The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 24, 1969, Image 3

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    SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1969
Capp To Speak Tonight
By LAURA WERTHEIMER
Collegian. Staff Writer
which appear melodramatic on the sur
face. For this reason he relates well to
Al Capp, the cartoonist-creator of Li'l both university and local audiences.
Abner, humorist and social critic, will He worked for the Associated Press present th C e aP m P o 's vie s
p.eNcochVietnamese
Ever
speak at 9 tonight in Rec Hall. drawing stock cartoons, and later worked Called Me Nigger" in the Hetzel Union
CaPP's speech will be the third keynote as an assistant to Ham Fisher, creator of Building Assembly Hall. It will run con
address for Colloquy. According to Joe Palooka. tinuously all night. There will be informal
Michael Saks, Colloquy Committee mem- According to Capp, he "wasn't the discussion held at Colloquy Central (the
ber, the incongruity of having three dist- assistant-type kid." He finally left Fisher, HUB), and refreshments will b e
inct keynote addresses "is symbolic of moving to United Feature Syndicate. He available.
what Colloquy is all about. So long as sold his first Li'l Abner strip to them for Learning Experiment
knowledge is imperfect, so long as corn- $5O a week. It was an instantaneous suc- Saks, commenting on the scheduling of
rnunication is incomplete and ineffective, cess, soon appearing in 900 newspapers three keynote speakers for the Colloquy
it seems reasonable to expect that life and earning Capp $2OOO a week, experiment in out of classroom learning,
will contain cacophony and conflict." Monitor Contributor said, "We are aware that a keynote ad-
Social Critic Capp is also a contributor to NBC dress is, conventionally, a single speech
Capp has long been known as a radio's weekend Monitor program, and which sets the tone for a gathering, pro
humorist, and is acquiring a reputation lectures before community and pro- viding the Main ideas and guiding princi
on campus as a social critic and satirist. fessional audiences throughout the coun- pies of the entire program. So it may
His talk tonight is expected to include try. His fame as a lecturer is derived seem incongruous and certainly unusual
satirical comment on university life and from his ability to translate intellectual to have three keynoters, like asking an
society as a whole, as well as con- concepts into contemporary terms, often orchestra to tune up to three separate
ventional humorous entertainment. emphasizing the humor of situations and dissonant chords."
* * *
* * *
9 Colloquy Panel Discussions
,
Open in Campus Living Areas
Colloquy panel ' discussions
get underway today in living
areas around campus. Four
discussions are scheduled to
begin at 10:30 a.m., and five
will begin at 1:30 p.m.
Vladimir de Lissory,
associate professor of child
development and f a mily
relations, will moderate a
panel discussion on "Sexual
Freedom: The Old New
Morality" at 10:30 a.m. in Sim
mons Hall lounge. Th e
panelists are Clark Polak of
the Homosexual Law Reform
Society; Steven Robertson, a
student at Wilkes College,
Wilkes-Barre, Mrs. Della Roy,
co-author of "Honest Sex"; the
Rev. Mac Saddoris, religions
affairs associate; the Rev.
Alan Searle, pastor of the In
dependent Bible Church of
Altoona, an t i-sex education
crusader; Samuel Taylor,
assistant director of th e
Department of Community Af
fairs, New York City.
"The Scientific Conscience:
The New Necessity?" also will
be discussed at 10:30 a.m. in
the Warnock Union Building
lounge, The panel will be
moderated by Clarence Noll,
dean of the College of Science.
The panelists are Mary Alice
McWhinnie, professor o f
biological sciences at DePaul
University: Stanley Rosen,
professor of philo s op h y ;
Rosemary Schroer, associate
SUMMER STUDENTS
Estimated bills for the 1969 Summer Term,
due June 13, 1969, were mailed home May 23,
1969 to all preregistered students.
DELTA GAMMA
PROUDLY WELCOMES
THEIR NEW SISTERS
Adel Bon
Sharon Holgate Debbie Jacobson
Chris Littel
Carol McCauley Judy Meyer
Peggy Meyer
Sue Powell
Sandy Ritter
Lynne Schoonover Martha Taylor
Susie Weiss
: :
MONDAY Smorgasbord
At the PUB RESTAURANT
ikk(A'AJ:l644, zwie
SOUTH ATHERTON STREET, STATE COLLEGE, PA.
FRUIT SALAD TOMATO JUICE
RELISH TRAY (ask the waitress)
COLD SALADS FLAVORED ASPICS
TOSSED SALAD JELLO SALAD
HOT POTATO
ROAST ROUND OF BEEF HOT VEGETABLE.
Assorted PIES arid CAKES HOT MEAT, FISH, or
ICE CREAM or SHERBERT POULTRY
TRY UNCLE BILL'S DELICIOUS FRIED CHICKEN
V) CA A Taste. Treat for Gourmets $1 7 c
%)•1.0%, prepared by I .1 trl
per personchildren
Chef Steve Scourtics under 12
SPECIAL HOLIDAY INN BUFFETS
Wednesday
Chuckwagon Buffet
$3.50 per person
$1.50 children under 12
Phone 238-3001 for Reservations
Visit the Pub Bar before or after your dinner
I=LaauwiiwAi
3rd Colloquy Keynote Address
Capp was born in New Haven, Conn. His
family was poor, and Capp was expelled
from three art schools for non-payment
of tuition.
professor o f biochemistry;
Richard Schein, assistant dean
of the College of Science: Vic
tor Yannaconne, legal counsel
for the Environmental Defense
Fund.
'Politics '69'
John Muntone, associate pro
fessor of human development,
will moderate "Politics '69:
The Machined Democracy" at
10:30 a.m. in the Findlay
Union Building lounge. The
panelists arc Donald Miller of
the All American Conference
to Combat Communism; Tom
Richdale, former chairman of
Students for a Democratic
Society; Doug Cooper, former
chairman of Young Americans
for Freedom; Murrey
Rothbard, anarchist a n d
laissez-faire economist; Sen.
William Sessler; Richard
Tomsu, of the Philadelphia
Draft Resistance.
"The Draft: Complicity or
Resistance? The Alternatives"
will be discussed at 10:30 a.m.
in the Pollock Union Building
lounge. It will be moderated by
Paul Holtzman, professor of
speech. The panelists are
Thompson Bradley, of the
National Mobilization to Resist
the Draft: Thomas Cronin, a
conscientious objector; Fred
Neufield, a Columbia
University activist; Lt. Col.
Walter Pledger, assistant pro
lessor of military science;
William Sennett, Pennsylvania
Attorney General; and Robert
Ellen Goldsmith
Linda B. Lively
Sue Pierce
Patti Wesley
Friday
Fish Luau
$2.50 per perscin
$1.25 children under 12
Young, an assistant to the A bazaar will be held on the
State Senate Appropriations Hetzel Union Building lawn at
Committee. 3:30 p.m. Muhammed Ali is
Five panels will meet at 1:30 expected to be there to con
p.m. in Waring lounge. Robert verse with students. Refresh-1
Scannell, associate dean of the ments will be available for ,
College of Health' and Physical guests, students and partici-
Education, will moderate "Stu- pants. LW
dent Unrest: Have Students
Gone Too Far or Haven't
Universities Gone Far
l
Enough?" On the panel are
Robert Black, former presi
dent of the student government
of the University of California
at Davis; Rev. Clayton Fox,
former Ku Klux Klan member,
and former candidate for State ]
senate; Bruce Gerand, San
Francisco State activist :I
Chauncy Lang, mayor of State'
College; Raymond Murphy, ,
dean of Student Af I air s ;j
Rosemary Schraer, assistant!
professor o f biochemistry;
Terry Watson, President of the
U.S. Youth Council.
Afternoon Panels
"Right and Left: Magnetism
at the Poles" will be held in
McElwain Hall lounge. It will;
be moderated by Carrol C. Ar
nold, professor of speech. The
other afternoon panels are:
"Religion: If You Can't Trust,
God Who Can You Trust?" in
North Halls, "Law and Order:
The Paper Issue" in Pollock
Area, "Industry. Military and
the World... The Money Game"
in East Halls.
Pennsylvania State University
Symphonic Wind Ensemble
by
SMITH TOULSON
Horn Soloist
Stephen Seiffert
•••• ..,..
4. ; the music of
I: -1: Mozart, Hoist, Dello Joio, Bernstein, Creston
..- .1.
3:30 P.M. Schwab Auditorium
Sunday, May 25 Admission Free
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
STA'RLITE
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7 War Veteran Steals
Plane from England
LONDON (AP) A young U.S. Air Force mechanic, a
Vietnam medal winner, is presumed lost at sea after stealing
a four-engine Cl3O Hercules troop transport from its English
base yesterday and heading over the Atlantic, apparently in a
solo attempt to fly home.
His last contact was a radiotelephone conversation with
his wife. Mary Ann, in Poquoson, Va., reporting he was having
trouble two hours after take-off.
The U.S. 3rd Air Force said Sgt. Paul A. Meyer, 23, a
ground crew chief, took off at 5:10 a.m.-12:10 a.m., EDT from
the Mildenhall Air Base 65 miles northeast of London.
A few hours earlier, Meyer had been put to bed drunk
by his first sergeant, an Air Force spokesman reported.
Meyer flew the 52.3 million turbo-prop through the British
radar track in the English Channel to a point north of Cher
bourg. France. on a course that would have taken him out ov
er the Atlantic. Then radar contact was lost.
U.S. and Royal Air Force jets scrambled after him but
failed to pick up his trail. A search was concentrated north of
Cherbourg.
Meyer contacted the Air Force on the plane's radio shortly
after leaving Mildenhall and requested the telephone hook-up
with his wife in Virginia, where she lives with their three
children.
, .
Feat. Time NOW
1:30-3:30-5:30 CINEMA I
PLAYING
7:30-9:30 237;,657
e. l llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll - %
The Brothers of
Alpha Chi Sigma
honor their Spring '69
Pledge Class with
a formal
Saturday, May 24 at
No Chapter
Sorry, Closed
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PAGE THREE
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