End to Degree Factory? THE STAFF OF the Yale student newspaper recently published , a guide book for prospective college students. It included tips on what to expect for schools of all sizes across the nation and, while it cited Penn State for having an extensive "down home" system of com monwealth campuses, another notation was less flattering. The guidebook, in the very first paragraph in the section on dear Old State, charged that many students would find that education here is something like a degree factory. GREAT. NOW HIGH school stu dents across the country can get at least one opinion of what might be wrong with learning here. But for the first time ever, things are taking a turn in the opposite direction. Beside the thousands of courses computer - catalogued and offered every term, the Free University is offering 17 non-credit, non-mandatory, non-graded, non-competitive courses. What is special' about Free U's Another By COMMANDER ALI Collegian Columnist The Dick Gregory speech-interview at Juniata College will be continued next week. Today, the Census Bureau will serve .as a , vent for my inner most frustrations. Those bureaucratic bastards de serve the "gross malcontempt of the decade" award. Those bumbling incompetents missed five million people in the '6O census. Last year, they just got around to admitting missing these five million people. I'm quite sure the figures are muffed. I wonder how many people they really missed. They'll make up for it somehow, some decade. For the record, two million of those five mil lion were black. The other three comprised various ethnic and minority groups, such as Puerto Ricans, Mexican-Americans, Orientals and a few over looked poor whites. Curious as to where I got my figures? I'll list a few of my sources for all you doubting Thomases. Jet magazine sometime in the spring of '69 and TV 10 News (Philadelphia) inter view March 25 with black director of the Phila delphia area Census Bureau. The reason the Philadelphia Census Bureau Chief gave for the undercount was: "In 1960 there were fewer members of various ethnic and mi nority groups taking the census. Since most of the Census takers were white they were afraid to enter poorer districts of the city." If they were afraid to go in the ghetto then why did they become census takers in the first place? This goes to show you that .the cycloptic bureaucratic govern ment will hire almost any "concerned" dimwit to perform important tasks. Matt Subscription Price: 512.00 a year Mailing Address Boa 467 State Celle... Pa. 16501 Editorial and Business Office Basement of Sackett (North End) Phone 865.2531 Business office hours: Monday through Friday. 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. 'he. Associated Press JAMES R. DORRIS • Editor Published Tuesday through Saturday during the Fall, Winter and Spring Terms, and • Thursday. during the Summer Term, by ,students at The Pennsylvania State University. Second class postage paid at State College, Pa. 16801. Circulation: MOW. Baird of Editors: Managing Editor. Glenn Kranzley; Editorial Editor, Allan Yoder; City Editor, David Nestor; Assistant City Editors, Marc Klein, Pat Gurosky; Copy Ediors, Sandy Bazonis, Pat Dyblie, Rena Rosenson; Sports Editor, Dan Donovan; Senior Reporters, Rob McHugh, Denise Bowman, Larry Relbstoin, Bill Broadwater, Jett Becker, Bob Dixon and Jay Finegan; Weather Reporter, Billy Williams. Opinions expressed by the editors and ttaff Ministration. 'faculty, or student body. Following is a list of the emotive officers of Collegian. Inc., the publisher of The Daily Collegian: Gerald G. Eggert, Pres. Teresa A. Dario, Vice Pros. Mn. Donna S. Clemson, Exec. Sec 110 Sparks Bldg. 406 Packer Hall 20 Sackett Bldg. • University Park. Pa. University Park, Pa. University Park, Pa. PAGE TWO Dr. Chadwick Hansen - will speak on and play examples of • ' 'Early Recorded Black Music' at the Folklore Society Meeting, 7 p.m. Sunday, April 5 in 214 HUB —ALL ARE INVITED— .' lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIis %ink° Corporation located across from South Halls NOW RENTING New, modern all-electric apartments s Efficiencies • • Semi one-bedrooms • One- and two-bedrooms Also modern all-electric single rooms Males Only niumullummitimitillinitunnimilumuittituniumminummiliutionmilmitiwur.. Representatives from South Windsor, Connecticut, will be REC = RUITING teachers on campus APRIL 13. 1970 from 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. Please contact State College Placement Service to make an appointment. Salary: Openings: South' Witidioe,' COrinecticut 8 miles from Hartford, 15 minutes driving time. Editorial Opinion Successor to The Free Lance, eat. 1887 Tim Elailp Toltratan rs of Editorial Freedom Member of W-QWK fm/ninety-seven THE PROGRESSIVE ONE TEACH IN CONNECTICUT BA $7300. Up; MA $7BOO. Up; 6th Year $B3OO. Up. Spring Term offerings is that the re quirements imposed by even the most liberally-administered courses are gone. Free U type ledrning doesn't depend on how fast a student soaks up his assign ment, term paper or exam dosage in a scanty 10-week term. Instead, its educa tional program hinges only on the stu dent's ability to forget the red tape and learn what he. wants to. The College of The Liberal Arts' 493 series was a baby step toward a more formal drive for educational reform with its initiation of topics focused on current student interests. But Free U offers a broader, more exchange-oriented class with none of the assembly-line routine. SAN FRANCISCO STATE Univer sity, originator of the free university concept six years ago, has proved stu dents will support such a program. The overwhelming registration figures for the University's Free U program indicate Penn State students are now ready and have the same chance to get a new look at what learning here could be. The U. S. Census Bur Facet of Racist America Just today a friend mentioned that his mother was a census taker in '6O. He mentioned how some census takers would stop at the corner store and take an estimate or go into an apart ment building, count the mailboxes and make an "accurate" estimate. Returning to my sources: Walter Cronkite's CBS Evening News of March 27; The MIT study estimate of 50 million about two years ago; Bobby Kennedy's Freudian slip of 30 million about eight years ago. Sounds a little inconsistent, doesn't it? Those are "reliable" white sources, not my cere brum's. My figures are drastically different from those of that damn, racist Census Bureau. I see the miscount as a part of the indelibly etched racism within the American System. I contend that 50 million black Americans are residing in the US. From 1790 to 1870 blacks weren't counted in the census, since we weren't considered citizens or even human beings. Slaves were considered as property, and three-fifths hu man under the Constitution. Therefore, their numbers were estimated on slave plantations. No great painstaking "care" was made to count them as in 1960. After 1808, four million more were smuggled into the country, that ending around 1860. For the record,'ls million Africans lost their lives on the "pleasure cruise" over. If the Federal Government will admit to missing two million blacks in '6O, then how many were missed in '5O, '4O, '3O on back. The old folks tell me we've had that proverbial figure of 20 million since '5O. I can remember only 20 mil lion reported "Negroes" for my entire 12 years in school. Rather odd, don't you think? I'm not going to freak out supporting my contentions to CHRIS R. DUNLAP Business Manager Daily Collegian are not necessarily those of the University Ad. FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1970 MEYERS' Baßestraurant 210.214 W. College Ave. Downtown State College NOW , SERVING BREAKFAST 6:30 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. Kitchen will remain open till half-past midnight Bar Opens at 11:00 A.M. Primary Grades K• 3 Intermediate Grades --;.- 4-6 Physical Education, (Girls); Guidance Counselor; Remedial Reading: Science (Biological back grounp Social Studies; English. ; Junio; High: Remedial Reading; Librarian; English; Mathematics (Algebra);'Science' (Earth Science); Social Studies. " High School: Daily Collegian Letter Policy The Daily Alregian wel- Collegian office, 20 Sackett, in comes comments on news cov- person so proper i"entification erage, editorial policy, and of the writer can be made, al campus or ntm-campus affairs. though names will be withheld Letters must be typewritten, by request. If letters are re double-spaced, signed by no ceived by mail, Collegian will more than two person., and no contact the signer for verifi longer than 31, lines. Students' cation. The Collegan reserves letters should include name, the right to 'airly select, edit tem and major of the writer. and condense all lette^s. Tte3 should L, brought to the monday and friday nights cofCI 'til 9 p.m. Chdir237-6612 311 west beaver ave. It's going to be mighty hard to fill Eric's shoes ... you white folks. If you can go around making bland estimates, so can I. Only my estimates hold a little more weight. since I'm a member of Black Masses. I reinterate my figure of 50 million black folks here in America. I've read white's rate of multiplication—it's seven per cent. The black rate is almost double that at 13.6 per cent. We have a higher fertility rate because the pill isn't as firmly entrenched in our communities as white suburbia. Not that I'm endorsing having a dozen kids unable to support them. Statistics show whites are trying to main tain having 2.5 kids. Over half the black nation in North American is under 30. This is one explanation of the upsurge of Planned Parenthood Centers in the ghetto. Planned Parenthood Centers are nice names for "Genocide Clinics." These "Genocide Clinics" have also sprung up in other non-white districts of the city. Their essential purpose is to limit non-white America's population. Those of us who can't be eliminated in that manner they attempt "mental genocide" on in these hallowed halls of Penn State. Some are disabled spiritually with "medicines" like dope and booze. Others are done away with physically in such "far away exotic" places over the pond, like Vietnam. This completes the racist American 360 degree genocide cycle. One might ask how does mental. spiritual and physical geno cide relate to the Census? This is a part of the American racist "master plan." Once you can accurately total the numbers of various sub-cultures, you can devise more effec tive means to eliminate them. You right-wing swingers can open the concentration campus, start more Vietnams, give our women the pill and really get your thrills. •Over the vacation my parents received a census form. It said not to include students at tending college and not residing at home. They will receive Census forms at their respective resi dences. At the end of Winter Terni - I changed my residence. I checked my old mailbox this morn ing, and have yet to receive a census form. I'm not going to lose any sleep behind those inade quate census takers. So I guess that doesn't make me an April fool. It does make me a non-existent member of an "invincible" population . . "calling all non-existing members of an 'invincible' popula tion." Is the black population increasing, decreas ing or maintaining an unchangeable population? In other words, I existed in 1960 but don't exist in 1970, according to the "friendly" facist Census Bureau. That's one helluva' paradox to be caught up in. An undercount can keep needed poverty funds out of the black community; the black communi ties are predominantly located in the urban areas; the cities are losing possible funds because of past undercounting. The new Census mailing system was devised to better count so-called minority (non-white) groups. Why else would they change methods in midstream if their older methods were so damn "accurate"? now open SOUNDS UNLIMITED at the UUB JAMMY FRIDAY—=APRIL 3 9 P.M. to 12 Midnight HUB Ballroom University Union Board Lath Red Rush of Wine By BILL MOHAN Collegian Columnist Guy went into his small footlqcker at the end of the bed and pulled out a - bottle of dark red wine. He sat down at the table in the "kitchen" section of his single room. There's bad light in the room, gas station men's room light, sort of a polluted yellow. Outside it is Saturday night at eight o'clock, almost dark, it - should be darl- but Guy persistei ly sees a pink ai white streak in tl The early spri is deceptively co as, cold EEMZO parts of the wint but the sun shim during the day ar so you go out wit out a coat at nigi. The shades in Guy' room are draw• and kind of sy bolize his wanii, no parts of tIL outside. ' He holds the bottle like a test tube. He turns it slowly around, observing the red green wrinkles in the thick-blown glass. The label, which is tissue paper with an inscrip tion, is crusty and peeling. Guy stares at the inscription, ascertaining once again that the signature on the bottle is that of Napoleon I. He had paid five thousand dollars at a New York auction for this wine. And, with out the radio on or the record player play ing, Without distraction, he was going to drink it tonight.. "The ultimate flattery is to drink one hundred and sixty five year old wine by oneself," he recited as he maneuvered the brittle cork with his thumbs. The ex `Z': Biased Achievement By MARC TRACHTMAN Collegian Film. Critic The film "Z" is a superior film. It is a political film and it is a biased film, but con trary to a recently published review, "1" is also an artistic achievement. As far as I understand, art is the ex pression of life, This expression may be figurative or it may be literal and unadorned, as "Z" is. However, to deny a film credit as an artistic work simply because it lacks the frills of Hollywood scriptwriters is the height of ar rogance. Besides, with the clamor for "relevance" in all things today what could be more relevant to real-life people than real-life situations? And how can a political film be called "ter ribly dishonest?" Biased, yes; stilted, yes; but never dishonest. Indeed, the people who made the film are totally committed to their cause, making their viewpoint a necessarily slanted one. Sure. "Z" tries to win audiences to its side, but then the makers think they are right. To expect an objective, detailed analysis of the historical events behind the film (such as info on the coup d'etat or the CIA) is to expect a CBS news film. "Z" is not unbiased and does not pretend to be, as proven by the marvelous opening notice that all similarity to real events is intended. This remark proves the film is pretending to be neither "pseudo-documentary" or objective and also proves that the film is not "terribly dishonest." As for relying on the viewers' knowledge of past events, it seems that for once a film has been made which assumes some degree of in telligence on the part of the viewer and does not spoon-feed every bit of information to the audience. I, for one, am pleased that the film respects its audience, proving that this film was NOT made for the masses of John Wayne addicts who go to films in order not to think. I also claim there are several "living, breathing characters" within the film. Pro- Grievance Policy Members of the University community wishing to file formal grievances over news and editorial content of The Collegian should address correspondence to The Daily Collegian's Committee on Accuracy and Fair Play, in care of the executive secretary of Collegian Inc., publisher of The Daily Collegian. Mrs. Donna S. Clemson 20 Sackett Bldg. University Park, Pa. 16802 plosion was somewhat gentle; a white cloud of liquid slowly curled from the bottle's narrow neck. He would get a good head on. Guy was a fairly skinny kid, wearing tan pants and•a burgundy crew-neck sweater as he took down the fist• gulp. It was very sweet, ,and tickled as the bubbles burst on his lips. He picked up today's Washington Post, then pushed it away when he remem bered what he was drinking. He . took an extra reverent swig. The bottle was half done. "The days of Napoleon," Guy thought half-jokingly, "are being played out in my stomach." He picked up the bottle and went to the window, drew up the shade and sat on the bed. It was definitely dark now. Lights and cars were seen vacantly passing, voices like silverware, absently heard. The red rush of wine in his head made everything inscru tably humorous. The bottle being finished was humorous. He glowed. So now Guy put on his raincoat for the damp night air, turned out the light and left his room. He, plowed up through the traffic of gravity all the way to the jammY, where the band was playing loudly. It seemed like a lot of people were coming' up and saying "Alleluia" to him as he stood by the drinking fountain fumbling his change. - MOHAN Inside, the hall was dark, and swarming with dancers and every kind of gaper im aginable. A black hustler and a blonde chick were dancing in a corner, Guy could hear the cat's high-pitched dandy voice above the music. The usual settlers were there: high school kids, the secretaries, the hard up hip pies who came stoned. "There's •no sense in trying to pick up a girl," Guy mused in the midst 'of mono lithic bother. How could he have ever en tertained the thought? With hands in pock ets, he turned and left, and walked until he was in the parking lot, where he had to piss. Good-bye Napoleon. bably the most impressive is the government investigator who slowly uncovers the corruption within official circles. This character, although hindered as all others are by subtitles, does come through as an honest man with scruples (in fact, it is so stated in the dialogue) who must suddenly decide between honesty to himself or self-corruption. His decision is the obvious one, but follows the development of the character smoothly and surprises no one. Yves Montand as the all important "doc tor" also has a strong honesty of character. He should not need to explain why he loves peace or why he continues to fight for peace. It Is part of his character and is reflected in his ac tions and speeches. Also, several of the "top brass" who ap pear sparsely throughout the film reflect a slightly stereotyped but still amusingly adept presentation of doddering, simple-minded of ficials, particularly in a scene near the end of the film in which they are all indicted for con spiracy and murder. Finally, I must defend Mikis Theodorakis' musical score. For once this composer has created a background that fits neatly into the film. There is no "ear-pounding" noise, but rather a unique rhythmic composition to un derscore a fight on the back of a pick-up truck and a brilliantly satirical march for that scene where the officials are presented with their in dictments. It is unquestionably Theodorakis' best score and considering his emotional at tachment to the story (he is currently in exile from Greece and his music is banned) it is quite understandable. I realize that no one film can appeal to everyone, but "Z" is the only film I have ever seen three times, and I wanted to applaud at the end each time. I only wish the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences had the guts to give the film the Oscars it was nominated for, including the double-best-picture-of-the year awards for best foreign film and best pic ture of the year. "Z" is alive.