The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 22, 1967, Image 2

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    . Wlhlpi l Ippin Mr lulu Hih UulvpuKy i'klimhlhi 1 in
* RIi’RHUH W«ff\
Wftlri mm-ntnutf an I tjfininnns malm U’hvrUhm
Amm prim in oka m pr! ni'dntii- mu wlf w
iiiH ms niflßP it nnn nf i ip nnsi iPHM in stw y in pllp
HP lllfjtl HfflflP
And, ihn row wwtthw frown nifnniinn in pamptis ,
problems iptojome state of pfomisinga/
hopeful blossoming into reality spring term when'
sunnier days better aepommodate teach-ins end
protest,
Fall term has one more week to run. In the brief
pause before final*, it i* important to look back to
the few, advances made in academic and social
spheres at the University and to look ahead to what
needs to he Implemented!
If Winter Term serves any purpose, it should at
least be for long hours ipf thought on problems of
this nature,
The housing problem In State College has not
been solved, but the efforts of the Town Independent
Men's Council to correct the most glaring problems
students have In downtown quarters nave been
milestones. Now they need to be effected, hopefully
before June, 0
The Hitenour Issue-” Is still with us. How Im
portant It is to work to change the current policy of
charging students directly for medical treatment is
now questionable; improving medical service and
facilities is not,
There are still flagrant breaches of professional
ism in attention and procedure at the health center.
No ponder students especially resent paying cash
for treatment which they often find sub-standard.
- We still lack a University bookstore, a proposal
that has weathered many, many winters of discus
sion.
"We still are without the optioh to take a number
of elective courses on a pass-fall basis.
. Qm Maltt still seems as remote' at times as It has
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BIOHARD ♦ SSJSfBSI
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■sitsriii ciiumnii!, Jiv ipiri td*r, p*y l«v nt/ Aiiiiftni tetru
«««•,/» KHfci PMlnrW idler, MHw Urtini B "Sir W
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W«" , «r,. ( M*r , H. invCif and Idwirt KremHln) Ceerisit Miniiin,
fitt-to!? i 1 ” 1 • m t*wj ,r i *• ilMan) CradU Manner, oiirn oiib) Clastilied
Bn« rt inJ , iKi l ’ ,, L! r ' l p, , i. aiiilniirrNitltnil Alvirtitlns Minmn. Miry Ana
». , . , .i < u.». n A a Hj'lir/ Clrculillon Minigtr, auric Birnur; Office int Sir
iVir'liff ,n,,,r ' K,r,n Public Relatione end Primollon Msnssir, Rmild
’AGE.TWO
* ii i ii wm ii n n u m
IFC RUSH CALENDAR
WINTER TERM 1968
Thursday
Thursday
Saturday
Sunday
Sunday
Sunday
Monday
Sunday
Monday
Monday
Monday
Monday
CUP AND SAVEP FOR WINTER
fOTTOfUAL OPINION
Looking Ahe
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1967
<i—n—ue»
January
January
January
January
Janu
January
January
January 14,1967
January 15,1968
January 22,1968
January 22,1968
January 29,1968
Wll httH t I'Hl HHI ,1]
In VlPlnHifli M of
hip oi'piplp slwiiid
hHipi l VRlnpi' \ m [m
nrfliPßl PWRRRfI (in Bp i
. 1. Wpi’snpy'fi ppll In
liflVP hwpnpfl ttiPlf
slfnwli
These areafew tlv
action, nesft term,
The Pally Collegian will work lor them edi
torially. We urge students to do their pari. too,
Today la the last Issue of the Collegian for this
term. Although three Board of Editors members are
graduating Editorial Editor Julie Moshinsky and
City Editors Jackie Snyder and Leslie Kay the
paper will be back next term with a partly new staff,
partly new ideas, and a pledge to keep on working
for much of the needed changes we’ve lobbied for
this term.
Letters To The Editor
Satire Appreciated
TO TUB EDITORi This is to reply to Mr, Gregory Long's
letter of Nov, 21, eoneerning Mr. Podleekl's censorship of
Steve DeSouza's "Gross-Out Man" in the November issue
of Froth, Mr, Long states "There is absolutely no reason
why intelligent college students cannot come up with bet
ter ideas for a humor magazine," If he can come up with
some better ideas I’m sure Froth will welcome them. Froth
constantly asks Its readers for jokes, cartoons, etc.
He alio states, "A limit has to be set somewhere" and
leaves it at that. He offers no criteria for establishing the
limit he feels must be set, nor does he tell us why he' feels
a limit mutt be sef. ,
Finally, Mt. Long cites ChHst as an example of some
thing held sacted by satiety and objects to the satit e about
him tot that teasom ftete ( i feel thet Mh Long takes a
ttattow view tmd fails tb tealite that some segment* of
society do not hold ttbtist sauted and fmd nothing ob
jectionable about the satite
T 0 ?HI IBITSfIi f Wisll 1(1 BffRF IP BBHBRfII HlilllltS Id
ilibsb nigidhPi's df Hip ArtminlslniHfln'wnß km IVplppfl m
Id FIPRF lip Ills NIHSIIV pilflline pidhlPllV II SPPI11!I Hut /
nunipmw ilhilpou tart two llpkplpfl far pflcHliis Ip fp- '
slnptPFi idiiPfi. Amp Id llislppH nf PdPdiißlß mbiih- ypnp ahi’
lnpHlry Inifl tlip mutter,aprompt roplv was vopp|vpp front
Mr. P. W> PUwtn, Item) of tlte Plvlslon of DewUeapo
rimming, agreeing to tha following:
• ImUll "No Parking" signs Immediately In oil ques
tionable
• A guard till will be creeled l nth* perking ores
ceil of Dormitory 38 to ellmineie the problem of
perking in the middle of the lot.
• A gusrd tell will be erected in the perking me
until the guard rails ere put up.
The co-operation of the Department of Physical Plant
Planning and Construction and the Campus Patrol in tho
solving of this problem is greatly appreciated,
Garry Warmer, Co-chairman
Parking Committee
U3G Administrative Action Commission
Meeting for all second term Freshmen in
Schwab Auditorium at 7:30 p.m,
4,1968
< >
Larry Lowen, Ed Bassetti, and John Kiley
will appear on WMAJ’i Limelight Show to
discuss Winter Term rush
1968
Open house parties for all seoond term.«
Fruhmon OiOQ p.m. IiOO Vm.
1968
Open houses for all seoond term Freshmen
giOO'SiQO p.m.
1968
Meetings In all dormitory houses for dlsous*
slon of Winter Term Rush—7s3o p.m.
1968
Invitations for dinners and luehes may be
extended—B:oo p.m,
1968
Second form rush officially begins BiOO p.m.
1968
Open house parties
Bids may be
TFA rushees
Second term
5:00 p.m.
Second term
p.m.
i Mill I vb Hlmul mi Hid \m
m h ipt jivpFiiiiio otm<,
piimm ipf into wn,v of m
ling sob mm \m\ mm
*P IVP RPFVIPP RiFPPtfIF InPWIS
’ft I PlHi-Wfll’ OFOIPNIPFS who
- PBFds «not a strong enough
mgs that bear thought, If not
Thmki Is Piebliin lelvers
extended to TFA rushees
may accept bid
Freshmen may receive bids
rushees may accept bids 5:00
TERM RUSH!!
friflei* tymmh >l9
BERRY'S WORLD
« M ,!s*%• ,
"GRIAT NIWS—THI PRISIDINT GOT THI BIG PART
OP THI WISHBQNtI"
On worn Radio-91.1
4-4:05 p.m, WDFM News sport?!, and weather)
4:05-6 p.mv - Music of the Mas- 7:15-7:45 p.m. - After Six (Con.
ters tinued)
«L* p. m . - WDFMN.». £<»tta AU.
6:05-7 p.m. After Six (Pop- (Music from Broadway)
■ ular, easy-listening) 10-10:05 p.m. - WDFM News
7-7:15 p.m. - Dateline News 10:05-12 midnight - Symphonic
(Comprehensive campus, na- Notebook
tional and International news, 12-12:05 a.m. WDFM News
TODAY ON CAMPUS
AsswMltth SI ml this, uhlfe Bp.w., Hi Mm
MVm 4 ™ b Xb ' UHIbH SfcltHbfe B:3t)
*§ mw..*
"THAT WILY)
FIRST TERM
The following Fraternity Houses will be open this
weekend for first term freshmen dt the designated
times: ;
Friday night
None
Saturday afternoon
Sigma
Lambda Chi Alpha
Saturday night
Alpha Chi Rho
Tag Phi Delta
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Theta Xi
If there are any questions feel free to tail the Rqsh
Chairman.
I**^
V/V('Z*l>>
ATTENTI
jails Mwltltulty
'Scarlet biter'
~, Revisited
7 "
ipim" hd mwitwtf: "Hmm MhMhuMh'i Wm
, itiwu
Hi* \\m wMflfiPrt with mm* M\\\ Phiiliimiwni'ilr
M ihhih ft( m\\m \nm in tnill IWi Anywiw hi,
wm hwlrti hhniilf wnh ni'Wi and hwifir ippMiniljfi
If TIMWIi . L J ,
Phllllnwwnrlhi formsiiy Rob Prymmp, had Iwn
«ww from thi Minn hnrnHih.fw awhile. Whin M
he and Hester fold wen aaeh nlhiPi they had been Mends,
m since ho had parted, Hester had committed the
most horrendous pin Pbilingsworth ponld think of.
She had wtated and produced a real Bam—a pearl.
10 to ipaak-Ht cfnful and disgusting artieta which of.
tended cartain mambara of tha Puritan borough.
; Chillingsworth, in his passionate rage, immediately
1 pressed charges against her and held Her up to public
ridicule and molestation.
A meeting of -the Puritan Council was thenceforth
scheduled to decide on Hester's fate.
"Oh fie." Heifer declared characteristically. "What
ever ihall t do?"
"Pear not!” came a tired but familiar sigh. "I will
: let no harm befall thee," *
It waa Richard Dlmmesdale, dashing scholar and
newest edition to the Council,
"I shall defend thee till my dying day," he promised,
and by the looks of him, that day was not far off,
Tot Dlmmeidale'i burden was greet! he bed com
plied with Heater In the production of her pearl.
But he determined to face the Council with the con
vietion that he would do what had to be done, just as
he had done what had to be done wttlrHeater on that
fateful night not long ago . , .
For,Hester had come to him and seid, "Richard, 1
have a very deap faeling which is crying for ajcprea
sion ..." ! i
"Than it must ha txprasiad," he had said under
standingly.
And so it was that the pearl was created.
Certain members of the Puritan borough, however,
ghvisiohed the situation differently.
‘fluty eoHlihded ihti ttgilir had meihterind poor
Bimmaidali with her wiaieal *y«i audi with ihi blip
8t ike davU Miles 6tHsbif|i had lufid hint inis Ihi
Slash f , Biiil and: than had iidustd him and hiatawaihad
him and lalt him in a Hals si mania! ditgHgtman):
And FipFdliiM e( flVßwali m tin eeiutißh Blinnni:
dgl? snnld net malt? llnm nndgratßnd'.
awns nnmtes nf tin Bbuml salted fw Ifistit 1 *
imnmdtets aslte:;
«flh wimd* and Iwmbbiw WmniMrtiili iM
vflhwnwHvi far hn wrottlmwi Imi ronlroV nl HU tww*!
"I «m Hi« wIKy AWi” h* wlrf- "I dm ttw m fa
wimm ih* sim«. in* I *m fa« «n« wlw ilfawifl Iw fa
go Nwmgh with— It.
"I m the »|mw, and If anyone .Is to bo exiled,
It li I,"
’vl'Oh, p’fluiw," Goody Twoshoes and Prudenoa
Pni'nournphy exclaimed In a frenzy, for they, 100, some
times lost control. "It wns that evil witch who Intimi
dated you!”
The trial proetedad thusly, hut whan It came to a
vote —10 l Hester was exonerated, albeit with reser
vations. ' :
But the point had been made, Both Hester and
Dimmesdale had, learned their lessons,
For both carried with them henceforth and forever
more large scarlet F's emblazoned oh their br--sts,
Sunday
Alpha Kappa Lambda
Delta Tbu Delta
Acacia
Phi
Mu Delta
Phi
Gamma Delta
Phi
Sigina Delta %
——3o—
MEN
afternoon