TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 19j68 right under your nose Movies, Lectures Abound This Week 4 By NANCY [SCHULTZ Collegian Staff Writer If you’re looking (for a bargain film, head for the Hetzel Union Building Assem bly Room at 7 and 91 this evening where the German Film Club will present G. W. Pabst’s “The Love of Jeanne Ney,” a silent film depicting a young French girl in love with a Russian Bolsheyik. Then, Thursday, af 7 and 9 p.m. in the HUB auditorium, exchange a 50 cent piece for “The Rules of the Game.” The Inter national Film Club’s si ort subject is direct ed by Jean Renoir. As another investment, try a lecture. At Eisenhower Chapel at 12:30 this after noon Donald J. Wilfover will talk on “Teacher’s Subculture.’!’ At 1 p.m. today iiji Room 162 Willard, you could be . having fiin listening to Irwin Pollack, University of Michigan professor of psychology speak on' “Psychostatistics, or Having Fun Listening to a Computer.” Music Discussion Later at 2:20 p.m. in Sparks, Theodore Hoffman of New York University School of the Arts will present “Music as a Symbolic Process in Communication.” A two-hour panel discussion on the topic will take place from 7:30-9:30 this evening. “Troy and Problems in Trojan Arch aeology” will be discussed in 102 Forum at 8 this evening. - J. L. Caskey has participated in excavations on Troy, in Greece, and on the island of Kea. He will present the sub ject. Tomorrow afternoon at 3, furniture de signer and architect George Nakashima will present a free lecture in the HUB auditor ium. • . The Economics Club will present “The Gold Crisis,” a panel discussion at 111 Boucke at 7:30 tomorrow evening. Starting Thursday,! the Annual Penn- Students Ask Write-in Two University students are nedy before the New Hamp- can get involved. The Mc running for delegate posts at shire primary. “I switched Carthy for President organiza the Democratic national con- when Kennedy opportunistical- tion has had over 700 canvas vention. Alfred Di Bernardo ly jumped into the fray; we sers operating in a ten county and Gary Sykes, both graduate have had enough of that type area durum .the past six week students in political science, of leadership,” Sykes said. - ends. We have had groups are running as write-ins com- The primary, according to as far away as Oil City and mitted to support Sen Eugene Sykes, is a different type of Franklin to the west and Ridge- McCarthy. politics. “This is participation way to the east.” "We are both greatly dis- politics where the individual Altogether, there are four turbed by people on the ballot ~ write-in candidates running for who refuse to supp- rt the : can- AU/C Pl@rfianc the delegates’post. Along with didate chosen in the primary,” n '' " ncviiwiia Sykes and Di Bernardo are Sykes said. “We are publicly Elections for residence hall Erna R. Hennessy and George committed to support the:win- presidents and vice-presidents E. Andrews, professor of math ner of the Pennsylvania pri- will be held today. The Asso- ematics at the University, mary.” ciation of Women Students will, There are no other names on Sykes, who teaches political set up polls in the lobby of the ballot. “The voter,” Sykes science and is an honor student, each residence hall, and all said, “had absolutely no choice said that he was circulating a undergraduate wome>- may and this is why we decided to petition for Sen. Robert Ken- vote. . get in.” THE THINKING MAN’S CHOICE... You can’t just wish your way out of the kind of problems we've got today. You’ve got to think them through-and that takes a lifetime of getting ready. Think about Viet Nam .A brutal conflict that tears the nation. A new kind of war against a new kind ef enemy, that requires new concepts of concerted mili tary, political, and diplomatic effort. This is a time when we must explore every avenue toward settlement—but keep up our guard against the temptations of a camou flaged surrender. Think about your dollar. Weakened and shrunk by buy-now-pay-later politics, eaten by taxes, threatened by the balance of payments and the gold drain. It’s going to take skill and understanding to get •an $BOO billion economy back on the track-and keep it there. Think about your children. About their schools. Their college. Will there be a place for them? And the world they inherit. Will it be worth inheriting? Will they have a world to inherit? Think about the cities. About the civil war ripping our nation apart. Aboutviolence an'd crime and despair. About the need for both the rule of law and the light of hope. About the new statesmanship needed to sylvania Intercollegiate Interpretative Read ing Festival will be held in the HUB Assembly Room. ’ , Bach and Friends Another lucrative move would be in the direction of a concert. Tomorrow Charles R. Krigbaum, Yale University organist and choirmaster will present a concert of Bach and other composers at 8:30 p.m. in Recital Hall. Tonight at 9:30 WPSX will present the Columbus Symphony in concert. Presenta tions by Bruckner and Beethoven will be performed in conjunction with the 400- voice Ohio State University Chorus. Another WPSX program of interest will pit William F. Buckley, editor of “The Na tional Review,” against Murray the “K.” Murray will defend the American teenager, while Buckley will play the devil’s advo cate. 7:30-9:30 p.m. is the time tomorrow in Recreation Hall for Karate Club. Anyone is welcome. Sundry Items of Interest Thursday 6:30-8:30 p.m. tryouts for the Varsity Rifle Team will be held. No experi ence is necessary. Instruction in internation al competitive small bore rifle shooting will be given. After your next class in Sparks, stop in the hallway outside Room 211 for an exhibition entitled “Albert Camus, 1913- 1960,” a collection of 125 photographs re callihg episodes in Camus’ life. On your way to the Lion’s Den, stop anytime between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. in the HUB for a World University Service shoe shine. You’ll want to see the curtain rise on “Marat/Sade” at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Playhouse Theatre. Tickets are available at the theatre and can be reserved by call ing 865-9543. make our nation whole again by making our people one again. Think about the world. Its complexity and its challenge, Russia. China. NATO, SEATO, the OAS the UN. Europe. The Middle East. Africa. Latin Americ. Asia. Nuclear arms and diplomatic maneuvers. A work entering the most dangerous period in its history, anc looking to the United States for leadership that can take it safely through. Think about the Presidency, its awesorr powers arid its lonely responsibilities. The range things a President has to think about, know about. Ti great decisions that he alone can make, and that m; determine the fate of freedom for generations to com -and even the survival of civilization. Think about the one man who is best qur lied lor that office. With the sure hand, the balanc judgment, the combination of seasoned experier and youthful vigor. The one man who has gained a p. spective on the Presidency unique in our time-fro 20years in public life, eight of them at the very cent of power-followed by a rare opportunity to reflect an; re-study,and to measurethepressingneedsof America and the world in this final third of the 20th Century. The one man prepared by history tor the world's toughest job-the one man who can really make a difference in these troubled, dangerous times. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Board Finds Hunger in US. WASHINGTON (IP) A. special committee of private' citizens re ported yesterday there is concrete evidence of,chronic hunger and dan gerous malnutrition in all parts of the United States but primarily in. the South and Southwest. It esti mated victims number in the mil lions. The citizen’s Board of Inquiry' yesterday,', the board said there is into Hunger and Malnutrition in a prevalence of chronic hunger and the United States, established by, malnutrition which has been hither the Citizen’s Crusade .Against Pov- to unimagined, and “this prevalence erty, studied the problem for the is shocking.” past nine months and concluded: “A thousand people who must "If you will go look, you will go without food for days each month find America is a shocking place.” would be shocking in a wealthy na- Board's Findings tion,” the- board wrote. “We believe Court Rules on Obscenety WASHINGTON </P) The Supreme, Court told the states yesterday they have a right—even a duty—to decide what kind of sex material young sters may see and read. “The well-being of its children- is of course a subject within the state’s constitutional power to regulate,” Justice William J. Brennan Jr. said in a 6-3 decision. Moreover, Brennan said, parents, teachers and ethers who have the prime responsibility of rearing children “are' entitled to the support of laws designed to aid discharge of that responsi bility.” The ruling was the court’s first venture into a growing kind of antipornography law—one de signed especially for children. A New York statute was specifically endorsed. And in a- companion case, the court threw out a Dallas ordinance geared to movies, because the justices found the classification standards vague. Here, too, the court said, through Justice Thurgood Marshall, “A state may regulate the dissemination to juveniles of, and their access to, material objectionable as to them, but which a state clearly could not regulate as to adults.” The vote was 8 to 1. Justices William 0. Douglas and Hugo L Black filed a dissent in the New York case. Commenting wryly that “the juvenile delin quents I have known are mostly over 50 years of age,” Douglas described the court as “the nation’s board of censors.” In another area, in a civil rights case from Report Says Victims May Number in Millions The board was formed after'a' Senate subcommittee tourned Mis sissippi last spring and found pock ets of malnutrition and hunger. A few weeks later six doctors reported that they had personally observed what they called inhuman and in tolerable conditions,, in Mississippi. In its ,100-page report, released "" ,4 :e:',;; . AM•4 Mississippi, the court said states can control In other significant actions the court: picketing outside government buildings though Refused to tinker with a consent agreement this may have “a chilling effect” on protest and that makes it difficult for a group of state and city freedom of expression. governments to recover millions of dollars they The test, Brennan said in a 7-2 decision, is claimed they were overcharged by publishers of whether the anti-picketing law “clearly and pre- children’s books. cisely delineates its reach in words of common Set'the stage for an important decision in the understanding” and is administered in good faith, field of civil rights by agreeing to decide next The court found the Mississippi law, enacted term if the Railway Carmen Union and the St. in 1964 and used to convict about 35 civil rights Louis-San Francisco Railway worked a scheme pickets who demonstrated outside the Hattiesburg to keep Negroes from job promotion, courthouse, passed muster on both counts. Ruled that the Los Angeles Times must give The' pickets, alleging racial discrimination in up three San Bernardino newspapers it bought in voter registration, urged Negroes to register. 1964 for $l5 million. AWS To Plan Town Women's Council Plans for the establishment of a council for Miss Rosenthal, chairman of the committee town women will be discussed at a meeting at working to set up the council, said that there is 7 p.m. tomorrow in 218 Willard. a “growing need for a communications system According to Cindy Rosenthal, of'the Associa- among town women.” She stated that ideally the tion of Women Students, over 130 coeds are pres- council would work independently, and also hold ently living off-campus. Miss Rosenthal said that a seat on the AWS Senate, and the TIM Council. AWS feels that an organization is needed to handle Miss Rosenthal urged all women students who the specific problems of town women. are now jiving off-campus, or those that are plan- The council will serve primarily as a sounding ning to do so next year, to attend tomorrow night’s board for grievances, and will work with the Town meeting. She stated that in order to establish the Independent Men for the improvement of off- “much needed” council, and to successfully im campus living conditions. It will also aid in find- prove living conditions in town, the women stu ing suitable apartments for women desiring to dents themselves must “get out and support the live in town. project.” aft 4 K 1 •X* that, in America, the number reach es well into the millions. And we believe that the situation is worsen ing.” 'Chronic Hunger’ It listed 256 “hunger counties” in 20 states. Georgia, led with 47 while 36 were named in Mississippi. The board, which held hearings around the country and made field trips, said wherever it went poor people spoke “not with precise an alysis of foods consumed in grams or ounces—but ... of constant, chronic unremitting hunger.” The board reported it found: —High incidence of anemia, “You don’t need a technical degree to do important work at IBM. Just a logical mind!’ “When I got my degree in Psychology, I never thought I’d be telling computers how to do their job. “But that's what mywork comes down to. I’m helping improve the way a computer converts programming language into machine language. (This is Bruce Mitchell, a Junior Programmer at IBM.) “I guess that doesn’t sound very exciting, but it is. It all has to do with the way computers work. Laymen talk about them as if they were intelligent. But actually, if you want to get anthropomorphic about it, they’re very literal minded. The programmer does the thinking, not the machine.” Your major doesn’t matter “You don’t need a technical background, just a logical mind. You can be a good programmer no matter what you majored in. IBM sends you to programming school. And pays your full salary at the same time. “One reason I like this field so much is that you’re continually solving problems. I suppose that’s the main reason I got into it. “But I didn’t overlook the growth factor, either. I read that there’s a national shortage of 50,000 programmers. And the demand is expected to more than double in the next five years.” What Bruce has said covers only a small part of the IBM story. For more facts, visit your campus placement office. Or send an outline of your career interests and educational background to I. C. Pfeiffer, IBM Corporation, Dept. C, 100 South Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. 60606. We’re an equal opportunity employer. growth retardation, protein deficien cies and other signs of malnutrition among the poverty population. —That pregnant women in pov erty suffered from nutritional de ficiencies and were 1 constantly ane mic. Severe Malnutrition —Diet deficiencies resulting in the most severe protein-deficiency diseases—Kwashiorkor and Mara mus, diseases usually found in un derdeveloped countries. —Evidence of high incidence of parasitic disease associated with malnutrition on its visits to South Carolina, Florida, Mississippi, Ala bama and Indian reservations. SIRSL 'i.. •w:' • < ?*v\ REIM PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers