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N ews Roundup From the State Sun Yields To Tenant Group By ALLA N YOOER Collegian Staff Writer The Committee of Grievances pro- testing alleged high rent and poor living conditions in the apartments of Shiou- Chuan Sun have won major concessions from the University professor and State College landlord. The committee members met with Sun yesterday afternoon and " went away satisfied that it got what it went after ," according to Joe Myers, Town Independent Men president. The four members of the committee, Lloyd Chambliss , Edward DiCenzo , Vin- cent Franklin and Laurey Petkov , said in a statement issued yesterday, "Dr. Sun has agreed to see all of his tenants about their grievances. And he —Collegian Photo by Pierre Bellicin r THE END: Undergraduate Student Government elections for 23 Congress seats and the freshman class presidency- enter their third and final day today. Election results will be tabulated tonight and announced between 9 and 11 p.m. in the- Heizel Union Building ballroom, and in Collegian. has agreed to take care of most of our demands. "If Dr . Sun does not fulfill all of the conditions that he agreed to at today ' s conference, we will be forced to take im- mediate steps to force action on these issues , particularly rent reduction , " a committee spokesman said. List of Demands "If a tenant , upon meeting with Dr. Sun, is still dissatisfied , he should con- tact the Committee of Grievances so that we can work on his behalf in our next session of negotiations , " he added. The demands with which Sun has agreed to compl y include the repair of faulty electrical equipment; the repair of holes in floors , walls and roofs ; pest control; replacement or renovation of tomorrow s ur furniture in disrepair; and the repair of Sun "from all sides , " according to Cham- bathrooms, bliss, he Chambliss said the group is meeting "Sun is afraid of a rent strike. He y ' s with Sun next week to " make sure tried to keep that idea down. The pub- m- things are going along smoothly. " licity would have made him look very ise "Dr. Sun was cooperative on all ^ad. a points except our demand for rent re- DiCenzo, another committee mem- duction. He had to be prodded a little ber ' said " Sun told us that he thought bit by the committee with that one." he would be fired (from the University) Dr. ' if there were a rent strike." >n- No Rent Overhau l «We have shown that we can defi . lat Chambliss said Sun would not agree nitely get lower rents and improved :xt to a sweeping overhaul in rent pay- conditions by organizing and getting the ments. " students together, " Chambliss said, las "Sun will see each tenant on an in- "We want this to be an example for of dividual basis. Then Sun and the tenant student-tenants in the area, air will decide whether the rent should be "We ' ve won a victory for the op- est lowered , and how much," he said. pressed students living in the State Col- of Much pressure has been placed on lege ghetto , " Chambliss added. Networks Offer Candidates Prime Time House Passes Equal Tim e Bill WASHINGTON (AP) The House uggled through a historic and record- ting session yesterday to pass a bill it could pave the way for television- lio debates between the three major isidential candidates. Immediately after House passage, Columbia Broadcasting System of- ed the candidates and their running ites one hour of prime TV and radio le on each of the next four Sundays " ore the election for a confrontation. The National Broadcasting Co. asked i three presidential candidates to ar- lge for their representatives to meet th network officials to arrange a time d format acceptable to all. Action Not Final ~Bul House action sent , the measure ck to the Senate where the battle could sume. Senate Democratic Leader Mike ansfield of Montana said the bill will be Ued up at the start of today' s Senate ssion.and he -had been told Republican ponents expect to speak at some length ainst it. . Sen. John.O. Past ore (D-R.I.) told a ws conference he will try to call up the JtSasysoon-as it is-officially transmitted from the House He said he will urge ac- ceptance of the House version because to send it to a Senate-House conference would mean its defeat. The House vote came 27 hours , 37 minutes after the House went into session Tuesday. Most of the session , 20 hours , 19 minutes, was spent on 45 roll calls. Republican Filibuster Some 20 hours was spent in a Republican-led filibuster before the bill could even be brought up for considera- tion . Passage of the bill was on a vote of 80 to 35, with all of the nays cast by Republicans. Voting for it were 182 Democrats and 98 Republicans. The bill would allow television and radio networks to arrange the joint ap- pearance of major candidates-Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey, Republic an Richard M. Nixon, American Independent George . C: Wallace-without giving equal timelo " numerous minor seekers for the presidency. A Senate version of the measure merely suspends the equal time provision leaving it to the networks whom they ¦want ' fo-appear. - ~- - -—- " -- ~-3"- ' Draff Bait at 60 CLARENCE I. NOLL, dean of the College of Science, re- ceived word this weekend that he has been reclassified 1-A. Here the Dean, age 60, looks at his draft card, issued in 1940 and never burned, and bis reclassification notice. See page 3 for the inside story. Frank Stanton , CBS president , sent , the telegrams ofiering three hours to the three major presidential candidates and one hour to their vice presidential run- ning mates. The specific times offered are 8-9 p.m. this Sunday ; 10-11 p.m. Oct. 20; 7-8 p.m. Oct 7. and 9-10 p.m. Nov. 3. From noon Tuesday and until 7:45 a.m. yesterday the House was tied up in parliam e' n t a r y maneuvers by Republicans who ordered a roll call vote whenever they noticed a quorum of 217 members was not present in the cham- ber. Democrats said the Republicans were filibustering against the suspension of the equal time provision because ' Nixon is afraid to debate their candidate , Hum- phrey., By the time a motion to consider the bill could be called , there were 36 roll calls each taking approximately 25 minutes. The previous record , as recognized by House officials for roll calls at a single sitting, fell at 11:45 p.m. That record had been set in 1965 with 22 readings of the ¦ lengthy roll. ¦ ¦ - -- . ~ ^_ - Collegian Photo by Plerr a Bellldnl sx Attack St udent ssQiiantsCa ptured Four men , a woman and a juvenile were arrested early yesterday morning in connec- tion with the assault and rob- bery of a 20-year-old Univer- sity senior. Arraigned before Spring Twp. Just ice of the Peace R. B. Copenhaver on charges of robbery and robbery with as- sault were Jesse L. Tressler , 18 , of RD 1 , Bellefonte ; Gilbert J. Tressler , 23, RD 1 , Belle- fonte ; William H. Poorman , 21 , Bellefonte ; Kenneth A. Hol- derman , 26,. RD 1 , Bellefonte; Sally Lou Miller, 25. Lo ck Ha- ven and Barry L. McMurtrie, 17, Belelfonte. ' McMurtrie was released in custody of his parents. The others were committed to Cen- tre County jail pending a pre- liminary hearing. The six were taken into custody by campus and State College borough police after Alan William Buch ( 12th- management-York) was at- tacked and robbed about 1:05 a.m. yesterday near the Hetzel Union Building as he walked to his residence hall from radio station WDFM in Sparks Build- ing. State Police Trooper Jan Hoffmaster , of the Rockview substation , who appeared at the arraignment , said Buch' s wallet containing 53 or S4 was taken during the attack. Buch escaped with bruises and lacerations , none of them serious . USG Elections E nter Final Day Today is the last day of voting in the Fall Term Undergra- duate Student Government elections. T wenty-three congressmen and the freshman class president will be chosen , in the election ' According to Steve Geron , USG elections commissioner, the number of students voting has been rising steadily. "The percentage has been increasing. The number of town men vot- ing has been very high ," Gerson said. The elections commission is looking for an even better turn- out toda y for the last day of balloting and hopefully a record Fall Term vote. Gerson said that there have been a few reports of minor elections code violations and that these will be ruled upon tonight after, the balloting is completed. The elections commis- sion will decide the validity of these reports and will levy docks if the complaints are found to be valid. The results of the election should be announced between nine and 11 tonight in the Hetzel Union Building Ballroom. If there are any serious delays the results will be announced at 12:30 a.m. on WMAJ radio , Gerson said. Dri nk-In ' at 11 :30 A "drink-in" to protest the milk price hike in the Heizel Union Building is planned for 11:30 this morning. Henry Peresie (graduate-chemistry-Crestline, Ohio) said he and a group of students will buy milk at the University Creamery and take it to the HUB Terrace Room, -where they will drink it with their lunches. The cost of milk in the HUB was hiked in the Spring Term from 10 to IS cents a glass. Co mmonwealth Camp uses Expand By LOUiS ROSEN Collegian Staff Writer Construction at 18 Common- wealth Campuses t o ta 1 i n g $53, 641 , 924 is now completed or in development. Building at the Ogontz Campus will amount to over 36, 000, 000, while Altoona, Beaver and McKe- esport will each receive construc- tion outlays of over $5, 000, 000. According to Mr. George Levitt , assistant to the vice-president for business, the- program was initiated to " upgrade facilities at some of the campuses which are either inadequate or nonexistent. ". Demand for additional facilities and academic programs by stu- sst&^&^i^e mxszsimi&izs&ezi^rf ^iw^ dents, Levitt said , and the levekng- off of enrollment here at 25, 000 are other factors in the decision to ex- pand the branch campuses. Shift of Emphasis "There will be a shift of em- phasis at University Park towards upperc lassmen jun iors , seniors , and graduate students/' Levitt said. The great majority of freshmen and sophomores will go to Com- monwealth Campuses. Also, numerous requests , from prominent citizens , advisory boards and industries employ ing students from Commonwealth Campus localities have been made, calling for expansion of current facilities. In addition , , campuses are now shifting away from education of a Z^^^ iia^^ i! ^^ i^^^^^^ !S» ^^ >^^^ £^^^^ X*^s^^^^ primarily commuting student body. "There is a shift in emphasis," Levitt said , "to provide more cam- pus housing " Dormitories are un- der constrution to fulfill this need. Not Enough Space - As student enrollment increases and more buildings are added to keep in step, some branch cam- puses-are finding they have inade- quate land space for expansion. . Some campuses are faced with the necessity of relocating entirely. Berks Campus will be moving to a new s ite where it can expand, as soon , as a general purpose building is completed. Delaware and Shenango Valley Campuses will also be making this move in the near future. Scranton and Wilkes-Barre Campuses both moved this summer from rented facilities to land owned by the University. "With the Commonwealth Cam- pus ' expans ion, enrollment collec- tively at the campuses should far exceed the enrollment at University Park within the next ten years," Levitt said. Expansion at some campuses has been planned to oreate additional four-year institutions, whose facili- ties would in all respects be equal or superior to those at the main campus. Liberal Arts Orientation.. "They may be limited in their of- ferings and limited in their cur- ricujums, however, " Levitt said. "The trend would be toward more non-science oriented courses." Four-year Commonwealth Cam- puses would act as miniatura "University Parks" , drawing up- perclass students to spend their final terms there rather than at the main campus. Funds for the development pro- gram come from state approrpia- tions, the federal Higher Education Facilities Act, local communities' fund-raising drives and gifts, and University income-producing facili- ties, such as book stores and cafeterias. "The bulk of the funds are from the state and are used as a mat- ching basis for acquiring federal funds ," Levitt said. IS Par iSeil Supp ort Protests—See Page ^MB^^^ m^^ mM ^^^^ x ^m ^^^^^^^^ jMsagiwyr^ j££&i; J! !*» v«S?avvi.&M& :£!&£JiiJji* .. ' m t t&w AAt^- .aa> J Aa & &BmS£2333ft& 5 Agrees To See Tenants The World Firing Squad Executes Congolese Rebel KINSHASA, Congo A firing squad has executed Pierre Mulele , who led bloody insurrections in eastern sec- tors of the Congo in 1961-64, the government announced yesterday. The guns were reported to have felled him at a secret site about dawn. Mulele was a 39-year-old Peking-trained leftist who turned against the central government after serving as education minister in the Patrice Lumumba regime, which took contro l -when Belgium granted this African territory independence in 1960. A special military court had sentenced Mulele to death for th? 1961-64 rebellion after a 15-hour trial Tuesday, 10 days after he returned from exile in the neighboring Conro Republic Brazzaville under a presumed amnesty. Brazzaville broke off diplomatic relations with the Congo last night in protest against the trial and execution. * Hanoi Challen ges LBJ To Halt Attacks PARI S Hanoi's chief envoy to the Paris peace talks, Xuan Thuy, cha llenged President Johnson yesterday to ha lt all U.S. a 'ttacks against North Vietnam as a move to- ward peace while he " still has enough time and power." Thuy offered nothing concrete in return. U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman told Thuy that the United States is willing to move far and fast toward peace the minute " your government gives us reason to believe it is also prepared to act." Talking later with newsmen, Harriman said: "We made no progress at all." While calling for an end to the American bombing and other operations above the border , Thuy offered no assur- ance that North Vietnam would respond with anything more definite than a discussion of " questions of interest to both parties." U.S. spokesman William Jorden, addressing newsmen after the meeting, said : "It' s quite evident that President Johnson has the time and the power to stop the bombing, and I think he will do it when he feels that the situation is appropriaite and would lead toward peace." * * Peace Hopes Shine in Israeli Statement UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. The United States de- tected a ray of hope yesterday in the latest official Israeli statement on prospects of peace in the Middle East , but Arab diplomats said a first look uncovered nothing new. Abba Eban , the Israeli foreign minister, offered to the General Assembly Tuesday what he described as a com- prehensive program for building a permanent peace with the Arab nation. A U.S. s pokesman described Eban' s s peech as im- portant , and stressed anew the emphasis the United States was placing on the private negotiations taking place at the Un ited Nations under ~ the auspices of Gunnar V. Jarring, the U.N. . peace envoy. "We note the foreign minister' s assurance that Israel will cooperate in this task, " the spokesman added. ' - >,; ' u^Fhe Ara b- diplonwjttsrwadieci private- agreemerit riofrSo- rcrll y; 'imm Bd^4eljjji B*te«pr d to the Eban speech, but din ¦ ¦be ' expected to " do ' sd wthe general policy debate. Egypt may speak Thursday. ' ' ¦ - * * Attempt at Thieu Overthrow Foiled SAIGON—A coup attempt against Nguyen Van Thieu' s government has been foiled and mass arrests of ranking Sout h Vietnamese officers are expected , a hi gh govern- ment source said yesterday. An official spokesman for Thieu , however, denied knowledge of any coup ¦ attempt, although he admitted the government had placed South Vietnam' s armed forces on full alert. The U.S. Embassy also said it had no infor- mation about an abortive coup. The source, who is in a position to know, told The Associated Press that several Vietnamese majors and colonels had already ben arrested. "You can expect a lot of people to be arrested in the next few days as a result of the coup attempt that failed," he sa id. The source reported that the coup was thwarted Tues- day night. If true, it was the first attempt to overthrow Thieu' s government since he came into power in October , 1967. * * * The Nation Apollo 7 Lift-off Progresses Smoothl y CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. The three Apollo 7 astro- nauts fine-tuned their pilot skills yesterday while tech- nicians at their launch pad worked smoothly toward an on-time lift-off Friday for an 11-day flight that could set America back on course for the moon. Even as Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr., Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and civilian astronaut Walter Cunning- ham drilled in a computer-driven mock spacecraft , three other spacemen who may fly around the moon at Christmas- time saw their huge Saturn 5 rocket rolling to a launch pad seven miles away from that of Apollo 7. - The two event—Apollo 7 preparations and rollout of the 363-foot-tall Saturn 5 vehicle to be launched about Dec. 20—combined to demonstrate that the nation' s man to t he moon program apparently has recovered from the stunning setback received when three astronauts died in the Apollo fire• Jan. 27, 1967. * * * Israel To Negotiate with U.S. for Jets WASHINGTON t- President Johnson told Secretary of State Dean Rusk yesterday to start negotiations with Israel on her long-standing bid buy 50 F4 Phantom jet f ighter planes from the United States. ;Both Democrat ic presidential nominee Hubert H. Hum- phre y and Republican Richard M. Nixon have come out for such action—and so did Congress by voting a special provision into the new foreign aid bill. "Johnson made no mention of the U.S. political cam- paign - in a statement issued as he signed the . aid measure— but he noted the proviso favoring supersonic jets for Israel if ' needed foi- her defense against hostile Arab neighbors. . ¦ ' -- 'an -the " light of this expression of the sense of the Congress, " Johnson said, "I' am asking the secretary of state to initiate negotiations with the government of Israel and to report back^to xne. " * * * The State Transplant Patien t Leaves Hospital ¦ PITTSBURGH ;.A cheerful and rosy-checked Ben An&ik was discharged yesterday from the hospital that he said gave him a' Sew life. ' ' -The 46-year-old former boxing promoter received the heiirt of a traffic fatality victim * 39 days ago. , "I've been here since June, and the treatment I' ve en- countered has just been out of this world, " Anolik said "They' ve given me a new life here and I' m going to do everything in my power, to make the most of it" i Anolik wi-s Pennsylvania ' s first heart transplant pa- tient He isjnow among ' the 28 people in the world who are living with the hearts of other people in their bodies. i Anoli k, with his .wife and mother sitting at his side, said he felt /better than he had at any .time in his life-in the past three , years. , .. . ' % ., I ' ,; i .\s . i p-* ^ vrcftr-.v^r. ^Y 1'" ) %&2st>&fi!iif ~ ' $53 , 641 , 924 in Construction
Transcript
Page 1: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

News RoundupFrom the State Sun Yields To Tenant Group

By ALLAN YOOERCollegian Staff Writer

The Committee of Grievances pro-testing alleged high rent and poor livingconditions in the apartments of Shiou-Chuan Sun have won major concessionsfrom the University professor and StateCollege landlord.

The committee members met withSun yesterday afternoon and "wentaway satisfied that it got what it wentafter ," according to Joe Myers, TownIndependent Men president.

The four members of the committee,Lloyd Chambliss , Edward DiCenzo , Vin-cent Franklin and Laurey Petkov, saidin a statement issued yesterday,

"Dr. Sun has agreed to see all of histenants about their grievances. And he

—Collegian Photo by Pierre Bellicin r

THE END: Undergraduate Student Government electionsfor 23 Congress seats and the freshman class presidency-enter their third and final day today. Election results willbe tabulated tonight and announced between 9 and 11 p.m.in the- Heizel Union Building ballroom, and inCollegian.

has agreed to take care of most of ourdemands.

"If Dr. Sun does not fulfill all of theconditions that he agreed to at today 'sconference, we will be forced to take im-mediate steps to force action on theseissues , particularly rent reduction," acommittee spokesman said.

List of Demands"If a tenant, upon meeting with Dr.

Sun, is still dissatisfied, he should con-tact the Committee of Grievances so thatwe can work on his behalf in our nextsession of negotiations ," he added.

The demands with which Sun hasagreed to compl y include the repair offaulty electrical equipment; the repairof holes in floors , walls and roofs ; pestcontrol; replacement or renovation of

tomorrow s

ur furniture in disrepair; and the repair of Sun "from all sides," according to Cham-bathrooms, bliss,

he Chambliss said the group is meeting "Sun is afraid of a rent strike. Hey's with Sun next week to "make sure tried to keep that idea down. The pub-m- things are going along smoothly." licity would have made him look veryise "Dr. Sun was cooperative on all ^ad.

a points except our demand for rent re- DiCenzo, another committee mem-

duction. He had to be prodded a little ber ' said "Sun told us that he thought

bit by the committee with that one." he would be fired (from the University)Dr.' if there were a rent strike.">n- No Rent Overhau l «We have shown that we can defi .lat Chambliss said Sun would not agree nitely get lower rents and improved:xt to a sweeping overhaul in rent pay- conditions by organizing and getting the

ments. " students together," Chambliss said,las "Sun will see each tenant on an in- "We want this to be an example forof dividual basis. Then Sun and the tenant student-tenants in the area,

air will decide whether the rent should be "We've won a victory for the op-est lowered, and how much," he said. pressed students living in the State Col-of Much pressure has been placed on lege ghetto," Chambliss added.

Networks Offer Candidates Prime Time

House Passes Equal Time BillWASHINGTON (AP) — The House

uggled through a historic and record-ting session yesterday to pass a billit could pave the way for television-lio debates between the three majorisidential candidates.Immediately after House passage,Columbia Broadcasting System of-

ed the candidates and their runningites one hour of prime TV and radiole on each of the next four Sundays"ore the election for a confrontation.

The National Broadcasting Co. askedi three presidential candidates to ar-lge for their representatives to meetth network officials to arrange a timed format acceptable to all.

Action Not Final~Bul House action sent , the measure

ck to the Senate where the battle couldsume. Senate Democratic Leader Mikeansfield of Montana said the bill will beUed up at the start of today's Senatession.and he -had been told Republicanponents expect to speak at some lengthainst it. .

Sen. John.O. Pastore (D-R.I.) told aws conference he will try to call up theJtSasysoon-as it is-officially transmitted

from the House He said he will urge ac-ceptance of the House version because tosend it to a Senate-House conferencewould mean its defeat.

The House vote came 27 hours , 37minutes after the House went into sessionTuesday. Most of the session , 20 hours, 19minutes, was spent on 45 roll calls.

Republican FilibusterSome 20 hours was spent in a

Republican-led filibuster before the billcould even be brought up for considera-tion .

Passage of the bill was on a vote of80 to 35, with all of the nays cast byRepublicans. Voting for it were 182Democrats and 98 Republicans.

• The bill would allow television andradio networks to arrange the joint ap-pearance of major candidates-DemocratHubert H. Humphrey, R e p u b l i c a nRichard M. Nixon, American IndependentGeorge .C: Wallace-without giving equaltimelo" numerous minor seekers for thepresidency.

A Senate version of the measuremerely suspends the equal time provisionleaving it to the networks whom they¦want' fo-appear.-~- --—-" -- ~-3"- •'

Draff Bait at 60CLARENCE I. NOLL, dean of the College of Science, re-ceived word this weekend that he has been reclassified1-A. Here the Dean, age 60, looks at his draft card, issuedin 1940 and never burned, and bis reclassification notice.See page 3 for the inside story.

Frank Stanton , CBS president, sent ,the telegrams ofiering three hours to thethree major presidential candidates andone hour to their vice presidential run-ning mates.

The specific times offered are 8-9p.m. this Sunday ; 10-11 p.m. Oct. 20; 7-8p.m. Oct 7. and 9-10 p.m. Nov. 3.

From noon Tuesday and until 7:45a.m. yesterday the House was tied up inp a r l i a m e'n t a r y maneuvers byRepublicans who ordered a roll call votewhenever they noticed a quorum of 217members was not present in the cham-ber.

Democrats said the Republicans werefilibustering against the suspension of theequal time provision because' Nixon isafraid to debate their candidate, Hum-phrey.,

By the time a motion to consider thebill could be called , there were 36 rollcalls — each taking approximately 25minutes.

The previous record , as recognizedby House officials for roll calls at a singlesitting, fell at 11:45 p.m. That record hadbeen set in 1965 with 22 readings of the¦ lengthy roll. ¦ ¦ -• -- . ~ _ -

Collegian Photo by Plerra Bellldnl

sx Attack StudentssQiiantsCaptured

Four men, a woman and ajuvenile were arrested earlyyesterday morning in connec-tion with the assault and rob-bery of a 20-year-old Univer-sity senior.

Arraigned before S p r i n gTwp. Justice of the Peace R.B. Copenhaver on charges ofrobbery and robbery with as-sault were Jesse L. Tressler,18, of RD 1, Bellefonte ; GilbertJ. Tressler, 23, RD 1, Belle-fonte; William H. Poorman , 21,Bellefonte; Kenneth A. Hol-derman, 26,. RD 1, Bellefonte;Sally Lou Miller, 25. Lock Ha-ven and Barry L. McMurtrie,17, Belelfonte. '

McMurtrie was released incustody of his parents. Theothers were committed to Cen-

tre County jail pending a pre-liminary hearing.

The six were taken intocustody by campus and StateCollege borough police afterAlan William Buch (12th-management-York) was at-tacked and robbed about 1:05a.m. yesterday near the HetzelUnion Building as he walked tohis residence hall from radiostation WDFM in Sparks Build-ing.

State Police Trooper JanHoffmaster, of the Rockviewsubstation , who appeared atthe arraignment, said Buch'swallet containing 53 or S4 wastaken during the attack.

Buch escaped with bruisesand lacerations, none of themserious.

USG ElectionsEnter Final Day

Today is the last day of voting in the Fall Term Undergra-duate Student Government elections. T w e n t y - t h r e econgressmen and the freshman class president will be chosen,in the election'

According to Steve Geron , USG elections commissioner,the number of students voting has been rising steadily. "Thepercentage has been increasing. The number of town men vot-ing has been very high," Gerson said.

The elections commission is looking for an even better turn-out today for the last day of balloting and hopefully a recordFall Term vote.

Gerson said that there have been a few reports of minorelections code violations and that these will be ruled upontonight after, the balloting is completed. The elections commis-sion will decide the validity of these reports and will levydocks if the complaints are found to be valid.

The results of the election should be announced between nineand 11 tonight in the Hetzel Union Building Ballroom. If thereare any serious delays the results will be announced at 12:30a.m. on WMAJ radio, Gerson said.

Drink-In ' at 11:30A "drink-in" to protest the milk price hike in the

Heizel Union Building is planned for 11:30 this morning.

Henry Peresie (graduate-chemistry-Crestline, Ohio)said he and a group of students will buy milk at theUniversity Creamery and take it to the HUB TerraceRoom, -where they will drink it with their lunches.

The cost of milk in the HUB was hiked in theSpring Term from 10 to IS cents a glass.

Commonwealth Campuses ExpandBy LOUiS ROSEN

Collegian Staff WriterConstruction at 18 Common-

wealth Campuses t o ta 1 i n g$53,641,924 is now completed or indevelopment.

Building at the Ogontz Campuswill amount to over 36,000,000,while Altoona, Beaver and McKe-esport will each receive construc-tion outlays of over $5,000,000.

According to Mr. George Levitt,assistant to the vice-president forbusiness, the- program was initiatedto "upgrade facilities at some ofthe campuses which are eitherinadequate or nonexistent.".

Demand for additional facilitiesand academic • programs by stu-

sst&^&^i^emxszsimi&izs&ezi rf ^iw^

dents, Levitt said, and the levekng-off of enrollment here at 25,000 areother factors in the decision to ex-pand the branch campuses.

Shift of Emphasis"There will be a shift of em-

phasis at University Park towardsupperclassmen — jun iors, seniors,and graduate students/' Levitt said.The great majority of freshmenand sophomores will go to Com-monwealth Campuses.

Also, numerous requests , fromprominent citizens, advisory boardsand industries employing studentsfrom Commonwealth C a m p u slocalities have been made, callingfor expansion of current facilities.

In addition,, campuses are nowshifting away from education of a

Z^ ^ iia^ i! ^ i^ ^ ^ !S»^ >^ ^ £^ ^ X* s^ ^

primarily commuting student body."There is a shift in emphasis,"Levitt said, "to provide more cam-pus housing " Dormitories are un-der constrution to fulfill this need.

Not Enough Space- As student enrollment increasesand more buildings are added tokeep in step, some branch cam-puses-are finding they have inade-quate land space for expansion.. Some campuses are faced with

the necessity of relocating entirely.Berks Campus will be moving to anew site where it can expand, assoon, as a general purpose buildingis completed.

Delaware and Shenango ValleyCampuses will also be making thismove in the near future. Scranton

and Wilkes-Barre Campuses bothmoved this summer from rentedfacilities to land owned by theUniversity.

"With the Commonwealth Cam-pus' expansion, enrollment collec-tively at the campuses should farexceed the enrollment at UniversityPark within the next ten years,"Levitt said.

Expansion at some campuses hasbeen planned to oreate additionalfour-year institutions, whose facili-ties would in all respects be equalor superior to those at the maincampus.

Liberal Arts Orientation.."They may be limited in their of-

ferings and limited in their cur-ricujums, however," Levitt said.

"The trend would be toward morenon-science oriented courses."

Four-year Commonwealth Cam-puses would act as miniatura"University Parks", drawing up-perclass students to spend theirfinal terms there rather than at themain campus.

Funds for the development pro-gram come from state approrpia-tions, the federal Higher EducationFacilities Act, local communities'fund-raising drives and gifts, andUniversity income-producing facili-ties, such as book stores andcafeterias.

"The bulk of the funds are fromthe state and are used as a mat-ching basis for acquiring federalfunds," Levitt said.

IS PariSeil Support Protests—See Page^MB^ ^ m^ mM^^^^ x ^m^^^^^^^^jMsagiwyr j££&i;J! !*» v«S?avvi.&M& :£!&£JiiJji* ..'mtt&w AAt^„-.aa> JAa & &BmS£2333ft&

5

Agrees To See Tenants

The WorldFiring Squad Executes Congolese RebelKINSHASA, Congo — A firing squad has executed

Pierre Mulele, who led bloody insurrections in eastern sec-tors of the Congo in 1961-64, the government announcedyesterday.

The guns were reported to have felled him at a secretsite about dawn.

Mulele was a 39-year-old Peking-trained leftist whoturned against the central government after serving aseducation minister in the Patrice Lumumba regime, whichtook control -when Belgium granted this African territoryindependence in 1960.

A special military court had sentenced Mulele to deathfor th? 1961-64 rebellion after a 15-hour trial Tuesday, 10days after he returned from exile in the neighboring ConroRepublic Brazzaville under a presumed amnesty.

Brazzaville broke off diplomatic relations with theCongo last night in protest against the trial and execution.

* • •Hanoi Challen ges LBJ To Halt AttacksPARIS — Hanoi's chief envoy to the Paris peace talks,

Xuan Thuy, challenged President Johnson yesterday tohalt all U.S. a'ttacks against North Vietnam as a move to-ward peace while he "still has enough time and power."Thuy offered nothing concrete in return.

U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman told Thuy thatthe United States is willing to move far and fast towardpeace the minute "your government gives us reason tobelieve it is also prepared to act."

Talking later with newsmen, Harriman said: "We madeno progress at all."

While calling for an end to the American bombing andother operations above the border, Thuy offered no assur-ance that North Vietnam would respond with anythingmore definite than a discussion of "questions of interest toboth parties."

U.S. spokesman William Jorden, addressing newsmenafter the meeting, said: "It's quite evident that PresidentJohnson has the time and the power to stop the bombing,and I think he will do it when he feels that the situationis appropriaite and would lead toward peace."

• * * •Peace Hopes Shine in Israeli Statement

UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — The United States de-tected a ray of hope yesterday in the latest official Israelistatement on prospects of peace in the Middle East, butArab diplomats said a first look uncovered nothing new.

Abba Eban, the Israeli foreign minister, offered to theGeneral Assembly Tuesday what he described as a com-prehensive program for building a permanent peace withthe Arab nation.

A U.S. spokesman described Eban's speech as im-portant , and stressed anew the emphasis the United Stateswas placing on the private negotiations taking place at theUnited Nations under~the auspices of Gunnar V. Jarring,the U.N. .peace envoy.

"We note the foreign minister's assurance that Israelwill cooperate in this task," the spokesman added.

'->,;' u^Fhe Arab- diplonwjttsrwadieci private- agreemerit riofrSo-rcrlly;'immBd^4eljjjiB*te«prd to the Eban speech, but din¦¦be 'expected to "do 'sd wthe general policy debate. Egyptmay speak Thursday.

' '¦- * * •Attempt at Thieu Overthrow FoiledSAIGON—A coup attempt against Nguyen Van Thieu's

government has been foiled and mass arrests of rankingSouth Vietnamese officers are expected, a high govern-ment source said yesterday.

An official spokesman for Thieu, however, deniedknowledge of any coup ¦ attempt, although he admittedthe government had placed South Vietnam's armed forceson full alert. The U.S. Embassy also said it had no infor-mation about an abortive coup.

The source, who is in a position to know, told TheAssociated Press that several Vietnamese majors andcolonels had already ben arrested.

"You can expect a lot of people to be arrested in thenext few days as a result of the coup attempt that failed,"he said.

The source reported that the coup was thwarted Tues-day night. If true, it was the first attempt to overthrowThieu's government since he came into power in October,1967.

* * *The NationApollo 7 Lift-off Progresses Smoothl yCAPE KENNEDY. Fla. — The three Apollo 7 astro-

nauts fine-tuned their pilot skills yesterday while tech-nicians at their launch pad worked smoothly toward anon-time lift-off Friday for an 11-day flight that could setAmerica back on course for the moon.

Even as Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr., Air ForceMaj. Donn F. Eisele and civilian astronaut Walter Cunning-ham drilled in a computer-driven mock spacecraft, threeother spacemen who may fly around the moon at Christmas-time saw their huge Saturn 5 rocket rolling to a launchpad seven miles away from that of Apollo 7. -

The two event—Apollo 7 preparations and rollout ofthe 363-foot-tall Saturn 5 vehicle to be launched aboutDec. 20—combined to demonstrate that the nation's man tothe moon program apparently has recovered from thestunning setback received when three astronauts died inthe Apollo fire• Jan. 27, 1967.

* * *Israel To Negotiate with U.S. for JetsWASHINGTON t- President Johnson told Secretary

of State Dean Rusk yesterday to start negotiations withIsrael on her long-standing bid t° buy 50 F4 Phantom jetfighter planes from the United States.

;Both Democratic presidential nominee Hubert H. Hum-phrey and Republican Richard M. Nixon have come outfor such action—and so did Congress by voting a specialprovision into the new foreign aid bill.

"Johnson made no mention of the U.S. political cam-paign- in a statement issued as he signed the. aid measure—but he noted the proviso favoring supersonic jets for Israelif 'needed foi- her defense against hostile Arab neighbors.. ¦ '--'an -the" light of this expression of the sense of the

Congress," Johnson said, "I' am asking the secretary of stateto initiate negotiations with the government of Israel andto report back^to xne."

* * *The State

Transplant Patien t Leaves Hospital¦ PITTSBURGH;.— A cheerful and rosy-checked Ben

An&ik was discharged yesterday from the hospital thathe said gave him a'Sew life. '

'-The 46-year-old former boxing promoter received theheiirt of a traffic fatality victim* 39 days ago.

, "I've been here since June, and the treatment I've en-countered has just been out of this world," Anolik said"They've given me a new life here and I'm going to doeverything in my power, to make the most of it"

i Anolik wi-s Pennsylvania's first heart transplant pa-tient He isjnow among'the 28 people in the world who areliving with the hearts of other people in their bodies.

i Anolik, with his .wife and mother sitting at his side,said he felt /better than he had at any .time in his life-inthe past three, years. , .. . '

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Page 2: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

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USG Elections:Pep Talk Time

"Alright, now, editors, I want tchear Pep Talk No. 1. I want you toreally arouse these people. I want youto send them scurrying to the polls thesame way sex-starved convicts on theirtirst day out scurry to the cathouse. Iwant you to really get these peoplepsyched up over this USG election."

"Yeah , boss. We've got it. How'sthis.

"Okay students, we want you toget out there and vote! Do you hear!Pay attention to us now students. We•want you to bound out of bed this morn-ing beaming and laughing with theprospect that YOU today will be per-mitted, by virtue of your status as stu-dents, to vote in the USG elections.

"Come on, people! Get with it. Thisis your last chance. Look at that list ofcandidates. Aren't they an impressivebunch? Eh? Don't they make you wantto just go out and vote for them?"

"Yeah, yeah, yeah, that 's fine boys.But I don't think it would appeal to thisparticular student body. Penn State isdifferent than most big schools, youknow. You have to appeal ' to what theylike most."

"Got ya, boss. How's this. Studentsof Penn State. Voting is cool. Not onlywill we have a keg set up at the pollingbooth , but we will have all your mothersthere and hundreds of apple pies. Also,think of the advantages of voting. Ifyou go out and vote today, you cancreate the USG Congress of y o u rdreams. It will be a pillar of mediocrity,a staunch supporter of that collection ofinstitutions that we all love so well, thestatus quo .

"There's no denying it, students. Ifthis year you really put your minds to it,you can have a USG Congress that willbow to the Administration's every de-mand, that will concede its dignity onany point, that will inspire an explo-sion of apathy beyond your wildestdreams."

"That's fine, editors, but.I think itneeds a bit of negative' kick. We mustappeal to the student's' outrage at anykind of activism." • ' '

"That's easy boss. Listen to this,Outraged students. Among the 33 can-didates running for office this year areat least four who dare "to threaten us

with change, who have openly partici-pated in activities like Walkertown andthe Free Speech Movement, who haveflooded our brains with diabolicalschemes to thrust this University intothe mainstream of educational life,where we would be mercilessly carriedalong on a tide of new, revolutionaryideas.

"Oh, these four are demons. Keeptheir names in mind—Krivoy, Schwartz,Shear and Rubin. And to add to thehorror , there are a number of otherson the ballot with similar handicaps."

"That was beautiful, fellas. Nowtry a little bit of praise for the hard-core non-participants."

"They're easy to find, boss. Justfollow the cockroaches and they takeyou right to Nittany. People in, of andaround Nittany, Shunk and Porter. Doyou realize that you are the mainstayof this University's traditions, that with-out people like you there would bechange — oh, lord in heaven, no—therewould actually be change on this cam-pus.

"You are so bad to mediocre, soapathetic to half-dead, that not one ofyou is willing to run for USG Congress.This is admirable, the ultimate in non-participation. But reconsider, men. Sup-pose there were no representative fromyour area. That would be change. Itwould disrupt the status quo.

"You must create one, write-in one.We are confident that you will write-inthe most thoroughly mediocre dolt im-aginable."

"Okay, editors, now let's make anappeal to their lust for power. That al-ways works well."

"Students. There are 25.000 of you.Do you realize how much stir 25,000enthusiastic students can cause. Wewould like to see all 25,000 of you votebefore this afternoon.

But we know that the figure willbe less than 5,000. Why not make it6,000 or 7,000? You might even be morecontent , more secure, more sure ofyourselves if you invoke the power thatis inherent in your numbers.

'.'They say that the attainment ofpower is an exhilarating experience.Why not try it? All you have to lose isyour chains."

"Watch out for his mud-ball . . . !"

Successor to The Free Lance, est. 1887

The Old Generation GapTO THE EDITOR: Today an undergraduateadvisee said to me, "Our generation gap is scgreat that we communicate from differenlplanets."

I agree that the college student-today is nolthe naive creature of my undergraduate days.The sights and sounds of television and thepocket radio were not my daily diet. I neverreceived the sensation of participating irMcLuhan's global village nor did I receive vastquantities of knowledge beyond my capacity tcabsorb. In my undergraduate days everywherewas far aWay, every event was long ago. I didnot have social awareness and I know I lackedwisdom, I was taught that wisdom and com-petence came through discipline, training andexperience.

The student of today's electronic age is in areal dilemma. The media created an imme-diate awareness and involvement whichgenerates a false confidence. Wisdom and com-petence have taken a back seat.

The way people feel about a problem or anissue has become more important than thefacts or .the past or the long range goal. Thekeynote's for my advisee are immediate ex-perience and awareness. And herein lies theconflict between us. He won't accept the'pro-position that age has acquired more wisdomand competence. - •

The word is that those of.us over thirty arenot to be trusted.

This generation gap between advisor andadvisee is nothing new. The Sorbonne in themiddle ages was noted for the fury with whichthe students, with sword in hand, defendedwhat they regarded as their rights andprivileges.' The universities in Tsarist Russiawere often closed down because of studentunrest.

Perhaps on a university campus thegeneration gap is in the very nature of things.The faculty represents continuity. The studentis temporary and constantly replaced. Afreshman is not competent to ju dge how orwhat he should be taught in a discipline ofwhich he is only partially familiar.

However, the heart of the problem of liber-ty and authority should be examined in aninstitution of higher learning with reason andvalid evidence rather than with emotion andimmediate expediency.

J. D. McAulayProfessor of Education

An Ass by Any Other NameTO THE EDITOR: "Anybody who likes it is anass with no taste whatsoever..."

That's it, Seydor. Give 'em hell. Walt Dis-ney's "The Parent Trap" is a film trap forcinema ignoramuses. Just do a reader of yoursone favor ; try not to confirm unwarrantedstatus on the flick by publicizing your con-demnation.

J. Robert Shorenth-Journalism

Jeering From SidelinesTO THE EDITOR: Paul Seydor is frustrated atthe lack of films he likes in State College. Hisangry kick at the local theatre managements,however, seems to me not only ill-informed andchildish,- but also unhelpful as a positive steptowards improvement.

Movie theaters respond more immediatelyand directly than any other outlet of popularentertainment to the pressures and wishes oftheir audiences as expressed at the box office.As a matter of record, "The Sound of Music"did more business in one night than "Persona"did in a week. We may properly bemoan thisnew proof that Gresham was right , but weoughtn't to blame the theatres. They offeredand continue to offer a choice. They do not takethe easy way out. We do.' State Collegei i has a- long history of suchpreferences ;-• thnsv'the distributors of' "Belle du

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Jour" wisely send their limited number of' co-pies - to other, more lucrative locations. We llget it later, when the other-demand is satiated.We regularly get tested 'to see if the patternhas changed. So far , it hasn't.

As Collegian movie critic. Paul Seydor canhelp to change the pattern by encouraging andcelebrat'ng the films he admires, rather thanbv wasting invective on the ones he doesn't. Aweek ago, his enthusiasm for "The Two of Us"might have done some good. While Paul Wasbaiting "The Parent Trap," "The- Girl WithGreen Eyes" ran to almost-empty houses atTwelvetrees. Kurosawa's brilliant "SevenSamurai" will come and go at the HUB, Paul'sreaders none the wiser.

It is an absolute fact that State College isbetter served "for films than any other town ofcomparable, size and population in the UnitedStates. Those of us who put time and money in-to improving the situation would welcome PaulSeydor's help. -We do not need him jeering onthe sidelines. •

David ShepardAssistant Professor in Film

, Dep't. of Theatre Arts

Little To Bitch AboutFO THE EDITOR: Being somewhat incensedover Saturday's editorial in re an apatheticfaculty, I want to let you know where I, forone, stand.

I favor Penn State status quo generally,including the USG, first rate teaching andscholarship, etc. I would like to see a Univer-sity bookstore and increased recreational andhousing facilities for students.

I am much down on the drug users and theradical, disruptive minority element such asthe SDS.

I think that a young person with the op-portunity to attend Penn State has much tcthink about and be thankful for , and damnedlittle to bitch about.

Edwin Gamble,Assistant Professor of Music

It's Such a Little VoiceTO THE EDITOR: In regards to the EditorialOpinion — The Daily Collegian Oct. 8, concern-ing the four USG candidates who.are involvedwith Walkertown — I quote: "this term, when arelatively small number of students have band-ed together to argue for bona fide studentcauses, the small number faces an overwhelm-ing student and faculty apathy. The small num-ber must work against a student body whichhas no confidence in student activism or USG,due to a long history of administrative indif-ference to USG requests."

First, I resent being termed "apathetic"merely because I believe Eric A. Walker is bet-ter qualified to run this university than any ofthe 25,000 students here.

Secondly, I question the phrase "workagainst a student body": I believe it has longbeen the practice of American democracy toelect officials to work for us, not against us —to elect those who represent the views anddesires of the majority to positions of power.The very fact that Walkertown has attracted anarticulate, yet really very insignificant in num-ber, group of students emphasizes my position— that the majority of Penn State , studentswish to be represented in USG by officials* whowill use their power, not to satisfy their ownself-interests, but rather to truly representthose who have elected them.

Only if this "apathetic" majority will .getout and vote against these "minority"' can-didates can true representation be maintained.Perhaps Old Main isn't really ignoring the"student voice"—it just can't bear such a lit-tle voice.' The sounds of 25,000 busy and con-tented PSU students are drowning it out — andmaybe that should be a subtle hint.

Fail Freunsch _Mflsic Education-'?!"

AN UPDATED CLASSIC

The Traditional look of the Monk Strap intoday's most perfectly tanned calfskin.A compliment to a university wardrobe.

0% iaihj (ttoltatUut63 Years of Editorial Freedom

Published Tuesday throu gh Saturday during tha Fall, Winter and Sprin gTerms, and Thursday during the summer Term, by students of The Penn-sylvania State University. Second class posta ge paid at State College, Pa. 16601.Circulation: 12,500. „ -_

^__

Sy£-cp,jjjj ^j ^— p,.! ,"; $12.00 a year

Mailing Address — Box 467, State College, Pa. 16801Editorial and Business Office — Basement of Sackett (North End)

Phone — 865-2531Business office hours: Monday throu gh Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Member of The Associated Press ~PAUL~J. LEVINE "LsS^, WILLIAM FOWLEREditor •****&&>•' Business Manager

Board " of~~ Editors :

~Managlng Editor, "William Epstein; Editorial Editor ,Michael serrill; City Editors , Judy Rife and Gerry Hamilton ; Copy Editors,Kathy Litwak and Mprtha Hare ; Sports Editor, Ron Ko!b; Assistant Spor tsEditor, Don McKee; Photo graphy Editor, Peter Belllcini; Senior Reporters,Pat Gurosky and Mars? Cohen ; Weather Reporter, Elliot Abrams.Board of Managers : Loca! Advertisin g Manager, Edward Fromkin; AssistantAdvertisin g Managers, Leslie Schmidt and Kathy McCormick; National Ad-vertising Co-Managers, Jim Soutar and Georg o Bernger; Credit Manager,George Geib ; Assistant Credit Managers, Carol Book and stave Lelcht;Classified Advertisin g Manager, Mary Kramer; Public Relations and Pro-motions Manager, Ron Resnikoff; Circulation Manager, Buster Judy; OfficeManager, Mary Gebler.

PAGE TWO THURSDAY, OCTOBERTo7 1968

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Page 3: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

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stall :"*; &<& iThe Hot TipNoll It All

By JU DY RIFECollegian City Editor

Twenty-four hours later, there I was. standing next tothe hot tip himself! But I managed to maintain my cool«nd- not say "Hi there, Hot Tip!" I said instead, "Hello,Dr. Noll."

It was Charlie Hosier, who had tipped me off abouthis colleague the day before. n^m_Br ^M«r

(Resigning I thought,we scoop Public Informa-tion! No, Hosier would gothrough proper channelswith news like that . . . andbesides, if it were true, likeRoose and Heller, it wouldhave been common knowl-edge, or at least a nasty MISS RIFErumor, all over town). "Well, he's 60 . . ." (Wow, page one'headlines: Dean Has Birthday !) ". . . and he's just beenreclassified 1-A."

Clarence I. Noll, dean of the College of Science, age60, reclassified 1-A. A hot tip !

Dr. Noll was taking the news calmly. "I'm a 60-year-old grandfather!"

And besides, the notice was not from his draft boardnor was it his Selective Service number.

'The head of the biology department (Joseph G.O'Mara) has this all figured out," he said. "He says youalways receive something from your draft board afteryour 15th birthday and I was just 15 this year." Whichprompted my alert photographer to speak up: "Leap year."And I nodded and said, 'When is your birthday?" Everyinterview is marked by at least one brilliant question.

Without prompting. Dr. Noll proceeded to answer thequestions I had mentally prepared. "I' think I know whathappened. Students come to us asking if we'll inform theirdraft boards of what they are doing here in hopes of ob-taining deferments. Some secretary probably saw myname at the bottom of one of these letters and sent a noticeto me by mistake.

Somebody Doesn't Know"It is not my Selective Service number and it's not

my draft board. The serious part of it is that there is some-body who has that number and doesn't know he's 1-A.

"I'm going to write them a letter explaining the errorand ask that the right person not be held to the date ofthe notice."

And there it was: the hot tip, tracked down by theunrelenting, truth-seeking journalist. But the proverbialnose for news was already twitching. Another hot tip wasin the making: "they" will meet you half-way. If you wantto talk to "them," "they" will talk to you.

' Dr. Noll and I expressed a mutual interest in LatinAmerica and mutual concern over the upcoming Presi-dential elections. We discussed the IDA mess in the springand University involvement with government and industryresearch and the political nature of the next generation.

Mutual EnjoymentWe exchanged titles of good books we've read lately

and discovered a mutual enjoyment of Wilder's "TheBridge of San Luis Key." (Another hot tip: he suggestshaving a heart attack to catch up on all those things you'vebeen meaning to read!) Then the conversation drifted tostudent activism, student-faculty relations, and how liberalarts students have this thing about Bi Sci and sciencecourses in general. '

I apologized for keeping him from his dinner, butthen Dr. Noll gave me the hottest tip of all: "That's allright, I'm not just being paid to be interested in students,I am."

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Paper RequestsFaculty WritersUniversitj faculty are in-

vitee to submit articles to Col-legian's "Faculty Forum."Columns of opinion from allmenrbers of the faculty arewelcome.

The articles should be type-written and triple-spaced andshould not exceed 75 lines inlength. Interested t a c u 11 yshould bring their articles toCollegian office, 20 SackettBuilding.

Colleg ianLetter Pol icyThe Dally Collegian wel-

comes comments on newscoverage, editorial policy andcampus or non-campus af-fairs. Letters must be type-written, double spaced, signedby no more than two personsand no longer than 30 lines.Students' letters should in-clude name, term and majoiof the writer. They should bebrought to the C -llegian of-fice, £9 Sackett, in person soproper identification of thewriter can be made, althoughnames will be withheld byrequest. If letters are re-ceived bv mail, Collegian willcontact the signer for verifi-cation. The Collegian reservesthe right to fairly select, editand condense all letters.

Sound Off? Put It in Print

S&M

By ROBERT J. GRAHAMAssistant Professor of English

andTH EODORA. R. GRAHAM

Instructor in English *

Ironically, The Daily Collegian editorial . "Facul-ty Apathy." (Oct. 5) will probably reach a smallnumbar of the faculty — unless the adamant few whosubscribe to the Collegian or those, like us. who askstudents to leave a copy after class pass it to theircolleagues.

We have suggested to Collegian editors, to facultysenators, to student leaders that the Universityshould foot the bill for copies sent to professors re-questing t h e m —and that the Col-legian or, if neces-sary, another pub-lication become abona fide student-facultv newspaperwith all that titleimplies. F a c u l t yForum is no substi-tute for what isneeded at P e n nState.

If discussion isto be continuousamong students andfaculty, then wesuggest realistic andserious exchangescan best occur inserious exenanges Theodora R. Grahamcan best occur mwriting. Free-wheeling personal confrontations ,with or without microphones, sometimes becomeinteresting, intense encounters ; but it has been ourexperience that too much talk and oral counter-explanation under such conditions abort goodintentions.

In certain dramatic instances such direct ex-change may encourage understanding and fruitful ac-tion. We recommend, however, that these desiredresults not be left to chance. There's something solidabout print.

Let's keep the microphone but seek a larger con-text.

What is personally frustrating about youreditorial is the paradox at its base. How to cut theGordian knot?

There is in academic logic an optional escapeclause which runs —

• if you think it could compromise your status otimage...

• if you believe it would1 be a form of stooping oi

Would appear undignified...• if you suspect it might be misconstrued . . .• if you would prefer not to.Ancient history. Begin again.

Student-Faculty DialogueOnce there was an indefinite and self-defining un-

group, non-committee c a l l e d Student-FacultyDialogue. Back in '65-66. Not to be confused with anyother organization , place, or arrangement which sub-sequently borrowed the name. That was after AdHoc. Jim Kaplan — Co. Soap boxes, a rare micro-phone, one guitar , a few best minds of a PSU genera-tion — and other decent ones.

Not many placards. One or two rallies wheremost people dressed square because anything elsealienated those above. A self-conscious , spontaneoussit-in in Old Main — at which the Alma Mater wassung with no little embarrassment ("let no act ofours...").

All about student-rights (that was before"power": change is the essence and a rose becomessomething else when someone else perceives a dif-ference) . Mostly off-campus independence; choice; inloco parentis.

A few resigned and retired ; some probably gotulcers hoping it would go away.

A Bookstore, ORL ot. al.Repeated patterns. It was also ( for those who

realized students were doing what they wanted to do,anyway, and were primarily sick of the hypocrisy) abookstore. Ordnance Research Laboratory, mindlessSpring Weeks, a few large do-noihing classes, someugly new buildings , the worst aspects of Grcek-ism( about which IFC chairmen prove to be perceptive),205 Black students in the midst ot a 23.000 enrollment( about which John Warner was perceptive), pass-lailfor real, the AAUP at PSU. resident learning centers ,an independent study school, portable do-it-yourselffree university classes with libraries — and astudent-faculty Senate with legal awareness. At thatmoment in time the Faculty Senate was not chairedby an elected member.

Where are we? Take you r own inventory. Itwasn't an easy road to that Senate tor those involvedin and behind the scene: but what does it mean: Formany Ancient History is a bore . It is N-O-W. Besides ,if the students in the Senate seem inarticulate , whatdoes it mean?

Cases in point.The student-faculty dialogue was rational , sign ifi-

cant , and good — despite the slurs , the newsletters afew professors sent back with red-ink condemnations ,a couple of ignorant telephone calls from those whodidn 't choose to use print to make relevant remarks.About 25 faculty members were regulars , contribut-ing money and time — and it took plenty of both topublish one newsletter.

Others consistently showed up at dialogues in theHUB, coming and going when they could. Up to 400faculty members and students appeared at the threeS-FD Forums held in the ForuT> . Fani'l' v rn"Ti '---slike Dr. Young, Dean Heller, Dr. R abinowitz, Dr.Rosemary Schraer and others — along u .u i aciui .i .a-tralors , student leaders (the serious kind), editors —discussed in open torum (does anyone remember?)"What Is a University?" We had plenty of freespeech . ^Begin again? Whore is a Bruce Alacomber?There was a box or two of S-FD paper, brown ink.addressograph plates for all faculty members andstudent organizations , a tew- dollars in the downtownbank account — and a lot of experience with bureau-cratic redtape. Anyone want to hear how difficult itwas to get some college deans and some departmentheads to permit distribution in faculty mailboxes —and how some efforts failed?

No Student EditorS-FD folded because there was no student editor

(the editorship w-as a joint faculty-student set-up withan open advisory board) who wanted to take Bruce'splace — even though the time-consuming machineryivas well-oiled. And this was no slippery, undercover,

low-quality bottom

editors could induce on short notice.Some will always believe that evaluation and

cntvism cannot persist with concern and love; butnobody's got an edge on love because he chooses onlypraise or silence. Elm trees , a man's achievements,the past are potentially comprehensible to anyoneover 12H.

When the newsletter was satirical, one didn'tchoose the stance because it was most friendly ; onechose it to shake the apathy, to drag written

(Continued on page six)

of anyone s bird-cage.

No red - eyedr a d i c a l spuminghowl with four-let-ter words to affrontAunt Edna and thelegislature: nor neg-ativislic anarchisticdown - with - State-and - Happy Valleymovement. We weretelling it like it isb e f o r e a n y o n ecoined the phrase—and with taste andas m u c h literarystyle as contributorscould summon orRobert J. Graham

facult y forum

Page 4: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

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Don 't Use Them Right NowBy The Associated Press

Gen. Curtis E. LeMay says thatneither in Vietnam "nor any placeelse" does a situation exist right nowwhich calls for the use of nuclearweapons.

^^^But George C. Wallace's i. .ingmate declared in an interview, "ine reis some place where you're going touse nuclear weapons," a l t h o u g h"where it is I don't know."

"There will be a point where youhave to defend yourself ," said the 64-year-old retired Air Force chief ofstaff.

LeMay said an all-out U.S. effort towin a military victory in Vietnamwould run "some risk — that RedChina might come in , maybe the Rus-sians even might come in."

Red China — 'No Weapons'.. ..He expressed the view, however,

that the Red Chinese "haven't got anyweapons capabilities to do us anydamage anyway, at least not now.Later on maybe yes. But now theyhaven't."

The interview developed these ques-tions and answers: ¦

Q. General , you've seen in the citieswhere you've appeared with Gov. Wal-lace that you can expect someheckling.

A. Oh, yes, I expected that. I knewit was going on but I was surprised atthe amount of it that was going on andthe fact that it's organized by groupsthat I know to be Communist oriented.

Q. How do you know that , General?A. I have more information than a

lot of people. True, I haven 't receivedany top secret briefings for ZM yearsnow, since I retired , but I remember alot from back then and I rememberthe names of some of these organiza-tions. One of the things that surprisedme is, here we're conducting a demo-cratic process and these people aretrying to interrupt it, using methodsthat would put them in jail for disturb-ing the peace just a short time ago.

'Just Another Weapon'?..Q General , you've said you consider

a nuclear weapon as just anotherweapon...

A. It's a weapon. A more powerfulone, yes. than the other weapons.

Q. And that it would be foolish to tellthe enemy in advance whether you in-

tend to use them or not?A. Well, if you 're going to sit in a

poker game with a bunch of cardsharks, and if you tell them "I'm notgoing to bet $10 unless I get fouraces ," or "I never bluff ," or "I neverdraw to an ace-high straight," Iguarantee you you're not going tomake much money in a poker game."

Q. Am I correct in saying that thereare some situations in which youwould conceivably use n u c l e a rweapons but no such situation exists inVietnam Now:

A. Yes, nor any place else. There issome place where you're going to usenuclear weapons. Where it is I don'tknow. If you're walking down thestreet and somebody starts molestingyou , at what point are you going to useyour fist? I can't tell you , you pro-bably can't tell me either. But therewill be a point where you have to de-fend yourself. I don't know what it is.

Says World 'Risky'Q. General, what would be the risks

of a full blown military effort in Viet-nam?

A. Well, my crystal ball is probably

not too much better than yours Ithink there's a risk. There's a risk ineverything. We live in a risky world.Neither one of us knew whether wewere going to get back from the rallytonight or not.

We were liable to get run over by anautomobile or hit by a brick downthere, or any one of a dozen things.

There is some risk to living.Presumably we looked- at the riskswhen we went in there. So there issome risk — that Red China mightcome in , maybe the Russians evenmight come in. Well, we'd just take alook at it.

How much risk is there? China?They've got plenty of problems oftheir own over there right now. Theyhaven't got any weapon capabilities todo us any damage anyway, at leastnot now. Later on maybe yes. But notnow they haven't.

So unless we put a big army on themainland so they could get at it , theycan't hurt us. I think we're foolish toput a big army there. Every soldierhas recommended against that as longas I can remember.

' IrmH'i ^ W'PS 'i" —Colle gian Photos by Pierre Belllelnl

IT WAS NO LEISURELY LUNCH yesterday for the Committee for University Reform.The newly-formed group of students and faculty members listed its issues and con-cerns, but could not agree on how its goals should be implemented.

New Committee lor Reform

Eugene's StandSaddens HHH

NEW YORK (/P) — Hubert H. Humphrey said yester-day "I feel a little sad" at Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy'srefusal to endorse him for the presidency.

Humphrey said, however, "I'm not prone to startmeeting conditions. I state my own case."

The vice president's comment at an airport newsconference apparently referred to McCarthy's statementTuesday night that he would not endorse Humphrey atthis time, but that there were conditions he hoped Hum-phrey would adopt.

McCarthy's Conditions:McCarthy called for a shift in Vietnam war policy, a

restructuring of the draft system and reform of the Demo-cratic party machinery.

While flying from Boston to New York to acceptthe state's Liberal party presidential nomination Humphreytold newsmen he talked to McCarthy on the telephoneTuesday. He said the Minnesota senator was more con-cerned about the structure of a South Vietnamese govern-ment than about an immediate bombing halt.

Attacks Running MatesIn his speech prepared for delivery to the Liberal

party, Humphrey turned his guns on the running matesof Richard M. Nixon and George C. Wallace, and saidsomeday they might be called "President Agnew" and"President LeMay."

"It could happen ," Humphrey said in reminding hisliberal audience that either Republican Gov. Spiro T.Agnew of Maryland or retired Air Force Gen. CurtisLeMay would be only a heartbeat away from the presi-dency if the Democratic ticket is defeated.

Humphrey then praised his own running mate, Sen.Edmund Muskie of Maine, saying: "I have never had todra g Ed Muskie kicking and screaming back into themainstream of my own campaign—or into the 20th century.And to borrow the language of Madison Avenue, no otherpresidential candidate can make that claim."

jV

-*

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ri g ht under your nose * fc

Group States ConcernsThe newly formed Commit-

tee for University Reformyesterday issued a statementof its issues and concerns, butcould not agree on how itsgoals are to be met.

Kenneth Wodtke, associateprofessor of educational psy-chology, announced the forma-tion of the group, made up ofboth students and facultymembers, at Sunday's FreeSpeech gathering on Old Mainlawn.

Some members suggestedthat the "committee join forceswith the Free Speech Move-ment, but this move was op-posed by several other mem-bers.

"The Free Speech Movementis unorganized ," one membersaid. "Trivial issues a r ediscussed along with t h esignificant ones.-We don't wantto duplicate that. We wantsomething structured," h esaid.

Need 'Strong Platform'"Some faculty members are

turned off by these three words(Free Speech Movement),"John Withall , professor ofeducation, said." And the cen-tral administration is havingproblems in thinking of how towork with the students. Weneed a strong platform, amilieu where students andfaculty can collaborate anddiscuss issues facing t h eUniversity."

Another faculty member saidhe thought the purpose of thecommittee should be to "makeit more difficult for the Ad-

ministration to refuse to meetwith the faculty and studentsaccording to its criteria of onlyspeaking to l e g i t i m a t egroups."

Wodtke concluded , "It's toosoon to say whether we needthis organization." The com-mittee made no immediateplans to meet in the nearfuture.

Lists GoalsThe University Reform com-

mittee lists among its goals:• Increased representation

of faculty and students inuniversity decision m a k i n gresulting in an e f f e c t i v eredistribution of power.

e A University whose studentbody and staff includes »larger proportion of minorityand working class groups con -sistent with the proportions ofsuch groups within the state.

©Greater protection of thecivil liberties of students andfaculty.

Democratic self-governmentby students of Universityorganizations which directlyaffect their lives , such as stu-dent government, s t u d e n tclubs, residence halls, foodservice and book stores andgreater representation by stu-dents in the academic affairsof the University.

Demo Says NixonReluctant rw^MWASHINGTON (AP) —

Richard M. Nixon , the GOPpresidential nominee, is a"reluctant dragon" who fearsface to face debate with his op-ponents. Rep. Fred B. Rooney,'D-Pa., charged yesterday.

Rooney told the House that iswhy Republican House mem-bers are stalling action onlegislation to suspend equalbroadcast time requirementsthat now are the law for allpolitical candidates.

He said Nixon 's "protectorsin the House are fightingdesperately to keep theirleader from having to face theAmerican voters without priorstaging by his Madison Avenuepublic relations consultants."

Rooney's comments came asthe House went into its 25thstraight hour on a Senate-passed bill to s u s p e n dtemporarily the Federal Com-

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If passed by the House, themeasure would clear the wayfor televised debates betweenNixon , Democratic presidentialnominee Hubert H. Humphreya n d third-party contender,George C. Wallace.

Rooney, a member of theHouse Commerce Committeethat reoorted on the bill, saidthe GOP colleagues regard thedelay as "something of a joke.

"I regard it a de'n''-';'« - •tempt to make a mockery ofour free election process anrithe vital importance of intel-ligent voting," said Rooney,who is from Bethlehem.

Earlier yesterday H o u s eminority Leader Gerald R.Ford of Michigan told a newsconference that he hadn 't beenin contact with Nixon while theHouse was battling over con-sideration of the measure.

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I

Campus Activities Swing

The Pennsylvania Book Shop

By BARBARA McCOUOUGHColieoran Staff Writer

Slalom, herringbone anyone?If skiing is your fascination, or perhaps

just a vague interest, you can attend thePenn State Outing Club's Ski Division me-eting and learn about $3-weekend rentalsand a Vermont trip scheduled for theChristmas break.

The program, scheduled for 7:30 tonightin 121 Sparks, will feature a movie entitled"Ski Magic"

A meeting of the Chess Team is schedul-ed for 8 tonight in 2H Hetzel Union Building.

"Eyewitness in Prague", a first-handaccount of the Russian invasion of Cze-choslavakia, will be featured at tonight'smeeting of the History Round Table at 7:30in the Assembly Room of the Nittany LionInn. Robert Scholten, professor of geology atthe University will be the speaker.

Scholten was in Prague attending themeeting of the International Geological Con-gress when the invasion occurred. The lec-ture is open to the public, and refreshmentswill be served. ,

Alcides R. Teixeira, director of theBotanical Institute of Sao Paulo, Brazil, willaddress a botany seminar at 11:10 today in213 Buckhout.

"Biafra-Past and Present", a discussionwhich drew a large audience when presentedat the Wesleyan Foundation last week, willbe given at 7:30 tonight in the Pollock UnionBuilding. The program features slides,discussions and films.

Mikel Dufrenne, professor of philosophyat the University of Paris-Nanterre, Franceand visiting professor at the University ofMontreal , Canada will address the PennState Philosophy Colloquium at 4 p.m. today

WYN NDAILY COLLEGIAN VCLASSIFIED AD ia /.u«iiuDEADLINE LACHMAN

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in the Assembly Room of the Hetzel UnionBuilding. Dufrenne will speak on "The APriori and the Philosophy of Nature".

For all you striving and starving scien-tiests, the Microbiology Banquet will be heldat 6 tonight in the HUB Ballroom.

This week's International Films featureis "The Seven Samurai" (The MagnificentSeven) (Japan 1955), scheduled for 6:30tonight in the HUB Assembly Hall.

For those of you who can't wait to hearthe news in tomorrow's Collegian , theresults of the Undergraduate StudentGovernment elections will be announced at 9tonight in the HUB Ballroom.

The Chinese Club Art Exhibit continuesin the Main Lounge of the HUB from 8 a.m.to 7 p.m. today and tomorrow. The FacultyArt Exhibition is also still on display in theHUB Art Gallery. Gallery hours are 11 a.m.to 4 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. daily.

On the agenda for the weekend is a jam -my in the Findlay Union Building featuringthe Donshires from 9 to 12:30 Friday night.Admission is 35 cents, girls admitted free til9:30.

Miss College of Agriculture 1968-69 willbe crowned Saturday night at the Ag HillParty. Nine contestants will vie for the titleand two iinalist positions. The winner willrepresent Penn State at the State FarmShow:

If your Sunday afternoon is not tied upwith Derby Day events^ go out and root forthe Kappa Kappa Gamma's in" their Powder-puff Football Game' against Sigma AlphaEpsilon. The game, scheduled for 2 p.m.,will be held at the Intramural Field nearBeaver Stadium. Admission is 25 cents — allproceeds go to chairty.

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LeMay: Nuclea r Weapons Needed, But

FICTION

Page 5: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

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Poll Probes Stud ent Awarenes s

REBECCA GROSS, editor of the Lock Haven Express, willbe guest speaker Sunday when the University's studentchapter of Theta Sigma Phi, professional organization forwomen in journalism, initiates eight women from the StateCollege area.

By DEMISE DEMONGCollegian Staff Writer

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a ser-ies of articles examining the results of astudent poll sponsored by the UndergraduateStudent Government and the Departmentof Sociology and conducted Spring Term.Subsequent articles urill explore studentopinions about the draft, the Presidentialrace and campus activism.)

Are those Penn State students who are readyto become actively involved in demonstrationssupporting student grievances going to remainan extremist few? Or is the prospect of a massmovement by the general student body becom-ing a reality?

With the birth of Walkertown and the FreeSpeech Movement , local as well as national in-terest is focusing increasingly on campus ac-tivism.

In a poll taken of Penn State students lastSpring Term, 65 per cent of those questionedindicated it was in some degree likely that theywould take part in grievance demonstrations.

Questioned about specific forms of protestemployed by dissatisfied groups, half of thestudents supported the right of' groups to "sitin" or "walk out" and stage mass protestdemonstrations. Twelve per cent of the stu-dents condoned the use of civil disobedience,and an equal number felt its acceptability wasdependent upon the situation. Only four percent agreed with the use of riot tactics, while

another eight per cent were unsure.The survey was, initiated by Philip Klopp

(10th-law enforcement and c o r re c t i o n -Richland) and backed by the UndergraduateStudent Government. Klopp was responsible forthe dating polls which created a considerablestir on campus in 1967 and 1968.

Klopp developed a set of questions to deter-mine whether a correlation exists betweenone's degree of "political awareness" — in-terest and knowledge — and his opinions aboutthe Vietnam War.

He secured the aid of David L. Westby. assis-tant professor of sociology and Richard G.Braungart , instructor of sociology. The surveywas expanded to include variables tapping col-lective behavior on campus , propensity for stu-dent activism and student mobilization. Ques-tions concerning campus issues, the selectiveservice and civil rights were added.

755 Students PolledThe poll turned into a unique situation of stu-

dents and faculty joining together to explore anarea of mutual concern. The Department of So-ciology provided funds and guidance, while un-dergradu ates provided manpower and motiva-tion..A force of interested students were enlisted

to poll a selected sample of 755 students, re-presenting males and females, Greeks and in-dependents and undergraduate and graduatestudents' proportionate to the number enrolledhere.

The material gathered in the survey is cur-rently being processed to relate responses ofthe individual to his background and knol-edge.

In the meantime, the available marginal dataprovides som e surprising and interesting in-formation about Penn State students' knowl-edge and ideas.

Rockefeller FavoredThe survey was taken in May, after Lyndon

Johnson's withdrawal as a 1968 presidentialcontender and before the assassination ofRobert Kennedy. Nelson Rockefeller emergedas the favorite candidate, supported by 23 percent of the students polled , and edging outEugene McCarthy (22 per cent) and Kennedy(20 per cent).

The two-later-to-be-nominated candidates,Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey, weresupported by 15 per cent and seven per centrespectively. At that time, George Wallace wasbacked by one-half of one per cent of thosequestioned.

Has college altered the political orientation ofthe Penn State student? Twenty-nine per centof the students indicated that they had become"more liberal" since attending, and ninety percent said they were now "more conservative".

23 Per Cent 'More Aware'Twenty-three per cent felt that they were

basically "more aware". Slightly over one-thirdof those polled indicated no change in politicalorientation.

Although nearly one-fifth of the students said

that politics was "very important" to them, »e>tual membership in political groups was low.Three per cent claimed membership in YoungRepublicans, one per cent in Young Democrat*and a total of fewer than three per cent in anyother political organizations.

The survey was largely intended to discoverhow much Penn State students actually restand know about current events. Nine-tenths ofthe participants successfully identified JohnLindsay as the mayor of New York City, andnearly as many knew that Saigon is the capitalof South Vietnam.

Questioned on Bookstore, Pot .Nearly one-quarter, however, were not aware

that Hanoi is the capital of North Vietnam. Al-though the i-urvey was taken soon after th«death of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, only40 per cent of the students could name RalphAbernathy, new president of the SouthernChristian Leadership Conference.

The survey also touched on issues of localconcern. Seventy-one per cent of the studentswere acquainted with students who smoke orhad smoked marijuana. Nearly half felt thatlaws concerning "lesser drugs" such as mari-juana should be less stringent, while 27 per centfelt that drug laws should be made tougher.

The poll found students fairly equally dividedabout whether the downtown bookstores treatstudents fairly and about the effectiveness ofthe Undergraduate Student Government as re-presentative of the student body.

Theta Sigma PhiTo Initiate Eight

Eight State College area women will be initiated Sun-day into Theta Sigma Phi, national professional organiza-tion for women in journalism and communications.

Sunday's ceremony will be the first initiation forwomen already working in journalism, conducted by thestudent chapter, Alpha Tau.

The initiation will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. in theLiving Center of the College of Human Development.Rebecca Gross, editor and vice president of the Lock HavenExpress, will be the guest speaker. Refreshments will beserved.

New InitiatesChosen for membership for their contributions to jour-

nalism are Eleanor Blakely, publications writer in theDepartment of Continuing Education; Elinor Chamberlain,writer in the Department of Public Information; JeanMcManis, publications manager for the University Press.

Nancy Miller, television specialist in the Departmentof Public Information; Alice Murray, home economics edi-tor for the Cooperative Extension Service; Mary B. Rogers,women's editor for The Centre Daily Times.

Evelyn Saybel, adviser to the College of Human De-velopment student publication, News and Views; andMarion Stocker, College of Human Development editor.

The initiates will organize a Theta Sigma Phi club towork with the student Alpha Tau chapter.

Recipient of AwardMiss Gross is an associate member of Alpha Tau

chapter. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, shejoined the staff of the Express in 1925 and has served aseditor since 1932.

Last year she was awarded the Pennsylvania PressDistinguished Service Award for dedication to journalismand widespread community involvement.

A native of Lock Haven, Miss Gross has been presi-dent of the Pennsylvania Associated Press. She has alsobeen active in work with the Associated Press ManagingEditors organization on the state and national level .

She has traveled to Europe several times with groupsof writers and interviewed Fidel Castro on a"'trip to' Cuba.

RitenourSets Hours

Medical care at RitenourHealth Center Dispenserywill be available this term sto 11:45 a.m. and 1:30 to 4:45p.m. Monday through Fridayand S to 11:45 a.m. Saturday.

A full complement of physi-cians and nurses will be onduty. Laboratory, X - r a y .physical therapy, pharmacyand emergency dental ser-vices are also available.

When the dispensary Isclosed, an out-patient servicef o r emergency treatmentonly is available in theUniversity hospital.

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Page 6: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

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Rams OverpowerLion Booters, 5-2

By DAN DONOVANCollegian Sports Writer

West Chester's soccer team scored fast and furiously in thefirst period yesterday to shell-shock the Nittany Lion squadand pin the second loss in a row on State's booters.

On their home field, the speedster Rams downed the Lions, 5-2.

The first West Chester score came even before 40 secondshad passed "in the first period as Bill Trimpi booted home agoal after an assist from Tom Elwell. Elwell got his, ownchance to score as he kicked home a penalty shot 15 minuteslater'/ Ken Weller completed the first-period surge with anunassisted goal only three minutes later. • -.

West Chester showed very good overall speed and seemed tohave a height advantage as it constantly controlled the headball when matched man-to-man with Lion booters.

State's John Klim lowered the halftime margin when he tookan assist from Bob Schoepflin and broke the ice for the Lions inthe second period. • ' '

John Oberholtzer added two goals for West Chester one eachin the third and last periods to complete the scoring for theRams. . ;

Lion wingman Dave Stock put the last score on the board as,he took a pass from substitute Jim Watts in the fourth period.

State's goalies had . an extremely busy day as West Chesterfired shots from all sides at the netmen. First-stringer PeteGeltman and sub John Pyle had an amazing 22 saves in thelosing cause.

•A spokesman for the Lion team said that the small-collegeteam was stronger than highly-ranked West Virginia, whichsqueaked by State last Saturday, 2-1.

Another fine performance was shown by State halfback GlenDitzler , who's individual peformance was one of the fewbright spots in the loss.

PENN STATE Pos. WEST CHESTERGeltman G ShellhammerSears RFB CharlesConzar LFB BooneDitzler RHB PcnnypackerGalvin CHB HandCarincl LHB WellerStock OR OberholtzerGatto IR TrimpiSnyder CF AldantockisKlim IL Elwe'lSchoepflin OL Longnecker

Score by quarters:Penn State o l o 1—2West Chester 3 0 1 1—5

Scoring: Trimpi tWC), Elwell (WO, Weller (WC),Klim (PS1, Oberholtzer, 2, (WO, Stock (PS).

Penn State's Rush DefenseLeads Majo r College StatsPenn State's rugged defense lowest mark in the country,

against rushing has put the „, Tr . ., , , .Nittany Lions first in the nation . The University of . Arizonain that department , according trails the- Lions, having surren-to official statistics issued t

dvf red 141 y?rds rushmS ln

Tuesday by the National Col- *Iiree fmes for an average oflegiate Sports Service. 47 yards Per §ame-

The Lions have allowed only Wyoming, Ohio State and100 yards gained rushing in Bowling Green follow the twothree games, for an average of leaders in this d e f e n s i v e33.3 yards a game, also the category.

Angevine Strikes GoldAfter Shif tin g Roles

By DON McKEEAssistant Sports Editor

A tall , blue-shirted figure cut into theclear and sprinted down the sidelines.Penn State quarterback Chuck Burkhartfired a long pass, the receiver made afine catch and the Nittany Lions had justcompleted a 25-yard touchdown toss.

The fans, bored in the closing mo-ments of a 25-9 win over Kansas State,leaned back and started talking aboutTed Kwalick making another great scor-ing catch Right ?

Wrong. The man pulling in the pass forone of State's two touchdown bombs thisseason wasn't Kwalick. but L e o nAngevine. While Kwalick was digging outfrom underneath about 10 KSU defenders ,Angevine was quickly but quietly runninga pass pattern that fooled the defense andled to a score.

Last week at West Virginia , whileKwalick was getting stomped on bydefenders and wiped out by hordes ofblockers, Angevine was slipping loose tocatch four passes for 54 yards.

In fact , Angevine is leading the teamafter three games with 10 receptions,good for 13.6 yards a catch. Not bad foran old running defensive back who's nowplaying split end.

In Joe Paterno's switch-conscious-brand of football. Angevine is one of thebest examples of the profits reaped when

moving men to different positions. He'sbeen moved more often than a chesspawn , but suddenly he's found a home.

Angevine was the starting wingbackfor four games his sophomore year. Thena broken foot kicked him out of a job, andout of the rest of the season. Last year,Angevine was .a part-time starter as adefensive halfback. Now, he's the splitend.

"Leon was a kid who had good size, alot of courage and good speed and we feltwe had to find a place where he couldplay," Lion coach Joe Paterno said.

"He has a very long stride and didn 'tlook like he'd be a good running back. Hedoesn 't have the quick feet — he's aglider. ' So we had him on defense lastyear , and now he 's the split end."

The object of all this planningcharacterizes the position changes as"different."

"It's also been confusing." Angevinesaid . "When you learn one position andthen get moved , it's pretty rough There'sa whole different theory on playing eachposition."

Enters Again

Ted Kwalick enters into the Angevinestory again . This summer he taught thenew split end 'some of what he knows —and what Kwalick knows about playingend would make any pass receiver better.

"I played split end in the last couplegames last year, and then all Spring,"

Angevine said. "Then Chuck (Burkhart)and Ted and I worked out together allSummer and that really helped."

Some opposing defenses may thinkthat Angevine has replaced Kwalick aseverybody's favorite receiver, but Pater-no says no.

"We try to adjust from game togame and do what we can against eachopponent," he said.

"The plays are pretty w e l l -balanced ," Angevine said. "Most of themcome from the man upstairs with theheadphones, what he seems to think willopen up."

With all the defenders keying onKwalick and Charlie Pittman . Angevineis the logical man to go to the pass.

"Yes, we've been going to Leon," saidquarterback Burkhart. "He's improved alot , has great speed and he's developed alot of moves."

Angevine once ran the 100 in 9.9 se-conds , but that was back at Peru CentralHigh in New York. The broken foot mayhave slowed him down, but it hasn 'tmade much difference, since he's outrunevery defense so far.

So the next time you see a Penn Stateend grab a pass for a long gain , don 't as-sume automatically that it's just anotherKwalick spectacular.

Check the program. More often thannot these days , it's Leon Angevine playingsecondary receiver to an All-American —and doing a great job.

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PREVIOUSLY HIDDEN in the large shadow east by All-American end Ted Kwalick, senior Leon Angevine hasemerged as the Lions' leading pass receiver. In three gamesthe split end has grabbed 10 passes, good for 13S yardsand one touchdown.

UCLA Listed To TopPenn State. 17-14

by WILL GRIMSLEYAssociated Press Sports Writer

MEXICO CITY (AP) — "No se puede ganar siempre".No matter the languajK, it's the same: "You can 't win

'em all". Despite the sabotage of Mississippi and Syracuse.we scored 47-13 for .784 last week and a season's average of.786.

Now reports are in from all the scouts across the borderand it looks like a gold medal week across the board :

Purdue 35, Ohio State 17: The Buckeyes are on the re-bound but the bounce is not enough to hurdle Leroy Keyesand Mike Phipps.

Oklahoma 14. Texas 10: This is the one that starts heartsand oil wells pumping in the Southwest. The Sooners winthe one that got away in 1967.

California 25, Army 7: The Golden Bears fin ally have thescoring punch they lacked in recent years .

Alabama 28, Vanderbilt 14: Absence of strong runningspeed has taken much of the whip from the Crimson Tide.

Texas Christian 21, Southern Methodist 18: Count on theHomed Frogs to build a fence around Jerry Levias.

UCLA 17, Penn State 14: The rugged Bruins can 't affordto lose two in a row to eastern rivals.

Navy 20, Air Force 13: The Midshipmen have a knack ofrising over their heads against service academy rivals. • .

Not re Dame 38, Northwestern 7: Ara Parseghian expendsa little mercy on his former team.

Michigan State 19, Michigan 17: We must go with the im-proved Spartans, but don't be surprised if it 's the other waysround .

Southen California 24, Stanford 20: A prediction that theTrojans' O. J. Simpson will have one of his roughest daysof the season.

Tennessee 21, Georgia Tech 14: The Vols' defense is fartoo strong for Tech's sluggish runners but Larry Good maytoss a couple of TDs.

Georgia 18. Mississippi 14: The Bulldogs , who escapedDietzel by a point , are always tough between the hedges atAthens.

I

Tigers Smash CardsST. LOUIS tm — The arous-

ed Detroit Tigers clobbered St.Louis pitching for a record-tying 10 runs in the third in-ning yesterday and squared theWorld Series at three gameseach with a 13-1 victory behindDenny McLain, a two-timeloser.

Jim Northrup's grand slamhomer off relief pitcher LarryJaster was the big blow in thetnird when the Tigers sent 15men to the plate against loserRay Washburn and threeothers.

It was the biggest Series in-ning since Hack Wilson mis-judged a fly ball at Philadel-phia in 1929 and opened thegates for 10 runs by thePhiladelphia A's against theChicago Cubs. The A's, trailing8-0 at the time, also sent 15men to bat.

The final score didn 't quitematch the New York Yankees'18-4 rout of the New YorkGiants in 1936.

Julian Javier's single withtwo out and two on in the ninthsaved the Cards from sufferingthe ' most lopsided 'shutout inSeries history.

McLain . -second choice to in-jured Earl Wilson in ManagerMayo Smith's pre-game opi-nion , made up for two earlierdefeafs by Bob Gibson as hecame back strong with a cor-tisone shot easing his achingright shoulder.

Up to GibsonThe Tigers' victory once

again puts it squarely up toGibson, the Cards' strikeoutace, in a seventh game duel to-day with left-handed MickeyLolich ,- -also a two-time Serieswinner.

Morning showers delayed thestart for 10 minutes and um-brellas sprouted in the crowdof 54,692 at Busch Stadium asthe rain resumed in the last ofthe seventh inning. The lightswere turned on all during thedark, cloudy afternoon . Playwas held up for 49 minutes byrain in the last of the eighth.

By the time the game wasresumed only a handfull offans remained in the rain-soaked stands. Some press boxwags thought it should havebeen declared a TKO as soonas it became legal to save thebattered Cards' from absorb-ing further punishment.

The Series thus followed thesame pattern as 1967 when theCards opened up a 3-1 edge onBoston only to drop two in arow before Gibson bested JimLonborg in the final. The only

A used to be for Apple_ Now it' s for

teams to come back from 3-1deficits were the Boston RedSox in a best-of-9 set in 1903.the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1925and the New York Yankees in1958.

Once again Gibson , who lastworked Sunday in the rain-delayed game at Detroit, willhave three days' rest while hisopponent, Lolich, will have hadonly two days to recover fromMonday's winning effort.

Breaks Hitless StreakIt was apparent early that

this was not Washburn 's day.The Tigers hopped on him fortwo runs in the second whenNorm Cash walked on a 3-1pitch, Willie Horton doubledhim home and Bill Freehanbroke a 16-at-bat hitless streakwith a single, scoring Horton.

* * *

Annihilate !

Washburn , a winner with reliefhelp from Joe Hoerner in thethird game, was wild and wasnot throwing hard.

The third inning started in-nocently enough with a walk toDick McAuliffe on four pitches.Before it was over 10 runswere in . 15 men had been atbat and the Cards' Washburn,Jaster, Ron Willis and DickHughes had been roughed upfor a grand slam homer, sixsingles, four walks and a hitbatsman.

After McAuliffe w a l k e d ,Mickey Stanley singled to Ickand Al Kaline, who had threehits and drove in four runs ,pumped a single to center ,scoring McAulitfe. That wasall for Washburn.

Jaster never did get anybodyout. Norm Cash singled , scor-ing Stanley and Willie Nortonwalked, loading the bases. Nor-thrup, who hit four grand slamhomers in regular season ,including two on successive in-nings against Cleveland June24, ripped Jaster's second pitchinto the Card bullpen, about380 feet away in right-field. Itwas the 11th Series grandslammer and first since theYanks' Joe Pepitone in 1964.

Now it was 8-0 but the Tigersweren't through yet. Freehan,first man to face Willis, walk-ed on four pitches. Don Wertwas hit by a pitch and McLainmade the first out , a sacrificebunt. An intentional walk toMcAuliffe loaded the basesagain and ' Kaline singled tocenter;again;for.-,-hisrsecond.liitof the -inning, driving in Wertand McAuliffe.

Bad BounceDick Hughes was the next

victim and Cash greeted himwith a single to right thatbounced over Orlando Cepeda'shead, scoring Stznley with theninth run. Horton's single offHughes' glove brought homeKaline with run No. 10 of theinning.

There was a derisive cheerfrom the crowd when Hughesfinally made Northrup fly toLou Brock in left field.

Kaline, the hitting star of theTigers ' fine c o m eb a c k ,delivered his second Serieshomer with ' nobody on in thefifth against Steve Carlton ,fifth of seven Card pitchers.

McLain never had it so good.The 31-game winner of regularseason coasted along with abig lead, pitching steady ballagainst the deflated Cards.

McLain had the most lopsidedshutout in his pocket until theninth when singles by RogerMaris. Orlando Cepeda andJavier gave the Cards theironly run. He allowed nine hits,all singles, didn't walk a manand struck out seven, includm 0the last hitter he faced DalMaxvill. still hitless in 20 trips.

After the game, McLain wasasked if he had-good stuff. "Itisn 't that hard to pitch whenyou have a 13-run lead ," hosaid. "I had real good control."

IM Football ResultsFRATERNITY

Alpha Chi Rho 5, Alpha Phi Delta 4(FirsT Downs)

Alpha Sigma Phi 26, Alpha Rho Chi 0Alpha Tau Omega 13, Sigma Alpha

Mu 2Delta Upsilon 2B, Phi Kappa Tau 0Delta Chi 5, Beta Sigma Rho 3 (First

Downs)Phi Sigma Delta 7, Theta Chi 0Phi Delta Theta 20. Sigma Phl Epsilon OLambda Chi Alpha 2, Alpha Kappa

Lambda 0 (First Downs)PI Kappa Alpha 7, Zeta Beta Tau 0Acacia 3, Kappa Sigma '0Alpha Gamma ' Rho 1, Alpha -Epsilon.Pi 0 "(Sudden Death)

Beta Theta PI 6, Theta Delta Chi 0,uf- 'DORMITORYPotter-Scranton 7, Montour-Pike 0Lawrence-McKean 14, Franklin 0Indiana-Jefferson 6, Fulton 0Altoona 6, Dunmore 0

Nittan y Lion InnFootball Rall ySet Tomorrow

A pep rally at 11:45 a.m.tomorrow at the Nittany Liontnn — sponsored by StudentsFor State, Block S, and thecheerleaders — will send thePenn State football team offto Los Angeles in quest oftheir fourth victory of theseason, against UCLA.

Coach Joe Paterno said theteam "appreciates anythingthat's done" in the way of arally.

UIII I I I I I I I I I I I I IUII I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I IMni l l imi l l l l l l l l l l l l l lMl l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l:

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riiiiiniiii innniuMiMiiiHiniiuMuiiiu.HiiEiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iuniiMiiMiiiOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

Snyder-Wayne 7, Aliquippa 04 Sullivan-Wyoming 13, Somerset-

Venango 00 McKeesport A, New Castle 2 (Firsta Downs)

Eastern 7, Kingston 0Hazleton 1, Harrlsburg 0 (Sudden

it Death)Uniontown 7, Wilkinsburg 0Pottstown 1, Sharon 0 (Sudden Death)

0 Sharon 7, New Kensington -0Norristown 4, Pottstown 3 [First Downs)Watts II 20, Walnut 13 ¦

0 Tamarack 7, Maple 0 '.Sycamore 3. Poolar 0 (First DownO

m INDEPENDENTQuips 7, Bellefonte Bombers 3 (First-Downs) f „ ... '.*¦ - -

Super Studs 27, Hogan's Heroes 7 ' ' 'Ingineers 6, Big Men -0 'F-Troop 7, Red Dogs 2 (First Downs)Smooth Guys 14, D.I.Y.E. 0Clan 6,-Fletchers 5 (First Downs)

Two State CoedsAttendConference

Women's Recreation Councilexecutive board m e m b e r sJudith Van Tosh and ElizabethCasso are representing PennState at the Pennsylvania At-hletic Recreation Federation ofCollege Women. The con-ference is being held todaythrough Saturday at EastStroudsburg State College.

! LACHMAN&

WYNNj for

USGTown Congressmen

Man Behind McLain?Grand-S!am Northrup

ST. LOUIS l/P) — When Denny McLain makes hispitch for a six-fi gure baseball contract in 1969, JimNorthrup would like to go along for the ride.

McLain -would be happy to have him aboard—alongwith all the rest of the Detroit Tigers.

"I want to thank every guy on this club," McLain saidyesterday after going from two-time World Series goat tojust-in-time hero as the Tigers pummeled the St. LouisCardinals, 13-1, with the help of Northrup's grand slamhomer.

"I wish I could take the whole gang into salary nego-tiations with me." said the Tigers' sore-armed pitching ace,-who scattered nine hits while atoning for two Series beat-ings and setting up a seventh game showdown today.

McLain, working with two days rest on a cool, rain-marred afternoon and bolstered by a cortisone injectionthat relieved the pain in his right shoulder, shut out theCards until the ninth.

Northrup, meanwhile, keyed a record-tying 10-runDetroit burst in the third with a bases-loaded blast intothe upper deck in right field.

"Do you know that this guy has hit five grand slamhomers this year and four of them have come while I waspitching," McLain said.

"It went through my mind while I was on deck thatI might get another chance to hit one for Denny," Northrupsaid. "But when I went up there I was just going for asacrifice fly."

"I want to say something in Denny 's behalf." theTigers' slugging center fielder added. "I was playing be-hind him both times before in this Series and I could tellthere was something wrong. He wasn't throwing right. Hetold me in the locker room his arm was hurting. But hedidn't want to use it as an alibi."

For Good ResultsUse

CoNegian Classifieds

¦ B H

Put It in Print(Continued f rom page three)

responses from students and faculty. Because it was,after all, a dialogue before the word was bastardizedto a whimper.

"Want of feeling; lack of passion , emotion, or' ex-citement": begin again?

What for? Who needs abuse? Revolution couldcome to PSU and walk on by.

Passion Better Spent .If the faculty and students together make a

university what it is — and we believe they must —maybe all that passion . Mr. Editor, is better spent upa tree, in attacks on billboards , in a slumschool pro-ject , in a capital punishment group, in a petition tothe MLA to get the next annual meeting out ofChicago, in Upward Bound , an experimental film —or in writing a novel about universities and goats.

But if 50 people were anxious to resuscitate S-FD? Might be nice to get out the buff-colored paperand see if S30 could be scraped' together again. Orsome new cornflower blue paper... The ideas arenearly the same, but a new color might be interest-ing...though there's something to be said for conti -nuity. On second thought: anyone with some intellectand guts can have the paper.

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Page 7: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

SKI CLUBMEETING

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7:30 P.M 121 Sparks

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Warren Miller Ski Flick

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Gods Spin Over OlympicsBy STEVE SOLOMONCollegian Sports Write?

When it came time every four years to paytribute to the proprietors of Mount Olympus ,whom they worshipped, the Greeks were of asingle mind. They temporarily ended their pettywars and sent their greatest athletes to engageeach' other in more aesthetic pursuits. Theythrew the spear for distance instead of fordeath, ran for time and not for a general, boxedfor an olive leaf , not for their life.

The Greeks felt the real meaning of theOlympics—the competition of God-given giftsand personal sacrifice, the short duration ofpeace, and the fraternity of men through sport.They ran and rode, jumped and boxed, onlywith a mind to whip the other guy.

With them—with Euripedes, with Phidipidesand with Pericles, the Olympic ideal died. Itwas their crea-tion , a preciouscraftsma n s h i p.T h e Ro m a n sabused it, thenk i l l ed it. AFrenchman res-urrected it, butdid so as a pro-motional p loy .And the sacri-lege continues totoday, to Nov.,1968, to the Mex-ico City SummerGames.

Beneath t h e

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ceremony, t h e BHHfflH^^ SiiiWBb. . ipomp, the pag- | Q$ g&. ^| Qt~eantry, lies thestark reality of AVERY BRUNDAGEthe O l y m p i c . . . the Greelc traditionGames. It is a study in mass self-deception; inirony. Supposedly an international athletic com-petition above the sway of politics, it has be-come enmbrdiled in just that; billed as a show-

case of the world's finest amateur athletes, itreeks of under-the-table professionalism; origi-nally conceived for the moral uplift of man, itdebases female competitors with a compulsorytest of sex, which in the opinion of many, provesonly a woman's right of residence on the planet.

Perhaps it is impossible to divorce politicsfrom an international event , although AveryBrundage, president of the International Olym-pic Committee, seemingly has worked an eight-hour day for most of his 80 years to do it. Hisrecord has been impressive. He opposed a U.S.move to boycott the 1936 Games in Berlin whenHitler -was solidifying his power behind theAryan supremacy theory. America showed up,and a poor Southern Negro named Jesse Owenswon four gold medals and sent Hitler home—red-faced , broiling, and perhaps thinking twiceabou t his theory.

His one failure , though, almost aborted the'68 Games and left the host country, Mexico,up a $150 million tree.

South Africa, which had been voted outof the 1964 Olympics in protest of its racialapartheid policy, was readmitted last Februaryby the International Committee. Subsequently,approximately 40 nations hinted they wouldrather watch the proceedings via satellite thanmix company with an immoral aggregation ofrunners and swimmers. So South Africa waskicked out. The result? A record-breaking swim-mer, Karen Muir, and a world-class black run-ner, Humphrey Khosi, are denied the experi-ence which has governed their very existenceover the past several years.

Won't MatterSouth Africa's racial policies are indeed

reprehensible , but it is doubted here that piouslyremoving them from the Olympics will altertheir political and social destiny.

And here again , an inescapable ironyemerges. The Russian representative on theOlympic Committee charged South Africa with"violating Olympic ideals". A few months later,Soviet tanks were patrolling. Czech streets, justas they had in Hungary only months before

the 1956 Games in Melbourne. Indeed , if man- ;.kind must judge the governments under whoseflags the athletes compete, the Russian moral Jposture should be up for examination. And afew-score other nations, too.

Charges of professionalism is a specterwhich haunts all of amateur athletics today.Sac and Fox Indian Jim Thorpe, one of thegreatest athletes of all times, was forced tosurrender all his Olympic medals when theworld discovered that he had taken $15 a game 'for playing baseball as a starving unknowing 1youth. Today, however, a Russian athlete cansomehow support a family while devoting allhis time to competition and practice , and anAmerican can live quite well despite traversingthe world on the invitation of a promoter whoneeds a "big name" to sell his show. Even theAmerican scholarship college athlete must an-swer to the charge of professionalism; in ex-change for four years of service, he receivesfor free an education sometimes worth upwardsof $10,000 .

One Too ManyThe newly-installed sex tests strike a dis-

tressing chord in any dignified human. Witnessthe case of one Ewa Klobukowska of Poland,a bronze medal winner in the 1968 WinterGames. Ewa checked in with one extra chromo-some, a sin which banishes her from furtherathletic competit ion, unless she should chooseto challenge Tommy Smith or Jim Ryun. Theinutterable shame of the controversy is thedamage perpetrated upon Ewa's pride, when noteven the American Medical Association recog-nizes the examinations she was forced to under-go— the buccal smear and the karyotype—asfoolproof methods of determining an individual'ssex.

No. the Olympic Games are not quite whatthe reigning gods on Olympus had in mind.They are, however, the best man can do—inter-national , but sometimes exclusive; amateur, yetbla tantly professional; free of politics, but miredin the possibility of strikes and boycotts.

And. of course, genetically pure.

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PRESIDENTIAL HOPEFUL Pat Paulsen began to campaign, for votes this week beforewhat he thought was a captive audience from State Penn, until he realized that thecrowd was really a group of early Penn Stale arrivals in Los Angeles. Paulsen willseek support from some 70,000 fans expected at the Colesium Saturday, when he gives ahalfiime add ress at the T.ion-tlflT.A contest.

H

\vAVERY BRUNDAGE. the Greek tradition

Elections, Sex TestsBeset Olympic GomesMEXICO CITY (AP) — A calm Mexico

City, heavily pa trolled , by police and soldiers,awaits the opening of the Olympics Saturday asnew controversy swirled around the Games.

The International Olympic Committee waslocked in argument over whether to re-elect asPresident Avery Brundage, the rich 81-year-old-Chicagoan who has headed the Olympics since1952. The Communist countries oppose him.

Striking students, whose clashes with thepolice in recent weeks have cost upwards of 50lives, held secret policy meetings. Indicationswere that any future protests would be on theorderly side.

The IOC's medical commission is in adispute with the International Swimming Asso-ciation over girl swimmers taking the sex test.Berge Phillips, the Australian president of theassociation , says the tests are degrading andshocking and opposes them.

However some airl swimmers have volun-

teered to take the tests. So far more than 500girls out of the 962 competing here have passedthe tests. There have been no rejections. Thetests were instituted after mannish appearinggirls won medals in past Games.

No one know to what extent the violencethat beset this nation has affected the expectedinflux of tourists. The reason is that thegovernment required rooms to be paid for inadvance. The hotels naturally report they aresold out.

Already the Games have set a record . Morethan 7,500 athletes from more than 100 nationsare competing here. Tokyo in 1964 set the pre-sent record of 94 nations and 5,565 athletes al-though Helsinki in 1952 drew 5,867 athletes fromonly 69 nations.

A sellout crowd of more than 80,000 is ex-pected for the opening ceremonies in the ultra-modern Olympic Stadium.

Politics, Professi onalism ... ¦!

in you and your future. INDUSTRIESam FniJAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

Ii

|1

Page 8: Agrees To See Tenants Sun Yields To Tenant Group1968.psu.edu/assets/uploads/collegian/10-10-1968.pdfBy the time a motion to consider the bill could be called, there were 36 roll calls

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STEAMING CIDER, dainty pastries, convarsations, wa rm smiles, soft lightsEd BUrgonci and John Perlis — Saturday

ELEGANT FIVE Bedroom, three bam-room contemporary styled • deck house.Completely furnished for select group ofUniversity Staff members or Graduatestudents. Call 233-8190.

MAKE U.S.G. relevant! Vote Bob Lach-man and Rick Wynn for U.S.G. TownCongressmen.

" H'orairG auBSUNDAY OCT. 13 Class I Canoe tripon Juniata River. Sign up at the HUB.Thursday"ocT."To~

Skl Division meeting121 Sparks 7:30 p.m.

HERE'S YOUR Chance! Get rid of thoseHomecoming Tickets while you can. Call

CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING POLICY

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International Films

THE SEVEN SAMURAI(THE MAGMFICL.7 SEVEN)

Directed by Akira Kurosawa

This is Kurosawa's magnificent poemthe calling of seven samurai at a timetion was crumbling.

of violence depicting the lives andwhen Japan's great feudal civiliza-

Thursday, October 10HUB Auditorium Tickets at HUB desk, 50c

SPECIAL TIMES 6:30 and 9:00 P.M.

STAfSOTEFHI. - SAT. - SUN.

—1 . /ZkF ™

Ni'ion*! Gtnail Picture profitA Joseph Janni Production

Terence StampCarol White in

Technicolor' rfj | sunCO-HIT I

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* F'T'W COLOR Hg. i a. -- Show TimeMam. f i.uu 7:30 P.M.

Feature Time J& 'W NOW

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Unlike other classics West Side Story'grows younger!

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Air Conditioned

^H? [CKMA Jy s«ow»;g66A riot, the funniest since the

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Air Conditioned

"Let mylittle boyplay witha mentallyretarded

child?Never!"

If mat 's !i"'.v you feel .vou don't know the facts.Write for a lrce booklet to

The President 's Comm:ttfl«on Mental Retardation .

Washington , D.C

_S\

Herberg Lectu res in HUBOn New Mora lity, Ethics

Will Herberg, noted American philosopher a tremendous revolution, but it happened 40and theologian, discussed the "New Morality" years ago. The current so-called revolution isbefore a meeting of. the Young Americans for mostly a media breakthrough: The revolutionFreedom last night. happened, but it is not steadily gaining. .

"We have a new theology," said Herberg, .Ww ^SS^ThTMiSlS^"which turns out , in the hands of popular pathological phenomenon. Je vast^or itymagazines, to be a Death of God Morality. The of premarital relatc-ns are not P™™scmty - I n"New Morality" is two different things. It is a fact , most 9™m™^

nsgt ™™°£ occur bet"

practiee based on widespread premarital sex- ween young people who later marry,ual promiscuity, on a chasm in values between Woe the Boy

^generations, and on the repudiation of conven- "In former times, Herberg said, in Scart-tional morality in favor of 'personal sincerity.'" dinavia, few girls married before they were

New Approach pregnant. But woe the boy who refused toHe continued, "It is also a theory, a new marry the girl — he was ostracized and-or

approach to the ideologies of Contcxtualism driven out of town. Today social pressures areand Existential Ethics. incomparably less tense, and few recourses are

"It is a misrepresentation to picture the open to girls when the involved boy simplyj 'oung men. of the upper and upper-middle shrugs." . - 'classes as straightlaced moralists throughout On student disorders Herberg said, r A Na-history until now: This simply was not the tional Student Association survey taken of thecase," said Herberg. "The middle classes' were first six months in 1968 showed that 40,000 stu-home-oriented and conventional in sexual dents were involved in student turbulence inbehavior throughout history. The change came the United States — which is seven-tenths ofwhen middle classes went into college, acquired one percent of the entire number .of enrolledupper class sophistication, and less conven- students ! Hardly the. picture the press. and thetional sexual inclinations and practices. It was media present." .

Increase Culture Interest

Regis tration. Rent, Hazards(EDITOR'S NOTE: Daily Collegian Hot Linerep orters will be o?i duty from 8 to II tonight.Students utith questions or complaints can callHot Line at 865-2881.) -

Mystery of Unreg istered CarWhat is the story with the parking situa-

tion? My two friends went home last weekendand on their way back the car broke down. Theone guy then brought his mother's car here.Since they arrived in State College at 3 a.m.they couldn't register the car. The driver hadclasses Monday morning and couldn't registerit then either. Still he received a ticket for S15.Since it was an emergency to have the unregis-tered car here, why did he get a ticket?

Name Withheld by Request• • *

There is a regulation that cars must beregistered before brought on campus. In casesof emergency ihe ear should have been parkedin ihe regular student overnight parking lotsuntil the student could register it. However, atraffic court spokesman said that you shouldappeal the case to the Dean of Men.

Bluebell Manager Fired?Is it mandatory for Bluebell residents who

are subletting their apartment during the sum-are suoieuiiiB u«u auuu..^.»»"-» ;„„;«—, "We didn't think that any of the boysmer to sign the addendum which conceros addendum," Deanpaying an additional ten percent m rent? Also, sa_dI heard a rumor that James O Brien was fired. •-.„_ 0ctober l0 June residenls wiu beIs this true.

wj thehld bv Request Pavin9 an additional ten per cent in their rent.

Bluebell is not pressuring any of ihe resi-dents into signing ihe addendum. Herbert Dean,overseer of O'Brien, said that, residents shouldrealize the advantages of paying the additionalten per cent.

They will have paid 10.9 months rent in a ninemonth period. The lease terminates in June,and if they wish to sublet they may. Only onemonth's rent is due in the summer. "If resi-dents don't sign the addendum," Dean said, theystill must take care of the rent during the sum-mer. Residents must realize that it is to theiradvantage by signing. It puts them in the samebargaining power if they want to sublet whenthe lease is terminated in June. The residentswill save themselves a headache if they can'tsublet. They won't have to worry about theirapartments during the summer. Bluebell thenhas all summer to get things ready for the fallso there wouldn't be many complaints from theresidents about ihe conditions."

As for O'Brien. Dean said thai he had been"let go" because "he was unable to handle theboys' problems."

(By Sandy Bazonis)

Coffee Brewery in DormsWhy can't students have electric coffee

pots in their room? They aren't as dangerousas a hot plate.

Debbie McGeehan—5th-Psychology* * *

Electric coffee pots violate fire regulations."There is a regulation against electrical

heating appliances in group housing becauseof the many fire incidents of these devices,"said Otto E. Mueller, director of food andhousing. "There is also too much at stake. Thehazards are not created by ihe use of ihe elec-trical devices but by their misuse," Muelleradrfari.

Ukrainian Club Plans YearThe Penn State Ukranian

Club was formed four yearsago to stimulate interest in theculture of the Ukraine.

Composed of 25 students andfaculty members, the clubsponsors activities of a literaryand rnltnra l nature . The Hub

is organizing a p r o g r a m decorating Easter eggs. Thefeaturing a troupe of profes- club" also organized an exhibi-sional Ukrainian dancers. It is tion of folk costumes shown atalso working to bring a pro- Pattee Library,gram for Ukrainian students Prospective members mayinto the University curriculum, call Mrs. Sandra Varney,

Last year the club demons- president, at 238-8571 for in.trated the Ukrainian art of formation.

GET GREAT RESULTS WITH A COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED AD

AWS ApprovesLate Clos ingsTwo o'clock curfews for women in the residence halls will

be in effect for the first two Saturdays in November.The Association of Women Students voted at last night s

Senate meeting to set two o'clocks Nov. 2, Homecomm.Weekend and Nov. 9, All-University Day. .

In other business, AWS President Gayle Graziano read tothe Senate the official statement of Charles L. Lewis, vicepresident of student affairs, concerning the new administra-tive ruling on apartment visitation . Under the new ruling,women over 21 or above first term do not need parental per-mission to visit men's apartments.

Returns to SenateLewis's statement, in part , said : "The committee (Ad-

ministrative Committee on Student Affairs) also voted to referthe entire question of the parental permission system back tothe University Senate for reevaluation of the necessity forcontinuing such a system...We are down to first term only(women who need written permission from parents) and wehave altered it as much as we can without further authorityof the Senate." , .,.,.,

AWS also decided last night to investigate the possibilityof forming a women's commission as an AWS research group.Miss Graziano, in proposing the idea, said the group would bean "extension of AWS to investigate issues that are discussedwithin the meetings but need more research."

The group would be composed of women interested infinding solutions to AWS problems, such as equalization ofwomen's admissions policies , off-campus living, discriminationagainst women in downtown housing and women's hours.

Lack of Study AreaNina Comly, first vice president, brought up the problem

of the study lounges in the women's residence halls. Many ofthe residence halls are without study lounges since they arebeing used as a temporary housing..

Miss Comly said she was discussing the problem of lack ofstudying areas with Otto E. Mueller, director of housing andfood services. Some of the sororities are opening their suitesfor studying, she said.

Miss Graziano announced the appointment of Lillian Perez,president of Ritner, as chairman of the AWS-MRC (Men'sResidence Council) Committee.

The AWS retreat for the newly elected residence hallcouncil members will be held Sunday afternoon at Stone Val-ley. The next AWS Senate meeting is scheduled for Oct. 23.

*f'^^ ^ S

BOOM OH BUST: Geri Siotis, 36, of Burbank, Calif,is one of the latest entries in Wall Street's bust boom.City's financial district this week and her appearanceThis was somewhat less than the crowds that turnedand her 43-25-37 measurements—two weeks ago.

WYNN.&.

LACHMANfor

USGTOWN CONGRESSMEN

—AP Wirephofowho sports a 47-29-38 figure.

She showed up at New Yorkattracted about 5,000 persons

out io view Francine Gottfried—

| TWEL VETBEE S I8 237-2112 I

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Film

NOW... :3_ .3_3Q-5:30-7:3D*9:30

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3~-???^____= NOW _ 2:00-4:3 0-7:00-9730If'saRING-A-DHIG *?ffi r , 1

LAUGH AFFAIR!

COLLEG IA N CLA SSIFIE DSiiiiiii i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i

OFFICE HOURS9:30 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.

Monday through Friday

Basement of SackettNorth Wing

'foh'sale 196? TR3. Aluminum V-8 enBine. Goodcondition. Call 865-6337 or 237-1644. S675.001965 MUSTANG 289 V-8. All"syncro4-speed, dark' blue. $1,200. Call Daveafter six 237-4201.

^ ^STUDENTS: WE provide prompt insur-ance for— autos, motorcycles, motor-scooters, travel, valuables, hospitalization.Phone Mr. Temeles 238-6633.

H0A6IES, HOAGIES, Hoaslts. Regula'60c, Tuna 60c, Ham 70c, Chicken 70c.Ham and Cheese Sandwich 35c. Dean'sFast Delivery. Dial 238-8035 or 237-10438 p.m. to midnight.

SCOTT STEREO P.M. Tuner. Two yearsold. Reasonable price. Call 238-9940 askfor Dick Ring. __TWO WHEELS Cycle Shop. Come seethe new and used motorcycles. 1311 EastCollege Ave.

USED PORTABLE Sewing. Machines.Singer, White, Pfaff. S29.95 to J49.95. All20 year guarantee. Mover's 238-8367.

1967 HONDA 305 cc Scrambler BikeIs In excellent condition. Extras. CallLarry 86S-49B2.

RCA STEREO, Remington Electric Razor,G.E. AM-FM Radio. Will bargain. Call237.3644.

I "' FOR SALE

T.V. CONSOLE — excellent condition.,SDT suite, 2 Helster Hall. S75 or bestoffer.:265 - 350 CHEV

-PARTS" — du_[~qua_

manifold with carbs, Isky cam and lifters.Corvette valve covers 7" cheater slicks.

1 238-7755_after _6^00_p.m: 1966" N

~Cr"t"o"n

_ATLAS

~750 ccTizof miles,

coppertone, fine condition. $700. PhoneTom 865-5919. | FOR

-SALE: 1966 Fo7d Custom 500. 390

engine, four door, white. S1000. Call A]237-6888

^ 'H

~l Fl iouiPMENT — Roberts 770A

¦ taperecorder. Cross-Field Head, 3 motors.Response 40-22000 I 2db. Acoustech IVPreamplifier rer,p. I 3d b 1.5 cp to 600 kc.

I960 CHEVY V-8, rebuilt engine, newtires, fuel pump, generator, voltage regu-lator, ball-joints. S35O.0O. 238-2710.FOR SALE: Gas

~Stove S10 00; 12" World

Globe S5 00; Emergency Flag and Re-flectors S3.50; Charcoal Grill with Rotls-serie $10.00. Car mirrors for car towinga trailer, removable door-mount type,S7.O0 pr. 237-7962 alter _5:30. FOR SALE — 1958 Porshe coupe. Faircondition. S695.O0. Call 942-8915 Altoona,Pa. 12-VOLT AM-FM Car Radio. Never" used.El Prado Classical Guitar, new. CallScott 237-1978. 1963 AUSTTn-HEALY 3000 MlT~iin>lewtop, battery, brakes, exhaust system,good tires. Completely gone over. Posl-tlvely must sell. Call John _23e^l5S., , ,DESOTO 1958. Clean inside, running con-dition. $100.00 Call Al 238-3708. *54 Hilltop

AMPLIFIER, A1APEG Gemini II 15 In.Jensen concert speak. $250.00. OrphenmFuzz Box $20.00. Call 237-1048. ' ' ' ' JGUNS: MARLIN 336 35 Rem. Deer Rifle; iMossberg .22, 4x scope. Best offer. 237-6864. jGUITAR — AUDITORIUM, F-hole - case, !strap, and amplifier, pickup included. $40.or best offer. Bob 237-1769. ,

1963 RAMBLER American Sedan. Good <shape. Good mileage. $480 or best offer. 'Will demonst.-ate. Phone 692-4677.

1966 AUSTIN HEALEY 3,000. Excellentcondition, original owner, R&H, wirewheels, overdrive. $7.375. Call 466-6287.

1967 BARRACUDA Formula S four-speed, radio, posltraction. Excellent con*dltion. If Interested call Jim (23S-5852!between 5 and 7 p.m.

IIIUIIIIII l l l l l l l l i l l l i l l l l l l l l l l l l i l l l l l i l l l l l l i iHIIIII i l l l i i l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l imil l l l l l l l i l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l lHIIIII l lFOR SALE WANTED "" ATTENTION'

1963 CORVETTE. Black, 327, 3-spd. stick. GRAD STUDENT looking for 4-5 year oldsExcellent condition. Best buy this year.j to play with my son. Live on farm,238-7952. ' could trade "kid-watching." See Jim—. ~ 1 Moore. 127 Sackett.M& - TD '53. Very good condition, bodysound. Make offer. 238-6130 after 6.sound. Make offer. 238-6130 after 6. iHUMfcCUMiNG committee needs talent

^T~7. 'acts (singing, comedy, novelty) to give58 FORD. Rebuilt and painted. $150. ;Short performances for Alumni, Sal. nite.Evenings 237-0224. j Nov. 2. If interested, call Carmen 237-WOOL PONCHOS from" South America, ^P- hand loomed, yummy colors, price S30.00 MIMEOGRAPH: WILL pay for access(Limited supply). Phone 238-8511 or t0 Mimeograph Machine — good cause,238-5494. Open until 6:00. Call 238-8853, Don or Rich.1965 M.G. MIDGET, wire wheels, good ROOMMATE WANTEb"to

~sha7e"'' 2

~rna"rtires._ Make reasonable offer. 238-7474. apartment, 7 blocks from campus. $50/mo

10<A TDItlAAOU OnnnH..IIIa .CCfl ,-,- D„. Cdll 238-3158.1966 triumph Bonneville 650 cc. Per-fect. Call 238-5209 after 5:00.Teci. mi -i-ic-j m aner 3:uv. _ A FOUR-MAN apartment available for1966 650 cc. BSA MOTORCYCLE, $450.00. ,winter and/or spring terms. BluebellContact J. Egli 665-0969. ; location

^ preferred._ Call Barb B65-9295.

Hb"rrDA_"90.

~~

Ex?eHent~^

ing"*co'ndltionJ'™'O NON-STUDENT Tickets for ArmyBest offer takes II. Call Pete 238-2587 , game. Need desperately. Coll Larry 237-after 7 p.m. :«WI.

il968 HONDA 50. Like now. less than 500;miles. SI60 or "best offer. Call 466-7132.'GET MOM an unsual gift at Hospital.benefit Antique Show and Sale at Ski-tmont Oct. 11, noon to 10. Saturday 10 to|6. Food, door prizes, free parking." '1967 305 HONDA Scrambler. Excellentcondition. Inspected. 50CO miles. Call'865-2283.

11967 VW SEDAN. Excellent condition.|$1390:00_or best offer._238-0454.

JUDSON SUPERCHARGER for '60 to '67iVW. All parts and Instructions. $35.00Used very little. Excellent condition.

j """" raLp' ANTED "" !¦«».»: » « 'man WITH car for delivery .service.^Cash daily. Dial 237-NM3 6 p.m. - 8 p.m.

1 BABYSITTER NEEDED in my homei Fridays, 11:30 - 5:30. Call 738-334? after,6 p.m.

[STUDENT WIVES S3.00/hr flexible hours.; Unusual opportunity. Car necessary.Write: Richard Shoemaker, 1442 South

tPugh Street. _____j DRAFTING TRAINEE'for office in the'Pittsburgh area. Contact R. M. Keddaland Associated, Inc., 3400 South ParkRoad, Bethel Park, Pa. 15102

STUDENT To run Multlilth Presi paritime. Experience necessary. Call 865-2841.

ADVERTISING AND SPEECH MAJORS,Part-time now, full-time this "summer &advancement. Write: Rena-Ware CollegeProgram, 144? South Push Street.

DESPERATELY NEEDED — Tickets forArmy game. Call 238-9954.FEMALE ROOMMATE wantedTN eat "a ridresponsible. Apartment near campus.Please call after six 238-6156.WANTED — ALL University~7adIo ama-teurs for inclusion in P.S.U. Ham Direc-tory, a project of Penn State A.R.C.Faculty, students, staff eligible to regis-ter. Call 865-9031 M - F 8-12 or 1-5.WANTED: TWO Roommates to "~sharevery nice furnished Apt. Call 238-284Bftf M7-5A38.

WILMA, PLEASE forgive. Can't meetyou today. Can't miss Antique Show andSale at Sktmont. Hospital benefit. Oct. 11from noon to 10. Oct. 12 from 10 to 6.Foods, door prizes.

DO YOU NEED a fob with training?Drafting Trainee wanted for Pittsburgharea. Contact R. M. Keddal and Asso-ciates, inc. 3400 South Park Road, BethelPark, Pa. 15102

STOP IN at our Open House MixerSal. Oct. 12 9 p.m. and on, informalatmosphere, fireplace, music, refresh-ments. 224 Locust Lane. 10c per person,15c with date.

TNT COFFEE HOUSE returns to theHUB Cardroom 9:00 Friday with theWooley Thumpers and lots of surprises.LOST — GOLD Charm Bracelet. Reward.Call Debbie 235-7687.

NEED A HAIRCUT? Marino's BarberShop has lust opened in The NittanyMaU — Open Tues.-Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.FREE DRAFT Counseling. . Any alterna-tive discussed. The Freedom Union,206 W. Beaver. 238-4535. Call 7-10 p.m.M - F. DON'T BE left out in the warm. Join;the p.s. Student Skating Club. Genera lmeeting Tuesday Oct. 15 7:30 p.m., 301Boucke. Everyone invited.

MONEY FOR Freshmen! Two scholar-ships available for freshmen who Intendto major in Journalism. Obtain applica-tion In 215 Carnegie Bids, and file beforeNov. 7. TYPING: FORMER secretary desirestyping at home. Has vast typing ex-perience. Call anytime 355-5216.S!NGE

~RS / ACTORS. Opera tryouts are

October 16. See Music or Theater bulle-tin boards for details. __THE CHINE'S CLUB presents folkdance, folk songs, fashion show and a

j color film, "Four Loves" on Oct. 10th|7:20 p.m. at Recital Hall. Tickets areavailable at HUB desk, SI.25

^ t LOST: ONE ~

WALLET. Please return[important papers, no questions asked.'Return to Pat Williams, 316 Plnchot.iPHI MU is

~up"for Sigma Chi Derby

Day!

SATURDAY OCT. 12 Class II Canoetrip on Red Moshannon Creek. Somewhite water exper ience necessary. EQUESTR1AN

~dTv!SION — Anyone wish-ing a ride or tickets to HarrlsburgHorse Show Sat. Oct. 24 contact Art.Phone: 865-3537: OVERNIGHT TRIP to Worthlngton StatePark and Fall Foliage Hike to SunflshRond. Check in HUB tor more informationand to sign up. , Su7Td7y

~0"ctT'i3 Climbing Pulpit Rocks.

Meet front of Rec Hall 9:30 a.m. Signup at HUB. Must participate in DynamicRelay practice to go en weekend trips.fUESDAY OCT. 15 Equestrian Divisionfirst regular meeting 7:30 p.m. in 111Boucke. Speaker Mr. David Tyler, man-ager of University quarter horse barns.

iiiimmmii imimimmii iiiuiiiiiiii ;NOTICE

NOTARY Bureau of Motor Vehiclesforms, Legal forms, and so forth. HotelState College, above Corner Room.AN HISTORICAL event" that "is" shatteringyears of acquiescence to tradition Is nowoccuring daily at Phi Mu Delta. Kudosto these Greeks who have defied tra-dition and asserted their combined

I strength in demanding the unique , . .(a prototype of a change that may well;affect all Greek organizations. It's hap-'pening now.JTHE PENN STATE Karate ClutTis holding(classes Sunday and Wednesday 7:30-9:00i in Rec Hall. New members are welcomed.[TABLE TENN7s

~cTub practice session,

.Monday 7 p.m. HUB. Everyone welcome.iJoin now!!|THE PLACE afterwhlch to take yourdate — Mixer — Open House, 9 p.m.Sat. Oct. 12. 224 Locust Lane.SKI CLUB meeting, 121 Sparks, 7:30 p.m.Thursday Oct. 10. Beginners inviteq.TERRY and SHERRY appeaT~!onite~*atthe Phyrst.FAT DADDY'S Group appears tonite atthe Phyrst.

jawbone ""

FRIDAY: PERSPECTIVE in Theatre!!Interpretive readings — Marcia Larson;

. Greek drama — Beverly Wyatt; Comedy—Yvette Altlce.

SUBLET — WINTER Term. One bedroomfurnished apartment. Close to campus.Call 237-6146.

" "" lost LOST FRIDAY at the Phyrst—brownberet, high sentimental value. Reward.865-6744.

LOST: .WALLET belonging to 164-42-1756.Keep money plus $5 reward. Call 238-0047or 237-2483.

WILL WHOEVER picked up the blackand white Kitten in front of Crabtree'son Tuesday please call 238-3628.

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EXTRA! ' CRO^ir^DlIar^ndlAbTiiY''

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