editorial OPINION m MS Letters To History Miscegenation TI L E fiT attLWA'isi rsswww ■ A S%!SS^ , SS!SS kWtt ' ? ’ 11 Hiiv. will Miiwii i! luiiiijim Hf iiy In >i) i ipl i Itmpj imuiif mm Purl Mu wtui P wvPlftnil mill lilt I m A 1 PyL J 3 ;,i ’ > ilh , Tiimti i« Hiimiiiiifliy lllHl, '': v ' Tin' |j(iltil'l N t Aliii ,| li | ji Iji [ml |i wlilii) imin'n i !| jtjii* i l i,,|, n i!!|('ilriiit'il llinUii*lllllXlllllll Th« Inal ihnt the Unlvaraliy ilaon ««i nlrondy tryi iiiul mit Htnlo mu iu» ImilH'l nliilm in lui«wlmo . mic \\m\\\ li.y,hiiii mi \lmvi| nil lliliihh Iwltl mim'il In hnvn niiuh n caui'iißi the imilllonm'n mnlnUlni "only imm n tmlnml tFni' emimiilii', llm nHlnln lhl'WmmVms bf AinTSA timm"iK Lneiah’ m.vJir wiih'iinu \m «i 'mrn. liMiliim uf mnny ml mminl pyulwlfluiaU » A iL! rt B 3 SB " miinimm m Amei fflSi \mu ii Vlniiii'lnii imnlii liy mi iiwuini ninUturnjnhn niimii Ini' inniiv vptrnn, ’j' 1 , lln il iilimml tniylliiniMi'U mil I'viii'vlliittih A llmll Inin In lm nnl x, ' ... , , Andi Bsphnes west impeptnnl et nib U wants la a wimnwlirn'm I «gw mi piniiliiilicnlly with Mm imdlnehl Him I onp m! £ miff SnlteSat funivOTsitiJ] Ll'aS § ive ,h * " 8 8 J0 ' n Am * rleft 8 ,@nsi el Westtly, WfVL l£*% nlmnHiml.y w\\m in mivi'limm ni m nf Pi’nlli until llm Mhim As it is now, flnly tlie liifilwy of jhe whilp mflii In ;\\ JL W.l f «•*«** Nparo iS JcmS"iP«n%is?ory, • mm vim t B wman wfprenws to “flur hra\m hlnek JBvf\ * , ft A_ a „.fToi! StT r..Sa # ',S,r. Ur ”a?« U» i« P »t everything intn «, - . WDFM Schedule »un In the public Interest, we nre virtually a aegre- peispecnve, ... , TmeS* 1 * gated school—wo have only a couple hundred Negro It ie time, In short, that American schools teach , /\hl» wJHu, 4-4:05 p.m,—WDFM News sports, and weather) students in a student body of more than 20.000 AMERICAN history. G B 4.05-6 p.m.—Music of the Mas- : (Contfnued> ' certainly a disproportionate representation. We urge Dean Roose and the University Sen- - © i»7 i r nevi«. Tchaiko°vskyf o Rimsky-Korla! Press Confer- But this move on the part of the Douglass ate therefore, to act quickly on the recommendations "How would you like io be charaed with 'police 1 kov . Prokovicv, Rachmanin- ence (WDFM and the Daily Association, as well as President Walker’s apparent of the Douglass Association. , Wo* would you Mejoje charge* police off, and Stravinsky., gft USG — 1— 6-6:05 p.m.-WDFM News 8-10 p.m. - The Sound of Foil _ 6:05-7 p.m.-After Six (Popular, Music (With Mike Welch) TODAY ON CAMPUS T.PttPt«s To TV)P> FHilor , _ T , ™, .. „ „ JnlW L lo Ai U JL .E. i,J.W JLJW4X Ls«/X (Comprehensive campus, na- Notebook Alpha Sigma Alpha, 7£m Intervarsity Chnstmn FeUow- tional and international news. 12-12:05 a.m.-WDFM News Hetzel Union Building Ball- ship, 7 p.m., 214 HUB rj;.!* ... , ... .■ ; room Jr. Panhellenic, 7:30 p.m., 216 KlteflOUr KICIICUie VietnCHTl Vigil Beginning Br.dge Club, 6:30 HUB / TO THE EDITOR: Since arriving here in September, \A/P^V r lIA p.m., HUB Cardioom liberal Arts Student Council, we have discovered many things which are not only new to At 12 noon tomorrow, a Day of Mourning will begin •» * *»%• ICU UIKS D ° l .f Association, 6 p.m., 6:45 p.m 174 Willard us> but pro bably unique to Penn State as well. Where else with a silent vigil at the foot of the mall. This will give all German Department. 6:30 p.m., 5.D.5.,'7:30 pmn,’217-218 HUB who believe our Vietnam policy to be wrong to band to- Noon Gm-dc'n H ° me ’' “ ,d 7-nn WlS^New I Ff ß semb^ fi i §]j ß JU HUB Resjdejlts ’ 6 P- m *» 215 arrives at the dispensary. _ gelher, silently and courageously and openly. 3;00 p JTI Nine (o Got Heady 7; ' 30 opinion: Washinstor m * This week a friend of ours passed out in one of our p Ur p o ie of the vigil will be to mourn the deaths 4:0(1 ooern g. 0 n Sons and DauEhter* rooms. A pre-xned student was in.the building and came . . .. . ... . . . Math suu fc>ons anci LJaugnteis — up to offer assistance. Whsn he discovered her pulse was of our “ rave Y°wng men, so needlessly sacrificed in Viet- 5:fl0 Merlin the Magician Smoking and Health _ _ oo#T only 23, we decided to do something we were destined to nam and to openly and lawfully show that we believe that ;; : 15 The Friendly Giant 8:30 Time of-Our Lives Successor to The Free Lance, est.:lBB7 xegrei—call Ritenour. The ambulance arrived after approx- all nations should be entitled to the freedom we enjoy. 5:30 What’s New 0:00 War of the Roses fsff *1 /-iff ff « . imately twenty fleeting minutes, and w. then witnessed one , 6:00 Farm. Home and 10:00 7th—Angle Ball - iJL it4n£ttJlf II rtl I Prtttttt of the grossest displays of incompetence since the Keystone We are no longer a minority. The voices raised m the Garden The Tales of Genjl VIH Cops first raced across the sliver screen; but then again, United Nations over the past few months show that the = » *■ l ** the Keystone Cops were acting. vast majority of the nations and peoples around the world 62 Year* of Editorial Freedom Out heroes, the Ritenour ambulance drivers, came up believe thal this is a needless war. General Shoup, Gavin, |Wt?UHM r~l7 : V| 1 ‘ : —= .to the loom Without a stretcher. Realizing she was too Ridgeway and other retired generals do hot believe this n™"®* F SPRINS \ (SUMMER ARE \ I weak tb walk when she failed to lift her head from the bed, war serves a useful purpose. Almost half of the people of I, " , |i|, / pAikjc Ape 1P 1 ( INVIfirtRATING /'I m they acted fash 1h only teh mihutes little, they ttiatiagecl our own country are seeihg through the smokescreen of so i- j| h , ,:!|!!‘ ! V iiHVibQNAliNou. y niJh tHfi* f?iifr 4WE,K 4B “ Hd tiS Ml * 11 C#l|BSl! ' **' to go dbWitbHe flight of stairs aHtlretuntwith the stretcher. gdh* ond emellnuel i-espuiises that warsluevilatily invoke, ufi ■ ■ i - : After ski If Lilly uufulUliieil, they asltbtl He halibut if «ma are beginning to see the war in all Us true, ugly wlm-s. ; i, |: ’ UI, ,11 lc / a Sft v \ l !| , MifiJHiM,, Ml 1,, w Sflifflvltesft fflSWWl‘Bw«Mllflps ! 111I II 2'\ 1 ,;i.' ji tbiiimwAms ii i ll 'itiWa#- ■TjH'IVI 'JtfIMWI ttMWI" IWfM w k LWifl™il4n« JwawViX. . /wn, M i4*i='iiwT|'f TiSfThl wp.Mam's jj.wjsws.'ijfsaws { i i ,I, M i -wwi-rr"! : -tic^ii k \l kWiit'lfcW IKI fra Vis l,lllllllm 11,1111,1 '■ mlll ' l, ' l,l , ' ulml vv,lm UM '‘ I l 1 fw :i>, 1 I lli# j; \m iwti , iuisiday, wuviiMtiw i, m iflßilLti ! *i ' MhH ' ': ■■ ■ 'i -■««■ iffilM; isa£fisass2222 ,r *— "■ —”——-• - • DO IT YOURSELF! YES YOU DO IT LIKE THE PROS I GO TO POLY GLEAN GEHTER 6 lbs. for ONLY $2.25 Gei One Load FREE For Every 9 AT ARMANARA PLAZA Aeross From South Halls Learn how to improve your organization's PR program. Five professionally conducted workshops! Radio Newspapers Collegian Advertising CmHvity and tiumtutgttt Pi'bteßßtuiinl Publle ttsUilßH# Tin eaHliriHii li tpiHisretl b/ ,■, jj{S THI BAHT COUIMANi All tMlipui 4I BPBHnlinllen Mid Bmk publli t|T relnfiens «nd publicity chnlp« .jV ' men ara waif emitetmand. Ajjr Thor* it no chorpe> no . t moil your roiorvn* ,JW tion In TODAY l Thanksgiving Candlelight Dinner Wednesday November 22,1967 5 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. HUB Terrace Ruoom inference Miisißf pwiii anti divenllietiuen pieaiai liHnmy si Undid Frulli,. Mil yaap pappla pnt Plpia ip 1888 miiiipn ppi laia Ip purchase pvpi 8 billion paenPi p| PhlpHila bananas. i This surpass is Pus Ip a vast aimnl nf research, planning, enltlvallpn, phaMy ppnlrpl and advenped management tephnlgneei m bananas today are a great improvement over what they were 6 years ego,; These Improvements that United Fruit has brought to Ohlqulta bananas are only a part of the story. We have grown In many other diversified-and exciting fields as well., United Fruit has In Its corner the Great White Fleet consisting of more than 40 refrigerated vessels; Companla Numar, processor of edible oil*, In Costa Rica; Revere Sugar Refinery; J, Hungerlord Smith Co., Ine„ manufacturers of syrups, fee eroam flavorings and toppings; and Baskin -Robbins, a leading,distributor and producer ol Ice rcream. We alio own: A4W Root Bear Companv and A&W Drlva-lns of Canada, Ltd.; Tropical Radio Telegraph which operates a publlo communlea Iloi'* imuni biiwwnliln Undid ftutii ind Litln ddunirlNilind a Mtt mumnn MafiMtilaiji Bipedal, ; Undid, men mppilani el tin'll iinpiPpftrPTei pur Psnpnn ftpKing ppsrsiipns; II ypH wrhlP lifts Ip ha part pf ihii ayfiiiamanl at Wniiap Fruit, wa wrhlP ilkq ip meat with van, Yph pan start thlnqsj happaning hy aphadpllng an interview with we, through lha plaeement pllipa on painpwe, We will bp Interviewing on November 30, 1967 For people lij tha following areas, "Accounting—Computer Programmers —Computer Systems Analysts—Food Science—Agriculture Engineering** ft an Intarvlaw la Incmanlant at thla tlma, plaaaa contact our Ptraonnal Administration ONIoa. t United Fruit Company Prudential Center Boston, Massachusetts 02199 undlditu avsltiiitd on a mer/t toll