IDA Teach-In Since most students are relatively uninformed about University involve ment with the Institute for Defense Anaylses, tomorrow's teach-in will serve a useful purpose. The talks by the three Columbia University students should prove espe cially interesting. Ed Robinson, who. re-- signed Monday as head of the Columbia Strike Committee, Steve Halliwell. 'a member of the Committee, and Mike Clare, a member of the Columbia IDA investigative committee will all speak at the teach-in. All are members of the Columbia chapter of Students for a Democratic Society, . The problem with all this, however, is that only one side will be presented. In addition to the Columbia students, James Petras, professor of political sci ence at they University and'Joe Schultz, a student, will speak. All five teach-in "teachers" are opposed to University in volvement with IDA. This is to be expected since the or ganizers of the event are also petitioning Welcome Rocky The Young Republicans are to be congratulated for arranging today's visit of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller to the University. With the three major television networks and many newspapers repre sented here today, Rockefeller's visit will receive nationwide attention. A large turnout of students and faculty— hopefully 10.000 to 15,000—may be all that is needed to inspire more candidates to touch down in University Park. We therefore urge all to abandon the classrooms and make their way to the HUB lawn. Tilt Eittilli Tn.ltertiatt 62 Years of Editorial Freedom • Published Tuesday through Saturday during the Fall, Winter and Spring Terms, and Thursday during the Summer Term, by students of The Pennsylvania State University. Second class postage paid al State College, Pa. 11101. Circulation: 12,500. Mail Subscription Price: 511.50 a year Malting Address Box 451, State Cones*, Pa. 16801 Editorial and Business Office Basement et Sackett (North End) Phone 11652331 Business office hours: Monday through Friday, f:3O a.m. to 4 p.m PAUL J. LEVINE Editor William Epstein Managing Editor Judy Rife, City Editor; Ronald Kolb, Sports Editor; Don McKee., Assistant Sports Editor; Richard Ravin. Gerry Hamilton, Kathy Litwak, Copy Editors; Dan Rodgers, Photography Editor; Pierre Bellicini, Assistant Photography Editor; Phyllis Ross, Personnel Director - Office Manager; Pat Gurosky, Kitty Philhin, Dennis Stimeling, Senior Reporters; Elliot Abrams, Weather Reporter. Committee en Accuracy and Fair Play: Charles Brown, Faith *annoy, Harvey I Clemson. PAGE TWO WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 1968 Spring Tlieeh 68 ct , . t z'. z z .T. - Editorial Opinion the University to/ "expose" IDA work at Penn State and "sever" its ties with the research group. But the educational as pects of the teach-in would be greatly enhanced if speakers of the opposite persuasion would give their views. As it stands now, the. open-minded student may be repulsed by the steady stream of anti-IDA. anti-Administra tion propaganda, which is sure to echo across Old Main Lawn. The speakers are likely to overlook some of the facts as they assail the evils of IDA. It is in the interest of University students to know some of the pertinent data which may be conveniently forgot ten, such as: • Thereds no IDA work going on at University, Park according to the Ad ministration. Some members of the University faculty do serve as consul tants to IDA's Jason Division, a part time group which meets mostly in the summer. • The University receives no money for its affiliation membership in IDA. • e IDA is actually a rather small part of the defense •effort. In 1967, IDA operated on a budget of less than $l5 million. • IDA was founded in 1956 strictly as a defense mechanism. Although its detractors claim it perpetrates every thing from insidious imperialism in Latin America, to biological warfare in Asia, it serves mainly as a protective "think tank." IDA's function,is to guard against the nation being scientifically unprepared for war. Those who remem ber the chaos among scientists in the beginning of World War II know the importance of "think tank" readiness. The second World War was nearly over when U. S. brainpower finally began to mesh. With tomorrow's teach-in only ex pressing the anti-IDA line, students would do well to keep these points•in mind. —P.J.L. Successor to The Free Lance, est. 2887 Member o f AssOciatedPres: .OMO- , Carnival Headquarters Tent Carnival Grounds 5:00 P.M. Wednesday Gymkhana and Fun Ratty Saturday 1:30 P.M. Parking Lot 80 ?7ZI9►/ WILLIAM FOWLER Business Manager Michael S. Saulll Editorial Editor Spring. Weeh Meeting BERRY'S WORLD "I'm voting for the man who PAYS THE MOST for his nomination!" Collegian Invites Faculty Writers University faculty are In viten to submit articles to Col tegian's "Faculty Forum." Columns of opinion from all men hers of the faculty are welcome. The articles should be type ((.4 90ri• 11' eV' •-..,_ .---,-,-----... '---D- Mad-Hatters Judging Wednesday 7:30 P.M. Rec Hall Spring Week Carnival "What Would. Have Happened If" Carnival Grounds Saturday 2-12 P.M. (Monday; May 20th Carnival fiaindate) - 6Utid4 written and triple-spaced and should not exceed 75 lines in length. Interested f acuity should bring their articles to Collegian office, 20 Sackett Building. 4110 A 4 tt, Spring liAleet 68 Spring Week '6B Hilarious History . • - Special Treatment Webhg . TO THE EDITOR: I am proud to attend a University which admits no one on the basis of religion or color. As an agency of public education, the only fair policy a slate uni versity can -follow is that of admitting ap plicants solely on the basis of academic qualifications. , Admission authorities should not be coerced into discriminating against white students by making' special exceptions for poorly qualified black students. This would violate the very rights of equality which ,the Negro holds so dearly. The other demands made by the Negro students should also be considered in this light. If University library officials insisted on. the separation of black and white authors for any reason, blacks would protest. Yet blacks are now urging, that a section of Pattee be devoted exclusively to black au thors. Not only do they ask special treatment in' admission procedures, init also in the library and on athletic teams. There has been no evidence whatsoever that the University discriminates against black athletes. If they have the ability, they make the team (Pro viding, of course, that they have the initial ability to be admitted here in the first place). I suggest that the Douglas Association students think twice about the demands they are making for special -treatment. The changes they desire are changes that cannot be made in the University, but instead in the whole position of Negroes in our society. Special treatment here is not the answer. Name Withheld by Request How About ltalian Power? I strongly support the 100 or so Negroes who confronted Charles L. Lewis Monday to voice their, demands for equality. In fact I think more students should have equal respect for their partipilar, pardon the ex pression, "clique." In view of this belief I would like to make the following demands of Old Main: 1. More Italian undergraduates 2. That a building be named after and dedicated to Garibaldi, Italian patriot and general _ 3. That a Garibaldi scholarship fund be established 4. That a course in Italian history be made a permanent part of the curriculum 5. More Italian professors 6. More Italian graduate students 7. That a section 'of Pattee Library be devoted exclusively to Italian authors 8., Reevaluation of the athletic recruiting program with regard to Italian students 9. More Italian athletes 10. Italian coaches for the athletic teams • 11. More Italian literature offered in the University's English course 12. The introduction of an Italian cul ture study program Seriously, can anyone see my point? Tony Talotta '69 " Whites Paranoid on Racism TO THE EDITOR: The Negro was going 50/mph while the Whitey ahead of him was going 40/mph. Therefore, to maintain his pace, the Negro had to accelerate and pass the White man. Yes, we whites were affected by the "Black Demands." As a stratified group we each responded to the article according to our social "bags". Some of us consciously responded reticently to avoid any inklings of prejudices. Some of us agreed it was about time the Negroes were demanding their rights, although the degree of honest enthusi asm varied. - Some of us were resentful and illustrated freely our "unhypocritical racism". Most of presents Semi-Finals Thursday 2:30 P.M. Finals M. C. Dr. Lattman wiii crown Miss Penn .State , guiddi Spring Met He-Man Sunday 1:30 P.M. , - Beaver Stadium Awards Night Tuesday, May 21 7:30 P.M. • Rec Hall us chose the . acceptible Means of responding —ambivalently by subtle; jesting; digs:Subtle digs are of course in jest and rarely criticized for containing deep-rooted resentment! Yes, yes, we all laughed at _Nyman Schwartz's and Walter Wononski's, and Tim othy 11 , 1cPatrick's and Antonio Pazerio's re sponse to the black demands. We all laughed at how each stratified, group would go about. demanding recog: nition on the Penn State campus. Yes, we whites just laughed and subtly revealed how ethnically, racially, and culturally we were conscious and egocentric. We all laughed that we had to discriminate amonge groups and compare before we could "really" interact. And we all laughed that we were aware of our biases, yet we still operated according ly. We laughed at the myth "treat all men equal". One had to be blind, deaf, and un socialized to ever accomplish that. Yes, we all laugh • . . some out of fear, resentment, or just ambivalence to the reality that the blacks are going to maintain their pace and that they will pass the white man even if he pleads that, "he hears a different drummer." When we were tired of laughing we began theorizing: "See. .it is like this . . . the blacks - up here havee a middleclass hang-up. Now they _don't want to be- Uncle Tom . . . so they identify with the Harlem tactic." Really, it is plain to' see that the blacks want black power and black recognition ... they want to be discriminated from us . . . they want to feel persecuted. They don't want white help or white postulates to "their problem", but supposedly "we" are their problem. Oh . they just want to use the great defense mechanism . . the loud cry . . DISCRIMINATION. Hmmm . ...maybe when the whites are tired of subtle jesting and theorizing and the blacks are willing to see how paranoid he has made the white man about racism, there will be fewer speed tickets and traffic violations. Then again, maybe ."gray matter" can not tone down black and white emotion and therefore we must construct • a four-lane highway and unanimously elect Jim Crow for President! Whites Make Demands 'ln regard to the outlandish demands imposed on The Pennsylvania' State Uni versity by the "contaminated," we feel an equal right to impose demands of our own. They are as follows: •We want less black undergraduates. Presently there are about 200 black students attending the University. By the fall of '6B we want this number decreased to 100, and by the following fall we want zero per cent of the undergrad population to be black. •We wish a building to be dedicated and named after the late and great Lurleen Wallace. eWe want a Gov. Wallace scholarship fund established. sWe want all courses in Negro History to be discontinued, because we may be "con taminated". •We want no black professors or black grad students because we may be "contami nated": •We want a section in Pattee Library devoted exclusively to Polish authors. , •We want all athletes and coaches evaluated with regard to their athletic and 'academic - merit. é Oril3# good literature should' be offered in the 'University's English courses. • The introduction of a Guam Island cul ture study program.' If these demands are not met, we will riot, seige 'and. loot as .is -the black custom. Gus Schuller '69 Jim Kohl '6B • Rec Hall --Auidd4 Lairde Silver '69 "'t e... c 4 OZI %kt ,