. — Free utilities. $53.00 per month. 237-6014. Married couples Ef ficiencies and One & Two Bedroom Apartments : $216 tor the Summer , Call Paul, 238-4235. — _z—r r~r-——:—JSUBLET sum ft FORpop Summersummer with Fallp»n optionwii«n, only. SUMMER SUBLET: One bedroom fur INEXPENSIVE 3-BEDROOM Apartment nished apartment, 4 blocks from campus. 1 Furnished, air-conditioned, S120/month, mamed couple or House. Fall term. $30 reward for in- All Students—Undergraduates & Graduates S120 a month. 237-2203. ' Co11 ARAB CLUB present symposium "Pale- 1 FOR I INVITED j _'lv i \u °* formation leading to such. 237-0655. stine and the Arab World," April 19, COPPER KITCHEN HELP wanted for 101 Chambers, 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. Dinner $2.00. Call 237-3918 for Information. summer term. Waitress or waiter. Call 238-2496 for appointment. FREE: Direct Private Bus Transportation To j cau,M wm baroa,n cau m "ALL THE KING'S MEN" ndi LJuLir 1 uWci - - ^^^^ssr^^r^si & " — The story 710 South Atherton Street an¥ : 5727. ROOMMATES (2); ~THouse; of Huey Long. Friday, May 9, 7:00 p.m., & From Campus—Tennis Courts— ^e _ •~ amERICANA State College, Pa. SUMMER SUBLET: 3-man, 1-bedroom, Mni„" "ri ; ~ V ,. h .^~~ across from Atherlon; - utensils, T.V., 101 Chambers Bldg. Presented by Penn Your Sprin g Thing •Furnished Efficiency ^ .m ^ $,io,r. air-conditioner, two bedrooms, furnished. State Newman. Air Conditioning—Gas For Cooking. %$? f ,£^»S2tir$f aSS:^ !i~ ~ 237-2669. " Da *"¦'"' ¦ PHI PSI Fat Boys7"ieware of precipi- Apartments nished. Ca ll 238-7848 between 4 p,m.-6 p.m. . " " "" MARRIED COUPLE needs apartment for tation on Mother' s Day. is at Fully Equipped Kitchens • Walk-in Closets • Laundry .Furnished and Un- - ffi ^^ " ^^^^ : ^ ! ;' summer term. Must be reasonable. 237- ^^ ^ " t tt 0725. Rooms Individual Thermostat Controls • Ample furnished One Bedroom Married couples only. 238-4682. : ™n'- B"?„ ":?'«' P°o1' Leaving many NOTICE • . L ; extras. 238-8724. Off-Street Parking. ! FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for Sum- i Apartments SUMMER SUBLET: One bedroom fur - mer and/or next year. Call 238-6156 after HEAR THE dazzling Guy Britten nished Apartment, 4 blocks from campus.!" ' ' voice of Petet Pall nr writp 6:00 p.m. Whitehead Monday night. Teddi's ShoBar. (Next io Murphy'f i Summer and September Rentals Available. .. -« „_-- -... Will bargain. Call 237-2203. ' " " " ~ ~ ROOMMATE wanted. Summer term. ALTERATIONS ALfcA UnCbUHT FURNISHED 2-4 (WOMAN House, across AND Sewing, Knitting, on S. Allen) Downtown Efficiency. air-conditioned. and Crocheting by Carole. Phone 238-1680. $100 includes all except We invite you to visit our Management and Renting Of- Sou,h Ha,ls Wl ha e- B b 8- phone. 237-1895. " Associates Inc. SK " "' ° " Town and Campus CHROMATOGRAPHY SUPPLIES aiic Come and See the fice in Bldg. H . . . See Mr. Nowak, Resident Manager, " "" SUMMER SUBLET: 3-man Apt., While^ accessories. Materials for Lipid Research. OOO. enOI SUMMER SUBLET: Three (wolman -p„_ hall. Two air conditioners, cable TV, Call us ... we bigger than life WWW I apartment, OT deliver dally on campus. who will assist you in your quest for a "Home Away '* • Vi block from Mall, $310 for * free parking. $180 per . month. Phone Supelco, Inc.. Bellefonte, 355-5518. Han dmade Sandal summer term. Air conditioned 237-6939. 237-6705. From Home." HolldaV Inn - Tha Total " ^ ^ TREAT YOUR favorite Mother to l in front of our store c 7 i. ./ I! ' SUMMER SUBLET. Fall option, 2-3 man. _ T , ROOMMATES WANTED. Two bedroom delicious dinner trom Pa. India Sunday, May State College,0* Pa. i**135/mo.us/mo. cioseClose campus,campu: iree parking. Sportswear Look furnished Apartment on South Allen. nth, Wesley Foundation, 6:30 p.m ICall 237-6868. SI 10 for entire summer. 237-9193. Tickets $2.25. HUB desk.