—Town and Fraternities -- Het/.el five candidates promNo* to be the Union Building most e\ciune , according to Saul . New Stude nt-Legislato r Ratio — East — Finrilay Union Ruildii i q Solomon, election' - commissioner. and .Johnston Hall The c.iiKl'ri.,tr'= are Thomas Lix , —West — Waring Joe l Maan/inci. Crnu .Mrlidosian, Of 800-1 Set by Congress —North — Warnock Steve Reiss and J-ihn S7ad,t Jr. By LARRY RElBSnTEIN McElwain . Hartranft Mifflin) — 2 —South — Rcdifcr Cnngres, ,'iNn nn^r.! a resolution Collegian Staff Writer —West Halls — 2 —Beaver — Rcdifcr for Pollock iiippn 'tiiiG in prn,ri-.l e. a letter re- representatives nuesting Ur.i\er-it.\ Presi !--nt F.ric A The Undergraduate Student —North Halls — 2 —Center — Simmnns and MeElu J,n IVnlker to prnclnim Wednesday a Government Congress approved —East Halls — 5 —Pollock - Pollock Union Buildin g " Day of Cn:i- ern last night a bill reapportioning The letter formulated bv Marvin —South Halls — 1 Voting time1; in East and the HUB voting areas for congressional Ruyen. prok'-sor nf i rono'i.ics ;n '-ed —Pollock and Nittany Halls — 3 will be from 8 a m. to 6 p.m. All other Walker to ' fn:"i' ,il!y ricngniro the elections. areas will vote irom \-V.W a m. tn r.'JO -Town — 8 per\ns-\e mid Horupant impact of the The number of congressmen to p.m. and from 4:30 tn 11 30 p.m. —Fraternities — 4 .var in Vietnam on all our lives." be elected from residence halls, Aron Arbittier, USG vice president, A total of 36 students filed for 27 ' We believe thai such .1 pro will be in fraternities and town submitted the amendment to conform seats Five students arc cnmpotini; Un- el.imatinn unuld be the appropriate the ratio of one representative with student sentiment expressed in tile freshman class presidency. mean.- tor enablim; all thn\i> within the for every 800 undergraduate stu- last Spring Term 's USG executive Univer.--il \ community who so desire Andrews reminded the cindiriale-. [»¦ dents. elections. Students favored In focus [!u nift'Mui'pci ' and energy ^-Collegian Photo by Roger Greeuawalt overwhelmingly a referendum that pictures and platforms are to be (in t his bese tting nationa l problem." were changed HALPH KIRKPATRICK, world famous harpsichordist Constituent areas also question lowering the representation turned in by noon Monday in 21)2 HUB. states elections, living the letter Harpsich ordis t autographed Patlee's Copy of the Book, "Domenico Scar- by Congress. In past figure of one congressman for every separate con- Ball ot posilions will he rlcfci mine! "Such a prn< lam.ilion would cnei ce latti." Kirkpairick wrote the biography of the famous areas were divided into 2 .000 students. today at 5 p.m. in 203 HUB. p,u tn. ipi-lmn in the ac- hs Book composer. stituencies so congressmen no one hccau.M' Autograp represented a segment of the area. Elections To Be Held Wednesday tivities takin g place on that dav would East Halls had more vacant sent 1; Now, entire living areas are a The elections for congressmen be w holh voluntary , and all points 01 and than number of candidates. In South . constituency. freshman class president will view cnuld find expression " it sai d. be held Center and fraternities the number of The following are the new con- Wednesday and Thursday. 'SG Mike An- candidates equaled the number of Ted Thomp. on . l. presidi-nt. urg- stituent areas with the number of drews, an election , commissioner ' - , an- seats available. ed the congressmen to obtain student Ra ps representatives: Grou p nounced the areas s where Women the voting signatuies on the letter to present to Queen Choice Cr iteria —Center Halls — (Simmons- will be held. The freshmen presidential race with Walker later. By RENA ROSENSON placing an advertisement in volved in WLF. There are The Collegian and putting up graduate assistants, graduate Collegian Staff Writer posters at all entrances to the students' wives, faculty mem- The Women ' s Liberation stadium. bers and women from town. Discussions Office: "Why should it be necessary Change Front announced plans last A suggestion was made to in- " to that only students be chairmen night to "do something vite the queen and the rest of of an organization in which so bring to the attention of the the finalists in the competition many other types of people are community the to the next WLF meeting. "We involved ," University want to tell them that we are a member said. hypocrisy involved in the aware of their point of view. For the purpose of obtaining Name to 'Student Inclusion'? selection of a homecoming We would like to hear what a charter, it was decided that By EILEEN McCAULEY name of the office be changed students, are excluded from dent of USG; Ron Balchclor. fice something more than a queen. they have to say and give them Miss Rosenthal and Betty to "office to Insure Student our point of view," a Petras. a new student at the Collegian Staff Writer full participation in all president of OSGA: Jim Dor- discussions office wherein stu In a general discussion the Inclusion." U n i versity decision-making ris , editor of The Dail y Col- d ents are brought together. spokesman for WLF said. University, would be named A member of the Faculty- 'hypocrisy' referred to was Hal Sudborough, president of bodies. " legian , and Sudborough. " In fact, en t he v.ii 'ous oc- No final decision was made chairmen and a member of Student Committee on the Of- The students also will pro- defined as the dress, ap- WLF would be named faculty Ihe Graduate Student According tn Sudborough . casions when the office was as to whether the homecoming fice for Student Discussions pose that the director of the of- students and faculty members being used , the office brought pearance and personality stan- adviser but it would be "on said the students on the com- Association , said the reason for queen finalists will be con- paper only." fice be given an 'ex officio' may participate in discu-siuns together administrators , st u- dards set for all women by the tacted. mittee will propose that the the change was because "the status on all University com- with the committee, which has dents and faculty members , selection of one as the ideal In other business, WLF mittees and that no com- been asked to name candidates and attempted to arrive at n woman. discussed the problem of ob- mittees be closed to the direc- for the position of director of concensus among the three tor. the Office for Student sectors of the Umvrrsiiy. The "It would be more realistic if taining a charter. They have Facult y, had a temporary charter since Staff Names Record ed Sudborough said these pro- Discussions and to explore the potential of the office is thu« the girls were evaluated with posals will be presented at an general concept of the office more than one of a simple her clothes off." one woman last spring, but now they are permanent open committee meeting 3 and the role of the director. c o mmunication mechanism said. "After all, the whole required to obtain a p.m. Sunday in 105 Forum. „ Students:cl , , .,Left ,, Out.,, What that 'more' is . is not thing is sexual exploitation." one. Director: Full Voting Rights clear and is now being serious The main objection to the The members of the NUC Support s Boycott "The director should be "Many student groups felt l y considered by all the sec selection of a queen was the organization reject the given full voting rights on the left out when the office was tors. ••idealized idea of beauty" University requirement that Senate floor and the Board of first created and therefore brought about by it. "It any chartered group have a Trustees. Generally, he should boycotted it." Sudborough said , Office's Operations typifies" the ugliness I see in faculty 'Adviser arid a student be admitted to any com- "but this time we're setting up "For practical purposes \\f According to Cindy Of Classes , . ROTC, military recruitment chairman. Moratorium mittee's discussion on any the committee to conduct a should attempt to focus on the " another Rosenthal (lOth-history- and the Vietnam war, By REENI E THOMSON Vietnam War which would for the Administration to pro- problem in the University," discussion in front of students offic e's operations vis a vis the woman said. Levittown) the organization is Sudborough said. concerning the oflice There Through organization and a Collegian Staff Writer relate the war to current ceed as if there were no Administration the lans to publicize their a discussion Members of the committee, will be microphones set up on office , the Administration may WLF p chairman is not only un- More than 90 faculty and American foreign policy. doubts, no objections, n o grievance at the football game The statement will raise reasons for stopping the entire which was established by the floor to receive comments gat h er , lo ,-i great extent , the necessary but undesirable. staff members have pledged University President Eric A. and recommendations from the tomorrow when the queen will support of the Wednesday, related questions such as project." focus mid concensus of the be crowned . Their plans In another general United States NUC strongly urges the Walker , include four faculty audience and we hope that organized student bodies. At the point was made National Vietnam War ' intervention in include writing a letter to the discussion, Guatemala, Thailand and faculty to state their objections members recommended by the through this type of Hireling, the same time the office can that not only students are in- Moratorium in protest of the University Senate and four stu- the director and a new role for editor of The Daily Collegian, Vietnam War and the class Laos. "In this way NUC will on the questionnaire and and should piovide the stu- intervene in an academic way return it to Patterson. dents named by the heads of him will be utilized by stu - dents with the Administration boycott, at the New University the Undergraduate Student dents." Conference meeting last night. on Wednesday." Petras said. Members at the meeting also concensus or policy position ,' He added NUC will publish discussed repression at the Government, the Organizaiion Sudborough added that GSA Mav said. This figure is based on of Student Government views the office for Student May agreed with Walker names recorded with the an open letter to "well- University. A committee will '' meaning but erroneous faculty be formed to give maximum Associations and the GSA . Discussions as an " in terim stall-lent Monday, that the of Not Suppo rt Coalition for Peace, according measure" YAF Will members who think the way to exposure to demands for due The faculty members are until students fice cm be a useful experiment to Wells Keddie, associate pro- Margaret B. Matson . professor become full participants in with 'rea l merit ' and that the fessor of labor studies, and protest is to join the op- process in the dismissal of position. William Semple assistant pro- of sociology; Hugh B. Urban, University governing policies 'expennvnt ' has not been tried member of the NUC. " , associate professor of human Klaus May, NUC will have a table in the fessor of architecture. Semple, chairman of GSA fully He also suggested that "The names on this list are development . William A . Rules Corcmittee said that the future discussions focus on Oct. 15 Moratorium probably only one-third of the HUB Wednesday to distribute who actively spoke out against literature. AH members of the racism in the war, was notified Steele , professor of chemistiw, majority of the student what the office can do with Freedom announced last night actual number of faculty mem- and Richard G. Cunningham , representatives involved in all regard 1 o Administratio n The Young Americans for bers who will not hold executive board of NUC are that his contract would not be support the National Vietnam War scheduled as speakers. renewed with no explanation professor of mechanical the discussions since the of student lelatinnships . defi ne its that they would not classes," James Petras. pro- engineering. fice's creation , and apparently functions and the selection pro- in protest of the Vietnam War. Wednesday. fessor of political science and Keddie stated NUC policy on given. Moratorium, the faculty club last night, urg- Semple said, "My depart- Students on the committee a number of faculty membei s cedures and alter this select a co-chairman of NUC, said. include Ted Thompson , presi- as well , desire to make the of- director. YAF stated, "We will support a de-escalation by stages Limited access and the short ing all faculty members to ment head told me Previously gradual withdrawn whose rate would be determined by amount of time have prevented voice their objections in the that, because of my political and a questionnaire to be returned to activity, my career was at a South Vietnam's ability to fill this vacuum left by our NUC from contacting a num- ber of faculty members, ac- NUC Vice President and dead end here." Working for withdrawal. Because a total, immediate withdrawal would Treasurer Robert A. Pat- the rescinding of the dismissal, Self-Nomination Procedure in Effect retrain cording to Petras. leave South Vietnamese forces unable to recover and Petras announced a meeting terson. The policy states that NUC will compile a fact sheet quickly enough to fend off an assault, a bloodbath would of political science teaching NUC deplores t h e "Ad- on Semple and present it to the we can not support the Wednesday assistants last night to decide ministration's plan to build an Undergraduate Student result. Therefore, elaborate faculty club at a Government, the Graduate " the question of support for the Moratorium. Moratorium. Philosophy time when funds are sup- Student Association and other posedly lacking for poor black organizations. GSA to Choose Delegates YAF has adopted national teaching assistants will meet The University chapter of as stated who serv- tonight. and white students," Action proposals on the members, YAF's position on the Vietnam war. Allan Montross, in an NUC release. national NUC level reviewed The Graduate Student Association will hold to Administrators and faculty 'Friends and Neighbors Ap- ar. election nf its senatorial delegates to thr- undergraduate -Inde nts , is one of ed as chairman , said they agreed that American troops should last night included renewed ef- graduate and " proach* Faculty Questionnaire Untversitv Senate committees at 9 p. .m Oct. 27 in^urtnL ' a 'fa ir deal' and an canal ooportuni' v be pulled out of Vietnam on a gradual basis. "If troops were Petras suggested the The questionnaire being sub- forts on campus against im- , a sug- in 102 Forum. for tlv Commonwealth ' s hi.ir k comnrinitv and to be removed too soon , it would result in an immediate blood- "friends and neighbors ap- mitted to the faculty deals with perialism and racism According to Hal Sudborough , GSA presi- for t he voting hint k adulN at this pub!u:l\ sup- preferential service time for gestion to develop guidelines to bath and an economic downfall," he said. proach" to contact as many in- dent , a self-nomination procedure will be in ef ported Mate mmer^ttv " dividuals as possible to support meals, how frequently the work regionally against 's repression and a call to set up feet sinct this is the first GSA meeting of the " Whoioas tin- r>t< nt of th< -> UimeiMtv YAF members present , voted to accept the charter, which the Moratorium. faculty member expects to term and students have not had enough time to comm ittment in repaid to black students may avail himself of the services, educational activity against was the same as last year's. Manuel Smith, assistant pro- get to know one another. be debatable, that nf GSA is not. GSA and its- fessor of economic develop- the amount the member would male supremacy. _ Faculty members who wish Anyone interested in running for a postion members haw > flonr l.ttle and have allowed the This made it legally possible to fill official positions. Allan ment, urged that students be willing to pay and the use of must applv at the GSA office in 213 Hetzel "Black Student Union and the Ar! minis:rat ion in oc- to add their names to the list Montross was elected president; Tom Wertz, vice-presdent; planning to boycott classes the facilities for special Union Building by Oct. 24. tak e the rap ni tin- blame in r-\ -t\ thing. We Wednesday "should go to the casions. A section for com- of those supporting the than we and Wayne White secretary-treasurer. Mora torium should contact The University Senate committees on haw accompli shed much Ir^s arc first five minutes of class and ments is provided. ly represented include the capable of " M-r ¦wl "Each question assumes that Elaine Janssen of the Coalition which GSA is sing dotn^. ^ A public relations chairman will be elected at a later date, challenge the professor to committees on Continuing K d u c a t i n n , M ay added , 'if GSA can make some ex- bring the class over to the the club will be built and that for Peace or Scott Williams of of since YAF agreed that it was not necessary to fill this position the mathematics department . Academic Development , Resident Instruction, tensiv e contribut ion-; t-> n-modv ^irne the teach-in at the Hetzel Union the respondent approves," the Libraries and Other In- 's p-t.blcrrs then GSA will o: "It is unethical 865 3881. Faculty Affairs and Umversitv . h" immediately. Building." Keddie emphasized release stated. formation Systems. value to the Unr. ei sit\ . to t he Administration , that the purpose of the Montross discussed setting up a table for YAF on the The association has two representatives on to the blacks and to the graduate Mudents " Moratorium is to "empty the 1 delegates to the the Hetzel Union Building. He said, "We need the Research and Graduate Study Committee. Election of t ' nartm ental ground floor of classroom." Weatherman Demonstrati ons Sudborough said prospective candidate 6 Graduate S' nd mt Couw il should be omplcted some form of communication. . .we need something to carry Petras announced plans to by t he enrl of the thud week of October , m time should consider using a delegate position to of of GS the information to the people." issue an NUC statement on the feet GSA's rrvijor task of the year: the for the fir ^t meeting A The^e election* resolution of the problem of black inclusion jr are t he io--poi-)< -ihi!i t> of t he departments and SDS Decries Actions the Universit\. the stud ent 1; within the d apartments . AV GSA' s Rules Committee Chairman KI.iu < graduate stude nts mav participate in the elec The University chapter of the Students for a Democralic W. May said , "The major problem, according lion nf the^c delegates E. Mc. Society has "disavowed" itself from the actions that have oc- TIM Counc il, Realty Firm curred in the past two days in Chicago, according to Dana Friedman, newly elected co-chairman of SDS. For the past two days there have been demonstrations in Chicago protesting the trial of eight Yippies charged with in- Conc ur on Most Problems citing riots at the 1968 National Democratic Convention in that Legislative Action Pending city. fall, voter] released yesterday, the 30. The suggestions included a room-by-room Friedman said SDS, at an earlier meeting this In a statement "Weatherman" SDS faction in Chicago. Town Independent Men's Council commended inspection by the borough, a deadline of not to support the Wednesday for minor repairs and Oct. 28 for Although a split has occurred in the national SDS. Fried- On Penn State Appropriations the Federated Home and Mortgage Co. for to improvements in the major repairs, a rent rebate of one week for man said the University chapter here "is not going to try "their strides in making formulate our own Uncertainty concerning the University 's Labor and Industry, would be shifted , to the apartments." students living on the second through eighth hop into one of the factions. We will Beaver Terrace ' " budget appropriation still exists followmg Universit y .-, total in an auditing procedure was prepared by Joe Myers, floors and two weeks rebate for those living policies. The statement above the eighth. "The main thrust of our program will be tn make the Wednesdays session of the State House of c han^e Undergraduate Student Government con- of the peopl e of the state," Fried Representatives The present Democratic proposal for the TIM vice president, The following is the text of the statement. University serve the needs gressman, and Jeff Lobb, "In every aspect has Federated Home and man said. Although $273 G million in appropriations Unuersity calls for a grant of SG4.5 million after several meetings with Philip Sieg. presi- will be University issues such ,-is , action on the and thn retirement factor , nbout 55000, con- Mortgage Co. made an attempt to satisfy our SDS issues this fall was passed by a 102 Dfi vote 000 dent of Federated Home and Mortgage Co. ' militarism, racism and the faculty club. Friedman said the University's request for funds will not come less than the GOP proposal. the Beaver Terrace (TIM) 'suggestions for improvement . In nine cerning the conditions of of the cases these suggestions have been met. faculty club "ties in -with racism at the University because the until after next w eek's session , a ccording to "The Republican side of the House felt apa rtments. "We feel that discussions with Sieg and University "is spending S2 million to build the club when there- Rep. Eugene M Fulmer. fR State College). we could meet all immediate needs of the Construction of the apartments was not Margo Semple, rental of the com- are other demands that probably ha"e higher priority. " He The Republicans, he said , had proposed state , includ'ng the extra money for Penn completed by the promised Sept. 5 deadline pany, have been quite useful and have shown added that a faculty club was not "relevant at this time and a 10 per cent increase over the 19fiS-Gfl State, and still live within a reasonable tax and manv students returning to State College good ra pport between TIM and Federated would probably be .segregated anyway." budgets for the University and the two other structure ." Fulmer said. during Orientation Week found their apart- Home and Mortgage Co. It has acted in the Friedman also said SDS plans to "reach out" to the com- state related universities . Pitt and Temnle. "Howexcr . efforts to arrive at a bipar- ments unfinished. commends munity by talking to the " working people of the University For the Universitv , it would have meant tisan understanding, with each side of the best interests of its tenants and TIM to up of After TIM received numerous complaints it for this. and the Centre County region. an increase nf S5 02 million over last yea'-'s ai^Ie asked come with ideas how to tenants about the poor living con- "We hope future discussions with "The University isn 't for the interests of the working peo- budcet of 559 million, for a new total of $65 cut. were unsuccessful. The next move will from the elite. There are only a iew ditions, they circuited a petition of grievances Federated Home and Mortgage Co. realtors ple,' he said. "It is for a small million. come when the Democratic leadership at- by 153 tenants. and-or landlords will prove as profitable." working men's children here and only a few blacks " In addition , a S-10G million retirement tempt s to win approval for its remainin-: which was signed "to and discussions with the Myers said the Federated Home and Friedman said SDS will try to implement programs b'll. hr**"-1" paid by the Do rrMment of mnnev b'lls next week, " he added. From the petitions , to try to get more blacks drafted eight "suggestions for im- Mortgage Co. "promised us that all repairs will make the University more relevant tenants . TIM " here and maybe include some labor education courses.." t. .-• •• —•» ...M**sm provement" which they presented to Sieg Sept, be finished within 10 days or two weeks. \ Editorial Opinion Finishing Our Union so you have a presence. B BILL MOHAN you in. Make you y first-class hippie by now. Collegian Columnist You're probably a Your unhappy family life was giving you pro- There was nothing to do tonight so I blems. You said something about love that Homecoming came back and read your letters, Sandra. your house. Then, you had a caused pain at There weren't any people here to talk to or "family" o£ friends, one girl was Mama, and do anything with, so I thought reading your you all used to sit on a wall in Scranton. letters might sorta bring you into the room. Things come back to me, like how you Rah. Rah. Rah! My cellar room: cement walls, bamboo cur- would shake if I caught you by surprise. IT'S HOMECOMING WEEK, and Other alums will walk around tains. The manner You worked for a publishing company in we could care less. campus staring at the freaks and thank- in which my mother the daytime. School , at night. By November, There's the tremendous football ing God that they didn't have to live assembled the place ¥i you must have been close to the end of this game against the Mountaineers on among such filth and that they didn't might be termed routine. That's when you stopped writing. Saturday. A fab jammy Friday night in grow up at a time when the young drop- "eclectic," in that I There was a tone of letting down in the last let- the HUB Ballroom: and there are motor- ped out in such great numbers. They got an odd or an ter, of letting go. You wrote a whole page, you cades, beauty contests and enough other won 't ask any questions. end from every wrote a whole page around the word "love," paraphernalia to male you sick. room upstairs in the and without being ludicrous, you called me HOW MANY ALUMS will ask why " Then there was the The only saving grace is that a house. your "beautiful friend. there are so many long-haired, shabbily , always being scared of and black girl has finally broken the But anyway, part about yourself dressed freaks around? " unstructured but segregated walls of getting back to you, running from life. Is that why we got so at- How many care about them other University tradition and is a finalist for , your five letters I tached"? than to condemn them outright? I figure you did leave Scranton and those Homecoming Queen. just read and hilly streets. The box}' brown apartment house. The NiUany Lions' fifth-place foot- Just maybe, though, a lot of the they're sitting next The one time I came 'to see you, you met me is at stake against a hi alums will have read about Penn State. to me on the bed, ball ranking gh downstairs, on the steps I couldn't come up All graduates must be aware of the de- an orange envelope, MOHAN . scoring West Virginia team. Thousands because your sister was getting dressed. "But mands of the black students and their blue, pink and two white. It makes me think, of alumni and students will jam Beaver "Fate-Saving Device" I'll show you the park," you said. Stadium to (1) watch the game and. (2) white sympathisers. And alums also and laugh to say your name because now it is I figure further that you're into drugs as get drunk. must be aware of the fact that the state nothing more than these letters. Hard to be- some kind of remedy, with a bunch o£ new kids SOME ALUMS will be back on is holding uo the University's ap- lieve you ever existed. propriation, thereby denying the ad- who can't help you either. I can see you, you're campus for the first time since they Grievance Polic y Some of the people in my dreams have had the one person I can see panhandling. graduated. They'll marvel at the new mission of many financially disad- more developed characters. You are just a vantaged students. Members of the University community wishing to I wonder where you find your protection buildings, become awed when thev see file formal grievances over news and editorial content place, then. Ocean City. But we shared now. Maybe in some little cult having to do the great new sundial in front of Old IT'S LUDICROUS most of the of the Collegian should address correspondence to the something, didn't we? I mean, all the time we with the cosmos or ghosts or vibrations. How's Main, reminisce about beer busts they time, to be critical and derisive just for Daily Collegian's Committee on Accuracy and Fair Play, spent together. the place where you live? Places can offer used to love and notice little change in the sake of mouthing off. But the in care of the executive secretary of Collegian Inc., you never gave me publisher of the Daily Collegian; We talked a lot. and protection. Can you watch a street from your the number of black faces here. realization that thousands of alumni any trouble. That might be it. I was content to Mrs. Donna S. Clemson window? physically touch you. It takes me time to Some alums also will probably will be arriving today and tomorrow for 20 Sackett Bldg. I'm running out of thoughts, and pleasant penetrate. I do it only when forced, and you return to their old fraternity or sororitv a football game and will leave without University Park, Pa. 16802 tiredness is coming on. I won't be seeing you, and be slightly amused at the longish the knowledge of anything but the NEVER gave me any trouble. but now you are complete, and we spent a per- hair on some of the students. game's score, is totally disheartening. So eleven months later I've decided to fill manent hour tonight finishing our union.

IHE 0NL-: REASON I'M HEi? 15 $HE TMREATENED TD ffiPOCT Vie TO iHE HEAP BEA&LE... Letter Polic y The mily Collegian wel- comes comments on news cove, age, editeriai policy and The student groups active in political and f or the rghl to eat and atta ining the human campus or non-campus af- social problems have critically analyzed most of dignity, which comes from self-determination. fairs. Le'ters must be type- Football, Vietnam, Life .. . the institutions of our society, but have con- Baginsky has chosen the imperialistic nations; written, spar TO THE EDITOR: "We gotta win : we gotta win; * .cd, signed let's go!" sistently ignored fraternities and sororities. It I have chosen, as (lie Cuban revolutonary song by no more than two persons ' evm must become apparent to organizations of both says, "...with the poor people of the world I cast and no longer than 30 It just isn t true, friends. We need not tU. ,; _£,,& _££., lines. play the game. If we choose to play the game, we the right and left that as long as these un- my lot." Which s'de are you on? Students' letters should in- academic and trivial institutions which mold , need only give it what we believe it deserves. That Diannc Weiss clude name term and major care of potential students into apathetic children are Gra d uate-Political Science ONCE W 6=7 NOW Ir fOf «= of the writer having been done, the score viill take . They should be itself. At New Beaver Stadium: in Vietnam etc. allowed to exist, it will be more difficult to REPORTcPTO A r?A33IT,UJRAT.4S b; ought to the C -llegian of- solve the problems THE HEAP WU 60ISS TO PO ? Setting our hearts on scoreboard victories and retain the higher values Don' t Cry Wolf to the Frosh fice, L9 Sackett, in person so ' usually results of our society. BEAcLE.iffliVE proper identification (Dean s list? Beat West Virginia?) TO THE EDITOR: The editorial "What Can- of the in distortion of our values — we are tempted to do Bichard G. Greco HAP !T! . writer can be made, although didates?" which appeared in the Oct. 9 issue of whatever is necessary to achieve our goal. If we 4th-Pre-Law The Daily Collegian is reminiscent in tone of the names will be withheld by give the game what we believe it deserves, -equest. If letters man who comes to a fire with a hose and yella: are re- however.... Choose Your Side "Why doesn't somebody do something?" Your ceived by mail. Collegian will not win on the scoreboard, TO THE EDITOR: Walt Baginsky in his letter contact the —we may or may editorial laments the fact that in three areas there signer for verifi- or in the national ratings — that depends on things Wednesday defending ROTC completely missed ' cation. The Collegian reserves weren t enough candidates to fill the designated the right to beyond our control , like the calibre of our op- the point. He said the importance of ROTC was number of seals on USG. The reason is clear to an fairlv se'ect, edit ponents, luck, and how well the officials enforce not that it insured "the continued strengthening of " ' an d condense all "ignorant freshman and that s the point! letters. the rules: America's defense posture in an unsafe world." The Collegian has the ability to reach more —we are certain to win a "moral victory ." but that its importance was in aiding "an in- students than any other medium available. If for Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887 Healthy-minded humans enjoy losing a well- dividual's mental growth and development ." no nther reason than to read Penny Weiehel's pre- played game more than winning a poorly-played Besides ROTC's doubtful ability to stimulate dictions, people pick up The Collegian. Why hasn't one. The former is a moral victory for us: the lat- intellectual discussion and questioning, the point is The Collegian published information on how one m$ ter is a moral victory for our opponents. (One that ROTC's primarily designed and structured to goes about running for office (i.e. — requirements mxln (Unitarian delightful attribute of the moral victory concept is further US foreign policy aims. It is beca u se of for nomination, election rules, acceptable means 64 Years of Editorial Freed om that both sides can win moral victories. If ive this function of ROTC that I oppose it , not because of publicity , etc.)? No one else has. at least not in Published Tuesday through Saturday during the Fall, Winter and Spring Term would seek a .mora l victory rather than a of its doubtful academic quality. anv manner which reaches the students m large ion Thursday tf.ri„a 1hB SummEr Term, by students of The Pennsylvania State University. Second class postage id at StatQ College, Pa. scoreboard win in Vietnam, for example, peace ROTC as a military agency is essentially numbers, and net at all to my knowledge. Circ ulation: 12,500. Ksfll. might be achieved through such a double moral quo in the ^~ ~ dedicated to preserving the status Freshmen are at a particular disadvantage. Mail Subscription Price : $12.00 a year Mailing AatSress — Box «»'• 5«if~~P«. victory.) world—a status quo which dooms millions of poo- How are we supposed to elect a class president in Editorial and Business Office — Basement of Sackett fft End) "8" Phone — 865-2531 The moral victory — is there any other? pie to remain in the dire poverty in which they any manner which doesn 't amount to a farce when Business office hours: Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.n i 4 p.m. Robert Boyer find themselves. The U.S. is dedicated to a no- no information is sent to us before we come here, ~ United Campus Minister world because it is Member of The Associated Press change policy in the third and hardly any after we do arrive? I asked a economically and politically advantageous for it to fellow student who was trying to get me to sign a JAMES R. DORRIS «d3E^ AUL S. BATES " " Greeks Called 'Childish' do so. This position does not allow the peoples m nominating petition how his candidate knew about Editor _ usin.ess_Manager TO THE EDITOR: Your article on PSU fra- the 3rd world to achieve political independence election procedure. "Ke found out during summer Editor. Glenn Kramley ; Editorial Board of Editors: Managing Editor, Allan =r; city EditiTr, David ternities opened an issue which has long needed and thus start the climb to economic incteoenr'ence testing" was the reply. Another told me: "I found Assistant City Editors. John Bronson and Marc Klein; Copy Editors, Sara Herter, Neslori GurosKr, Sandy Baionls; fmin discussion. It is appalling that students can still and development. We have only to look at the out from my brother." Etfitor, Marge Cohen; Sports Editor, Don McKee; Assistant Sports Editor, Dan D an; senior Reporters Rob McHugh and Denise Bowman; Weather Reporter, Billy Williams. , pat Dyjbjie, cling to this archaic and childish tradition Dominican Rep.. Cuba and Vietnam to see this Is this any way to a University : shrouding Sli nr taking place. Board of Managers : Local Ad Manager, Kathy M-Cormtck; Assistant Local Ad A Cr which reacts to a university as if it were a the a ffairs of student government in mysterv , si "'d'.- National Ad i Manager, Chris Dunlap; Credit Manager, Steve Leicht; Assistant Credit Manager, ?.til ' Filippi;J^ f Circulation country club. It is strange that these organiza- In this world situation one must choose which (un ntentionally or otherwise)? You 'd better Manager, Barry Barnett; Promotion Manager, Manager, Denny Marvich; Classified Ad Jer* rrts; sales Manager, Lynn tions are referred to aa Greek—the culture of side one Is on—the side of the Western nations believe it isn 't! So dear editor, don ' (eiiter. Kram- . t crv "wolf!" moderation, dedicated learning, and responsi- taking advantage of the underdeveloped world and (apathy), at least not to freshmen, until you've PAGE TWO FRIDAY. CTOBER I07l969 " bility—when such foolish institutions are the pursuing an imperialistic foreign policy or the side made an effort of your own. total denial of those values. of the majority of the people of the world fightns Jeff Davidson lst-.Journalism-Union. N.J. §£•" £k - B8™™BMBa i TAKE THE ifo~= ie^a; fiX* 1 CEILING OFF You h ower i iama ^iaina Bring Resulis B ro?£ y,<£ Pk ^ y

[ ¦^roudltt welcomes their

fall plcgc clali

ABBY CHARAPP MARCI SCHMELTZER LYNN EIZEN JANET SHERR A good cry LYNN HALPERN ANNE SILVERMAN CHERYL KAPLAN BARBA RA SNYDER SUSAN ROBERTS MARCIA STERLING cleanses the soul

B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION w- WEEKEND ACTIVITIES After all is shed and ings permits the dofve, your soul may be r growlh of bacteria on saved... but your conlacts I the lenses. This is a FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 10—8:00 P.M need help. They need Len- j sure cause o( eye ir- sine. Lensine is the one cor ritation and in some tact lens solution for com- SABBATH SERVICES cases can endanger plete contact care... preparin our vision. Bacteria can- SPEAKER: DR. STEVEN GOLDMAN (Phil.) cleansing, and soaking. t grow in Lensine be- There was a time when you cause it s Topic: "Jewish " is a compatible, "isotonic solu- sterile, self-sanitiz- Origins of Modern Science needed two or more different lens ing, and antiseptic. tion, very much like your eye's nat- Whitehall Plaza solutions to properly prepare and Lensine ... the sou/ution for ONEG SHABBAT FOLLOWS SERVICES maintain your contacts. No more. ural fluids. complete contact lens care. Made Lensine, from The Murine Com- Cleaning your contacts with by the Murine Company, Inc. pany, ma kes caring for contact Lensine retards the build-up of Apartments SATURDAY MORNING , OCTOBER 11—10 30 A.M lenses as convenient as wearing foreign deposits on the lenses. them. And soaking your contacts in Len- il Just a drop or two of Lensine sine between wearing periods as- SABBATH SERVICES coats and lubricates your lens. sures you of proper lens hygiene. This allows the lens to float more You get a free soaking-storage Students-Non-Students freely in the eye, reducing tearful case with individual lens compart- Occupancy for 2, 3, 4 irritation. Why? Because Lensine ments on the bottom of every bot- • SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 1 1—7:15 P.M tle of Lensine. It has been demonstrated the improper storage between wear- Conveniences HAYRIDE - BARBEQUE • FREE PROFESSIONAL BUS MEET AT HILLEL SERVICE MEMBERS $3.50 Per Couple • WALK-IN CLOSETS NON-MEMBERS $4.50 Per Couple not your 0 RESIDENT MANAGER SUNDAY MORNING , OCTOBER 12—1 1 30 A.M • AMPLE PARKING • TENNIS COURTS LOX & BAGEL BRUNCH contacts Inspection Invited MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 13—5:45 P.M SUPPER FORUM 237-1761 MEMBERS 75c — NON-MEMBERS $1.00 424 Waupelani Drive DISCUSSION LEADER: MR. SAMUEL GABER Just Behind the University Shopping Center Anti-Defamation League, Phila. Office Hours: 10 a.m. -5 p.- —6:30 p.m.-8 p.m §Hiiiiim 'iiiiiniimiiii associated preSS iiiiiiiiiiiii mmhiiiiiiii u^ Placement Office Survey Shows MewScope Czechs Restrict Private Travel to West PRAUl'E — Czechoslovakia barred its citizens from ' nf ihp &RH per month in agriculture private I ravel a, the West jesterdav in the most drastic lhin gs slowly seem to be the women lespnndmg had V. nir^n £i rj ri'Mtrs Col and libera- arls to a bi^h ol tightening of frontier control since the 'l968 Soviet invasion. lookin g up for the woman who secured e.m plnymcnt ( 2;i per lc_ o of ] rlncaKoii writ - c\(-Uirl 1 a\-p S812 lo S8o5 in oncinprnnst and the cmoif went into effect at midnight Wednesday and may not believe her place cent) compared lo onlv P4 of rn t'nm Uk •*!.! \^\ The"- ) -ciMiaic question cdilh and mineral sciences. cau ght hundreds of travelers at airports and frontier crossings necessarih is in the home. 46:; replies (IS per cent from pnlltvl in salarips ousting ol Stalinist Antonin A53fi and S5Rn i n Novotny as president in 1968 and Class o l 19IM . showed a 5 pel Financials . female (> '. \ -\ o 47 cailh and Airline and .'- travel officials were informed oarlv vesterdav June. aceomp,uned by a com- eo from S.">13 per month to l r«i- ( ",3 >$ per com ) lri*t •-oimt p and S7.>3 in rnsinepr- that a 1 exit i<> . permits in private passports have been declared mensrrate ineron--e in starting S">t9 . in human de\ clopmonl \ cm. ins invalid , effective immediately. salaries, out the Class of 19(18 liom S-172 to Sal 2: and in number of both main A si gn at police headquarters proclaimed ' Whil. Ihr- rotut n« nb'. nni-!\ Th" that the TVi n ,ni™v ,.,..„! „,! V,. , .,„ SCiCllCO . -SjliS tO MOO. ' hvx[ trvua e.- piii eun^ s;trtdiiate pa ssoort and exit permit ollicc cloved The survey, conducted hv the' the result 1 ' was for the day. wore 'iK-n'npklo . -( li nol upon t-ntnplrtion nf then' At Prague ai-por l. all Czechoslovak passengers University Placement Service, There w ere insuf lkir'it te n-! \f < -ubM,intuite wli,ii we were b.u'palaiirpaJ'-1 Miidie- dorhnod scratched liom all fli ghts tn the Wesl. was based on re-pon^os Irom ie pli"s from wo-pon graH.i.ile ., !; i ff/)"n';i2 n,j 'iMn.()!' . . except for those in i !)')' - finoi 29 nnd 1!> pot ( ent in IDfiS possession nf official passports lor offici al business. 52:1 1-1 9 nor (full of 1 .1174 ili pi-nte-Mon-- M.eh a- art - and V.\< i mpI llo- - ,i--i~i .m t in Ihr ari in _T sivl 1.1 per pent in infill • • fem ale gi annate- wuh degrees ai'chl'eetiiip. b u - l u e s - int erior nf the P)."H-enion ' Scr- * oniunoei lug lo nther than :n education inini- t ral inn and \ u V . s .M .i H m\e\ op, males entonns U.S. Casualties in Vietnam Decline The icults found that 120 ol make adequate compa; is,m - n-h as the Pea r SAIGON — ^i i'9irrr= 'P American battlefield deaths in Vietnam last "Tli.t * :^ . Ihoic ai*f riefini irh C' oi pq hm\ VISTA imnped from Week dropped to 64. the lowest toll in nearly three vears . and nioi i. i .ihti- (i r ' v i- - »i[.t > ii it 2 per i pnl in I HftS to t\ per cent of ficial sources said yesterday if the downward trend con- witni -in l(Kiri\ th.-»n '"".pi brl nti' m lilii't F-Vnialo5 in lhat tinues President Nixon might be promoted to speed up troop r-iii 'i -if i-. liPLiuituni; In ri\\!i;r oaiP _ ni>, poibdps in relation withdrawals. l ; i' . > \\r \ hpt 'diirn u; tiini p ,h l;- ; the jitn'ni .mp not eoekinq At the same time, it was disclosed that U. S. and South Homecoming Plans !(¦ ¦ * _. - f mi pui'i'Jinc lir; op e- upVA mrnt 1 ell irnm 12 poi Vietnamese forces have " pulled out of the once forbidding A mil 1 Ulll It - Mli i . ' - .i ' t - 'ili (hi 1: Shan Valley, seized i. ' -ni l a-t ua; to II per r ent last spring after a controversial battle for Mip ^'iinm 'ncttPi inn^ " Hamburger Hill, - \ ea; Lack of enemy activity was given as the , reason. To Peak Tonight Wh,,j ih o N l ll vr\ rilfi lint ,-i! f)nb \?> per cent of the malp U. S. officals declined tn speculate on whether the battle I'-n ni! to unt .j\rr w.i^ u lici htM' 21 annate • n 10li0 u pi p st ill Arlo' s Restaurant ? 1 ' lull foreshadowed a poli lical break-through toward ending the -lip^ p, ,i u 'Miifti i cHiit .il ion \\ .i - --Peking eriiplovnicnt a^ of .Tune ARLO GUTHRIE, star of song and movie, "Alice 's Resiau- Hn>npconitn~ lflrtn rrm. i ts prpspnlaimn nf aw-auK to -i'"- ; War. Some .military officers pointed to the weather. Heavy wak tnniahl with Ihr pn- Kialpd rii!-p<-! \ tn 1 ho jnh -.iu' i onipa i on to 37 per trnt of the rant." appears at 8 p.m. Sunday night in Roc Hall, spon- tieipat'nq groups in the week's monsoon rams are hampering allied and enemy operations. 'nnunc-cmrnf o f tllo now lock .ilt pi Ki' .'irii uitinn w omen . . , _,,,_. , fe.-timips Military sources cautioned, too. that they still expect the sored by the Folklore Society. Horrccnnuna Quccu ai.tl the IU" - i-' .I 'lf MinMli; In p\|ilni p *l h r. vniild mdit ate lhat North Vietnamese and Viet Cong to launch a winter-spring of- A motorcade, thi nu_,h t >w n l ilt '- .. -|M'i I in fJp tai! in n while mm o cti *j-> ~-itut iiiic- mav fensive about the beginning of November, as revealed in cap- tc li and cam pus w ill pi ecedp the si^\ii,i mic-iinnnHi ip c bo the 11 with salaries; cothns tured documents. MMIiOi l h> ion r ri n d (i m 1 \ hmhci thn (p'r 'e slil! ha^ ta pep rallr to ho hold m Iront of * + • Aimed at Educational Awareness - . -Wf Wn tt -nwlr iS r d ri u n;p- look luitrnT than her ma If Senate Committee Okays Haynsworth Bid* Rec Hall. The lont ball loam, irni.i tlip C1.I --S ot.il 'm. Lonnln ivtM to find them r One itnal note o| mtoro-t WASHINGTON — The Senate .Judiciary Committee im- rheci'leadoi s, mpin hci > ol the I lie hi -t nicnntii hUiM^ p rpMilt - peiluep-: to FnntTsvh-aTvn proved the Supreme Court nomination of Clement F. Hl ue Band and ' ns -iier Pe nn i n h u in un'ildId tPiici to bo.i i will k!" pis st'; 50 Haynsworth .Jr. yesterday, opening the way for a spirited Stale Rip En^lc be tli.iti.i t women ;iro om plfp .-iii d ei onomi' Cbooged n.il llic lli.'urv inns,? Form pni of i-p^pondin^ Colloquy per i struggle on the fioor. fea tnren. ( to In ant h out in mnrr !it\ ' ' tlip\ lob-; The vote was 10 to 6 to climax a two-hour closed debate -nn pus also have oeen -i-ked to supply two ( t nis • e.'tr --aiH f ound By LINDA OLSHESKY c. The ii omcconiiri^ i,.iii 'ii\ in llH'i r I'ln-i s Ul.'iil'in men Over Haynsworth's business dealings. iacuitv mo„Tibcrs lor the D'-oura m in the Commonw eahh a* \va« H ee Hail lentuim^ B.npKiot. in St \cn n i ihche tn'-I 1 8 ^p in HiiR \p\. York wa; Maryland Republican Charles Mathias withheld his vote Collegian Staff Writer Terry Jablonski , Colloquy chairman. Sari at the i a I Athens , will bec^in 8 IK) p m. iip .i- |on ^ri 'fl tilf a dist.uH -o,-ond in at 11 noting Don Shall , director nt Colloquy. Irf sl night During the the Uim-m nw.ud-> v nil :!ioiion .i-MOPiniP s wi th mediately available. be "dialogue toenser^ . basically talking alio,it , . in !'h" Penn S;aP u- adi^ito- promised a radicallv dilfetent Fall Colloquy Inr Honipcominii .nitMtip^ wil! p.oni *- mi they Mathias. who declined tn disclose what information he ' \> hat education sh ould be and what we can do pi'l '-Mil- v hi!' -n. Ohm and Now .' cimm even mat uon' t look or sound rrnith like last jear s. ') fi ( ) o to o n Sought, .said he will have his vote recorded later. to make i ! lust lhat. " be presented The 1 \utp n •' Knurii if ^ more riisumi tha'ds meeu'ns in the pv h ad not im Before the commit tee took its vote on the nomination, it Speaking before an open The people involved ui CoM oquv will be Hompcomms Queen ?Kn "ill ivpoilt 'fi tlki l !hnv lu.ton Binldina. Shall position l reiecl ed, 14 to 3, a motion by Mathias to postpone action mam lounge of Ihe Hetzel housed eitner In iCMiienco halls or li aterniti^ j . he oiticiall .N l.Mi'odu ced to ilv n mrmriini wucto!\U »riccipptpi opted a po=ilion explainer! that Fall Colloquy. "The Human crowd. She will hp forma I !v In again. "We re d oing this so thai all member of the "it not *¦!!¦ p'-Ain^ find ; IN THE OCTOBER Dimension of Education." will be " a uni que crowned l omni r.ow aflei nooi: := The commit tee postponed its vote twice before, last week pc,nol can become acquainted with Penn sun e woni rn in 10I1-- no t o.iroptK ptogiam in that it will be entirely structure,! during West Viri Penn and a gain Wednesday after Sen. Robeit P. Griffin, the students and their wa> ot hie." Sh all said ;ini-i t olrile -i In tiiPir pH ii .ninn " by the participants." State half lime ppi'pmiop.ics b\ Republican whip from Michigan , publicly joined the opposition The campus will aUo be docUred "open " Ho^s c \ p I a i n f n. "b"can'-p Gov, Rn\mond P Khafer and to Haynsworth. A concrete progra m \ul! not be decided on *he lir.^t day ol the piogr.mi Sbail explained w omen ummII' .h'p rlc.iu n lo another and S tu Slein Cjiicen committep .Judiciary Chairman .lames O. Eastland fD-Miss .) said it until panelt.sis meet uith one that "every faculty, administiati nn and student . rdccn tinn.'W Ji rlfN .ifh a- - \ff_sliiaea__s_3__3_ay would be a t least a week before minority and majoriiv reports members ol the University community the day meeting will he open to anvone who is ,n ch airman. libeml rf i ts \\\\\fh h,nc no » The Fight For the President » , a formality necessary before tloor debate before the program begin*-" . teiesled enough " couiri be prepared to come liomepommu ac!u n ie- pnn v poriti'- • ncv-ilmnnl mtphcat ion, Mind — And the Men Who Can start, Spring Colloquy, the "American Dream CoHoauy was ie\amped thN ( ear accoi dmg , tmue wi th the opening nf the (n thr.'ii "' ! Won It by Townsend Hoopes -*• —Conflict '69." featured M u h a m a d Ah . lo Shall because "' ' ie spring piogram was ta- ' • • - TiBih Annua! Hort u ul'iiro Show thn lflfin ' Ralph Nader and Al Capp as Key speakers. an alternate classroom for t!ie siuaen t-- . The\ A- for ihn nuil^" . • The Oakland Seven by Elinor Laird Asserts 'Vietnamization ' Policy in the K e Pavilion ," ¦ Over a period of two ria;s. ID panel disc us.-ons just got iniorrnation dosed oat in a different On dt>pla> Mir\ o.\ showed thf i l v\ itli il poi Langer WASHINGTON — Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laud to'norrow and S'indav w ill hp were held in residence halls , dealin g with such wa ,\. There wasn ' t enough interaction We hope ronl of Ihe qtrtdtiHt os t o^ponn • The Young and the Old: ihe \ annus uses nt plant pro ) Said vesterday the U. S milnarv command in Saigon has problems as air pollution , the draft and the to provide .something totally unique Ihls year " mi; i ! Ut;P of o.'JfiT . :17 pt> r rent Notes on a Nev/ History by received new orders covering battlefield operations and plac- ducts for the hol'dav -nn population explosion. The Colloquy cha i men fo- toe tall orogr im ^ea. ( KIT ) hdd ac( opiofl jobs 'Hik Robert Jay Litton ing highest priority on Victnamizatnn of the war. Scheduled for Nov. 6 to 9 Shall said that are Terry Jablonskj. gencal chairman; i5on was eqii.il lo ihp 08 pet t onl , Laird said policy is against public release of specific bat- Casino and Xii -koiod ean ... and Dan Wakefield on this year's Colloquy is dciqned to " make the Shall , directoi , Elaine Carroll , executive i iv poi t o| ;i \0< \r h^o. The Great Haircut War tl efield instructions but he generally described the American nigh ts \ ill be held tniiim i ow student more vibran tly a«are of his education >ecre lary : \orm flai-hiin . puohc relations , Joe evenin g in the Hnt/cl Union Male p.'ilfifics Hi sr> pinipi 'd tactical a pproach now as one of " protective reaction." ' of We want to make the students fi ust, at ion Loftus . fundin g chaun.an Biiildm. iri n.in^ iimii. fi low S.-)7'2 tn The defense chief told a news conference the U. S. Com- p bout this University more overt and then chan Ha rv Cinsbiug. scheduling rliairman and presidential injunction to maintain mand no longer is under ncl i t into productive action ." housin g coordinator: Tom Griffith , Colloquv iotaiotaiotaiotaiotaiotaiotaiotaiotaiot; pressure on the enemy, a phrase often used by maximum Fit ly innovators in the field of educa;"m Ontra! chairman . Da vid Rarsk.v . fr aternit ,.' President London B .Johnson have been invited to paiticipalc in Colloquj . housing coordinator, and Rhea Schwam. I nun - Laird was asked u hc'hcr he a grees that the new orders She'! snki. Each of the 141 departments on d ations ic^eaicn. o S which went to Gen. Crcighton W. Abrams m August amount to < THE SISTERS > a declaration that the real war is over, " I gllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l S h ;= "1 would not a gree with that statement." he said. But Laird asscrled the Nixon Administration is Inking the LAMBPA CHI ALPHA '1 Our Big Sphiel I OF "best approach to peace" by modernizing South Vietnamese forces to assume more of the fighting while allied negotiators Congratulates Crescent | | PART I! | O Seek a settlement in Paris. • * + = Zionism & Dual < IOTA ALPHA PI > Nixon Awards Medal of Honor to G.l.' s SUE JOHNSON 1 WASHINGTON — A warding the Medal of Honor to four I Allegiance 1 2 3 Vietnam heroes. President Nixon said yesterday he is " confi- < Warmly Welcome > dent that the challenges of peace will uncover great heroism in America's younger people." Sat. 7:20 122 8 Nixon said that on an occasion like the one at which he Ribonee of < Their New Pledges > honored four Army men, " we dedicate ourselves anew to 91.1 FM/WDFM lg o bringing the peace which we all want, so that men like this. ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA H AT YOUR NEWSSTAND NOW tvho have this element of greatness within them, may become heroes meeting the challenges of peace . . ." i mi llllilliMllllilllllllllilllillllllli?. flOIVlOIYXOIYIOIVIOIVIOIViOI ViOIYXOIVlOI ' It was Nixon 's first public appearance at a Medal of Honor ceremony in four months. I t was held on the south lawn of the White Hou se, and it preceded by just six days sched- uled nationwide demonstration a gainst the Vietnam war. Nixon made no reference to the planned protest?, nor did he speak in defense of his own embattled Vielnam policies. Rather he talked , with unusual brevity, about the nature of heroism. PENN STATE IS CHRISTIANITY CREDIBLE JAZZ CLUB as viewed b y a p rofessor in the PRESENTS physics depf. af PSU

INTER-VA tf SITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Monday 7 P.M. Eisenhower Lounge

LUTHERAN STUDENT PARISH

WORSHIP You don't have to play Hamlet to be in show business. Or write hot copy to EISENHOWER CHAPEL—10:15 be in the ad business. Or design moon TONY WILLIAMS rockets to be in aerospace. VESPERS—4:00 The CPA has become a key man in virtually every type of enterprise. CRACE LUTHER AN CHURCH— LIFETIME Why? Because financial and busi- 11:45 Until 12:30 ness affairs require keen minds to come up with new concepts in fact- ALUMNI AND FACULTY gathering, problem-solving and com- ARE WELCOME municating economic information. So if problems intrigue you, and if you have an aptitude for imagina- tive, concentrated thinking,you might make a good CPA. STUDENTS You might work in a public ac- counting firm , in industry, education Don 't forget to order or government. Or you may even de- yo ur PENN STATE cide to open a firm of your own. Wh at other profession offers so m$m, SAT. OCT. 25 many diverse opportunities? M um Corsages Talk with your faculty adviser. He can tell you about the courses you 8 P.M. can take to earn your CPA certificate $ ea soon after graduation. Or you might 1 50 SCHWAB AUD. want to do graduate work. We've prepare d a special booklet that tells the whole CPA story. We'll be glad to send it to you. Drop a' car d or note (ment ioning the name of your college) to: Dept. 15, AICPA , 666 Fifth DAVIDSON 'S Avenue , New York , N.Y. 10019. 130 E. College Ave. FOR BEST RESULTS USE Phone 237-4994 Amer ican Institute ol Certified Public Accountant - FLORIST and GIFT SHOP CLASSIF IED ADS 'Year of Black Supports situation Summer Film Sta . b e r OSGA w ith the , Campus representatives have ""'?, By CINDY DAVIS of Commonwealth , J* arm reported. in temporary the various living areas transferees living overwhelming According lo Batchelor. Ad- Collegian Staff Writer housing this fall. They also ' discovered an students n tern- ministration officials are con- The Organization of Student plan to ask why these students majority of s. Was PSU Student are 1 sidering Riving the same hon. housing I'™' Cover nment Associations, receive onlv $15 rebate in their porary ': ' ing priority to Commonwealth in students from t n e v.om- Bruce Davison, (he voting actor who has won one of the sfar- r epresenting Commonwealth housing bills if thev remain Campus transfers as is given the monweallh Campuses, rms mips in Frank Perry' s "l.a«t Summer." was bitten by the Campuses , resolved last night temporary housing after lo other students already in its executive meeting to sup- fifth week of the term. „ „.. ., acting bug when he ua = a -indent at the University. cited as an «»m— enrolled at University Park . port the Graduate Student "Let's not kid ourselves." Batchelor Davison ^h id ho never had had any interest in the tneatre of seven sU dents, in Director of Student Affairs Association's "The Year of the one OSGA representative said, pie six out unMl somp Has- maio* bet him lie wouldn' t have the nrrw to in hast Halls weie for Commonwealth Campuses Black Student." "Thev are making money otf one room Iry nut for a part 'n 'Come Back Little Sheba ' which the •• from Commonwealth Cam Merle E. Campbell , who was They pledged to assist GSA us disgusted last night ' I' nivetsilv Theatre was preparing for presentation. He ' Several OSGA officers and puses. "They are present at s meeting, auditioned but didn' t set the role. "in any way...to make their stated he expects a solution This -.mall t blems of the Commonwealth Too often student dents' expectations are in •itimmor , having had nnly one outstanding insititulion of student professional inle a* Summer Story Campus students and other themselves with problems of the transferring and orientation: Troilus m "Tiger at the Gates " lor committee, legislation New York's Repertory student groups and organizations, that is comittees alter and THE FOUR YOUNG STARS in Frank Perry's "Last nothing, leaving the organization ' Theal ir at Lincoln Center organizations "victimized by and more oarliamentary —how this year s transfers Summer," the story of restless youngsters during a sum- ' dealing with all-university He had pounded the pavements from agency lo agenc.v lor our present educational "tide up" and incapable of evaluate transfer and orien- long, <=n that he gr?tef.illy wmkeri m a BO *t»cnnd television mer v acation, lake a break during filming. (Left lo Right system" by working with other issues. tation procedures commercial Then, Student Government Associations out of more than a thousand hopefuls , he Bruce Davison, a Penn State graduate. Catherine Burns, organizations which have The Organization of was splrcteri co star under the direction \ the concept of student govern- 'n ot Frank Peri , . specific goals in common. must begin to rc-evaltiate who also had ptoduced "David and Lisa." Richard Thomas and Barbara Hcrshey. ment. O.S.G.A. must avoid becoming "hung" on unccessary Batchelor stated that in the the perpetuante of the "old past student governments have proceedings that work toward " " ol student government, but address been overly concerned with the idea or "old concept itself to problems of the university, specifically any issue @£ bureaucratic system and with students as well as any .student 7r Handling Homecoming Traffic perpetuating themselves. that affects commonwealth >T^ victimized by our present "Student government has group or organization that is been too 'pro' student govern- educational system. Thus in our attempt to "throw away" tradition, we as a ment , and not enough 'pro' the g>-oup of student leaders must work with other students." he said. ^Afe organizations whose aims are common to our own. The problems ol the new stu- dedicated its en- Copter To Scout Cars at Game dent transfers from Com- The Graduate Student Association ha? tire program toward the problems of black students by an- monwealth Campuses were , whip munities within a 45 mile A -s ell-out crowd of some the stale police Rockview sub- on hand to «ee the Lion' also discussed. nouncing the Year of the Black Student. radius of University Park will assist G.S A. 50.000 fan? are expected lo station and a member of the Colorado. 27-3. Plans were made to ap- O.S.G.A. recognizes the problem and Leonard pitching in from below, the in any way that we can to make their year p successful one convrrqe on Beaver Stadium to University Football Traffic With Sgt. proach the Director of Food Wa^hkeuicz of the Rockview results .speak for themselves. witness the unbeaten Nitranv Committee, requested a state and Housing. Otto E. Mueller, for the black student. maintaining contact For the Colorado game, traf- Lions take on the unbeaten police hehcopier to be sub-station concerning the great numbers Mountaineers nf We.sf Virginia dispatched to University Park with ground control, the chop- fic routes to the stadium were University in Penn State s from Han isburg for traffic per -;pent 70 minutes in the air cleared by at least 10 min- ites homecoming attraction. control purpose* . before the kiek-olf and 75 before the 1:30 p.m. kick otf Crowds like that have been It will be the chopper' s "e- minutes filter the final whistle. Afterwards the parkins known to cause traffic jams cond axignment of the year And with unit* of the state areas at the stadium were along the way. for a Lion football same. police. University Camp u s emptied in 56 minutes. That's why Lt. William Kim- The hrst came Sept 28 when Patrol. State College Police There are seme problems ENGINEERING Dl 75118 rnel, commanding officer of a record crowd of 51.342 were and the police from 82 com- manual traffic control simply can' t handle. Congestion is KAREN BETH sins'., inevitable, goin^ south along Route 322 at Boalsburg where live* , wri tes ol today the roadway narrows down CHALLENGE wi th deep conviction. from four lanes to two. is But the chopper can spot All she a^ks ior you long lines of traffic caused by to s/iarc her /'oy.s .. an accident or a breakdown. THE IOYS OF UK. As quick as the word can be •t relayed irom th^ air. the «tate Gilbert Associates, engineers and ^W^S^'^SSSsc^SlS B^bs police can dispatch a car to the s**** site to direct traffic consultants with world-wide scope I around the , r 3T""~J Inirediblr New tie-up. even re-route it if _ necessary. has challeng ing engineering and W_\ 1 Evnlement on Dec rj Records If anything, the traffic con- design opportunities for raft _ trol system will be even more ME. EE, I_2L— 1 flnd Tapes severely tested for the West CE and IE graduates for electric DGCCO Virginia game. A sizeable portion of the Col- generating plan ts, transmission orado crowd was made up nf bandsmen bussed from 60- lines, industrial plants and sani- JAZZ CLUB Pennsylvania high schools to • * participate in Penn State 's an- tary facility projects. nual Band Day. cc <_ The West Virginia crowd will be coming => > mainly in cars and Three Mite Island Station—840 MW Nuclea r Unit it takes a lot of cars lo Metropolitan Edison Co, ri N transport SO.OftO people to one place

"Sup port the ON CAMPUS - OCTOBER 28. 1969 m A ; Artists Series " Make an ahhc ment now with your Placement Office ^ gSBfiteTEE_* - -: ^^Slf SS5§SJS^P ^'^^^^Z^^^^sr^i^^.^S icQ S^^^^ GILBERT ASSOCIATES Z> IT'S WINDOW PAINTING TIME again in Stale rfiXrnK _i 1 1 The Latest From College as Greeks and other creative persons lake to \L°JLrJU / Engineers and Consultants u B—1 downtown storefront glass to dab on their Home- \ZmH^mJ READING, PA., Philadel phia , Buenos Aires, Rome, Ibadan the Window Painters coming efforts. Ak iit.nl Opp i rlitrin} Employrr m ¦ ¦

W-QWK INTERNATIONAL fm ninPty-seven ' TEA THE . For All Internationels PROGRESSIVE ONE ! (Students. Faculty. Visitors) and all who are interested UT r Oil BOB is a waste of TIME The longest word 1b H 1 9 ll^i* in the language? •«• "By letter count, the longest word may be pneumonoultra - microscnpicsilicovolcanoconioxiv, 't a rare lung disease. You won "M ystique" by find it in Webster 's New World Dictionary . College Edition. But & nge¦ blossom you will find more awful infor- mation about words than in any if the look of this setting makes you J p (CHICAGO N other desk dictionary. feel a little starry-eyed, that 's what tC Take the word time. In addi- \J KJ tion to its derivation and _ an was designed to do. Si.- individual TRANSIT ' illustration showing U.S. time diamonds create a ftre-and-ice aura zones, you'll find 48 clear def- around a solitaire. But a star-like effect H AUTH ORIT Y) initions of the different mean- isn ' t all that you find in this ring. P and 27 idiomatic ings of time There 's a little orange dot inside the uses, such as time nf one's life. in sum. everything you want to band, that makes it very down-to-earth. know about time. It symbolizes a guarantee that will This dictionary is approved replace the ring during the first year of and used by more than 1000 purchase, /fit 's lost, stolen or damaged. . . . unless you find a ; t turns you on and We need action-seeking graduates with degrees colleges and universities. Isn 't makes good use Now for the first time, a diamond ot vol ation. Inland Steel in most fields for management opportunities in /s r eall y forever . M wants only people whi to use everything sales . . . production S6.50 foe 1760 pages; §7.50 ystiquet by . . . research . . . engineering 3 > Orange Blossom: they've learned in col nd strongly desire Ti N thumb-indexed . . . finance . . . administration ... or you name it u N to grow personally and Think it over. If you have high aspirations At Your Bookstore Inland's future depei ds on the creativity and and a good record, take time to find out about a N n productivity of its peo] Ie. If you want a really career with us. challenging opportunit; to contribute—with the Nov. From the Diamond Room at rewards and responsibi ities that go with it— < 23 E JSkJF Inland wants to talk to you. moyer jewelers af 216 EAST COLLEGE AVENUE INLAND STEEL COMPANY

Jose ph T. Ryerson Son, Inc. Inland 3 Open Evenings by Appointment & Steel Products Company Inland Steel Contai ner Company m&M Financing Available An equal opportunity employer ""> 03 !• JAZZ CLUB * Collegian Notes Alum Blue Bandsmen To Appear P Homecoming 'Ml uif] t Hke on government. It is. for example, Uarshan Family participation Is en- " 2 added meanins for many old the accounting ovoaram at the activities secretary. and Color in Oriental AH. concerned with the educational a nd R. P. couraged and parents ask- Blue Bandsmen who w ill rioji University. L. .lai n, treasurer, are -< possibilities of satellite com- ed to give consideration to both libra ry white shirts and dark Kanwal, faculty adviser. Ann Alexander, trousers munications.- with relationships the hiking ability and take lo the field "Markings and Man", a pro- Committee members include and attention career consultant for Western during Ihe among universities, span of any young halftime festivities at particu- ject of the Office of Religious children. All Pennsylvania, will discuss 0 Ihe Penn larly wilh regard lo children should b e ac- librarianship as a career at State-West Virginia the shar Affairs and the Department of <_ name to ing of programs and computer Theatre Arts will explore new For the convenience nf companied by an adult . 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. morrow . , facilities, and with programs means of expressing questions returning alumni and others Participants are asked not to Wednesdav in the Seminar > > No less than 143 graduates. of the U.R 01 fice of Education, of meaning* and value. Various who will be on campus this bring pets into the area , and to Room , W338. on the third floor dating back as lar as the Class the Department of Health. creative workshop groups will weekend for Homecoming ac- note that there will be no cost of the West Wing of Pattee. of 1923. will appear for the Education and Welfare and be formed to do play reading tivities, the Penn State Room, for the walk but that the Miss Alexander also will be seventh annual performance ol legislation relating to for discussion and production on the fourth floor of Pattee, regular parking fee will be available for individual con the Alumni Blue Band. Thev education. on campus. Most of the groups which houses collections of charged. sulfation from 10:30 lo 12 a.m. -< historical materials about the will be joined by the 1%'fl edi- will work in the residence Directions to Stone Valley and 3 to 5 p.m. in the Ad- * * * University, will he open from tion of the marching Blue Rand. The Department of Account- halls. from the University may be ministrative Offices Con <_ ing in the College 9 to 11:30 tomorrow. ference Room. 102E Pattee. An Thirteen different, stales , of Business Information about t h e obtained in the Dean' s Office. from Illinois to New Administration has received a workshops can be obtained College of Health Physical appointment is not necessary > Jersev . SI .500 . Florida lo New grant from the l-'.rnst through Margaret Perdue, a Education and Recreation. 276 but can be arranged through Hampshire] and S. Krishnaswamy. K. A . will be Ernst Foundation, an in- graduate assistant in theatre Rec Hall. Elizabeth J. Bradt. personnel / represented among the MurtlTy. Pramod T h a k 11 r , ternational accounting firm. X librarian. 2 arts, or by contacting the Of- * * alumni band. Ashok Gupta, and Anil Kumar. One award for $ 5 0 (I fice of Religious Affairs. Barefoot in Athens -< The oldest nf the old timers The Penn Stale Baha 'i Club -< represents a general account- A Brass Chorale of 15 will he Daniel F. Pomerov of There will be a "Fall Color will present Allah Kuli Kalan- instruments will play a pin ins grant to the department . The Friends ol India Troy, a tromboiiisi with the Walk" at 2 p.m. Sunday at the tar at 8 I-might m 21.1 HUR. gra m of both traditional and The additional SI ,000 is to be Association announced their ' Blue Rand of 4fi years ago. Stone Valley Recreation Area. Kalantar s topic will be contemporary music before the used lor student achievement newly elected president Wesley R. Burns . Class of . Prem The walk , which will be two "Religio n, the Foundation of University Chapel Service Sun- > '4;'. and scholarship awards within K Dwivedi. Civilization". . from Camp Hill will he the the department. and one-half miles in length, day in front of the Music drum ma.in r. Other olficers are C. P. and take approximately two He will also address art stu- Building, or in the lobby in The grant represented the Lang, vice president. Mahesh and one-half hours , will' start dents at 4 p.m. in 230 Arts case of rain. The program will * * * filth consecutive year Ernst Rex E. Dorr filth recreation C. Bhardivsi. general at. the Mineral Industries Building when he will speak begin at 10:20 a m.. chapel and Ernst has contributed to secretary ; Virandra K. Bhalia Camp Parking Lot. -< and parks Baltimore. Md.) has . on "The Svmbolism. of Design service is at It a.m. been eleeled president ol the National Student Recreation <_ and Park Society of the > > National Recreation and Park FRIDAY OCT. 10 Association Low Water Supply To Pose Problem; Derr was named to a one- year term as society president at the recently-concluded an -< nual Congress in Chicago of Residents Seek Water Pollution the National Recreation Study and 1— Park Association. ' a 25.000- Dwindling; water supplies will pose a major pro- surv eyed Pennsylvania' s county commissioners , park ttled as by far the biggest single problem, wnile member nonprofit organization blem lor Ihe Slate within (he next 10 years, according superintendents, park and recreation directors and > working to impiove and ex- Delaware leaders ranked industrial waste highest h-ii to reliable sources. district conservationists with the Soil Conservation pand park and recreation pro- were also worried about municipal waste and water- They include 238 local grams and conserve natural experts on water resource Service. supplies," Leadley said. resources. problems- surveyed by a Univcrsitv professor in order Membe r s of the League of Women Voters ' Com- When Questioned as lo what they considered thftr -< As society president . Derr tn acquaint federal and state ollic.al _ with their mittee on Wate r were contacted , as wore cooperatr*e hi sacs t problem to be in in yea is, respondents from and his student executive board view* . extension service agents and Office of Economic Op the Delaware and Susquehanna basins moved water of regional representatives will "With the many demands being made on the portunitv personnel. supply to the number one spot. In the Allegheny, of- emphasize the establishment ol research dollar, deciding what investigative pro- Pollution, whether in the form of municipal and ficials c student chapters on all college , Irom more den et y populated regions, felt it grams lo support has become increasingly difficult, ' and university campuses offer- domestic waste disposal, industrial wastes or acid would be .municipal waste, said Samuel M. Leadley. ing a park , recreation and con- assistant professor of rural mine drainage, was pinpointed by the respondents a.* Leadley also asked his group of rxnert* tn namt1 servation curriculum. sociology. "Government decision makers may not today's biggest headache . In the future, they pre- obstacles hindering progress in finding solutions for + + know what people in the field really want dicted it would be water supply. the problems named. There will he a Nickelodeon "A recent study completed in thr< Susquehanna For purposes of analvsis . Leadley divided the "Only the southeast region cited am obstacle Nil e at 1 30 tomglit in the Het River Basin. )or example, found federal officials un- Commonwealth into three nver basins : the 7.e| Union Building Assembly atvwe that of lack of financial support ," he sa'd. Hal 1 der the impiession that local personnel were most Allegheny. Susquehanna and Del a warp "Delaware called multiple political jurisdiction- concerned with problems of water supply. But . when "We found a div ergence ol v icvv s anions more vexing. " The Ba ha 'i Club will meet a! residents were actually asked, they preferred that it regions ," he continues. "The Allegheny Basin with \ '~ Overall. Leadley *Rid . official* v.ere not op 8 tonight m 215 and 21(i HUB. tent ion be given to solving the problem* of water many mmes placed acid mine diainase at the ton of timM'C. Onl.v a small minority anticipated construc- " * * * pollution. its list of current problems, closely followed by tive action would he taken to solve the three mn-,1 C. R. Carpenter , i csoarch To avoid such misunderstand' ngs . Leadley, su n- municipal waste disposal important water resource problem* they had iden professor of psychology and onncd by the University's Water Resource-- Center , "In the Susquehanna area, municipal waste wa- nfiprf anthropology, has been elected president of the .loint Council on F. d u c a t 1 n n a I Telecom- munications (JCET l ehc He has been a member of the Council's Board of Duco- presents lors since lflfifi. serving as a representative of the Association for H 1 a h e r Education. W ITH THE blue bus The primary function of in a JCF.T is to serve as a liaison TOWN INDEPENDENT MEN'S COUNCIL b e t w e e n the \ a r1o u s educational interests and MEN & WOMEN — CHADS & UNDERGRADS no place like home jammy Pe titions lo run for office may be obtained t ub rec room Toni at the TIM Office: 203 G HUB gh t 9-12:30 UN of A KIND 25c a head — qirls free till 9:30 Filing Deadline: Monday. Oct. 13 - 5 p.m. WQWK AND. 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Kalin's Men's St ore 128 S. ALLEN STATE COLLEG E. PA. JAMMY JAMMY JAMMY JAMMY For Wednesday ' s M oratorium Money, Sex Kickbacks In Viet Army Clubs Groups Gather Support WASHINGTON (API — A voluptuous Australian booking Next Wednesday s New York's Wall Street, where California State Colleges pro- agent told U S. senators \esterday kickbacks —mostly in moratorium to protest the financial workers are schedul- hibited dismissal of classes money but someMmcs in sex—were demanded bv sergeants Vietnam war is growing into a ed to take part along with and ordered disciplinary action scheduling entertainment for the Arm> clubs they ran in Viet nationwide affair lhat will in- Mayor John V. Lindsay and against any professors who nan-> . volve persons of all ases former Deputy Defense disobey. Miss June T. Skewes. 34. who uses Ihe professional name including p o 1 1 t ician". Secretary Roswell Gilpatric. gover- and nut Three New England of June Collins, said she ^as blackballed driven of businessmen and professional The executive board of the nors endorsed the idea- business when she reported allegedly illegal ricti\ itics to people, as well as the students Central Conference of 1 Democrats Kenneth Curtis of miliary autho ities who started it. American Rabbis, representing Maine and Frank Licht of Miss Skewcs testified that corruption in all form? became 1.100 Reform rabbis , endorsed Rhode Island and Republican a ws\ of life in running the entertainment cluh 1- Plans for the moraloriurn— the moratorium. lis president o i meaning suspension of normal Francis W. Sa rgent. She gave this description of the price «he said 'he and condemned Presdient Nivon 's Massachusetts. othc- entertainment agont= paid for spavins ;n busmen activities — include rallies, recent press conference state- "The booking agent , such a* mv-elf. would be paid hv the speeches, m arches and ment that ho would not be af- In Sacramento , Calif., stu- custodian of the club Then I would ha\e to give the custodian religious services from coast fected by protests. dents planned a 24-hour vigil a certain percentage of mv profit to coast , culminating in a 5 outside the home of Republican ' The amount nt the percentage—or the cut -would vary. p. m. candlelight procession Classes Canceled Gov. Ronald Reagan. Gov . depending" on the size of the entertaining gioup and the M?e of around the White House. Dozens of colleges canceled Dewev Bartlett of Oklahoma t he contract Indications are lhat some classes, or announced that declined to appear at college She said a f.**e-piece band might be booked for $150 a -how y,, form of activity connected with absences woul d not be penalis- rallies, but Sen. Fred R. Har- of v hich she said she would \~ >p \ t he band StftO t.-kn .i as Ihe the moratorium will take place ed. But Chancellor Glenn S. ris. D-Okla.. the Democratic booking fee. and the kickback $25 to the club custodian. in every stale. Dumke of (he 19-campus national chairman, accepted. "The payment gorera 'b wo uld hr cnsii, " *he said She Washington Procession said she once heard Sgl William ¦ l\. H.gdon . a club custodian ar Lon-7 Bmh, tell friends '""Being a club i ustnd'nn is worth S150.000. " Sponsors plan lo have 45,0(10 Washington She said he told the group he 'v,> extending h^ service in marchers in the SIL Has No Charter; Vietnam "because he couldn ' " procession: They will be led by t afford no' to the widow of the Rev. Dr. Mar- The maiontv ol the custodian* of the club-- T know of de- mand and rocene kickbacks for the purchases th ny tin Luther King Jr. negotiate—irom *.nack bar itcrr"> tn iurrit ure to kitchen equip- Seventeen .senators and '7 May Not Take Stand ment and air conditioners The going price is 10 per cent. " congressmen have expressed She said she nidged custodians not by their —Pho to by Dom Bencivenga support so long as the The Society for Individual Liberty, whine charter still has moratorium i s " peaceful, not been approved by the Univer.-itv . may not take a stand on honesty—"because in a >tncl sense most of the are WITH OLD MAIN in background, this construction worker dishonest "—but by their manner* lawful and nonviolent. " Some any issue or pass any resolution until it is chartered, it wa? "Some are gentlemanly and kind. " «h? sairi. "Others are High and Mig hty looks over his blueprints atop the still unfinished Graduate plan speeches against the war disclosed at last night 's meeting. in the Senate and House, Con- will probably not rude and greedy and demand sexual tavors fro m the Center near Rec Hall. Charlcv Bet/.ko. SIL chairman, .•-aid SIL " businesses they buy from. " Decision ... gressional staff members plan be chartered until next week." and "there is not much reason "I did not provide women for them because that is not the a vigil on the Capitol sleps. to meet formally." kind of enterprise I managed ," she said. "But others were less Plans to keep the House in "So much is up in the air . because of SI1. ¦= recent split principled in thai regard. " ses.-ion all night on Oct. 14 as a from Young Americans lor Freedom " Betzko said. She gave several specifi c examples, then ?dried " symbol of protest against the "The Undergraduate Student Government Supreme Court "But I did pay kickback- I had no choice It was either war were disclosed by Rep. has to decide if we're legitimate—otherwise we have to plead Court to Rule on Immediate Benjamin S Rosenlahal D- pay kickbacks or go out of busine=« ." . . our case (appear before the court lo convince them that SIL She said «he began informing lo the Army Criminal N. Y.. who said enough should be chartered)." he added. Investigation Division but nothing was done. speakers have been lined up to Betxko explained that " national SIL is a service "The word ohuou^lv filtered down to the custodians and School Integration Issue talk through the night. organization (in that) it will distribute literature. " , their friends " she said. "Gradually mv businos5 dried up Reading of Names Don Ernsberger. SIL national chair— in . has had Ihe Finally, nobody would use my entertainers. 1 closed up shoo." WASHINGTON (AP> — The desegregation and to demand government said i n a presses going day and night turning out literature by such Supreme Court agreed yester- immediate abolition of racially memorandum by S n 1 i c i t o r Names of war dead w ill be right-wing authors as A\n Rand, according tn Betzko. day to decide whether public identifiable schools across the Genera l Erwin N. Gnswold read at hundreds of Each local chapter will be "autonomous" or independently schools m Mississippi—and South that the "deliberate speed" ceremonies, including one in active, he added. ¦ possibly throughout the The court declared racialh. formula was no longer ap- -cS&A »M South—must be integrated im- separate public schools un- p 1 i c a b 1 e to s c h o ol fMS mediately. constitutional in 1954. In 1955 it desegregat ion suits and conse- .i m3 The court will rule on an ap- recognized school districts fac- quently there was no need tor peal by the NAACP Legal ed problems in desegregating, the fij iirt to ' ,iar the appeal in AiJISjfcw.' iS i Defense and Educational Fund but said (hey should comply order to abandon the formula. TSS that demands immediate ' with the 1954 ruling with " all Obligated i'mH desegregation of 22 public deliberate speed." % schools in 33 M i s s i s s i p p i Deadline Lifted Gnswold said the court in district?. reece ^J^f onieconiLiiQ : ¦ m several decisions since 1955 G !* » In the Mississippi ea=e the The Justice Department had has indicated school boards are ^ sfcfc advised the cou rt to reject the circuit court in August lifted a deadline that schools in the constitutionally obligated to appeal or postpone action until devise and implement plans desegregation plans were filed district have workable ^&% desegregation plans by the thai will promptly and with a federal court in realistically convert dual , Oil rJLook Mississippi. By order of the start of the current school tk tlte Ecu year. The circuit court segregated school systems into U S. Circuit Court in New unitary , desegregated systems. • t. Orleans these plans are due by postponed the deadline until Dec. 1. Dec. 1 after Robert H Fi.ich. He said the U.S. Office of Examine our wide selection , Advice Shunned secretary of health education Education w a s proceeding But the high court shunned and welfare , said the time was " with dispatch" to help lor- of suits, spot tcoats and sweatei the advice and granted a hear- too short in view of "Ad- mulate desegregation plans for ing to the fund on Oct. 23. ministration and logistical dif- the Mississippi schools and The court reached this ficulties." that they would be submitted unsurpassed m quality and distinctive decision during a private con- The fund then appealed to a^ quickly as possible and cer- 1 ference in which the justices the Supreme Court in behalf of tainly bv Dec. 1. in styling, for your special occasion 1 considered hundreds of appeals several black families. The 22 that have accumulated over schools involved are attended the summer. An announcement bv 135.700 black and white i before Monday was unexpected children. and lent an extra measure of Finch's request for a delay Suits from $89.95 1 urgency to the court's view of was the first such request in a the dispute. schools case by the federal •i The appeal asks the court to government since the 1954 Sportcoats from S60.00

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Does it re a ll y work? THE YOUNGBLOODS If you ve ever resorted to NoDoz"" at 4 a.m. NoDoz when you can get caffeine in a SUNDAY, OCT. 12 at the night before an exam, you've probably cup of coffee? REC. HALL been disappointed. Very simple. You take NoDoz all at NoDoz, after all, is no substitute for once instead of sipping coffee for 10 min- Tickets Available in the HUB sleep. Ne'ther is anything else we can utes. And if you take two NoDoz tablets, think of. the recommended dosage, you get twice Red Barn reached What NoDoz is is a very strong stim- the caffeine in a cup of coffee. to the British Isles ulant. In fact , NoDoz has the strongest Two tablets-isn't that likely to be to bring its customers m£mztsM¥£SB/mmiii!£9Fmm£stimulantyoucan buy withouta prescrip- habit forming? Definitely not. NoDoz is tion. completely non-habit forming. another adventure MM'GO»H/A Caffeine. Which means it's safe to take in good eating. You What's so strong about that? whether you're cramming at night. Or If we may cite The Pharmacological about to walk into an 8 o'clock class. Or cone that s packed chock Basis of Therapeutics: Caffeine is a driving somewhere (even though you're full of Red Barn' s famous powerful central nervous stimulant. __§? Caf- rested) and the monotony of the road feine excilcs all portions of the central makes you drowsy. fillets of crisp golden brown nervous system. Caffeine stimulates all One last thing you should know portions of the cortex, but its mai n action __K~ about NoDoz. It now comes in two forms. thing since Wellington won F&- -*' is on the psychic and sensory functions. Those familiar white pills you take with It produces a more rapid and clearer flow water. And a chewable tablet called miisfiK p of thought and allays drowsiness and NoDoz Action Aids". It tastes like a choc- FHNESI CHARLES IIV fatigue. After taking caffeine, one is ca- olate mint, but it does everything regular MARUiN BORGNINE BRQ NSDN BROWN pable of more sustained intellectual ef- NoDoz does. fort and a more perfect association JOHN RICHARD GEORGE IRIM BftlPK ROBERT of And if you've managed , . only ideas. There is also a keener apprecia- to stay awake this .«j_k -55!^ « DINE IN COMFORT INSIDE tion of sensory stimuli. long, you know l*8illl &L___# •he prese nts Very interesting. But why take that's quite a lot. I' .^^ BS^^r if cinema " e" *ub rec room sat. & sun. 7 & 9:30 — SOc SOS South Atherton Arc Coming The Russians Are Coming mfl fkf"T he Russians ") H.M.C1969 Brtito LMf* State Investigating Committee Contract Hassle 9 Rises in Capitol Business Tax incentives HARRISBURG (AP) — State in his senatorial district. Sen. Edwin G. Holl , R- "He (Holl) emerges as the Montgomery, was implicated man who L & N with Gov asked to act . Shafer in charges of as liaison between the com- Should Help Revenues "political favoritism" and pany and commonwealth of- are doing the job "political influence '"'by ficials, a rranged a HARRISBURG (AP) — The hcavily on business taxes than the incentives Auditor cocktail comparable industrial stales for which they were intended, Gen. Robert P. Casey party for the same group, con- oxceutive director of the stale yesterday in the award of a Chamber ol Commerce told a and. therefore, the incentives "The question I would like to ferred with L & N officials on "is million-dollar stale ' - - how to further state House investigating com- arc necessary in the hot com- answer ." Knglehart said, the interest of L business exemptions are Casey, a Democrat., gathered & N. . /.and who participated mittee yesterday lhat petition to lure new plants to whether those newsmen in his office yester- tax incentives should hel p the locate in Ihe commonwealth. bringing jobs lo Pennsylvania. in the final decision," Casey return day to "make public all the stated. state get more revenues Irom who is Selling any "The state tax incentives through increased employment facts available to me" on a The letters. Casey said , current levies. controversial air p o 11 u t i o n The committee , headed b\ now in elleei . " Hibbard said. anr] other economic benefits." "strongly suggest that Gov. "arc the result nf bipartisan _ . monitoring system contract Shafer and Rep. Harry Knglchnrt (D h ,,„„., of the ,nt ont,ves since, the auditor general Sen. Edwin Holl of Cambria), is probing the effect efforts to giv e us a lav struc . said , Montgomery County used their , , h , , new the Governor "used his ex- of tax incentives on the state 's tur-e which is an mdn.-omrnt " £ , Pen. political influence' and showed rather han a deterrent lo ,n- ecutive powers to halt our in- political industrial and economic pic- ,,{. was also menlioncd quiry favoritism in an ap- v du.stral development ' . " into the issue "and parent effort to steer a con- ture to dctn mine whether thc. m 1( Mlmon> hy slatc Com- launched a vicious personal at- tract to the highest of three are ni-'oded. Englchnrl said there were meice Sccreiary Robert M. tack on me." bidders at The investigation w a s grave doubts in his mind thai Mumma The auditor general a potential loss of launched earlier tin- - von r was $750,000 in taxpayers' funds " - Mumma . whose department referring to statements by the . when it was rev ealed Ihnl U.S. He added: "The evidence does the recruiting for the Republican governor last week Steel Corp. had uncd tax stat e, sairl "Wc have to keep that Casey's probe of the also strongly suggests that the writeoll s lo reduce its slate Shafer administration T I f\ Pcnnsv Kama 's tax structure award was "a cheap and corporate tax bill lo zero in working to cieate a good tax tawdry attempt. . .to make deli berately discriminated 1967 I ©mPl©i»Jf UGSH/ against two bidders who of- « ' climate ,n older lo encourage political headlines." Chamber executive Robert vf • f investment in now industries in Shafer said Casey's probe fered to build an air monitor- Hibb.ird defended the in- r \ ¦• and refusal to sign the contract ing system at a lower cost. .." centives as " .ittr. tctin^ new King f or a Day .he *.... = had held up the project three Asked if he thought his and expanding industries fni ~* ' State Revenue Secretary months, forcing him to void evidence indicated a criminal Pennsy l vania. " Warner Depui cautioned the the $1,050,000 pact with Leeds act had occurred , Casey refus- He said "tax incentives e\ PI1ILADF.1.PH1A (AP) — rommitlcc against leaping into ed to comment IN ANOTHER AREA of campus construction, these & Northrup Co.. North Wales. but added that tended lo industry are not Temple University elected a an attempt lo got short-term even if he thought one had Wonder When We'll homecoming queen \estpt-Hav int reaves in state tax revenues Pa. , he two workmen are laying in a sewer line for the loopholes " ' The inquiry itself was. halted would be powerless to do Ilibbard pointed out that with those .statis tics- 45 31-42. bv culling out so called last month when Atty. Gen anything about it. Get to China? addition to Pattee. The ditch is 16 feel deep. Pennsvlvatlia relics more green eves and a goatee loophole^ William C. Sennett ruled Casey ,, ,, ., ,. , Ho said. a thorough study of Marno ,-eallv Marc From/. „ l;|.il( , ,. K ]n taN.alion had no subpoena powers. laneM his victory A sue- Shafer admitted in July he , r.,lcml,.c,f:mR b„,„lr,„ was cestui batlle against apathy . j had taken a personal interest in on the campus , in t he citv and not r c^ the contract procedure at the Chicago Police Battle Radicals; in the nation , and is making " An > ",h r' approach must request of Leeds & North rup 'EggS Fish and ' people aware of Temple." on,-v lrad '" snnr l lPrm Par" officials. He said the request / Booze tisan bickering u-ithou! any was made in May when he Marc ynf fir> per cent of the meaningful result ," Dcpuy made a personal visit to the vote cast, with the remaining said. North Wales plant to try to Illinois Governor Activates Guard Deflate the Great One .¦1.1 per cent spread among his convince the firm to locate a 11 opponents ol the f?urer sex. new facility in Pennsylvania MIAMI BEACH. Fla (AP) — Jackie Gleason molted off instead of Ohio. 151 pounds reducing his 54-ineh middle using a diet nf meat, The voting turnout was so Casey turned over to repor- To Control Violent Demonstrations eggs, fish and "all the boo?c I wanted." hoavv . election officials had to ters copies of correspondence The beef y entertainer is down to 209 and claims . "If I lose prepare extra ballots. The final count was not announced r* ¦ from company executives and CHICAGO I/PI — Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie Dohrn. 27 former inter-organizational any more the television viewers will think I'm dying " >f state officials which said , . Support the ordered 2.000 members of the National Guard secretary of SDS were arrested yesterday af- Gleason 's atlack on girt h began "March and much nf the mMure,.. . a, 1,. il y.. e, a.. r ,- n,, I ,d among other things, that Holl . fat is gone. ' • to active duty in Chicago yesterday after street police during a demonstration s o phomnic communications had begun lobbying for Leeds ter thev rushed "It wasn' major of suburban Huntingdon & Northrup in February, more battles Wednesday t too bad." Gleason said "I ate all meat one day, between police and some 300 near the Conrad Hilton Hotel . all eggs the next and all lish the next Vullev , sai d he was dr.ifled to than a month before bid n young radicals. "The ' ru n for homecoming queen of vitations were even sent out on Police said about fiO women marched six no-no s were vegetables, bicads and sweets. I a'e mwiuiuiium.Motdtdril J FTI " scrambled eggs, boiled eggs and oivfou aloiv with every Hie W. QM stud ents by the the project. The governor said he talked with Mayor Michigan Avenue school's radio station Holl later told newsmen he abreast at Balbo Drive and kind of meat and fish imaginable. But lhat was ail." for which Richard J. Daley about the plans of the and re fused police orders to disnerse. Officials Gleason illustrated he is the sports director had tried to help the company his weight i'w, backstage before "proba bly because I' m a but saw nothing unusual about radicals Tuesday and Brig. Gen. Richard T. said the women, many of whom wore helemts rehearsal for his Saturday night show on CRS TV. "Gimme It and described his actions as Dunn was asked to observe the situation. and carried clubs and chains, planned to march those Ralph Kramdcn pants ." he told a wardrobe mm. hm "They 'll show." PARTICIPATE "my responsibility to a con- to an induction center. Of the crowning ceremonies stituent" for the firm located A spokesman for Ogilvie said Dunn 's The outfit Gleason used last season in Ilone.vnioonei during the Temple-Hoist ra .scenes as the Brooklyn bus driver measured 54 inches recommendation was based on the violence Those arrested were charged wilh ag- . "And lootball game next Saturday, they used to be tight. " he said. Marc said, "We hope to fill the Wednesday night and the fear that more disor- ar- gravated battery, mob action and resisting Jackie pulled on the trousers and held them out . showing stadium and thereby help our THE ders might occur last night. rest. The others were permitted to continue the enough space to stuff Mickey Roonev inside with him image in the cit v " slightly injured. BEST THINGS Daley praised police for their restraint dur- march. Seven policemen were IN LIFE ing Wednesday's hit and-run skirmishes with Leaders of both SDS wings predicted 5.000 ARE young persons who stormed out of Lincoln Park to 15,000 young persons would attend the following a bonfire and rally. demonstrations planned through Saturday in One Students for a Democratic Society Chicago. group, the Weatherman , sponsored the Lincol n CHEAP Park rally for 400 persons which ended in two Wednesday night the police deployed 300 hours of street skirmishes between police and men in Lincoln Park and kept reserve units in LIKE club-carrying, helmeted youths. There were 65 nearby buildings until the youths suddenly end- persons arrested and 34 persons, including 21 ed their rally marking the anniversary of the NI CK ELOD EON policemen, injured. death of Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara. NITES The Weatherman's rival for control of SDS At least half the persons in the park ran and recruitment of many unaligned young through the Near North Side Gold Coast Still 25c radicals, is Revolutionary Youth Movement II. district, smashing carwindows. glass fronts of which sponsored a demonstration yesterday at restaurants, tossing brick's. There "were three the U. S. courthouse where eight political ac- major confrontations with police, one of them Pick up your tivists are being tried on charges of crossing near the fashionable Drake Hotel on Michigan Tickets Today state lines in a conspiracy to incite riots. Avenue. (we sell out fast) Nearly 150 persons were in the courthouse The focal point of the planned protests is plaza but there were no incidents. the conspiracy trial Three of the defendants HUB Assembl y Room Twelve women including Bernardine attended the Lincoln Park rally. FRIDAY 7:30 & 9:00 Stop Worrying About Charlie Chase, Laurel Ik Hardy. W. C. Fields, Charlie HIGH PRICE S Chaplin Sen Your U.S.G. VISA Rep m;! Sre^JppiaBL ' _3_S m mW^wJ^i _?£¦»I t^f im^>C'JBfflHBwm___MBtiBmH^i _k___*_(^^ Cycling is news! And everyone !s lp l?\.for the yuung in heart getting back on a bike. Stop in IIIIIIBMp today and let us show you the new S^vm:av ^tBSBSm way to a happy, healthy, fun-filled . _mMH ^BH life — on a new Schwinn. Light- weight bikes — designed just for &# the active adult. Bikes with 10- speed gears to take the work out &r \_sP of cycling. We have a big selection now — drop in for a test ride. W m s * (Oicucle/?• / ^.VJn P .^P^%i 437-441 W. College Ave &i& State College, Pa. 16801 m (814) 238-9422 mm

ONE SHORT BLOCK PAST CAMPUS

r£f$.£3 I T he lampyridae beetle famil y. artificial g low by mixing luciferin now get a digilal leadoui of bacteria Deli ght of small boys. Biological and luciferase wherever life is concentration ma run Iter of minutes, lig ht bulb. And prime source of present Other potentially lilesr. rj uses J && 'in raw material for another Du Pont Noting that phenomenon, Du Pent for the biomotcr are being c..g- innovation. soentists and engineers went on gested ev-iy day—cucn as diannos- Luciferase, an enzymatic protein to de/elop it in'o a practical a na- ing metabolic tales , enzyme oe- TURN US ,<". ol s Dl. Pom ior u/rf'j . ¦:, _ , ', cJc-ire es in Pizza < Lorenzo 'i " Rear 129 S. Allen St. Na-ie Open S p.m. to 1 a.m. Um. =-!.:> Right in heart of the Italian Section !>-"-.- .-rac;u3l,on Date r^T MTi riTPr^ f WDEMit .Ji ,ial" 2,0 WDFM Radio Penn State in Fv il O-r. mtv En-Dlo,cr (M/F) Vent ures for better living First in Music - Stereo 97 WVU Rolls in Tomorrow Fancy Offensive Show on Tap By DON McKEE there. With his place-kicking duties added , jury. He'll be ready to go tomorrow and could "4 2W~«<* Collegian Sports Editor Braxton is the nation's leading scorer, with 66 grab the touchdown pass that will give him the points in the iirst four games. Just to add fuel WVU record. to the running attack, Gresham is also in the The term gr eat " is rarely applied to top 10 in rushing. The pair has gained over 800 With all those records dropping right and anything irom Ihe slate of West Virginia except yards together. left, it's hard to tell the Mountaineers from a coal, and the applications has been few and Far radio station. The choice is made even harder But the real excitement in West Virginia 's with all the noise the team has been broadcast- between in recent years. high-scoring array comes when Mickey Sher- ing lately. Players talked of aiming at Penn Then Jim Caiien happened, ne of the wood drops back or rolls out to pass, especially State and of being able to "win them all, youngest coaches in the country at 36, Carlen when his target is Patrick. including the Penn State game." arrived in the hills in 1966, fresh from Bobby As if that wasn't enough, word from Dodd's football factory at Georgia Tech. He Only halfway through his junior year, Sher- wood already owns the WVU career offense Morgantown in the mountains has it that started laying down the law all over the moun- record and career completions mark. And. if he Carlen had to cancel Monday's practice an hour tains—no smoking, no drinking, lots of hard early, because ht "didn 't want them getting too w ork . picks up 77 yards passing against State, he will . H set a new standard in that department, too. psyched up too soon ." Mountaineers Rising Patrick, a rangy 6-4 and extremely fast, is With all that offensive talent at his The rigorous discipline may not have been becoming a nemesis for the Lions. He's scored disposal. Carlen probably needn't do too much popular at tirst , but now it ' s starting to pay three touchdowns against State is two games psyching—his guys will be ready for a fight dividends. The Mountaineers went 7-3 last year and sat out the VMI game resting a slight in- anyway. West Virginia isn't kidding anymore. and man-handled a lot of teams they weren't used to beating. Syracuse, for example. This season Carlen's men have taken up where they lelt off . winning their first four games m-a-row. But that's not the big story. Standard Rulin g Now , for the first time in years, the Moun- Lack of taineers have a flock of talent and other peopl e know to beware. They are ranked 17th national- ly by the Associated Press and several of their performers are gaining wide reknown. Confuses Frosh Status *"They have the two best running backs A confusing situation con- ECAC rule," Czekaj said , "but fering intentions of its op- we'll have seen this season in Bob Gresham cerning the eligibility o I at the same time will maintain ponents. "Where permissable, and Jim Braxton , " Penn State assistant coach freshman athletes for varsity freshmen sports." we will use freshmen," Czekaj Dan Radakovich said , "an extremely accurate sports has arisen in the Foes Differ said , "but we also have signed Holds Fistful of Records contracts for freshman sports. passer in Mickey Sherwood and the greatest Eastern Collegiate Athletic Czekaj recently determined THE FANS in Mountaineer Field sat up and took notico split end in America, Oscar Patrick." Conlerence. The lack of a ' ' IV a C USl S Sit t' n ' when fired two the intention of all State s op- ih r °A - V » ; rf 'as' ^ason Mickey Sherwood scoring definite rule applying to all ponents, so that coaches in the thei athleticL director said,"/ and , . . _ . , ' , . . , „r-.i_ -m That 's an awfu l lot of talent for one outfit schools in the 190 member con- there are a lot of schools not bombs against Penn State s powerful defense. With 20 but Radakovich was impressed by another affected sports can plan for the more , ference has led to a situation individual contest. He found happy with it. I don 't know completions this year, he's just as dangerous once plaver. too. "They might have the best middle where freshmen may be used what's going to happen." —DM Car] ," (hat 21 schools will use guard in th£ country in Crennel in some contests and withheld freshmen and that 14 will not. Radakovich said. from others. Two opponents in minor sports With Sherwood. Patrick. Gresham and Two years ago, the National will use Irosh in some events Wide Receiver Braxton, the Mountaineers should bring some Collegiate Athletic Association but not in others. THE UNIVERSITY UNiON BOARD WITH THREE SCORING pass receptions in special kind of scoring machine into University ruled that freshmen could be State's major opponents are two years against Penn State , split end Park for tomorrow 's game (set for 1:30 p.m.,). used in all varsity sports ex- almost evenly split on the cept football basketball and with Maryland, West s , question, wants to know if you like Oscar Patrick looms as one of West Virginia Fullback Braxton is in the nation's top 10 in hockey, but left final approval Virginia, Pitt and Temple most dangerous players. rushing, but his services to the team don't stop up to the individual con- deciding to use freshmen meeting interesting people? ferences. players and Syracuse, Lehigh, Having a good time? Fro sh OK' ed Army and Navy deciding The ECAC ruled that its against the use of freshmen. Doing something rewarding? Mets Head for Baltimore members could decide the Reque sts Hono red status of their f r c <= h m e n "We will honor all opponent 's themselves. Penn State has requests," Czekaj said. "We If you do, the UUB is decided to allow freshmen to don 't intend to cancel any con- compete in varsity events, pro- tracts and we don 't want to the place for you. vided the opponent does not ob- sever relations with anyone Seaver Set for Series ject, according to Edward M. because of the freshman rule." I Czekaj, State athletic director. State thus finds itself in a| NEW YORK (AP ) — The Orioles' opening , make a contribution after "Penn State will abide by the dual position due to the dif- 1 watching most of the National eager worked (17.9) _ due to APPLICATI ONS: HUB DESK out in warm sunshine on the gQ m the second game Ior the League playoffs from the ^ \ repatched turf of bench. Only Weis saw action in ('Freshmen Welcome) S ^els, threw baULng practice those games as a late Ex-Pirate Hoak Found Dead *_^ yesterday afternoon and then and reported the cold that has defensive replacement. took off for Baltimore and bothered him in the last week PITTSBURGH (AP! , a fiery competiloi ACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKH ARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHAI their date tomor- Hodges is benching first helped the become the world champions in was much beUer_ Seaver had baseman row with the Orioles. . third 1960 died yesterday a few hours after the managerial job he worked for 15 m j n u t e s baseman , right wanted badly was filled by his former manager. Danny Mur- Manager said Wednesday afternoon so he did fielder and se- taugh. cond baseman , LORD SWEATER SHIRT there would be no changes m not throw again, a Hoak, 41, was found slumped over the wheel of his car in quartet which hit for a .380 the Shadyside area of Pittsburgh where he lived and police his announced plans of starting Flrst baseman Bonn Clen- average in the three-game rushed him to a nearby hospital. Whether you call it a shirt or a sweater (25-7) in the denon _ Ed sweep over Atlanta. A hospital spokesman said Hoak died of a heart attack. depends on the occasion. , Sanded ^In^lamst > _i& Charles right fielder Ron Either way it keeps you warm without Cuellar (23-11). Swoboda and the lefty who l weight. Pearly buttons and handsome has been announced as the will get their chance to f^f STUDENTS - VISITORS - ALUMNI heather tones are definitely Lord Jeff. And the knit is sole enough to wear next to your chest. FOOD FOR THOUGHT WELCOME >=»¦ i f» / to Hille! Supper Forum GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH East Beaver Ave. 81 South Garner Ave. ffm i^aftft ¦ i f.ttn shop tor in fit Speaker: Dr. Sam Gaber , SERVICES: - W. College Ave., 8:15 a.m. with Communion , 10:30 a.m State College % A Around the corner Irani Bostoman Lid Head of Phil. ADL SERMON: ACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHAI Topic: "Jewish Students Awareness "War Moratorium, Citizenship & Christian Conscience " and Action on Campus "

5 :45 Monday—at Hillel fsW sssss iiiiuiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii ~»x ^W-iMt NSjSSS SENIORS » 1 >\S Portraits for the 1970 ^ HP La Vie are now being taken /<_?*&=?v a i _r >! a i V f - ^-. f ill xSiSS at the Penn State Photo Shop W * JJJ******* l^p IP (214 E. College Ave.—rear, 237-2345) x 'irMlit ¦¦? *&¦ 3S?® s3s ten wt BR Ai l Mlllll^t » 9 a.m. -12 noo n and 1 - 4 p.m Choose a look. Norelco will help -L Oct. 6-Oct. 18 ^xmi you keep it . /®^hi Choose any look. Make it yours. Then Norelco will help you keep il %m0L ^^ '] Men wear li ght shirt, dark jacket and tie. WELCOME GRABS Because no matter which look you choose, your beard still grows. Drop in and see how we've changed for the better! It still needs to be trimmed and shaved. Norelco handles that, a Its pop-up trimmer will keep your whiskers and sideburns M Women wear jewel neck sweater of any shaped the way you want them. The 3 floating heads will / shave the parts of your face you want shaved. And inside J$ color and no jewelry. the floating heads are 18 self-sharpening blades that M<' / shave as close or closer than a blade every day. With- _3$&-' Keeler's out nicks or cuts. The Norelco unique rotary action keeps the blades sharp while it strokes off whiskers. Every time you shave. There will be a sitting charge of $1.85 206 E. College Ave Then, when you're finished, you just push a but- ton and the head flips open for an easy clean-up job Triptehe ader Nov? make another choice. Choose the cord model or 4SCT. PENN STATE SOUVENIRS the Rechargeable. Both will help you keep your look. But ^ Cocktail Shakers, Glasses, Assorted Styles the Rechargeable will let you do it anywhere. For up to Pewter Pieces by Wilton three weeks. Because it gives you almost twice as many This is you r chance to- shaves per charge as any other rechargeable. norelco Ceramic Mu gs, Ash Trays. Plates, Look them over. Tne choice is yours. Even on a beard like yours Flasks , Wall Plaques, GO DOWN \H HISTORY Imported German Steins, Pennants—Stu ffed Animals—Sweat Shirts—Jackets

H1969 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. 100P Soph Kickers Bootes 's To Visit Army By JAY F1NEGAN NCAA has left it up to the individual schools lo decide uniforms. Face Collegian Sports Writer whether or not they will clad freshmen in varsity Pressure of Army, and all the service academies, being Bastions By DAN DONOVAN For two hundred years the United States Army has conservatism, restrict plebes to plebe ball. Thus, State, been carrying out orders. They do this so well that all men whose only two goals so far in this young season were Assistant Sports Editor who have faced them have found thorn tough competitors. credited to fre.shinen, will not suit them up. In the much-publicized sport of college football, And the Army believes that its leadership and determina- The NiUaivj defense then, spirited by Charlie Mcssner, there is pressure on every player on the field. One little tion are molded before actual battle on playing fields. Phil Sears and Bum Phillips, will be heavily counted upon mistake can change the course of a very emotional sport. Take the military's future officers, for example. West to keep the Cadets in sight. State goalie Leith Mace, a quick Unlike pro football, where mistakes are shrugged off Point, N.Y. is their testing ground. Some call these men and nimble junior, will also figure prominently m the out- and corrected by vigorous play, a mistake in college cadets. Those who do athletic battle with them call them come Playing with a foot that belongs in an accident ward, football can cause a change in momentum and a change the "Black Knights nf the Hudson." Teams which find the Wednc--d.. -ty. Mace chalked up 14 saves. in the outcome of the entire game. trail up along lhat lazy waterway are often too dazed by ' to the One place where pressure is moot evident Army will he certain to put Mace s bruised foot is in the Black Knights to find their way back. Army, any way test Stale's feel hope to put the bruises to Army. kicking. If the offense fails to score a touchdown, one it is said, comes out fighting. player is rarely blamed—the whole offense has bogged down. But if a placekicker misses an extra point or State Meets Army field goal, he alone bears the wrath of the fans. When a punter sees the ball fly out from between the Penn State's rebuilding soccer team , barely recovered legs of the center, he knows that he could be the only from a 2-0 defeat by West Chester last Wednesday faces object between that brown, egg-shaped piece of^ rubber West Point's fiery band this afternoon , up-river. Coaches and six points for the opposing team. If he makes a around the country picked Army eighth in a pie-season mistake, the whole team suffers. survey. NOW . . . 2:00-3:55-5:50-7:50-9:45 Penn State coach Joe Pateino knows the importance For the Lions, who own Ihe nation's most hazardous of kicking in ihe game. "In a given game," he said, Photo by Dom Boncivenga schedule, it provides the unenviable challenge of taking on "kicking may be more important than any other phase two powerhouses in the same week—and dome it with a of offense or defense." BOOTING THE GOALIE is not really whai ihis Penn substantial portion of their unit watching in civilian But Paterno has seen Stale soccer player had in mind as he approached the clothing. As against the Rams, State must foifeit use of its fit this season to fill the val- goal. The action should be just as furious freshmen-varsity performers. These aie the unique firs t today as the year men who never know uable kicking positions with Lions travel Jo Army. om day to day if the.v belong . the two untried sophomores, to a frosh team or the varsit The inadequate i tiling by the k. two sophs who still remem- [B bet- high school where the n most pressure they felt was W whether they could get a AAurtaugh Back Again W date for the homecoming STAHLITE j dance. FRI. - SAT. - SUN / While most of the sophs are waiting for the Reids, Jacksons and Smiths lo graduate. Mike Reitz and _P Bob Parsons have assumed m&J3 %Mf l lf%i,£3C mmiff $<*ff$ ill f?IC STPsl a S n%& f'B crucial roles in the Lion of- PITTSBURGH (AP) — the bench. But last year I retired, the Pirates finished fense. Most sophs can only Tobacco-chewing Danny Mur- helped run the rookie instruc- sixth. shout encouragement from taugh the only manager to j^Jpthe sidelines during the . tional league and was at spring "Sometimes the thought is give the Pittsburgh Pirates a training. I'll be better equipped that the Pirates have a game, but Reitz is place world champion since 1927. now kicking and Parsons is punt- ." he said. pitching problem ," he said "I DONOVAN was again named manager of Murtaugh said ho asked didn 't see many games this ing, the club Pat pmo f^eis this is good experience for the young- Brown to be a candidate for year, but I don 't anticipate a slers. ' It really helps them feel as if they re in with the yesterday. the job at the end of Sep- pitching problem. I think we The announcement came in a tember with one stipulation : have a ball club that's going to team." said Paterntf. "Kicking has made them feel as if the they are contributing to winning." haze of secrecy aboard that past friendships not be the compete for first place." Galeway Clipper, a parl- reason for the choice. Reitz certainly has contributed to the good of the dlewheel boat that inched its "Dan is the best man I could team—he is the scoring leader with 21 points. He hasn' t way across (ho Allc ^h°nv pnssi blv find. " said Brown FREE IN CAR HEATERS missed an extra point in nine tries and is four for six River to the new Three Rivers "He's been my choice since he in field goals. Curiously, he is not satisfied with his 24 Hour Program / rvice performance. Stadium. said he was ready to come i I'C\ \ Murtough retired after seven back." Hj ggRlgff &l CARTOON "I need to work more on my distance." said Reitz. in lflfi4 due ''I have been pretty accurate vcars of managing Four Candidates WMx , but I need to kick farther." io ill health, but General Brown said there were four Paterno agrees with his placekicker. "He is a good Brow n said he Im/mmaBBZ 30-yard kicker, Manager Joe L. other "outstanding candidates " the coach said, "He is very consistent is now ph ysically fit. "He for the job ," but he wouldn't from closer range, but if we had to kick a long one, we is phjsically name them. They were believ- WITH OffN Alt THS4TU KATlf might use Bob Garthwaite, who has greater range but is assured mc he sound ." Brown said. ed to have been Don Hoak, Bill 1600 N. Aiherton St. 322 N. not as consistent." and "Crowd reaction never seems lo hurt you when Coached Rookies Virdon , you're on the field," Reitz said. "Kicking is an automatic The 52-year-old Murtaugh perhaos Bob Skinner. FRI. - SAT. - SUN. charge of the Murtaugh managed the ¦ , *-?. reaction learned in practice and in a game you don't has been in years includ- _«» ,- •-"¦¦""•'issa really have time to think, you just kick." Pirate rookie instructional Pirates for seven development of ing 1900 when they dofeal"d FOR LOVE OF IVY CO-HIT Emanuel I. Woll presents AN ALLIED ARTISTS FILM One of the reasons State did so well in last week's league and the New York Yankees in the A Frank Perry-Alsid Production game against Kansas State was Parsons' punting. He players for the past three with Unw^isaf Pu -on averaged 43.1 yards per punt years. He also served as in- Worl d Series. , despite the fact that half Murtaugh got to the majors SIDNEY POITIER of his kicks were into a gusty wind. A 64-yarder put the terim manaeer when Harry lORfi as a player for the § ¦¦¦ § ! Wildcats deep in a hole just when they were starting to Walker was fired in Phillies in 1941. MV rally. He succeeds Larry Shepard , Philadelphia P RBARA HERSHEY. RICHARD THOMAS. BRUCE DAVISON „. CATHY BURN He went into the service in THE HIGH "Parsons is kicking not only for good distance," said who was fired four games „ UEANOR PERRY .... ~..- ., EVAN HUNTER m. « » ALFRED W CI Paterno, "but he is also getting the ball up high. Parsons before the 1969 season ended. 1944. COMMISSIONER BECKERMAH KS.S JOEl GUCKMAN •""•.:FRANK PERRY . EASTMAN has the potential to be one of the finest punters in the The Pirates, with four players Returns to Baseball simon S2™%;;':c:'."«v.' .««. .-.,». ., allied artists <=s RO'D TAYLOR ¦ ¦ w rj ..-.i thf n»*<;s Ring on ITCO Pno-Ji ki. ™ ...~..^ .. -~~r_. country." batting over .300. finished in He returned to baseball and s I UHlVlKtt PlCKRt * — ' * -4M -> . h* Parsons admits that the pressure bothered him at third place. 12 games behind ended up with the Pirates ir first. "I was really scared in the first game," he admitted, the New York Mets. 1D48. He had one of his best ''If you blow it. everyone knows it." "I wasn 't mentally ccftiipped seasons that year, with a .290 Paterno credits Parsons with lots of poise. "He's a to manage the club when I pverage and 71 runs batted in. real competitor," the coach said. "He responds well to came back the last time." He also led the league for se- to»_ggMB_r.^JJB -tifel B_ -J_l pressure." Murtaugh said aboard the cond baseman in putouts, _ ^a"]___ !' hSSk ^ _| ot_ h St """ShI Big -_—— B^WfARNER Parsons is listed as a quarterback on the ioster and boat. assists and double plays. 1:30-3:30-5,30 k 2rd m^fffl^kwv^wjkff^pfm^____K ¦ _ his passing and running ability may come in handy in A Cheerleader In 1964. when the once [CINEMAQIflEM A 1 J 3rds.1SHOWING an emergency. Don' chunky, but now slimmer 7:3Q IJ t be surprised to see the sturdy 6-3, "I was more of a -9:3° ^_^l_-li Big WeelWeek 233-pound youngster take off with the ball if pressured. cheerleader than a managcr on Irishman from Chester . Pa.. m^^ntexem NOW . . . 1 :30-3:30-5:30-1:30-9130 All but the most exceptional sophomores have been known to succumb to pressure in past seasons, but the Lions already have two who are proven under fire. *2 *• , - "RAUNCHY, RIOTOUS, GREAT, A REAL TONIC PAUL NEWMAN NEVER BETTER!" "Support the "ABSOLUTELY STUNNING! Artists Series Last Times Today 7;i0-9:30 FIRST RATE!" Romeo i®k_ - _S* '*.-I ^JULIET DOLLS Put on your get-up and go VISA Communications Antenna Systems Home Entertainment Products _ *«JHS

A JKROMEHE LLMAN-JOHN SCIII.i:SIN(;i:i { PRODUCTION the M G M presents Bl ^ ^ I John Frankenheimer- p ^^ fM \q || r Edward Lewis Production of jsHSbs^* vJOPt^ y©8COT •^f the fixer "IV§IOiy§OH7 COWBOY 11 Alan Bates • Dirk Bogarde • David Warner®^ BRENDA VACCARO JOHN McGIVER RUTH WHI1E Last Times Today 7:10-3:30-11:45 SYLVIA MILES BARNARD IIUfiHKS s< i.-c n ,,i., . i,iWMnos\i.T «n'i « . m. .ii.'. iv.ti- .ii.uiii i in iv I'ltnliui-il l„ ll.HOMRHI I t.M.W Ur., •¦'1 !>¦ KtlP. V Hl.l >P i .1 i: Starling SATURDAY 2«w Music Supervision l'\ HillMtVlRy ' llVKHY HonVvrM l .)\ v.„ , -!. \ll-- -n Shows at 6-8-10 P.M. plus Midnight Show SAT ^fty V.C CI , 1 PoBICIt i'L. l/,a l.Q'l^V'i t A.SIIA°IE I.MI10 t°..'.!'. -:' 1 .' [ l^ ,. , "" " —J A MAN and A WOMAN nek '' ^plf^iSs ; COLOR, DeLuxe ®v—' Personj Under IB g•—W<^ ^j g Satellite Svstems TV Picture Tube Processing Not Admitted JOth 0" 1* TctP _____ TWELVETREES CINEMA _-_ . posijive Prooi of Ago I.e.-. — ; 'y BHSSbS 129 S. Aiherton 237-2112 __S_i RftUL NEWMAN Coming Wednesday ... A film about people robert redforo vmmmzross for whom the violence of Chicago Convention BUTCH CASSlOy AND THE SUNDANCE K big thing . . . the H.tl r«u1 M(j n.iih PiotlQ« Po/ , the Black Panthers. Co r,<-"mo STROTHEH MARTIN, JEFF COREY , HENRY JONES poor , the Young Patriots vri.i- /t"ry-l'tiill,ii vOVO''ir,.-« rx".!'iiffiii,(r'H,.jCMy JCnnx roi>r»*onnji', i Bwir,n i r r < -1 r„r r.roT.fGF O«r,r nnor HtU ALL, with a cast of both pigs , ,'J' lI 'AM <".0{.OM*M »^JLt Co-pOirii T>1 (, -""i..(1^1 tiy P I"' l> »C«»"»'',- This film is real, 7:30.9:25 »_h_ 537.7A.57 I _«t»Bl rl-WIIHU ¦ nmrauwo p d, d» ¦™[PEMA > n .wan ronrM»'j t Li..- 1J 1 "^,vo"«c-i" and people. jg ¦ 1 TU , AMERICAN REVOLUTION 2 rwoJWaaw>«_>..->«» pst) |mj **ry.i^^ "~^r™^ i ?' ^^ liA_ Sli_5?' * pRMk'iiauBrTfH flff W^frm^m I saj s-—y BH k 11 IB fnUw Els

Lexington House Apartments ,XQ____„

NASA Mission Control Center 518 University Drive "'The LIBERTINE COMES ACROSS 3rd STUDENTS Youll find a future INCREDIBLY Ilk WEEK! WITH WRY 2 bedroom furnished at Philco-Ford Nitcly HUMOR 7:10 - 9:05 apartments. Your future will be as bold and as bright as your imagination and ambition make it. AND taste; Rent includes: Ki'ptt i Bunr SAT. & SUN Your future will be as challenging as your assignments ... New furniture 2:00-3:45-5:35 and you might work on anything from satellites to 7:25-9:20 All utilities communications systems, to microelectronics, to home Electric heat and ; entertainment or appliances. It's your chance to be conditioning as good as vou want to be You will build an Wall to wall carpet experience oank that will prepare you for many opportunities. Your future begins by meeting our representatives ' Cnthcrmr jynah Afnfrear Electric stove, refrigerator f ^ ttuuh when they visit your campus. Or , write to _JD ®fpll §in i n Curi'it/s (Jrvcri f Hefner' s laundromat, dishwasher, dis ¦lujjb College Relations, Philco-Ford Corporation, n itli f tiv!/...ait(l oy JPcnthQ uaa posal. Ample free parking. )OJc lihe a C S Tioga Streets . Philadelphia. Pa. 19134 TfiaiifeYOii ttrct da U) rtrrnmr. o itnc-n ftimtn urxcrii schooLl " INSPECTION INVITED PHILCO-FORD WILL BE HERE ON Monday, October 20, 1969 All irenr Kiribati .sfj: .swrrri j For appointment—Phone BADLEY M tTZCEK Much pr«» *e» -. UNIVERSITY REALTY PHILCO lAN McKELLEN-JOHNSl IDiNG'MiCHAELCOlIS "theJibERTINE" Anita N. Combs—Realtor r~ ' ' The Better Idea People In Your Future ELFANOR BRQN . 1VDIA j ('.-it h|.rinc S|i.i.ik..dJ i.nn.I/niisTrinli tmnnt Street ; " " 300 S. Allen An Equal Opportunity Employer l.'MJ I'.&Sr.MEEI-.G - .71" ^., i v, - . -"•JidJ IMJ 237-6543 Vrfr.lS HL'bSEiN-l.'iARLAHET C I'COLCR NO PERSONS UNDER 18 ADMITTED I For WVU Entries Due Tod ay Student Seating In Footba ll Cont est The Penn State athletic and the ticket will be checked department has announced the by gatemen and ushers. Entries in ihe second weekly Daily Collegian Foot- Centennial Raises 4 p.m. today at the HUB desk. following information concern- Even seats in rows 1-40, sec- ball Contest are due at enter the contest by choosing the winners ing student seating for the tion YVH, will be available to Anyone may seniors and graduate students of 30 games plus the scores of ihe three designated State-West Virginia football until filled. contests. Entry fee is 25 cents and the winner will re- Fund. game, tomorrow. Students entering sections ceive S10. All proceeds will go to the United This week's contest games are: M Student gates will he ,opened WJ and WH arc requested to Gridiron Questions at 11:30 a.m. A detailed check enter by the steps to avoid n North Carolina — Air Force will be made of all student attempting to use the ramp. Ohio State — Michigan By JAY FINEGAN cussion and a recent heart transplant. How is he identification—a matriculation The game will start at 1:30 Army — Notre Dame - card, certificate of registration State Collegian Sports Writer described in the papers? p.m. Auburn — Clemson Pitt — Navy South Carolina — NC State A—They say All right, football enthusiasts, this centennial this kid has "desire." Brown — Yale SMU — TCU California — Washington Tennessee — Georgia Tech season is nearing its half-way mark and you have Q—Does he? Texas — Oklahoma* Dartmouth — Penn read as much gridiron literature as could possibly Reds Pick Manager Texas Tech —- Texas A&M A—Yes, but he's also got a hole in his head. Florida — Tulane USC — Stanford ' ' be run off America s presses. Let s see how well The thing he desires most is a short life. By The Associated Press the West Division of the Illinois — Northwestern Utah — Arizona State ' you have digested the lessons of the football sea- George "Sparky" Anderson, National League this year, four Indiana — Minnesota Vanderbilt — Alabama I Q—The 5-6, 145-pound quarterback for Fly- Iowa State — Colorado VPI — Kentucky son. Ready? Please give the first answ.er that who guided minor league games behind leading Atlanta paper Tech has just been turned into a grease spot Kansas — Kansas State Wake Forest — Duke h teams to four pennants in five although the Reds led the Maryland — Syracuse Washington State — UCLA comes to your mind. by three 6-6 * , 275-pound defensive lineman and two years, was appointed yester- division part of the season. Miami (Fla.) — LSU* Wisconsin — Iowa blitzing linebackers. Question—Goalpost University's "high-flying Ambulance sirens are wailing day as the They finished fourth in the two Michigan — Purdue Wyoming — UTEP and stretchers are being hustled onto the field. Mississippi — Georgia 11 suffered through a gruelling spring practice, manager one day after Dave previous full seasons under •Pick scores I How is the Bristol, when the Missouri — Nebraska play described? Bristol was released. circuit had 10 after a winter of weight training. The team worked teams. Anderson, who becomes the A—The announcer tells us that the quarter- Iii in a quarry all sum- major league's youngest — . back appears to have been "shaken up." mer, replacing the - manager at the age of 35, Series Starts Tomorrow .1 steam shovels. They yl_?fi£ _sii_k Q—A team that has crushed all opposition by coached San Diego this year ran laps at night and ^|BmwW—Wfc» one-sided scores and only Wednesday was nam- ^ , includes six All-America picks lived on a diet pre- mS^^^ gm and a Heisman Trophy candidate, meets its tradi- ed a coach for the California pared by the curator ff\, _^?iE tional Thanksgiving Day rival, a school that is Angels. of the Bronx Zoo. _ trying to drop "I appreciate the opportunity iNSfct ^^W football and hss a fullback who Orioles Prep for Mets " Anderson said at a news After returning to pre- ' """ t ..W flunked his physical for the Dramatics Club. What here. conference. "This is a very BALTIMORE (AP) — Manager Earl going to stick around and practice taking the season camp in late (_ ¦ *££ •}'%[ do the papers say about this one? have to talented ball club. You Weaver tuned up his snappy chatter while the line-up card to the plate. Then I might practice 1 August for a month of have talent to win a pennant." baS6 in 6 A—Anything sharpened their batting eyes "^ ^^ ' **** practice, Goalpost is can happen when these two Bristol. 36, was let go after &"«?£ Sumon?^ ready to open its sea- teams meet. You throw the book out the window Robert Howsarn. vice presi- yesterday. Weaver looked at the Memorial Stadium manager, time son. What does the for this game. dent and general "Are you ready to answer questions from clock and noted the countdown to game said he felt the Reds needed a 600 reporters?" Weaver was asked about the for tomorrow's opening game was some 49 coach have to say be- Q—Coach Savage has stripped the state of managerial change. Howsam influx of the press for tomorrow's World Series hours and 26 minutes, for the first game? healthy ball players. He has emptied the steel offered Bristol a front office opener against the New York Mets. If there was anxiety, there was no lack of il "Sure. All they ask will be blah anyway. confidence. And the feeling was shared by the FINEGAN position. " Answer — "I only mills , taken talent from the coal mines and suited Anderson's minor league "Will you be up for the Series?" whole squad , as the Orioles went th rough a Hope we'll be ready for them. My boys really up every knife-carrying ruffian who has finished teams won four straight pen- "Yeah. After the final workout today, I'm spirited workout. ' set." the eighth grade. He demolishes a team that has nants and each year, the farm haven t had time to get affiliate of a ma had poor recruitment and would be an underdog club was an jor league team of which Q—Coach Arsonic Aardvark lias a player on against the Girl Scouts. What do we say of Coach Howsam served as genera his squad who is out on bail, leads the conference Savage? manager. Howsam came to ii in breaking noses and fights tooth decay four Cincinnati from St. Louis in E iscopol Eucharist A—We say p ways—with his fist, knees, elbows and helmet. he is a strategic genius. Napoleon 1967. , . , couldn't have Cincinnati wound up third I What does the coach say about this public menace? organized a better attack. (Holy Communion, The Lord's Supper, The Mass) Excellent sports fans. You have learned A—He's got character. He's the kind of kid , your lessons well and have helped bring collegiate foot- Eisenhower Chapel you just can't leave out of the lineup. ball through its first , brutal 100 years, where the Sunday: 10:30 a.m. (Small Chapel) Q—We have a middle linebacker who plays belief is generally held that "Winning is more im- Last Times Today 7:10-9:30 despite a broken ankle, four cracked ribs, a con- portant than anything else.'' 12:45 p.m. (Large Chapel) 1i 6:15 p.m. (Large Chapel) Romeo Monday: 12 noon (Small Chapel) liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii uiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ^ ^JULIET Wednesday: 12 noon (Small Chapel) IM Football Friday: 12 noon (Small Chapel)

Montgomery 7, Luierne 0 (Rev.) Derald W. Stump, Episc o pa l Chaplai n Fulton 15, Columbia 0 t t Armstrong 5, Carbon 2 (first downs) Maul he Moun aineer s Mr. Jeff Fox , Organist Butler 6, Cameron 3 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiii iiiiiimiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniimiini Bradford 13. Snycfer 6 Pittsburgh 1, Indiana 0 (overtime) Lawrence 8, Montour 0 Dunmore 13. Altoona 0 Allquippa 12, Elk 0 Jefferson 21, Crawford * McKeesport 1, New Castle 1 (first downs) career Easton 2, Kingston 0 i**»f engi neering r\/ ?. T. I. M r\. j opportunities Button me Up JL.' and call me Scruffy ¦ ' .' •' ,\' f- TI) CASINO NITE f or seniors in all branches of engineering Any of you guys see Scruffy in September This Saturday Nigh!, Oct. 11 15th ? Woolrich makes _ it. A knockabout shirt-collared wool 8-11 P.M fijacket in authentic plaids, lined with Ground Floor of the HUB 11 lush Orion* pile. Buttons are in. So |$ are two-way muff-and-patch pockets. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS , pWrf II Men's S M,L,XL, $30 Preps' 12-20, I Wk $27.50. Want yours unlined? Tuesda y, November 4 | | l k Men's, $17. ALPHA PHI OMEGA %iSfrWPT WMMHR iliffT- .mP _B_L Preps', $15. Appointments should be made RUSH SMOKER in advance through your College Placement Office 1 MONDAY , OCT. 13, 1969 wmmi 8:30 P.M. PORTSMOUTH NAVAL SHIPYARD isfi I 110 HUMAN DEVELOPMENT _%5t _ (LIVING CENTER] Portsmouth, New Hampshire WooHucn. G HOY BROTHERS . 3? STATE COLLEGE ALL 'UNDERGRADUATE MEN Positions are in the Career Civil Service INTERESTED IN SERVICE AND FELLOWSHIP ARE WELCOME (An Equal Opportunity Employer) u c l registered tm fm ' " "°° * i Mrm&mgtm ™roNT its acrylic fibeb rinnimiunnu innnuiiiimn iniimmmmmnnmmni ^

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII< IIIllllllMIIIIIIIIM IIII iiiniuinui iiiiMiin iiniiiiiinii niini iiiiCOLLEGIANiniMiHiiiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiiii iniiii iiimiinimn CLASSIFIEDS ———————~* ' ' "" "' | | FOh saLE I FOR SALE I FOr sALE I WANTED WANTED JAWBONE NOTICE ,1- ™ ,, CLASSIFIED FRIDAY — ETHANE COANE with his HUNGRY AFTER "' I'M AUSTIN-Hi-aley 30C0. Needs some JAGUAR XK-E 4.2 Convertible. Only 1966 305 cc. HONDA Scrambler. Good FEMALE TO share 2 bedroom aparl WANTED FOUR (4) non-student tickets rnidnisht? E t"Tli ir minor repair*;. Enalne excellent. Priced condition. Best otter takes it. Call 865-0791. ment. Call 238-6522 alter 6 p.m. lor Homecoming (West Virginia—Oct. 11). own creations. Saturday — "Open Mike" take out 'til 4 a.m. Real down home ADVERTISING POLICY 17,000 original miles, lolsa extras. Ex all night with you doing whatever you steaks 237-4816. 25«„ below book. M8-17U. cellent condition. $3200. Call 23B-9408. Contact Eric for information 865-2738. 1966 FORD CORTINA. Great condWon, WEST VIRGINIA Tickets. No student Name vour orice. want. 8:00 - 12:30 both nights. tickets please. Call 238-3223. FREE HOT DOGS French Fries, Pepsllll DEADLINE HARMON KARDON, Dynnco CRIB AND MATTRESS $15. Excellent 30,000 mi., must sell. Call 865-0791. stereos, ac- ~ WANTED: ROOMMATE (male) for apart- At Shake ' n' Dog. Compliments of USG etones below wholesale prices. Fret condition, S60 value, drop-kick sides. 1962 KARMANN GHIA Coupe. New paint* WANTED: DATE Ticket Homecoming "" and VISA. On sale at HUB. Tuesday Afternoon Phone 237-0785. (West Virginia Oct. 11). Contact Les for ment, 1207 W. Beaver Ave. Rent SSO/mo. lost riomonstration one! information. Call Mike AM-FM, 66 engine, extra snow tires. Apply evenings same address. 23? 5148. 237-3584 evenings. information 865-6633. Name your price. JOHN — ALL IS forgiven. Please stop FOUR 14" CRAGAR chrome reverse PEOPLE ARE lost without VISA member- drinking at the Phyrst and come home RATES WANTED: TRAINS any make, condition* First insertion 15 word maximum CAMERA— DACO D A 35 mm. has light Will fit any Chevy. Call 237-9053. '65 MUSTANG V-8 automatic convertible, , ATTENTION ships. Don't be left out. Join VISA to- to men and The 23 Screaming Kids, fl. iS image good running condition. Priced to sell sauge thru 1942. Also Lionel and Ameri- day, in HUB. —Evelyn Gultr mpirr and doub!? focus In vlew- can Flyer only after 1946 in good con- Each additional consecutive ir nfler. Call 237-63SS — S550. Phone 237-9002 after 5 p.m. PLAYLAND — NOW Bigger and Better dition. 237-B329 Sam. Earn weekend money REWARD FOR lost TKE fraternity pin. FREE LUBE with Oil Change and Filter, insertion J5 arm, Ortofon S25/T cartridge. 237-6186. offers you Fun and Relaxation — a Call John 237-4203. ONE DOLLAR game discount on 76er the easy way. F leck's Phillips 66, South Atherton Street. Each additional 5 words .15 per day I ' 's STEREO EQUIPMENT AR-3 speakers! nice place to spend a little time. Largest Basketball with your VISA card. On sale j QUALITY ART. Graduate Student Visual display of electronic Fun games. A DAVE, BOB who went to Phllly last 1 Dynaco Pre-Amp tuner, stereo 70 ampli- at the HU a. Artists to exhibit at The Jawbone. Call oleasanV and friendly atmosphere. Campus Friday: Find Prescription Glasses in Cash Basis Only! '" ^ GUY BRITT0N fiers, Falrchild turntable, Grado tone Shopping Center. '1968 YAMAHA YM-1 305 cc.7~exceiient j j arm, Orlofon S25/T cartridge. 237-6186. Fred Reisz 238-7011. Car? Mark 238-0304. No Personal Ads! j condition. Metal flake paint, phone Rich TIRED OF the same hole? Get into WHEELERS AND DEALERS needed for "Support Collo quy " S63-27J2 after 10-00. '66 HONDA 305 cc. Scrambler, excellent ' ^ i «A whole new line of | engine, S390. '66 Yamaha 250 cc , great something better! Move to Bluebell! TIM Casino Night. Contact Ran McAffose artTstssehies " 237-9377 or 365-6851 or report to the , IMFLATIBLE FURNITURE?Chairs SlKSoT condition, $380. Don or Ammon 237-6800 ARE YOU READY? Hamlet, Rosencranti] ¦ ! fur coats j or 865-1266. GUITA R PLAYER with some singing ground floor of the HUB Sat. 7:00 p.m. OFFICE HOURS Tables SB.50, Mini-Chairs 55.00. Blue, red, experience for established group. Call Guiidenstein and the gang, are coming yellow, white, black. RSE. P.O. Box 164, ! j CLASSICAL GUITAR. Listed for S425, Boyd or Rick 237-9012. B LOWOUT IN the Streets. Free concert Tickets start next Tuesday. 9:30 - 4:30 Lemont, Pa. 16851. India & Afro lounging on Beaver Ave. with Barefoot in Athens, ~ j • j will sell for half. Must sell need cash. THE PERFECT START to Homecoming POSTERS! POSTERS! and More Poster^ Christophe 237-1210. PROGRAMMER DESIRES work. IBM i:m Sunday Oct. 12, 1969. Get it to- Monday thru Friday I dresses ! Fortran IV, JCL, Watfor, Tape and gether, Weekend. Ralph KIrkpatrick, harpsi- B. S & T, Al Cooper, Dylan, Beatles, " " chordist, performs fn Schwab Friday. If you ' re ready . . , land many more. All in full color. Call DISCOUNT PRICES. Sports car acces- Disc Usage, Libraries. Two yrs. experi- Basement of Sackett sories, roll bars, mag wheels, radial ence. Full or part time. Also student ATT E NTION MEN students. Let our ' 233 69i2 j «Leather clothing for company help pay for your college ex- fry North Wing ~ ~ j and conventional tires. Call 23B-2710. consultation. Call John 237-6372. FOR RENT AKC Pany Poodle' Puppy" penses. If you have a car and can work FOR SALE . j men & women in the NEED* " Also two-year old black male Poodle. j MUST SELL on account of illness. Good TWO Syracuse TicketsTcal! Larry 15-20 hrs. a/wk., you qualify. For per- TWO BEDROOM Trailer in Pleasant Gap. Both have shots, both mini-toy 364-1346. j latest styles shape 8x50 Trailer, 2 bedrooms, ready 238-0394. sonal interview call Tom MacWhtrter, Married couple or single male students BROTHERHO OD by mid-Oct in good location. $1,400. our campus mgr., at 237-8323 between who want to share costs. 865-7952 8-5 or ' LOTUS FORD Cortina 1947 Weber 238-955B. WANTED: TICKETS In senior or non- 5:30-7:30 p.m. 466-619 expressive clothing fSr sale carbs, Pirelli tir?s. excellent condition. I • Handmade Handbags j student section for west Virginia game. J. Must sell, S1590 Call £37-8478 SALE NATU RAL WOOL Sheepskins; 237-6166. Name your price. LLEBEULB spells Bluebell's turned * DUNLOP - PIRELLI - Michelin - Conti- I —Tanos, Davey's, Jole; j Limited supply. S20/S25. Call 237-0142. HELP WANTED for people nental - Goodyear, etc. Finally! Good ; 1966 DUCAT I 250 cc. Good condition. around policy and Mexican handbags • *"v.W Sedaif~SlT00X0. Great TAKE YOUR girl to dinner 12 times prices on tires for all cars. Also parts Phone Bill Piekielek 237-6440 or 86S-607« j ISALE 1965 . thru March 30 1970 for Vi price. S, C. SAVE S50.00. Eat dinner out. Buy twe DISHWASHERS AND Waiters wanted. for all imported cars, accessories and ' shape. Call Ed after 5:00 p m. at 865-6258. 127 E. Beaver 1969 BMW 2000 Sedan. Stick shift, radial Jaycees Diners Club books available. dinners, one free.. $5.00 buys the book. Work two, eat three, plus social privi- competition equipment at low prices. Sterling silver rings for McLanahan's, South Allen St. leges. Call caterer at 238-2473. 237-2521 Supplies before you tires. Bought in Germany. Dial Wihlams- j • j TYPEWRITER: ROYAL "Safari" port- Flamenco Call Super Sport able. Excellent condition, two years old. INTERESTED IN learning " " buy. 238-8375 days, evenings or weekends. port 368-1424. j men & women ROOMMATE— FALL term only. Four Guitar ' Call 237-8015. Ask for Avrom. WANTED: WAITERS to work two meals, ¦ j S60. Will dicker. 237-4660 afler 5:30. eat three. Cad Delta Cut 228-9944. 11:30 - 9:00 Weekdayi BUY 24 DINNERS get twelvp free man apt. new, near campus, burnished. GOOD FOOD, good times, good music. AVAILABLE DECEMBER — Why pay 237-8476. 1969 VW CAMPER fully equipped $2900. State College Diners Club. 55.00 at College ! • Leather watchbands j Open Mil 4 a.m. Down home steaks. 221 11:00 - 6:00 Sat. Contact Rick 238-3802. Pharmacy jhigh prices for apartments? Own 1967 E Beaver, PHYRST Ave. & berets 1 Mobile Home for less. 466-7141. ! j - SWEATERS: 30% off retail price. Brand , . DISCOUNT PRICES. Sports" Car" AcceT- KOAG1ES, HOAGIES, Hoagies. Regular, THE TARNISHED SIX (Half of The . . . but only if new. Contact Rich, 904 Brumbaugh on series, roll bars, mag wheels, radial and Lox & Bagel | Ham, Chicken, Tuna — 75c. Ham & Dirty Dozen) wit! once again put out Pierced & non-pierced Clieose 40c. No delivery charge. We cash with some Hot Dixieland Jazz Fri. nite HAYRIDE call 665-0640. j J • j ' conventional tires. Call 238-2710. you're ready earrings ! BRUNCH . & •student checks. We take pennies. Sunday M The Phyrst. SONY COMPACT stereo unit with Lafay-j j 1965 DATSUN ROADSTER. Red, black ..iru Thursday evenings 8-12 p.m. Deans HILLEL ette Tuner. Excellent condit-on. Will sell j Interior, 23,000 miles, whitewalls. ~ ast Delivery Call after 6 p.m. 237-1043 3AREFOOT IN ATHENS — Fri. after- Open Jill Nine after lop. ¦oon at 3:30 only at The Phyrst. please icfer foqefher or separately. Bi S-7476. _ j j • Chains, belts, necklaces j snewi, four sp°ed. Ron, 8S5-<993 Hiiie! I '. 238-8035. the football game— to larger STUDENTS: PROMPT insurance for " Eight UR BARTENDERS have never been 1948 TRIUMPH G.T.6 Fast back. Red, 11:30 SUNDAY I CAT GIVEN FREE lo right person. ad in Collegian autos, group student life, motorcycles,] A-ire wheels, raaio, snow tires. 51,995 00. nontns old, calico in color, spayed anc * Jail but we've all spent a lot of time vs, hospitalization. Phone : j fravef. valuab. CM Mrs.. James D. Selfe 238-0614. .ill shots. Call Al 217-4032. ehind bars'. Mr. Temeles, 233-6633. * ) J