Editorial opinion Double je:i r pfar's)'#••' Double jeopardy, said even in a low whisper, makes the Univer sity's Office of Conduct Standards wince. People constantly accuse , Conduct Standards of placing' students in double jeokardy i a system by which one person tried in two different courts for the same crime. Conduct Standards winces because it says it operates under "dual jurisdiction," not •double jeopardy. But people still get con fused and yeN "double jeopardy" at Conduct Standards. 'Maybe because for all intents ,and pur poses, they mean the same thing. There have been other cases of "dual jurisdiction" in past years, but the most recent one involVes an alleged rape at Phi - Gamma Delta fraternity. In this case, there is triple jurisdiction with the In terfraternity Council even taking a hand in the Matter. State College police have an in vestigation going, after which the HANUICKAII— ISRAEL CELSEUZATES Ilag Ricer9F LIGeiTS Letters to . M3-b TO THE EDITOR: There is something inherently wrong with your editorial stand on recent Senate action to eliminate course repeats and to extend the drop period through the eighth week of the term. The fallacy of your position resides in your mistaken assumption that the! moral he a rt of Penn State is internally sound. i Through the failure of the now inactive Senate regulations, which based similar hopes on the integrity of students and . 1 1 1 \ 1 , I - De c ., faculty, it is apparent that good intentions are not enough. A TO THE EDITOR: Margaret Miller's letter of De s:des4 large portion of faculty any students seem to believe that some comment. Those 'of Ms.! Miller& ilk like to throi Senate rules are made to Ibe broken. Loopholes in such words racism and oppression around quite itiosely.:; benevolent. regulations as the course repeat 14341 invariably beyond comprehension that n intelligent person I appear, and they do not go unnoticed. In the year that M3-b has support a country that conceiv t e Gulag Archipelago, oppression around in effect, the num,ber op filed course repeats has swelled gobbled up half of Europe and al l recentiy as 1968 drove ti unbelievably. - , - . . into a neighboring country. It is b yqnd cqrnprehension thi Recent Senate action to deny students, he privilege of M3-b intelligent person could support the bloc of Arab countries , • a , N i(3o CA ITTAtc3.,i t , r- .." 1 ^- ''s V 1 case will probably go to court. That's the state's trial an the only necessary one since tite alleged crime was a state offense. _ The University for sortie reason, felt it necessary to conduct its own hearings. ' Supposedly, this is to protect stUdents at. the University. But students at the UniVers!ty, are also residents of Per nsylvania. Since the state laws pro:ecti them, the University% hearings are un necessary and unfair. j The University even Stet: s that federal and I state laws! ap • ly' on campus in its "Policies and Rules for Students" booklet: "As c tizens of the ComefTtlinwealth - • the Nation, m6mbers of the Uni, ersity community enjoy the same basic rights an'd are bound by the same responsibilities to respect the rights of others, as are all ctizens. The carnpuS is not a sanctuary from the general law." Assuming that's true, then the University bears the same respon was both inevitable and desirable. It Is time that this in stitution stop making excuses for poor scholarship and turn, instead, to the fulfillment of its educational objectives In the Classroom. The real pigs , 1 1 sibility as the state toward th charged with Committing state of '' fenses. Those accused will go : 1 1 through the courts and emerge guitty.or innocent. 'The University; :1 in accord wits constitutional law / could wait u til a court, verdict were pronounced to , ' pas 6 , judgment on ,the accused. . Instead, asl with the current Phi Gamma Deltalcase, the University holds its own peedy hearings:ad- "! ministers justice, and has the whole thing I washed from the University in I no time flat. The charged fraternity brothers could be found guilty by the University, innocent later by'a state court and guilty again by IFC. , Such a ;system confuses everybody, includiOg tho§e found guilty, innocent and' guilty. The daenal code is t dedigned, to bring criminals to jUstice. But how can -1 we be sure if the accused Is a criminal if heis both guilty and in nocent? English columnist and samples Woonsocket sherry By NICK BRETT Collegian Columnist Tuesday Two days to blast off and I'm not really sure that I ,want to go. They told me about culture shock before I left England, bLit this - could be the biggest trip of the lot, the ultimate In assimilation l l and acceptance. Would the "cute" jaccent carry me through? Would they Ifloor me with one of those weird Ameriban words 'caboose, condominium, cabriole, cymatium? , In two days we'll be meeting around a turkey me and 27 relatives by marriage in Boston, Mass. Paranoia coming on real strong - now as one more piece of plea bargaining with Alice fails "What if I was to do the washing up single-handed for the next six months?", ... "Laundry?" ... "Couldn't you say I'm a Seventh Day Adventist and disagree with Thanksgiving on moral 'grounds?" ... "Jehovah's Witness?" ... "I c9u Id always give thanks bver the phone?" Wednesday Friends drop by our apartment on Tussey MoLintain and I spill all my fears. To end my babbling they , tell me all about the W alton's i TV Thanksgiving last fall. Apparently Jim-Bob and the rest recite -in turn what they're thankful for. Do Seventh IDay Adventists really oppose Thanksgivirig on moral grounds? Midnight( and the paranoia's really digging in.[This insane feeling that I'm John-boy reincarnated in Happy Valley. It all fits sleeveless sweaters, wire rims, the desire to a journalist. 'We learnt many,thinigs on the Mountain, not least the meaning of Thanksgiving spent the Editor with the ones we loved most dearly Good night, John-boy. Thursday No listing for Seventh Day Adventists in the phone book. A nice lady at telephonene information assures me that the Plymouth Brethren do celebrate Thanksgiving. remember Jerry Schwartz telling me not to buy him a Christmas {resent a mad fleeting moment of 11opei Does Jerry eat turkey, pump Kin pie, peanut butter (and jelly)? Maybe tone of those pint posts who eat Palestinian rice (Deut. 11:44)' and write those endless boring letters to the Collegian (Kings 23:16) can tell me if turkeys are kosher (Ecc. 19:31)? Sanity briefly restored as I decide agqjnst circumcision as a way of dodging Thanksgiving. Positively no way out now. Noon and we're cruising through limerick country Pawtucket, Nantucket, Woonsocket, Squibnocket. Mentally note that I'd better not mention over dinner where we've' been. Botind to get tongue-tied and come out wrong. No possible escape now. There they all are 27 varieties of instant family: Glasses steam' up and I become hopelessly embroiled in one of those endless courtesy exchanges ... "I-Now do you do?" ... 'Very well, thAnk you" "That's nice" .... "Yes indeed." Probably one of my worst moments since I got stuck in a rut of 15 "Thank yous" and "Your Welcomes" with a waitress in Burger King. Fortunately my brother-in-law, God bless. him, comes to the rescue. With teenage cunning he suggests showing would just as'soon puke on their Palestinian "brothers" as help them out, or support a country which expels all ,those of a different race such as Uganda, or torture and brainwash all those who disagree with the ruling class, as in China. The real pig and oppressors are working dVertime to spread their message, usually by force. And they have been suc cessful. Because with all the horrible injustice in the world, Ms. Miller can't see any farther than to attack about the only two countries left in the world where the average man can find a place in the sun, even if he has to overcome disorimination. i The bedraggled remains of a truly oppressed peoPle have put together a working nation, and this causes her to wallow in self-righteous indignation. Before the last remains of freedom and dignity on this earth ;go down the drain, I suggest Ms. Miller put herself down where !she, can join her friends the Russians and Ugalndans and' :perhaps find out what oppression really means. Mikei Antisko 041•Encil ish the lit is ' r ould and tanks iat an si that Ws a funny thing about the free marketplace of ideas. Sonietimes it's glutted; sometimes the stalls are empty. We need Some help in restoring a little trade to the marketPlsce. We're looking for some people to write columns for the editoiial page, to share ideas and opinions with the University community. Qualifications are few. Columnists must be students, and must be prepared to write columns on a weekly basis. More impOrtantly, columnists should have an interesting perspective on issues, lifestytes and ideas. And abOve proppective columnists must -be able 'to write in O.clear, in teresting aft hopeful ly eotertaining way ideas are nothing if nobody bothers to read.them. Columnists doltot hatm to be journalism students we'd like a variedLsarnpling 'of people. Most of all, we want to; im prove and expand debate and discussion among our readers. If you'd liket to help out, stop into the Collegian office, 128 .Pamegie Su d ay or Monday night, -and talk to Sheila McCauley. If , kdssible, bring a sample column or sample-of Your writing. -t ~~ The Daily Collegian encourages comments on news coverage, editorial policy and campus and off-campus affairs. betters should be typewritten, double spaced, signed by no more than two persons and .io, longer than 30 lines. Students' letters should include the name. term and major of the vijriter. Letters should be brought to the Collegian office, 126 Carnegie, in person so proper identification of the writ4r can be made, although names can be withheld on request. If letters are received by mail, the Collegian will contact the signer for verification before publication. Letters canriot be returned. (Wanted • " • eets relatives me up to my room. Safe behind locked doors he produces a bottly of liberated sherry and begins administering it in large' doses. One empty bottle later I come to the conclusion it was brewed in Woonsocket. He runs through the relatives one by one sketching in their hob6le4 jobs,' peculiarities etc. Everything begins to get blurred Woohsooket's done its job and I'm having Problems remembering if it's Uncle Ben who played defense for Navy or' wrote "A Connecticut Guide to Mosses and Lichens." I'm I dragged screaming and hallucinating from the bedroom and by God —'!Take not the Lord's name in vain." (Gen. 12:42), Name Withheld —, there itl is, a turkey the size of Frank Cannon Som+ody mentions the bicentennial nd 27 pairs of eyes home in one me. Try rguing`that I'm half-Welsh, but they're not having any. I realize that ,ir‘l'm to escape Ithis holiday with my life I had ietter h mor them. I refer frequently and , espect ully to the American Revolution in every unbiised English school book i's called the War with the Coloni and omit the fact that =renchea power won the war. Wave of hot and cold Woonsocket pass o er me interspersed with this insane lclesire to leap up and toast the iueen. ',Paranoia now totally -in control, s the table begins a death spin, hurtling out of focus, and . 27 grunting Masticating faces leer at me across the table. , Suddenly it's t?iere on my plate a huge pile of psychedelic orange matter: Michael Berlin M.D. University Health Services The kind of thing they'd eat on Star Trek. ~ Should I stage a faint? Decide against this for two reasons the chances of a' genuine faint in the near future are very - real considering I've been mixing' Woonsocket with cider and, secondly, maybe I'll need my phony faint later t• - stall the pumpkin pie. The word' comes down the table that it's sweet potatoes. I praise the Lord that it isn't sweet potatoe-pancakes-with-mapl e-syrup and-marshmallow and take a tentative nibble. A veteran of 14 years of English schools dinners (VOESD), I can now reveal that sweet potatoes rank better than tripe and worse than casserole of - heart. Curious sensation in my neck, possibly early signs of botulism brought , on §,y sweet potatoes. Realize that I can't turn my head. Snatches of conversation float by. To my right the Connecticut Uncle is explaining to my brother-in-law , the difference between a Dartmouth type and a Cornell type. I notice with real ~ pleasure the look of total bewilderment , on my brother-in-law's face obviously the Woonsocket has been getting to him too. Maybe even, the sweet potatoes. Ta my left two MIT relatives ar dismissing some experiment involving a revolving plate of sweet potatoes and Scotch tape. Maybe I could join and accidentally drop my sweet potatoes? Well that .does it. Coming down the table towards me is a piece of pumpkin pie the,size of a roof, tile. In a moment of sheer genius prompted I'm sure by the buzz you get off Woonsocket I grabbed at the Scotch tape. "Have you seen this one?" Definitions TO THE EDITOR: Rubin's letter in the Collegian of 12-9-75 quotes the unabridged Webster's dictionary definition of Zionism as "A theory, plan, or movement for setting up 'a Jewish national. or religious community in Palestine." The dictionary says, in fact, something quite different: "Among the modern Jews, a theory, plan, or movement for colonizing their own race in Palestine, the land of Zion, either for religious or nationalizing purposes." Evidently Mr. Rubin found it necessary to twist the above definition in his letter in order to obscure the obvious racism and colonialism of Zionism. One must question the right of the Zionist movement to create a national Jewish state in a Palestine already inhabited by '- others. . The Zionist movement, which seeks exclusive possession of• Palestine for the Jews, caused the majority of the U.N. members to recognize and coidemn its racist nature. A„growing number of the Jewish people have also realized the racism inherent in Zionism and are turning away from it, e.g. the Matzpen party of Israel. The continuing isolation of Israel and the growing support for the PLO and its practical solution of a secular (non religious, non-racist) state in Palestine is the true hope for a lasting peace in the Middle East. :Collegian JERRY SCHWARTZ Editor Mailing Address: Box 467, State College, Pa. 16801 1 Office: 126 Carnegie BOARIYOF EDITORS: MANAGING EDITOR, Dave Morris: EDITORIAL EDITOR. Sheila McCauley: EDITORIAI. ASSISTANT, Karen Fiscrter. NEWS iTOR, Kuhnhena; ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR, Paula Gochnour; WIRE IiDITOR,44in ,Seinger, COPY EDITORS, Maria Green. Deannp Finley, Elm* Turner:. FEATURES EDITOR, Cathy Cipola; SPORTS EDITOR, rJeff Young; ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS, Gorden' Rain, Brian Mier; PHOTO EDITOR, Eric Fetack: ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS, Juie Cipolla.Tcp Peters. • I • ) • • I, Sabah A. Wall graduate-physiology ROBERT A. MOFFETT Business Manager