Alma Mater's 'boyhood gate' under criticism By JOAN HARDEST\' seem to have no sensitivity to Colkegian Staff Writer it." The Penn State alma mater Raffel said this Alma Mater lately has undergone close stanza may have been ap scrutiny by campus women's propriate 50 years ago, "but it organizations. no longer is and Should be When the alma mater is deleted or modified if it is to ku sung at football games, have meaning at all. It's students who aren't chanting everything like this that adds - We don't know the goddamn pto equal opportunity for words," are singing "When women." _ we stood at - boyhood's gate... Thou didst mold us, dearrold State, into Men." According to Association for Women Students Presicleat. Marjorie Storch, "The stanza fails to represent the women who make up neaily one half of the Cniversity's student body. .Just as social attitudes and institutions change over time, so must outdated and irrelevant traditions." Norma Raffel, chairperson of the National Education Council of the Women's Equity Action League, said the stanza is "just out of this v.orld I can't understand why class after class- of women have : it. This , stanza is an abuse women students who ale: '73 VW Buggy "By keeping this stanza the University has not moved with - the trend to abolish sexist attitudes and prac tices," she said. The composer of the alma mater. Fred Lewis Pattee, anticipated feminine reaction to the stanza and wrote words to be substituted in the stanza hut refused to make the final change himself. When the alma mater was written in 1901 when George THRIFTY BOTTLE SHOP COLD BEER TO GO BEHIND THE TRAIN STATION Call 237-9836 After 5 Atherton was college president few women at tended college. According to his autobiography, "Penn State Yankee" (1953), Pattee said he believed in 1901 that "a college was for the education of men." Pattee wrote that Penn State always had been a "he- Man's college" and it became co-educational only because it was supported by the tax payers who had as much right to send'their daughters to the institution that their money was supporting as they had to send sons. Once the tide turned, however, it became a "flood." "I'm behind theni,!" Michael Thomas (graduate- English) said. "It's silly that we even have a verse likethat in 1975." Ann Shelton of the AluMni Association exprigsed lin terest in informing the Alumni Council of the move. "This may stir up some controversy among the old timers," she said. University President John W. Oswald has - expresSed disapprilval of the move. "The alma mater written over 50 years-ago is a part of long- Eventually; Pattee wrote, time campus tradition and I he realized Penn State was no . feel there are more fruitful longer purely a masculine ways to proceed than to try to student body and rewrote the alter those words," he said. stanza as "When we stood at "Its composers, I feel childhood's gate... Thou didst positive, had nothing Indignant male students sent a petition to the trustees protesting that their college was becoming "a tea. party and a dress parade." "Penn State's a he-man's college," they said, "not . a nunnery." The trustees obliged by setting a quota of female students permitted to be enrolled. mold us, dear old State, Dear old State." "Surely in —this world nothing is pe,:manent save only change," lse said. "Mit it does seem to me Penn State's mission has been to mold men for the major jobs in the world. I hesitate to change the stanza. Let someone with the forward look do it." AWS believes this year, International Women's Year, is the appropriate time for the change. _1 1,- discriminatory iii mind when the verses were written." One anonymous student said, "I like it like that. It sounds nice to me." A graduate of the University class of 1937; who is employed in the Penn State Room of Pattee Library, said the "alma mater is a tradition that many people cherish." "Women need to get changes in political and legal areas, but riot-in alma maters. Women fooling with the Alma Mater will turn people off," she said. However, o r student said, "It would be a subtle change but important enough to make people notice." Bob Moyer (9th psychology) said, "I don't think the alma mater is taken too seriously. I had to learn it when I joined a fraternity." • "I can see how it'might be inappropriate though," Moyer said. "The girl I'm going out with is - very much into women's studies and if I say 'that stupid woman driver,' I get clobbered. It doesn't matter to me whether they change -the - Ima mater or not, but if it comes down to a hassle. I'd say change it." . 2; fi z igr a m a n gf riz o wnsawan t ,:»; mir weeler.terumwvier.Aem.etul 41e. r ; ste. 4 1 1 :110 HOBS SPRING DANCE SAT. MAY 17, 8 30 PM - ;313 tag is 1 :.8 UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP ilti 79ti iig : . w/"D.J. Dave & The Disco-Sound" . : 11; .I. : Mt! AK , _ AK - .. ..:3 1 I t i 50c Dona! ion All Welcome .. ....31..:••••d••116 . 0 . 1b•••111••••••••11bW411 . 0 . 1111 - 0 . VONIIIIeO . IIIIWIII - 0 . 1111WWW•leir.641111 - 41 . 4r1 , 111221E•WWSKS;CIWW41 , 41 , 41 , 46 . 41 , 86 . ../lia046 - efiro . ......b . •111 - 4,411,...111 . 6,11••••116 . •• tf: : :"liIIeNZIPMII/7011PITIOMIITIMIICRIIMIZZIMUMM.A1S5MIPMSNOMMIOTOP.•.11P 9 .4/..•.ii....i.....1M11e. " ZeZ1M1ZZ0N:111M10.71/M11.741/M N.! .. „mum: p... .i . .. 1 1: .: ; 1!,' , ./..... , .: , .. , : •'.-.,::,•,::,..,:,., : , • , :":L5.i.: , .. , : A. , :: M . : , ./:: , • , :: , .. , : : , • , :, , ,, , :•,'::,./ . :;?•,::k . •:! , ...);_\•!.::.M.:' , .. , ::.. , .. , • , :. , .. , :: ,,, : , .. , .:: , • , :: , ./1: , . , :":!".:".:: , .. 1 ;;‘.. , :t5. , .::' ,,, :tk. , :: , .. , ;: , ..%::\• , .:: , ./:":".:: ti I Alvo ElectroniL's Balfour's _ Balfurd Inc. I Bath Abode I Bicycle Shop Bill Coleman' Bostonian Linlited Bumble Bee Burger King Centre For Travel Centre Hardware Centre Sports Corning Glass Crabtree Jewe Elaine Powers Fashion Fabri l G.C.Murphy Glick Shoes Goodyear Howard Smit H.R.B. Singe Jack Harper Jay Kay Distri Jim's Army & Joe the Motor Kalin's Men Knothole Miss Haircut Mr. Tux Moyer Jewele Mur Jewelers Mayaguez affair ok'd U.S. action condoned Ily United Press International Newspapers in England , Spain and Israel said yesterday the United States was justified in using military force to retake the American cargo ship Mayaguez and its crew from the Cambodians. Somewhat surprisingly, the Soviet Union's official Tass news agency reported the American show of strength without comment and the mass media in China omitted mention of it altogether. Reaction was also favorable in South Africa, but a French newspaper criticized the action. United Nations officials Were silent on the matter. "This time it would be difficult to blame the United States Administration for what oc curred," the London Times said. "This was clearly an act of piracy—indeed, being carried out by the naval forces of another country, an act of war—which no government could ignore." The Daily Mail said the Americans "were justified in going to the limit to rescue their men and their ship," and the Evening News said the decision to send in the Marines "was one of those very rare occasions when might is right." The Madrid-newspaper Informaciones said the American action was wegemed in Europe as a demonstration that "the Communist vic- NJ 111;1 11:42;4 11;1:111111;tVIVX. n2;4111126 . 11NN/ il;10;.V.11•Ltill 1.1.r.111;16 . 4 Illt;11112:1111;2;d11;1;1112011;2,;102.,;/12;4 6;2;4 ..ttritt Pr.:a MI 0:Z49.7;:l 16;:11: 4 ZI1 /7 1 :1•511 Mt egg P.7 4 7,117.11P:r.11PMM1/V.1•7:010...0,5 1 :11.7 4 1111MONZI15:91/7.515Neella6110 1 : ti 709 Ridge Ave. utors Navy Store sts Friend 'hop f Pittsburgh tory in Indochina has not turned the United States into a scarecrow." In a report from Washington, Tass gave the basic details of the operation against Cam bodia, mentioning the fighting and the sinking of three Cambodian vessels. It quoted the Cambodian allegation that the Mayaguez was engaged in intelligence ac tivities, without elaboration. The main early evening television news in Moscow did not report the U.S. action at all. All mass circulation media in Peking omit ted mention of the matter. Prince Nordom Sihanouk, the former Cam bodian head of state living in Peking for the last five years, remained silent on the note the American diplomatic mission handed the Cambodian embassy Tuesday. In Tel Aviv, the Israeli Labor party newspaper Davar said the United States was right to retake, the ship by force. And the government-run South African Broadcasting Corporation said the United States would "benefit from the determination not to be pushed around by any pipsqueak nations indulging in criminal acts of vio lence." United Nations Secretary General Kurt Waldheim offered to mediate early in the dispute • but-- refused- comment on the American military action. Sigma Pi would like-to thank the following merchants for helping to make the 2nd Annual Sigma Pi Open a success. Nittany Gas & Oil Nittany News & Book O.W.Houts and Son Pathfinder Pedals Penn State Travel People's National Bank 'Petrino's Bridal Shoppe Rite-Aid Roland & Hull Stork Unlimited Student Book Store Szeyller Associates T & R Electronics Tobacco Taverne Uncle Eli's Art Supplies University Travel Bureau Unlimited Rent-Ails Waffle Shop Woodrings W.R. Hickey Proceeds to the Centre Couniy Home Health Service The Daily Collegian Friday, May 16, 1975-