Partly sunny, 'Andy and chilly today with a chance for a few brief showers or -snow flurries (!). High near 52. Cold tonight; low near 30. Partly cloudy and cool tomorrow. High near 55. Saturday: Partly sunny and Whipples. VOL. 68, No. 110 '►'d Rather See Than Be One • • . , AND 'YOU can see one Saturday at the Little International Livestock Exposition. But no purple cows, just black and brown and red and white and combinations thereof ones. After all, even the author of the poem never saw a purple one. ..-. . .- r- 't ''" ..., .•'-- P arl - - , -.- .1; en t ~ • . ~.....„ a A., , r"' Sh,, ~ 4. yr. •. J I VeS i OC By BRUCE RANDALL Collegian Staff Writer Purebred horses, beef cattle, sheep and swine will be shown and judged beginning at 8 a.m..Saturday at the Ice Pavilion. The oc casion is the 51st Little International Live stock Exposition. This event, sponsored by the students of the Penn State Block and Bridle Club, will be open to the public. The show will provide an opportunity for any student,. with og without.expertence. interested in animal husbandry to work with Penn State's prize-winning purebred live stock. More than 120 students from various curriculums will participate this year. The students, all volunteers, have been working with their animals, which were chosen by lots from the University herds and flocks, since the first week of this term. The students and animals will compete for more than 50 awards in fitting and showmanship. According to Glenn R. Kean, advisor of the Block and Bridle Club, "The experience and fellowship gained is invaluable,. although no course credit is offered for the event." The Little International is patterned after the famous Chicago International Live stock Exposition. The basic difference is that here the students are judged on their ability to groom and show the animal rather than on the animal's merit. Students Hard at Work John Frey, publicity chairman, said the students have been scrubbing, clipping, and trimming the hooves of their animals for one month. They have also taught the animals how to stride out and to stand for the judges' inspection. Frey explained that the first ob jective of the students is to spend much time with the livestock. This enables the animal , : to become accustomed to the students and overcome their natural nervousness. Program Plans The students have worked long and hard, enduring many frustrations, in preparation for having their efforts evaluated in only a, few minutes in the show ring. The awards they hope to receive are contributed by Penn sylvania agricultural industries, University organizations and professors and individuals interested in promoting Pennsylvania live stock. The program of events will be: sheep and swine show at 8 a.m., beef cattle at 10, intermission for lunch, quarterhorses at 1 p.m., meat raffle at 4 and a banquet at 6:30. The banquet, which will be held in the Hetzol Union Building, will honor the win- Reds' Unity Conference Lacks Delegates BUDAPEST A preparatory unity conference of Communist parties opened yesterday in a sealed-off hotel with barely half the 88 delegations invited showing up. Many of the absentees said the meeting's only purpose was to entrench Soviet dominance over the world's Marxist parties. The stay at homes 49 by unofficial count included Red China and Albania, critics of the Soviet Union from the far left, and Yugoslavia and Romania, both ,to the right of Moscow. Cuba was reported missing as were North Vietnam, North Korea and other Asian parties. The 10 or 12 days of scheduled discussions are to decide on an exact date in November or December for a conference in Moscow to "promote the cohesion of all anti-imperialistic forces," and according to Yugoslav re ports, draft a document on Vietnam and a peace appeal. The last big party meeting in Budapest, Feb. 26 - March 5, was the stage for a Romanian walkout and open break with Moscow. Sixty parties were in attendance at that session. Six Week Allied Push Kills 2,000 SAIGON Intensive allied operations in the Mekong Delta have killed 1,943 enemy troops in the past six weeks and have flushed newly equipped North Vietnamese reg ulars, U.S. officers said yesterday. Troops from the U.S. 9th Division and South Vietna mese marines and soldiers ran into a Viet Cong force. In a day-long battle, 56 Viet Cong were killed, the U.S. Com mand reported. It , said 15 Americans were wounded and South Vietnamese casualties were light. U.S. artillery mounted on barges in the delta's water ways supported the action. r ' • ........ 40 Ct i lltgla . . • .0' ;.- ', ‘" . ~'1 ; 1... ?I _ ~,.. ~..,...,...1.„.6.; . 4 1 , .• '44:: . 4856 . . 7 ' ' ews from the World, Nation * * * 8 Pages —Collegian Photo by Pierre Bellicini ners of the show; awards be presented at this time. Tickets for the banquet may be purchased in 202 Armsby. This year the show is dedicated to Her man R. Purdy, co-coach of the University liyestick judging team. Purdy, also in charge of pedigreed livestock at the University, is considered one of the most popular beef cattle judges in the nation. He also teaches beef cattle management and advanced judg ing courses here. Frey described the procedures used to prepare_ thq. animals for, showing. The beef cattle are Washed "three times, then :brifShedt and combed until their hair stands up. The hair on their heads 'and tails is clipped. On show day, they are rubbed with hair oil. Butch wax is applied to their legs, which are combed to make the hair stand up. Their feet are polished or painted according to the color of their hooves. Sheep are washed only once, since it takes weeks for ti.e wool to dry completely, and covered with a blanket. Their wool is also clipped to give the animals an ideal shape. Swine are washed two or three times. Hair on their ears and tails is clipped. On show day the white pigs are powdered with talcum while the black ones are prettied up with hair oil. Horses, which are very diffi cult to keep clean, receive only one beauty treatment. They are just brushed until their hair shines. Exposition Personnel The distinguished alumnus award this year went to John G. Auld. Since his grad uation from the University in 1940, he has been instrumental in aiding many students in animal science as well as an enthusiastic supporter of the University's department of animal science. The judges are: sheep, Bill Sipple, Uni versity graduate who teaches agricultural extension here; swine, Henry Freter, a di rector of the Delaware Pork Producers; beef, Edward Rishel, Jr., an alumnus who is man ager of Sayre Farms in Phelps, N.Y.; and horse, Bob Kimble, another alumnus who is director of the meat animal evaluation center of the State Department of Agriculture. Students assisting with the preparation of the show are: David Coble, show manager; Mark Stehr, assistant show manager and swine superintendent; Richard Byerly, cata log editor; William Keck, assistant catalog director; John Frey, publicity chairman; Jared Tyson, meat raffle chairman; Richard Kuzemchak, banquet chairman; Lance Lan non, beef cattle superintendent and Les Hal ler, sheep superintendent. from the associated press Over North Vietnam, U.S. planes flew 11l missions Tuesday against targets in the southern sector, but bomb damage assessment was said to have been precluded in most cases because of bad weather. * * * Firearms Control Voted Into Anticrime Bill WASHINGTON The Senate Judiciary Committee voted yesterday to cement into a broad anticrime bill a section providing tougher federal controls over firearms sales. But, contrary to President Johnson's recommendations, the new restrictions would not prohibit interstate mail or der sales of rifles and shotguns to individuals. However, they would ban such sales of other fire arms, including concealable weapons ,like pistols and re volvers. There also would be an outright ban on sales to per sons under 21 gears of age. The bill would make it unlawful for any person other than a licensed dealer to transport or receive in his state of residence any firearm other than a rifle or shotgun pur chased or otherwise obtained outside his state. This prohibition is extended to a rifle or shotgun if the purchase of such a weapon would be unlawful in the state where the person resides. NEW YORK -- Columbia University's campus was all but sealed off yesterday, after several hundred rampaging student demonstrators seized control of two buildings. They held three school officials behind makeshift barri cades for 4 hours, and wrecked the office of President Grayson Kirk. Night classes were cancelled, the 70 buildings locked and all but two campus entrances closed, amid reports that Harlem Negroes planned to join student sit-ins in the two buildings. UNIVERSITY PARK, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 25, 1968 Students Seize Buildings at Columbia • 6 • r • • •ss. -98 • on WASHINGTON (W) The United States has sent another message to North Vietnam in the still-unsuccessful effort to achieve agreement on a site for preliminary peace talks, the State Departinent disclosed yester day. It was understood that the new U.S. mes sage went to Hanoi Monday and amounted to a diplomatic prod to the Reds to respond to earlier U.S. offers of any of its list of 15 Asian and European capitals as a meeting place. It was the fifth such communication from Washington to Hanoi announced since the opposing sides publicly declared three weeks ago their willingness to enter into direct talks. Since then they have been spar ring over whe're their envoys should meet. No Official Message In revealing the latest American message, State Department press officer Robert J. Mc- Closkey added: "I could not report progress" towards accord on a site. ' Other U.S. authorities said no. official message has been received since the second —Collegian Photo by Pierre Bellicini CHARLOTTE CORDAY (Jackie Knapp) conducts the symbolic slaying of Jean-Paul Marat (Ted Marlin) under the able direction of the Marquis de Sa . de (Robert Breuler) in the Peter Weiss drama which opens tonight at the Playhouse Theatre. See story on page 5. 8,000 Students Vote In Time's Choice '6B Close to 8,000 University were, about 150 write-ins. He students voted yesterday in said that more than 100 bal- Choice '6B, the Time Maga- lots were invalidated be zine national collegiate Presi- cause they were improperly dential primary, marked. • • "The only comment I have The , ballots will now be on the turn out is that in one shipped to Washington, D.C. day of voting, Choice '6B had where they will be run a greater number of voters through the Univac 1108 corn than USG had in three days," puter. The results should be Joseph Chirra head of returned to the University on Choice '6B at the University May 2 or 3 and made avail said. able here about a week be- According to Chirra t h r e fore national publication. U.S. Sends New Message to Hanoi As 500 other students gathered in a rainy spring dusk to heckle the demonstrators and throw eggs, Associate Dean Alexander B. Platt urged them to disperse. He told them: "If you try to handle this yourselves there will be violence and we can't afford violence at this time. We can't afford violence at all." During two days of disorder and vandalism, the dem onstrators polarized into two groups—Negroes protesting a new university gymnasium, and whites opposed to the war in Vietnam. Students from other universities in the city were said to have joined in, as well as some non-student Negro mili tants. White members of Students for a Democratic Society invaded Kirk's office and a university spokesman said: "The place is a complete mess." * * * Advance Shocks Felt For A-Bomb Test LAS VEGAS, Nev. The mightiest nuclear blast to be fired in the United States is set for tomorrow and the federal government is 'feeling shock waves in advance. Protests against possible 'danger or damage have come from citizens, scientists, labor leaders, peace groups and from the organization of Nevada's biggest spender, billion aire Howard Hughes. The test of a hydrogen device will pack the wallop of one million tons of TNT or more and is expected to - be felt, earthquake style, for 250 miles or more. The Atomic Energy Commission says no damage is expected from Friday's test. It is set for 6 a.m. in a cham ber 3,800 feet under Pahute Mesa at the Nevada Test Site 100 miles northwest. The AEC' said it will evacuate buildings near the site and close a few roads 'as a precautionary measure. If the test causes no damage, a spokesman said, even larger ones may follow. The Friday test has been termed essential to weapons development. ..................~. i ~ . ~ ...,.......1 .`....a..ti 4 i5i.: 1 ....~................. , ... , .:.Z%.........~..a.:~x~.,:....,..,.w.a............~.:..~...~.~.:.~. y aw . :..ai from Hanoi on the subject, dated April 11. That proposed Warsaw as a meeting location. The first North Vietnamese offer, on April 8, suggested Phnom Penh. The United States has objected to both Warsaw and Phnom Penh on various grounds. It wants the talks to be held in a neutral country where there are adequate communi cations and the parties involved in the Viet nam conflict have diplomatic accreditation. Paris Likely Spot The State Department spokesman's re marks appeared to be a follow-up to PreSident Johnson's statement at a diplomatic reception Tuesday—not further explained at the time— that the United States had been in touch with Hanoi again. The message was reportedly routed through Vientiane, the Laotian capi tal where both sides have embassies. Asian diplomatic soui-ces see Paris as the likeliest spot for the two sides to agree on. Neither the United States nor North Vietnam -has proposed the French capital as a site so far—and neither has rejected it. Delegates Not Bound To Support McCarthy PHILADELPHIA (AP) largest state. Backers of Sen. Eugene J. Mc- Because the votes for can- Carthy cheered his showing didates in the Pennsylvania pri yesterday in Pennsylvania's mary are not binding on con primary, but he can count on vention delegates, few dele only a handful of the state's gates campaigned as support -130 Democratic conven t ion ers of any one man. votes. McCarthy's name was the only one on Tuesday's primary ballot, and he far cutdistanced write-in candidates. "As a result of, the preferen tial primary, it's fairly obvious he is a great favorite. and a great vote getter," said Mi chael H. Malin, chairman of the Pennsylvania McCarthy for President organization. McCarthy, D-Minn., had no immediate comment. Votes Not Binding _ In the voting, McCarthy's to tals were 7-1 over a write-in votes for Sen. Robert F. Ken hedy, a Democrat from New York, and 10-1 over Vice Presi dent Hubert Humphrey. On the Republican side, former Vice President Richard Nixon forged a 3-1 write-in lead over New York Gov. Nelson Rocke feller. Only McCarthy and Ken nedy campaigned at all in Pennsylvania, the nation's third Shafer To Lead Delegation HARRISBURG (A') Gov. Shafer said yesterday he still planned to lead an 'un committed delegation to the Republican Na tional Convention' despite - the impressive showing of former Vice President Richard M. Nixon in the Pennsylvania presidential preference primary. "Dick Nixon did receive the most write in votes," Shafer acknowledged, but the gov ernor quickly noted that Nixon currently is the only announced candidate for the GOP presidential nomination. Shafer, speaking at a news conference, discounted the write-ins cast for Nixon and others as representing only "pocket of sup port" and not a general consensus of Re publicans statewide, Shafer's Plans Unchanged "I don't believe the result was par ticularly significant in the over-all situa tion," Shafer said, adding that his plans to be a "favorite son" in order to hold the dele gation together were not altered by the pri mary. Unofficial and incomplete returns Malin, claiming outright 15 delegate votes for McCarthy at Chicago, said contests involv ing about seven possible Mc- Carthy votes were still unde- cided. On the basis of Mc- Carthy's showing Tuesday, Ma lin said, he hdped to persuade some other Pennsylvania Dem ocratic delegates to back his man. State Democratic •head quarters in Harrisburg was compiling a list of ,delegates. Kennedy backers claimed no delegate votes, saying they had not campaigned for any:, GOP Nominates - Schweiker' Pennsylvania voters alio ap proved fiv e constitutional amendment questions. Sen. Jo seph S. Clark, a Democrat seeking his third term, won re nomination over U.S. Rep. John Dent. Dent was a winner, how ever, in his nomination for, a seventh House term. State law allows candidates to seek more than one office in a primary Governor Pla ' s 'Favorite Son' & State State Republicans Retain Control HARRISBURG House Republicans have retained political control of the chamber for the balance of 1968 with the task for the GOP leadership now one of making the slim majority work on major party issues. An apparent split with the minority Democrats in six special elections Tuesday boosted a Republican strength in the 203-man House to 104, only two votes more than the 102 it takes to pass legislation on straight party lines. But the six-month battle over Gov. Shafer's $266 million tax program last year, when the GOP also started out with a 104-99 margin, demonstrated the slight constitu:- tional adVantage is not necessarily workable. Two staunch Republican holdouts, coupled with ill nesses, absences and solid Democratic opposition, stymied the fiscal affairs of the Commonwealth for half a year. Voters Approve Constitution Proposals PHILADELPHIA Pennsylvania's voters, who other wise displayed widespread apathy toward the primary election, overwhelmingly approved Tuesday five proposals designed to modernize . the state's constitution. Gov. Shafer immediately called the election outcome the "most significant long-range achievement for Pennsyl vania in this century." Shafer, .who made constitutional revision the No. 1 goal of his administration when he took office 15 months ago, held a news conference in Harrisburg yesterday morn ing to discuss the primary. All five of the proposals for updating the state's 94- year-old basic charter were adopted by impressive mar gins although two of the questions faced stiff opposition in some areas. The governor also said that he would soon appoint a special commission to make recommendations on how the legislature should go about implementing the constitutional proposals that require legislation. 7::;...*;:i".ZEZzlimaZ3frAlMEL:'.:::::.Z.:.l.3r,LcElrariCiZZMME.r2=4"2=ZZ Guessing Game ---See Page 2 f , . s The diplomatic sources noted that Paris is accessible to representatiSes froth both the Communist and non-Communist countries in volved in the war. U.S. Allies Anxious McCloskey reaffirmed that at this stage the proposed meeting is to be only between U.S. and North Vietnamese emissaries. This is in line with the original announcement con cerning direct Washington-Hanoi contacts. U.S. allies have been anxious not to be left out of negotiations that may develop. On this question, the United States has assured its Vietnam partners that they will be con sulted and informed' on the initial talks and has indicated they will be at the conference table should discussions broaden into full fledged negotiations at a later stage. At the United Nations, Secretary-Gen eral U Thant appealed to the United, States and North Vietnam to agree on a site "without further delay." And he called for scaled-down fighting to set a more favorable stage for peace talks. election Republican voters nominated U.S. Reu. Richard S. Schwei ker, who was unopposed, to op pose Clark next November. Pennsylvania Democrats sent 162 delegates to the Chicago convention and they cast a total of 130 votes. Pennsylvania Republicans have 64 votes at their Miami Beach convention. Most Delegates Uncommitted The bulk of both delegations is now largely uncommitted. With 7,991 of 9,460 precincts reporting, McCarthy had 340,- 692, Kennedy 44,304, Humphrey 33;819, President Johnson 13,962 and former Gov. George Wal lace of .Alabama 10,656. Mc- Carthy backers had said they exected their candidate to poll about'2oo,ooo . votes. • On the Republican side, with 7,413 precincts. reporting, Nixon had 112, 145, Rockefeller 34,228, Gov. Ronald Reagan of Cali fornia 4,698, Wallace 5,180, Johnson 1,376 and Gov. Ray mond P. Shafer of Pennsyl vania 806. Shafer has said he wants to go to the convention as a favorite son presidential candidate to unify his party's delegation. showed Nixon holding a 3-to-1 margin over Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York. Nei ther man's name was on the ballot, and neither campaigned fo'• votes in Pennsyl vania. Shafer said he also did not believe the victory by U.S. Senator Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota in the presidential preference bal loting among Pennsylvania Democrats was significant, since McCarthy's was the only name on the ballot. Predicts Schweiker Win The governor expressed an opinion that the primary indicated U.S. Sen. Joseph S. Clark, DlPa., faced ah uphill battle in his bid for reelection in November. Although Clark won renomination easily, challenger John H. Dent polled nearly 47 per cent of the total vote. "It made it more evident than ever that the people of Pennsylvania want a change in the U.S. Senate insofar as Joe Clark is concerned," Shafer said. "Dick Schweiker unopposed for the GOP nomi nation will win a resounding victory in November." SEVEN CENTS