8
Ei y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 Sweeping draft changes affect Penn grad schools The Selective Service System's decision to cut back graduate school deferments will probably mean a large overacceptance of graduate students by the University for 1968-69. Lewis Hershey, director of Selective Service, announced Friday that there will no longer be draft deferments for graduate students, except those already in their second or subsequent year of graduate school and those in "medical, dental, and allied medical professions." The order means that most college seniors and students now in their first year of graduate school will probably be drafted soon after spring graduation. At present, the oldest registrants are drafted first. Students graduating from college New rules worry grad school deans Photo by MARTIN SMITH Blow your mind at Irvin A near full house at Irvine had its collective mind blown as Janis Joplin turned on the multi- tudes with her white soul singing. Janis, Big Brother and the Hold- ing Company and the Soul Sur- vivers sent out their good vib- rations and broken chairs for nigh onto two hours. Morris bares plans: no nudes this year Nudity buff Mark Morris still hopes to teach a Free University course in the nude, but he doubts that it will be this semester, he revealed yesterday. He is still checking into the legality of the matter to make sure that police officials will not object to it. He is also unsure of what the University's reaction would be for such a course. "I don't feel it is quite ready for it yet," he said. This semester he plans to teach a course called "Masks", which will deal with the role of masks in primitive and modern societies. He has not yet regis- tered his course. "The Free University," Morris said, "is not upset over my announcement." Morris has been invited by the Circle H Nudist Colony to bring his class there if he finds enough pupils. The owner informed him last week that there are 30,000 nudists in the New York - Pennsylvania area. Morris declared: "Nudity is a much better solution to crime in the streets than increasing the Federal Narcotics Squad 30 per cent," as President Johnson has proposed. (Continued on page 5) are generally older than most other draft-eligible men. To fill the graduate school quota at the University, Presi- dent Harnwell said recently, bet- ween ten and 50 per cent more students may be accepted this fall than in the past. This would be done, he said in a January news conference, because of the large number of students who will be forced to turn down accept- ances due to the draft. The Hershey order, made on the advice of the National Secur- ity Council, was coupled with the abolition of occupational defer- ments, except those which local boards grant "based on a show- ing of essential community need." Previously the Security Council maintained lists of "es- sential and critical occupations" for which deferments were auto- matic. The Security Council, in mak- ing the decision, said that grad- uate school deferments are "un- fair particularly in the time of armed conflict to all the young men who do not have the oppor- tunity or the finances to attend graduate school." The Security Council also said that granting deferments for certain categories of graduate study .such as the natural sciences, would be unfair and result in "distortions...from the tendency (of students) to select draft- deferred fields of study" over others. Officials of educational as- sociations in Washington were reportedly unhappy with the de- cision. The American Council on Education issued a statement calling the decision "alarming" and recommending that Congress adopt a system of random selec- tion of draftees. Congress speci- fically voted against such a pro- posal last June, however. The new draft regulations have plunged University graduate and professional school officials into worried uncertainty. "We've made all sorts of efforts to predict the effects," said Dr. Michael H. Jameson, dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, ''but the basic decisions rest with the local draft boards." "If this stupid government would only give us some rulesl" beefed Dr. Donald F. Blankertz, director of the Wharton School's graduate division. SDT will shut down on Friday Unless the officers of Sigma Delta Tau (SDT) sorority can come up with "some fantastic proposal," the house at 3926 Spruce St. will be closed on Fri- day, Dean of WomenAlice Emer- son disclosed yesterday. Mrs. Emerson's statement confirmed widespread speculat- ion over the weekend that SDT was about to shutdown for the semester. "Unless they can come up with a proposal that really makes sense--and I doubt that they can- it looks like the girls will be moving back to the dorms next week," she said. SDT's difficulties with the University stem from a long standing dispute between the 17 resident sisters and SDT house- mother Mrs. Sylvia Baggish. Strained relations between the women and Mrs. Baggish have been discussed with the University "since October," but "the present set-up in SDT does not reflect satisfactory living conditions," the Dean said. The housemother has moved out, and the University has found a temporary replacement until Friday, according to Mrs. Emer- son. "I'm not happy about it either," grumbled Dean Jeffer- son B. Fordham of the Law School. Jameson, whose 3000-student graduate school is the Univer- sity's largest, promised "to overaccept as much as we can manage to fulfill our committ- ments." "The worst thing," he said, "is that students will have to live in complete uncertainty, and we won't be able to help them plan." Not all graduate students will be drafted, he noted, but the uncertainty will discourage many students from entering graduate school. "Such a student may never actually be taken into service," he said, "but he will waste a lot of time and money hanging around." He predicted that graduate school enrollment would be down next semester. "But how much of it will be due to the draft and how much to general un- certainty," he added, "it's im- possible to know." Blankertz, whose 1500-stu- dent Wharton graduate division ,7iay be among the hardest hit by the new regulations, com- miserated with his students. "We want to give advice to them," he said, "but we don't know what to say. He said applications for spots in the division were up 16 per cent over last year. "We're going to accept 2700 students (Continued on page 3) next year," he predicted. Officials to meet on assistance to evicted students By MARK LIEBERMAN University officials will meet today to determine what steps the University can take to aid stu- dents who have received notices to vacate their apartments. John Brogan, director of the Residence Listing Service, said Friday he would meet with Fran- cis M. Betts HI to discuss the situation. Betts is director of the Office of Institutional Studies and Planning. "We want to be able to help everybody with every type of housing problem," Brogan said. Brogan added that the discus- sion will include policy decisions on any possible legal action which students might request as well as decisions regarding relocation assistance. Occupants of more than 30 campus apartment nouses were issued notices to vacate Thurs- day by the Redevelopment Au- thority as that agency took another step towards the clearance of land for University expansion. The notice, which in most cases was hand-delivered, gave the occupants 90 days to remove personal property from the pre- mises. The notice was dated Feb. 15. Student tenants are required to vacate the apartments by May 15. Final examinations for the spring semester are scheduled to end on May li. The mimeographed notice was signed by Francis J. Lam- mer, executive director of the Redevelopment Authority. The notice advised occupants that the Authority's Rehousing Bureau, at 3833 Market St., would aid students attempting to re- locate. Robert Murphy, director of the Bureau, would not reveal the number of inquiries his of- fice had received since the no- tices were issued. He did admit that his office received requests for assistance. Murphy said the Authority would assume the costs of as- sociated with moving due to the eviction. He added however that persons who moved into apart- ments since the buildings were condemned would not receive such financial aid. A spokesman for the Redevel- opment Authority said he anti- (Continued on page 5) EVEN LANDLORDS are being forced to move as evidenced by the rubble left at the former offices of the Morton Packman Realty Co. on the 3700 block of Locust St. Many of Packman's tenants in the University area received notices to vacate last Thursday.

Eiy Pennsylvanian - Penn Libraries · y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 ... armed conflict — to all the young men who do

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Page 1: Eiy Pennsylvanian - Penn Libraries · y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 ... armed conflict — to all the young men who do

Eiy Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114

Sweeping draft changes affect Penn grad schools

The Selective Service System's decision to cut back graduate school deferments will probably mean a large overacceptance of graduate students by the University for 1968-69.

Lewis Hershey, director of Selective Service, announced Friday that there will no longer be draft deferments for graduate students, except those already in their second or subsequent year of graduate school and those in "medical, dental, and allied medical professions."

The order means that most college seniors and students now in their first year of graduate school will probably be drafted soon after spring graduation. At present, the oldest registrants are drafted first. Students graduating from college

New rules worry grad school deans

Photo by MARTIN SMITH

Blow your mind at Irvin

A near full house at Irvine had its collective mind blown as Janis Joplin turned on the multi- tudes with her white soul singing. Janis, Big Brother and the Hold- ing Company and the Soul Sur- vivers sent out their good vib- rations and broken chairs for nigh onto two hours.

Morris bares plans: no nudes this year

Nudity buff Mark Morris still hopes to teach a Free University course in the nude, but he doubts that it will be this semester, he revealed yesterday.

He is still checking into the legality of the matter to make sure that police officials will not object to it.

He is also unsure of what the University's reaction would be for such a course. "I don't feel it is quite ready for it yet," he said.

This semester he plans to teach a course called "Masks", which will deal with the role of masks in primitive and modern societies. He has not yet regis- tered his course.

"The Free University," Morris said, "is not upset over my announcement."

Morris has been invited by the Circle H Nudist Colony to bring his class there if he finds enough pupils.

The owner informed him last week that there are 30,000 nudists in the New York - Pennsylvania area.

Morris declared: "Nudity is a much better solution to crime in the streets than increasing the Federal Narcotics Squad 30 per cent," as President Johnson has proposed.

(Continued on page 5)

are generally older than most other draft-eligible men.

To fill the graduate school quota at the University, Presi- dent Harnwell said recently, bet- ween ten and 50 per cent more students may be accepted this fall than in the past. This would be done, he said in a January news conference, because of the large number of students who will be forced to turn down accept- ances due to the draft.

The Hershey order, made on the advice of the National Secur- ity Council, was coupled with the abolition of occupational defer- ments, except those which local boards grant "based on a show- ing of essential community need."

Previously the Security Council maintained lists of "es- sential and critical occupations" for which deferments were auto- matic.

The Security Council, in mak- ing the decision, said that grad- uate school deferments are "un- fair particularly in the time of armed conflict — to all the young men who do not have the oppor- tunity or the finances to attend graduate school."

The Security Council also said that granting deferments for certain categories of graduate study .such as the natural sciences, would be unfair and result in "distortions...from the tendency (of students) to select draft- deferred fields of study" over others.

Officials of educational as- sociations in Washington were reportedly unhappy with the de- cision. The American Council on Education issued a statement calling the decision "alarming" and recommending that Congress adopt a system of random selec- tion of draftees. Congress speci- fically voted against such a pro- posal last June, however.

The new draft regulations have plunged University graduate and professional school officials into worried uncertainty.

"We've made all sorts of efforts to predict the effects," said Dr. Michael H. Jameson, dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, ''but the basic decisions rest with the local draft boards."

"If this stupid government would only give us some rulesl" beefed Dr. Donald F. Blankertz, director of the Wharton School's

graduate division.

SDT will shut down on Friday

Unless the officers of Sigma Delta Tau (SDT) sorority can come up with "some fantastic proposal," the house at 3926 Spruce St. will be closed on Fri- day, Dean of WomenAlice Emer- son disclosed yesterday.

Mrs. Emerson's statement confirmed widespread speculat- ion over the weekend that SDT was about to shutdown for the semester.

"Unless they can come up with a proposal that really makes sense--and I doubt that they can- it looks like the girls will be moving back to the dorms next week," she said.

SDT's difficulties with the University stem from a long standing dispute between the 17 resident sisters and SDT house- mother Mrs. Sylvia Baggish.

Strained relations between the women and Mrs. Baggish have been discussed with the University "since October," but "the present set-up in SDT does not reflect satisfactory living conditions," the Dean said.

The housemother has moved out, and the University has found a temporary replacement until Friday, according to Mrs. Emer- son.

"I'm not happy about it either," grumbled Dean Jeffer- son B. Fordham of the Law School.

Jameson, whose 3000-student graduate school is the Univer- sity's largest, promised "to overaccept as much as we can manage to fulfill our committ- ments."

"The worst thing," he said, "is that students will have to live in complete uncertainty, and we won't be able to help them plan."

Not all graduate students will be drafted, he noted, but the uncertainty will discourage many students from entering graduate school.

"Such a student may never actually be taken into service," he said, "but he will waste a lot of time and money hanging around."

He predicted that graduate school enrollment would be down next semester. "But how much of it will be due to the draft and how much to general un- certainty," he added, "it's im- possible to know."

Blankertz, whose 1500-stu- dent Wharton graduate division

,7iay be among the hardest hit by the new regulations, com- miserated with his students.

"We want to give advice to them," he said, "but we don't know what to say.

He said applications for spots in the division were up 16 per cent over last year. "We're going to accept 2700 students

(Continued on page 3) next year," he predicted.

Officials to meet on assistance to evicted students By MARK LIEBERMAN

University officials will meet today to determine what steps the University can take to aid stu- dents who have received notices to vacate their apartments.

John Brogan, director of the Residence Listing Service, said Friday he would meet with Fran- cis M. Betts HI to discuss the situation. Betts is director of the Office of Institutional Studies and Planning.

"We want to be able to help everybody with every type of housing problem," Brogan said.

Brogan added that the discus- sion will include policy decisions on any possible legal action which students might request as well as decisions regarding relocation assistance.

Occupants of more than 30

campus apartment nouses were issued notices to vacate Thurs- day by the Redevelopment Au- thority as that agency took another step towards the clearance of land for University expansion.

The notice, which in most cases was hand-delivered, gave the occupants 90 days to remove personal property from the pre- mises.

The notice was dated Feb. 15. Student tenants are required to vacate the apartments by May 15. Final examinations for the spring semester are scheduled to end on May li.

The mimeographed notice was signed by Francis J. Lam- mer, executive director of the Redevelopment Authority.

The notice advised occupants

that the Authority's Rehousing Bureau, at 3833 Market St., would aid students attempting to re- locate.

Robert Murphy, director of the Bureau, would not reveal the number of inquiries his of- fice had received since the no- tices were issued. He did admit that his office received requests for assistance.

Murphy said the Authority would assume the costs of as- sociated with moving due to the eviction. He added however that persons who moved into apart- ments since the buildings were condemned would not receive such financial aid.

A spokesman for the Redevel- opment Authority said he anti-

(Continued on page 5)

EVEN LANDLORDS are being forced to move as evidenced by the rubble left at the former offices of the Morton Packman Realty Co. on the 3700 block of Locust St. Many of Packman's tenants in the University area received notices to vacate last Thursday.

Page 2: Eiy Pennsylvanian - Penn Libraries · y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 ... armed conflict — to all the young men who do

mmmwm

Campus events CAMPUS AGENDA

BOWLING MEET: Men's bowling team challenges wo- men's. 4 P.M. tomorrow at Wil- liam Penn Lanes, 3619 Wanut.

CAMPUS PERFORMANCE SOCIETY: Concert, 4:30 Thurs- day, in CA Auditorium (this week only). Works by Mozart, Cross- man, and Beethoven, performed by Pat locca, piano and Eric Stumacher. piano. Free.

CATACOMBS: "AnEveningat the Opera" presents Puccini's "Turandot" with Nilssen and Correlli - tonight at 8 P.M. Tomorrow: Gary Cooper in "High Noon" at 7:30 & 9:30.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE OR- GANIZATION: Meeting tomorrow 11 A.M. Upper Room CA. All invited.

COLLOQUIUM -GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION: "Teaching Students to Think," by Charles E. Dwyer, assistant professor of education, Wed., 2 P.M. in Education D 9-10, 3700

Walnut. DELTA DELTA DELTA

SORORITY: $300 scholarship available to all undergraduate women. Applications at Dean of Women's Office, must be return- ed by Feb. 26.

GRADUATE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS LECTURE SERIES: C.A. Doxiadis, architect, plan- ner, and author will speak Thurs- day. 8:30 P.M., College Assembly Hall, College Hall.

HILLEL: Dr. Richard L. Hoff- man will speak on "Reflections on Jews and Judaism in English Literature," Tues, 4 P.M.

KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA SCHOLARSHIP: $500 graduate scholarships to any woman stu- dent interested in pursuing a graduate degree. Applications must be obtained in 117 Logan Hall by March 1.

LAST LECTURE SERIES: Dr. Nancy Leach, Assistant Dean of Women, will discuss "Student Convention: Paradox of Their

Rebellion," Wed., 8 P.M.. Hill Hall.

LAW STUDENTS CIVIL RIGHTS RESEARCH COUNCIL: Students invited to hear John Abt, counsel for the Communist Party of the U.S., speak about the Mc- Carran Act, 2 P.M. Law School, room 214.

PENN DRAFT COUNSEL- ING COMM.: Office open for counseling. Room 3 CA. Monday thru Thursday, 12-5.

PEOPLE TO PEOPLE AND CATACOMBS: An International Folksong Workshop, Sat., 9-1 A.M Free. Refreshments.

PRE-LAW LECTURE SER- IES: Dan Finnerty, "The Draft and its Alternatives," 7:30 P.M. Tuesday.

RECORD: Last week to re- serve 1968 Record.

SKI TRIP TO MT. SNOW: March 10-15. Deposit due Feb. 27. For details attend Ski Club meeting Tuesday night or call EV-2-2973 or EV 2-2958.

STUDENT TUTOR SOCIETY: Free undergrad tutoring. Tutors assigned Moru-Fr., 1-2 P.M., 206 College Hall.

SYMPOSIUM: Discuss "Com- munist Strategy in Asia," with Drs. Palmer, Lee, and Osburn. Tomorrow, 8 P.M., Spruce Hall, 42nd and Spruce. Refreshments. Free.

WRITTEN WORD: In associa- tion with Hillel presents "Kadinah: The Story of Israel's Six-day War." Wed. and Thurs., 9:45 P.M. Catacombs, 36th and Locust.

ACTIVITY NOTICE

BRIDGE CLUB: Team of Four event Wed., West Lounge, H.H., 7 P.M. Limited to first 18 teams.

CAMPUS GUIDES: Meeting for all members and heelers, Tuesday. 11 A.M. Hill Hall House III Formal Lounge.

GERMAN CLUB: Meeting Tuesday 11 A.M., 303 College Hall.

IAA: "Upheaval inCommunist China" topic for Great Decisions 1968 Discussion group tomorrow, 8 P.M. , 2nd floor lounge CA. Background information on topic

Sanders is the systems company that • § ubled its sales volume

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CALL your placement director for an interview here next week with a Sanders representative. The Sanders story makes good listening.

FEBRUARY 28 CREATING NEW DIRECTIONS IN ELECTRONICS

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available from Mr. Bill Wegener. CA.

MC CLELLAND HALL CLUB: Organizational meeting for of- ficers and heelers today, 9 P.M., in back of basement study hall.

F2NN LITERARY SOCIETY: Meeting tomorrow 11 A.M., Houston Hall, Room 1. Dr. Phyl- lis Rackin will lead the dis- cussion on "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead." All in- vited.

SKI CLUB: Meeting tomorrow 7:30, Houston Hall, for Spring Vacation Ski Trip to Mt. Snow. Details and Reservations.

SOPHOMORE WOMEN: Don't forget to fill out Sphinx and Key questionnaires and return by Feb. 19 to 117 Logan Hall.

VIETNAM WEEK COM- MITTEE: Meeting tomorrow night. For time and place see tomorrow's DP or call EV-2- 4650.

WHARTON GIRLS: Mrs. Su- zanne Rohrbaugh, from the Placement Office, will speak about business opportunities for women, 11 A.M. tomorrow, E- 109.

SCUE to hold interviews

The Student Committee on Undergraduate Education (SCUE) will hold interviews for prospec- tive members Wednesday and Thursday.

Prospective members should sign up for interviews at the Houston Hall information desk.

Wrestling (Continued from page 7)

a 11-4 victory. Then, for the second time this

season, the home team had no one available to face Penn jun- ior Vic Antes. The forfeit boost- ed Antes* slate to 5-1.

Co-captain Richie Levitt and junior Jed Olmstead kept the total rising in the Red and Blue victory column.

Levitt, who has not lost since the December opener with La- fayette, recorded his fifth straight triumph via an 8-3 de- cision of Bruin Steve Morrow.

Olmstead upped his season mark to 6-0-1 with a 6-2 vic- tory over Brown's Barry Nathan. The 152-pound junior was behind 2-0 in the second period, then came back with a pair of re- verses and a two-minute-plus

tage.

DRIVE PART TIME

MEN AND WOMEN DAY OR NIGHT WORK

Yellow-Cab Company of Philadel- phia has openings for part-time drivers. Here is an opportunity for pleasant, interesting outdoor work with good earnings.

Over the years thousands of college students have driven Yellow Cabs to aid their financial needs.

Qualifications: 21 years of age; current Penna. Driver's License; proof of driver's license for 2 years.

Apply

YELLOW CAB COMPANY Employment Office 105 South 12th Sir**

Monday Ihrouah Thurtoa y — 9 AM to 9 P M Friday and Saturday —9 AM. to 3 P.M

«3 DEPOSIT AFTER PUBLICATION $12

PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968

Page 3: Eiy Pennsylvanian - Penn Libraries · y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 ... armed conflict — to all the young men who do

Rl • • I • I M Psychological effect of war ehgious dichotomy is issue, Rev. says 2-S causes student guilt

By CARL F. KUGEL "The religious community in this world is split," a leading

Eastern Orthodox theologian said here Thursday. "There is a soul-searching going on in all religions," the Rt. Rev.

Alexander Schemann, dean of St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in New York, said during a lecture in the Christian As- sociation's Memorial Hall.

Schemann said such "soul-searching" results in a choice between the secular and "sacred paths" to religion.

Secularism is the acceptance of the world on its own terms and the rejection of the world's old, sacred framework, he explained.

The "God is dead" theolog- ians represent such rejection in its extreme, he said. "They be- lieve that the return from the sacred to the profane is the real religion of today—the building of the secular city." Action must replace prayer, he added.

The alternative is a"thirst and hunger for the sacred again in a very new way," Schemann remarked. Unless one returns to the primitive, sacred promptings of religion, he can never exper- ience real religious feeling, he theorized. Schemann termed this lack of religious feeling "a tremendous spiritual vacuum."

Schemann presented the Eastern Orthodox view, saying: "it is impossible to combine these two trends in modern re- ligion because they are so dif- ferent. Man must attempt to transcend and reconcile them." He believes that the sacrament has come to signify something which relates to both this world and the next. It provides a visible sign of an invisible grace, he commented. Human life has be- come infused in the sacrament, he said.

Photo by BILL VITKA

RT. REV. SCHEMANN 'World is split'

SDT to shut down

According to a noted psychia- try professor, male students who accept the 2-S deferment pay an enormous psychological price for this privilege.

Dr. Seymour L.Halleck,pro- fessor of psychiatry at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin and direc- tor of its student psychiatric services claims in an article in the "Progressive" that 2-S stu- dents are "plagued with guilt, an unremitting guilt which domin- ates every aspect of their exis- tence."

The guilt, he says, is caused by the idealistic students' inability to compromise.Students are concerned about "selling out." Halleck claims students feel a greater moral committ- ment to their values than older men who have lost their "Ideal- ogical purity."

Halleck says that as a result of this committment students can find only two "pure" answers to their personal involvement with the war in Vietnam.

If the war is right then they should not shirk their duty but should help fight it. If the war is wrong, they should do everything in their power to stop it. Although neither course of action is fea- sible as long as one is a student, there is a part of every stu- dent's conscience that says to him, "You either belong in the army or in jail."

Halleck does not claim the students' fellings are rational or even consciously recognized. He does say that today's students have a tendency to be unusually honest; that they have a limited capacity for self-deception.

The student realizes that a business-as-usual attitude with regard to the war is not good enough. He cannot understand "how supposedly idealist men like his professors can continue to live their lives as though no- thing was wrong."

Halleck thinks that the morally committed youth are turning to activism as a way of

confronting the moral dilemma which they are facing. When stu- dents declare themselves poten- tial draft resisters or mail their draft cards back to their local boards, they undoubtedly experi- ence a sense of courage and commitment. He makes the distinction between shouting "We won't go" at a political rally and' facing the threat of a court trial and possi- ble imprisonment.

Halleck also feels that the war has made it more difficult for homosexuals and mental cases to overcome their psychological difficulties, as these students realize that their illness is a means of beating the draft.

Halleck says that "whatever one's position on the war, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that our Government's efforts to protect the sons of middle class parents from the hazards of military serVice has had a poisonous effect upon our country."

"It is no longer Nature itself but human liturgy."

(Continued from page 1) Predicting that "very severe

obstacles exist to finding an ar- rangement satisfactory for the rest of the semester," Mrs. Emerson added, "It'll be better to take a fresh start next fall."

Mrs. Emerson said she met with house officers and SDT alumnae'' troubleshooters'' F ri- day afternoon and told them of the University's decision.

"I asked the Alumni repre- sentative if she could come up with some solution and she said she didn't think so," Mrs.Emer- son said.

"The girls have already had such a poor winter of not being able to work with other people,

it's probably betier this way," Mrs. Emerson declared. "We aren't taking any action against the chapter."

Some members of SDT have charged that the Dean's Office had threatened them with dis- ciplinary action for alleged in- cidents at the sorority.

Several of the sisters have reportedly retained lawyers.

Under the plan worked out by the Dean of Women's Office, all house residents from outside Philadelphia will be moved back into the dorms. Residents from the Philadelphia area will com- mute for the rest of the semes- ter.

THE PHILADELPHIA CHAMBER ORCHESTRA SOCIETY

PRESENTS Third Annual INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF CHAMBER ORCHESTRAS featuring The Philadelphia Chamber Orchestra, (Members Of The Philadelphia Orchestra), EUGENE ORDANDY, Hon. Music Director: NICHOLAS HARSANYl, Conductor. Soloists NATALIE HINDERAS, Piano — GILBERT JOHNSON, Trumpet.

ACADEMY OF MUSIC, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1968, 8:00 PM PROGRAM

Vivaldi Concerto Grosso In A Minor Shostakovich Concerto No. 8 For Piano, Trumpet Irving Fine Serious Song — Lament For String Orchestra Mozart Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201

SPECIAL PRICES FOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY LOCATION REGULAR STUDENTS AND FACULTY Parquet Circle $4.50 $3.50 Balcony 4.00 3.25 Family Circle 2.75 2.00 Amphitheatre 2.00 1.50

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT HOUSTON HALL TICKET SERVICE

THE 0PINI0NMAKERS The influence of the press on American society

AN INTERCOLLEGIATE SYMPOSIUM AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1968 SPEAKERS:

Broadcasting EDWARD P. MORGAN, PBL JAMES C. HAGERTY, ABC GORDON MANNING, CBS DAVID SCHOENBRUN, CBS

Newspapers

RALPH McGILL, The Atlanta Constitution BEN W. GILBERT, Washington Post JAMES A. WECHSLER, N.Y. Post and a representative of the N.Y. Times

Magazines

WARREN HINCKLE, Ramparts WILLIAM ATTWOOD, Cowles Communications SAMUEL FERBER, Esquire MARYA MANNES, The Reporter

Books SIMON M. BESSIE, Atheneum JOSEPH BARNES, Simon & Schuster RICHARD SEAVER, Grove Press EVAN THOMAS, Harper & Row

EDWARD W. BARRETT, Moderator

For information contact your campus representative:

Tom Bly 304 Bishop White Hall

or write to: Board of Managers - ICA 206 Ferris Booth Hall New York, New York 1U027

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE THREE

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..mm- ■ m

18»5 Say Pennsylvanian 1968

DENNI*H. WILEN

Managing Editor

DONALD M. MORRISON Editor-in-Chief

ROBERT I. TUTEUR Business Manager

RICHARD B. SHAPIRO Editorial Chairman

JAMES J, RESTIVO JR. Features- Editor

LAWRENCE D. KROHN Sports Editor

ACTION LINE QUESTION: It is freezing up here. Help!—Suite I-J, Hill Hall.

ACTION: Action Line spoke to Sandra Gust of son, director of Hill Hall. The heating is all right; the windows leak cold air when they are not taped. They were taped at Christmas, but were opened (by students) when the coeds returned. They will be taped again.

CAMPUS CAROUSEL .

Freedom fighters The men file in, clad in blue fatigues.

For every 20 men in blue, there are one or two in white. They file into a well- lit, almost antiseptic "recreation room," 20, 60, 110 men — and boys — all in clear, azure, winter-noon-sky blue.

Jack and Sam and Walt are there to welcome. They pin paper valentines on the men — and boys --in innocent blue They file by, walk solemnly to cafe-style tables, six or eight men to a table. Some sit in chairs lined up along the walls. They sit and stare. At each other. At the walls. At Jack and Sam and Walt.

A young, "collegiate-looking" guy stands on a riser at the front of the room. He starts to spin some records. Martha and the Vandellas' "Heat Wave;" "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye," the Casinos. Sam and Dave "Hold On, I'm Comin."

Some of the men in blue crack faint smiles of recognition. Two get up, a study in black and white, dance something that looks like the Funky Broadway." The others hoots and clap. Black and white sit down before the song is over, red- faced.

Jack tells the record-spinner not to worry, "the girls'11 be here any minute. We got a dozen girls. They always come, they'll be here any minute."

The men—and boys—in blue aren't all the same. Some are Good Ole Boys from North Carolina. Some are blacks from Harlem, blacks from Selma. High School dropouts from St. Louis, College gradu- ates from New Haven. They're a mixed lot.

The girls arrive, attractive, Jewish- looking broads from Northeast. That's Northeast Philadelphia and the place breeds a type.

They start to dance, the pretty high school girls from Northeast and the sad, sad men in blue. The guys from big cities do the 'Boogaloo" and the Funky Broadway. The guys from the sticks do something that looks like the Twist or the Pony. A shy one asks the record- spinner's girl to dance. She dances.

Jack, 45 years old and a little paunchy in his tight black Banlon shirt and seedy brown sportcoat, stens. ^nto the stage, a food - high riser. Tambourine in hand, he shouts "Sock it to me" into the micro- phone, beating the instrument on his thigh.

RICHARD SHAPIRO The men in blue smile . . . understand- ingly.

Two men— really boys — in blue walk up to the record-spinner, hand him some albums. The Doors, the Rolling Stones. The record spinner and the two boys talk. Recognition again. The boys in blue recog- nize in the record-spinner the manifesta- tion of a former life-style. The three smile wanly. There but for fortune.

The men and boys in blue are patients at the Valley Forge Military Hospital, neuropsychiatric ward. Jack, Walt, Sam are members of a Jewish veterans' lodge. They come to the ward every two weeks, hoping to bring some cheer to the men and boys in blue ward uniforms.

The patients are all young, surprisingly young, 18, 19, 20. Very few past 25. Patients in a neuropsychiatric ward, dia- gnosed mentally ill because killing people blew their minds. They're abnormal, don't you understand, sick; because they became manic-depressives, schizophrenics, cata- tonics rather than face their daily task, killing.

You look at Jack and Sam and Walt, their wives and daughters who have come to dance with the men, and you realize that they too are being used in the war machine. It is apparent that trained psychologists in government employ could do a better job. of devising means of amusing the men. But allowing veterans' groups and voluntary organizations to participate in "healing" soldiers ac- complishes two ends. It provides the patients with some release.

But, more important, the Jack's and Sam's and Walt's are being given an opportunity to pitch in and help with the war effort. It spite of their middle-aged paunchiness, they are being let onto the team.

They're doing their bit, and thus the perverted camaraderie of fighting wars is spread a little further abroad in the land. Countless thousands of veterans and their wives, boy scouts, girl scouts, fraternities, foundations are reaping the vicarious thrill of participating in war without dirtying their hands.

On the road back to Philadelphia stands the Freedom Foundation at Valley Forge. Nowhere to run, no place to hide. Hold on, I'm comin'.

QUESTION: Whatever happened to Repertory Theater of the Air by a University Group? Posters were up about three weeks ago. There is nothing now. Is it still around?—L.B.

ACTION: Action Line spoke to Frank Fitzmorris, WXPN business manager. The Repertory Theater of the Air is currently in the planning stages. The first recording date was Feb. 17, with others to follow. However, they will not be on the air before April.

QUESTION: What can be done about a water cooler on the fourth floor of Class of '28. It doesn't work.-Wolodymyr Shembel

ACTION: Action Line spoke with Ambrose Davis, office manager at the Residence Office. It does work; water comes out. However, someone has been playing a- round, and pulled out the plug. Unless the cooler is plugged in, the water can't get cold. Perhaps, if you keep the plug out long enough, you will get the hot water that is so scarce around here.

QUESTION: When will the steam room in the Gimbel Gym be operating properly? —John Chester.

ACTION: Action Line spoke to Lida D'Esterre, secretary at Gimbel Gym. She told us that the steam room is being worked on and adjusted constantly. It is ex- pected that it will be operating correctly in the future.

QUESTION: In the middle of the street at 38th & Spruce Sts. there is some trolley mechanisms which are in such poor repair that there is a hole about three- feet deep. The hole is covered with a metal lid which is broken in the center, and through which anyone could fall. Can it be fixed?--Christopher K.

ACTION: Miss H.A. of Municipal Radio at City Hall promised Action Line that she would send the police out to take a look!

Keep on callingl While police are out inspecting pot holes, all the pot heads will be safe.

(Continued on pare 5 }

.u T5',', D"ily Penn«ylva">"n i» published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods, and the last seven class days of each term. One issue published in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall 34th and Chestnut Sts. at the rate of $10.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Phila- co.P^.J!fnI,8v,lvan.i.a- £eW" and editoria» Phones: (215) 594-7535. Business and advertising- :: 594-7534 (If busy call 594-7535). *

1HMR . .. -■-, . • URGED TO EVALUATE

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

Every day in The Daily Pennsylvanian Activity Notices there is a phone number to call for draft-related problems and every day, I am sure, a few students call up. However, a lot more would— except for fear of having their names or pictures taken. I called and found it was done in a most fair and impartical man- ner. I was not coerced into accepting any specific ideology. I was not told to run right out and appeal forconsciencious objector, to go to Canada, or to lead a demonstration-rather I was urged to follow my own conscience. I was urged to evaluate my stand on this war and all other wars. I was instructed of all my alternatives, yet the whole time I was reminded that the decisions I made today may have to follow me for the rest of my life. I was given some pamphlets, some ideas, and a lot of time in which to go home and THINK' After a three hour thought provoking session I was tired, but I was INFORMED.

To allow tfje University community to become informed, to give them a sampl- ing of the objectives of this most worth- while service, and to acquaint them with their legal and illegal alternatives to this problem, The Pre-Law Society will spon-

PAGE FOUR THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Letters to the editor sor Dan Finnerty, Reverend Alan Happe, and Dr. Eileen Girsh speaking on the pre- ceding topics on Tuesday evening, Feb. 20, at 7:30 in DH E-8. They will be able to assist you in your problems and to answer your questions at that time. This is open, not only to the Pre-Law Society, but also to the entire University community.

On behalf of the club, and the speakers, I urge all of you to attend.

Arnie Rachlis Secretary: Pre-Law Society

POLITICAL ALTERNATIVE

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

The advertisement on page seven of the Feb. 14 DP announces the arrival on campus of the New Politics Movement. While the ad mentions a series of issues, it omits some points in the platform voted by the National Conference for the New Politics last Labor Day weekend in Chicago; this conference gave rise to the coordinating body of the movement, the National Committee for New Politics.

Perhaps the new campus chapter of the movement could clarify to the public, to which it is appealing for support, whether it subscribes to the Chicago platform in its entirety (including, among other thorny

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968

points, its condemnation of the "imper- ialistic Zionist war" and the Israeli government's "aggression") or whether it formally rejects some of these points. While the Middle East has now been re- legated to the inside pages, the public may once again have to face some fun- damental issues there, this time possibly without benefit of the lightning victory by Israel that allowed this country the luxury of being bypassed by events. The question is therefore a legitimate one to ask of any movement that aspires to beccme a political alternative to the existing parties.

Igor Kopytoff Associate Professor Department of Anthropology

DON'T FALSIFY

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian: Are the editors of the Penn Comment

so upset that they didn't think of a drug survey first that they are now trying to ruin it for everyone else? Or have thy suddenly become obsessed with the " Phil- adelphia mentality" after discovering it in their last issue? I would think that the Philadelphia police have better things to do then search every West Philadelphia apartment for pot-smoking students. Cer-

tainly they have not bothered looking for underage students who are breaking the law by drinking.

Far more important than any statistic on how many students use drugs is the knowledge of why they choose to do so. Less than one fourth of the UPSG ques- tionnaire deals with personal drug use; the rest deals with attitudes, the knowledge of which is hardly going'to lead to raids. It is crucial to know who uses drugs only to correctly interpret the rest of the questionnaire. To any student who re- ceives the UPSG questionnaire I would say this: do not answer any question if you feel it may later be used against you but please do not waste everyone's time by falsifying your reply.

Cathy Walker, Chairman UPSG External Affairs Committee

Letters to the Editor must be typewritten, double-spaced, 60 characters to the line. The editors reserve the riaht to edit subject to space limitations. Letters must be signed, but names will be with- held upon request.

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ACTION LINE (Continued from page 4

QUESTION: One of the hot water faucets in the women's rest room on the ground floor of the Hare Building has been stuck-on since last summer. The water is so hot it's not good for anything but making coffee--if you bring a cup and some instant Sanka. Can't something be done to turn it off? When the weather gets warmer the place will turn into a steam room again --Elaine L. Fort

ACTION: Action Line spoke to Harry Wall, foreman of the University carpenters. Mr. Wall expressed amazement that no one had said anything for so long. He said that the matter would be looked into at once. Maybe someone thinks they're in the Gimbel Gym.

QUESTION: There is a sign on the door of 216 college Hall that says: Fire escape may be reached through this door. The room is someone's office and is always locked. College Hall is a difficult builting to get out of if there is a fire. —C.W.

ACTION: On the fourth phone call, Action Line reached the occupant of Room 216, Dr. Wesley D. Smith, Associate Professor of Classical Studies. He said the sign is indeed on the door and the method to reach the fire escape is to break the glass in the door, reach in, open the door from the inside and proceed to the fire escape. Dr. Smith added that he hopes this method will be used only in case of fire. In any event. Student Health will cheerfully sew up any wounds received while breaking the glass.

Research

Apts (Continued from page I)

cipates little trouble from stu- dents who are forced to relocate. The spokesman explained that the buildings, in most cases, are already owned by the Authority and that former owners were merely managing the properties. Tenants pay rent to the landlord who receives a management fee and also maintains the property. Remaining funds are given to the Authority.

The spokesman added that leases signed by students be- came invalid as soon as the properties were condemned. Stu- dents whose leases run past May 15 will not be held to the con- tracts, he said.

Nudes (Continued from page 1)

"If President Johnson is really serious about crime in the streets, he'll take off his clothes", Morris declared.

"I'm glad my thing is taking off my clothes " Morris added, "It doesn't require talent or cleverness."

Morris told The Daily Penn- sylvanian Thursday that he hoped to teach a course in the nude in the Free University.

The Free University is run by the UPSG with the philosophy of no restrictions on who may teach, what can he taught, or who may enrol' as a student. There is no salary, no tuition, and no credit for the courses.

Your Best Defense is a Good Offense

After winning the light-heavyweight Naval Championship in 1945, Dan Bucceroni trained 2,000 recruits per month in the art of self- defense at the Great Lakes Naval Installation. Many of these men had occasion to resort to their boxing training in combat.

For your everyday living, a course in boxing and body building will make you feel more confidant, and in the event of any fistic emer- gencies, the art of self-defense may save you from severe bodily injury.

Today, Dan teaches boxing and body building at the DAN BUC- CERONI SCHOOL OF BOXING AND BODY BUILDING, 2827 N Broad St. Author of Easy Boxing (or Self-defense, Dan Bucceroni, on three different occasions, was in line to fight Rocky Marciano for the Heavyweight Championship of the World

This week, Dan will offer free demonstrations in Convention Hall at the 32n(! ^nual Philadelphia Sport and Camping Show. Observers and participants are welcome to attend this informal and very informative-expose.

REASONABLE RATES BA 3-3233 IV 3-1022

BOOK AVAILABLE AT THE SCHOOL OR BY MAIL AND AT CONVENTION HALL — $1.00

YOU'D BETTER GO SEE IT AS SOON AS YOU CAN.

Sylvie is superb." — Crowther. N.Y. Times

"Played to perfection by Sylvie." —New Yorker Magazine

lh. WiM»f Raid* OrgmuiMn l«e P»«M«U

BERTOLT BREChTS

(Continued

expect significant reductions in the Ad- ministration's budget requests. Research funds frequently are cut by Congress, because many Congressmen think some research projects are duplicated and are irrelevant.

Arwin A. Dougal, assistant director of the Pentagon's office for research and engineering, said the Defense De- partment surveyed universities to de- termine what effect the budget cuts would have. In terms of priorities, Dougal said,

Gellhorn named new Med. dean u Thant aide

from page 6) most universities will first reduce the number of new post-doctoral research fellowships. Then, universities will defer purchases of major pieces of equipment, and the number of graduate students admitted will be reduced, he said. Dougal said summer faculty research appoint- ments generally were low on the list of priorities for cuts, but he added that many faculty members across the coun- try still will be unable to find support for summer projects.

ERICTURKINGTON Night Editor

'■;■;. '■;:■::':

DAVID KAY Night Assistant

HOWARD TOPEL Sports Night Editor

Dr. Alfred A. Gellhorn has been appointed dean of the Uni- versity's School of Medicine, President Harnwell announced Saturday.,

Gellhorn, a professor of medicine at Columbia University College of Physicians and Sur- geons, will succeed Dr. Samuel Gurin on July 1. Gurin has held the post since 1962.

Commenting on Gellhorn*s appointment, Harnwell said, "We believe that he will give us the leadership we need for coordina- ting our medical school teaching and related activities with the University's expanding clinical and hospital relationships. He is nationally recognized for his contributions as a medical clini- cian and research scientist."

Gellhorn has been a member of the Columbia medical faculty since 1943 and director of the Institute of Cancer Research since 1952. He is the author or coauthor of more than 150 arti- cles dealing with fundamental aspects of cancer and the care of patients with neo-plastic disease.

Gurin resigned last April be- cause of poor health. He joined the faculty in 1937 and became professor of biochemistry in 1948. In 1955, Gurin was named Chairman and Benjamin Rush Professor of Biochemistry,, He received his doctorate in bio- chemistry at Columbia Univer- sity.

"I wish to express the appre- ciation of the University and its School of Medicine for Dr. Gurin's imaginative leadership and accomplishments," Harnwell said.

"He took a leading part in planning for new buildings to provide convenient laboratory facilities for students at all stages of their medical educa- tion, and create space for new types of clinical research pro- jects designed to improve medi- cal care," he added.

Gellhorn has also been named professor of medicine and direc- tor of the University Medical Center.

China-wafcher talks

the

+ ROADRUNNER CARTOON!!

TUESDAY, FEB. 20

IRVINE 7 & 9:30

FRENCH: ENGLISH

SUBTITLES

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old lady STARR.NCSYI.VIE Dmecno BY RENE ALLIO

M.TIT f^l Mlt*%tO RY £3J^

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MEMBERS

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ROMANCE LANGUAGE CLUB PRESENTATION

"Without the cultural revo- lution, Red China would have been invited to join the U.N. by now," said Dr. John G. Stoes- singer in an International Affairs Association - sponsored speech Thursday night at the University Museum.

Stoessinger ought to know.He currently serves as U Thant's right-hand man in the U.N. Sec- retariat's Political affairs di- vision and lectures at the City University of New York.

"A profound tragedy," is how he termedU£.—China relations. "China sees the U,S. as the supreme devil in the world, and the U»5. sees China in the same view. And the tragedy is that both are based on inaccuracies and misconceptions."

Tracing the history of China, before an audience of approxi- mately 200, he showed the strong justifications for China's anti- Western attitude.

"China's antipathy toward the West includes Russia asmuchas the rest of the Western world," he noted, citing Russian land grabs of the nineteenth century as the basis of Chinese anti- Russian feeling.

Photo by HAROLD KLEIDERMAN

JOHN G. STOESSINGER "Profound tragedy"

P-O-P- MARCH 1

HOW NOW CHAIRMAN MAO? SPRUCE HALL PRESENTS A SYMPOSIUM ON:

"COMMUNIST STRATEGIES IN ASIA" with DR PALMER

DRLEE DR OSBORN

Tues., FEB. 20 8 P.M. ADMISSION FREE

SPRUCE HALL 42nd & Spruce St.

^jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii*iiiiiiiiMiiitiit«itiiiiiiiiiMiaiiitiittiiiiiiaiiiiii>iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiii««iairtt«tiiiiiii«iiiiuj^

A representative of The

Doily Pennsylvanian will be in the west alcove

of Houston Hall

during the University free hour

11-noon today

to take classified ads, letters to

the editor, Action Line requests

and other DP business.

■ =TiiitiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiitiiiitiiiiuiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiK^ MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN P\GE FIVE

Page 6: Eiy Pennsylvanian - Penn Libraries · y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 ... armed conflict — to all the young men who do

Defense Department reduces support to universities By WALTER GRANT

WASHINGTON (CPS) — Troubles may be just beginning for university graduate students and professors who depend on the Defense Department and the space agency for fellowships and funding of research projects.

The Federal Government's budget have forced both the Pentagon and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to reduce support to universities during the current fiscal year. And the outlook for Fiscal 1969 is not much bright- er.

Although some universities are already feeling the pinch, most will not feel the full impact of the decrease in financial support until April or May, according to an official in the Pentagon's office of research and engineering.

The budget cuts are having a wide variety of effects on universities. Some graduate schools may be forced to accept fewer students next fall due to the lack of fellowships and research opportunities.

Faculty hiring at some graduate schools will be unable to support faculty and stu- dent research projects this summer.

Private schools with little or no en- dowments will be hurt more than some large state universities, like the Uni- versities of Michigan and California, which are heavily endowed. Some of the major private universities like Stanford and Har- vard also have large endowments which will help offset the loss of federal support.

Overall, University-based research in the Defense Department has been reduced to $238 million for 1968, compared to $261 million in Fiscal 1967 and $299 in 1966. Of the $23 million reduction this year, about $20 million will come from the area of basic research, defined by the Pentagon as projects "seeking to develop new knowledge." The smaller amount—about $3 million--will come from applied research, which includes most of the classified research projects in uni- versities sponsored by the Defense De- partment.

In the space agency, the spending re- ductions will have more effect on gradu- ate fellowships than on research. NASA gave' 750 predoctoral three-year fellow- ships in 1967, but will be able to give only 75 this year. The overall NASA program of support to universities has been cut from about $117 million in 1967 to less than $100 million this year, a space agency official said. NASA's sus- taining university program was cut from $30 million to $10 million.

The budget cuts have been caused primarily by the Vietnam war, which is eating up a large portion of the federal budget. Since the war is expected to continue at least at the present level during Fiscal 1969, and possibly at an escalated level, universities are not ex- pecting any relief when the new fiscal year begins this coming July.

If Congress accepts the Johnson Ad- ministration's budget recommendation for NASA, the amount of university support in 1969 will be comparable to the reduced

level of this year. NASA would again be able to offer only about 75 predoctoral fellowships, and the sustaining university program would receive only $10 million.

Pentagon officials say they cannot give specific figures about how the proposed 1969 budget will affect university-based research. However, the Administration is requesting an increase of about $90 million for the entire research program in the Defense Department. One Pentagon of- ficial predicted about one-third of this amount, of $30 million, would go to uni- versities.

In this case, university-based research for the Pentagon would be increased to about the 1967 level. But costs have been going up, and a dollar in 1969 will not go as far as a dollar in 1967. Thus, even if universities receive a $30 million in- crease, the overall program level still will be down.

Congress, however, is in a fiscally conservative mood, and most observers

(Continued on page 5)

Stop read like thev di

in

100 y years

100 years ago, people read the way you're reading right now.

Word by word. About 300 or so words a minute.

And 100 years ago, that kind of reading didn't cause any problems. You could keep up with what was happening pretty well.

But today, our knowledge is exploding so fast that people who want to keep ahead are actually falling behind. There's simply too much to read. Too much homework. Too many magazines. Too many books. Too many reports and memos.

What's the solution? Learn how- to read faster and better.

You can do it, too. So far over 300,000 other people have done it. People with different jobs, different IQ's, different interests, different educations. Students, businessmen, housewives.

These people have all taken a course developed by Evelyn Wood, a prominent educator. And all

of them have at least tripled their reading speed with equal or better comprehension. Most have increased it even more. Some have increased it 10, even 20 times.

Think for a moment what that means.

All of them—even the slowest— now read an average novel in less than two hours. They read this ad in 8 seconds. They read this entire issue of Time in 15 minutes.

They don't skip or skim, either. They read every single word. Nor do they use machines. Instead, they let the material they're reading determine how fast they read.

And—mark this well—they actually understand more and remember more and enjoy more than when they read like you. That's right. They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more.

You can do the same thing— even if you're a relatively slow

reader now. In fact, if you don't at least triple your reading ability, the course won't cost you a thing.

This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The same one Senators and Congressmen have taken.

It's eight weeks long. 2*/i hours a week, with classes held regularly in Philadelphia, Jenkintown, Wynnewood, Cherry Hill, Allentown and Wilmington.

Shouldn't you find out more about it? You can, simply by coming to a free one hour orientation.

We'll show you a film. Explain the course more fully. Answer any questions you might have.

You'll be under no pressure to enroll. If you want to, fine. If you don't want to, fine. But do come. It could change your life.

For a schedule of these orientations, use the coupon below or phone TU 7-9000 (In Allentown 264-5121; In Wilmington 655-1168)

R^The Evelyn Wood LLJ I Reading Dynamics Institute Administrative Offices: 119 York Rd., Jenkintown, Pa., 19046; TU 7-9000. Please send me additional information. I understand that I am under no obligation and no salesman will call.

Name. I

I City.

Address.

.State- Zip Code-

PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVAN1AN MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968

Page 7: Eiy Pennsylvanian - Penn Libraries · y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 ... armed conflict — to all the young men who do

Photo by JEFF STERLING" RICHIE COHEN, Perm's top-ranking squash player, returns a serve against MIT. Cohen swept Charley Tantavit in straight sets.

Racquetmen trounce

MIT, 8-7 at Ringe By ROB LATULIPE

Six Perm racquetmen chalked up 3-love wins Saturday at the Ringe Courts, boosting the Quak- ers to their sixth straight tri- umph in an 8-1 romp overMJ.T.

Perm had an 8-0 lead on the scoreboard before Bob Melan- son of the Engineers downed Gerard Harney three sets to one in the number three spot. Despite the lone setback, it was the Quakers' most one-sided vic- tory of the season.

Mason Gerhart, Fred Levin, and Mark Melidosian vaulted Penn into a big lead, all winning in straight sets.

Chris Keidel and MJ.T.'s Ken Wong matched up at num- ber two. It was a smoothly played contest, marked by sev- eral long rallies, with Keidel erasing a deficit in the fourth setto^wln.

Spencer Burke followed with the early clincher for Penn. Burke garnered 12 straight points in the second set en route to a three sets victory over Geoff Hallock. Quaker seventh man Dave Brown topped Al Reisz, 15-5, 15-4, 15-8 to remain with Burke in the unbeaten ranks in 1967-68 intercollegiate play.

Gibb Kane and Richie Cohen finished out Perm's scoring with wins at opposite ends of the lad- der. Kane, battling Bill Klein in the ninth position, posted an 8-0 margin in the fourth and final set and surged in, 15-3.

MJ.T.'s Charley Tantavit, a native of Thailand, stayed close to Cohen in the first two sets of the top match, but the Perm junior managed some fancy off-

balance returns and put away several precision shots to take a 2-love advantage, 15-10, 15-12. Cohen had a 6-3 lead in the third set, then took and held the serve for nine straight points and game.

Penn now holds a 7-1 record with two games left on the slate. Only a major upset by Dartmouth or F&M can prevent the Quakers from capturing at least second- place in both the E J.S.L. and the Ivy League.

Basketball (Continued from page 8)

hung on with a 20* corner shot by Reynolds that knotted the score. ^rl

Bete AncLevts then attemp- ted a ten footer that bounced off the rim, as Brown rebounded and looked for the final shot. A hustling Tom Northrup forced a jump ball, however, and An- drews was subsequently fouled by Greg Donaldson.

But with 25 seconds remain- ing, Andrews missed both charity tosses and the game went into overtime. In the ensuing five minutes, Penn was unable to score a single point, while Brown collected three points from fouls on Donaldson and Bruce Moger to collect the win.

=CIC

:•:•:

DAN FINNERTY: The Student's Legal •:•: and Illegal alternatives # to the draft. S

3HC MK 20C

Tuesday, Feb. 20, W PM

V. V.

Dietrich Hall, h-8

1 PRE-L\\\ |

SOCIET1 iCTlVIT} I

Wrestling (Continued from page 8)

Jrown partisans were able to do some cheering during the heavy- weight bout.

Big Bruin Don Curt in shocked Penn supporters with a quick first period takedown of unde- feated soph Mike Ha jjar, and con- trolled the Quaker 250-pounder for most of the period.

Hajjar came right back near the end of the opening frame, however, with a reversal, and then began to dominate the match. The titan soph managed two take- downs and an escape in the final six minutes, and a riding ad- vantage gave him a lopsided 8-4 triumph.

Although the decision extended Hajjar* s season record to 6-0, not everyone was satisfied with the result. It was the first time this season that Hajjar did not pin his opponent, and thus the longest pinning streak in recent Quaker mat history ended.

In early action, once-beaten Brown soph Bob Davidson (123 lb) stalled the third period away to stop Penn junior Mike Haraion, 2-1, but then the Quakers rocketed to a 14-3 match lead.

Soph Mike Atwell, weighing in at 130, got things going with

(Continued on page 2)

IXJC 3*K

Fencing (Continued from page 8)

counterpart on the Yale team, but rallied in the last two rounds behind the lead of sophomore Bruce Lieb to win a 6-3 de- cision.

Lieb captured three of the Quakers' victories in this weap-

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on, including the decisive win in the second round which gave the Perm fencers an insurmount- able 14-4 lead.

He was supported by Dennis Law, who dropped a tough 5-4 bout in the first round but came back to dominate his opponents in the last two, and co-captain Dave Tong, who won his last match after losing two 5-4 bat- tles.

Not one Yale fencer won more than one bout in the Elis' sixth

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE SEVEN

Page 8: Eiy Pennsylvanian - Penn Libraries · y Pennsylvanian VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968 NO. 114 ... armed conflict — to all the young men who do

SJiiy Pennsylvania!! sports PAGE EIGHT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1968

Matmen, swimmers triumph over Brown Penn grapplers capture initial Ivy championship

The 13-year Penn dream of an Ivy wrestling title became a reality Saturday afternoon at the expense of the cellar-bound Bruins, 23-9.

A March 2 victory over Columbia, a 40-0 loser to the 1967 Quakers and now the lone Ivy foe on the Penn schedule, will give Don Frey*s grapplers sole possession of the Ivy mat crown; a loss to the Lions will still assure the Red and Blue of a half-share of first place.

Never before has Penn even shared the top spot in the loop, once coming as close as second four years ago.

The matmen are now 7-0 on the season and 5-0 in Ivy play, with an undefeated season easily conceivable if non-league power Temple falls Wednesday, in the year's last home battle.

In Saturday's contest at Providence, Brown was trounced des- pite the absence of standout Quakers Ron White (6-0) and Joe Geeb (4-0).

But at one point, a rout seemed unlikely. Rhode Islanders Robbie Har-

WILLARD PORTERFIELD

Three firsts for mermen

ley (5-0) and Pete Gotten (5-1) won back-to-back decisions ir the 160 and 167 pound classes over Tom Haney and BobGoslin, by 5-1 and 3-2 scores, to pull the home-town squad as close as 14-9 on the match.

Cagers play two overtime tilts; shock Bulldogs, lose to Brown

DAVE LABOSKY Turns tide for keeps

At that moment, it seemed as if the Bruins, sensing an up- set, might have the momentum necessary to pull it off, but it was not in the cards.

Penn 177-pounder Dave La- bosky muscled his way to a one-sided, 14-2 victory, and the tide turned the other way for keeps. It was Labosky*s fourth consecutive victory, and it hiked his season log to 6-1.

Dave Pottruck followed La- bosky* s act with his second straight win, a 7-1 crushing of Mike Abbott complete with 5:25 riding time, and the Brown threat was over.

Surprisingly, however the

By STEVE RUTTER

The odds were pretty good that Penn's cagers would win one of their two final road games this past weekend, but the un- predictable Quakers satisfied the laws of probability the hard way, as they shocked Ivy crown hope- ful Yale 71-68 in overtime Fri- day night, only to lose in over- time again on Saturday to Brown 52-49.

The upset to Yale, now 6-3 in Ivy play, erased any re- maining chances the Elis might have had to beat out Princeton and Columbia for the champion- ship, while Penn's loss to Brown gave the Bruins their first Ivy win of the season, and their fifth victory against the Red and Blue cagers in 55 years of com- petition.

Coach Dick Harter's squad, meanwhile, holds an 8-14 mark overall and is 3-6 in hry play with four league games remain- ing on the schedule.

Against Yale on Friday, the Quakers were again faced with a tight shifting zone defense thrown up by the Elis, but they responded with some good out- side shooting and recorded their best percentage from the foul line of the season.

Although Penn made eight fewer field goals than Yale in the game, the Red and Blue cagers sank 18 of their 21 charity tosses of the night to pressure the Elis out of the game.

It was Yale, however, who came on strong in the closing seconds to force an overtime period, and to possibly foil the Quaker bid for an upset.

With 29 seconds left in reg- ulation play, Penn led by a seem- ingly unbeatable margin of four points, but Yale's Bob McCal- lum and Frank Wisneski threw in two baskets, the latter on an 18 foot corner shot with eight seconds left to give him a game high of 25 points.

The Elis scored first in the overtime on a jumper by Ed Goldstone to make the score 60-58, but Penn's Steve Pear- sail sank two foul shots as Bob McCallum, Yale's best defender, left the game with five personals.

Goldstone, the Yale captain who had just returned to the lineup following a sprained ankle, then hit another 15' jumper to give the Elis the lead again, 62-60, and with 3:19 remaining, coach Joe Vancisin ordered his team to stall.

Penn's coach Harter re- sponded with a full court press which paid off, as the Quakers stole the ball and Pearsall hit a jumper to knot the score,

Sabremen win nine

First Ivy victory

Mermen win, 76-27 By AL BADEN

The margin of victory was 76-27, as the Quaker swimmers rolled over Brown Saturday afternoon, with some of their best times this year.

The Penn mermen swept five events and both relays, while allowing only two Bruin firsts.

Setting the pace for the meet was the 400-yard relay team of Chick Wigo, Conrad Reddick, Steve Morrow, and Willard Porter- field, who won easily in 3:48.8.

The first of the two Brown wins came in the 1000-yard free- style, where distance ace Vance Salter held off a fine effort by Quaker Bill McCurdy to win in 11:43.9. McCurdy's time of 11:53.5 was his best showing this year in the grueling 1000 free.

The Red and Blue superiority in the shorter freestyle events proved to be a decisive factor in the meet. Sophomore Dewey Slater edged out Brown's Rick Davidson in 1:56.5 in the 200-yard free event. The freestyle sprint duo of Porterfield and Fred Nahas combined to sweep both the 50-yard and 100-yard free-

style races. Porter won the 50 in :23.2 and the 100 in :51.5, with Nahas close behind in both events.

Another good one-two com- bination for the Quakers Satur- day was Wigo and Rick Smith. Wigo won easily in the 200-yard individual medley in 2:11.1, and edged out sophomore Smith in the 200-yard backstroke by one second with a time of 2:15.0.

Disaster almost struck diver Steve Sinclair. In his fourth dive from the 1-meter board, the Quaker senior hit the board with his arm and completely ruined his dive. However, the Red and Blue ace came right back in the fifth round with an excellent back dive to win the competition, edging Bruin Gary Brighton with a point total of 189.15.

In two of their best efforts this year, Quakers Morrow and Reddick ran away with their re- spective events. Morrow finished in 2:10.5 to win the 200-yard butterfly and captain Reddick won in 2:22.7, just five tenths of a second off his varsity rec- ord, inthe200-yardbreaststroke.

The 400-yard relay team of McCurdy, Nahas, Sinclair, and Slater put the final touches on the Penn victory with a total time of 3:37.2.

This win over the Providence mermen gave Penn its third triumph against nine defeats, and its first Ivy win this season.

while Carl Robbins and Tom Northrup scored two more points apiece with a minute remain- ing which forced Yale into com- mitting a foul.

Five more charity tosses were made by Penn to make the final score 71-68, as Pear- sall led all Quaker scorers with 20 points.

The following night, Brown demonstrated dogged determin- ism in staying within five points of Penn throughout most of the game, and then pulling even during the closing minutes on a second half scoring spurt by Bill Reynolds and some poor Quaker foul shooting.

The Red and Blue cagers practically reversed their char- ity percentage from the previous night, hitting on only seven of 15 from the line. Reynolds, the Bruin co-captain, on the other hand, pumped in eight of 11 Held goals and had a perfect per- centage from the line, to score a game high of 17 points.

With 2:35 remaining in the game, Penn led 49-47 on a foul shot made by Robbins, but Brown

(Continued on page 7)

Swordsmen trounce Bulldogs

Bruins rip skaters, 19-3 Brown's hockey team, playing stuffed the rebound through the

like the only team that beatCor- nell, swamped the hapless Quaker skaters by a 19-3 margin.

The Bruins,using their great speed to its best advantage on a fast home rink,scored on break- aways and just bombarded the Penn nets.

Brown scored first at 7:22 of the first period, but Penn's John Heath scored a minute later on a screen shot from the blue line to knot the score at 1-1. Howard Mooney was credited with an assist on the play.

Penn sandwiched a hustling goal by Bob Whitney between eight more Brown tallies and trailed 9-2 after one period.

The second twenty minutes was more of the same as the Bruins poured in six more goals, four in one minute. The Red and Blue got its third goal near the end of the period as Mooney slapped a shot at goal and then

pads of the Brown goalie. Torney Smith, the Quaker

netminder, made 38 saves in the two periods but was taken out because coach Jim Salfi didn't want his goalie to be worn out for the important Yale encounter Wednesday night.

Smith's replacement, Barry Dumser, did a fine job in the final stanza making 23 saves. Nevertheless Brown scored four more times to round out the final arithmetic.

Two Brown players scored four goals. Senior Phil More- land and junior Bob Walsh were the duo and they added three assists to that total.

Wayne Small, who holds the Ivy career scoring record, scored six points on two goals and four assists. The total gave him this year's scoring lead over Brian Cornell of Cornell.

Led by an undefeated sabre unit and a nearly perfect epee team, the varsity fencers handed the Elis of Yale their 33rd straight loss in Ivy League com- petition, 23-4, on Saturdwy.

Fencing before a small crowd in the Palestra, the Quakers gained their 13th and most de- cisive victory in the 22nd re- vival of a rivalry which began in 1925.

The Red and Blue sabre unit finally exhibited its skill by cap- turing all nine bouts, as the sabremen rebounded well from some disappointing perform ances in recent meets.

Co-captain and NCAA sabre champion Todd Makler recover- ed from the shock of being up-

set twice in the last two meets and calmly disposed of all three opposing Yale sabremen.

Norm Braslow, the national junior sabre champion, dup- licated Makler's feat with even more ease, as he completely dominated all three Bulldogs that he fenced.

Sophomores Dave Ehst and Bob Moore shared the third sabre position and combined to win in

NORM BRASLOW (right) the first round of sabre Penn won 23 — 4.

scores touch competition.

on Jon Friedlcnci of Yc.'e in Braslow won three bouts as

all three rounds>with Ehst com- peting in the first two and Moore in the last.

The Penn epee unit came very close to matching the record of its sabre counterpart by winning eight of its nine encounters.

Juniors Jim Wetzler and Frank McComb both swept through all three rounds of fenc- ing inflicting three losses apiece

on the Bulldog epee unit without expending much effort.

Al Cherry and Van Louisa each won one bout in the third starting epee spot to round out the Quakers* scoring in that weapon.

The Red and Blue foil unit faced stiff opposition from its

(Continued on page 7)