Editorial opinion: Many of you now are com pleting your first term, at the University, your first experience with college life. As with most summers at' the University, it has been a relatively quiet term and unrepresentative of the remainder of the year. Prepare yourself for fall. As freshmen, many, of you will find yourself in East Halls, faced with the dismal prospect of treking across campus for a first period in Willard. And if you have a sixth period, it will be a race to make it back to the dorm in time for dinner. With the coming of fall, the student population at the University will more than double and once again provide a normal ratio of upper classmen to fresh men. Fall. Term will also.bring the return of football games and one of the few times you’ll be thankful you're living in East you'll be Advising program provides safeguards The University Faculty Senate has recognized the need for more effective advising programs to aid students. On Tuesday the Senate voted to accept the recommendations of a report by the Senate Sub committee on Advising. Each college now must draw up its own advising plan subject to minimum specifications set by' the sub committee. The new standards provide excellent safeguards to ensure that students are kept informed of pertinent regulations and fully understand their options. Each freshman will be assigned a trained adviser faculty, professional, graduate, or senior undergraduate to plan an academic program and to register. Study abroad: mixed conclusions 5y TERESA VILLA of the Collegian Staff I remember Dagobert de -levie telling us back in early March that studying in Europe would be -the most amazing educational experience of our lives. He was right. I also remember, thinking that living with a Spanish family for 14 weeks in Salamanca, Spain certainly would be different, but it couldn't teach me more than 10 whole terms at Penn State. I was Nothing can beat the actual ex perience of living there, in Europe, that is. Me had to speak'Spamsh, we had to get used to drinking-'wine (my favorite part), we had to get used to Spanish men bothering us, to not taking showers more than once a week, and all those other European “inconveniences” you hear about. But they were easy to get used to and I learned other things that are hard to explain. • Once I was watching television with my Spanish family when Watergate news came on. After my Spanish father asked me what I thought about Nixon, my little 'Drifter': poor western By DIANE NOTTLE of the Collegian Staff Now is the time for all true believers in the American western myth to pack up their white (or black) hats, shoot their trusty hosses and kiss Miss Kitty goodbye. Actor-director -Clint Eastwood has come out with "High Plains Drifter," a cheaply made western melodrama that uses every imaginable cliche to tell an ancient story that: already had been used too often at the time of its first lemake. Eastwaod portrays, if that word does not give ' him too much credit, a nameless drifter who rides from where' the buffalo roam into the mining town of Lago. Within ten minutes he shoots three men in a bar-room brawl, rapes one woman in the town livery stable and lathers his face for a shave. -. Now it jusjs so happens that three Prepare for fall close to Beaver Stadium. The stadium will be crowded and you’ll be sitting behind the end zone. Because of the poor seating for freshmen, you’ll miss the Blue Band drum major as he struts down the field during the pre-game show and a lot of the action, but the games are still enjoyable. Besides, there will be enough action in the stands to hold your interest. Classes will be different, too. The University will be back on a 10-week term, with the normal three periods a week and 10 to 12 credit load. Basically, the schedule will be more relaxed, enabling you to delve deeper into your courses. With the return of the students, campus organizations will once again become active, offering students a wide range of ex tracurricular activities and ser vices. After the freshman year, students will be assigned a faculty member responsible for program and professional guidance, in cluding course selection. Registration, including drop add and pass-fail may be carried out through the academic or student adviser or through a self advising procedure approved by the Senate Committee on Academic Affairs. This seems to be a con tradiction. If a student has the initiative to take on the respon sibility of handling th£ drop-add procedure, he should be allowed to guide himself. Perhaps the colleges should take the example of the College of the Liberal Arts’ self-advising option to heart. Spanish brother, eight-year-old Fer nando said very matter of factly, “They’ll throw him put and put in another one." Well-,'that’s one European view on the whole affair. The man-woman relationships are different too. In Spain there is no discussion of women’s liberation because' Spaniards consider it an ac cepted fact that women are inferior. Besides that, it’s hard for Spanish women to find jobs, there are barely enough of them for men. Economically, Spain is behind the times. But just because most Spanish students own only two pairs of pants, instead of six or seven makes no dif ference. Americans pride themselves on wearing the same jeans ’ all| the time anyway. ’ - l The same goes for cars, which are pretty scarce in Spain, and are con sidered more as status symbols than necessities. My Spanish family saved for years to buy a car, and now cannot buy. one because auto strikes in Spain have made them even harder to get. After reading the last paragraphs, I realize I can’t begin to talk- about professional killers are scheduled to be relased from prison the very next day. Furthermore, the three threatened at their trial to return and burn Lago to the gound. Naturally the townspeople are quaking in their boots. Impressed by the drifter’s skill in hitting his barroom adversaries right between the eyes, the town hires him to protect the people, giving him a free hand over the town. But the plot thickens when the people realize the drifter may reveal their collective deep, dark secret. . All this is punctuated with quick drawn pistols," beer glasses sliding down bars and rampant discrimination against friendly Indians. And every other aspect of the production is characterized by the same lack of quality and imagination as the plot. Eastwood apparently has directed the film with an intense effort to make no deviation from standard western devices.’ "High Plains Drifter" has everying 1 from shoot-outs at the pass to show-downs in the street, with a touch of medieval torture-chamber tactics added just for fun. Eastwood's acting is no’better. As the unnamed drifter who wreaks his sadistic sense of humor on the terijified town, he makes little more impression than would any lesser-known actor with a five o'clock shadow. ■„ The term will also focus on the REVIEWS: Now playing fall elections which will include all major town posts mayor, borough council, tax collector and county district attorney. A voter registration drive will be conducted before the election and not without reason. While you are a student at the University, State College is your home and the workings of the town government will directly affect your life. In addition, a number of students and student-oriented candidates are - apiong those slated for the election. Student voters should consider the ad vantages of electing those in dividuals to key positions in town government. As with any term, Fall Term will be what you make it. Join an organization, attend the football games, become involved. Register to vote, follow the elections, vote in November. Make Fall Term count for you Another safeguard requires that students be given a list of un fulfilled requirements prior to graduation to discuss with his adviser. These rules are designed to prevent isolated cases in which students are unaware of required courses and find themselves unable to graduate without at tending additional terms. The members of the Faculty Senate have wisely remembered that students attend Penn State to get an education and that any action that makes it easier for them to concentrate on their studies is beneficial. However, students who are willing to accept the reponsibility for their degree requirements should have that responsibility. everything I have learned. I guess it takes those 14 weeks living there to know what it is like. If you can’t afford the time or money to live in Europe, I guess travelling is the next best" thing. When the Penn State Salamancai program was over in early July, I took off for six other countries. It was fun and educational in a different way. I saw lots of famous places and cities and museums. But living there made the trip worth it. Please do not think I am giving Penn State any big pat on the back for sending me there. The foreign studies program made it possible and I appreciate that, but now I realize how poor my education was until this spring in Spanish and in European history and culture. It's a shame so few students take advantage of the opportunity. 1 was told the foreign studies program was highly selective, which I found out was wrong. So few students applied for the .Salamanca program, that I think all were accepted. Maybe someday I’ll be lucky enough to return to Spain and Europe, but even if I don’t, Spring Term taught me enough to last me a lifetime. The 1 two ■ actresses who play East wood's happy victims, the film’s closest thing to leading ladies, are unknowns and likely to stay that way. Verna Bloom and Mariana Hill display a remarkable lack of talent as the semi-respectable women who succumb to Eastwood's negligible tjrute charms. The film 1 , also shows a surprising dearth of quality actors in supporting roles; the giost outstanding is a high voiced midget, probaSly left over from Munchkinland, who resembles Andy Hardy turned 60. While many westerns have reaped great benefits from casting successful ; character actors as bar tenders or barbers, “High Plains Drifter" avoids good acting like the plague. The rest of the production is equally shoddy. Ernest Tidyman’s dialogue combines all the old western cliches with some brand new bad writing. The camera work is on about the same level, approximating a handful of old action shots-spliced together. Worst of all is the music, Which sounds something like the score of'f’The Good, The Bad and the Ugly" sungjby a sick cat. Better Westerns are available on television any time of any day. Students faced with long, dull weekends should study for finals rather than go to see “High Plains Drifter.” It’s much less expensive and much more entertaining. By BILL SPANGLER of the Collegian Staff . Before Rambo carnet Madison, Kentucky was a quiet, average Anrterican tovyp. But his arrival turned Madison into the stage for an explosive confrontation, which David Morrell skillfully depicts in his novel, First Blood Fawcett Crest, $1.25), Rambo's antagonist is Will Teasle, Madison’s chief of police. He assumes the bearded Rambo is trouble-, possibly the first of a group of hippies coming to his town. So he wants to see Rambo out of town as soon as possible. But Rambo won’t leave. He has been given the same treatment in a dozen towns before Madison, and this time he decides he will not be pushed. And he can be sure he won’t. Rambo is an ex-Green Beret, who has been returned to America after escaping from Letters to the Editor Let them eot meat TO THE EDITOR: During Fall, Winter and Spring terms, there are sales of various meat products at the Meat Lab on Friday afternoon at 1:30. There are generally 600 to 1200 pounds of meat available at these sales. The quality is generally good arid the prices very reasonable. The sale .is conducted by lottery method. Usually 100 numbers are drawn, but the meat is gone after the first 15 people have made their purchase. Also, the undergraduate student population is not represented because of lack of publicity. Most purchases are made by faculty members, town residents and graduate students who are making purchases for large groups.' Many students living off campus have financial difficulties. They could benefit from the lower cost of these meat products. More publicity of these sales and a limit on the amount of meat one person may purchase-would benefit many more people than the present distribution system. Out in the cold? TO THE EDITOR: The Caucasian Cult never ceases to amaze me in trying to pull the white sheet over the Afro-American eyes. It is downright disgusting but socially acceptable. This is all in reference to one of the many incidents that take place in trying to suppress the Afro-American. For instance, to be specific, the American World University Game Team is here heading for Moscow next week. There were several events which included students from different nationalities. In the 1,500 meter event Tony Waldrop, Caucasian, and Reginald McAfee, Afro-American, were tied 3.44.9. Waldrop supposedly came in first, but how this was determined was not specified in the Collegian: “Waldrop was awarded first place and a spot on the team, leaving McAfee out in the cold.” Quote unquote. First of all, there were two spots opened for the fjnals in Moscow. Secondly, McAfee and Waldrop were only competing to show a competitive edge. Now my question is: if Reginald McAfee is left out in the cold, how could he be going to. Moscow for the finals? Pigeon plot TO THE EDITOR: I've been noticing that your letters to the editor column has been quite barren lately, and so I have taken it upon myself to remedy the situation. Now don’t get me wrong, this is a legitimate letter with a legitimate purpose. To plunge right into the matter it concerns pigeons Yes pigeons, my friends, those feathery 'enemies of the 'Carats touching, humorous By STEVE IVEY ; - of the Collegian Staff At last someone has produced a love story motion picture worth watching. M.J. Frankovich’s "40 Carats” is a thoroughly enjoyable film. "40 Carats” is good for several reasons. First, the film t avoids the sickening sentimentality of “Love Story" and at the same time features a warm, human love story. It also lacks the cute asininity of “The Summer of 42,” replacing it with a more adblt humor. “40 Carats" triumphs over previous attempts to make a "modern" love story because of Liv Ullmann’s tremendous acting. As Anne Stanley, Ullmann plays the role of a 40-year-old New York apartment rental agency president who is divorced REVIEW a,W Cong camp. N®her man will move from his position. The friction between them mountSj and Rambo starts to push back. He a-* guard and flees to the hills. The cljase that follows provides not only engrossing reading but also a realistic look at how violence breeds more violence. As word of the hunt spreads, civilians and semi-professional nunters converge on the mountains. With no organized plan, they start to shoot at pach other, hammering Teasle’s men. Morrell, who did graduate work at the University, illustrates another-point the necessity of making an enemy less than human. Even after Teasle learns Rambo’s identity, he insists on calling him "the kid,” just as Lt. William Galley, at his trial, insisted that the people he fired at were "the enemy." Morrell drops into preachy dialogue Rob Brown [4th-education] Judy Stewart ' [sth-nursing] Jim Shanaban [3rd-agriculture] Regis Nells [4th-division of counseling] Bob King [l3th-electrical engineering] , Ken Nellis [7th-computer science] Name withheld from Billy Boyland (Gene Kelly), a second-rate TV star. While stranded with a broken-down car in Greece, she meets 23-year-old Peter Latham (Edward Albert), who offers her a lift on his motorcycle to the nearest town. This starts a romance that is both touching and humorous. Should a 40- year-old woman associate with a youth almost half her age? What happens when he asks her to marry him? . Ullmann’s acting is so superb that she makes the audience believe she really is having these problems. Her facial ex pressions and mannerisms are perfect for the role. She has to be one-of the greatest actresses of the past decade. When she agrees to meet Peter in the Rockefeller Plaza skating rink, Ullmann does a fantastic performance of trying not to fall on the ice and at the same time trying not to fall in love with Peter. Ullman adds the proper air of breathlessness when she drinks a glass of Ouzo and says, "What did you call this, Ouzo? It certainly is.” , 4 Surprisingly enough, Albert is also very good in his rote as Peter. He is self assured and confident enough to im press older people, but not to the point of being snotty. He turns in a fine job of acting. Kelly is excellent as an immature, over-the-hill TV performance is 'First Blood' for a few pages of the book,- but on the whole the characterizations and dialogue are crisp and solid. He gives the conflict between Ram bo’s weariness and his pride in his training the necessary schizoid quality, and lets it echo in Trautman, the soldier Teasle calls in to outwit Rambo. He also a/oids making Teasle the sterotyped, redneck, Southern policeman. Asjfhe hunt for Rambo wears on, Teasle realizes he thinks like his quarry and develops a respect for him. Moreover at their first meeting, the policeman holds no contempt for Rambo's appearance; he merely feels that getting him out of town was part of his job. Ironically, Rambo feels he is doin- his job applying his training w ' h n '' ' was in the mountains fighting ici'_ ne A thought that might be the most frightening part of the book. state: those dirty communists in bird suits. I’m on to.them, let me tell you! There lives a hoard of those beady-eyed no-goods on the roof of the abandoned house next to mine. At all hours of the day and night they are constantly Blllllllop-ing. Ob viously, some sort of secret code! They defecate where and when they please, in public, and often defacing our national and state monuments. And yet some persons condemn B.F. Skinner for locking these monsters in cages where they belong, so they can’t provide unsavory role models for our children. I myself applaud the man and his ingenious front of psychological ex perimentation’. In actuality he is trying to curb this pigeon plot and the bulk of his work involves breaking down the code. Food pellets? Oh no, my friends, truth serum in solid form. It is time the American public became aware of the pigeon menace that is nation. The “shitty peril" is on the rise. Stand up! Don’t just sit there and pick you noses, when pigeons lurk on every street corner, waiting for the cover of night to sell dangerous narcotics to your children and mug you as you walk through central park. Yes, this is the hideous truth! The Daily Collegian welcomes comments on news coverage, editorial policy or noncampus affairs. Letters should be typewritten, double spaced, signed by no more than two persons and no longer than 30 lines. Students’ letters should include the name, term and major of the writer. Letters should be brought to The Collegian office, 126 Carnegie, in person so proper identification of the writer can be made, although names will be withheld by request. If letters are received by mail* The Collegian will contact the signer for j verification. JOHN J. TOW) Business Manager J Successor to the Free Lance, est. 1887 • Member, the Associated Press Editorial policy is determined by the editor. ’ 'J PATRICIA J. STEWART Editor Opinions expressed by the editors and staff of The Daily J Collegian are not necessarily those of the University ad-'« ministration, faculty .or students. - • Mail subscription price:' $17.50 per year. Mailing address: 80x,467. State College. Pa.. 16801 Office: 126 Carnegie Editorial Staff: 865-1828 Business Staff: 865-2531 Sports Staff: 865-1820 SUMMER STAFF: Managing Editor, Rick Nelson; Assistant City Editor, Diane Nottle; Copy Editor, Terry Walker* Assistant Sports Editor, Mark Simenson; Reporters: Colleen? Burritt, Jeff Deßray, Richard Dymond, Stephen Gerhart, Mark Hoffman, Steve Ivey, Mary Ann McDonagh, Dave Morris, t Joe Napsha, Steve Ostrosky. Fred Ramsey; Photographers: Ed Golomb, Marc Silverman. -J BOARD MANAGERS: Advertising Manager, Ed Todd;( Assistant Advertising Manager, Cynthia Ashear; Graphic! Artist, Susan Marie Voytovich: . j downfown Darla J. Mansfield [ll th-rehabilitation education] Letter policy Business Office HoursJ Monday through Friday 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.;gi helped by the fact that, director Milton Katselas does not let him sing and keep* his dancing confined to a discothequj with his former mother-in-law. ‘ Binnie Barnes as the frustrates! kleptomaniac grandmother is perfect Leonard Gershe's screenplay of Barillet and Gredy’s Broadway stage play is filled with humorous lines. One-lineiJ such as "I like to try love, but I'm married", dot* the film, adding to fte warmth and tenderness. The score is not outstanding but certainly not one of Michel Legrand's poorer works. "40 Carats" introduces Deborah Raffin as Trigia Stanley, a curvacious 3° hustler. Raffin's first major acting jol? definitely wijl not be her last. The scenes in Greece are beautiful and[ well done. The audience is not over-> whelmed with shots of scenery. Instead'! Katselas uses the scenery as it should be used: to lend an air of belief and to create the proper mood for the film. 'J 40 Carats” is the best love story td[ come out of Hollywood in a very lono time. Scicf) films need the special sensitivity and superb acting talents ot actresses like.Llv Ullmann. Unless sh» agrees to star in another such .film, “4(J Carats" will be the best love film for th 9 next few decades. *