Page Two Z.l Nittair4 'sup frrso Asonriation of tgonnntntttttatt4 Campus Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor TERRY L. ROBINSON Sports Editor DOM LAMBERTI Layout Business and Photos Advisors ._ The Nittany CUB is located in the Reed Union Building. The Behrend Campus of the Pennsylvania State University, Station Road, Wesleyville, Pa. 16510. Advertising inquiries phone 899-3101 Sta. 238. DEAR CHARLY (Anyone having a question about anything, please send your question to Charly Lee, c/o Publication Office, Reed Build ing. All letters will then become property of the CUB and will eligible for printing.) Dear Charly, Meteorologically speaking, could you explain to. me why there is so much snow at Behrend. Dear Mr. 8., • I'm afraid that I can't answer your question Metero logically, but theoretically speaking I feel thusly: - ~And the Lord said, Because the cry of Perry and Ni agara is great, and because their sin is grievous, I will de stroy them save their mighty leader, Richeson. And Richeson drew near, and said, Wilt thou also de stroy the righteous with the wicked? Arid the Lord said, If I find in Perry fifty righteous within the halls, then I will spare all the place for their sakes. And Richeson begged the Lord, peradventure just forty, or twenty, or just ten righteous are to be found? And He said, I will not destroy it for ten's sake. And there came two angels to Perry at even: and Lane sat in the gate of Perry: and he bowed himself with his face toward the ground. And when morning arose, the angels hastened Lane saying, Arise, take thy wife, thy son, and thy , daughter which are here; lest thou be consumed in the iniquity of this place. And no just men or women were found in the place and the Lord rested in contemplation. Richeson was in com munion with the Lord and watched Lane escape the fury. Haste thee, escape thither; for I cannot do anything till thou be come thither. Therefore the city of refuge was to be called Zerie. The sun was risen upon the earth when Lane entered into Zerie. Then the Lord rained upon Perry and upon Niagra hailstone and snow from the Lord out f the heaven. And the fury - continues even now. And Richeson looked toward Perry and Niagara and toward all the land of the wrathfull area ,and foresaw with his prophetic powers that in the future the countryside will become as. one white glacier and will vanish from the earth forever. When a heating pipe froze, Thursday, the Alghth, all heatin.the RUB was shut off.'ln fact it was turnea. off.tWice. The_first tune a pipe burst floodipg ‘ the rec vlcipi, twO.likturs . „)4fer, the.4kgater in - the rafeteriicovered that v flUor withyaler.§llY-wo. ,texiippri __ tures were the cause. IVIMMBER OF . . . Intercollegiate Press Bureau VICKIE CASKEY GARY GRiterlS, JOHN MEYERS (Photos) SHARI }MELTS, R. C. BAUGHMAN RANDY S. ICENEEAD Signed, Mr. Baker Signed, Charly THE NITTANY CUB University of Santa Initiates Sensitivity Santa Clara, Calif.—(l.P.)—Sensitivity training as an aid of determent to the individual, his educa— tion and occupational environment was evaluated recently by speakers on the University of Santa Clara. campus The _conference, "Encounter-Groups: •Hope or Hell," -was - sponsored by the Center for the Study of Contemporary Values under the direction of Dr. Stuart McLean, assistant professor of theology _at- Santa - Clara. Conference keynote speaker, Dr. William Schutz of the_ Esalen Institute in Big Sur, de fined sensitivity training as a "tool in a social revolution of openness and honesty. The _result will be a new way of relating to self and others." He tranced the patterns of re pressive behavior inculcated in the individual during childhood and the methods the encounter group employs to counteract this conditioning. In enumerating the guidelines used in -the sensitivity "session" he said, "participants are to be open, honest, talk. about the now and express when possi ble physically what could have been expressed verbally." Chairman of the Santa Clara Pliychology' department, Dr.. R— oland Lowe, _responded to. Schutz with the deficiencies inherentr_iri the encounter group method. He questioned the qualifications of group facilitators .and asked for evidence "to prove that sensitivity training does what it claims." He also challenged the value of total honesty in relation to the importance of an individual's privacy and added "coping with aloneness is a valuable part .of maturation." The. New Left's position on sen sitivity training was cited by for- Jethro Tull -Too Often Ignored by Gary Thornbloom At.times many of us often tend to ignore some of the better sounds around. All too often our perception fails us and we pass by a good thing. To most people who have got it together about the sounds of the music of today, the rap I'm about to put down is nothing new, but to the uni formed majority, please read on. When a group makes it, it's often due to how commercially orient ed they allow their sound to be come. The more commercial their sound is the more .AM, and at times PM, airplay they will re ceive. The groups exposure and the amount of promotion (ie. dol lars spent selling the group to you the listener) play the guiding factors to what you will hear. and buy. Very often to hear the best groups YOU have to search to find them. Once you are turned on to them, it's good-bye to top forty shit. Whether by lack of our own observation or observation or due to poor promotion procedures I many groups are ignored. Groups such as the Buffalo Springfield and Procol Harum, when they were still together, were both fan tastic bands but •to a large ma jority, they went unnoticed, - Niel Young, the 'Steve Miller Blues Band, the_ .Moo.dy__Blues -and -Jet hro Tull are all grdups which are releasing really great albums. How .often do you hear any mention of these groups. Each of these is a sound of ,now, a sound of the -beauty of rock. Perhaps the most ignored of the ones I've mention ed is Jethro Tull. Their record company, is so uniformed that for a long time they were releasing _entirely false statements about ,Jetro Tull. It's thii group that I've selected - to do this reviewing. Jethro Tull's first album was entitled This Was and was just 'what they were•in August of 1.96.3. .The band was into . a blues ,sort Of thing. Lead instrument parts mer S.D.S. member, Mr. David Ransome, editor of the under ground Mid-Peninsuala Observer_ The encounter's exclusive concern with individual problems in lieu of a confrontation with . political issues was described by Ransom as the Left's basic objection to sensitivity _ sessions. He found them a middle- class phenomenon and the openness policy described as fallacy-didden. "Equals .can be honest—unequals cannot." He stated the obligation of society to support the develop ment of the individual "which it does not do" and called it "a cruel hoax to say we_ can change social institutions." • Dr. Schutz refuted the futility of revising social institutions and cited the- encounter as a means of effecting change. He considers sensitivity training instrumental in clarifying the individual's-image of his political self. "It avoids the projection of personal problems on the politicl level and action as well as singing were _shared • y, lan Anderson and Mick --Abra hams. This was features the ex ceptional rhythm 'background of bassist Glenn Cornik and drum mer Clive Bunker, outstanding guitar work by Mick Abrahams and introduction of the flute as a lead rock instrument by lan Anderson. The closing remark in the liner notes is "This was how we were playing them —but things change. Don't they." The band has changed, Mick has been replaced by Martin Lancelot Barre and- the group now reflects a more -varied style due lan's dom inating influence. Stand Up is their second album and shows how they've matured. The bottom to the group is even more solid LITTLE _MAN ON CAMPUS 1.-r LAIMIWWW - 11tE STUDENT CCONCIL NASTAKETlf.6c:viresg SOLD NEW 6CE.:F ON INTEcigATiONA, Clara Course for the sake of enhancing a liberal_ image," Schutz said. The Chairman of--the Advisory Committee on Guides for Moral Instruction in California schools, Dr. - Edwin Klotz, labeled sensitivi ty training "old-fashioned nihil ism, a breakdown in the individ ual's value system" and anti-the tical to - individualism in its crea.: tion of dependency on a group. "It -is a :source of rebellion des tined, to. be - controlled by_ the com munity." . Fr. Joseph Powers, professor of theology .at the Graduate Theo logical Union in Berkeley, offered the following theological-ethical evaluation of sensitivity training: Religious and encounter purposes basically compatible. Both seek "to find freedom within a group and accept feelings as an assistance in making free decisions." At present, "We still don't know the people we're edu cating and what we're educating them for.' than before and lan puts down. some symetrically sound flute playing. Martin Lancelot Barre, great rides, but is found lacking the new addition, plays some a good tone setting for his rhy thm. parts. The selections on this album are all good and a few are very unique, in that no other group has touched the type of sound which Jethro Tull has cap tured. A New Day yesterday hap Mar tin coining through with a really good lead riff, with lan providing an equally fine flute lead. This song sort of flows through you, drawing you into the group. Look into the sun has lan show ing his many sided ability on - the (Continued on Page 4) ME=Mffi= January 16 1970 WOMEN oilt.st , , Lti Pg. MEN