__, Weather Partly clondy intermitten rain degrees.
VOL. 69 , No. 43 ' 4 Page . jj t^euau rrom the associated pr ess W^^ ,.„ <% Uni versity Not a Student Laborator y News Roundup: I From the State,
University President Eric A. know everything there is to know. authority, and with all authority goes wealth Campuses, accepted honorary sibilities of recruiting students from Nation & World and tl,ey are more or less admitting responsibility Walker said last night that the ." memberships for himself and Merle disadvantaged areas. -„„ij u„ tnat the professors know more than Walker " TTnUniversityi^ioi-cit^r could be a placel of<• said it is easier to try the E. Campbell . Dean of Student Affairs Study Problems the students," he said, fi rst step of leadership in a situation for Commonwealth Campuses. OSGA sessions met yesterday af- social action, but in some areas "You came to Penn State to learn, where you can do something, Gerry Hamilton. OSGA president , ternoon to study problems involved o£ The Natio n it cannot be a student labora- We start out by teaching, you a lot measure the results and say that made the presentations. He said , with regional conferences a n d tory. Walker was addressing a facts/ Th,ese iaQts, aren t wortl? verX was good , that was bad , and go from "Dean Campbell and Mr. DeShong finances. SGA will hold its final there." have been instrumental in hel Thieu May End Boycott of Peace Talks dinner meeting in the Hetzel ping sessions this morning. ^ id" ^ "" He said Commonwealth Campus The Press Association to achieve the Thomas Ritchey, alternate Com- SAIGON — President Nguyen Van Thieu may decide Union Building Terrace Room He. said students should rely on students are fortunate because their success it has during the past year." monwealth Campus representative to to end his boycott of the Paris peace talks, possibly within of the Organization of Student "leir education "to think, to form "learning laboratories" are smaller SCUSA. will present a summary of two weeks, if he gets certain reassurances from Washing- " which can be defended by than University Park OSGA, USG Pull Together , Government Associations, °^ims and when they the "Joint Statement on the Rights ton government sources reported yesterday. ,„ u;„i, „ 4. 11 *"' - ""¦ *" "*> facts anJ reason. make mistakes the results arc not so Jim Womer. preident of the Un- and Freedoms of Students," which The reassurances included' a' pledge from Washington all Common- disastrous. «?Jl r? Autnority and Rcsponsibmty dergraduate Student Government, was written by representatives of the that Thieu will never have to accept a coalition with the ™wealth Campus student gov- .. Easier to Become Student Leader spoke to the opening session of the American Association of University Communist-led Viet Cong, these source's said. Too many peopIe start doing ernments. before they start thinking," Walker He suggested that it is much easier OSGA congress. He said he hoped Professors, the National Students The informants said there was a growing feeling to become a student leader at a that OSGA and USG could pull Association, the American Asso- among members of Thieu's government and members of "When students come to a college, said. "When you start to do some- they are admitting that they don't thing, you are exerting your smaller campus, which provides together to get important changes ciation of Colleges, the National As- the Senate and National Assembly that South Vietnam more practical experience for stu- " for the students at University Park sociation of Student Personnel Ad- must join the Paris negotiations eventually. dents. and the Commonwealth Campuses. ministrators and the National Asso- Any decision on the peace talks issue probably would "We expect great things from the Conditions are right in State ciation of Women Deans and Coun- follow a reshuffle of the Cabinet. Informants said if a Commonwealth Campuses." Walker General Assembly for such changes selors. stronger cabinet i: created, Thieu would feel more secure said. "We now find in our studies as rent control of off-campus housing The statement asserts that stu- and might not feei it necessary that his delegation outrank that we have to make them increase and lowering the voting age to 18, he dents have certain rights and free- that of the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front at Paris, in size." said. doms which they are entitled to. ' • .• * Next year the Commonwealth Fred Sayen, the Commonwealth such as the right to have an adviser Campuses will become mandatory Campus representative to the at disciplinary meetings and the R usk Warns NATO of R ussian Threat two-year institutions, according to University Senate Committee on Un- freedom from double jeopardy. BRUSSELS.1 Belgium — The United States served no- Walker. "And the following year dergraduate Student Affairs Campus SGA Adopts Statement tice yesterday it believes any Soviet attack on Yugoslavia some of them will have to become (SCUSA), explained that he is "a Altoona Campus Student Govern- or Austria will imperil the security of the whole 15-nation three-year, and the year after that lobby for OSGA" and could speak ment Association adopted the State- North Atlantic Treaty Organization. some may be four-year." before the Senate to make Sure that ment last Winter Term, and has pro- • Secretary of State Dean Rusk also was quoted as tell- Changing Relationships it understood the Commonwealth posed that OSGA adopt it on behalf ing NATO foreign ministers a Russian thrust into Romania If this takes place the relationship Campuses. of all Commonwealth Campus stu- will spark an even greater crisis for Europe than the in- between the Commonwealth Cam- Alex Kashock , OSGA vice presi- dents. vasion of Czechoslovakia. puses and the University Park Cam- dent, reported that OSGA has ini- Edward Swierczewski. president of Accounts of Rusk's speech were made known to news- pus will have to change, according to tiated committees to study the the New Kensington SGA , will pro- men by conference officials. The secretary's aides broadly Walker. This would involve student transfer student housing situation pose a bill to provide operating funds confirmed what they, called the passing references he made government and the University and the University Park orientation tor SGA. The bill, titled the Assess- to Austria and Yugoslavia. They neither confirmed nor Senate. program. ment Act . proposes that each Com- denied his remarks on Romania explaining Rusk himself Ralph L. DeShong, assistant to the He said that OSGA has initiated a monwealth Campus SGA provide could not remember alluding to that independent-minded dean of student affairs for Common- committee to investigate the pos- iunds on an annual assessment plan Communist country. The North Atlantic Council of foreign ministers, be- ginning a two-day survey of world affairs and especially of European matters, was debating the implications of the Czechoslovak incident. P • Paris Talks May Resum Czechs Await *Russian *Polic y Debate PRAGUE — Communist party Central Committee members battled on behind closed doors in a crucial policy Thieu Expected to End Silence debate yesterday with the Czechoslovak public almost v completely in the dark about what was going on. " PARIS (."PI — There was a general air of expec- it would invite the Saigon government to the con- Some reports filtering out of the meeting said pro- tancy among American officials here yesterday that Soviet, or conservative speakers were making personal at- ference table. tacks on party chief Alexander Dubcek and other reform a South Vietnamese decision to join the Pans peace North Vietnam informed the United States it leaders in the session's second day.' talks may be imminent. would invite the Front. The United States insisted 'Prague students, showing their apprehension, planned But they avoided making any prediction on that the talks thus would pioceed on a two-sided sit-in demonstrations in their departments beginning over when President Nguyen Van Thieu might drop his the weekend to protest a recent clampdown on the press ba=is, while Hanoi insisted the talks have become and ban on demonstrations. boycott and end a two-week deadlock on what role a "four-party conference." But the Prague student leadership bowed to govern- should be played in the talks by the Viet Cong's Neither the United States nor North Vietnam ment threats of force and said there would be no street UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Eric A. Walker suggested last National Liberation Front. accepted the other's interpretation of the agreement. demonstrations on Sunday when a march had been planned to commemorate the 29th anniversary of the day Hitler night that Commonwealth Campuses may have to become Thieu saw U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker But this difference would not have prevented the closed Czechoslovak universities to . punish anti-Nazi mandatory two-year institutions next year to accommodate a in Saigon yesterday morning for the first time in enlarged talks getting under way Nov. 6 as sched- demonstrators. growing enrollment. Sitting,next io. Walker is Ronald Batch- nearly, .a., week .and a-full report on. their talk was •uled if Thieu had approved the ambiguous formula. elor, president of the Organization of Student Government sent to Ambassador W. Averell Harriman. chief U.S. Instead. Thieu balked at the agreement and said Associations. Walker was addressing a dinner meeting of negotiator at the Paris talks. he would not sen d a delegation if the Front, a rebel The World OSGA in the HUB Terrace Room. Formula Kepi Vague movement in South Vietnam, were given the status ¦ In Brussels. Secretary of State Dean Rusk told of an independent delegation. Nixon Makes Peace Gesture to USSR foreign ministers of the North Atlantic Treaty Or- Two-Point Alternative NEW YORK — President-elect Richard M. Nixon has Place: 'Lawless Force' ganization that the talks, once they begin, could go Thieu proposed a two-point alternative which sent a message to the Soviet Union expressing confidence on for a long time and may be accompanied by more would place the American negotiator under South that there can be great strides toward world peace and security in the years just ahead. hard fighting. Vietnamese direction and would require a foimal "It is now more essential than ever," Nixon said, "that Rusk told his NATO colleagues that the formula commitment from Hanoi to downgrade the front our two peoples work together, in a spirit of mutual re- Trend Revers e Seen under which the United States and North Vietnam delegation to an integral component of the North spect and with a recognition of the special responsibilities agreed to enlarge the peace talks was kept deliber- Vietnamese delegation. we share for the peace of the world. mitted by police without a warrant in American officials said the first of Thieu's points "I am sure," Nixon said, "great strides can be taken By i .ARC KLEIN ately vague. Collegian Staff Writer an emergency and police can hold The formula in principle allowed each to organize might be negotiable between Saigon and Washing- In the years just ahead, toward the genuine peace and the accused for six hours before security that people everywhere yearn for." The president, of the local chapter charging him. its side of the table as it wished, without obliging ton, but there was nothing the United States could Nixon put forth his views in a telegram, sent Thurs- of the America-i Civil Liberties Boyan said that Nixon's attorney the other to approve or recognize the participants. do to compel Hanoi to organize its side in accordance day and made public yesterday, to Nikolai V. Pvodgorny, Union (ACLU) predicted Thursday general and his new Supreme Court Thus, the United States informed North Vietnam with Thieu's wishes. chariman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet. Pod- night that the trend toward increas- appointments will ''vigorously sup- gorny had sent a message of congratulations to Nixon this ing the rights of individuals involved port" the new legislation. week. in criminal cases will be reversed. Boyan called this new t rend During his campaign for the presidency, Nixon said Stephan Boyan Jr., assistant pro- harmful because, he said , "One of he favored a series of summit meetings between the leaders fessor "of political science, said that the greatest lawless forces in society of the two countries, but a Nixon aide said the message this country is returning to the prac- today is the police. has nothing to do with .that. tices followed six years ago. Legisla- "As the courts crack down on • tion which guaranteed such things as police practices, the police decide Bishops Loosen Contraceptiv* * e Ban informing the accused of his rights that they are going to punish by WASHINGTON — The nation' and representation by counsel before themselves without going through s bishops opened the the courts," Boyan added. way yesterday for Catholic married couples to use contra- being questioned are being reversed, ceptives if their consciences permit it. according to Boyan. He claimed that the day after the President-elect Richard M. Nixon civil rights riots in Newark. N.J., The bishops said couples will not be cut off from com- police shot down any remaining riot munion or turned away from the church for breaking Pope said in his campaign statements that Paul VI's continued ban on all artificial birth control. such legislation weakened . police participants. He also accused police They suggested certain circumstances—although they powers. Boyan claimed "that this is of beating students in Chicago during not so. He said that Nixon's belief the Democratic National Convention. named none—can reduce the moral wiong, as their church ' views it, of disobeying the ban proves that the accused will continue "They re (police ) not paying atten- . to come under attack. tion to the courts and to their /The compromise, stitched together after a week of controversy over birth control and the Vietnam war He noted that this year Congress superiors," Boyan said. , was , former passed 180 to 8 by the National Conference of Catholic passed a statute stating that a The Rev. Alan Cleeton Bishops just before its windup. lawyer need not be present when the head of the Wesley Foundation arid a The bishops backed conscientious objection to a spe- accused is put in a line-up or ques- member of the ACLU board, said cific war and called over-all for an end to the military tioned; the police no longer have to that people get outraged when whites face police brutality but ignore it draft. They questioned whether the war in Vietnam is inform the accused of his rights IS IT TRUE thev roll the sidewalks up at 5:30 p.m.? No, it s Slate College at night. Where have all the people gone? worth its cost in human suffering. when arrested; wiretapping is per- when blacks are involved: The bishops said Vietnam had demonstrated that mili- tary force alone is not enough to solve internal political conflicts or accomplish peace. Schola rshi p Drive Begi ns Monday The State Pittsburgh Faces Budget Deficit PITTSBURGH — City council's finance committee Kin g Fund Week Gets Underwa y chairman said yesterday Pittsburgh faces a-.$15 million budgetary deficit- for 1969 and may try to tax hospitals By MARGE COHEN- Union Building. better benefits." and other nonprofit - organizations to wiggle-out of a finan- Collections will extend from 9 a.m. until 5 Not only does the theme "indicate that, more A fund closing program is planned for 4 p.m. cial bind. Coliefltan Staff Writer p.m. Wednesday through Friday, at additional ideas and programs could spark from this one Friday in the HUB Ballroom. Philip Baskin said the city is not currently authorized A campaign -will get underway here next tables set up on the first and ground floors of idea ," Thompson explained, but it also "in- In addition to Arrington, Thompson and Got- to levy.taxes on nonprofit groups and would haVe to ask rather than supporting a nationalnaUonal Thompson added. dicates that this is only one point in which ef- tlieb, speakers at the program will include week. But, the HUB, the Penn permission of the State Legislature. candidate, the drive will be for "the futures of up in the dining halls forts have to be made to provide higher educa- Charles Davis, area chairman of Tables will also be set to attain it State Human Rights Commission: Wilbert He said the proposal under consideration would tax economically and socially disadvantaged stu- during the lunch and dinner hours for dona- tion for those who would be unable the revenues of hospitals and.private clubs like the exclu- dents," Ted Thompson, vice-president of the without financial assistance." Manley, president of the Douglas Association tions. and Jim Womer, president of USG. sive" Duquesne Club or the neighborhood American Legion Undergraduate Student Government, said. Starting Wednesday, each contributor to the Thompson continued, "this is not a stopping meeting hall . Next week has been designated as "Martin fund will receive a black and white button ex- point, for the children of the recipients of this Eric Prystowsky, president of the Inter- He said the city was not thinking about taxing Luther King Fund Week" by University Presi- pressing the theme for the week in return for program will grow up in , an environment dif- fraternity Council, and Gene Cava.ucci. presi- churches at the present time. dent Eric A. Walker. During the five-day his donation. The button reads simply "A ferent from that of their parents with more and dent of the Men's Residence Council, also will The tax was one of a number of measures Baskin out- period, contributions will be solicited for the spea k. lined "at a news conference as possible ways for the city King Fund to be used to provide financial as- Just because the fund solicitation will end to get' itself dut of its dilemma. sistance to deprived poverty students from Friday does not mean more money will not go Baskin said the city was not in the red for 1968 but urban areas who desire to enroll here into the King Fund. v Next Sunday, the Jazz Club will sponsor "ur- normal increases in salaries, pensions and equipment costs 510,000 Goal • i Policy; LBJ Makes Fo re gn " Buddy Guy in concert to com- along with fat pay hikes for police and firemen will leave - ban Blues man the city with the huge deficit , next year. The minimum^ goal of the drive is 310,000. memorate the King Fund Week. Rather than ' ' "This isn't just for black high school stu- ' charge admission to the concert . Jazz Club ¦ ¦ - * dents," Thompson said. '.'This is for any President Arrington said donations for the King Budget Battle* Predicted * in House minority group student who is financially Nixon Does Not Have Veto Scholarship will be accepted. HAHHISBUHG' — The leader ofthe soon-to-be Demo- unable to attend Penn State. Prohibitive Status cratic majority in the state House of Representatives says "This group of students is an untapped WASHINGTON CAP ) — President Johnson alreadv named as a special presidential assis- ' " , phoned Johnson Thursday and The King scholarship is "directed away-from Gov; Shafer can expect-a tooth and nail fight on his 1969- resource," he continued.' "Both the community told the nation and the world emphatically tant to Nixon ," ' could profit by their further Friday' to -assure him there is no attempt "to the high scholastic minority group student 70 budget—especially if.it is tied to new consumer taxes. and industry yesterday that he — not President-elect Thompson said, "because this student will Chief among the consumer taxes being aired "by Shafer education." '- . Richard M. Nixon — will make all decisions on presume-on-the 'constitutional authority of the 'Jones, assistant Nixon is inaugurated. President." receive financial aid from this or other univer- and Republican legislators is a:state income tax. Thompson, with Frederick C. U.S. foreign policy until sities anyway." Republican leaders say the governor put them on coordinator of University Programs for • the Harlow was said to be convinced there is no Johnson appeared to dispute statements by basic misunderstanding or disagreement be- The scholarship is directed toward "the stu- notice.earlier this week that the .budget .he will present Disadvantaged, is co-chairman of the fund prior consultation and prior agre- Gottlieb,' -professor of - Human -Nixon about " tween Johnson and. Nixon over the mechanics of dent whose economic and social status is such in January will run between $2.1 and $2.4 billion. He also drive. David ement" between them. And qualified infor- that, without financial assistance, entrance to indicated he was generally opposed to new taxes oh Development, " is chairman. the transition of power. ¦ ¦ ' * mants said the president-elect holds no veto •A lthough he took pains to assert his this university would be prohibited." he said. business. - - , , . ' . ' ':. . " Thompson explained, "This isn't just a stu- power over Johnson action . A screening committee o£ five members will Herbert Fineman, D-.Philadelpnia ,' current. House mi- dent government project or a faculty project or authority, Johnson gave a personal and special ' project. This is a project of But the Nixon camp moved swiftly to head welcome to Robert D. Murphy, Nixon's liaison be set up to interview prospective recipients of nority leader and chief contender for the House speaker- an administration the scholarship.-' Two of the members will be Democrats take over_ January, already the total Penn State community with everybody off any major, blowup. A top assistant to the man on foreign affairs. . ship when the , in ^ Johnson that Nixon has undergraduate students . from backgrounds sees opposition" to Shafer on* two counts', '"- involved." . . ' president-elect assured And administration officials said privately ¦ ¦ / no intention of intruding into the' foreign-policy consultation with the similar to those of the potential recipients. - "We the Democrats are,going to control all the com- Clark Arlington, president of the University ' there would be extensive ' ^ " Jazz Club, said Club members would begin the prerogatives of the White House. incoming president although the arrangement Two faculty members and the director of the mittees in.the HouseTahd .we're going to take.a hard look Penn State Upward Bound program will also be " and "possible 'rfew T taxes Ito finance them," campaign drive Monday and Tuesday with Sources close to the incoming president between him and Johnson is apparently vague at .expenditures . . part of the selection committee. lineman said yesterday.-. "'" ¦ . . booths set up on the ground floor oi the Hetzel said in New York that Bryce N. Harlow, and imprecise.
i Editorial Opinion BERRY'S WORL (including the one blessed with the University Irony Vietnam Polluted , Perverted Values bank account) ; the right to call for student par- of right to listen or The North Vietnamese government democratic principles when their power ticipation and concern and the TO THE EDITOR: Have we truly -lost our students; the right to is threatened. relative values speak to 500 concerned is more just, more efficient and less sense of priorities regarding the " protect from their own pleasures The ' mere mention of diffusing , of property and lives? The evidence on this paternally corrupt than the South Vietnamese affirmative 25,000 students and the right to call fctrth the that power so that it is more representa- campus certainly leads to an , Campus Security, Pa. State answer: no, longer do we value property over Campus Patrol government. The North Vietnamese tive of the people will get you at least Police, and State College Police to remove life! A few examples illustrate my point. is planned government is at least as democratic as a five-year jail term. Witness peace UCLA game those students who obstruct h > The Pep Rally following the tjIgssutgs the South Vietnamese government. candidate Dzu and the three newspapers was reported to have cost the university $1,300 the President, , during And finally, it is the right of. that have been closed down in the last in damaged property. And a goal post rights of his freedom, to Amidst the political and military the riot that followed the Army game, was torn in the name of the . two weeks. bring on Campus whom he pleases, be it the turmoil which has afflicted Southeast « down by so-called "students" (or were they not Lab whose science is re- , we are not writing propaganda reported cost of $2,300. Ordnance Research Asia for as long as anyone can remem- No outside agitators?) at a pression,, or General Westmoreland, whose for the North Vietnamese. We are not Thus, in only a scant month student riots cost ber, Americans tend to lose sight of these least $3500, or ap- chosen duty is repression. giving aid and comfort to the "enemy." the taxpayers of this state at facts, Americans have been so smothered proximately enough money to, pay the yearly At a university where, the Student Govern- in polemical anti-communist propagan- The point is that the United States does tuition for 6 students. ment freely denies itself a voice in student af- fairs because it knows' that it lacks power, what da that many assume that any country not automatically confer moral superi- Such civil disorders, theft and ravaging of and rioters is obscene is that student activism is decried as ' ority upon its choice of allies. In the case property, must not be tolerated which adopts Marx s label is automat- must not be coddled by the Administration and a trespass on the rights of those who have ically oppressive and tyrannical. of Vietnam, we are supporting a corrupt, allowed to destroy University property. If the power. It is the business of the powerful to reactionary military dictatorshi perpetuate their rights; the task of the Ho Chi Minh is a dictator and un- p which University no longer respects its own property, has no mandate to rule , against a com- can it possibly expect its students to do so? powerless is the contestation of the rights of doubtedly crushes any opposition that WKTV munist dictatorship with widespread On the other hand, without hesitation did power. arises. But he is also an ardent national- REST I the University President bring in the forces of Wolfgang Walter Fuchs support among the peasants. losophy ist. He loves his people and since he took ftQPMS Law and Order to protect the lives and limbs of Graduate — Phi And what is worse ' power in 1946 has thoroughly destroyed , we are allowing L ^ certain military guests when their collective the South Vietnamese government to personal safety was threatened by student dis- the inequities which kept the vast ma- Please Cut Us a Break dictate our foreign policy. Presidential sidents. President Walker further demonstrated jority of them living at the bare subsist- his compassion for life by ensuring that those adviser Walt Rostow affirmed again TO THE EDITOR: The students of this Univer- ence level. He expropriated the landed oasta students be bodily thrown from the path of his Thursday that President Johnson will (against their irrational will) to pre- sity are proud of the accomplishments our foot- aristocracy and redistributed the land motorcade achieved this year. With an not allow the formation of a coalition vent cars and buses from running over the ball team has among the peasants. Those corrupt mer- 3^ perhaps killing them. So highly Orange Bowl Bid nearly certain, many stu- government with the National Libera- students and would like to continue chants and businessmen whom he didn does the University value human life. dents, including this one, 't tion Front. Richard Nixon also rejects their support by traveling to Miami for the kill went scurrying to the south. But where were the forces of law and order a coalition. The NLF represents at least when our property was threatened? Nowhere, game. Since the game is being played on Wednes- In contrast, the government of one-third of the South Vietnamese peo- @W ,£P>¥ so far as one can perceive from this publica- South Vietnam has not done anything tion. Were the.perpetrators of such violence ap- day night, Jan. 1, many students will find it ple by day and many more by night. At ' iitV very difficult to be back in time to register on to help its miserable people. What land "We don' t Aav« ANY gimmick*, prehended and prosecuted? Once again, the this low point in its popularity, the Sai- answer is no! Friday, Jan. 3. My suggestion is — all students has not been destroyed by American gon government represents only this comparison demons- who are planning to attend the Orange Bowl the In conclusion, known by present- bombs and vegetation killer is owned by trates that this University has forgotten the game, make their intention army and the businessmen. ing their ticket at the Department of absentee landlords in Saigon. They are The United States is "MT DOS HA* primacy of property and-thus polluted and per- thus defeating verted its values in so doing. Scheduling. in Saigon both because it is too danger- eoT.To All these students' class cards would be both of its original purposes in the war. f I'M 6LAP mm Gerald Sanders ous to live in the countryside and be- "R 5'W 11 held out of regular registration Friday, and , We intervened originally with the in- I WAS FIRM L Graduate — Educational Psychology cause most of them have tasks to per- tJITHfllCOrV OtiTSIDE would register Saturday afternoon, Jan. 4. It tention of securing self-determination [ would be a two or three hour administrative form for the army. for the South Vietnamese. Yet we are headache on Saturday afternoon, but approx- A large portion of the army and air militarily and politically supporting a Forward Nittany -March imately 5,000 students would consider it as a 3v£ wonderful Christmas present. How about cut- force officer corps consists of members government in Saigon which allows no TO THE EDITOR : It is becoming quite ev(dent ittany Halls are responding to ting us students a break — Dr. Walker? of the landed gentry. This is one of the self-determination and which refuses to that the men in N the conditions in which they are forced to live. James F. Quinn main reasons why Marshall Ky and his participate in any peace settlement Furniture with PSC 46-47 (meaning Penn State 7th — Liberal Arts, Engineering successor General Thieu have refused to which would guarantee free elections. College — 1946-1947) stamped on the side shows fulfill their promises of land reform. To We are also defeating our original how long it has been since the University paid , Carlos do so would be to disenfranchise their foreign any attention to what goes on down here. Defense for Smith policy goal — to contain Red WWW I \BBs "« I would like to thank The Daily Collegian fellow officers and invite a military China. It is now generally recognized ALUAWFES. for its coverage of the problem which we resi- TO THE EDITOR: John Carlos and Tommie 6UH.TY? „ representing Warren coup. that a united Vietnam, Cambodia and dents face, and hope that in the future the Smith may not have been Coleman's generation ('Black Glove Controver- But then, if we may judge by Ky Laos under a nationalist Ho Chi University will significantly.improve these con- Minh i» ' sy', Nov. 14), but they were certainly represent- and Thieu's past, it is doubtful would provide ditions without continual prodding. Forward that they a more formidable bul- Nittany — March ing the young black generation. care much about the Vietnamese peo- wark against Chinese expansion than John Biesinger Their actions were designed to be symbolic ple. Both fought with the French against any American intervention ever could. President-Nittany 21-22, Nittany-Poliock USG of the black man's feelings against racial in- their own people in the Gallic version And perhaps Congressman justices in this country. Since sports is pro- that is the supreme other than entertainment, of the Vietnamese bably the only area, war. Ky and Thieu's irony of the war. We have sacrificed both noticed and respected, the Olympic Games chief interest is to retain power and 30,000 American lives and $100 billion, Task of the Powe rless was the best place to bring these feelings to they, like their more popular counter- and maybe we have been fighting on world opinion. part in the North the wrong It has been argued that the peaceful , do not quibble about side. TO THE EDITOR: You are annoyed that some on by Carlos and Smith can- students fail to recognize certain basic rights, demonstration put Successor to The Free Lance, -est. 1887 ACTUALLY, IT CONCERNS SNOOPY. not be condoned because it was politically "such as those of General Westmoreland to tran- , this argument is not valid KVc«iATRicl PROBLEM ... HE SUPWNLY SEEMSTOBE AFRAIP quilly watch his Alma Mater's football team oriented. However /J I as the exclusion of South Africa because of its HSLP S<$ > |y-» I T05LEETO nSlOE ATNI6HT...HE play, and the right of President Walker to in- obviously a political ac- vite whom he chooses to his home. apartheid policy was KEEPS HEARIHS NOISES.. tion. The fact that Carlos and Smith were ©h? l atin (EaUraiatt And you base your objection on a com- 63 Years of Editorial Freedom " suspended from the games and sent home fur- ~zr/& T ' mendable principle of equality: that all men ther shows that the Olympics have political Published Tuesday through Saturday \ during the Fall, Win.ir and Spring Terms , and Thursday during tha Summer 0m \ have certain inalienable rights. But of course, connections. Term, by students of The Pennsylvania State University. Second class postage paid at State colle ge. Pa. 16801. In this contention ybu do an injustice to the ¦ Circulation: 12,500. To merely compete in the Games and win Walkers and Westmorelands of the world. The would be a continuation of a trite old black Mail Subscription Price: 112.00 a year THE Doctor LLjA c?3^ fact is that some men are more equal than tradition. Carlos and Smith would have been Mailin g Address — Box 467, state College, Pa. 16801 15 B __LSEB^^^. others, have greater rights than others, for Editorial and Business Office — Basement of Sackett (North End) , Tn-nr exalted because of their athletic prowess, yet Phone — 865-2531 ' rr^> they also have power. > looked down on as being socially unacceptable Business office ho urs: Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. m From Viet Nam war commander, to ad- because of their 'skin color. - viser on supression of guerilla warfare in Latin Member oj The Associated Press DO W DEAUN YflFCOURSE! fLLTREATAHV PATIENTWHO HAS World opinion seems to mean a great deal PAUL J. LEVINE America, to planner of repression of the ghetto to the United States. Perhaps the actions of «$s^&> WILLIAM FOWLER ANIMAL PStttlATW?) I'M VERY A PROBLEMANP A NICKEL ; population , to spectator of football, all these ' Editor -^uxr— * Business Manager Carlos and Smith have embarrassed tht> coun- WHJO-HOOT RV- r /BRDAPMINPEP are the inalienable rights of General try enough to make it correct the plight of the Board at Editors: Managing Editor, William Epstein; Editorial Editor, Michael SerrlJI; City Editor, Gerry Lynn Hamll- L. Westmoreland, Army Chief-of-Staff. ton; Assistant City Editor, Charles Redmond; Copy Editors, Kathy Lirwak, Marth a Hare and Pat Gurosky; News Editor, TOHELP m r -f^Z ^j Mac kman. Hitler possibly would have been David Nestor; Sports Editor, Ron Kolb; Assistant Sports Editor, Don McKee; Photography Editor, Pierre Bell lcinl; ^ Our President too has certain inalienable stopped sooner had the Jews been able to Senior Reporters, Marge Cohen, Glenn Kranzley and Allan Yoder; Weather Reporter, Elliot Abra ms. rights; the right to approve of responsible dis- broadcast their message on world wide tele- Board of Managers: Local Advertising Manager, Edward Fromk in; Assistant Advertising Managers, Leslie Schmidt and sent and the right to define it; the right to re- vision. Kathy Mccormick; National Advertising Co-Managers, Jim Soutar and George Bernger; Credit Manager, George Gelb; present the academic community and the right Errol Shorter Assistant Credit Managers, Carol Book and Stive Lelcht; Classified Advertising Manager, Mary Kramer; Public R*la- tions and Promotions .Manager, Ron Resnikoff; Circulation Manager, Buster Judy; Office Manager, Mary Gebler, TM» DflcTU* * to ignore its sentiments; the right to deplore lst-Liberal Arts ~ " tf¦* Committee on Accuracy and Fair P!ay: John R. Zimmerman, Frederick C. Jones Th omaV~M. Golderu i i! R lawlessness and lack of integrity and the right Ervin Bullock n~rr to sit on the boards of profitmaking institutions lst-Liberal Arts PAGE TWO SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1968
'Tis winter alread y and IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY everyone ' s in a tizzy, The NEWEST High Rise Apartment HARBOUR TOWERS The Brothers of 710 S. ATHERTON ST., STATE COLLEGE, PA. Furnished Efficiencies PiKA Furnished or unfurnished one bedroom apts are especially busy. 2 Elevators All Utilities incl. Call Alex Gregory . Associates , Inc. After doing the duties and mopping 238-5081 SUITE T02 HOLIDAY I NN the floors, Sometime in the future we'll bring back the doors. Dear Beta's Ni ck Froggy Thanks for the memories Tippy- Toes Plain Old Joe Homecoming-Snowball Fi T.H.E. Peach Jamie ghts- Chocolate Easter Eggs- South Phill y Rich Crazy Serenades-and Socials Michaud Joe Love, The A Chi O's Interlan dia June Grads START A proudly presents CAREER IN as BANKING Ed Stone and BANK EXAMINERAWES SALARY $7,200 Mark Michaels Tra in with foremost banking inst itutions After two year* — $9,200 - Promotional opportunities to over $24,000 Veteran's Administration grant s whiltt training Just join our job-in , and find out In a Folk Dance Worksho p ¦ about it. For information about livinj and current job ALL .COLLEGE SENIORS ELIGIBLE opportunities in the New Pennsylvania write tot Job-In Begin July 1, 1969 Clifford J_ Jones, Secretary For "furt her information con tact your placem ent officer or I Pennsylvania Department of Commerc- 225 Pine Street, Harrisburg, Pa? 17101 Saturday, Nov. 16 Commonwealth of Pennsylvania RAYMOND E SHAFER , Gove rnor NEW YORK STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT >g*?!J!! g'-!»P| C|t 1M CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK, H. Y, 1rM07 Name 2:30 p.m HUB Bail room PLEASE PRINT ' * i j I College Class Major " ¦" ¦" | . . " Permanent Home Address
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