our e• s (Here for Senior Class Gift This gradual Z , CIIIOI . 11;1, at last reached the point where lie has received his last class gilt hind ,olicitation After numerous experiences anli that mime n) looking pink class gift fund card at registration, he will be happy to learn that the Class of '65 has collected approximately z>B.ooo. The final stage in the class gilt in'olcut will he c•onipleted Tuesday, Wednesday and Thur:da. it hen seniors it ill ‘ote nit the use of their gilt land. The %Wing - trill he done as •enioi's pick tip their copies of La Vie, the Uni‘e;sity yearbook in the Bet eel Union Building en rdroom. This year's gift will follow in the University tradition tt h u•h has lett such gilts as the• Alemorial Gates at the 5,e,1 entrance of the campus, 03. mans scholarship and loan lands: the clock and chimes in Old Main. the lion Shrine, '4)). the Boat dock and landing at Stone Valk '6l. and the new clock on the Beater Stadium scoichaard, Weather Forecast: Partly Sunny, Cooler VOL. 65, No. 136 S in South' Taps c: a aufort For Project The Penn State in the South protect has selected Beaufort, South Carolina, as the community in nhich ten people will work for ten neek , t this sun imen 'chic pl'Ojat s, just the beginning of a long range social action program initiated by students, faculty, administrators, town and campus clergymen and State College residents The program, designed to aid in community organ ization. citizenship education and voter registration. was formed in response to an invitaton Isom the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr, for local community and campus leaders to form a SCOPE chapter. (Summer Community Organiza tion for Political Education). Groups Involved Six groups have pooled their efforts and resources for the project. They ale Hillel Thundation, the Lutheran Student Association, Student Union for Racial Equality (SURE), the Newman Student Association, the State Col lege Committee on Human Rights and the University Chris t tan Association. (representing ten denominations). Members of the Penn State in the South have been in direct contact with James Richardson of the Beaufort County Voters League, the group which requested the assistance of the Penn State project. Both white and Negro South Carolinians have greeted the news of the Penn State gloup's assignment to Beaufort with enthusiasm. Southern Cooperation "The South Carolina Council on Human Relations looks forward to working cooperatively with the Penn State in the South project," according to T. J. Leccien, an official of that organization. Both recruiting and fund-raising drives are now in full swing. Student:, faculty, administvatora and townspeople are urged to either go for the len week period or support someone who is going. The estimated cost of helping support each worker is 5350. A screening committee hi- been formed to screen the applications which are now being received. Egbert H. Donovan, Roman Catholic chaplain, is chairman of the committee. Other members are Norman Frisbee. director of the Placement Service. Margaret McKendry. executive secre tary of International Development, Rabbi Norman Gold berg. and Joseph D. Ban, director of University Christian Association. Donovan, Frisbee•. and AlcKendree have had profes sional experience in the field of perscnnel screening. Gold berg and Ban are representing the campus celcgious staff. Kidnapped air Get Relay Home By ANN WARRALL Tll e University students who were kidnapped Tuesday night by two Rockview Cor rectional Institution escapee . ; returned to State College yes terday by relays of state po lice cars. Jeri Rinehart (11th-counsel ing - Pittsburgh) and David Paul Jones (Bth - counseling- Pittsburgh) said they were forced to drive at gunpoint to Williamsport, Harrisburg, Norristown, Philadelphia and Paoli in Rinehart's car. The fugitives. Robert Q. Seidal, 25, of Reading and George Hughes, 22, of Ilop2- well, who bolted from a farm det ail Tuesday afternoon, ere captured night after burglarizing a liquor store in NeWili Best and Worst: the Term in Review From.' - ;' - oam *;:in ''Toth to ,Mall Soap '..t.oxes By LAURIE DEVINE Collegian News Editor It was the best of times; it was the worst of times. It was the time of Vutacw's resignation, of soapbox speeches on the Mall, of the return of Froth, of Stone Valley sunsets. It was spring term '65 at Penn State. And suddenly the student revolution sweeping the nation's college campuses since last fall's actions at Berke ley came to the University. Starting early in the term with a fast-paced campaign for the Undergraduate Student Government elections un der the theme students should have more rights and re sponsibilities, the term peaked when the controversial Viet Cong movie was shown here April 23. Weeks before the black and white propaganda film reached the campus, Peter Vujacic, physics professor at the Ogontz Center, resigned his post in protest of the showing of the film at the Commonwealth campus. But the furor kicked up by the professor's resignation lost sonic of its impact, except among a few Philadelphia organizations which later honored Vujacic for patriotism, when University President Eric A. Walker said the Yugo slavian-born instructor had been slated to resign next fall anyway So. amid protests and counter-protests, Russell Stetler, Haverford student who narrated the Viet Cong film, pre epted his program. The movie, raucously jeered by some By SUE HESS “naaelphia in . linri space on the ballot to tpecily the area in v,liich the _ 4l V r i '; ri g"749l Totirg 4 - tig Gll 'llO - ryti o • 56 They are being held in a Newark jail A Long Ride The tno students were just leaving a cottage owned by Rinehart on Spring Creek at about 10 p.ni. when the fugi tives shoved a muzzle load ing shotgun in their faces and forced them into Rinehart's car. Rinehart was told to chive It turned out to be a rather long trip which finally ended in Reading, Seidal's home town at JI:30 a.m. Wednes day. The students were forced to exchange clothes with the Rockyiew• men and were fi nally released on the Skyline Drive on top of Mt. Penn. They hitchhiked back to Reading and were taken to (Continiled on page fire) Show Goes On Four electives !or the gift halhit have been selected from sug2e,tions trom many sources the senior class gift fund committee. The critelia lor the alternatives stipulated that the gilt be benelictid to the L'imersity, th:a it be physically rec ognizable! to Alumni and that it maintain or increase it , value over the ears. In discus , in, the tour choices. committee chair man Grads Susie/. said "The students have a mitde selection: I hope they vote wisely." First of the lour gilt choices is a mobile be Alexander Calder, internationally lamed artist and in‘color of the special ize dart form ior expression of spatial movement known to us today as the mobile. Calder recently received 1\ orld-wfde acclaim for lib , exhibit in New York City' , . Gin;genheim 'Museum. Purcht,e of one of iiorks n•ould be e:pecrilly anprooriale since he is a native 'penrplvtmia Ira n in Philadelphia 1899 —Collegian Photo by John Loft HOWARD GOSSAGE: 'Can the company president and make minature banana pins.' Gossage Sees Life Through Pop Ads By JUDY MATE Speaking at the Univer sity because "the week wit; shot anyway," Howard Luck Gosstig,e, director of Gossage, Freeman and Shea Adver tising Agency, last night gave his opinions on obiec tivity and environment to an overflowing crowd m Bourke. Gussage, \vim justt returned from Washington, D.O whine he served on the President's Committee for Nat ur a 1 Beauty, said it was difficult for a specialist to be objec tive about his environment. For this reason, he ex plained. if a business is hay ing trouble and an architect is consulted, it is likely that 'he end result will be a new building. "And maybe they didn't need a new building at all." lie said. "Maybe all they needed was to can the presi dent or manufacture minia ture banana pins." Color blind people can't see camouflage, he said, and that's why they ar e hired specially by the Army. Where a color blind person would say "Hey. look there's an ammu nition complex," the "nor mal" person would say "No, you're wrong, there's noth ing there." Camouflage for Abnormal "Camouflage isn't made for normal people but for the abnormal who can't see it," he explained. "Camou flage is ersatz environment and it takes a newcomer to of the 800-plus crowd jamming 121 Sparks. was followed by counter-statements defending the Administration's Viet Nam policy. Public outcry in the state newspapers and letters from home condemned the University administration's decision to let Stotler's film be shown. But Walker remained firm, and The Daily Collegian applauded hon. And then 'way back on April first the Ad Hoc Com mittee on Student Freedom was lounded as a pressure group "to gradually phase out the University's policy of In loco parentis: From a first day membership of 30, the group has mushroomed to nearly 1.000. The Committee originally scrapped the idea of applying for a University charter, but later reconsidered and will go for a charter. (The only dif ference in operating with a charter is the Committee will. when chartered, have the privilege of being active on campus.) Meanwhile. out on the Mall. students were climbing on soapboxes, soda crates and the steps of Schwab every day to speak out about the Ad Hoc Committee. USG, college conformity, the Administration, Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic. One day \ Robert G. Bernreuter. vice president for stu dent affairs. strolled over to the crowd to find out exactly what was cooling off. The speaker invited the administra tor to address the group. and The Daily CollEVan later UNIVERSITY PARK, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 28, 1965 .~ ~ ~~.~ . ~~; .~ ~~. ~' see the defect: of it." Since he came into the ad vertising business late in life, Gossage believes that he is able to see through the camouflage and is therefore critical. Gossage showed three ad vertising spots to illustrate his principle of removing something limn its environ ment for purposes of objec tive analysis. Pop Ad Award The ads, ice-blue Secret, Head and Shoulders sham poo, and Carter's Little Ltv er Pills brought laughter from the audience who voted the Head and Shoulders as a; winner of "The Fuss Penn State Pop Art Advertising Award." Go,sage called the win ning ad "another contribu tion to culture by Proctor and Gamble." After opening the ses ion to "questioning or stoning as the ease may be," Go-;sage (Continued on page six) Term's Last Collegian The Daily Collegian will cease spring term publica tion with tomorrow's issue. The Summer Collegian will begin publication on June 24 and continue each week of the summer term. Derby Events The present "arts explosion" also indicates it is time the University added to the good art work it possesses. In the category of sculpture the University has a minimal amount. Purchase of the Calder mobile would be benelicial in that it would increase the University's prestige greatly to own a work by such a distinguished and influential artist. "One Little lied." the mobile under consideration is ion st•ucted of metal: its dimensions are 21 niches by 104 inches Members of the gilt committee recommended the mobile as a choice alter a trip to New York City where they saw it on exhibit in the Pearls Art Galleries. If picked by the class, the mobile would be hung in either the new Theatre or the new addition of the Hetzel Union Building. The gilt committee ako recommended the purcha: , e of hooks for Pattee in and• of lour useful categories. Student: , ‘‘ill nd siwer , hr. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE USG: Last Session of Term „,Tenate Election code revisions deal ing with campaign funds, met complete defeat at last night's Undergraduate Student Gov ernment meeting, while the resolution on student voting in the University Senate again changed form. Edward Cressman, the elec tions commissioner, presented the entire election code revi sion which was partially de feated. The section placing campaign expensec entirely with the Election Commission, by giving the Commisskin the responsibility of contacting and deciding upon printers, was entirely deleted. Another section. asking that membership lists be compiled by the Elections Commission and available only to party chairmen, also met complete defeat. Cressman's Revisions Cressinan, speaking for the revisions, said, "This is the first big thing that has ever hit the election code. You can t halt on this" A boost i n election cam- The issue of student rights is the local point of the fourth installment of the Student Allah s Research survey report currently being compiled by Prem S. Dua, consultant to SAR who was in charge of the protect. The survey, which was conducted near the end of last term, was based on a random sample drawn from the entire under graduate population of University Park and leatured a 187- item questionnaire. Students completing the survey numbered 1,380 or 9.2 per cent of the population. Results are being released with the approval of the offices of Lester S. Hamel, SAR director and Robert G. Bernreuter, vice president for student affairs. Miss Dua's compilation aide is Louis Adams, a graduate student in the SAR office. This installment, according to it Dua, deals with the results of survey questions asked in the context ol the "free speech movement" and the social and political rights issues ith Illeh many students are involved. This involvement demonstrates an awakening of concern and commitment on the part of American youth to the signifi cant trends of their time. she noted, and the SAR survey attempted to explore students' observations and experiences regarding the issues of the clay. The following is a composite picture drawn from a series of questions resolving around the issue ol how students perceive their campus experience in terms of rights and treedoms actually enjoyed by them in their status as students. With regard to the broader issues of freedom of speech. 72 per cent, of those polled agreed, in general, that "no re strictions have been experienced by them in their freedom of speech during their University career." By ROBERT ROPELEWSKI "The biggest problem of stu dents is that. prior to coming to college, Dad provided the buck and as a result, there was little value to the dollar. 'Now, the student has to de cide for himself what he's going to do with that buck, be cause he only gets a limited number of them from home. "Now. they have to exercise some judgment in their spend ing, because there are many outside interests vying for their dollars. In many cases, some one else was doing much of the htn ing for them before they came to college." This is the explanation that challenged him to do likewise The good doctor gracefully resolved the situation by speaking informally at an open speech in the HUB on May 13. presenting the Administration's views on subjects rang ing over the whole term's activities. That very same night Dean of Women Dorothy J. Lipp spoke in Atherton Hall concerning the events at Berkeley. Her comments aroused a storm of protests and letters to the editor. In the midst of this undertow, the University made its annual plea to the State Legislature for a 56.700,000 increase in allotments, bringing the total amount requested to $31.000.000. Just last week the House Committee on Higher Educa tion heard testimony from students, faculty and adminis trators here to better decide how the state's education bill will be sliced. \\Talker spent a grueling 2 1 2 hours before the committee. The state's appropriations are still pending and should be decided shortly. This was the term of campaigns. Launched by fifth year architecture students, the "Penn State Is An Architec tural Disaster" campaign began March 30 with requests that a Fine Arts Committee on Art and Architecture be established to raise the standards of campus architecture. And there were pickets and counter-pickets staged by the Student Union for Racial Equality, Young Americans for Freedom and SENSE, Students for Peace. Three Uni Purchase of Books paign budgets was diseased by the Congress. This matter was tabled and will be dis cussed by Congress next fall. In the matter of student voting representation on the University Senate, the esolu tion passed at the last meet ing. called for represe»tatlim by the presidents of USG. the Association of Women Stu dents. Town Independent Men. Intercollegiate Council Board, and the Panhellenic Council was amended. Robert Katzensctin. USG president, introduced an amendment changing the rep resentatives to the President's of Women's Judicial, Men's Tribunal, and the Graduate Association. This amendment \vas de feated, and the orgamiation representatives were chanced to Town's Independent Men, Men's Residence Council. and the Interfraternity Council. Another amendment. again introduced by Katzenstein. Survey Focuses On 'Rights' By JUNE FIEL FSM Survey Merchant Discusses Prices on e dox‘ ntmAn businessman gives lor the dissatisfied atti tude of student , ; toward prices in State College. Price Observations He's Alton Gaumer, man ager of State College's Sears- Roebuck store. With 26 years training and experience in retail merchandising behind him, his carefully considered observations appear to provide something of an answer to the price dilemma. "The merchant's primary purpose in lile is to make a profit. for himself and for his stockholders. He can't stay in business otherwise. That is why you, as students. are going to "We Want Action!" Amendment Defeated money , hould be used. The lour areas arc book , . of English literature from mum trie , of non-English background , . laic book , . general books and the estabh.hment of a loaning record library and sound equipment lor the new wing. The money \mold he put to use he library ollicials over a e year period If the Pattee alternati\ eis cho,en by the elas't a Plague %%ill he placed in the library and a paper teal put in each hook put chased Herm% being placed on the shelves. all the book, will he displos in the new %Ong of Pattee In addition, a pamphlet will be published listing the books. Projected Loan Fund As a third choice, the committee has formuldled a plan for a general loan hind to augment the restricted loan funds now mailable to students Although the student loan problem has been alleviated by (Conti mi page six) tan added the president of the Graduate A•qociation. It was further decided that these five organizations plus the Inter-collegiate Council Board and the Panhellenic Council should be reconuned ed for speaking privileges on the floor of the University Senate. Laurence 11. Lattman, pro fessor of geomorphology and Joseph C Flay, instructor of philosophy, attended the meeting at the iSlVllation of USC. Katsenstein said at the meeting the congress would be extending invitations to faculty to sit in on meetings in an attempt to I miller "dia logue between students and faculty " Presidents Receive Vote The presidents of USG and AWS received a vote on the Senate Committee for Student Affairs, Tuesday, when Katz enstem and Joan Bowman. AWS pi esident, appeared be fore a seven-member faculty committee. They have not re- Of the remaining 28 per cent that had encountered some difficulty or other in making their voices heard, about half felt strongly that restrictions had been imposed on their freedom of speech: one-third of these felt that they had been deprived of opportunity lor expression of opinion in the class room. another one third complained Etat the campus news paper had tailed to publish the opinions they had presented. The remaining one third felt that the opportunity for self expression had been denied to them at meetings of student organizations or that they had been reproached and repre manded in private by members of administration or faculty lor voicing their opinions. In the manliest context of a generation of students who seem preoccupied with the importance of their own civil rights, the SAR survey attempted to establish whether Uni versity students perceive their campus rights and freedoms as being congruent with the general social climate of their Hine, Aliss Duals report states. Equal Rights Issue To the question as to whether Univesrity students perceive themselves "as enjoying the same rights as other citizens to participate in the political and social activities of the outside community, - 50 per cent agreed that I hey had almost equal rights. 28 per cent felt that their political and social rights did not measure up to the rights enimed he other citizens and the remaining 22 per cent admitted that they were not in a position to make a fair comparison. In a time when students are generally nary of surveil lance on the part of an adult society and suspicious of any comments on student posture. 51 per cent of the University (Continued on page four) college—so that you can make more money when you get out of school." he said. The veteran retailer a 1 s o made this point: "The old cry is 'I can get it cheaper at home!' Well, my question is 'Why don't you buy it at home?' ?lost students go home at least twice a term. They should he able to buy most 01 the clothing and supplie , they need during those visits home. "But that's not the way human nature works. They only bring here the things they need for the immediate iuture. Then. when a new fart or style catches on, t h ey see soq,,,thing versity students were arrested in Erie May 11 for picket ing Hammermill Paper Co. for allegedly unfair hiring practices. To lighten this grim new picture of the militant stu dent, Froth, traditional campus humor magazine which was silenced for smut in October, 1962, resurrected itself. Pretty successfully, too. because the 7,000 copies were sold out in two days. Cultural attractions were offered almost daily through the Spring Arts Festival, the dedication of the new Arts Complex and the campus speeches of J. William Fullbright ID-Ark.) and Wayne Morse (D-Ore.). Women's rights took a step forward with the Associa tion of Women Students' effort to liberalize downtown apartment visitation privileges Parents were polled to find out their reactions to the proposed change. The letters have been returned and are currently being analyzed. Outstanding groups and individuals won recognition during the term's activities: Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Beta Theta Pi fraternity for Spring Week; Susan Smi ley as Miss Penn State; Robert Katzenstein as USG presi dent; John Hunt as Interfraternity Council president, And gymnastics fans' pride and joy, Mike Jacobson, senior star, captured the National Collegiate Athletic As sociation gymnastics all-around championship award. So the term that saw not much rain but lots of cam paigns and sunshine and speeches and frenzy is a o lmost over. But for &bine 3,400 graduating seniors, it's all over. PSU in South --See Page 2 SIX CENTS ecived votes by the Senate by- law as vet USG also passed a resolu tion endorsing the construc tion of a University Forum. Joie Lieberman, chairman of the USG committee investi gating this proposal, said that although this ii as a USG sponsored project, the Board of Trustees must make the final decisions, Ile also said site selection would hate to be by trained people. Actual construction. he said, Ivould be in stagas, hopefully ending in the ulti mate construction of an out door theater. Thomas Reich presented the 1965-66 budget to Congress. Total expenditures for the up coming year were listed at 18003 dollars, under the head ings of executive. commis and scholar ships expenses. sions, classes they Just hake to have, at... they go out and buy it, ne matter What the price. "And students won't buy al, item of clothing if it doesn't have a particular label in it because they're looking for the status that goes along with al, exclusive label." Gaumer's conclusion is "It is shopping that the student must learn to do. Most stu dents have never learned to CO m p a re the merchandi , e they're buying. They don't know chat comparison is. But when }on have a limited amount to spend, it's the only way to shop.