I from the associated press

News Round up : • 9 From the State,

By DENNIS STIMEU NG original proposal. Walker said the University Collegian USG Reporter would have to raise tuition or cut back on Nation b World new programs if it did not receive more state The Undergraduate Student Government funds. passed the controversial Student Protection Long read a letter to the Congress which The World Act and appropriated $250 for its fight against he had received from the Speaker of the Gov. Shafer's proposed tuition increase in a House, Republican Kenneth B. Lee. Lee wrote Br it ain Predic ts Fu t ur e Mili t ar y Pow er congressional meeting last night. that the legislators' "response to these needs LONDON — Prime Minister Harold Wilson's govern- The protection act, introduced by Dave (University requests and a tuition hike) will ment boasted yesterday Britain soon will be the strongest Vinikoor, Town Representative, and Theodore be based upon a sympathetic approach with- military power in allied Europe and foreshadowed greater Thompson, East Halls Congressman, is de- in the limits of our current fiscal limitations." British influence in North Atlantic Treaty Organization signed to eliminate the University's policy of Kefford's report on the progress of this affairs. "extended jeopardy". , fight stated "it looks like the Democrats will A White Paper on defense policy said the nation's The bill declares, "The University dis- line up as a major protest group against any "formidable contribution" to the security of the Old World ciplinary /system shall not have the authority tuition increase while the Republicans will Will match its drive for the political and economic unity to execute a policy of-extended jeopardy in remain non-committal until the Governor an- of Europe. any case." nounces his plans." Defense Secretary Denis Healey went even further Previously, similar bills'has been intro- Letter to Legislators when he addressed a news conference on the consequences duced but were defeated because of the bases by 1971 ambiguous definition of "extended jeopardy". Kefford also announced that a rough of Britian's program to adandon its Asian draft of a proposed, and to concentrate instead on a European strategy. Definition letter to all State legisla- When in the early 1970s Britain completes its redeploy- tors has been completed. The letter will ex- The legislation passed last night defined press USG's opinion as to the effects of a ment "we can expect to have a major influence on the this term as "the Administrative policy, development of allied strategy." tuition hike. The letter states that such a whereby judicial action is taken by the Uni- plan could have "disastrous effects" on stu- In the next 10 years there is "some probability that versity disciplinary system, before charges the extent of the United States' physical commitment" dents with fixed scholarships or students are dropped, or before or after an acquittal working their way through college. to Europe will be reduced and this must make. Europeans or conviction has been/obtained in any other more self-reliant. Long then introduced an act asking for judicial jurisdiction." $250 to be appropriated for Kefford to use Vinikoor stated of this bill, "I don' • * • —Collegian Pholo by Pierre Belllcini t for lobbying in Harrisburg. , Effectiveness AMBASSADOR ARTHUR GOLDSCHMIDT iold representatives to the University's sixth think that one should be tried twice for the Long stated, "This bill has a double pur- Marines Question Bombin g same crime no matter how important it is." KHE SANH. Vietnam — Some U.S. Marine officers annual Model United Nations last night that "the most dangerous child of want is pose: to appropriate the money and to affirm The .bill now goes to the University Sen- the support of the question the effectiveness of the massive aerial bombing war." Goldschmidl is U.S. representative io the U.N.'s Economic and Social Council. ate Committee on Student Affairs. If ap- Congress for this fight." campaign that is supposed to give them the upper hand The act was passed as individual con- proved by the Senate, it will then be con- gressmen against a 40,000-man enemy force encircling this combat sidered by the University trustees. expressed their approval of USG's base. decision to battle the proposed tuition in- Dan Clements, Chief Justice of the USG crease. Despite what the Air Force calls the greatest bomb- Supreme Court, who was opposed to the bill, ing campaign in history, Communist truck convoys still are predicted that the trustees would eventually Vinikoor also introduced a bill request- moving through Laos and into South Vietnam with am- ing the creation of a committee "to study the veto it. He said of extended jeopardy, ."I advisibility of munition and supplies for the North Vietnamese forces. don't think it is a legal right the University instituting a 'free university'" Supply trucks have been spotted as close as two at this University. should give up. This bill has guts," he added, Jon Fox miles from the Khe Sanh base. Soviet-built tanks also ¦¦ "but I don't think the trustees will ever , USG vice-president said that have been seen in the same area. Some have been de- ^$3$r 9 9 ^9 0 Ar ^ «& ^B&0 ^M ^SSr hI E9 H §r&^ H tar I II H B ^Q^ H 8 ^EB 4^ p such a "free university" could be defined as approve it." no charge stroyed but many more remain. 'Extremely Good' " , no credit, no grade." Classes held Aerial bombardment and resupply of the encircled By BETH GOLDER Ambassador Goldscnmidt said the decla- under the proposed plan will "contribute to base is the cornerstone of the U.S. Command's defensive The bill was cited by Jeff Long, USG intellectual and educational growth", accord- The keynote speaker tor the sixth an- rations have had an enormous effect all president, as "an extremely good one, which ing to the bill plan for the Khe Sanh area, where '5,000 Marines and over the world since their adoption in 1948, , by holding informal classes 500 South Vietnamese troops nual Model United Nations, Ambassador has long been needed at this university." on any subject matter. The classes would be are dug in. Arthur Goldschmidt, said last night that the with 39 national constitutions drawing from On the subject of the proposed tuition them and many pieces of legislation referring taught by either University professors 01 -*• ¦* • most important work of the U.N. is not increase, the congress heard a report by * to them. students. shown in TV .debates or by people calling James Kefford, special assistant to Long in The committee established by this bill others ' names. Rather, he said it is "the He said Americans should look at their charge of the tuition fight. Kefford stated has the responsibility of reporting its results under side of the iceberg"—tne economic own failure to ratify the declarations, espe- that President Walker's speech Wednesday to USG within two months. At that time, The Nation and social agencies helping the under- cially since this year was proclaimed by the before the State Senate Appropriations Com- appropriate action will be taken. Johnson Asks $10.4 Billion For City Crisis developed countries of the world. U.N. General Assembly to be Human Rights mittee was simply a restatement of Shafer's (Continued on page three) The United States Representative on the Year. The U.S. lags behind others, including AUSTIN, Tex. — President Johnson attacked "the the Soviet Union, in ratifying them. crisis of the cities" yesterday with a $10.4 billion 'package Economic and Social Council of the U.N. pointed out that "the most dangerous child He added that if we don't we can hardly of help in the fields of housing, poverty, transportation and of want is war , riot insurance. ,'' demonstrated by the fact expect newer nations to approve them, or to If the program goes through in its entirety, the eventual that in the last decade the major trouble in understand why we failed to join in their Graduate Scho ol the world has come in the underdeveloped support, since we are a leader in applying Troubled price tag might run. to $30 or $35 billion, some officials nations. believe. these i beliefs. He urged the 52 delegations of the The ambassador mentioned other Some of the program was new, some of it old. All Model U.N. to topics of it was pulled together in a massive, complicated message consider the issues that they which will be discussed by the Model U.N. will discuss in the next three days as "only He said the issue of the admission of Com- By Change in Deferment to Congress that was nearly twice as long as the one the passing storms." Ambassador Goldschmidt President delivered on the State of the Union last month. munist China can' give delegates an insight McDermott said that the said that it is crucially important that into the intricacies of the organization. By RICHARD RAViTZ technological Again, Johnson called for boosting income taxes Americans understand ¦ through a 10 per cent surcharge, this time on grounds that the U.N.—to know He noted • that sanctions against South Collegian Administration Reporter advances in the last several years, medical 'building what it can and can't do. Africa have had little effect on that The University graduate school is con- discoveries "soaring interest rates will cripple the home in- Conditions in coun- and breakthroughs in science re- dustry and the tax boost will help prevent this because Philadelphia and Pitts- try's illegal administration of Southwest fused and troubled by the suggested limita- " burgh are as related to activity in search were made possible by the work of it is anti-inflationary. Africa or of its policy of apartheid, since tion of graduate deferments in fields other New Delhi or Panmunjom as to events in it is self-sufficient enough to refuse to graduate schools. Johnson also asked Congress for a new housing and Connecticut or than the medical sciences urban development act that would write "a charter of New Jersey, he added. comply. , Robert McDer- He also said that scholarship in the hu- and set a goal of The ambassador observed that a rep- mott, associate dean of the graduate school, manities is equally renewed hope for the American city" resentative from the United Kingdom has He said the Middle East problem gives important for America, building 26 million new homes and apartments in 10 years. said, delegates a chance to see how the U.N. can said yesterday. and the graduate schools play a vital role "there is nothing wrong with the U.N. be flexible and play a variety of roles • • * except its members." He had previously . How- "We are not certain at this time what in educating artists, scholars and writers. noted that delegates ever, he said the U.N. must take infinite AFL-CIO Boycott Foreign Copper Impo rts have a role as a multi- care to do nothing to disrupt rather than changes will finally be made in the draft, "Most of the graduate students are in- 's boycott lateral ambassador, a person whom U.S. but it seems inevitable that we will get MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — A longshoremen Ambassador assist. dustrious and eager for learning. Students against multimillion dollar imports of foreign copper Arthur Goldberg has defined In his discussion of the to be "someone who comes to every ques- work of the hurt. Some people have suggested as many are not young people who are not able to was announced yesterday in a mounting AFL-CIO cam- U.N. in helping developing nations, Ambas- as 50 per cent of the graduate students in paign to aid 60,000 U.S. copper strikers. tion with an open mouth." sador Goldschmidt said it is doing things perform skilled labor. The graduate schools "The International Longshoremen have decided in Ambassador Goldschmidt said the ac- which can make human life different from the country will be drafted. are not hiding students away. the interest of helping their fellow trade unionists on tual legislation of the General Assembly is animal existence. "I don't think the figure will be that the one-seventh of the iceberg that glitters "To lose some of these students would strike against the copper companies to refuse to handle He quoted a commission member in high here, but we will lose some people," be an irreparable all imports and exports of copper in the United States above the surface adding that he did not New Delhi who said that many countries loss i to the nation. It is Gleason of the intend that to be an analogy to the Cold fail to meet the McDermott said. tragic that the nation does not value grad- and Canada," said President Thomas W. War most basic criterion of inde- International Longshoremen's Association. . He emphasized that the remainder of pendence—that of being able to feed them- There are currently 4,439 graduate stu- uate work in 'terms of critical importance." Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz, here to talk the U.N. work is provided by the agencies selves. The ambassador said an answer to dents enrolled in the University. In addi- which directly aff ect the political security Although the immediate effects of wide with AFL-CIO leaders, said earlier that copper imports the food problem as well as the answer to tion to studying, many graduates serve as amount to $3 milion a day since the seven-month-old strike of the developing nations. curbing population growth is the provision scale drafting of graduate students may not halted most U.S. production. What the U.N. fails to do in the eco- of capital to stoke the economic develop- assistants to professors or as instructors be apparent, the research and development AFL-CIO President George Meany also announced a nomic and social field today will determine ment of the countries. themselves. industries, which comprise the bulk of the major financial campaign among all 63,000 affiliated lo- what is on future agendas of the General The apathy and indifference which he Many courses on the introductory level Assembly, he said. Gross National Product will suffer from loss cals to "adopt a copper striker." It is the first such effort observed in undez-developed countries ,20 «re taught by graduate students—English to enlist virtually the entire labor movement in support One legislative topic which the Model years ago is gone, he noted; today the peo- 1 of manpower, the dean explained. of a strike in some 40 years, Meany said. U.N. will discuss is the implementation of ple think "they may not be ordained to live and 3, foreign languages and beginning sci- Admission Requests Increase the Universal Declarations of Human Rights. in starvation and poverty." ence courses, f or example. Requests for admission to the graduate * * * Anti-Intellectualism school have increased 10 per cent over last McDermott said that an undercurrent of year, despite threatened draft changes. Mc- The Sfafe anti-intellectualism is present in the debate Dermott said he seriously doubted graduate ConCon Reverses County Court Decision over deferments. Many Americans regard school would lose its attractiveness to stu- Greek Week Com petiti ons graduate school as a HARRISBURG — The Constitutional Convention re- "series of Mickey Mouse dents interested in further study. versed itself within hours yesterday by throwing out a courses" and as a draft-dodging device for The dean said that years out of grad- proposal to delay for five years local option elections on bright students. uate school spent in the army would set whether justices of the peace should be replaced by com- He said that undergraduate deferments munity courts. Ente r Final Rounds Toni ght back the graduate student for several rea- The amendment, introduced by Delegate W. Walter place an extra burden on the non-college sons. He would be older and possibly less By MARGE COHEN Sigma Alpha; Delta Chi and fied from the competition be- youth, but the nation has apparently realized Braham of Lawrence County, had been approved by a Delta Delta Delta, did Phi cause of a "misunderstanding energetic in his studies in a shorter period 69-67 vote shortly before the convention recessed for Collegian IFC Reporter that college-trained people are vital to the of time. Also, he might marry and raise Final competition in the Sigma Kappa and Delta Zeta. of the regulations." They will lunch. The choral groups will be continue in country's well-being and has reconciled it- children, and the economic pressures could When the afternoon session resumed, Braham, a "Greek Week — '68" college the matches, a col- bowl and in the sing contest judged b> members of the lege bowl committee spokes- self to an admitted inequality in the draft. force him to delay returning to graduate former judge, asked that the earlier vote be reconsidered. music department. man said The convention approved his request 134-3, will be held at 7 p.m. tonight , because of the "mis- McDermott said he agreed with the sug- study. , which College bowl matches will understanding'' and "uncon- cancelled the' first vote and then Braham withdrew his in 111 Forum. gestion of the American Council of Graduate McDermott said that graduate school Competing in the sing con- Mow the ' sing competition. Pre- trollable circumstaces." amendment. He said it had been, offered under a misim- liminary elimination among pression. test in the madrigal division The "misunderstanding" cen- Schools that draftees be selected by a ran- is important for the University's standing are Alpha Epsilon Phi and the four teams will precede the dom pool or lottery with no deferments and achievement, and that the University During the morning session, Braham introduced his sing. tered around the substitution of amendment because he wanted lie said Zeta Beta Tau; Phi Kippa Sig- team members once competi- granted for undergraduate college study. should continue the fine record its graduate , , to put off the JP- The participating teams are community court option until voters had an opportunity to ma and Alpha Gamma Delta; tion started. Because this was McDermitt responded to criticism of school already has. decide how well proposed reforms of the minor judiciary Alpha Kappa Lambda and Kap- Zeta Beta Tau and Phi Sigma not clearly stipulated by the had worked. pa Delta, and Delta Chi and Deltf:: Phi Gamma Delta and college bowl committae, the graduate schools as ivory towers for wealthy The draft will undoubtedly raise many Phi Sigma Kappa ; Tau Kaopa + Delta Delta Delta. Sigma Alpha Mu and Triangle and lazy students who don't want to leave problems, but no one is certain what the * * In the novelty number cats- Epsilon and Acacia, and Sig- team used a substitute when school and work for a living by noting that specific effects of a change would be or how gory, the finalists are Tau ma Alpha Mu and Triangle. PSEA Head Observes Florida Teachers one of their players could not leaders in industrial and scientific research the University will deal with them, the dean HARRISBURG — The President of the Pennsylvania Kappa Epsilon and Kappa Kap- Sigma Alpha Mu and Tri- continue in the <:om"c'itibn . State Education Association spent three days in Florida pa Gamma: Acacia and Alpha angle were originally disquali- (Continued on page eight} are former graduate students. said. this week observing the statewide walkout of teachers there. "I didn't go down there to learn how to operate a strike said Joseph Standa of Casualties High; Resistance Crumbling ," Johnstown, president of the 1 80,000-member professional educator organization. , "I wanted to see how strong the teachers in Florida felt about this. After all, resigning from your job is the ultimate resort. You can't go any further than this'." Standa's PSEA has scheduled a statewide demonstra- tion for March 4 in Pennsylvania to protest legislative inaction of higher teacher salary and school subsidy bills. Some 4,000 Florida teachers have submitted their resignation in opposition to what they consider an inr'' - - SAIGON {/?) — U.S. Marines stormed the south wall rines seized a key tower and killed 15 defenders. The side the capital, another 1,800. quate education budget approved this year by that state's of the Citadel in Hue yesterday against crumbling enemy North Vietnamese melted away. These casualty estimates provided the first indication legislature. resistance while outside the old imperial city American Associated Press correspondent George McArthur of the intensity of the fighting inside Hue, where Marine "I come back convinced teachers in Florida, Pennsyl- troops cut the supply line that has kept the North Viet- reported from Hue that as evidence of weakening re- casualties have been severe, i This was reflected in the vania and elsewhere in the nation are no longer willing to namese fighting for three weeks. sistance, the North Vietnamese left behind many rifles American casualties. accept second class citizenship," Standa commented. In the air, the U.S. Command reported warplanes and two mortars set up for firing. While the battle for Hue was the hottest sustained for the first time Wednesday bombed the Hanoi radio sta- At the Citadel, ,AP correspondent John Lengel said action, there were scattered clashes up and down South tion beaming Communist propaganda from North Viet- it appeared about 40 per cent of the Citadel was in allied Vietnam. wmm^^^BZZzxrCK^n-a n^rrr-"'™ .:r : 7:::^z:r: 3rcx% nam. But Tokyo reported Hanoi radio still was broad- hands, with South Vietnamese soldiers heavily engaged. At the U.S. ^Mal'ine base at Khe Sanh) in the north- casting. Supply Line Cut west corner of the country, sporadic Communist shelling 1 The ferocity of the fighting all up and down South Outside the city, a strong force from the U.S. 1st Air went on. Associated Press correspondent John T. Wheeler What' s Inside M Vietnam was reflected by the command's report that Cavalry Division and the 101st Airborne Division were reported one of the stronger ground probes of the Marine \ a record number of U.S. soldiers—543—were killed in driving toward the west and north walls of the Citadel lines in recent days had been made but had been hurled -3k? the Feb. 11-17 period. Another 2,547 were wounded. and were about two miles away. Their greatest triumph back. COLLEGIAN OPERATION PAGE 3 In the battle for Hue, a Marine spokesman said: was cutting the Communist supply line. He said 100 enemy troops had advanced through "We made a big break today. Spirits were pretty high." A U.S. patrol boat was hit in the Perfume River a heavy fog toward a portion of the Khe Sanh perimeter BOOKSTORE PAGE 3 U.S. Flag Over Hue that divides the old walled city from southern Hue and manned by South Vietnamese rangers. The fog lifted TALK. TALK , TALK PAGE 4 As the Marines secured their first lodgement on the was badly damaged. The North Vietnamese also struck suddenly, exposing the advancing troops. The rangers south wall of the Citadel, a lance corporal ran up the a U.S. landing boat carrying Vietnamese refugees with opened up and cut down the enemy , force with withering TONKIN , McNAMARA ... PAGE 5 Stars and Stripes on a makeshift staff. a rocket grenade and several civilians were wounded . fire sending it reeling to its own positions. There was ABE IS AILING PAGE 6 The Marines fought to within about 50 yards of the McArthur reported that military sources estimated no estimate of enemy casualties. walled inner palace grounds under heavy fire from 4,800 enemy troops have been killed in the battle in Hue An all-out enemy drive to overrun Khe Sanh still THE LAST TIME PAGE 7 the 300 or so North Vietnamese still believed holding and outside the city. He said the Marines had killed is expected. Marine officers were saying it could come CHAPEL SPEAKER PAGE 8 out in Tue. about 1,500 of the enemy, South Vietnamese forces any time—in a few days or a few weeks. Resistance on the outer wall crumbled when Ma- about the same number and American paratroopers out- i Continued on page three) • ,- Editorial Opinion Letters To tours WOHLO The Editor Those Little White Lies TO THE EDITOR:" Mr. Anthony's letter shows just what Doan of Women Dorothy L. Harris, speaking years. America is—The most hypocritical cesspool of ignorance Wednesday nk-hl at the installation of the officers Last year's dramatic reinstatement of the Na- and bigotry in the world. * of the AL-zxda'Jci-i of Women Students, made an tional Defense Loan program as a result of student Mr. Anthony should note that although he and I on the of know what America was built for white men, she attracted inieveAin^ observation growing-up AWS— pressure channeled by USG is an indication of the most of her immigrants with the lies that America was an observation that may well be applied not only to effectiveness a studentof government can have in in- the home ol the free and brave and that America be- AWS but to several other campus organizations fluencing decisions^ the so-called real world. ' lieved in the equality of all men. So it is America's fault that all of those horrid foreigners invaded Mr. Anthony's as well. Despite criticism of jumping *fhe gun, USG's homeland. Dean Harris said that in the past few years AWS current plan to mobilize opposition to a possible tui- "Also Mr. Anthony should try to make himself realize has grown from "an amateurish high-schoolish stu- tion hike before the proposal becomes law is Ih: kind thai this continent didn't come into being at the instant den t government to a high level organization." of action which gives ^ a Pilgrim breathed in this area of the world. It just so significance to the existence of ^ happens that those ."savages," the Indians, were here first. While The Daily Collegian is not as favorable as the student governing body.' It was only with lies and brutality that the white man Dean Harris in our appraisal of progress in the grow- The time is not past remembering when USG obtained this land. Surprisingly enough Mr. Anthony, ing up of AWS, we must agree that AWS, along with was hardly aware of the Harrisburg influence on the everything about this country wasn't lily white. several other campus organizations notably the Un- affairs of the University In addition. I would like to assure Mr. Anthony that and the. legislature could he can bet his whitest sheet that the black man didn't dergraduate Student Government and the Town expect to never hear a word of student opinion from come here because he wanted to see what a plantation Independent Men's Council, has come a long way University Park. " .• ' and "freedom" were like. toward maturity and responsibility. Perhaps most impressive of all is ihe giant step As for going "home," too many non-whites have died Beginning three years ago with its work towards forward in this nation's wars for lies, i.e. . "democracy/' and in taken by the Town Independent Men's America's sweatshops and ghettos for ihem to take Mr. the abolition of the regulaiion forbidding women Council from the days when their main concerns were Anthony and his proposal seriously. They plan io continue students to visit the apartments of males anchconr arranging mixers with women's residence halls and raising hell until ihey begin to share in the prosperity linuing right up to yesterday's announcement that providing lists of available housing in State College. America has sucked from the veins of all the non-whites the Administration has approved its resolution allow- of Jhe world. If for any reason they did leave, I don't In the past year or so TIM has made it its busi- think they would leave too much of America standing. ing coeds to utilize the After Hours Service for visit- ness to fight for improved housing conditions By the way,-Mr. Anthony and Miss Newton in Stafe ¦ , , four- ' *»* ing men s apartments after residence hall closing College, making themselves known nor t only to State fifths of the population of this planet is non-white. And hours, AWS has been significantly responsible in College borough officials but to State housing offi- if you don't start minding your manners, we may just freeing coeds from archaic rules which they regular- decide to put you off of "our" planet. cials as well. If results have been slow in coming, it 5>- Raymond Edoerton '69 ly side-stepped anyway. has not been due to a lack of initiative on the part cpsW Similarly the Undergraduate Student Govern- of TIM. © 1968 fcy NEA, Inc f ment has lately demonstrated a concern with the None of these groups has as yet realized its full "Excuse me. Senator! May I have your autograph? Through kose Colored Glasses significant issues affecting students rather than with potential, but at least and at last, they are on the TO THE EDITOR : I don't know too much about Nancy the trivial concerns often occupying USG's of past way. Newton or Joe Anthony, but I'd like to express my com- plete disagreement and dumbfoundness over his "Don't play in my backyard." TODAY ON CAMPUS I guess History 20 must be soon changed to fit the Agricult .re Faculty Meeting, - times. Last time I went to class, this country originally 4' Engineers Week Fit . 12 noon, belonged to the red men, not the white. It grew p.m., Hetzel Union Building HUB assembly hall from a Letters to the Editor virgin wilderness into a magnanimous nation made by assem' ly hall International , Farm Youth 1 the hands of many people from a Chinese Cub, 7:30 p.m., 214 ' p.m.; 217-18 HUH kaleidoscope of races. , if you think that this nation was HUB La Vie , 8 a.m., 218 HUB George W. and Joe A. Contributions Joe built by the hands of the white man alone, I think you TO THE EDITOR: Today being George Washington' should sue s TO THE EDITOR: We are writing in response to Joe your school board because you have a gross miscon- birthday, ! feel it in the interests of patriotism'to reply Anthony's letter. We would first like to suggest that Joe to Mr. Anthony's letter. ception of history. There is no ideal American race, un- On WDFM ftacf io-97J Anthony take an elementary history course so that less you mean the red-man; whether you like it or We, the enlightened masses ' not, 4-4:05 p.m. — WDFM News Sports , have long been tolerant he will become aware of the fact that the white man he was here first ! Even he doesn't try to claim this of ignorance. Even William Penn mi took 4:05-5 p.m. — Music of the 8-12 midnight — Sam Magee ght have lost pa- , or maybe the better word is stole, this land from nation as his creation; he can't. Neither can the white, news on itence with you, Mr. A., but we continue to allow vou the red man. Secondly, black men didn't come here, they Masters with Eugene White with popular music, " the black or the yellow. (Nielsen Sym #1; Beethoven the hour. Ski reports 8:45 and to express your point of view. Those of us who are were brought here against their wi'.l by the white man Time is a little costl interested y these days, but no price is too —Quintet in E; Rachmaninoff 10:45 in preserving the remains of our American for his profit. dear to pay for education. Besides, isn't heritage would that why you —Pian o Concerto #1' SATURDAY like to help, but we do not have time The white man did not build this, land solely by come here? Joe, you'd better meat Nancy to re-educate you in Pattee as 6-6:05 p.m. — WDFM News 12 midniP.^W a.n . — John and Miss Newton. Would a library himself. Black men have given their lives in every war soon as possible so you can look card be of service, a through the archives 6:05-7 p.m. — After Six (Pop- Schulrick with Ton Forty, new pair of glasses, a gift sub- America has been involved in as they are dying today of history together. Each American should know scription to the New York who ular, easy-listening) News on the hour Ski report Times? in Vietnam. Black men contributed to ihe white man's made this country what it is; Do you know why this 7-7:15 p.m. — Dateline News . 12:45 Perhaps we need to establish a Fund to Trace the capitalistic system (in particular the South's cotton in- country was made, what the yellow contributed to it, (Comprehen ive campus, na- 6-9 a.m. — Popular music with Lineage of our Ancestors. We could appoint you our dustry) only to become exploited under this same system). the red, the black and the white? ' researcher in chief and tional and international news, P""- r> Handler, news on the could arrange for you to spend We feel that Joe Anthony and others who share his It might be "cool" to wear "shades," but it's time sports and weather) ' Ski reports 6:45 and the summer abroad. When you finish plotting your you took off those rose colored lenses f views should wake up and realize that if American rights so you can see 7:15:8 p.m. — Spotlight On 8 45 amily tree, let us know. You might even learn some- are not given life as it really is. Get to know "Humanity," he' thing to all Americans, then they will be taken s really about American history. py what ever means necessary. a remarkable fellow. Maybe then you won't mind your Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Mrs. Laurie Tr.ieb Then Joe Anthony neighbor playing in your back yard. State College won't have to worry about black But, if after your education men playing in his backyard, he'll have to worry about , you still hold your them burning it. bigoted views, don't send Americans away to distant shores to build a new land—send yourself. Go Siarleila Flowers 70 back Was laihi fflnliwrian Learning to your original land and build your home and your Too Late Karen McGill '69 hate; go build your - -.h- " 62 Years of Editorial Freedo m - own little ir- -* TO THE EDITOR: For those whites who feel the same Gloria Horsley '70 / Linda ' Whitby 70 Published Tuesday throu gh Saturday durin g the Fall, Winter and Spring Terms as the two demented individuals, Nancy Newton "Shape and onci> weekly on Thursdays during June, July and August. The Daily Collegian up or ship out," and Joe Anthony "Don't play in my back is a student-operated newspaper. Second class postage paid at State Colle ge, Pa, yard," a few things should 16801, Circulation, 12,500. be made clear. It is time IM WORKING 0M SET VS SOME 6AMES WITH white people in this country realized that they cannot W THEM GET V6 SOME GAMES FLAW 00R SCHEDULE. R|&|T Mail Subscription Price: SB.50 a year enslave and OUR BASEBALL SOME REM LITTLE W<5 Mailing Address — Box 467, state College, Pa. 16801 exploit black people here, support the en- , ITH SOME REAL OLPLAPIES, CHARLIE BROW, AND WE'LL ' Editoria l and Business Office — SCHEWIE FOR CHARLIE BROWN Basement of Sackett 1 North End> slavement and exploitation of " black men in South Africa, , 50 WE MP WEIL BUW6HIBR "THEM.IOO.' HAVE A GREAT SEASON! Phone - 845-2531 and use these same black men to fight yellow men in NEXT SEASON CAN SLAUGHTER THEM.,, Business office hours ; Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. w Vietnam forever. This is precisely the mentality that ^-r^T-V— Member of The Associated Pr ess 1 allows the white man to tell the red man to go back where he came from. II J''° Jfe RICHARD WIESEJNHUTTER DICK WEISSMAN Black men were shipped » " °^S*4^spg= *. here as slaves, and if this Editor Business Manager country does not "shape up," black people will "ship out" —not as slaves but feet first ' 1 Committee on Accuracy and Fair Play: Charles Brown, Faith Tanney, Harvey . And if it comes to that, z-'- Oc/w.i'l; Mr. Anthony, U- ^ ^M'- - Jv Reader. you will see your "back yard" burned to ^Ai-x the ground. ^m^uw* 2-23 PAgTTwO FRIDAY , FEBRUARY 23, 1968 John-Franklin Warner '68

Put wow on the wall!!! presents THE NEW SCHOOL COLLEGE PSYCHEDELIC FULL-COLOR is or college. It offers the third and fourth years of the undergraduate curriculurn, leading to the B.A. degree. We accept liberal arts students *Wtwst»raJ*k Tl. who hahave comP|eted ,ne equivalent of the freshman and sophomore years tfAlW I We Mu!fi-Media Experien ce d«rA«#*/i7 $#^ elsewhere. offer two programs-Humanities and Social Science. Half A«$VfclZ. JW ,he work in each Pr°8ram is done in DIVISIONAL COURSES which spa n lhe traditional departmental boundaries in order to study the basic con- (Actual size 22V2" x 31" ; Li i$& 00*4 ght Show - Dance Concert cepts melhodS and principles of the larger discipline. In addition to the &*V&I§ ^%/fa ' Divisional Sequence of courses each student- works in a specialized area V?\S V0 0* § cul- with ^^\ V00 and engages in a tutorial leading to independent study. The program m ®^ * minates in an Inter-Divisional-Senior Seminar, which examines the rela- 1 tionships between the disciplines of Social Science, the Humanities and the Natural Sciences.

The juniors in the Social Sciences take The juniors in the Humanities also take three year long all of the arts and Lj and three Divisional (year long) courses. courses. Working with materials from In the first course the emphasis is on philosophy these courses engage the student in various fifettSmm a systematic analysis of a large (mac- modes of critical and interpretive analysis in order to ^ JUHN RIHC0 GEORGE ro) social order-in this , case the maximize the possibilities for significant discoveries in ' Big, American culture. Readings include: confronting the vast range of works created by man s f-f^^^^ &^ full-color brand-new posters of the intellect and imagination. fabulous Beatles! Paul Goodma n , Drawing the Lir.s: {vSW& w™> A psychedelic blast for Luckman and Berger, Social Mobility , are excerpts from last year's com- the young of all ages. Flame-bright John... Here, as an example Mfc Milil f liP¦% s Flower-power and Personal Identity; C. Wright prehensive,examination. "The following texts all concern 'i8j WM&. Paul... Dove-loving Ringo... , The Link question ** Myslic Geor Mills, selections; Parsons themselves to a greater or lesser extent with the S$®^f$f- 9e- Al1 clicked in Swinging Gar- question, the possi- Wlr K London b Between Character and Society; of human history, and the correlative wMdrWii>l "' >' < V world-famous photographer , What We Want; de Tocque- bilities for progress. Choose three of the following texts * R,CHAR O AVEDON michacl FW§k< * *i' & - , and printed in dazzling, ville, Democracy in America; San- and compare and contrast their treatment of these ques- fc*^" ' ' ,irsWime colo >'s that turn on the _„_ ** v *£ /S Sat. February 24 8:30 p.m. HUB Ballroom tayana, Character and Opinion in the tions. Communist Manifesto; Reas on and Experience |, ' "JFV W' 1 Patterns of out there. Like the Big M^Bl Four ! w United States; selections from Freud (Dewey); Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Kuhn); *'• ' ¦> J^^wM themse,ves, they're kicks, a ?|« and Skinner; economic analysis by Genesis; Antigone; Caesar and Cleopatra ; The Sound and * haPPenin9. ¦ E«H $ I / W' ' & ^ an art form, a chest Knight, Samuelson and Marx ; and the Fury " .. ."2. One factor which would seem to distin- paul " 'hump. Get them and believe. political analysis in the terms of guish indisputably the modern temperament from the past Photographed in Hume, Aristotle and Dewey. The sec- is the drastically shifting conception of the heroic-not Swinging London by RICHARD AVEDQH. ond course is in micro-analysis, i.e.. only in terms of what the heroic indeed is. but also in terms Exclusively for raTO Magazine. an examination of subcultures seen of what possibilities for heroism still exist. Discuss this in relation to the larger community. quotation drawing evidence from Job ; Phadre: The Strang- We read Glazer and Moynihan , Be- er: Hippolytus; Marat/Sade; The Balcony; Billiards at HSwHfl 5 ft- ¦»¦ in the world yond the Melting Pot; Mal inowski, Half Past Nine " .. ."3. Using one of the following films, ^ *^ ^ Somewhere Kroeber, T. S. Eliot (Notes Toward 8'/3, Wild Strawberries, Last Year at Marienbad , The l! « s** you could find your exact double the -Definition of Culture), Weber Knack, Ulysses, discuss in what sense the material (i.e., m^WmWmf i T *•> ' *«1 - (The Protestant Ethic), Erik Erikson , cinematic technique) affects the value judgments you make Malcolm X, and more readings and of character, incident, and theme.".. ."4. How do partic- field work on.such subcultures as the ular words or images control aesthetic responses in the But probably not in Penn State hippies, the poor and the black na- following poems: Leda and the Swan , The Lovesong of tionalists. The third course is con- J. Alfred Prufrock , A Coney Island of the Mind." .. ."5. cerned with comparative analysis— Compare the role of coincidence in King Lear and Tom BEATLEBANNER 3'/a feet-wide , black-and-whi te portrait ® 1957 Nems Enterprises Ltd. All rights reserved. No two people here are alike. specifically a comparison of US- Jones, -indicatin g to what extent the nature of that role is life insurance thing USSR, largely in terms of the social, determined by the tragic structure of the one and the comic And John Hancock believes is an individual political and economic dimensions in structure of the other.".. ."6. In reading both philosophy too. We tailor specific life insurance programs for each and the process of industrialization which and arguments, language has been one of the most recur- have taken place, east and west. The rent topics: Aristotle on diction in the Poetics, Plato on the every client. readings include case study material living word, Augustine on the Word that was in the be- Even more important, we could arrange the right as well as complex conceptual anal- ginning, Unamuno on the birth of language in relation to And we'll change it as your change yses: Henderson, Ashton, Bendix , the tragic sense, Wordsworth and Coleridge on the rela- plan for you. needs Nef. Moore, Schumpter, and more. tion of language to the minds of men, Freud on verbal over the years. We think John Hancock's AH Divisional Classes for all students slips, and Heidegger, Carnap, Wittgenstein and Chomsky flexible, personal approach is the are small. The major concern of the on philosophic issues bound up with language. Using at Jllf^ ^Sk classroom is to analyze the readings. least four of the above, write a brief essay on language best possible insight of each cf the four and way to offer the -.Jsk *^ 2>

and let us prove it We're located in Greenwich Village - coffee § .«* THfct^T N^er^nriVW SCHOOLa i houses, but no football. We don't even have a g ffl |S« g gym, but only a city full of concerts and cul- I Wagjr COLLEGE • • I ture. And we don't operate dormitories. We | T New School roi Socw. Reseakch 1 y &/_ ... _ / , . ,1, • • . ¦,» _ n 1 bb west liiri oft .cci & muJnmcqcR don't count credits or grade points. You earn I New York, N.Y.1 10011 g the degree when you pass all of the compre- . m) ¦ ¦ a bunkers il These editors, with the editor-in-chief , com- He went on to say that they "do not want facing the opposite direction and quickly overran them. to be censors for every article. Flushed into the open, the Viet Cong were cut down by pose the Board of" Editors. " gunships. "People' who are chosen for editors are The Lines of Action are presently hold- In the raids on North Vietnam, the U.S. Command Collegian Photo by Pierre Belllcml people who were good for some ing a series of meetings with various or- said the warplanes struck at Hanoi radio SVi miles ganizations time " Miss Diehl said. She went on to ex- on campus. The purpose of the south of Hanoi. This is the most powerful transmitter in Saint Joan , Maior Barbara , Eliza Dooiime , meetings is to better intra-campus communi- Southeast Asia. IT LOOKS LIKE all Shaw 's other women are out to see Caesar and Cleopatra , which plain that most of the editors are journalism cations. Dama ge Unknown opened last night at the Playhouse. Universit y Theatre 's production will continue to- One source said Hanoi radio was a diversified oper- ation and there is more than one transmitter site. It was night and tomorrow evening and Thurs day through Saturday of next week. Tickets may assumed that if the facility attacked was damaged, the be purchased at the box office or be reserved by calling 865-9543. Curtain time is 8 p.m. North Vietnamese were able to maintain Hanoi broad- HUB A casts from other facilities. A military spokesman said the rts Review Returns; station was a concrete building protected by a concrete blast wall. Overcast prevented an assessment of damage. I Air Force F105 Thunderchiefs attacked another North Vietnamese target for the first time, a military storage ' Available On Campus Today area 41 miles southwest of Hanoi. It is a complex , of 21 Contrary to popular opinion, matic, artistic, musical and HUB Arts Review as a journal one-story wooden buildings including barracks, ware- the HUE Arts Review is not theatrical events in the area of arts and letters denend first houses and a headquarters. Clouds prevented pilots from dead. The rejuvenated publica- and to give attention and scrut- upon the support of the read- seeing the damage they had done. tion will be available today and iny to the major artistic ers and second upon the talents The record number of U.S. dead in the past week every Friday at the Hetzel events." Machuga also hopes and diligence of the writers." reflected the bloody fighting 12 days after the Communists By KITTY PHILBIN Maxwell said that the peti- In regard to the attitude of Union Building desk , in campus that the Review wil be an "ex- The HUB Arts Review lives launched their lunar new year offensive. The previous Collegian USG Reporter tion is not intended to present the student body, Maxwell said living areas, downtown and in tention of artistic commentary and is in need of typists. All high was 416 Americans killed and 757 wounded in the any view other than that of the that it is "generally my im- the Arts ccmplex. and be able to publish poetry those interested hi contributing A member of the faculty an- faculty, a view which is "not pression that there is more stu- week ended Feb. 3. nounced yesterday that he will Michael Mfchuga (8th-jour- and letters -to the editor con- to this publication in the ca- For the second straight week, the U.S. Command said necessarily consistent with that dent support than, has been iributed by the student and fac parity circulate a petition among fel- demonstrated. nalism - Aberdeen, Maryland), cf either typist or staff enemy and South Vietnamese casualty, figures were un- of the Administration or even " is editor of the new HUB Arts ulty readership." Futher, he member, may pick up an ap- available. But in the past low teachc/s as a demonstra- that of the- students. " He said, however, that he week other allied forces re- tion of support for the proposed Review. Machuga is . assisted feels "the possibilities ' of the plication at the HUB desk. ported 18 men killed and 35 wounded. The newly-drafted position feels the faculty's effort will be (graduate- University-operated bookstore. will be circulated so as to stronger if it is independent o£ by Terrcnce Kester Dead: Nearly 20,000 Ronald R. Maxwell, assistant theatre arts-State College), reach a "diversified number" both the University and the stu. (9th-general The new report raised U.S. casualties in the war to professor of English, said the of faculty members. dents. Alan Jay Dion 18,239 killed and 112,469 wounded. Of the last, 52,641 did purpose of the petition is "not Tiie petition and a resolution arts ana sciences-Elkins Park), B'nai B'rith Hlllel Foundati on not require hospitalization. The number of Americans miss- to make t concrete prpposal, Maxwell said that he feels will be presented lo the Univer- Mitch Schwartz (5th psychol- ing or captured numbers 1,242. but only to express our (the that he and the faculty "have sity Senate at its next meeting ogy-Philadelphia) and Barry U.S. sources also disclosed that the North Vietnamese signers') belie! that the intel- all recognized in ourselves a March 5. Todd (7th-general arts and sci- 34B Division had 'moved across the demilitarized zone lectual, cultural, and academic certain need for this store." ences-Pittsbu-ghl . William J. " Proposing the resolution will WEEKEND ACTIVITIES between North and South Vietnam to the area of Quang advantages of an on-campus The petition will 'also . e an be Robert W. Frank, professor Fuller, director of Student, Ac- Tri, capital of the province of the same name 34 miles bookstore are of sufficient mag- aid "so students don't \get the of English, anu a senator on the tivities, is faculty advisor for north of Hue. nitude to warrant the faculty 's feeling, they're standing out in University organization. Max- the Review, which is published Further evidence of the enemy build-up came with exoression of support." the cold." well described Frank as being under the auspices of the HUB Friday evenin g, Feb. 23 U.S. disclosure that several new Chinese 107mm rockets a "lung-time sympathetic ob- committees. had been captured north of Saigon. Lighter and more server." The HUB Arts Review defines portable than the Russian 12mm Sabbath Services rocket, they have a Maxwell said that he is not itself as a critical comment on range of six .miles. the artistic community. The Officers said the Chinese USG Meeting— concerned 'it this time with the v Speaker: Dr. Jack Hanoka rockets were used for the financial aspects of the book- format of the new Review first time Sunday in attacks on Cu Chi and Lai Khe in (Continued from page one) Long feu that under the closely resembles that of last the Communists second wave of attacks on key cities. In otner action, the congress Deans of Men and Women there store. He said that he has heard "Masidic Thou ghts on 'd conflicting reports on the pos- year's with a schedule of events Cu Chi, 25 miles northwest of Saigon, is U.S. 25th Di- considered a resolution to re- would be n ..landardize sys- in town and on campus followed vision headquarters. Lai Khe, turn the discipline of academic tem of dealing with the prob- sibile cost of such an enter- the Torah Portion " 20 miles north of the capi- prise. "Nothing supports 'by reviews and criticisms writ- tal, is headquarters of the U.S. 1st Division. dishonesty to the individual col- lem. He added, "I would, be ten by the staff critics. ¦ Out in the Gulf of Tonkin leges from its present place in very fearful of sending it back itself , " Maxwell scid. "but if , the nuclear-powered car- Machuga feels that the HUB rier Enterprise, the world's largest warship, returned to the Administration. to the colleges. 1 think this is something is found to be con- Saturd ay mornin g, its battle station after being Richard Mowry, the bill's ambiguous." sistent with the goals ol this Arts Review should "promote 10:30 a.m diverted to Korean waters constructive support of dra- by the recent North Korean seizure of the U.S. intelli- sponsor , related that only 12 The congress agreed with University, we snbsidize it." gence ship Pueblo. students had been disciplined Long and tabled the motion Sabbath Servi ces On the political side, informed sources said at least last year for cheating. until the next meeting. nine more persons have been arrested in the govern- He stated that this proposal Bill Sinclair, Mens Residence ment' was named s crackdown on its political opponents. would create "more eauity in Council president^ SUMNER POSITIONS FOR MEN Sunday mornin g, U.S. sources, said the nine presumably were arrested the treatment of cheating." to chair the committee estab- am 19:30 a,m because their names were on a mysterious Viet Cong list The opposition to the reso- lished last week to investigate Ar lhur Hurwiiz , director of Camp Lynnwood, a of names. lution was led by Long, who constitutional revision of USG. Lox & Bagel Brunch felt that the colleges did not He announced that meetings of co-ed camp near Morgantown , W. Va., will inter- want this responsibility. He this committee will be held next view men interes ted in positions as counselo rs T said he contacted the college week, with several of .them S'Ai'afe.WH' L deans last summer on this to be open to the student body. and instructors in Swimming, Walerslding , Rifler y ES Ri lei Sa SB. tafes Ka tei SsteJE Ra iis ia isi iBi Crisis in topic. Of those who replied. Long also announced the ap- and Cam pcrafl on Thursday , February 29th. Koreo Long stated that they were all pointment of Murray Hartzberg Come into the Office of Student Aid, 121 Grange opposed to the idea of this res- as co-chairman of the Student i-j olution. Opinion Bureau. Building for an appoiniment. Still Smoulders Ik V WASHINGTON CAP) -, One score propaganda points over Teach ers Placements month ago North Korean patrol their capture , Dade County Board of Public ( Instruc- School District of Philadelphia, Phila- boats seized an Am°rican intel- But when the crewmen's day tion, Miami, Florida, March .11 delphia, Penna. March 13 " ligence ship, sparking a crisis of freedom will West Chester Area School District, North Allegheny School District, Pitts- for come—if it Wesl Chester, Penna, March 11 burgh, Penna, March 14 , 15 Camp Tanalo which threatened to set off a comes—is obscure. The only Huntingdon Area School District, Hunt- Ridgewood Public Schools, Ridgewood, second war in asia. progress evidence so far has ingdon, Penna, March 11 New Jersey, March 14 6 School District of Cheltenham Town- South Windsor Public School, Wapping in the Poco no Moun tains Today the crisis l?enJVth a willito»& ne bv the ship, Elkins Park, March 11 Connecticut, March 14 is still Koreans talk,f and, ' ¦ smolderin The threat of Ko- or (2) Brevard County Board of Public In- Haverford Township School District, . ^161 SU pl struction, Titusville, Florida, March Havertown, Penna, March 14 i a GEORGE rean War II has eased off P ylI g the names o£ Spring Val- will interv ew on c mpus for Qtf-X , but thel u, , J 12 Penn Hills School District, the USS Pueblo and its men are ^?ueSl0 ^ four cas"al,ties - Alfred I. DuPoM School District, Wil- ley, N.Y., March 15 stil lin Communist hand's. ° "^ ead '. thref wounded. . mington, Delaware, March 12 Ramapo Central School District, Sprins General and Specialty Counselors Otherwise the eight secret Kutztown State College, Kutztown, Valley, N.Y., March 15 1 Penna, March 12 Ha rrisburg School District, Harrisburg, (men and women) President Johnson is current- U.S. North Korean meetings at Oil City Area School District, Oil City, Penna, March 15 WASHINGTON'S ly depicted as confident that di- Panmunjom to date have pro- Penna, March 12 Los Angeles City School Districts, Los plomacy will win back the duced nothing Frederick County Board of Education, Angeles, Calif, March 15 of record to indi- Frederick, Maryland, March 12 Hanover Park Regional High School February 28 and 29 Pueblo's 82 survivors, once cate a break in the crisis. More San Diego City Schools, San Diego, District, Whippany, New Jersey, Pyongyang tires of trying to meetings are expected. Calif. March 13 March 15 Also positions for Kitchen . Management BIRTHDAY "Re Undergraduate and graduate students presentative s from the Carl ynton School Dis- Family accommodations trict will be on campus on Friday. March 8, to Further information available through Office of Student interview prospective teac hers in the fields of Aid, 121 Grange Building. Appointments should be made -3 DAYS ONLY- I mathematics, science, English, and ejementary The New Liturgy in advance. 17 education. Sunda y 7j The Carlynton School District is located in the Thurs.-Frt - Sat. South Hills area of Alleghen y County. The Carlyn- 9:00 a.m. ton District is composed of ihe boroughs of Grafton, 6:15 p»ffli Carnegie, and Rosslyn Farms. All three are suburbs of Pittsburgh. " Eis iiimiiiiimiiiiimiiiiuiimiii iiiimmiiiiii niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini Colonial Pastry Breakfast 9:30 a.m J5i(jma ^) i gina S^iqma Coffee Hour 7 p.m. Episcopalians & Others sincer ely lli anl! I I J \apaa j -^h f or llieir haiiJe tail weekend. CLASS OF 71 1/ nEiiaPS llllllllllllltlllllllllllllltllllllllllllllttlltlllllllllttlllllllllllllllllltlttllll presents New Spring Merchandise by Haymaker '' THE AVANT-GUARD WITH 1 *

Wishes io express its thanks to LITTLE LIGHTNING THE GOLEM will (The Go-Go Girl) FASHI ON all those on- and off-cam pus or- Leave You Speechless ganizations who have so warml y Feb. 23, 1968 25c FLAI R and enthusias tically welcom ed NICKELODEON NITE HUB Ballroom 1321 S. Atherton St. State College its performances throu ghout the toni ght — 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. 3 term. HUB Assembly Room OPEN MON. thru SAT. 9 to 5:30 p.m

Sa Sa Uk tsa Sa lBstetalSi lKi Sa Jsa tsl British Are Corning — To Debate

' The Nuclear Engineering Department will hold .its problems of fertility and population control in Puerto iRico fourth colloquium of the Winter Term from 4 to 5 p.m. and Jamaica. today in 109 Sa'ckett. Harry W. Graves Jr., manager of His current research has focused on public attitudes '3 reactor development of the Advanced Reactor Division ti£ and, especially, local journalistic reaction toward popula- fm, ,;rr w Westinghouse Electric Corporation, will speak on the sub- tion policy in Brazil, Colombia, and other Latin .American ject of the plutonium recycle in power reactors. nations, and his talk will'deal .withxsome recent develop- The fifth colloquium will be presented at 1 p.m: ments in this area. March 7 in 112 Sackett. For this presentation, Har-" Mandil • of ,MPR Associates, Inc. will discuss the new concept of Stale *Department * Jobs the ice condenser containment system. "Job Opportunities for History Majors ia the U. S. ^ Mandil will be holding, interviews for positions in State Department" will be the subjects for the History engineering oriented research'with students receiving their Round Table meeting at 7:30 p.m..Tuesday in the Laurel M.S. or Ph.D. degrees in nuclear, engineering this year. Room of the Nittany Lion Inn. Appointments can be made at the Nuclear Engineering . The speaker will be Ernest E Ramsaur, Jr., a U. S. , I Office. State Department Senior Fellow and a "Diplomat in Resi- * 1 * ¦ ' * * * dence" at Penn State. * 1 Fluid Mechanics Seminar Ramsaur has worked for the U. S. Foreign Service in Valdis Kibens, now working for his doctor of philoso- Istanbul, Turkey, Bremen, Germany, Toronto, Canada, DOROTHY RILEY LEONARD BERKOWITZ ANDREW R. PARRi'SH NICHOLAS WALL phy degree at The Johns Hopkins University, will address Beirut, Lebanon, Berlin, Germany, and Washington , D. C, THE QUESTION of American presence in Vietnam ' will of London, and 'Nicholas Wall, who will receive a bachelor the Fluid Mechanics Seminar at 4 p.m. today in 232 and also has taught at George Washington University. . be debated tonight , with students from ' The University of arts degree in literature and law this year from Trinity Hammond. The round table session is open to the public. of; London and Cambridge University competing with College, Cambridge University. The winner will be de- His subject will be: "Detailed Measurements in the i* Penn - State , debaters. The debate will be at 8:00 p.m. in termined by the shift of audience opinion, and a question Intermittent Zone of a Turbulent Boundary Layer." * • Artist To Lecture 121 Sparks. Speakers for ihe affirmative are Dorothy and answer period will follow. The debate is sponsored Zeljko Kujundzic * , internationally known - artist, will Riley (Bth-psychology-Scranton ) and Leonard Berkowiiz by the University Forensic Council under supervision ot Art• in Future• present a lecture at v 3 p.m. Wednesday in the -HUB Assem- (llih-poliiical science-Levittown) of Penn Slate. Taking Clayton H. Schug, Director of Forensics. Patricia Schmidt "The Arts and the Future of Man" will be the theme bly Hall. The event, sponsored by the Department of Art, the negative stand are Andrew R. Parrish , a graduate stu- (grad uate-speech-York) is , the coach of the Penn Stale of a workshop to be held at 8:00 p.m. Sunday in 212 Helen is open to the public. dent of chemical engineering at King 's College. Universit y team. Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. The purpose of the workshop Kujundzic is serving as visiting lecturer in the College will be to explore the possibilities of using dance, fine arts, of Arts and Architecture during the Winter Term. His drama, poetry and other art forms as expressions of the appointment is sponsored by the Institute of Arts and Travel , Write , Etc humanizing goals of contemporary man. According to Humanistic Studies. Richard E. Wentz, of the Religious Affairs Office, it is felt The subject of his talk will be "To Scratch the Surfnce that many people are interested in the arts as either crafts- (Impressions and Improvisations)" and will deal with the men or as those who enjoy them. These people need oppor- artist's experiences in' the Northwest. The lecture will be tunities for communication together about the values and illustrated with slides and films. future of mankind. Kujundzic is a versatile artist who works in many Student of the University, faculty, faculty wives, and Donald J. Wiliower, professor Hutton was executive secre- full-time director can' be ager at the McKeesport Cam- media—metal, clay, wood, and paint. A native of Yugo- of education , was elected to tary of the Canadian Commit- named, pus sine 1959. all others interested are invited to attend this introductory slavia, he now resides in Kelowna, British Columbia, where the Board ol Trustees of the tee on Education Overseas He will assume the responsi- * * * meeting. No particular proficiency or skill in any art form he founded the Kootenay School of Art and now operates University Council for Educa- nght after World War II, when bilities . of Walter A. Kearney, p etr F hoped, Wentz said, that tional Administration at its the late Governor-General, then director ot the ..ampus since _, , . . . , , is essential to participation. It is a private school of art. He also established a school of art R°t>er<- LimT a, assistant pro- students and adults who are practitioners of specific arts sessions this week i n Atla ntic High Commissioner to London, 1959 , who will leave March 31 t at Nelson, B. C, during five years of residence there. City, N.J. acted as chairman of that to become direc or of the tessor o£ Spanish and human- experience «to the explora- ities ece will also be present to lend their "The University Council con- group. Schoul of Education Placement ,ntl attended the In- * *. * tfrnat' Jional Poetry£ Forum in tion of the theme. Southern Revolution sists of approximately 50 Uni- * * * Office and professor of educa- Material from Par Lagerkvist's Let Men Live will be versities in the United States To • of Schools tion at th0 University of Pitts- Pittsburgh where he accom- The Rev. Mi Benjamin Nunez, distinguished Costa panied Jorge Luis Borges, dis- used as a stimulus for the workshop. This modern moral if y and Canada having doctoral Philip F. Hallock, professor bur gh Rican statesman and scholar, will discuss "Revolutionary of architecture, now on sab- A native of Uniojtown , Show tinguished Argentine author programs and research inter- nd a recent lecturer at Penn play will be performed April 14 in Eisenhower Chapel. Currents in Latin America," at 8 p.m. Wednesday in 108 ests in educational administra- batical leave, has been making received his bachelor of sci- | Try-outs will be held 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. March 3 in 212 Eisen- Forum. tion. Its main purposes are to a cross-country tour of schools ence degree from the Indiana State. of architecture on his way to State University of . Pennsyl- Lima is the editor and trans- hower Chapel. The talk, which is open to the public improve, through-inter-univer- , is being spon- sity cooperation , preparatory the West Cnast, Japan and Aus- vania and has taken graduate lator of "Sorgss the Labyrinth • * * sored by the Latin American Studies Committee of the tralia. studies at Penn Stats. Maker," the only ci-itical study Ghetto Project Described programs and research in the College of the Liberal Arts and by the Study Abroad Pro- field of educational administra- To date, he has visited more Ho has ' ec-n business ,man- of the author in English. The Harrisburg Ghetto Project will be described by grams. tion. than 15 schools, and at Ari-| Gerald M. Phillips, associate professor of speech, at the ft # * zona State University, he lec- • tured' Faculty Luncheon Club meeting at 12:15 p.m. Monday in * * Prof. Gives Paper on all phases of profes- Harvard Linguist sta- '. pro- sional practice. Room A of the HUB R. Lee Byers, assi . Wayne O'Neil , professor of linguistics at Harvard fessor of r-echanical engineer- The project, for which Phillips is program director Oceanograpliic Cruise The Brothers of , University, will present two talks here next week. ing and executive director of involves 20 disadvantaged Negro youths from low-income the specialist training program Robert F. Schmaiz, associate , He will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday in 26 Mineral Sci- professor of geology at th Harrisburg families. All have "some kind of police record," for the Center for Air Environ- .- Uni-' ences on "Lexical Representations and Syntax" and at 9:30 versity, has completed a 15-day , , ment Studies, is participating said Phillips', and all are school dropouts. Yet the boys a.m. Friday in 124 Sparks on "Deep Grammar: What We this week in the 63rd annual oceanograpliic cruise on the ' have "natural talents and intelligence and strong potential See When We Read." meetings of the American Insti- Canadian scientific ship, Hud- ; for leadership" which, it is hoped, may be channeled in tute of Chemical Engineers in son. i The Thursday night lecture is open to the public, while constructive directions. St. Louis, Mo. The ship departed from Hali- j the lecture Friday will be limited to an invited audience. fax , Nova Scotia, on Jan. 24 i Phillips who has titled his address "Talking to Our He presented a paper congra tu late ,', O'Neil is brought to the campus by the Linguistics Wednesday on "Particle Dep- to collect c'lemical, bio logical , ' Darker Brothers," warns that the squeamish should think geological, an d geop hysical | Program, on which Simon Belasco, professor of Romance osition from Turbulent Streams twice before attending the luncheon program since, of by Means of Thermal Force" data between the Grand Banks linguistics, serves as chairman. Carj their new initiates necessity, "frank language will be used." and at Wednesday 's luncheon and the Central l bean Sea. led a technical discussion on Schmaiz, who joined the • Priestley• •Lecture • r "Air Po'lution Standards and cruise as a guest of the Bedford Food Science* Speaker* Institute for Oceonography, in-! Dave Baldwin Hugh Devine Frank H. Westheimer, professor of chemistry at Har- Control — State or National phia vestigated the thermal and Carl Herold of David Michael & Co. in Philadel vard University, will present the 42nd annual Priestley Domain?" will be the speaker at the Food Science Club Monday. He chemical properties o£ open Tony Qliff ord Hick Dubil Lecture Series at the University, March 4-7. Canadian Governor ocean waters as part of a con- will explain the Institute of Food Technologists and the A graduate of Dartmouth College with the master of An article by Harry K. Hut- tinuing .'ti'dy of carbonate' re- college to work actions in seawater. Tony DeAngelis Jim Merrill changes that a student faces as he leaves arts and doctor of philosophy degrees from Harvard, West- ton, professor .of education, in Acting Director Named in industry. heimer was a National Research Fellow at Columbia and appreciation of Vincent Mas- Plans will also be discussed concerning the IFT Con- sey, former Go-ernor-General Francis G. Show, business Paul Scott professor of chemistry at the University of Columbia, be- vention in Philadelphia in May. All interested students are of Canada, ' has been published manager at the McKeesport fore going to Harvard in 1953 where he was chairman of recently in several Canadian Campus, will serve as acting invited to attend the meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 117 Borland the Department of Chemistry from 1959 to 1962. In 1944-45, dailies and weeklies, including director of the campus until a Laboratory. he was research supervisor at the Explosive Research the Canadian Statesman , the Lab- Essex Free Press and the Til- • • • oratory of the National Defense Research Committee and bury Times. Population Explosion for his work" was awarded the Army-Navy Certificate of It tells of Massey's personal "The Population Controversy in Latin America" will Appreciation and the Naval Ordnance Award. interest in promising students be the subject of a public lecture to be presented Tuesday Last year Westheimer was named to the President' and his indifference to political s pressure in behalf of those of afternoon by J. Mayone Stycos, chairman of the Depart- Science Advisorv Committee. ment of Sociology at Cornell University and director of no particular talent. the International Population Program there. His talk, sponsored by the Committee for Demographic Research of the Departments of Sociology and Anthro- pology, Geography, and Economics, is scheduled for 2:20 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Hetzel Union Building. Stycos is an outstanding scholar in the field of Latin \ m American demography and has published extensively on

THE The Penn State Greeters ' Club m v\ Presents Evenin g In Monte Carlo 7 3^3^ "Casino Royal Buffet ' Sunday, February 25, 1868 4:00-7s00 ?M, SHIPMENT OF Maple Room — Home Economics Bldg Donation : $2.75/person MUGS Reservations may be made in leads the world Room 4 of Home Ec. or SWEATSHIRTS through any Greeters member , in the production SCHOOL SUPPLIES of electric power ?

PSEA The electric company people of the United States ! Though we have only one-sixteenth presents of the world's population, we have more than one-third of the world's electric powe'r producing capacity. Dr. Abram VanderMeer AT This is nearly as much as the next five countries combined- Dean of the College of Education Russia, United Kingdom/ Japan, West Germany and Canada! Your electric company is one of the more than 300 investor-owned electric companies continuing to keep America ,on top ' , Thou12 ghts- on fee Future t S, Alien St and through sound business management. Always on the go producing the electricity that powers America's progress ! ' of Education" allege Ave. Stor es

Feb. 27 7:00 p,m Bectrkfty»m& HI Chambers -Mnmess Everyone Welcome West Penn rower "American Education Stimulates Progress " v Part of the Allegheny Power System Parking Tickets I WM*£-4«ft* v - 1* Waft 350 Miles . \ PITTSBURGH ' (AP) - It's stuck in a foot of snow, he u WASHINGTON (#¦)—Defense security censors gleaned snicker, sneer and scream time said. ^ ?p5e* again in Pittsburgh. Margaret O'Hara of Glen- * 'I through more than 247 pages of testimony by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara on the controversial 1964 _ Cause of it all are those per- shaw also got a ticket for Jan. ¦ sistent, perplexing Philadelphia 13. Sally Danielu of Kenmawr Gulf of Tonkin incidents and pronoucod them ready yester- parking tickets whidi seem to holds the present record, how- day for public disclosure. waft 350 miles 'across the Alle- ever, with x"ive. . : --> gheniss periodically to the mail- Even so, Mrs. Daniels is S , However, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is boxes of Pittsburghers who far from the all-time high. ¦ not expected to make them public until next week, to give scream ^they've nevar been Virginia Deni of Penn Hills ¦ > its members a chance to study the censored document. there. has racked up 20 tickets and • < , . ..: • : ' M "I was down the- : 15 years undergone treatment for an • w . :/ J . \. . Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.), the committee's chair- ago and went dowr by train ," ulcer she blamed on them be- *\ man, has urged speedy clearance of McNamara's testimony said William Evans of Car- fore she approached the mail- j given behind closed Hoot s earlier this week on North Viet- negie. ''But my wife's never box with ai.ythinf but anxiety. £ "* v namese attacks on two U.S. Navy destroyers. been there." W'lliarri E ans ha: yet to li . Mrs. Evans got three cita- have the problem explained to In a cover letter accompanying the "sanitized" tran- tions for illegal parking in the him with any ' satisfaction . script returned to the committee last night McNamara em- last two weeks. "I can't figure out how they , Another ticket for illegal get these numbers " he said. phasized he wants to eliminate any issues remaining over parking on Jan. 13 went to "They must be crazy or some- g the veracity of official statements on the 1964 attacks. Richard S. Grandy of Gib^onia. thing." I "My pickup truck was in "I knew this: We aren" going I These led to the first U.S. reprisal air strikes against front of the house that day, to pay it. " a North" Vietnam and were a prelude to major U.S. interven- tion in Southeast Asia. Failed in Proof Fulbright charges that administration has failed to New Spanish Course prove that the destroyers Maddox and Turner Joy were actually attacked by the North Vietnamese on Aug. 4, 1964. McNamara presented a prepared , 21-page statement To Produce Drama to the Senate panel Tuesday, but Fulbright said later the defense chief failed to demonstrate the Ame'rican ships The Department of Spanish, ground may register for the were attacked Aug. 4, 1964. Italian and Portuguese has an- course to work in technical ca- nounced a new course, Liberal pacities and to assist in the As is routine, the transcript of McNamara's answers Ar ts 498.9 (Spanish Drama In overall reparation' of the pro- to questions had to be submitted through the security re- Production) to be given for duction. Ihe class-rehearsal u^em^^tA: &i3&Ar,H*? iftnwtthtt view process to glean out information that might be val- three credits Spring Term. sessions must be attended by uable to an enemy. The course consists of the everyone taking the course for THE WILSON COLLEGE CHOIR, with Glen H. Gould directing, will present a joint concert with the all-male reading, Interpretation and dis- credit. Penn State Glee Club at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Schwab. McNamara directed that it be sanitized "on an expe- cussion of an important full- Students interested in taking dited basis." length play, or several one-act course are asked to come 1 plays Spanish the Security Review , from the entire to a preliminary reading-tryout drama repertory in order to to be held at 7:30 p.m. March The Pentagon said the transcript was received at 10 mount a production in Spanish 4 in Schwab. They should bring a.m. yesterday and a team of security review specialists toward the final weeks of the a selection in Spanish and an- went to work on it immediately. term. other in " nglish from any play The noted Wilson College Choir will make the presenting the "Glori Patri" of Claudio Monteverdi Students who enroll in the "The security review procedure will be completed for the audition. University the first university stop on its 1968 tour and Zoltan Kodaly.'s "Four Hungarion Folk Songs." to- course will participate in all day so that the entire transcript, with only the Anyona who is interested in when it presents a joint concert with the Penn State Also included will be works b Aaron Copland deletions phases of production—on a re- y , necessary to safeguard intelligence collection hearsal schedule. Students in taking the course, but cannot Glee Club Thursday. Randall Thompson and Edouard Lalo. , can be re- attend the tryout. is asked to leased tonight by the committee," a Defense Spanish or with a knowledge of The program to be held at 8:30 p.m. in Schwab The Penn State Glee Club will then present the Department the language will be expected contact Robert F. Lima, Jr., , , statement said. professor of Spanish , is open to the public. "Coronation Scene" from Moussorgsky's opera Boris to perform in Spanish; students assistant However without sufficient Spanish back- as 220 Sparks Bldg. The collaboration with the 50-member all-girls Gudonov, accompanied by duo pianists Michael , the actual release lime will be set by the choir will be the second joint presentation by the Machuga Jr. and Gary Schwartz. Also presented committee. Glee Club, which will feature more of these events will be two 16th century Spanish airs, Handel's A committee source said the transcript will not be re- leased before next in the months ahead. "Haste Thee Nymph," , and two arrangements of week, after committee members have had a chance to The concert will begin with the Wilson Choir American folk songs by Lewis Spratlan, both com- review it. Col. Sander s pleted within the last three years. McNamara gave rather elaborate detail in his prepared Both choirs will then collaborate in a perform- comments as to whether the Aug. 4 attack on the U.S. de- Ready For ance of Johannes Brahams' "Schicksalslied" (Song of stroyers Maddox and Turner Joy had indeed occurred. OCCUPANCY SEPT. L 1968 Destiny) based upon the well-known poem of Fried- Key Incident rich Holderlih. This, a second incident, was a key one, McNamara said Director of the Wilson College Choir is Glen H the administration had not retaliated against the North mmmmt owers Vietnamese when, two days earlier the Maddox attacked 710 S. Alherlon St. Siaie College, Pa. Gould, who was appointed professor and chairman of the department of music in 1966. He received his because "we believed it possible that it had resulted from Studio Apartments bachelor of music, from the University of Southern a miscalculation or an impulsive act of a local com- mander." Furnished or Unfurnished 1 Bedroom Apartments California; his master of music from Wayne State University, and his doctor of philosophy degree from Fulbright said , however, McNamara had engaged in TAKE HOME Ceil! Alex Gregory Associates, Inc. Indiana University. "selective declassification " of certain secret information to show only one side of the story. North Atherton Si Phone 237-3912 238-5081 SUITE 102 HOLIDAY INN Lewis Spratlan , director of the Penn Stale Glee Club, is in his first year at Penn State and is serving "He has kept secret important communications from . For information and application io as assistant professor of music. He received his bach- the naval task force that indicated doubt about the re- elor of arts and master of music degrees from Yale ported attack on Aug. 4, but released communications that OPEN DAILY JN0LUBING SWAY HO?J m APARTMENT FOR Y0U! served his purpose 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. University. He served as acting director of the Yale ," Fulbright asserted. as Glee Club in 1966 and on the choral faculty at Boston The Arkansas Democrat also charged that the Penta- Symphony's Berkshire Music Center. gon had intimidated a Navy officer by ordering him to ¦ undergo psychiatric L ——— I "" * examination after he voluntarily offer- I AA«*\M 9 T1IEC ed information on the 1984 incidents to the committee. The Pentagon said in' response to questions McNamara f I ml.! ..,. ., ..Hi.. mil l "assured _ Sen. Fulbright that he would have the matter COMBINE checked into and would report back to the .committee with the facts." and his Bf ue-lyed ^"^^•§#^#^^4*^ AND Vb The Sisters of ® Nov/ Bookinq for Spring Term Iota Alpha Pi Saiisfadssss guaranteed! Fraternity WITH W thank their p ledges SOUNDS BY ^ Houses hip ta SOUL wante d. Will or a reaf p lcdw THE ROCK BOTTOM \V f S show. v$ battle any band . on camps i® prove we are ihs most dynamic SAT., FEB. 24 8s30 -S :O® » 3 Pieces Kentucky Fried Chicke n Greg Berry 238-8256 THETA DELTA CHI Whi Potatoes TAKE • pped OPEN TO RUSHEES & INVITED GUESTS SOME • Country Sty le Gravy « Creamy Cole S(aw ' HOME... **kS^.j *S%* ' <$A^6& A (^ $l$$QQ$$e&®M$Afl • Hot Biscuit They'll Love It! SUNDAY ALL OUR COOKING DONE WITH HIGHEST QUALITY, PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING FREE

cmrtAV MOVIES Methodist

OF V • ,f&J I BAHAMAS EISENHOWER ¦^Sa -^i CHAPEL FRIED FILLET OF FISH DINNER AND 11:15 o, m • TARTAR SAUCE a FRENCH FRIES PUERTO RICO • COLE SLAW • HOT ROLLS TUESDAY , FRB , 27TH 7;O0 P.M. ] a Regular $1.25 ! for a set of used wh @©Ss? WESLEY FOUNDATION ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo PINT Serves Up To SAUOS 4 people "' -- _ } If you are looking for a certain POTATO SA.LAD .... 49c Refreshments l = i kind of PAPERBACKS COLE SLAW 49c used car but can't find \vhat BAKED BEAtfS 49c j you want, try Sports Car Special- MASHED POTATOES 40c ties. We will do the looking for fmm CHICKEN GRAVY .. 40c Bahama Adveptare—Marc 2f»H SI&MIO |; ; you ... in places you can't. .. and B . .'Ja &Aj a&i&csBiii«SS; pV ™ come up French Fries °">°< 35c °» 59c . pMgrfa Rise—Mar. 21-26 $185.00 { with that car. Hunting is WzTmmllmim ;' part of our business. 3Ss5s * £tf£r&cS' &W\ '* : ' fllsSS i > -: . St? ' ' P ' 116 VV. College Avenue Svate College , Penna. 16801 :; SprkJMes ™ ^ mer St. Phtne 23M2« 1 | Spiffs fer , Inc. f*ws^iJiPi»,p i3i* i I I 238-0528 as £?¦; CITROEN - TRIUMPH "** W ^ "Kl®E ^^^^ ¦ sgft flg .i. i i u. ¦ii ...i »..uaiaj —«i i ¦« - ^ HamBatt 'a^ rgsggTO^g Sales and! Service

Service and Parts for Sports and Imported Cars ¦ ¦ %. 1821 AVest College Avenue The Pennsylvania Boek Sliop i- 4 State College, Pa. 16801 East Collage Ave. and Heister : ' 237-R297 —OPEN EVENINGS- Limp Muffles - Koll 's Strategy Judo Club Prepares For Meet By STEVE SOLOMON will look at Pitt's 4-5 record Collegian Sports Writer and decide that the trip is being More than 100 judo enthusi- taken just to take in a few asts from throughout Pennsyl- Basically, it was pretty sound steel mills. vania will gather in Rec Hall strategy. The only trouble was "I don't think we'll have a that 7,-100 people knew about it. mental letdown," . Koll said. Sunday for a tournament spon- Wrestling coach Bi1' Koll was "Actually, we were never high sored by the Penn State Judo playing some serious hanky- for Navy, whic'' disappointed Club. ' - panky with his lineup before me. We just didn't have any The tournament, which -is last Saturday night's showdown fire. As a team , we didn 't with unbeaten Navy in Rec wrestle as w 11 against Navy ooen to the rubric, starts at 1 Hall. With injuries decimating as against some o" the other p.m. his lineup, Koll craftily moved Bill teams we've met. The boys will Competition will be held in ' . Vince Fitz up a weight class to be out to prove that they're white, brown and black belt 152 and then weighed in two better wrestlers than they ranks , black being the highest men—Bob Abraham and Lee showed Saturday. " Smith—at 1G0. Koll, of cours . wasn't re- proficiency rank. Capacity Crowd fering to all his wrestlers. Each rank will be divided Five hours after the weigh-in Four Wrestlers Impress into two classes, a lightweight the starting wrestlers f rom both ' "I was very pleased with class for entrants under 176 certain individuals Rich Lo- teams stood at the edge of the pounds and a heavyweight for mat, a capacity crowd staring renzo and Matt Kline did very down on them like a pack of well. And I was particularly those over 17;. Gold cups will hungry wolves. Finally, the impressed with Tom Jostetter be awarded to first place win- introductions came down to the and Bruce Balmat." ners • and plaques to runners- 160-pound division. Hosteller, a little-used sen- ior, took over the 145 berth up. "Fur Navy," said the an- Steve Cohan, president of the nouncer, "Mr. Kent. For Penn when Koll moved Vince Fitz up Stale, Mr. Abraham or Mr. a notch to ±52. He scored three Penn State Judo Club, said that Smith." takedowns and a predicament the single el.mination tourna- The three wrestlers walked over Mike Carmichael before the bell mercifully ended the ment is invitational out lo center mat with ex- "We've received entries from tended hands, and right away bout. Balmat, a sophomore at 123, all over Pennsylvania , " he Koll's strategy was a bust. said, "and should have a f least Abraham was linr mig notice- probably , wrestled +he best match of his life in a losing 100 competitors. W may also ably, and it was quite evident have several entries from New that the only exercise he'd cause. He lost, 4-1. to unde- READY FOR SUNDAY'S judo tournament are (left to right) Vern Koha ya, Steve Cohan , captain Gary York. engage in tha ": night would be feated Navy president ' of the Penn State Judo Club and George Mower. More than 100 competitors chewing a stick oi gun. Burger, who was third in last Tliis is the first tournament year's NCAA tournament. are expected for the tournament which will be held in Rec Hall. we've sponsored , " he said, W fched from Bench _4 1 , . So the dark-haired junior Draws Top Wrestler "and we're doing it with the \valcheo from the bench , and Again this weekend Balmat hope of promoting judo as a winced once or twU.e when fill- draws the opposition 's top Bud Palmer Predicts: competitiv e sport in central La ¦ " »>s '¦' Penns„ Ivania. Ii' -it is success- in Leo Smith absorbed a 6-2 a..*/. * wrestler. This lime it's Pitt t hrashing at the hands of sophomore Bruce Unagst, un- ful , we hope to sponsor one Navy's John Kent. BOB ABRAHAM beaten this season ..with a 6-0-1 tournament per term." "You always look forward to ailing mark. ~ohan said his group is inter- a day off , " Abraham said, "but Pitt is loaded in the lower ested in organizing a central once you g. .' it, it's no fun. No Pitt on Saturday. for the Lions. Th/ contest is weight classes. Besides Unagst, Pennsylvania Judo League, fun at all." "Bob still isn't 100 per cent , sandwiched between a bitterly they boast senior Dick Shildt with clubs from Altoona , Slip- Abraham's limp Was the re- so we won't risk any further disappointing loss to. Navy and (7-1-1) .t 130, Ron Schucherl NEW YORK (fP) — John "Bud" Palmer, handsome, is the Commissioner of Public pery Rock, Clarion , Harrisburg sult of a l ' „v Claus in Pocono Mts Champs for the third consecu- * ' ' , Andy Wineman and Before Publicati or on Lake WaMenpaupacit tive season in the weapon. Harry Hill in sabre and Chuck C. G. P'AXSON , Director State's unbeaten eppe.sts seem Kegley, Jon Schmid and John dark horses to unseat the Mid- lion Fencers Aim for Revenge Griffiths in foil. will be on campus for interviews »9*ceoeaee«»ooeo9e«*»e«»oao*oee«asce eoceo 9oc> FEBRUARY 27th For Results-Use Collegian Classifieds and 28th STUDENT AID OFFICE, 121 Grange Descriptive reference material on file or contact : Ihe interfratarnify and Panktaic Councils MUSIC ROBIN AND THE HOODS Appointments for summer employment appl y to of Susquehanna University DANA GODFREY '68 or WILLIAM BARWIS '69 on campus for pre liminary facts about Pocono opportunities. 9-(2:30 FRIDAY, FEB, 23 THE LETTERMEN m THE FU3...25G Thursday, February 29 - 8:30 Reserved Seat Tickets - $2.75 GiRLS ADMITTED FREE 'TIL 9:30 l. ^ 'Mc, i ^*lt,.< For Tickets wri te "The Leliermen " Susquehanna University , Selinsgrove , Penna. Enclose a self- COME BOW YOUR MIND addressed stam ped envelope and remittance with Wr order. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR

rtnnn ttnrr incti * nmuia When You Think of PIZZA PH LADELPH5A LEDGE FORMAL honour of the ~J-all and lAJinlei' [^t edq £-•1 f- SINCE Karen Barth Mary Gebler Janet Long • 1775 Anne Bcllegia Nanette Gillis Maureen McCauley

.ii MW IP. ^ Becky Burcaw Mary Ann Hunt Joyce Ness W i ii i^ l i . 'M.^ lj , Jane Davis Candy Hylton Cynthia Robetts DISTRIS? OORPS OF ENGINEERS Jenny Donaldson Janice Leber Judy Rossi . . », -^v.,..^ s»^«,.M^i« ^ S ^ Department • »£._ <|§l||t§llff - 3 Julia Dunlap Nancy Logan Susan Saunders Of The Army sBs §*V 8^^^^^ »^ WJ ^j £^ |^*»>S. ^ l'& Helene Gayle Shank The Largest Will Conduct Susan Schaeffei Gail Smalstig Engineering Organization On-Campus # In The U.S. \ Interviews For Sally Sevick Mary St. Peter Cheryl Shaffer Colette Straub CIVIL ENGINEERING POSITIONS And Related Fields INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD ON MARCH 8 CALL and SUBS S,^^^^m ^^ ^^ ^FASTST For Appointment App ly To: 238-0596 mm^^ DELIVERY COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICE

mWi JlS^fik George Lee: Do St One More' Tim NEW YORK (ff) — If George Lee was given a ca- when he retired , he would need a dealers' license. If the By RON KOLB home court, it's really an accomplishment.* fans' gave him a day when he hung up his basketball Assistant Sports Editor The Panthers' season record isn't im- pressive, either. They stand 6-14, having just shoes, it would take a week. George Lee's retiremen ; In Pittsburgh Wednesday night, the Pitt lost to Syracuse (85-71) and the Mountaineers party might run into next month. Panthers played their last home game under in the last week. Sports information director George Lee, you see, is the most retiring of all Na- departing coach Bob Timmons. Though they Dean Billick says, "They seem to have fallen tional Basketball Association players. By count, he has put up a strong battle, they just couldn't apart since announcement of the coach's re- quit four times. No. 5 is not long off. quite catch West Virginia losing 87-76, , tirement." -Employed on Bench After the game, Timmons was asked why ' Yet Pitt put on quite a show Wednes- " he didn't play a senior instead of using a day night. Never behind by more than 11 Lee is presently employed on the bench of the . San quicker junior guard. It had also been the points, the Panthers remained close through- Francisco Warriors where he also doubles as an assistant senior's last appearance at Pitt Field House. out, though three regulars fouled out. Tony coach to Bill Sharmah. He appeared in eight of SaA "You don't think about sentiment, you DeLisio, a 6-2 junior guard who went score- Francisco's first 66 games and averaged 3.4 points a game, think about winning games," Timmons said less against State, had 18 points. Another a performance that doesn't keep' him in' demand. in an annoyed tone. "You ask me to think guard, 6-2 senior Pete Smith, had only one But he does have one claim to some kind of fame. Last year, before retiring for the fourth time, he go' ; about sentiment in coaching? Don't get me against the Lions but scored 17 Wednesday. ' started." Another guard, highly-touted sophomore into one game and scored 12 points in five minutes Bob Petrini; did not play in the hitting on three of four field goal attempts and six oi Don't Think About It latest game. seven free throw tries. It's the last thing last-year coaches want Bob McFarland, a 6-5 forward who led Pitt in scoring against the Lions "Will Chamberlain was mad," chuckles Lee. "I beal to think about. The final game before a home , only had two him in field goal percentage for the year." crowd can be quite against the Mountaineers. Junior Steve a tribute if it comes out Stevenson and 6-5 ' But Lee ser ves a purpose , an important one in the] right. Pitt lost, but its all-out effort gave , 235-pound football end hospital case of the Warriors. Paul Naponick, both held scoreless in the Timmons something he'll always remember— "I work out with the team in case of emergency,'] a sense of personal pride State game, both hit 11 in the latest loss., . Needless to say, says the 31-year-old 1960 graduate of Michigan. "I come Tomorrow afternoon in Rec Hall, Tim- things have changed out- of retirement when the team has injuries or isn't mons will in the last month, including the jobs of Tim- be an observer as a Pennsylvania mons and Egli, going well and we've had plenty of injuries this season colleague, also making his last appearance Hold the Line at home, Only ' One will have to fight off the sentiment. "I try to hold the line until the injured players come John Egli, about to step into a new position, The last home game of the season usually steps out of means the last appearance of a flock of sen- back. My job is to give the other guys a breather." the coaching ranks in two games. Lee broke in with Detroit in 1960 Timmons and Egli have had similar iors, most of whom ride the bench much of , averaged 12.1 careers. Both the year. Tomorrow, only one Lion will play points a game his rookie year and dropped from there. have been under pressure all He was sold to San Francisco in 1962, played in 54 season as their squads stumbled and fell. The his last game in Rec Hall, and he certainly games doesn't ride the bench. that season and then retired for the first time. Pitt coach is bowing out after 13 years, while " Penn State Captain Jeff Persson has already made an "I think I quit too soon," he says now; but he kept 's coach leaves after 14 success- impression in the his hand in, playing in 19 games in 1964-65 before ful campaigns. The two faced each other 27 record books. Only the fifth times in player to score over 1,000 points in a career going into private business for a year. He added one that span, Egli holding a 15-12 edge. mid-season retirement and then left again after last sea- Nothing would be sweeter than at Penn State, he has led the team in scoring number 16. for two consecutive son despite his flashy one-game showing. Nothing More " seasons. This year he Unsure leads in both scoring (17.3) and rebounding "I'll just get in for the pension," he says, so all these The unfortunate thing is that nothing is (151), having had eight 20-plus point games. comebacks did him and the Warriors some good. more unsure than number 16. After a weak Of Penn State's 66 points in the first showing against Bucknell Wednesday, the meeting, 6-8 Bill Stansfield scored 20/ ' v^£y Lions are back to their unpredictable selves. Persso n and Bil l Young each added 14. with At any one time, State can look like the Stansfield and Young combining for 21 re- Philadelphia 76ers, and at another time, the bounds. It's a production they usually dupli- Coeds Topple Bucknell State College biddies. Two nights ago it was cate in two games. Collegia n Photo bv Mike Urban hard to tell which was the regular game and Tomorrow's 2:30 contest will be a simple It was a strange game. each of the fjrs t two quarters which the halftime show. battle between two teams that have been less It ' s a Tigh t Squeeze, -Ed The Bucknell University coed against Bucknell's total of six, Based on the results of the first State- than tremendous. It will also be a battle be- basketball team almost la ighed Penn State's starters retired to Pitt game Jan. 13, the Lions should have no tween two coaches on their way out. And it WEDGED IN between Penn Stale's Jeff Persson (44) and Jim Linden (30), Bucknell s itself out cC White Hall yester- the bench until the last four trouble winning their 10th game in 19 starts. will be a tribute to two individuals who Ed Farver tries to push his way through the mass of fla ling arms. Action took place day afternoon . The Lady Lions minutes of the game. When the They dominated the Panthers in every facet have given Penn State fans something to in Wednesday night's qame at Rec Hall , which the Bis ins won in overtime, 74-73, weren't as jovial. They just substitutes were finally re- of the game that day, winning easily, 66-43. cheer about on went about their business and called, many occasions. career tomorrow when he leads biaie they had upped the The victory was especially significant to Undoubtedly, they deserve some final Lion captain Persson will close out his ho —' eased to a 54-22 victory. It was score by l*" points. Egh, who said, "When you beat Pitt on their recognition, with or without the sentiment.' aaainst ihe Pitt Panthers at 2:30 in Rec Hall. the third win of the season Penn State's Marion Homer against one loss for State's was high scorer in the game coed team. with 17 points. She was closely Spiker Set for Ail-Around ' Although the Lady Bisons followed by Lione? Barb De- loco/ Ski Report played a brand of basketball Witt , who tallied 14 points. Skiing conditions across which resembled a vaudeville High scorer for the Lady Pennsylvania w ' 11 remain act, they couldn't buffalo the Bisons was Sue Unger. She good to excellent this week- Lady Lions, who were hotter sank two of Bucknell's five field end. How3ver, ski areas with- on the court yesterday than goals and three charity throws out artificial snow making ap- they had been in anv of their for a seven-point total. paratus continue to be three previous garnet. Pei.n State's nex' game vill By DAVID NEVINS coming Olympics. troubled by the lack ,"f any Penn State sank 41 per cent be held at 4 n.m. Tuesday at Collegian Sports Writer . Pitt's team is so weak that it important snowfall in the last of its field goal attempts and Lock Haven State College. So month. 62 per cen,. of its free throws. far this season," Penn State has Penn State's gymnastics team will be using freshman gymnasts A snowstorm fr->,n the south What Bucknell found so up- a 2-9 recoi -! on the road. The defeated Syracuse two weeks ago in the meet. Their routines, how- 42SIS&1 may change 'this picture late roariously funny, the Lionesses final game of the Lady Lions' by more than 60 points as the ever, will not count toward the Saturday, however, especial- never fount out. They were too season will be at 1:30 p m. Orange barely hit the 120-point team' total score. ly in central and eastern parts busy chalking up points to next Saturday when the Lbn- ^ - S of the state. bother with frivolities. esses meet Gettysburg Colli 'ge level. Two weeks before that, Syra- Score Doesn't Matter Aftor tallying 17 points in fn While Hall. cuse topped Pittsburgh. wMk Although the score of the meet You needn't be an expert in is of little concern to/ most people; mathematics to predict the results some individual performances will of tomorrow's fiasco between the un- be important. Ed Bayuk and Jim defeated Lions and winless Panthers. Corrigan will be fighting it out in SHERWOOD FUB JAMMY Stale faces Pitt tomorrow afterncan two events for a position on the in Pittsburgh. . squad that will compete in the Easterns. - There MUS C by ROBIN AND THE HOODS Coul d" Double ' Score .is - one opening^left y on State's team in both the floor ?(« iS'4f' ."¦;' If State coach G*ne Wettstone exercise and long horse vault. These were bringing his whole squad to spots will probably be filled by 9-12:30 FRIDAY, FEB. 23 &0ft Pittsburgh it would be conceivable either of these two men, depending that the Lions could double Pitt's on their performances tomorrow. IN THE FUB...25 C score. This would undoubtedly be a Don Spiker will be working all- first for the veteran coach who has around for the Lions for the first been producing winning teams at JIM CORRIGAN r ^ ' time in over a year. State's captain m BAYUK GIRLS ADMITTED FREE 'TI L 9:30 State for 30 years. . ". . wants Easterns spot has limited his action to three events battles Cornaan Fortunately for Pitt , W ettst one to perform at the Easterns. This sea- this season and has not worked the has more important things on his son for the first time the all-around side horse, floor exercise or rings as partly in jest, that after the Lions mind with the Eastern Intercolle- entries in both the Easterns and yet. score 115 points (presumably after COME BOW YOUR MIND giate Gymnastics Championships the Nationals will have to perform State's gymnasts are finding it five events) they could forget about next week. Wettstone is leaving Bob specifically-designed routines (com- difficult to approach the meet in the last couple events and still win the meet. Emery, Dick Swetman, Paul Vexler pulsories) as well as routines they their usual serious manner. As a and Tom Clark home so that they have designed themselves (option- matter of fact, they seem to find it When your mind is on next can get ready for the Easterns. als). In the past only optionals were amusing that they have to compete week and the Easterns, an afternoon Swetman and Emery will spend required. This change was made to against a team that might not score meet in Pittsburgh against the the weekend practicing the com- comply with the international rules more than 100 points. One Penn undermanned Panthers isn't the pul^v mi-tines that they will have that ' will be observed in the up- State gymnast pointed out, only most inspiring event in the world. Zeta Tau Alpha TEACHERS proudly pre sents its * Boveriown Area School District in pleasant S. E. communit y 35 miles from Philadel phia. Will interview applicants for positions in the elementar y Annual Winter % and secondary schools on

Pledge Formal % Thursday, February 'm•..;*sw Friday Saturday ± Good salary program, fringe ben efits, outstanding working conditions . and wond erful living. Feb. 2 Feb. 3 ? Vacancies exist in English, Mathem atics, Science, Geography, Social Studies, Jammy at Dinner Dance * Business Education, French, Spanish, German, Library Science, Physical Kapp a Sigma at the $ Education, Music, and Elementary K-6. Music by Holiday Inn I Register at the Placement Office The Sundae Train | , ^.x«^•^.^'^•^^ ••^•^-^•^•^•^?•^•^•^•^•^•^•^•^•^•:••: "^•^^•^•^'^•^*^•J"^*^•^•^•^•^?'^' Ssllliit kJNfc, i Performances This Weekend & Next -.:>. .«ffl.«„. «»»..«»"W For Current Information Call 865-9543 Honors the Fall, 1967 Pledge Class GEORGE BERNARD SHAW'S MTATORIUM

CAESAR AND Friday, February IFC AND PANHiL PRESENT CLEOPATRA SWIM JAMMY AT THE NATATORiUM rF C SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24 FROM 1:30 - 4:30 BO Saturday, February MUSIC BY THE DARKER SIDES Dinner and Dance ME PENNSYLVA N A STATE State College Elks Country Club DIVERS TY THEATRE RESPECTABLES OPEN TO ALL (Invited Guests Onl y) For Results-Use Collegian Classifieds ' Service reofy res hmu Available Go-Go Girl Go-Goss in Police C Alpha Xi De\ta, national anthropy m 1B5S. The first SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) — " "That was a ball, she told he heard t'n° ''oar of his « social fraternity for women, is annual award was made in Stopped for speeding, a woman officers. "Those police cars can behind iiirn. He turned t offering a graduate fellowship 1959. motorist drove off in the police really move.'"' her s .ei1 off . of 'si,5CD for advanced study To be eligible, an applicant t heologian Ritschl patrol car yesterday with red Patrolman Charles Kilgove Kilgore flagged clown a in the fie?d of social service. must be a graduate f an light blinking and siren mailing, ing motorist who took hir Alpha Xi Delta olfers this accredited college or univer- said he originally stopped her Dietrich Ritschl, professor of minister of a German-speaking police reported. p.hone. ' fellowship because in concurs sity, have an outstanding Finall on Interstate 5 Freeway after the history of docLrine, Pitts- congregation in Scotland from y halted after a 40-mile clocking h. r at 80 m.p.h. The California Highwa 1 with the exesption with most civic authorities scholarship record and be chase, at speeds which at times trol, the sheriff's depar burgh Theological Seminary, 195i! to M5!S, intersted in pursuing a career will use the text of Romans 13, of the fall iemestv;- 1957, when and juvenile court officials reached 120 miles an hour, she He suid he put her in the and cars from the Ocea verses 11 and 12 for his sermon he was a guest lecturer in New that there' is an increasing cf work'ng with children or identifitd herself as Margaret back seat of his police car and San Diego and Carlsbad '. topic at University Chapel Ser- Testament at Presbyterian Col- need for trained personnel to youth to prevent deliquency Ann Loeio, 22, of San Diego, was moving her car from the Deoartments joined the < Montreal Canada. He work with youngsters. Sup- in the United States. middle nf the freewav when vice at 11 a.m. Sunday in lege in , porting this belief , preventing Applications are available Schwab. came to this country in 1958 ' years was profes- juvenile delinquency was from Carol Yaspan, 603 Wolf The Chapel Choir, directed and for fiv e chosen as the national phil- Hall. by Raymond Brow i, will sing sor at' Austin Presbyterian the . Joseph Goodman, "Adora- Seminary and urinfe, 1959-61 was Psnn State mus Te, Christe". Organist guest lecturer at the Episcopal June Miller will play three Seminary of the Southwest, fy'jf&t Internationa! Juc! works by Felix Mendelssohn. Austin, "Texas. He was also ilkfc. Miff Ritschl is a native of 'Basel, minister of a church _n Texas Competitions Tournament Switzerland, was educated in in 1958-62. He assumed • his universities at Tuebingen and present post in 1963. ( Continued from page one) College Bowl, according to the Sun. Feb. 25 Basel in mathematics and A frequent coni 'ibutor to The commUtee ielt it only lair co-chairmen, Julie Conover and physics and at Bern and Basel journals in Switzerland, Ger- to both teams, the spokesman Lew Hirsch. Topics range from 1 :00 p.m. in theology and philosophy. He many, Britain, Hungary and continued, to permit them to li beral arts to sincere to trivi a, was examined for the ministry the United States, Ritschl has continue in the competition. an innovation of the college * Recreation Hall in 1950 and received ' doctor written sev^ en books, the latest Judging of the matches will bowl committee. of philosophy degree in par- being "Athanasius," published be done by members of various Howard Schultzberg of Radio tistics at the University of in Zurich in 1963. He has also departments at , the University. Station V/MAJ will emcee both Edinburgh. ' lectured oi preached in Hun- Questions to be used were com- events The public is invited . I After serving for two years gary, Czechoslov.-.kia, Mexico, piled by the General Electric tei attend in Switzerland. Ritschl was and the Soviet Union. GROUP COO hundred minutes of murders SAVINGS 7^ l (n ara siiziisgaetot. Are you ID i vj^ MLV Q ELE0TH0N Always hold —200 E. College Ave. holding up the matches till —10% on all items upst cold. YOU ARE if you don't help your Post Office by using Zip Code in the address *C0UJaE AVENU you are writing to, and in. PHARMA6Y —120 E. College Ave. —The only registered pharmacist on College The Screen Will Wait A Long Speak to Stan about discounts. Time For Another Adult Comedy Best Picture Of Such Delectable Refinement ! Best Actress TO MISS "LOV E MATES" Best Actor WOULD BE A GRIEVOUS MISTAKE hm DRYERS Supporting Actre ss 310 W. Beaver Ave. 10% on all dry clean! Best Screen play Cinemat ography GAYLE HUNN CUTT- RAYMOND BURR ^y^Mll:

WILFRID HYDE-WH1TE¦ -BR0CK PETERS-SUSAN SAINT JAMES Best Director MUSIC-HEAL HEFTI Screenplay by PHILIP REISMAN, JR. - Story by PHILIP P.EISMAN. JR.and —114 E. College Ave. EDWARD J. MONTAGUE- Directed by JOHN CUIUEBMIN -Produced by EDWARD J. MONTAGNE TECHNICOLOR* A UNIVERSAL PICTURE (?5SS» AMUR'S TRADITK SHOP —342 E. College Ave. This —10% on all cash sales is Benjamin irumi He's I • . ' f *3 PHOTOGRAPHY a little 120 E. College Ave. worried ' '' IJll one free 4"x5" with e ie It's all about sitting about t r ou the cfiase... B^llk tte taplure— his ' ^' ' ^ arts prates of technique. future. Is mora really Ote tender sex ...is Ml 106 Sowers Street MBBRH&B 4Hi| PBk fen MBh H Bf ca stSBHa thsanimalT Tflfl lL H*Hffl Sft fnH H fiftTFBP 10% on handbags and THE liB li ll ll E 5% on shoes ( TARRING

lgMEiLNtirJVLAY BANCROFT^DUSTSN HOFFMAN • ^v KATHARINECOrJt*< riv ROSS

CALDERFtHFORMEO BY WILLIN GHAM^ BUCK HENRY PAUL _ PRODUCED by SIM0N M0RNER KUPB0/ gMBN-GARFUNKEL LAWRENCETURMAN —100 Sowers Street 5 9 MIKE NICHOLS technicolor panavision ha* -WEEKLY EASTMAN COLOR d* ;^ t, Mm h™ \„i„m,^j I SPECIAL 3rd wmm shattering week zPmT*3&lWJ2i/f v. A/trf 1.3^ ^nuiivucttrrtfuAT r^ 'VrTA.*»* i n "i i iJJiTTT nlMllft ^ «"^ k fa Efte ^. SL-lft - *±m IVL.4A.AAMAA/7 NOW... i :30-3 ;3Q-5:30-7:3Q-9;30 0 fa UuUto C^Aw''3"'^^£?^— _^w~^ luilK«Wffliffi&jy9£l8?isfi»^ffl MA BELLE FEMM * Gwr)«/Oranat/M«orial Pielmi Limited Ptoduelion @-$S> A UNIVERSAL RELEASE in TECHNICOLOR* l »>Wim f«ll»ti» todltMu | —151 S. Allen St. —10% on all services ••••••••ASA<'«oa**o«*ig«iii«ei«iitigo«tt<(>iitot(itiiiiait ' ' '" Academy Award Nominee for sale WANTED . FOR REST NOTICE 108 W. College Ave. 1965 GOLD• MUSTANG, 289 automatic, EUROPE — SUMMER 1968. Students, gn bucket seats, 35,000 miles. Excellent fore m of the year! 5% on all paperbacks rd$' medals, t„o bedrooms, two baths. Air con": faculty, dependents, round trip |ef, group condition. Asking SI450. "Will finance." insignia,*? guns,« ?etc.« 466-6091.«m 50, fare $265.00. Contact Joel Schweldel 10% on posters Call Harold 237-W7. tioned. Pool, Free Bus. 238-5158 DEADLINE STUDIOUS ROOMMATE wlnfed for ~ 238-4763 after 4:00 p.m. AlTER A MANAMA WOMAN" 0NE MAN Eff7cfeSc7 _ available inT- '' 1962 CORVAiR7~rnaroon, blaliTTnterioT; Un Vers V Tcwers - Ca 10:30 A.M. Day Before 4 speed, dual ' " " mediately. Call Larry 237-6141 after 6:00. SUBLET 3-4 MAN Whitehall Apt. for exhausts, new parts, exc. 23M383. summer. Bus service, air cond., pool, tIhe new love storv by cIauqe IeIouch Publication cond. $400. 237-1143. ORTTMMiR ^b~67gIrr piayer wanted A LY fu n, he< ne extras. Call 238-0393. S ^rPm Rin0h»n "?n l- J \ FOR SALE: Two West Halls Dorm for creative, dynamic Rock group. Call 5^™ u°be" .?£'• ~ * Jw5 o!tmen) ° i Summer TermJ?r — June rent paid. Swim- BLUEBELL: Air-conditioned three bed- Contracts for Spring Term. Call 865-7945. ChuckucK _^238-5377jB now.now - room apartment available this summer First Insertion 15 word maximum Double room. ^ _^/_ ming poo|/ air conijmonmg# bU5 smice , $1.00 ~ WAITERS— Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity. Phone 237-1215. (fall option). Pool and bus service. 237- ' Each additional consecutive FOR SALE or Swap for steel string 7966 ; RESTAURANT Insertion 25c Folk Guitar — Olds-Ambassador profes- PSYCHEDELIC TEAS, monstrous sional Trumpet with case. 2 MAN APARTMENT for Spring term. S125/mo. Furnished. Call 237-1375 iaw- 119 S. Buxrowes St. Each additional 5 words 10c per day In good con- . 3 man/ burgers, hot cider plus Sherry Erhard dilion. Mark 856-2647. 865-9085. woman. (in ihe alley) (Friday), Vladimir Ekzarkhov (Satur- Cash Basis Only! GRADUATING SPRING WEST HALLS Dorm Contract for sale! - Must ' sublet day) equal a fun time at the Jawbone dj No Personal Ads! Ca£ Joe 238-5167. summer term. 3 or 4 man furnished Coffee House. 415 E. Foster . 8-12:30 p.m. 10% on all food and apartment with air conditioning, tennis FENDER TEL!cAsTEY~much re GOD IS LOVE is Blue Is Love is God! except alcohol Tuesday ROOMMATE To share Apt. for Spring court and swimming pool. Call Fran worked, or Gibson J-50 folk guitars. 237-6485. Worship—Sunday 10:15 a.m., Eisenhower through Thursday Thomas 238-8901. Term. S50 mo. 7 minutes walk to cam- Chapel; 11:45 a.m, at Grace Lutheran OFFICE HOURS pus. Call Ron 237-1066. Church. 9:30 A.M. - 4:00 P.M. ATTENTION ROOMMATES WANTED. Girls to share SKI RACKS, ski bags, and boot bags j apartment in Holiday Towers starting Monday through Friday LOST: CLASS RING. Willard, first floor are for rent or sale (at 10% off) from STUDENT ECONOMY European Tour. ! Spring Term. Call Jane 238-8898. Unlimited Rent-Alls. If you don't ski, 21 days $499 complete. Visiting London, lavatory on Saturday. Please call Bob J: STUDIOUS ROOMMATE rent a toboggan. Basement of Sackett Paris, Zurich, Amsterdam, Frarikfurt. for Bluebell 238-9191. Apartment. Only S100 for complete b] Write for brochure, care of Box 202, LOST: MAN'S tan winter coaf taken HAPPY RTHDAY Georgp Fredrick North Wing Spring term. No deposit Rich 538-1690. Handel. Hear Israel in Egypt at Spring Wayne, Penna. 19087, from Willard "Wm. Barry" label. Call . Pjj f . ^ 1PIP \| ROOMMATE FOR Bluebell Concert in May. 129 S. Axherion St. THE FINEST Steaks you ever thaw. Apartment, Jon 237-1512. Reward. Seafood— lobster, Spring term with summer option. $62.50 FOOD FOR THOUGHT (as well as shrimp, oysters — 237-6386.237-6384 , —¦"" LOST: IRISH SETTER, reddish-brown, 2 for the price of one at """ ' Spruce Valley Farm Freezer. 238-5351. —-—. . white blaze on chest. Answers to Cory. body), both free. It's another SRL stu- for sale ~ ~ FEMALE ROOMMATE dent faculty dinner. Sunday night at the 5 p.m. shows Sunday DR. ABRAM VANDER MEER, "Thorahti for 2 bedroom Reward. Call 237-6316. apartment. One block from campus. Own , - 7TT7-= ~ Prof. Robert Butler's. Topic— "Man's on the Future of Education" PSEA, ^777EN-^' HGTrALF^ T^.ENGTTr^TT Go d T ed through Thursday and al 1 STUDENTS: WE provide Insurance for room. Spring term or sooner. Reason- JAK, ,. , , Aggressive Nature as it Pertains to autos, motorcycles, motorscooters, travel, Feb. 27, 7:00 p.m.. Ill " Chambers. Wlnler Coat whlte.-V w0011 collar - T|00P Prospects for Peace. day Monday. ~ ~ ably studious! Call 238-6365. ' ' • Rides leave HUB valuables, hospitalization. Phone Mr. THE FINEST ~W r bu»on eyes. Return at HUB desk or at 6 p.m. Call Lloyd, 237-7216, before STEAKS vou thaw. ' ' Temeles , 238-6633. Seafood— lobster , shrimp, oysters— FOR RENT...... cal1 238-5970 for reward. Saturday for reservations. OVERSTUFFED CHAIRS, davenports, Spruce Valley Farm Freezer...... , .. , ,.„.. , ONE DIAMOND post earring lost . In swivel chairs, chest of drawers and VETERANS MEETlNGlitl 'hl Mu Delta, BEAUTIFUL, NEW, large, two bed- vicinity of Cathaum Theatre and Locust JAWBONE dressers. Hoy's Used Furniture, Lemont. Sunday Feb. 25, 3:00 p.m. Refreshments. room Mobile Home. Completely fur- Lane. Reward offered. 865-4618. Phone 238-0420. Open 1 - 9 p.m. nished. Very private. WE LOVE SHERRY — the big girl with GEfT~ ~" Very reasonable. CO-EDS: whi7e fi's hoTlcoffeeT Available Spring, Summer and Fall; or the big voice. Sherry Erhard sings soul TWELVE INCH SUBS. Regular, tuna Call Denny, 9 - 10 any night, 238-9846. 6Sa chicken, ham, 70c; No delivery Spring, and Summer. Rent reduction for and blues Friday night. Vladimir Ekzark- GARDENS (Guys: Sorry, this is girls' week). Summer. 466-6709. hov brings us the sounds of Russian folk. charge. Student checks cashed. Dean's (Girls: One lump or two?) YAHWEH — SABOATH. No Virginia, Saturday . night. 8 - 12:30 p.m. 415 E. -117 E. Beaver Ave. Fast Delivery, 23B-8035. " ROOM — SPRING Term. $42.50 includes this Is not George Romney's campaign A'?TENT70N7"FREi~FREE, Free.lr he Poster. 1958 TR-3, white mechanically good, top kitchen equipment, clean sheets weekly. manager — Lutheran Student Vespers -10% on everything excel Jawbone loves you and presents for Rent paid to April 9. 238-3272. Sunday 4 p.m. Eisenhower Chapel. 8. side curtains good, tires good. 237-6079. your entertainment the soul sounds of floral telegraph delivery1 '62 RAMBLER sta. wgn. Engine and Sherry Erhard and Russian Folk of transmission recently overhauled.- Priced Vladimir Ekzarkhov this weekend. 415 HELP WANTED PENN STATE OUTINO CLUB tor quick sale. Call 237-4147 after 5 p.m. E^os ter. " ~ ENGINEERS MONTANcl ask for Sam. COME WORSHIP with us . . . Sunday SKI DIVISION MEETING PHOTO EQUIPMENT. 4xS Omega en- Lutheran Student Worship . . . Come. ENGINEERING TECHNICIANS THURSDAY. FEB. 22 ' view camera, tanks, traxs, etc. ~ ~ ANNIE CiRARaOT These discounts do not ap] larger, AVANT GUARD Get in on "What's DRAFTSMEN CANdtCE bERGEN ' Call David 237-2198 afternoon. happening." Bookings for Spring term. HIGHWAY ENGINEERS io merchandise discoun: 1961 LARK. Good condition. Must sell Satisfaction guaranteed. Call 238-4145. Excellent opportunity for professional advancement and placed on special sale immediately. Will make good bargain. DEUTSCHES HAUS MarionettenspieT S75.00. Call 238-6222. Sonntag Nachmittag, 25, Febuar, 2:30 bis Salary commensurate with experience and ability. Lib- ihe participating merchai 1950 FORD. New state inspection, new 4:30 33 Simmons. Alle Willkommen. eral fringe benefits including paid continuing education, If you have any queslio parts. In good condition. $100. Call Tom Erfrlshchungen. and profit sharing retirement plan. Openings in State 237-6098. ' call Sean Fisher ai 238-6! FOOTBALL FANS: Coach Palerno will College and Altoona Area. White or call collect Person- 1963 TR-3. Need money -urgently. See speak and present films in the Flndley nel Manager: 814-944-5035 or Richard Lofande at 2 it and make me an offer. Cuil John, Rec. Roam, East Halls, Monday Feb. 26, Auto Cross mil) iffBVE TU.VC / vm TAKjEff / J£*V Cofcwb / MOUk kstJAC I («.» U (fr M 237-7540. 7:00 p.m. All Interested are Invited. GLENN ENGINEERS INC. by I2S2. pnoductd by Ala^dRE MNoucrtta &. qtOHjts dmckjER / colon dduxE'^Z, 1960 OLDS 98, all pwr., new tires and Sunday, Feb. 25 , CONSULTING ENGINEERS i U^oitC ^ [OF--&b:io\lt)l.^«i.\-<-hip»^ci