’AGE TWO /Moyers To Appear On NPSX Tuesday Kill D. Movers, press socre- pm. and attain at 11 a.in. ivwl ary and special assistant to Friday. President Lyndon B .Johnson Moyers will talk about Ins '■ 'll make h !s f n; .i nationwide cluti( ' s m hotli he- press *«.■!>■- televisinn interview appear- 'ary and presidential assistant a.iee Tuesdtn on WPSX-TV upcoming White Hou-e Channel .'i, the universilv ed- l t 'R lh hil>vc proposals, relations neational station with the press, the handling o! The progu, n on uhich I K , V s Pr ;sid"m 'll appear is-The Piesid-n 's ~" h n‘ 'o ns n,|;,tloils " ,!h lh< ’ Mon.'' Which Weel.lv features |, f C o K antl !ll ° :, ' r>ei "' s hank and movoeative inter- ~f. l 10 , w: "', ln K ,oln: *"’ i i-w.- with the kev leaders wi n i U ashmgtnn news eonespon swoe in and abound President d< ' nl L 1 N, Y‘; n -, v 1,!,s .lohn-on's ..,,,.| r ~ 111 covered the political scene m Ul,u of the capital for nearly 17, years. ~,, • .. . is the comnientaloi and host l . >■>'<" vi-ju pan for this National Kdncational M 911 tuesda\ at La.; and 8 Television presentation. Wlotjer jewelers (Now In Their Beautiful New Store) Soys Welcome Back And invites all vacation weary students to see their complete selection of Monogram Earrings (pierced and otherwise) Monogram Pins (sterling and gold) Signet Rings (in all sizes) jfioper Sfetoeler? 216 E. COLLEGE AVE. jta I AUAUALI fri r (CDIHAE mcLANAHAN SELF SERVICE DISCOUNT PRICES ON ALL YOUR NEEDS! Crest ££c Family Toothpaste Mc CORICIDIN TABLETS 77, Reg. 51.19 ... Save 53c • 25 s NFW MISS S.. 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Mu* boa l, 'ik shambled. unto the L’mversitv stone durum the filttrs to piaetiee bn theory of withdiuual fioiu •'Orietv and to contemplate )ih identity found Mjck'fy riddled with hypocrisy find uslinCfS, and sought escape li'om il thiough fiee-verse pnetiv and serin-ion. Occasionally in his search for utopia lie turned to dui'K- alcohol and sexual oigiex With the advent fit the sixties, a new face appeared, clean shaven, well shod and with new tools of protest—the picket, the sit-in, and the soaobex. He is the activist. His aim is to change the nation politically and socially. For the inrM pari, iho more intelligent, intellectual, and .'icadenucaliy successful he is, the more likely he is to be found oil the soapbox From Berkeley io Yale, he has protested what he con siders infringements on basic human freedoms. He carries signs with slogans ranging from "End the Draft" to "Give Negroes the Vote." He is part of what is collectively called The Movement. AI Pi'Tkelcv Calif. Ihe ■iiow_-ir>i j n t is called free speech: al V;ile Univerdiv ifs ,imm«l die publish or perish >lißnw. And al The Pennsvlvania Slide University it is the Ad Hoe Commilleo or. Sind-.’ll F’e''dnm Prmeipaßv concerned wdh Penn Si lie affairs, the Ad Hoe Committee \< as found'd Ml I Ilf Sprier lerm of lflfif) hy f’arl Davidson and Bruce Goldberg, both philosophy gradu ate students. "We wish to e-tnblish the freedom of sclf-rosnoivdbihtv.” -aid co-chau man Daeidso n. "but our idea of freedom is not apart from the responsibility of law. We milv feel that cer tain rules should he abn'i-lmd because their continued exist ence is a mockerv of law ” JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE IN FULL PROGRESS ON SWEATERS SKIRTS SLACKS DRESSES SKI JACKETS BLOUSES SMART SHOP 123 S. ALLEN ST. Reg. SI Save 34c GILLETTE ££ c SUN-UP OO AFTER SHAVE 51 . e Save 34c • 6 oz. Bufferin Ht§ c ( 60) Hog. !lsc Save 2!)e / i giant foamy **AVINQ CR£ANW Sk Reg, 51.09 Save 43c THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA By KATHY CASE CoUegmn lYeirs Kchlnr i for Reg. 3 ior 34c Save 18c KOTEX • 24's . a Reg. 89c • Super or _ _ , Save 23c Regular Vicks 66 C Formula 44 Reg. ssc, Save 32c GILLETTE FOAMY • 11-oz. size 66' • Reg. SBc • Save 32c GILLETTE SUPER BLUE BLADES • Js's REG. $1 OOC SAVE 34e In order to establish a basis from which to work, the committee supported a rights and responsibilities bill mtio duccd into the student governing body, the Undergraduate Student Government. Proposing no specific legislation, the bill eventually passed by USG stated that it was the right and responsibility of evety student' ‘'to acquiie knowledge and experience m any matter within the laws of the land that are consistent with the Bill of Rights "to question and receive answers when there are an-weis 'to refuse to obey laws contrary to human dignity "to make the iiilc.- governing their conduct in the uni- As USG became involved with their annual elections, the Ad Hoe Committee picked up the hot potato of students rights and responsibilities, earned it to their soapboxes and began to speak. On May 5. 1965. .John Downey, an English graduate stu dent. stood on a battered soft-drink ease in the center of tile University campus and announced the advent of a "new type of student.” This type of student, he said, "feels like a number in an impersonal and indifferent environment and begins to ques tion his present experience because he knows that the type of experience he has in college prefigures on life on the outside in a curious way.” Downey proposed a scries of spontaneous speeches during which students could express then' views, and the “soapbox derby'' began. During the next two weeks the ‘'derbv” became quite a production with everyone advocating their own paiticular cause. Civil rights worker Robert Lavelle spoke about voter registration in the South and called for student participa tion to aid oppressed Negroes. James Caulan, Ad Hoc Committee member, demanded that students be allowed to make their own rules. Barry Clenison and Thomas O'Brjen, both graduate stu dents who had done civil rights work in the South, demand ed that the University cease its policy of "m loco parentis” Tlie derby was moved to the steps of Schwab Auditorium and music was added to the oroduction with the singing of an appropriate sons. “The Times They Are A-ChanginV’ Attendance at the speeches varied from crowds of 150 to five or six Somewhere along the line the Administration appeared on the scene. Robert G. Bernreu'er. vice president for student affairs, accepted an invitation to ascend the soapbox. He denied the accusation of University paternalism. The University sets rules, he said, “simply in order that groups of students can live together amicably.” When asked his opinion of the Ad Hoc Committee, Bern reutcr said. “I am completely neutral, and I am not aware of any controversy between the committee and the Uni versity.” Bernreuter called the group's activities "a little echo of Berkeley." Penn State went through its worst student tur moil three or four years ago, long before the Berkeley revolt, he said. Then student leaders were running for office on platforms promising to resist anything the administration had to offer, he added. Witli the assumption of responsibility, he said, the stu dents eventually began to resist resistance. Dorothy L. Harris, dean of women, addressed a group of students in a residence hall about the Berkeley situation. She accused the leaders of the Berkeley uprising of “radical ism and irresponsibilitv.” Her speech caused a flurry of protest from Ad Hoc members. John Downev again took the soapbox and called Dean Harris’ statements irresponsible and uninformed. The voices of a few faculty members rose to comment on the student movement. William M. Frev. assistant professor of management, said. “Students must have the guts to do more than talk about the ideal situation: they must do something about it ” Joseph Flay, instructor of philosophy, said, "The student already has all of the freedom and all of the responsibility he will ever have. The basis of freedom is the abilitv to make a choice, the ability to decide and to act. Responsibility, on the other hand, has nothinq to do with ability, but means simply the shoulderina of the consequences of acting as vou have decided to act. Therefor, if you act upon your choice, you are responsible for what you do." Although the term’s main subjpet of controversy was University policy for the Ad Hoc committee, other organiza tions carried the Penn State movement into national affairs. The Congress for Racial Equaliv. (CORE) sponsored the showing of a Viet Cong-produced film brought to the campus by Russell Stetler. a Haverford College student. The Universitv allowed the film to be shown and was chastised for doing so by the Harrisburg administrators Members of the Student Union for Racial Equalitv. (SURE) picketed the Erie Hammermill Paper Company to protest its proposed move to Selma. Ala , which would con flict with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s proposed eco nomic boycottt of that state. The Young Americans for Freedom. (YAK'. Die onlv recognized conservative groun involved in Ihe Penn Slate movement, nickeled to protest the SURE picket which they said would harm industrial growth. Thirtv-nine members of SENSE. Students for Peace, marched on Washington to protest President Johnson's police in Viet Nam. The YAF held a demonstration al tlm foot of the Mall in support of Johnson's Viet Nam policy. 'Die YAF demon- Lutheran Campus Worship COFFEE AND DOUGHNUTS AT 11:30 IN STUDENT LOUNGE NEW CHURCH SUNDAY AT 10:30 EISENHOWER CHAPEL SUNDAY 8:00 A.M. HOLY COMMUNION 10:45 A.M. THE SERVICE A Review Emm .'nation was picketed by membeis of SENSE. And \anous civil lights groups combmcl to form a “Penn State in the South” program and ehose three students to work in the South on voter registration. Then suddenly it was summer and everybody went home. The majority of the members of the alphabet soup of organizations dispersed temporarily. Davidson, Goldberg, and O'Brien, the principal characters in the Ad Hoc saga transferred to other schools or finished their degrees, and the flood of student agitation dwindled to a trickle. But behind the comparatively quiet scene, protestors were sitting on their soapboxes and working out the legal and adnnnislratii c aspects of activism. When students returned to the Umveisitv Paik campus last fall, they found a few changes had been made The Ad Hoc committee announced that they had a university charier, had lomporurtlv abandoned the soapbox and were planning to work with the existing governmental bodies to introduce legislation. Many Ad Hoc members were "under ground. writing lulls lor USG.” according to John Rosen baum. Ad Hoc'co-chairman Barry C’lcnison and Bruce Macombor. members of the initial Ad Hoc Committee announced that tlicv planned student-faculty seminars in the Hcl/cl Union Building once a week. SENSE announced that they planned lo place less em phasis on demonstrating and more on educating the students regarding their princinl-s. They suggested that their mem bers wer coats an ties to any future demonstration And a group ealed (lie Socialist Club was chartered. Only the YAF seemed to retain the spark of the Spring, which they blow into a minor llanie by distributing copies of John Stunner's controversial hook "None Date Call It Treason " It appealed the Penn Stale movement had been .silenced until Oct. Hi. International Day of Piolc-I Against lIS. Policy in Viet Nam. Members of SENSE and the newly formed Socialist Club gathered at the foot of the Mall to protest the war in Viet Nam and fanned the flames of dissent, which eventually culminated in the burning of selective service identification by four of the demonstrators. The four, Andrew Stapo Jacob lloynrin. Ibn-id million and Imran Rahaman. are all nicmlK’!of SENSE nr 1 tip Socialist Club All held Ihe opinion dial llv wai in Y'ei Mam was immoral and illonal but had varied re i-ons for bin nine their draft identification. Ileyman. who actually burned his draft dihMln'.ilmn notification became he did not have ln< dralt card with him. said his was an "act of civil disobedience" against the draft. Rahaman ancl Milton, who hunted their .'-elective ser vice cards, said thov were motivated hv contempt for "a law which would enforce five veins m j.nl for the burning of a draft card.” Stapp said. “We wouldn't be fighting in Viet Nam now if we didn't have the draft. The dialt is not the cause hut the means." YAF was in Washington picketin'; m support of .Joint son's policin' at the true of tlt• ■ SENSE demonstration Although occasional protests were reaistered concern ing University regulations durino the fall term, the princi pal topics of Protest—Part two—at Penn Stale were the Viet Nam controversy, freedom for the Negro, and socialism in the United States. SENSE and the Socialist Club stood off to the ieft with YAK and the Young Republicans maintaining llte riphtest position. Somewhere in llte middle was (he Ad Hoc Committee, selling back issues of ''Birdcage." a humor magazine banned front campus, speaking to administrators and introducing legislation. The administration was silent on the activities of the other activist groups but commented freely on the Ad Hoe Committee. Dean of Women Dorothy L, Harris said. “The Ad Hoe Committee rose to fill a need hut the direction m which it will go depends oil its leadeis" The niobicm is. she said, “how do vou maintain ord a- m sociotv and still work in its behalf.’" Bernreuler observed that students seemed to he in volved in a "frantic search for causes that is so diaracter istic of the activist movement.” The piedommant vehicle of protest m tile fall term was the spcak-in. with pickets on the side The Socialist Club brought Russell Stetler back to cam pus to discuss communism. The YAF greeted Gen. Maxwell Tavlor. while SENSE and the Socialist Club picketed against him. The Ad Hoc sponsored a rallv at which student leaders denounced the University ruling foibidding coeds to visit downtown apartments. Various civil rights groups organized a "Freedom Wepk" during which comedian Dick Gregoiv and rights worker Fannv Lou Hamer wore the principal speakers. The draft card burners await the decision of the FBI which has investigated the incident and sent (lie lesults of their investigation In the US Attorney General. The Ad Hoc Committee has turned its attention to pro test of a tuition hike for out-of-state students oassed by the Legislature, and which, they felt, will make Penn State a university "limited to Pennsylvania students." In spite nf the turmoil, administrators still leel that I here is no revolt al Penn Slate. Dean of Men Frank J. Sillies labeled the Penn Sta'p activism ‘‘mostly an emulation of Berkeley.” He said that in the oast students suffered in silence and today there are more nutlets for revolt and channels for •unrest, "but they haven't suddenly appeared, they have just become more vocal.” He said that "fringe groups" overlap and so give Ihe appearance of being in greater numbers. ‘‘Membership lists would probably reveal the same names over and over again,” be said Bernreuter said there was no tevnlt because. “We have no city. The non-college population is not full of semi-pro fessional agitators. That's the cw*e at Berkeley.” Sillies said that graduate students who usually “set the tone" are not as numerous at Penn State. Dean Harris said. “The administration needs to en courage social action, but not at the expense of doing the job the students came here to do —get an education.” “Our job, after all.” she said, “is to promote the best values of our culture, not the worst." Bernreuter said. ''Parents want the University to put its weight on the side of what is moral, to set the highest moral standards.” "Many students feel they have olher rights as humans, rights which everyone has reserved to himself under a democratic society, but this is not a democratic society," Bernreuter added. The University was not formed by the students, he said, and "any rights not delegated to the students aie not stu dents’ rights.” According to a survey conducted last winter by the Student Affairs Research Bureau. 72 per cent of the students polled felt that they had encountered no restrictions on speech at the University, 51 opr cent felt the administration had the right to regulate University atmosphere, although 85 per cent were against the policy of “in loco parentis ” The general view of the students was that they didn’t waul to take over but did want a share in running the Uni versity. Although no legislative action has vet resulted from protests staged by students at Penn State, the activists feel that they are becoming an integral part of tbe university scene. Carl Davidson summarized the activist feeling. "The age of apathy characteristics of the fifties is at an end Students todav are recognizing limitations, and they are overcoming them.” SERVICE FOR LATE SLEEPERS ... 4 P.M, COME AND BARRAKAH WITH US! FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1966 it- v » ’ i , ' ' X S f * ' y -i'-Jj tv-* /, •- „ ' - ♦**; _< - ■■ C * . .. • ,-o - -**• *»* 'S K ■ 'i