THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1968 wan'x..A right under your nose • "'" Simon-Garfunkel To Share i Spotlight With Marat/Sade Violence Erupts at Columbia By NANCY SPENCE Collegian Staff Writer "T" (for today) minus three days and counting! 'Til what?' 'Til Sunday, Simon and Garfunkel Day, what else? See you at Recreation Hall at the scheduled 8:30 p.m. blast-off time. To pass time away until that awaited hour, become a rock-climber, a spelunker, a race driver, or, maybe, a movie-star gazer. The word's out that Penn State now has its own asylum. You may feel like an in mate yourself, but the Marquis de Sade's got his own bunch at the Playhouse Theatre. He will unbar the doors for the last time tomorrow and Saturday evening. Persecu tion begins at 8 p.m. If Marat's assassination would make you sick, try something calmer like a nice bloodless lecture. The Penn State Baha'i Club will sponsor Mary K. Yntema. assis tant professor in the Department of Com puter Science on the question, "Where Do Science and Religion Meet?" That's also, at 8 Friday night, in Room 215 Hetzel Union Building. Social Problems At the same time in Eisenhower Chapel, the Newman Student Association will show the film "The Detached American." John J. Fleming (graduate-sociology-Randolph, Mass.) will conduct the fireside chat. Saturday's "a day in the life . . ." of the American Negro. Tickets for the presen tation of black life in this country are on sale for 75 cents (50 cents for Douglas As sociation memberS) on the ground floor HUB. It is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Music Building auditorium. Become an activist! Leave the HUB parking lot at 11:30 Saturday morning and AWS Backs Fraternity, Dorm Visitation Policy By NANCY SCHULTZ by the Senate Subcommittee on committee was formed to work Collegian Staff Writer Student Affairs. AWS will then with Foy in trying to find a vote on whether or not to ac- plausible solution to the admis- The Association of Women cept the conditions stated in sions problem. Students passed a resolution the bill. In other business. it was an last night to support a visits- flounced that AWS is currently Rena Foy,professor of edu tion policy now being preparedresearching the question of the cation, was' present at last by the Men's Residence Coun-possibility of off-campus living night's meeting an' asked the cil. for women students over the Senate for a discussion on her The policy is intended to age of 21. They are also dis that women . are be establish a University - w d e contention cussing extending apartment mg discriminated against for program for fraternity and permission for coeds and admission to the University. elim residence hall visitation privi-Mating the system of She stated that according to obtain leges. the present admissions policy ing off-campus permission for , The AWS Senate agreed to „ thereveryone above the standing of is no discrimination of support, such a policy only iff e irst term freshman. , an applicant as to religion certain 'Ftipulations were made Gayle Graziano, AWS presi- Color race, or creed. The sex' to allow individual student gov- ~ , is dent, announced that curfew applicant not mentioned ernments the right to establish °` an ... , will be extended to 2 a.m. this by the admissions office. their own visitation programs. weekend, and also on the week- When a definite bill is passed After a lengthy discussion, a ends of May 18, and June 1. rees To Indonesian Pro•osa U.S. OKs Floating Talks (Continued from rictge one) charter was a statement of aims of the World European locations previously proposed by War II allies. U.S. diplomats—"is acceptable to the United Water-borne meetings are sprinkled else- 13121311 _ "A neutral ship on a neutral sea would 1807 Russia's__ Alexander I and France's Na be a good meeting place," Christian told poleon Bonaparte concluded a treaty aboard a newsmen in words recalling some presidential river raft. U.S. Gen. Douglas MacArthur ac oratory aboard the U.S. carrier Enterprise cepted Japan's World War II surrender on last Veterans Day. the battleship Missouri. Sea Is Good Site Arrangements Not Made In that speech on the flight deck aboard If the U.S. and North Vietnamese emis the carrier off San Diego, Calif., President saries do wind up on an Indonesian warship, Johnson declared the U.S. search for peace it could be Soviet-built. Malik did not specify could extend even to a meeting ground at a particular vessel, but the large scale Mos sea a vast place which might help men cow arms deliveries to Indonesia during the realize the "ultimate smallness of their Sukarno era included a cruiser, sources have quarrel."said. "For us, the ward room could readily be Just how the arrangements fora ship s conference room," he said. "A neutral ship board Vietnam negotiation would be carried on a neutral sea would be as good a meeting out remained obscure. Johnson has listed place as any." four requirements for a site: Johnson recalled that President Frank- That it be in a neutral atmosphere, have lin D. Roosevelt and Britain's prime minister, adequate communications, with free access Winston Churchill, had met aboard the U.S. for news coverage by all nations, and access cruiser Augusta off Newfoundland in August by representatives of all interested govern -1941 to draw up the Atlantic Charter. The ments. - HANOVER CANNING COMPANY OF • STATE COLLEGE HANOVER BLOOMSBURG HAS EXCELLENT , SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITIES • IN THESE AREAS • STATE COLLEGE LEWISTOWN DANVILLE BLOOMSBURG BERWICK • HANOVER YORK and GETTYSBURG THOSE STUDENTS INTERESTED IN TOP HOURLY RATES, 2 DAYS OFF PER WEEK AND OVERTIME ARE INVITED TO TALK .WITH OUR EMPLOYMENT REPRESENTATIVE IN ROOM 214 OF -1 THE HETZEL nip! BUILDING FROM 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. _ ON MAY 2ND AND MAY 3RD. FOR INFORMATION CALL FRED V. HAWBECKER 364-1482 (8 A.M.-to 4 P.M.) - ' AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER gier3 and Paclzer3 Pennoylvania 6 2 11031 Quality. cycle that bike to Huntington (Juniata Col lege country.) Or, wait 'till after lunch at 1:30 to accompanying the Cycling Club to Franklynville. Tlie Penn State Outing Club event for Saturday is a class two canoe trip on the Red Moshanon Creek. Then, on Sunday, Donation Rocks do nates its rocks for the PSOC rock-climbing division. This Wondrous •Earth The same day, the cabin and trail di vision hikes to Logging Railroad. Hike along and find out 'where it is. Sign-up sheets for all PSOC events are at the HUB desk. Shippensburg has a grotto and that's where the Nittany Grotto is headed Sat urday and Sunday. If you're going, get your name on the HUB-desk sheet. J.F.K. comes to the rescue Saturday evening at 7:30 and -10 in Findlay Union Building. The movie is "F.T. 109" starring Cliff Robertson. So the North Halls resident, the same movie will be shown Friday at 9 p.m. in Warnock Union Building. The Cinema Scene The 35 cent HUB student film Saturday at 7 and 9:30 and Sunday at 6 and 8:30 is "The Rack." -.. • Gregory Peck and Sophia Loren steal the scene in "Arabesque" at 6:30 Sunday, in Waring Lounge. Then at 9:30 in Waring, Gamma Sigma Sigma, women's national service sorority, will sponsor a hootenany. If you couldn't get tickets for Simon and Garfunly?l, you might go, instead, to Eisenhower Chapel at 8 p.m. Sunday for a discussion entitled "This Summer's Urban Riots." Sounds like a riot? where through diplomatic history, too THE DAILY COLLEGIAN; UNIVERSIN PARK, PENNSYLVANIA NEW YORZ (.4 3 ) A handful of Columbiia University students fought police again yesterday on the strife-torn Ivy League campus, where nine days of disruptive demonstrations have brought the educational process to a standstill. The clash came on a day when Columbia's classrooms remained closed so that student mili tants, some of them bent on fomenting a campus strike, could cool off with "a day of reason and reflection." Reason fled, however, and reflection vanished during a street rally of students from other col leges outside the university gate at Armstrong Avenue and 116th Street. In support of Columbia strikers, they diSplayed a banner reading: "Strike against racist trustees, strike against racist police, and strike against. imperialist wars." Police, Students Clash Some students claimed a policeman's hat was tossed through the gate onto the campus and that Columbia students attacked him as he tried to re trieve it. However, the police version was that Columbia students on the edge of the street rally blocked the gate. Swinging nightsticks, about 30 police men charged a similar number of Columbia stu dents. _ At least three students suffered scalp lacera tions or cuts. Several were arrested and dragged away. It took police about 15 minutes to quell the group, some of whom climbed trees or onto build ing ledges, shouting "Cops must go!" Stony Brook Restive • Meanwhile, on the Stony Brook campus of the State University, far away on Long Island from the Morningside Heights campus of Columbia, 22 students, including four coeds, took over the busi ness office, after staging a sit-in in the school library. They demanded the withdrawal of Suffold County police from the campus, scene of a raid last January in which 33 arrests were made for posses sion and sale of marijuana and LSD. They also expressed sympathy for Columbia students. One of the Stony Brook demonstrators, Mark Stanglet, 18, a freshman, said: "We were told by Columbia students that the best way we can help them is to get sympathy going on our campus on our own issues." There have been no night classes at Columbia since April 23, and no day classes since April 25. Originally, it was planned to reopen class- Orchesis To Present Spring Dance Concert The annual spring concert of Orchesis will be present ted next weekend with performances scheduled for 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday in the dance studio of White Building. Free tickets for the program, sponsored by the Women's Recreation Association, will be available on Monday and Tuesday from 12:30 to 2 p.m. in the lobby of White. The program this year will have as its theme, "This Is What Is!" The themes of the dance numbers are based on the primitive, contemporary, and avant-garde periods and were choreographed by the members of Orchesis. Special music has been composed by Amado Santos- Ocampo and Steven T. Gorn and sets were designed by Richard P. Calabro, of East Chester, N.Y. . . • • . PITI/4stl•-••;.• • ••• • • 2: :••A'i . • • YOUR PENN STATE Cf-ASS RING 4' 4'7 , 6.':.v , *.•': b• ' II 11 Hi', - .';. -, --t. ‘ r:,,1i.,--&fi •, 1 21 I ._.,- - ~: _ .E, 7' , 'f:Z.7-1.6.. . - ' - ' 4.1 4 -. 4- • 216 E. College Ave. Campus Remains Closed rooms yesterday. However, 'senior faculty mem bers suggested they be kept closed for a day of Cooling -off conferences between the teaching staff and the students over issues arising in the campus crisis. ' Factions seeking the ouster of Columbia Pres ident Grayson Kirk have called a student strike. 7 - Tnwever,- the extent of its support among the 25,381-member student body remained undeter mined in the absence of classes. - Kirk became the target of Columbia dissidents after he called on the police Tuesday to break a week-long student sit-in in five university build ings. There were 720 arrests and an estimated 150 minor injuries during a 75-minute clash between demonstrators and police. Taking their cue from'the Columbia demon strators, two students of the Stony Brook, N.Y. Temple Group Protests PHILADELPHIA (AP )—Sev eral hundred sign-carrying stu dents temporarily disrupted the inauguration of Temple Univer sity President Paul R. Ander son yesterday when they walked out in the midst of the academic ceremony. The studenti called Anderson "the wrong man for the job", and protested a Board of Trus tees' decision to deny tenure to a professor. Last fall the professor re fused to use the traditional A-to-F grading system for his students and substituted a pass fail, grading system in his classes. The 1 650 guests at the cre mony, including Pennsylvania Gov. Shafer, waited in silence for about five minutes as the students filed out of Philadel phia's famed Academy of Mus- Sizzling over problems and complaints will hear? no one :.,v~ , : i'¢~ COOL IT! ic. Estimates of the size of the walkout group ranged from 100 to 400. In hi s address, Anderson called for a review by urban universities of their moral re sponsibility ir. solving social problems. He said in order for the university to meet complex urban problems, the academic community must pool its man power to develop programs to better relate the university to the urban scene. To do this, An derson said the university in America must launch massive research efforts designed to confront basic issues. The students who walked out continued picketing the inaugu ral outside the Academy of Music. Police said the demon strators were orderly and that no problems had arisen. The Sisters and Pledges of Delta Delta Delta Congratulate: Sally Diehl Sorority 'Woman of the Year Sponsored by Phi Sigma Kappa The Daily Collegian "HOT LINE" will soon be in operation to hear you complaints and problems concerning campus organizations, the University administration,' housing, the faculty, etc. Starting Monday, May 6 and every subsequent Monday and Wednesday between 8 and 11 p.m., our - "HOT LINE'? reporters will receive your calls (865-2881). Your complaints will be investigated and a reply will be printed in anew feature of The Daily Collegian "HOT LINE." The Daily Collegian "HOT LINE" State University began a sit-in at the school busi ness office, protesting the presence of county police on the campus. The police moved in after arresting 33 students on drug possession and sale charges in a January raid. Defying a threat of wholesale suspensions, pupils—mostly Negroes—renewed sit-in demon strations at four Cincinnati public high schools to protest disciplinary regu'ltions. Police arrested about 100 for ignoring on.ers to disper e, School Supt. Paul Miller already had announced that 1,400 pupils involved in sit-ins at six high schools Tuesday would be suspended at least 10 days. Judge Benjamin Schwartz of the Hamilton County Juvenile Court • backed Miller with an order placing all suspended pupils under house arrest, He said they could go out in public only if accompanied by a parent, and must be home by 9 p.m. Anderson became the fifth president of the 43.000 student university. He succeeded Mil lard E. Gladfelter. who retired last August to become the school's chancellor. The protestors said their feel ings were expresses in an edi torial in the student news paper, distrftted at the in augural. The editoriaT. said. in part. Anderson is 'the wrong man for the presidency because of his" out-dated ideas and his tactlessness. "The university can be seri ously retarded because of a man who has misunderstood the concept of university in the late 1960'5. a man who does not realize the inconsistencies between his words and his ac tions and a man who is tactless in his public statements." PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers