Hiiiiiiiiii miiiiiiii iinii associated press ii riimiiiimiiiiiiiiiin u: NewScop e f. Second Studen t The W orld Attacked in HUB Fi g hting Breaks Out in Ban Me Thuot SAIGON — Fighting has broken out on the approaches to By ROB McHUGH Bergonzi (graduate-anthvopology-Bogota, N.J.). Ban Me Thuot, where leaders of the rebellious Montagnard Collegian Sta/f Writer said that the sit-in was "a non-violent , non- tribes met and aligned themselves with the South Vietnamese disruptive action against military recruitment government. A student was attacked yesterday while on campus because the military is using college Field officers said about 1,000 Viet Cong and North Viet- debating politics with military recruiters work- students as a resource" for Vietnam. namese were involved against allied forces in two clashes ing on campus. Literature Torn Tuesday and a battle yesterday and speculated they may have The incident occurred early yesterday af- been the spearhead of a fresh thrust toward Ban Me Thuot . ternoon on the ground floor of the Hetzcl Union Bergnnzi e m p h a s i ?. e d that the This provincial capital is 15 miles northeast of Saigon. Building, where both Army and Marine Corps demonstrators were not obstructing persons Reports from the jungle plateaus north of Ban Me Thuot recruiters had tables set up. wishing to speak to the recruiters. laid 109 enemy soldiers were killed and allied casualties were Capt. Nelles said that recruiters on campu- light in the three engagements. Frank Sutula (lOth-gcncra l art* and sciences-Eayonne. N.J.) told The Dally Col- "give the free student a chance to look into the The Communist command long has tried to win over the ' military." Montagnards, the non-Vietnamese hill tribes who resented legian that he was discuss ng the military with Saigon rule as much as they resented the old French colonial one of the recruiters when ".-.oniconc from Nelles said that after the fistfightina took rule. The capture of Ban Me Thuot, home for many Mon- behind turned me around and punched me in place, a few members of the crowd threw coke- tagnards, would be a psychological victory for the enemy. the face three times." on tlie blanket covering the table and tore up No Argument the rest of the literature. Referring to the demonstrators, Nelles Lebanese Troops• Fire• on •Student Rioters Sutula said that when the incident took said. "These people aren 't going to get violent BEIRUT, Lebanon — Troops and police with armored place, "there was not even an argument going firit: they know better. They're just trying to cars fired on rioting students and Palestinian refugees in two on." bother the other people until they start Lebanese cities yesterday. A state of emergency was declared A similar incident occurred Tuesdav af- something." Nelles said that the fight was an to halt the riots in which at least seven persons were killed Photo by Willia m Epstein ternoon when an unidentified member of Stu- example of this. and scores wounded. dents for a Democratic Society was attacked Demonstrators spilled into the ' streets in Beirut, the Militar y FOR THE SECOND day in a row a fight broke out in front while debating with an Army recruiter. 'Propaganda Film' capital, in the southern port of Sidon and in the Bakaa Valley of the Marine recruiting table on the ground floor of the Marine Capt. James C. Nelles. one of the Neiles also discussed a movie on Vietnam village of Barr Dlias to protest government restrictions Recruitment HUB as a spirited discussion on military recruitment on recruiters, said that Sutula "had been harass- war crimes that was shown throughout the day against Arab guerrillas operating against Israel from bases in campus ended in a fistfight. ing us and tearing up our literature." in the HUB. The movie was sponsored by the Lebanon. Causes HUB Fight Relative Killed Students for a Democratic Society. Chanting slogans in support of the Arab guerrilla move- , technically put ment, the demonstrators clashed in street battles with Nelles said he felt the student who attacked "The movie is a spliced security forces. Sutula probably got fed up with the anti- together propaganda film." Nelles said. He ad- Thousands of Palestinian refugees sparked the rampage in military talk , and "just blew up." ded that most of the material was 20-year-old Sidon. Students took up the fight in Beirut and fiercely Arab According to Nelles. one of the attacker's film that had been taken while the French oc- nationalist Moslems rose up in the Bakaa in eastern Lebanon. Sirhan Condemned to Death family was killed in Vietnam. cupied Vietnam. Later in the afternoon , a group of about 10 Nelles said that many of the arm? and students gathered in front of the recruitment machines pictured in the film are not used by The Nati on tables for a sit-in to protest military recruit- the American military. He added that recent ment. film of American soldiers was spliced in, to Nixon Maps War Against Cosa Nostra In California Gas Chamber make the film seem authentic. One of the demonstrators, Edward W. WASHINGTON — Mapping a S61 million war against organized crime, President Nixon suggested to Congress LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sirhan Bishara life during a penalty hearing that followed a yesterday that Mafia chiefs might be crippled financially Sirhan yesterday was condemned to death in fi rst-degree murder verdict by the same jury through use of antitrust laws. the California gas chamber for what the state April 17. Implementation of this rather novel idea for striking back called a calculated, cold-blooded political Mrs. Sirhan heard the news of the death at businesses they take over, said Nixon, could 'strike a assassination that took the life of Sen. Robert decree at her Pasadena home, as she had the critical blow at the organized crime conspiracy." F. Kennedy. first-degree verdict. Comm ittee Considers The suggestion, to be pursued by the executive branch, "Even Jesus Christ couldn't have saved The only relative in court was one of was part of a broad anticrime package Nixon outlined in a me." the 25-year-old Christian Arab was quoted Sirhan's four brothers, Adel , 29. In a choked special message that incorporated his own ideas plus warmed- as telling his laywers afterward. He shed no voice, he declined to comment. over suggestions from the Johnson administration. tears. His face was ashen. Cooper said he will continue to represent WPSX Responsibility Declaring that the Cosa Nostra is stronger that ever and When the verdict was read at 11:35 a.m., Sirhan without fee during the appeals stage of seeks the ".moral and legal subversion of our society," Nixon the slight 5-foot-4 defendant betrayed no By STEV E SOLOMON television exposure and not for Senate ad hoc committee on the case. The Daily Collegian. Com- proposed a S5 million increase in appropriations to combat emotion. At no time did the state enunciate in so subsequent use by other organized crime. This would make a total of S61 million. Reject Plea ' Collegian Staff Writer organizations or Interests. ments by faculty members in many words a demand for Sirhan s life. The executive committee the FCFSR meeting had • * * By its decree, the seven man, five-woman Robert Scholten said last The Instead. Deputy Dist. Atty. Joh n Howard , a will frame a resolution revealed concern for th e Nixon Directs Tax at Ford Foundation jury rejected a defense plea for mercy. 6-foot-3. 220-pound prosecutor, put it another controversy alternative to the death penalty was life im- night he hopes the to be presented as testimony in freedom of speech and possible WASHINGTON — Two of the Nixon administration's tax way when he told the jury : "This defendant arising from the WPSX-TV at- the Saturday hearing of the censorship. recommendations on foundations appear to be aimed directly prisonment, with parole possible but not likely will regard permission to live as an additional at practices of the S3.5-billion Ford Foundation. after seven years. triumph. You will not be obliged to hear this tempt to film the Tuesday Vice President Spiro T. Agnew may have had this in mind Juror George Stitzel, 57, a press room defendant boast that he committed the crime of meeting of the Faculty Com- when he inserted a tongue-in-cheek remark into a speech foreman for the Los Angeles Times, said the the century. Others will." mittee on Faculty and Student in original vote was 8 for death, 2 for life and 2 New York Tuesday night. 'Proper Verdict' Rights, will be cleared in the Agnew said President Nixon had asked him " undecided. The count became 10 to 2 for death Council . to announce ballots and agreement Chief Deputy Dist. Atty. Lynn Compton told immediate future. Pollock-Nittany to you that as a result of secret peace talks held today, a on the second and third was reached on the fourth. newsmen after Sirhan was condemned: "We break .through and meaningful negotiations are being held proper happen Scholten, the director of the In last, week's verdict.of first-degree mur- believe, it ^s a verdict...! to which hopefully will bring about a phased withdrawal of the committee, said the director of Ford Foundation from its tax-exempt status. der, Stitzel said the balloting began with 9 in "* believe a great majority of The American public „EIects New Officers " capital punishment and if they do. I Two administration recommendations on foundations tie in favor, and 3 holding out for second-degree mur- favors WPSX will be contacted today Apr thlnk clearly this was the kind of a case to m- "to determine whether WPSX The only previously an- organization deals too much in directly with previous testimony to the House Ways and talk and there is no positive Means Committee about the Ford Foundation. There is no chance that Sirhan will be ex- voke it. full nounced candidate for the pres- Sirhan stepped out of the crowd in a is authorized to exercise idency of the Pollock-Nittany action ." Pavlick said. "What One reads "prohibit private foundations from engaging in ecuted swiftly. Superior Court Judge Herbert journalistic responsibility as a V. Walker set May 14 to hear motions for a new kitchen area of the Ambassador Hotel last June Residence Council withdrew we need here is responsible activities which directly affect political campagns, such as or whether such leadership." voter ,registration drives.' trial. At that time, he can pronounce sentence 5 and fired three .22-caliber bullets into Ken- news medium, from competition last night, nedy, one of them into the brain. The 42-year- films are subject to the use stating. "The council is dead, Pavlick also said that he • • or defer it. wished to put more power into * At that time also, it is within the power of old New York senator died at 1:44 a.m. June 6. and control of the University or perhaps has never lived." Recipient of Eye Transplant Waits to See Brooded Over Promise Robert Chanin (9th- the hands of the residents the 69-year-old judge to reduce Sirhan's sen- Administration." th rough the use of referenda. HOUSTON, Tex. — John Madden, the world's first but in 19 capital cases that have m a t h e m atics-Philadelphia) tence to life, Kennedy was campaigning for the also told the council "I feel Robert White (3rd-business recipient of a total eye transplant, was reported in excellent been before 'him, Walker has exercised this Democratic presidential nomination. Far from Faculty members of the . condition yesterday and undisturbed that one eye is now hazel that there are no results to be administration - Mechanics- prerogative only once. his boyhood home in Jordan, whose memory he committee voted 16 to 14 to burg) and Roy Rathbun (3rd- and the other brown. and seen from this council. I feel There is an automatic appeal of a death revered , engrossed in the Arab cause he close the meeting to a film that I cannot waste my time engineering-Fayetteville) were The 55-year-old Conroe, Texas photographer and his Sirhan had brooded over Kennedy's sound crew from the surgeon are hopeful that the transplant will restore his vision. sentence in the California courts. cherished, and be thanked with elected vice president and campaign promise of jet bombers for Israel, University educational " It will be at least three weeks before Madden and Dr. Con- 81 On Death Row television station. Citing the frustration. secretary by acclamation. in according to testimony. After Chanin withdrew , The PNRC is composed of rad Moore will know the outcome of the transplant performed Moreover, reflecting a growing climate In a 15-week trial, the defense argued that use of WPSX films of the Old early Tuesday at Methodist Hospital shortly after the donor, , California has not put a Thomas Pavlick (5th-libera l presidents of the men's dor- the United States Sirhan's background and his hatred of Zionists Main sit-in by the Special arls-Phoenixville) O. B. Hickman, 55, Houston, died of a brain tumor. criminal to death in more than two years, Board, the FCFSR was elected mitory houses in the Pollock- had left him with diminished mental capacity, Judiciary president. "I feel that this Nittany area. Moore said that to his knowledge it was the first time, ex- although there are 81 .-ondemned men maturely pre- deferred a decision on future cept for animal experiments, unable to meaningfully and 'for an entire eye to be languishing on the San Quentin Death Row. meditate and carry out the assassination. His television coverage of its meet- transplanted with an objective of restoring vision. The last legal executions in the United young Arab as "a ings until the WPSX director Moore said the primary problem will be keeping the lawyers characterized the optic States occurred in 1967 — in April in California poor sick wretch." could be contacted. nerve cells alive. He said nearly one million nerve fibers must and in July in Colorado. grow together if vision is to be restored. The defense was grimly prepared for the Mentally Abnormal In a straw vote conducted AWS Votes To Ratif outcome of the long case. After 11 hours and 45 The state agreed he was mentally ab- immediately after the tem- y • • • deliberation that extended over normal — but not to a degree that he could not porary ban was approved , the Mailer Enters New York Mayor ' s Race minutes of y approved three days, the jury sent word to the courtroom cooly and calculatedly plan and execute Ken- FCFSR unanimousl NEW YORK — Author Norman Mailer is on the campaign nedy's murder. The jury heard the penalty the principle of full news cov- trail, not as an observer, but running for mayor of New York. that it had reached a decision. Revised Constitution "I'll bet you $5 it's death," Sirhan's chief arguments in the case Monday and began erage if jou rnalistic ethics are Is he serious? would mean counsel, Grant B. Cooper, his voice trembling, deliberations at 11:59 a.m. that day. followed. That The Association of Women that women residence hall "Watch me." Mailer says. Mailer's running mate, can- they had reached a that in the case of WPSX, the didate for City Council president told a newsman. The jurors signaled that Students last night areas should be aware of the , is another writer, Jimmy decision at 11:04 a.m. yesterday. filming of the meeting for unanimously voted to approve Breslin, who gave up his newspaper column recently to work Cooper had made the final plea for Sirhan s rule concerning solicitations on a novel. their newly revised con- (Rule Y-16). It states . stitution and by-laws. The Mailer-Breslin campaign to win the Democratic party "Solicitations by or for any primary opened on a rainy Tuesday at St. John's University. The constitution provides for outside interest may not be Breslin warmed up the audience — "You can be in the John Cornell Profess ors Vote To Drop Charges a new structure which will sponsored by any area or Birch Society or the Black Panthers, you still gotta breathe include an AWS senate and residence hall government." the air" — until Mailer arrived, 30 minutes late. a council board. One senator The rule pertains to the sale of "We've begun a fine and long political association by my will be elected for every 250 items such as magazines, being a half-hour late," Mailer said. "Jimmy has all the undergraduate women stu- books or cosmetics. humor and I have all the philosophy, except the philosophy of dents. Applications for the senate the streets. I went to Harvard." - Facult y Bows To Black Demands Each residence hall will and residence hall presidencies Both Mailer and Breslin will be available Monday in said they decided to run because weekend oc- spread at City College of New the school's ties to a partly elect a president to serve on of the desperate condition they find New York City in. By The Associated Press campus in a the council board. The presi- residence hall duty offices or cupation of a student center. York. classified Army project. at the Hetzcl Union Building * * • In other developments in At Columbia University — on SDS members at Princeton dents will supervise their re- The Cornell University facul- blocked the entrance to a spective residence hall coun- desk. They must be returned Theatre Owner s Attack Pay Televisio n dramatically campus turmoil , new the first anniversary of the by next Friday to senior resi- NEW YORK — In 17 ty reversed itself disorders Defense Department building cils and the residence hall years of testing pay television has demonstrations erupted a t outbreak of student dents. faced more trials and tribulations than a soap opera heroine. yesterday, agreeing to . de- on the Morningside Heights on the campus. The sit-in was itself. Applications for the AWS Now, after finally getting approval mands of black militant stu- American and Princeton campus — white students marked by scuffles, including Undergraduate women liv- , it is under attack by a one in which the dean of stu- Summer Council Executive determined foe. dents who carried arms on universities and disorder massed briefly to show support ing off-campus will also have will be available on May 5 at The movie theater owners for black student demands. dents was knocked to the representation in the senate. have mounted a nationwide ground. the HUB desk. These will be campaign to gather 25 million signatures to convince Congress The Senate also pointed out due May 16. that' the public doesn' 'Clear-Cut Vote' The students, protesting the t want pay television. Vietnam war, broke up their The owners, with the aid of a 45-second film shown in their The Cornell faculty vote, sit-in at the Institute for theaters, have cast pay television as a "monster in the living described a s "clea r-cut," Defense Analyses after three room" that is out to kill free television. TIM Lobbyists Return would drop charges against ' hours, they said, to avoid ar- "We ve got several million signatures already. We don't five-black militants, represent- rest. They left after police ar- think it's too much of a problem to get 25 million," said Mar- ing a victory for the campus rived. Bomb Scares Total 16 tin H. Newman, chairman of the Joint Labor and Management Will Canvass Support Afro-American Society. It had Buell G. Gallagher, president Committee to Save Free TV. The owners are allied with the threatened violent reprisals of the City College of New theater unions and businessmen connected with thpaters Town Independent Men's Council will canvass the State unless the charges against the York, ordered classes cancelled five black students were Sparks Latest Target College area this week for evidence of alleged discriminatory at the 20,000-student school dismissed. again today. violations of fair housing by The University received its 16th bomb scare yesterday af- The State practices against students and The faculty had voted ternoon despite a 55,000 reward offered by the University last Welfare Department Ad mits Mixup landlords. overwhelmingly Monday night To Meet With Students week for information that might lead to the arrest and con- HARRISBURG — State Welfare Department officials and The .information gathered in the survey will be used by a to reject an agreement that He said he would meet with viction of persons responsible for the threats. a relief recipients organization admitted yesterday that some 6-man TIM delegation to lobby in support of Rep. Max the armed black students sign- black and Puerto Rican stu- Sparks remained open in spite of an anonymous telephone of Philadelphia' ed with administration officials dents who have been barring s poor probably are cashing in double on public Homer's (D-AUegheny) anti-discrimination housing bill at call received by Campus Patrol at 12:05 p.m., stating that a assistance payments but contend the number is a very small Sunday. The charges, stem- whites from half the campus bomb had been placed in the building and was timed to ex- percentage of the total." the state capital in Harrisburg. ming from earlier since Tuesday morning in sup- plode between 1 and 1:30 p.m. There also were some indications from several state of- The bill is one of a 3-part package concerned with the demonstrations, were the key port of their demands. Classes meeting in the building and personnel working in fices that m-ixups in the computerization of Pennsylvania's implementation of fair off-campus housing for university stu- issue. The students are seeking the offices were advised of the threat and given the option to enrollment of more blacks and welfare payment system was a contributing factor of alleged dents. It is concerned specifically with discriminatory prac- Storm Building leave or remain. welfare fraud in Philadelphia charged by Auditor Puerto Ricans and establish- General studies. Grace M. Sloan earlier yesterday. tces against students because of age or year of A thunderous cheer from ment of a separate school of Mrs. Sloan said a special audit of Philadelphia welfare When questioned about the success of the trip, Ron Suppa , some 7,000 Cornell students, black studies. operations showed hundreds of welfare recipients were receiv- TIM l egal affairs committee chairman said, "The trip was gathered in Barton Hall , The black student demands at Columbia include an interim ing and cashing two checks for the same payment period. definitely worthwhile. The background information and pre- greeted the news of the faculty While unable to pinpoint the total amount of state board of admissions to en- Bank Cancels Interview s dollars liminary appointments we set up will be invaluable to the suc- vote. involved in what she called the "outright fraud," courage greater black enroll- she indicated A dozen students stormed ment, creation of an Afro- Students who scheduled placement interviews with it ran into the thousands. cess of the trip. It was an educational experience." the American University ad- The delegation spent most of the day reading the official American cultural center and the Chase Manhattan Bank today were informed by 4 ministration building in a black studies program. the Placement office that their interviews have been f t accounts of the special investigative comittee hearings on Washington, D.C., and evicted canceled. dormitory and off-campus housing. The specific " committee the university p r e s i d e nt, Receive No Answer A secretary from the office telephoned students and George Williams, from his of- said that Chase Manhattan representatives would not Woof's Inside I hearings studied were from Perm State, California State and fice. He was escorted from the Members of the Student 1 Edinboro State college. come because of a threatened protest by Students for n f\. nw*K,'A4w*(AW« building. Afro-American Society met ¦ ,XSi Jw^vSSa- *'"> *«i*w« *nto i«W*"i'«»'""*** «w^^ ™%:^...^,>^^a.« ¦-. y^&>j^ ij ,i'>ais^';'i w -asiiM;^ .^.-»%-:s'<«ss--. «-«s SHOSUH/HI. CHUCK !r \ ALOTCfOUS 6WS WER£ 5ICK, Editorial Opinion / UAMTEPTOTALMREMeMB£R'?C0£U,ICOW.PHAYE [TOW ABOUT THAT COME OVER ANP BEAT WTEAM Abroad WTIP1PNT WAH1 Studying 6AME - \- Q. .V S AS0.J J ^> - Some Similarity Time wmm United States. Recruiting: the Editor's Note: Miss Gurosky, a Collegian have about Ufe in no means ¦%¦ ,, Copy Editor, is currently attending the Uni- But our education here is by 4A classroom—it also encom- versity of Strasourg, France , with the Penn strictly in the ' OVKK... SORT IT'S HAfiP NOT TO APPRECIATE experiences such as learning to. use I M THAT UM. State Abroad Program. passes Change WJ KNOW? SUCH COMPASSION ! subway system, making snacking s COMPANIONATE For Big OF , the Paris THE SUBJECT OF military recruit- be required to operate through the on French pastry a between-meal habit, and ment on university campuses is quickly Placement Off ice in Grange Building. By PAT GUROSKY hitch-hiking to Switzerland for the weekend. becoming embroiled in a heated debate. When IBM, General Electric and the I Collegian Copy Editor Strasbourg itself is a beautiful cityi While many schools have concerned Philadelphia School System must work slow-moving canals tra- universities tree-lined avenues, elimination or through the Placement Office, then the In several ways the two bridges and an 800 year old themselves with the in versed by many crippling of ROTC courses, Penn State military should also. are strikingly similar. Both are situated dominates the skyline. And low moun- cathedral which is slowly becoming aware of the extra If the military recruiters in the provincial towns surrounded by afternoon pastimes is frequent and one of our favorite benefits the University grants military HUB were not set up in such a carnival tains, where spring rains are cafe by the pond in the park, luxuries. Both are large, sitting in a recruiters on campus. atmosphere, sit-ins, potential disruptions sunny days are rare black swans glide easily between with tall classroom build- watching students passing and fights would not occur. But the sprawling schools, awkwardly piloted by young Almost weekly, construction in lull rowboats h the ground floor of the Helzel presence of the military in a main stu- ings and signs of more in the bow. throug students and too mothers, with children Union Building are faced with Army, dent thoroughfare such as the HUB an- view. Each has too many few professors, and each has had its share But Strasbourg also has it own person- Navy, Air Force or Marine recruiters. tagonizes students from both extremes. peculiar to foreign eyes. The leftists feel,compelled to demon- Ex-Runner Speaks Out of active student discontent.' ality, sometimes The people staffing these tables offer All stores are closed at mid-day for a two- students attractive brochures about the strate against a system which they con- TO THE EDITOR: In reference to Dan Donovan's article One- of these schools is Penn State—the my leaflet urging the hour siesta, and many of the shopkeepers enticing alternatives to the lowly life of sider unjust. And the rightists feel com- in Tuesday's Collegian concerning other is the University of Strasbourg, where removal of Harry Groves as track coach, I am forced to speak Alsacien — a dialect neither French a draftee. pelled to demonstrate their sympathy and important 35 University students, participating in the point out several overlooked but obvious nor German. And the bus drivers go on When the recruiters are in full with the military. facts. Donovan wrote that Cabiati and Brinker, (co-captains University Study Abroad Programs, are every Friday without fail . f the area they occupy often re- of the track team) stated that they were not in agree- learning about France the best way—by liv- strike orce , What is iron ic , however, is that both ment with my criticism ol Groves. sembles a carnival. The entire scene be- groups demonstrate such irrationality They said this because they—like all track team mem- ing with its people. Liberal Dorms comes somewhat ludicrous when all four in their actions. bers—live in fear of reprisals from Harry Groves. Anyone There is no campus here as we know it who would speak out against Groves would be thrown off The French have a reputation for being branches of the service set up their at home—classroom buildings are scattered tables and display their films slides and THE ACTIVISTS , consistently call- the team the next day. Asking an identifiable member of lib eral , and this is evident in dormitory poli- , the track team any opinion of Groves which would be throughout the city. Though there are many life-size, stand-up, ing for free and unrestricted expression, cies. There is absolutely no curfew for coeds cardboard figures of Erinted in the paper is like asking Alexander Dubcek if American s t u- Navy Nurses. attempt to block students who want to e , favors Russian economic policies in Czechoslavakia— here, and the dormitory front doors are talk to military recruiters. the answer is, of course, only one answer—the answer dents here (from never locked. Instead, a male concierge i» BUT WE MUST admit that the mili- given out of fear. Dartmouth, Pur- stationed in the lobby all night. What's more, And a few of the conservative tary recruiters fulfill the wishes of a more Groves ' refusal to comment on my leaflet indicates due) the Penn men are permitted in coeds' rooms all day, members of the student body feel it is his inability to refute my points and not his desire to spare majority of students; and for that rea- State program is until 10 p.m.—though the sug- their job to physically attack those me from being hurt. If he did n't want to hurt me, he every day, son alone, no matter how opposed to the stu- wouldn't have slandered my name like he has to the doz- run separately, gested time for leaving is rarely enforced. present role of the military we may be, dents who oppose military recruiting. ens of people who have told me the incredible lies he has and our classes make us wonder this recruiting should be allowed to con- Neither view makes unblinkingly told them. are not inte- Other French customs sense. And My advice to Brinker, Cabiati and the rest of the team abide by some tinue. neither action should continue. grated with stu- whether we'll be able to when confronted by an interviewer who asks questions return. For «x- However, it should not be conducted which have only one answer is to utilize Groves' technique dents of other American laws when we in the HUB. We see no rational IF THE UNIVERSITY were to take of "no comment" rather than lie to the public. schools. In fact, ample, a good bottle of red wine can be e for its action and special prominence, and we can not insist that all military re- As to the track team's record under Groves, we lost when we first bought in the supermarket for about 40 cents, cruiting be conducted every indoor track meet we ran this year—including one understand why the military should be through the Place- arrived here, and of course there's no instructions about ment Office, loss against Pitt who had not beaten Penn State in 17 allowed to recruit and interview stu- less friction between the years. Outdoors this year we have lucked out in wins even the French keeping it in our rooms. And vending ma- two extremist factions would dents in the HUB while other result. over Villanova and Navy. Both were plagued by injuries students were chines in the lobby give a choice between companies , and organizations are not. Unless, of course, the Administra- to key personnel. Fortunately, for the team most mem- gone—on a two- two brands of beer. tion would bers of the team except the distance runners are under the like to see more friction direction of capable assistant coaches. The distance run- week Easter va- THE MILITARY recruiters among Dining Hall Beer should the students. ners have been going downhill all year. cation. MISS GUROSKY On a closing note, I'd like to say that a coach should We can also get beer with our meals in be a teacher, not a dictator, and the team should charge French Look (mildly equivalent to Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1SS7 out to compete and win and not to win just for winning's the student restaurants sake Though we're gradually being molded dining halls), which are scattered through- Ray Smith Ex-Cross Country Co-Captain into the French "look", we felt as if we out the city. We buy meal tickets in booklets Stjr Satlt t (ttnllroiatt were wearing the Stars and Stripes when —that way, we pay only for the meals we Arabs Voice Susp icion eat. Opinions differ as to the quality of the _ G4 Years of Editorial Freed om TO THE EDITOR: Our club, the Penn State Arab Club, we first arrived. The French, and even the has had several sad experiences with our exhibitions on other foreign students, for some reason could food in the student restaurants, but it is Tl P H UnlvtrW Dr. S««nd class postage paid ™ " SrwtllVn-r H?/(5 " """ " '"" *>•>• .1 S.aV Col ,., ?,. 1M, the campus. In 1967 we joined an international exhibition in tell we were Americans right away. difficult to get used to eating dinner be- the Hetzel Union Building where several valuable items, tween 7 and 8 p.m. Mai! Subscription Price: S12.00 a year from only our exhibit, had disappeared. The Campus Pa- The French students laugh at our thick Mailing Atsdt vss — Box 467, Slate College. Pa. 14S01 Editorial and Business office - - Basement of Sackett (Norm End] trol and the HUB authorities were informed about the American accents, and rightly so. But I never The French students are not as patient P hon a — IS5.2S3I incident. However, the items are still in the oblivion. Business office noun: Monday guage until as we about waiting in long lines for meals. through Friday, 9:31) a.m. to 4 p.m. This year, on Saturday, April 19, we displayed an really appreciated my own lan Member of The Associated Press extensive exhibition of pictures, posters, articles and I had to explain a common English expres- It's almost a game with them to see how far photographs depicting ahead in the line they can push themselves. JAMES R. DORRIS PAUL BATES the sad state of the Palestinian sion (in French, of course) to my French Editor refugees in the Middle East. These items included some , who is an English major. And a favorite way to get someone's atten- Business Manager valuable and irreplaceable items belonging to roommate f %W1 7tm ,rt ' ' the Embassy tion in the student restaurant is to shoot %^^^»? J*«J8FbJ$t " * * ***** ^^ mim nm^-m thSS^T^ of the State of Kuwait. This time the entire exhibition The French students are perhaps too ~ disappeared only a few hours after it was posted. a carefully aimed breadball at them. Managers : Cciocal Ad Managers, Kathy McCormIck; l,csli e Schmidt; NalionarAd liiVi " „„„,.,. - ied with their own student grievances 55?2i ?.' ™ , f occup CrM.t Manager , Steve Ulcht; A»t. credit Manager, Patty Fllippl; ciassifi od Advertising MManager.na«? m£« ' "S It is our opinion that this repeated action is not a Promollon Manager, Jerry Orrls; " ""'" riising , Mary »Kramtrj to be very concerned with those in the Life here is challenging and fun, and _c irculal|on Manager, Denny Mar-vie mere coincidence, but an organized attempt to suppress ~ - ~ Board ol Editors: Managing Editor, Glenn Kran i|ey; Editor lVrEditor. ' Allan Yorte rj rltv ~" cm-;—n^ .i - .. . — any views in contradiction with opinions held by certain United States, but they are immensely in- we're learning a lot. Many of us will prob- * ' Assistant city Editors, John Bronso n and Marc Klein; Copy BAfOT, K.l y Lltw k! Ricky FeNk." ' FMtuf . t%,Z' individuals or groups on this campus. •Letter Cut Marg. Cohen; sports Editor, Don McKee; Assistant terested in the racial problems in America. ably return to Europe -several times; but Sports Editor, Dan Donore* Pnte lM9arraolwm SaSSir pl,rrSr.r ™ ¦•HW«ll..mi If' We appeal to the community to do all that is Senior Reporters, Pat Dybtle and Rob MCHush; Weather Reporter, Billy WMliami. - * in its We often find ourselves trying to explain, few, if any, will come back as students— ~ " ~ " " ' '"' power to see that this exhibition will have the right of Committee on Accuracy and Fair play: John R. Zlmmerrn an, TSomas M. Golden; display in this University and that every possible action the situation to Europeans and being sur- and for that reason we're trying to make ' ' PAGE TWO THURSDAY, APRIL 24 will be taken for its recovery. prised by the many false impressions they every minute of our stay count. , 1969 Abbas A. Alikhan Pre deni. Penn Slata Arab Club ! ARTIFAX Class Ring Special HAS A Order Your Official Class SURPRISE ! Ring This Week And

You have to Receive A Free Gift come see what Free, a sterling Penn State class ring charm with we just received each PSU class ring order.

Als o, oriental $5 Value. ORDER THIS WEEK. $5 Deposit j ewelry, sh eepskins, wild crazy gifts and assorted old mover jewelers items of interest. 216 EAST COLL EGE AVENUE ARTIFAX 123} W. Beaver AHey, Rear of Danks Downstairs Class of 1970 ask LA VIE SENIOR you r PORTRAITS ARE BEING TAKEN NOW f riends about SENIORS FROM A-D CAN ONLY HAVE THEIR PICTURES TAKEN UNTIL MAY 7. THERE WILL BE NO MAKE-UP DATE. erf&t\ Portraits are taken without appointment from 9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon and from t :00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the Penn State Photo Shop (214 E, College Avenue—rear; 237-2345]

modest Men Wear Light Shirt, Dark Jacket & Tie ; Women wear jewel neck sweater of any color and no jewelry

31 w. beaver There Will Be a Sitting Charge of Si.85 sun. 1:30 • 5:00 exhibition

tu a. 2:30 - 9:00 sales Hurry ! Time Is Running Out USE COUEGIAN CLASSIFIEDSCLASS Colle gian Ads Brin g Results FOR BEST RESULTS Black Separatism Sande r Vanocur To Give Keynote Road Towa rd Inclusion Colloquy Help Needed By MARGE COHEN ture, Mrs. Sizemore said , values and norms Shall said that Collegian Feature Editor must be affected. By SANDY FISCHIONE York AP wire," Silver said. dents present. Referring to Harold Cruse's "Crisis of the Coverage is also anticipated the f irst phase has proved suc- When she was introduced to the Negro Intellectual, CoUeoinn Staff Writer from WEDO. the McKcesport cessful. This, he said, "is the class in " Mrs. Sizemore said the most crucial part of Colloquy." American racism Monday night, Barbara A. struggle for superiority is an "ethnic struggle, The chairman of Colloquy Columbia Broadcasting System Sizemore was described affiliate, KDKA-TV in Pit- The success of the second as "a beautiful not racial." emphasized last night that phase will be revealed at the woman. She cited the Irish-Catholic and Jewish- more people arc still needed to tsburgh and WPSX in State And, as she proceeded to discuss "Black American ethnic minorities who used aid the out-of-class learning College. It is also likely that actual program. Separatism: A Road Toward Inclusion," "violence" and "cultural nationalism," respec- program scheduled for May 23- Colloquy will gain publicity on The students broke into audience reaction indicated agreement with the tively, to work their way into the American 25. the National Broadcasting small group's shortly before 9 introductory description. social system. Company network. Silver add- p.m. to sign up for com- Drawing Larry Rubenstcin, Colloquy ed , because Sander Vanocur of mittees. In the Colloquy ap- from the writings of the late Each group first determines its "pseudo- chairman. expressed h i s Malcolm X, the Honorable Elijah Muhammed, species declaration ," basing it on culture, NBC w ill be Colloquy's keynote plication distributed at that pleasure at the tunvoul of ap- speaker. time. Jon Fox, personnel Stokely Carmichael , Charles Hamilton and kinship, language and religion, she outlined. proximately 70 people who met other black spokesmen, Mrs. Sizemore, instruc- From that first stage, the groups could effect Also scheduled to speak are chairman, restated the need last night in the Hetzcl Union cartoonist Al Capp and former for more people. tor at the Center for Inter-City Studies, Chi- a strong group nationalism on institutions, Building Reading Room. cago, summarized heavyweight champion Muham- "There are no specific kinds a 5-stage process toward eventually leading to the third level of ethnic Rubenstein said, however, med Ali. entmc-minority inclusion in the American sys- inclusion: "work niches" and economic blocs. of experience for Colloquy tem. that more people arc still Tickets for the speakers may membership that are required 'Process of Exclusion' needed. About 300 people are be bought in a package of It is on that third plateau where the "process except the interest and desire Confusion of Terms needed to fill secretarial three for two dollars and will to help successfully* initiate one "Inclusion," Mrs. Sizemore , of exlucsion" reveals its importance, she said . positions and to take charge of go on sale May 5. said "because of , the e h ic o f the most valuable out-of- the confusion of other terms defined by white To maintain its economic strength t n a nd moderate panel discus- Terry Jablonski, organiza- class experiences at Penn people." minority dominates either the union s or sions, to work round-the-clock tions liaison , said that faculty State." "Integration is an irrelevant business, discriminating against those not in shifts at Colloquy Central (the support for Colloquy lias been word," she said. the group while reporting " 'how hard we And the terms "militant" and "Black Power" HUB), to compile a Colloquy expressed. Hubert Humphrey are meaningless. worked.'" \ handbook which will contain also has expressed a wish to "There is only one group in this country that From economic strength evolves political biographies of the three m.'in speak next year at such a pro- P°wer ' Mr strength, she continued, raising the minority to speakers and to handle other 7.25. > s- Sizemore told the audience. the fourth level in the process. And level five gram. Silver said. That s the White Anglo-Saxon Protestants — items such as ticket sales and Don Shall , unsuccessful can- ask the Catholics." — where the power is — lies not too far away. public relations. didate for Undergraduate Stu- , But there is a concept of identity that is But, when asked if this same process would Stu Silver, Colloquy public dent Government president FECIAL very exciting" for black people, she continued , work for black people, Mrs. Sizemore said she —Coileslan Photo by Plerr a Belliclnl relations chairman said that and originalor of the Colloquy referring to the sociological interpretation of did not know. Did she have an alternative plan ? this is the first time such a idea, said that the program HOLIDAY the 'concept of the pseudo-species. "Yes, but not tonight," she said. 'A Beautiful Woman ' large scale out-of-class learn- was designed in two phases. " Need for Unity instructor at the Center for ing situation has been tried 'Chosen People' BARBARA A. SIZEMORE, at First, the campus needed INN "The Muslim community seems to be follow- Inier-Ciiy Siudiet In Chicago, spoke to the American a large university. something to bring all seg- "To reinforce the illusion of being chosen, ing the Jewish cultural-nationalism model," she He mentioned the wide-scale ments of the community to BUFFETS every group says 'we are the chosen people,' " said. "The significance of this model is very racism class Monday night. Mrs. Sizemore summarized a publicity Colloquy is receiving. work together : and second, it Mrs. Sizemore explained. Not only does such an important — it emphasizes the need for unity 5-siage process toward ethnic-minority inclusion in "We've already been mention- needed something to make .identity build group cohesion, but it also and an end to cleavages." ed in 25 to 30 newspapers in "protects America. courses more relevant to the " the group from other pseudo- "Before a group can enter the open society, It Pennsylvania on the Associated sturint body. FRIDAY ipecies," she said. must first close ranks," she added. Press wire and also on the New Citing the number of stu- , The hostilities among the pseudo-species, In the meantime, values must be affected, racism in particular, have given men "reason Mrs. Sizemore said. FISH IUAU to slaughter one another" and has "provided The male supremacy, white supremacy and Irvis Raps Withdrawal the impetus for each pseudo-species to main- economic supremacy values of this country WDFM PROGRAM SCHEDULE tain its superiority," she said. merely support the norm, she said. And to change . that aspect of the social struc- And the norm has got to change. • THIS AFTERNOON 9—Two on the Aisle. Broadway $2.50 per person Of Aid To Students *-Ntws music S1.2S children 7:30— Relaxing with Jonathan HARRISBURG (JP) — House Democratic Leader K. Le- 4:05—Music of the Masters, with Rich ... Is Jacob J. Kaufman, under 12 roy Irvis said yesterday he was opposed to withholding Kathy Bradley head of the new University 6—News office of Student Discussion state scholarships and loans from students who are accused e:05—Afte r Six, popular music 10—News of crimes. with Steve Lucckei 10:05—Symphonic Notebook University Readers To Irvis issued a statement criticizing the Pennsylvania 7:30—Dateline News with John 12—News Stage Moses 15i 12:05—Slsnoff #1 Higher Education Assistance Agency, which announced 7U5—Dateline Sports TOMORROW MORNING earlier in the day a cooperative agreement with the State 7:50— Comment 6:30— Penn state Weekday, rock Police. 8—Sound of Folk Music with Tom McLaughlin The PHEAA said the State Police would report any 8:30—Jazz Panorama *:3D— Slanoff Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales' student arrested and charged with a felony or misdemeanor By JANET KELLY he feels the actors have cap- Other members of the cast involving moral turpitude. Payments Withdrawn Collegian Staff Writer , tured this spirit. Acording to are Samuel Edelman (10th- RESTAURANT Wigley, movement and colorful speech-Altoona) as Chaucer, Kenneth R. Reeher, PHEAA executive director, said The University Readers pro- costuming are the only spec- Lois Bruckner (3rd-liberal if a student so charged was receiving a scholarship or loan, THE DAILY COLLEGIAN xdAiwW duction of Chaucer's "Can- tacles. Wigley said the costum- arts-Silver Springs, Md.) as further payments would be suspended, pending court LOCAL AD I I CLASSIFIED AU Slate College, Pa. terbury Tales" will b e ing, designed by Felice Proctor the Prioress, Lainie Silver action. DEADLINE DEADLINE Nightly Entertainment presented tonight, tomorrow ( g r a duate-theatre-Mouritain ( 6th-general arts and sciences- If the student is found guilty, his scholarship or loan 4:00 P.M. 2 Days 10:30 A.M. Day and Saturday night in Schwab. Lakes, N.J.) is "very good." Teaneck, N.J.), Michael Ker- would be withdrawn and steps taken to insure against Before Publication Before Publication Director Joseph A. Wigley, Members of the cast include rigan (3rd-division of his receiving additional state grants in the future, Reeher associate professor of speech, students from a variety of ma- counseling-Glenside), Howard said. •aid the production is not a jors. Richard Porter (5th-art Ross (Sth-theatre-Kingston), If acquitted or if charges are dismissed, the student's reading, but a story with history-State College) plays the Corwin King (graduate-speech- scholarship or loan would be returned to him upon certi- dramatic action. The prologue Reeve, Howell Rosenberg (6th- State College), Elizabeth fication by the college or university that he was in good I SM A"I and five tales will be enacted political science-Philadelphia) Leininger (6th - speech - Pitts- standing. in modern English, edited from doubles as the Pardoner and burgh, Jonathan Miller (6th- Speaks as Individual the translation by N e v i 11 Chanticleer, and Ellen Zeruld psychology - Philadelphia) and "This flies in the face of all Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence Coghill. (9th-English-Philadelphia) por- John Shepley (9th - English- which considers a person innocent until he is convicted," Wigley said the verse trays the young wife in the Wilkes-Barre). Irvis said. translation closely follows the Merchant's Tale. Irvis, from Pittsburgh, emphasized that he was speak- original. ing as an individual lawmaker rather than as a spokesman Look what "I had to do quite a Dennis Tessler (10th- Tickets are on sale from 9 bit of editing to preserve the r e h a b i 1 itation education- a.m. to 5 p.m. today through for the Democratic majority caucus in the House. rhythm," he said, "but I've Merion ) is cast in three Saturday at the Hetzel Union He said he personally favors a proposed bill that would itayed, on the whole, faithful different parts, withdraw scholarship aid when a student, currently re- including the Building desk and may also be ceiving such aid to Coghill." Nun's Priest and John Hegness purchased at the door. Curtain , is convicted of a crime. youcan get away Englishwoman in Lead (3rd - architecture-Pittsburgh) time for the performance is 8 ¦ Marion Desmond a pro- plays the Knight and the Fox. p.m. j fessional actress from England, lL- is cast as the Wife of Bath, one THE BLACK of the greatest comic female withnow: characters in literature. Miss Desmond Is the wife of Brian STUDENT UNION Langley, a visiting lecturer in More Czech Students architecture. She has perform- presents ed Shakespeare on British Broadcasting Company television, as well as on Middle Protest Against Husak •nd Far Eastern tours. PRAGUE (AP) — More col- faculties of Prague's Charles "It 's r thng " The setting for the produc- University took part tion is a bare stage. leges joined yesterday in the in the fyftoftyrfj fWX "*" "Costumes, people and student sit-in strike against the agitation. Many will continue From 5, 12 to 5, 18 " boycotting classes until language are the only props," regime of the new tonight, prolonging by one day said Wigley. "The rest has to Czechoslovak Communist par- the originally scheduled end of be supplied from the the sit-in. * imagination." ty leader, Gustav Husak, who International Films _ Capture Spirit replaced liberal-minded Alex- presents "The Tales; are rather sexy, ander Dubcek. but in an earthy and gay sort H? Twenty colleges and of way," Wigley said. He said The Sisters of DEVI '>mL&1 directed by Saiyajii Hay THETA PHI ALPHA INDIA 19S1 ri Cf m fa;/ ^iite f-^ledqei of «• congratulate then This is a tale of old World superstition colliding * with new World realism , of a house divided over new initiates: religion and, like the Apu films, done with forceful simplicity. Ljamma f^nl Il5eta * THURSDAY. APRIL 24 wiih to thank * 5HAYNE FORMAN t HUB Auditorium 7 & 9 P.M. + RITA FERRI 5SBR m the brother i Cf pledge. Tickets 50c at HUB Desk m I TT'tSftSS of aDelta lApsiti ffS f or Ike areat * 9i . ^ "i ' §4 f'f-3 * Wit- ¦*'¦-¦ » * a pi's • • .* * ^Jree p arlu. r -li % ral& i AAAJiAAJhM ' co-ed ; I W. >Wi Chauce r's living Md t .i'^k ?lf|?f experiment ^ i- 4'i 'H Canterbury Tales The Honda Scrambler 175. m Nothing to hold you back when | | in Modern Eng li sh at you team up with this baby. H| It's the beginning and the end. ji Fj ve merry yarns of tricked husbands The end of shelling out big || and trick y wives , illuminated and re- money for gas, parking, upkeep [I m I and insurance. The beginning ? enacted in colo rful costumes , on stage at PENN 1 of a new kind of freedom. The ! 175 takes you where you want to . • I go—on or off the road. And it \\ STATE ? \ takes you there with power— : i Schwab Auditorium I a rugged 4-stroke OHC twin ' = f. 8:00 p.m. Apr. 24-25-28 engine that moves out to 80 mph. 1; The Canterbury House I I Why wait? Get away with the I £ Thurs.—Friday—Saturday P^^ l "The Shelter" Scrambler 175 today at your j 1 ( Tickets on Sale at HUB desk nearest Honda dealer. ; I is considering the possi- bility of a progressive liv- HONDA See your Honda dealerfora coifir brochure, satety pamphlet and "Invisible Circle" film; or wnie: American Honda Motor ing experience. Interested Co . Inc.. Dept. C-15. Box 50. Gardens. California 90247. Collegian Ads women : applications at HUB desk, or contact Jack aBWfcwSfesssi William son Sports Motors Bring Results Hermansen at 237-4123 Your authori zed dealer for 120 S. Pugh St. HONDA State College S 2' S *Z «<"w— '***S*l>"JV*i!i^ *w « W fii Collegian Notes Prystowsky Call s On IFC To Preserve Status Quo Positio ns Available ministrative-vice president Jerry North for set- Collo quy By JOE MEYERS up the new Commonwealth the marketing profession s ma- weeks, serving on an in- Collegian Staff Writer ting Campus rush Appl ications are now didates for the deanship of the conducted by the American program. Graduate School. Institute of Industrial jor national organization. terdisciplinary team which is Eric Prystowsky, outgoing president of In- available for membership on examining a variety of com- 'Intact Organization' coordinating committees for the in- Engineering. * * * ter-Fraternity Council, has said, "I have a M. Nelson McGeary, Laird, director of munity development projects "Over all we have provided the next ad- Colloquy. Students may sign up cumbent dean, will retire on Herman's paper. "Job Shop Donald T. world of confidence in the new executive board. ministration with an intact organization which Scheduling via Forecast the Computation Center and in behalf of the World Bank. They will make an extremely efficient board . at the main desk in the Hetzel July 1. is much more more .efficient than it was when Union Building, in area union Schedule • Board", will be associate professor of com- Freeman, a member of' the "The highest priority of the new board Grant N. Farr, professor and, puter science, has been faculty of the Division of Com- we look over. I hope that the new board can buildings and at the Colloquy Department of presented at the National Con- should be to keep the status quo. or to be sure take the present structure and build from head of the ference of the Institute to be selected to participate in the munity Development in the that the organization remains as solvent and office, 203 HUB. There are no Economics and representing there", he said. special requirements for mem- held next month in Houston, 1969-70 Visiting Scientists Pro- College o f Human Develop- politically powerfu l as it is now." he added. the College of the Liberal Arts, gram of the Association for Prystowsky also expressed his opinions on bership on the committees, has been elected committee Texas. ment, is the only sociologist on Prystowsky stressed the fact that the group the experimental living - center, the Shelter. Computing Machinery. the team, composed largely of emphasis on what he called which include secretarial, chairman. Other membrs of * * * should not place its "My feeling 1? are ambivalent. It's nice for those registration , public relations. Six faculty members The program makes ar- economists. the "false goals" of liberalizing the social who want it. but I'm sure that it will have Colloquy central, moderators, presented papers for the Sm- regulations of fraternities. "Academic matters rangements ior participating * * * many of the same problems as fraternities student hosts and special ser- posium on Pollution Control in computer scientists to visit col- Hugh H. Chapman Jr., pro- should take precedence over any social have. In fact, a friend of mine told me that he vices. Fuel Combustion, Processing leges and smaller universities liberalization," he said. fessor of Romance languages, moved out of the Shelter because he wanted * • • and Mining at the ' 157th where they can discuss with has been named for the second 'Maintained Status Quo' more privacy. I'm sure the introduction/ of Panhellenic Council will national meeting of the Prystowsky also spoke of his ac- students and faculty the im- time to the National women into the Shelter will make it a stronger meet at 1:30 p.m. today in 215 American Chemical Society pact of computers and com- Scholarship Committee of Phi complishments of the last year. "It has been a institution, though." he said. HUB. held in Minneapolis, Minn, last ' year of general student unrest, which did not puter science on today s Sigma Iota , the national bypass the IFC. One of the most significant ac- Major Advantage * • * week. society and offer advice on the Romance languages honorary "The major advantage of the Shelter is Alpha Phi Omega , men's H. B. Charmbury, Secretary use of computers in research. fraternity. complishments of my executive board was to service fraternitv, will meet at # 'keep the lid on the kettle.' Two or three that it doesn 't have to follow the rules of IFC, of Mines and Mineral In- * ' * The committee, composed of ' 6:30 tonight- in 217 HUB. dustries was a luncheon Everett C. Shuman, who times some of the fraternity problems but then again it doesn t have any of the ad- * * * scholars from six universities, threatened to go overboard. U'e maintained the vantages of IFC, cither." he added. speaker before the Division of retired last July as associate selects the recipients of Henry pro- The annual initiation banquet Fuel Chemistry and presented professor of engineering status quo. which was very hard to do." Prystowsky cited the co-ordinated rush for the Society of Sigma Xi will Ward- Church Scholarships, "I would also like to commend my gram as one advantage of IFC membership. a paper entitled' "The Mineral research in the Penn State awarded annually to the most Shelter be held at 6:30 tonight in the Institute for Building secretary-treasurer. Brad Lawrence. For the Prystowsky said he feels that the main dining room of the Nit- Engineer and His Challenging outstanding applicants from, first time in years the IFC budget balanced. will be popular, but, "when the Administration Role in our Environment". Research, has been elected to the membership of the honor tany Lion Inn. Sigma Xi is the honorary membership in the Lawrence collected over $5,000 in back debts." stops babying the students. IFC will change, national honor society for the Other papers presented were society. he added. and it will have very few rules, and The Shelter "Recent Advances in Ext- American Society for-Testing . " encouragement of research in and Materials. * * * Prystowsky also commended his ad- will then be nothing. science. inguishment of Burning Coal Richard. G. Cunningham, Refuse Banks for Air Pollution He will be presented a cer- * * * tificate of honorary mem- professor and head of the There will be a meeting of Reduction" , and "Review of Department o f Mechanical Branch Cami uses Hook-up the Christian Science Pennsylvania's Mine Drainage Engineering, has been named Organization at 6:30 tonight in Pollution Abatement Pro- Final plans have been ap- t o a 3-year term on the the Helen Eakin Eisenhower gram" , both by David R. proved for the Life Sciences Engineers' Council for Pro- Maneval ; "The Oxygenation of Huildinr. Unit 3, which will be fessional Development, begin- * • * Irpn (II) Solutions Relation- constructed by the General ning in October. Tak e Over The Marketing Club will SHUMAN ships to Coal Mine. Drainage State Authority. He was named as a Com puters meet at 7 tonight at Phi Kappa , The building will be located Treatment" by H. L. Lovell; representative of the American Tau fraternitv. north of Buckliout Laboratory. Now that the day of the com- While computers are adap- vantages of this system versus th Committee and the Col- "Subsurface Disposal of Mine Society of Mechanical pu ter clearly has dawned in table to administrative assign- the linkup with University * * * leges they represent are Stuart Water." by R. Stefanko, and Engineers. necessary, their Park. The Bellefonte YMCA will Patton, agriculture; Vfirth V. "Chemical Properties of Toxic bership on June 25 at the American education, the Com - ments when hold registration for the water Cunningham also serves as a monwealth Campus network of prime function at a university One obvious benefit a t McCoy, arts and architecture; Strip-Mine Spoil Banks in awards luncheon of the member of the Council's ac- instruction or Schuylkill is that the complete safety instructors course at Max D. Richards, business ad- Pennsylvania", by R. J. Hut- Society's 72nd annual meeting the University is beginning to is one of 7:30 tonight at the YMCA. creditation personnel list from share in the marvels of the research. computer operation is ministration ; Laurence H. Lat- nik. in Atlantic City. N.J. which visiting teams are com- age. research and available at the spot for the * * * tman; earth and mineral Shuman will receive the posed and as a member of the Almost 140 new students to witness and utilize. There will be a meeting of * * * It will be a while before all 235 new instructional projects sciences; Robert L. Lathrop, Peter D. Bennett, associate award for his "diligence and national Policy Board on But in any case, there is t h e Undergraduate Student education. professor and head of 19 campuses can bask in the were progr ammed into the p.m. tonight the expertise in furthering the ou r- Education of the Society. glory of the era but the poten- almost no end to , what the Government at 7 John S. Nisbet, engineering; Department of Marketing,, was . computer during Fall Term. campuses can do with their in 203 HUB. pose and ideals of ASTM in The main function of the tial of the computer on Of the eight locations linked Elsworth R. Buskirk. health elected to serve a 2-year technical, administrative and Council is accreditation of their academic programs is equipment, beyond the obvious * * * and physical education; Ruth term as a director of the to the Computer Center, the ability to expand their com- Young Americans for intersociety affairs and for his engineering programs. virtually unlimited , thanks to Capitol , Beaver. B e h r e n d , L. Pike, human development; American Marketing continued important counsel V * * the capabilities of the vast puter science qurriculum. Freedom will meet at 7:30 Leonard W.Zimmerman , Association at the McKeesport and Ogontz ca m- tonight in 215 HUB. and contributions to others in Peter Gould, professor of University Computer Center puses are equipped with what Vast Resource # • science, and Evan G. Pat- organization's recent national the Society." geography, has been aopointed and its S6.5 million worth of the computer scientist calls At the Beaver Campus, for * tishall Jr.. medicine. election. co nsulting editor of rented hardware. example, one instructor has The Chess Team will meet at * * * "medium speed" terminals 8 tonight in 217 HUB. Additional committee mem- The AMA is a 25,000-member Walter E. Freeman, pro- Geographical Analysis, a new Within the past year, seven consisting of a printer, card used the computer to create a * * • ' bers are John W. Moore, association of educators and fessor of human development, international journal of of the branch locations plus the punch and card reader. test for a math course. This graduate student in higher practioners and is considered is in , Kenya, Africa, for six theoretical geography. University's Milton S. Hershey spring the equipment has been There will be a meeting of The Hershey Medical Center the Mode! Railroad Club at education, and Richard H. Medical Center have been link- put to use in physics, engineer- Heindel, Capitol Campus. ' and the York and New Kens- 9:15 tonight in 214 HUB. ed to the Computer Center s campuses have slightly ing and statistics. * * * IBM 360-67 system at Univer- ington "He re we. have the actuality * * * less sophisticated typewriter A committee representing Roy Gordon, a member of sity Park. or "low speed" of this vast computer the Harvard University facul- Computer at Command terminals, resource" said Director J. each college of the University equipment as its called in the . ty, will address the Physics - "They have this computer at Paul Giusti. "Our capability 12:45 computer business. The Department of History Colloquium here at their command." said Burton sites is linked to outranks facilities of some in- this afternoon in 310 Whitmore. professor Each of the " will sponsor a symposium at 3 THE NEW SCHOOL COLL E6E E. Squires, assistant computer center b y dustries. of computer science and a the Director Irvin H. Kochel. of p.m. today in 214 HUB. Kwang- Gordon will speak o n is the senior college of the New School for Social Research, an urban university telephone lines which run the tory Computer Center staff mem- data the Behrend Campus at Erie, ching Liu, professor of his "Collision Mechanism o f located in Greenwich Village with all of New York City for its campus. There terminals through a at the University of California, Molecules." ber. "Anything that can be the complex IBM reports the computer has been are three main New School units. One is the Graduate Faculty, a leading center done'with this computer can be adaptor into quick to catch on with the stu- will speak on "Confucianism * * * oik- in the Social Sciences that offers training to 2,400 masters and doctoral students done on these campuses." 360-67 network. dents. and Modernization." , Charles Herman of Deland, under scholars like Economist Robert Heilbroner, Political Scientist Saul K. don e Schuylkill Computer "This kind of machinery Fla., a Penn State senior in in- Padover, and Philosopher Hannah Arendt. A second is the New School evening , And just what can be different approach ^ with the 360-67 computer tests A slightly fascinates the students and has been appointed b y dustrial engineering, took first division, which provides a vast range of courses, workshops, and lectures for was taken at the Schuylkill competition some 12,000 New Yorkers annually, and serves as a major cultural center for the community-at- the imagination. lkill Haven. they want to use it. Univrsity President Eric A. place in regional No less than 118.349 different Campus in Schuy The interest has been so Walker to recommend can- of student technical papers large with programs of concerts, films, modern dance and art exhibitions. The newest unit is the through There a stand-alone IBM 1130 great that the University is ex- jobs were processed installed two the system during Fall Term computer was ploring the possibility o f NEW SCHOOL COLLEGE vears ago to permit a alone by 100 different the establishing a new two-year an undergraduate program, limited to 500 students. The College offers a two-year program for University departments and comparison between degree course in computer advantages and disad- students who have already completed their sophomore year elsewhere, and who are interested in divisions. relative science technology at some earning their B.A. with emphasis in humanities or social science, in a program which considers campus locations. undergraduate education important in itself. Special Task Force SIGMA PI Instead of lectures, every class in the College is designed as a seminar, with about twenty students Last May. a special task sitting around a table to learn through participatory discussion. Instead of textbooks, the student force at University Park congratulates our new initiate confronts the actual works produced by great minds of the past and the present-Aristotle and Senator Urges List ing recommended computer Sartre. Freud and Erikson, Sophocles and Pinter. Marx and Marcuse, Shakespeare and Picasso, facilities gradually be placed Joyce and Antonioni. Instead of requiring its teachers to engage in specialized research and publi- at all but two of the 19 cam- cation, the College has a faculty whose primary commitment is to teaching, and it frees them from Autos puses. The task force noted Ken Bundy extrinsic demands so that they can concentrate their talents on the instructional program. Instead Acciden t-Prone that the President's National of taking a collection of unrelated courses, students take a Divisional Program—a set of courses WASHINGTON (API — Sen. Philip A. Hart urged the auto Science Advisory Committee designed by the faculty to fit together into a total educational experience. And instead of a "major." insurance industry yesterday to identify car makes and has taken a hard look at the (Finally!) each student pursues his own Individual Study Program, in which he investigates, in considerable models that are most subject to accident and most expensive computer's growing impact on depth and over a two-year period, a problem of his own choosing under the gu idance of a tutor. to repair and to adjust their rates accordingly. university-level education and The student takes three year-long courses during his first year and two year-long courses during Democrat said it would be more useoil for concluded: his second. This constitutes his Divisional Program. The rest of his time is spent in Individual Stud- The Mir-higan ies, which he initiates during his first year and pursues for hal f insurance companies to run advertisements with this in- "By sometime in the 1970's it of his time during his second year. formation than those ads "lecturing juries' for making high- is doubtful that more than a damage awards. few per cent of the students Kdt-t chairman of the Senate antitrust subcommittee, will graduate without having Haddon Jr., testified that made some use of computers." THE DIVISIONAL PROGRAM: Unlike most THE INDIVIDUAL. STUDY PROGRAM: made his comments after William colleges, we are not divided into specialized high-performa nce type cars designed and promoted by From the field, Henry H. Art and Photo graphy Students One-quarter of the junior year and one-half repair costs. Herring, director at the departments like English, History, or Psychol- of the senior year are reserved for individual- manufacturers contribute to heavy ogy. We have only two Divisions-the Humani- ized stud director of the Transportation Department s Schuylkill Campus, and Samuel y. The student pursues his own spe- Haddon was ties and the Social Sciences. The entering cial interests under the guidance of a faculty National High Safety Bureau until .mid-February. He now is Laposata, an instructor at supported by auto Beaver, put it another way. student normally elects to study in either the tutor and by means of the analytical tools he president of a nonprofit organization n •*.* humanities or the social sciences, but may highway safety. "That's the world today." rosmons is developing in-the Divisional Program; his insurance companies to promote for Art Editor s choose to work in both. work generally culminates in a written paper. Haddon said a study by one insurance company showed they said. "It's the computer age and we're part of it." The significance of this unorthodox Divi- Some students form ther own seminars or en- that "the experience for high performance cars is con- sional structure is twofold. It means that the average incurred list members of the faculty to offer special siderably worse than the other groups in and Photogra phers are still student takes courses at an advanced level that courses; others take courses from the vast losses, claim frequency and loss ratio." are genuinely interdisciplinary rather than nar- programs, graduate, undergraduate, and adult, Unnecessary Expense rowly specialized. And it means that the student available at the New School for Social Re- Haddon also testified that manufacturer' use of very large is free, i in the Individual Study portion of his search-courses taught by such visiting special- exterior sheet metal components, rather than smaller ones Blow Yourself available on the 1970 program, to investigate a problem that defies ists as Paul Douglas, Rollo May. Bayard Rustin, that would be easier and cheaper to repair, results :n un- the boundaries of conventional departments, Leslie Fiedler, Lee Strasberg, Allen Ginsberg: necessary expense. perhaps cutting across philosophy and drama, and others choose to work independently o£ "The same applies in the case of parts that are designed UD POSTER SIZE or psychology and economics. any course structure, under the direct super- such as fenders * 2 «. x 3 H. in ways that make them difficult to replace, La Vie staff. THE HUMANITIES: The humanities com- vision of their tutors. The possibilities for In- rather than bolted on. ' SmJ «*r W*d •* ! WU, *r C»W Plwfe dividual Stud that are welded on fr^>J»-- i JU'to l i tO- Wiidli Mj «*, . prise all the creations of man—in music, paint- y are initiated by the student Hart urged greater research eiforts to determine the iLii uo-up ... —, THE NEW SCHOOL j * more detailed information on Australia and Japan all of the social science disciplines. We'have therefore constructed an upper-level program I '&U#' COLLEGE I * a completely new section on Africa New School fo« Social Reseuch I concert: may 3 in social science that is totally interdisciplinary. Ii 66 West 12th Street I * information on every important city, country, and continent The emphasis is on formulating new prob- ¦ New York, N.Y. 10011 S to which an American student is allowed to travel lems rather than learning the answers to old ¦ leaH. ?nd e t,le Bull etin and applicatio n lor¦« the«»= I at your college Bookstore or use coupon: ¦ problems, on mastering the'methods by which I iS. NewE School. SCollege.. . , . . | - —— tickets on sale today hub desk truth can be discovered rather than memo- r j rizing the truths already known, and on under- i ¦ i •Ob GROSSET 4 DUnIapTInC. I I am now attending „ . H " ¦ ^ 51 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010 ¦ standing the seminal concepts that have proved ! I (C ollei< or Vnl\trsUy) ! l Gentlemen: me of I to be especially suggestive in illuminating so- l 6 0 copy(ies) THE STUDENT TRAVELER I one show onl : Name : : J I ABROADflf^.S at" $2.50 per copy. y : 7 30 cial reality. The problems studied in this pro- l i gram, as well as the readings, exhaust no I Name . ___^__ I universe, establish no canon, define no ortho- Addrcu ___ j I I Address . . ; j sponsored by uub and jazz club doxy. They provide a strong foundation on which the student can build his Individual S City State _Zip, __;__ I ' ' City . state Zip I Study program. 1-——______„___..__..____„.___J ^^ KMSSSMSK^^ Slow Start Fata A Cinderella Team

That Couldn t Win li Bis ons Edge LaXers / 7-6 Editor s Note—Erstwhile basketball voted Gene Mauch National League i By WARj REN PATTON predictor Penny Weichel has decided to "Manager of the Year." No one was start a new Collegian Sports Writer career—legitimate sports wri- laughing at my Phillies now. They finished ting. After a hard winter of following must love bad weather like the the hoopsters fourth in 1963, one game out of third place. I The lacrosse team , Miss Wetclie! was glad to was caught up with the enthusiasm Srprihcrs Brothers love the censors. The latter has driven one see the advent of spring, and with it the and the weather is doing its return of generated by the Phillies' organization, of the former two out of existence baseball season. sportswriters and fans. At least Gene Mauch foul worst to accomplish the same murky ending. The Lions match to the opposition and the ele- le r tic antics the fu tile Phila- and I were enthusiastic. I couldn't wait for lost their second straight „ , ? ! rf, ?^. °f the '64 season to begin. This just had to be cnts yesterday. 7-6. The opposition was Bucknell. The elem- delphia Phillies in the early going brought ' back bitter memories the year. I refused to believe it wouldn't be. ents? Well . vou name it and it was there. to Miss Weichel, anything out all an old Phillies ' die-hard. She reminisces Unfortunately , the Lions seemed to be below. But the Phillies , are definitely Hie there. They started out poorly, sunk even lower and finished Charlie Browns of major league baseball. ii> with a belated comeback that was one goal too short and one case you haven't noticed. They are. I found long-winded but that was By PENNY W E CHEL second too long. Which seems a little I that out after living through the '64 season. just another factor of the elements. Collegian Sports Writer. You look at the so-called Cinderella teams of the sixties — the '60 Pirates^ the '61 Reds, or Crucial Score My true confession. This is the story of the '67 Red Sox. They all have" one thing in a beautiful young maiden (me ) and my common — they won. That one second was the amount of time left in the first :** unrelenting one-sided love affair with a period when the Bisons scored their fourth goal — to have baseball team. It is a story of vouth and in- Then there's the Phillies. The only Cin- guessed that it would be the crucial goal would have been > nocence and a Joe Boyd belief in a ball c'ub dere lla club in the whole history of baseball unthinkable at the time. for which absolutely nothing will ever go to blow the pennant. I'l l never forget it as It was all part of a nightmarish first period for the State right I mean, of course, the Philadelphia long as I live. A six and a half game lead squad. Bob Schoepflin 's early goal tied Bucknell's iirst thrust Phillies. with 12 games to go and they blew it. but . unfortunately for Penn State, that was the last knotted score of the day. The boys from the land of Christy Even though I'm a native Pittsburgher, The only time I cried was during the Mathewson poured three more shots past Jim McGuone and I guess I should've known by the time I was Phils' final home appearance of the season took a lead which they never surrendered. right in the middle of their famous 10-game I 10 that I was destined to become a Phillie "We just couldn 't clear the ball ," summarized Bob % diehard. In the first place, I started collect- losing streak. They were playing Milwaukee 24 and the Braves were taking their usual Schoepflin , who led State with two goals and two assists. "We ing baseball cards at that time and my couldn' t pick up the ground balls cither. We were favorite was this picture of Don Cardwell home run swings and coming up with Matty AIou hits. Oh , it was sickening. I wept and overconfident and were looking forward to Rutgers." 1 (then a Phillie) because of the because of The Lions inability to clear the ball to the attacking zone the black background. I mean I thought that wept. It's okay when Matty Alou beats you with Matty Alou hits, but not those sluggers put tremendous pressure on Jim McGuone who made 12 saves was really neat. None of the others had on 41 shots. Heaven help coach Dick Pencck if McGuone 8 black backgrounds — they were all yellow. the Braves had. The Phillies lost that game 13-10, although Johnny Callison (my favorite should suddenly turn gun-shy. Then another time I asked my father what a Sweeping adversity and a poor playing day aside, the "Phillie" was supposed to be anyway. He Phillie) had three home runs.'I knew then the Phils were doomed. A LATE SURGE was not enough for the Lions lacrosse Lions, with the help of Galen Godbcy 's fi rst goal of the season, said a filly was a female colt. I said , "Oh ," pulled lo a 7-6 deficit with just two minutes remaining The : 2 team lo overcome an early lead by Bucknell. The Bisons and wondered if female colts were supposed No, You Bisons stiffen ed from there on and the deficit became the final Actually when I look back at the whole scored four goals in the first period to score an upset. to be tough or something. ordeal, I' should have figured it out earlier— tally. that the Phils were doomed Can't Have It Here Lion midfielder Dave Schock (21) presses the attack. When ,1 was 11, we moved east into , that is. In July Worst Possible Time Phillies Baseball Network territory. Until the Cardinals had them down 10-2 going into then I reall y hadn 't paid much attention to the bottom of the ninth against Phillie-killer It just seemed that the Lions picked the worst time to baseball games or the Pirat es. AH I knew Curt Simmons. Now check this one out. The have a bad day. The Bisons, described as a "heady" squad by about the game was what I learned from my Phillies erupted for seven runs in the bottom coach Pencck, proved to be just that, controlling the ball I baseball cards. I even thought the Pirates of of the ninth to lose the game 10-9. Isn't that th roughout the contest. And , as the saying goes, you can't ridiculous? The 1960 Pirates would have Netmen Top Gettysburg ?; the middle and late 50's were supposed to be score if you don 't have the God forsaken ball. Bucknell had the come through with at least eight runs J good. Then I rear!some years later that they to tie, ball most of the time — Bucknell scored 7-13ths of the time. j finished seventh all the time. It was the not to mention the nine needed to win. But And then you figure when was the last time Penn State | | Phils, naturally, who finished last. not the Phils. Like I said, they're the Charlie was held to just six goals? Not since the Maryland game. Browns of the majors. For Seaso n's First Win Maryland is in the top 10 in the nation . Bucknell would be j jj In 1960 I began listening faithfully to lucky to be in the top 1,000. You could just simply call it a bad Well, I " was young and dumb and all Cathrall' £ every pitch of every inning of every game By BOB DiXON s plea, won his singles came through with an easy 6-0, day. s; via Byrum Saam ( the Philadelphia an- fired up for the '65 campaign. It was so and doubles match in straight 6-2 win over the team of simple. The Phillies had won two pennants Collegian Sports Writer Saturday, the Lions go against a ranked power in Rutgers. il: nouncer). Even on Sunday afternoons when sets. Captain Neal Kramer got Forbes and Bfttinger. It was The Lions had better be up for this one as another loss could g all the other voluptuous 12-year-old females in their whole history (needless to say, There's no such thing as the ball rolling when he easily quite an improvement over sink their won-loss tally into the depths of oblivion. It' fewer pennants than any other major league s a good g were down at the pool chasing all the 12- "fighting the clock" in tennis, defeated sophomore Dave For- last week when the two Lions team that can drag themselves from nowhere and knock a Jj year-old he-men, I sat plastered in front of team except for the expansion clubs). One but for the Penn State netmen. bes, 6-1, 6-1. It was the senior's were defeated by Navy by the superior team from being a ranked power to a rank power. the TV trying to figure out who Gene win was in 1915 and the other in 1950. Add up such was almost the case first singles win of the season. same score. % at Mauch T. would start third. Jim Woods or Ted Lep- 15 and 50 and you get 65. We were in. yesterday. The Lions had been Sophomore Bob M e i s e , In the second doubles, Meise Bucknell 4 1 2 0—7 ^ rained out of a win in their recently moved up to the num- and Rupert combined for their % cio. Bigail decision! I knew who all the players Penn Stats 1 2 2 1—6 were right, but boy was I stupid. I even No we weren t. We stumbled through season opener against weak er two position , won his sec- second win in a row, defeating ^I asked my father if foul balls were counted in that season as well as '66, '67, and '68, West Virginia, and the dark ond consecutive match with a Runne and Teese , 6-2, 6-3. The al though each summer I convinced myself skies at Gettysburg threatened 6-2, 7-5 victory over Juhan team of Avery and Matty Kohn | | computing batting averages. He said no with 1 Runne. Joe Kaplan followed , | a straight face. that the Phils were going to stage some to do the same to the match completed the shutout with a 6- phenomenal mid-season drive to the top a la against the equally weak Meise with a convincing 6-2, 6-2 2, 6-1 victory over Wildonger 1 The early 60s were bleak years for the the '64 Cardinals. Every time they won a Bullets. triumph over Paul Teese and and Holt. CHILDREN'S CAMP •j Phillies, or should I say bleaker than usual. game I'd say to myself, "AH right, bab y. Glenn Rupert .defeated Jim Important Win "I saw those clouds and all I Bittinger, 6-4, 6-1. 3 Nineteen-sixty-one was the year of their This is where we make our move," but then could think of was that another "What can you say when you COUNSELLORS - Female j memorable 23-game losing streak. I never they 'd go ouf and lose two or three in a row. easy win would be rained out." Soph Surprises win 9-0," Cathrall said. "I <$ missed a pitch. The last one they lost was But I never gave up until they were" coach Holmes Cathrall said af- Art Avery finished his match think the entire team played •i the first game of a doubleheader with the mathematically eliminated. I would never ter the meet. "I told the boys in strong fashion, beating Ken well and now all of the starters Private Girls camp Berkshires, Mass. Tangel 4. Milwaukee Braves. I bet my sister's fiance stop believing. to play hard and try and get Wildonger. 7-5. 6-1. The sur- have at least one victory. The S| that they'd win that game — 50 cents I bet their matches over as quickly prising sophomore now has win was an important one wood Area. Openings for watersafety instructors ;| ;| him—but they lost. He kindly asked' me if Until now. My love for the Phillies is not as possible. We needed five in- State's best record . 3-0. and because it should put the boys | "| I'd care to bet him another 50 cents that completely dead, nor will it ever be. It's just dividual matches completed also has two doubles victories in a good spirit for the tough skiing, sailing, boating. Phys Ed ma jors for tennis realistic. I am now able to face up to the for the match to count, but as to his credit. Bob Claraval ,13 they'd win the second game and I said no match against George archer y. Write to: Mrs. Paul Winter 'I and the Phillies finally won. Figures. I've hard-boiled fact that the Phillies have a it turned out, the rain held up completed the singles com- Washington Saturday." 'J never won a bet when it had to do with the rotten pitching staff , fair hitting and maybe until the entire match was petition with his first win of The win was State's first of | | Phillies winning. the first team in the whole history of finished." the season, defeating Bob Holt, the year and the Lions' record 215 West 92nd St, baseball to finish last behind a first year ex- Because the rain was kind 8-6. 6-2. " now'stands at 1-2. The remain- ; Well, they won the next night against pansion club. Why do I feel this way? Is it enough to "go away and come The Lions took up in the dou- der of the season has its tough New York 25. N.Y the Cubs in Philadelphia for a two game" because I'm getting old or is it just that I'm " — prob- bles competition where they spots, but the netmen can now "* again another day ; winning .streak and ended the ,last week, of sick of being frustrated every summer? " ably every day all term — the left off in the singles. The first hope and look forward to more P. the 1961 season in fairly decent fashion. I know not why. All I know is that the Cubs State tennis team now has a team of Kramer and Kaplan sunny days. | | was muttering to myself, "Just wait till next are going to win the National League pen- new look. Instead of a season 1 year." Ah ,the spirit of youth. nant and the World Series to boot. record of two losses, the Lions ; can now add a 9-0 shutout over | | The next year (1962 ) was the first time I So to all Phillie fanatics in general. Here's your opportunity to take -| picked the Phillies to win the pennant. They Forget it, ' Gettysburg and new confidence baby. We re a long-suffering but to the picture. m finished seventh but the baseball world was doomed group. And never miss a "Peanuts" girl out for a great evening j so shook up about it that one wire service special on TV. The Bullets were simply no your favorite match for the Lions, as each of the State netmen, heeding of bowline: and save money I In Four-Way Meet 3oj ^&mk?> The Brothers and Pledges of QjVL Ofi Ia^o^M Coed Gol fe rs Win Theta Delta Chi Penn State's coed golf team meet Saturday. proudly congratulate t heir new initiate won a quadrangular meet held Winning for the women were Friday Nights, at Armenara Lanes , for every Come meet Miss Maples, at Cornell last Friday. The M'ss Wayda over Bobbie women defeated Cornell , Swank, 8 and 6, and Miss game you bow l, your date may bowl a game free Smith over Barbara Ey, 6 and Revlon Beauty Consultant Ithaca and Cortland in stroke of charge ! That's tomorrow night, for each game play in a meet shortened to 4. Miss Brownlee lost to Nan- nine holes because of rain, fog cy Kelley. 3 and 1. and Miss Mike Mc Donnell a guy bowls his date bowls a game free. So fellows, at McLanahan's Self-Service Atwood lost to Pat Niles, 3 and and 40-degree temperature. take your favorite girl to The Lady Lions consisting of 2. here from Thursday, April 24 thru Vivian Brownlee. Cindy At- wood, Suellen Wayda and Sally Alpha Phi Delta Alpha Phi Delta Friday, April 25 totaled 203 to take first $50.00 REWARD J> A r me na m Lanes Smith, towards information in locating the place in the contest. The low negatives to In* Walkertown pictures In Armenara Plaza , on Sowers Street, score for Penn State was a 46 and other , events that occurred In turned in by Miss Wayda. front of Old Main this past Fall. Alpha Phi Delt a and you can both bowl for the price of one The coeds again encountered Anonymity promised Frida y nights , 8 lo closing. bad weather when they tied call 238-8495 B Spring Pledge Class LIBERAL ARTS AND BUSINESS STUDENTS a Mike Scicchitano Alan Steckley The Pennsylva nia Departm ent of Highways #i oF is in the bus iness of pub lic service. We need 3" , J(orWic« | | Rich Temple Pat Frye a i T mature young men and women I socially conscious, ¦o who are not only aware of problems but who £ Tony Cardarelli Bill McGillivray are willing to work toward doing something about °- Tom Del Pozzo Jeff Stump them.

If you are a "DOER " and interested in a Long may they live! ¦ * JOHN MEYER challeng ing career oppor tunity , we would like to I'a ! She 'll show you how any girl with a brain in meet you. Alpha Phi Delta Alpha Phi Delta SPEAKS YOUR LANGUAGE A PDH repr esentative will be on campus i her head can become a beauty now. Come, Apr il 30, 1969. to discuss careers in Per sonnel Tell it to the oracle- let her show you the real ri ght way to app ly Administratio n and Heal Estat e. Please see your in our bright and versatile Private Eyelashes' in 3 wiggy lengths. (It's Placement Director in the Grange Building to SUMMER JOB S Greek stripling of a skirt— make arra ngements for an interview. web-belted and buckled simp le!) See all the new eye-makeu ps (no WE HAVE A SPECIAL in chrome. $14. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Pick up a batch of more jaded eyes). A full curr iculum of lip- JOB JUST FOR YOU! , John Meyer's cotton sticks and nail enamels. 'Natural "Wonder ' \ knit shells to wear treatment and prettyface makeups ' (the first ationaS Agency o absolutely oit-f ree makeups ever!) As well as For Action its compacts ad infinitum Discuss the classics , so you Student Employment —communicate! can pass the pretty-peop le test. P. O. Box 52492 TWO WHEELS New Orleans , Louisiana 70150 Cash ? Check ? Money Order ? GENTLEMEN: PLEASE SEND 1969 SUMMER JOB KCVLON DIRECTORIES CHECKED BELOW. m IMA Usi^ U ?Vacation Resort Jobs $3.00 MlUR* »Nll | Work with students at America 's finest Resorts. «yi ?Fo reign Jobs $3.00 ^§§235 *1 Vgili! tCM|Sfi Vi A ParamMtft*** wawSy f lHM lf l i 5 I i set anyone off guard. To watch him in civilian usually serious guy who looks more like a full- throws the javelin when we need points. Both fa In VI 1 9 I f.illU 9 Surwesrwtor clothing you could never imagine him explod- back lnan a ni8n JumPer. He has more spring of them are willing to put themselves in an .aaaflal ^ HH BlilBa aVjiBaa^H BHHl BMi HiHB BMaa MlaalMRB $$, ing out of a set of starting blocks, skimming in his legs tllan a h'6h-strung slinky. event where they may not be their best in over hurdles to snap a victory in record time. Cabiati Pleases order to have a winning team. Both are solid NOW... 1 :30 • 3:30 • 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30 In fact, Brinker almost didn't relinquish his "Cab" came out his sophomore year and guys as persons and will succeed in what- ^ $ street duds for the blue and white shorts of a pleased coaches, relatives and himself by soar- ever they do." "A TRIUMPH OF BEAUTY , SUSPENSE, State trackman. ing 6-10, sufficient height to warrant a second They're already well on the way. Jack AND UNDERSTATEMENT, Lfiffimon A BEAUTIFUL FILM AND ALL TOO HUMAN!" Tennis Frosh Lose —Liz Smith Cosmoaolitan TOhter t it Matthan The Penn State freshman They hunled each oilier as enemies.. tennis team lost yesterday to they tormented each other as savages the Bucknel l frosh, 5-4. It was Ihey faced each other as men! mA the opening match of the there's mimm urn it AT ALL! season for the young Lions. "A fantastic film in which LCi all of life becomes a week- MARVIN fa DAILY COLLEGIAN end—a cataclysmic , CLASSIFIED AD seismic traffic jam. The V TOSH1R0 DEADLINE film must be seen for its ^Wmhfune 10:30 A.M. Day power, ambition, humor, Before Publicatior. and scenes of real

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<4 -« iHNiiiniiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiitiniiiiniiimiiMiUHiiiiiMiiiiiiMiimiiimimiiiiiHuiniiiiMiiiumiHiMHiiiMuniiiimCOLLEGIAN^ CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE I FOR SALE FOR RENT FOR RErTT WANTED ATTENTION NOTICE CLASSIFIED "' ' " " STUDENTS: WE provide prompt insur- J1966 HONDA 300 Dream, S320. Call 237 PARK FOREST furnished two-man Apt. SUMMER SUBLET. Roommates needed camp couns1elors wanted. wsi, HEAR THE dazzling voice of Peter FECULENCE? DIRT? Call 8S5-213a for ADVERTISING POLICY ance for aulos, motorcycles, motor- 3398, Phil. sublease summer, fait opftan. Air-con- for luxury townhouse. Afl utilities, (ow fencing, nature, sailing, group leaders, Whitehead Monday night. Teddl's ShoBar, girls wiilina to clean aoartments scooters, travel, valuables, hospitalization. ditioned, pool, very reasonable. 237-6945. cost. Call 237-2725 or 237-2714. music' all camp specialties. Write tc ALTERATIONS AND Sewing, Knitting, TRAILER 8 x 45. DEADLINE Phone AAr. Temeles, 238-6633. ; 1959 CHEVY. Good clean condition., Max Kleiman, Box 636 Middtetown, Conn, Live cheaply! Patio and Crocheting by Carole. Phone 238-1680. I Cheap! Willing to bargain. 466-7486. j DON'T SWEAT summer swlnlng ex- EFFICIENCY FOR Summer term Am- Camp Hadar. and awning ! Yard with fence! For in- 10:30 A.M. Day Before IT'S ALL happening at Two Wheels Cycle travagantly. Air conditioned furnished ' bassador Building. Call 238-1078 after spection call Bill 237-1023. Married couples WE USE approx.