the daily - penn libraries studies carried out at the university. such considerations in- clude:...

12
The Daily VOL. LXXXII Craft wants more hours. Lawrence supports House Plan. Would you believe Adam Clayton Powell was keyed by St A's? PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967—No. 93 IF Head Says Univ. Needs House Plan By PHILIP ARROW The proposed house plan, if passed, will not hurt the fraterni- ties, but could be "disastrous" to fraternities is dropped, Mike Law- rence, IF president, said yesterday. Passage of the plan, Lawrence said, would stimulate fraternity expansion and modernization to compete with what he called the "modern, compact, institutional liv- ing" of the houses. Fraternity membership would not be diminished, he continued, for the plan, as envisioned, is only large enough to contain the fra- ternity-apartment overflow. Scrapping the plan would be "disastrous" to alumni contribu- tions to both fraternities and the University, he said. Alumni Were Disgusted "Many alumni who were dis- gusted with living conditions when they attended Penn are giving con- tributions, knowing they are im- proving undergraduate living stand- ards," Lawrence said. "If I, as an alumnus, even got a rumor that the house plan was a hoax from the beginning, I'd feel tricked into making pledges, and would prob- ably never give another cent to the school." Lawrence added, "The house plan was probably the reason they [the alumni] supported the Rede- velopment Plan." [Harold E. Manley, business and financial vice-president, said yes- terday only $2 million in alumni donations has been earmarked spe- cifically for the house plan. The donations come from two $1 mil- lion grants—one gift and one will —and no decision has been reach- ed as yet as to where these funds (Continued on Page 11) Craft Calls for Approval of Hours Extension "Mil INSPIRATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHS help make the long wait at Logan Hall Book Store a little easier to bear. Some students, however, have suggested they are symbolic. They didn't say what of. Drug Evidence Could Be Used by University By TOM KNOX Evidence inadmissible in a court of law need not be necessarily in- admissible in a University hearing, two members of the Law School faculty said yesterday. Their views may pertain to the case of a College junior arrested December 14 on charges of drug possession. Police did not inform the stu- dent of his right to remain silent and to a lawyer, prior to search- ing his apartment for the drug, Paul Hiller, assistant dean of men, reported. Consequently the drugs found, capsules of amphetamines, may be inadmissible as evidence in court. Craft Undecided James Craft, dean of men, was undecided Tuesday on the admis- sibility of such evidence in a Uni- versity hearing, should the same evidence be disallowed in court. Possession of drugs is a violation of University rules which require students to comply with state and federal narcotics laws. "I don't think you can say that (Continued on Page 7) By STEPHEN MARMON Dean of Men James P. Craft has recommended that the Committee on Residence Operations approve today new parietal hours of mid- night Friday and 1 a.m. Saturday. Commenting on the proposal, Craft said, "I hope the hours will be approved." The Committee will vote with "little if any discussion" at 4 p.m. today, according to Committee Chairman Virginia Curtin, acting director of occupational therapy. Al Conroy, president of the Men's Residence Board, gave the new proposal to the Committee and Craft Wednesday afternoon. Proposal Changed Originally the MRB and the Com- mitee on Social Regulaions had recommended an exension of the hours to 1:15 a.m. Friday, 2 a.m. Saturday, 9 p.m. Sunday, and 6 p.m. during the week. Conroy, describing the new plan, said, "I think we can get the new proposal through without any delay. The other one might not have been passed until next semester, and I didn't think it would be fair to the residents to play around trying to get it. Speaking about the original pro- posal Conroy said, "First I want to see how this one works. There are other things we want to work on too. Improvements on the rooms, creation of lounges, and other im- proved dormitory facilities are im- portant, too." Levin's Approval Needed If approved by the 15 member (five students, five Administration officials and five faculty members) the proposal will go to Vice Provost A. Leo Levin. If the new hours are approved by the Committee and Levin, Penn- sylvania's weekend parietals would be among the most liberal in the Ivy League. Dartmouth has 1 a.m. on both Friday and Saturday, while Cornell has 12:15 a.m. on Friday and 1:15 a.m. on Saturday. Hours at Brown are 12:30 a.m. and 1 a.m. Columbia (Continued on Page 7) DEAN JAMES CRAFT Approves Compromise Plan Free With University Holds Registration Tentative List of 50 Courses Wharton Professor Dissents Secret Research Issue Antedated Vietnam War Proponents of secret research at the University of Pennsylvania are purposely clouding basic issues in an attempt to legitimate their non- publishibility stand, a University professor charged yesterday. In a letter to The Daily Pennsyi- vanian (page 6), Dr. Edward S. Herman, associate professor of fi- nance in the Wharton School, criti- cized an allegation that "objec- tions to the ICR are emotional re- sponses to the Vietnam war and therefore have no genuine basis in academic principles." Majority of Faculty Opposed Rejection by "a large majority of the University Senate ... to secret research and restriction of publication," said Herman, is one of the basic issues. The Wharton professor further emphasized that the secret re- search controversy existed before '"the Vietnam issue by almost a full decade.'" If this debate raged even before the use of chemical weapons in Vietnam, he argued, then the emotional objection of non-publishibility supporters is not germane to the controversy. Herman cited the Educational Survey of the University of Penn- sylvania as historical precedent for the present debate. This report, documenting edu- cational needs of the University recommended, "The results of re- search should not be available for publication." Other suggestions in this docu- ment have also been violated by the Chemical and biological war- fare studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication of the re- sults should be accepted by the University. This would mean that it should decline classified proj- ects. The University exists for the promotion of free inquiry and ad- vancement of learning." Registration for the Free Uni- versity of Pennsylvania's spring term will be at the Christian As- sociation next Thursday, Jan. 26, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. The announcement was made by Free University spokesman Steve Kuromiya. The Free University starts its second year with a tentative spring schedule of over 50 courses and 1000 students on its mailing list. Open to all members of the Uni- versity community and the public, all courses in the Free University are free and have no admission standards. The faculty for the courses come from Pennsylvania, local colleges, and the community. Independently Run Founded by the Students for a Democratic Society, the Free Uni- versity is now independent of S.D.S. and is run by a Coordinat- ing Committee which publicizes the courses and scheduled meeting places. The Committee has no con- trol over the classes or their sub- ject matter. One of the courses this semes- ter will be "Analogues to the LSD Experience: the Way Beyond.'' (Last semester approximately 100 students attended a lecture series on LSD.) The first of the Tues- day night lectures on the various aspects of LSD will be Feb. 7th, featuring Richard Alpert, Timothy Leary's former associate at Har- vard. He will be followed by Ber- nard Aaronson, chief researcher of the Bureau of Research of the Princeton Neurological Institute; Humphrey Osmond, author of How to Live with Schizophrenia, and Morse Peckham, author of Beyond the Tragic Vision and Man's Rage for Chos, among many others. Offer Freud, McLuhan Among the seminars to be of- fered are Freudian Psychology - Literature and Sexuality; The World of Marshall McLuhan, taught by Ira Einhorn; The Social System of South East Asia, taught by Steve Piker, anthropologist from Swarthmore; Black Humor in the Modern Novel; The American Indian taught by Professor Hetzel, chairman of the department of en- gineering at Haverford College, a European Monarchy course taught by Susan Lane from Temple Uni- versity; Science Seminar for Lay- men by Russell Nelson; Communi- STEVE KUROMIVA Announces New Schedule ty Orientation by Timothy Baker, William Yocton, and Jay Wilson; Marxist Literary Criticism by Gay- lord LeRoy, professor of English at Temple University; Film as Art by R. D. Whitley; Marxism in Ideology and History by Bronson Feldman of Community College; and International Relations by Ed Dailey. Library Workers Join AFT Union By MIKE ADLER A group of employees of the University have been granted a charter by the American Federa- tion of Teachers AFL/CIO, the first white-collar union at Penn- sylvania. Gunther Cartwright, spokesman for the union, said that the two main goals of Local 1740 are higher salaries with benefits and more effective library service. Cart- wright said the unionization will create possibilities for effective service because there is now a cen- tral facility through which personnel problems, new proposals, and pro- cedures can quickly be reviewed and acted upon. Warren Haas, director of librar- ies, declined comment. Cartwright said that Haas is mostly concerned with library effectiveness and not with salaries. A newsletter released yester- day by the union referred to a (Continued on Page 11)

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Page 1: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

The Daily

VOL. LXXXII

Craft wants more hours. Lawrence supports House Plan. Would you believe Adam Clayton Powell was keyed by St A's?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967—No. 93

IF Head Says Univ. Needs House Plan

By PHILIP ARROW

The proposed house plan, if passed, will not hurt the fraterni- ties, but could be "disastrous" to fraternities is dropped, Mike Law- rence, IF president, said yesterday.

Passage of the plan, Lawrence said, would stimulate fraternity expansion and modernization to compete with what he called the "modern, compact, institutional liv- ing" of the houses.

Fraternity membership would not be diminished, he continued, for the plan, as envisioned, is only large enough to contain the fra- ternity-apartment overflow.

Scrapping the plan would be "disastrous" to alumni contribu- tions to both fraternities and the University, he said.

Alumni Were Disgusted "Many alumni who were dis-

gusted with living conditions when they attended Penn are giving con- tributions, knowing they are im- proving undergraduate living stand- ards," Lawrence said. "If I, as an alumnus, even got a rumor that the house plan was a hoax from the beginning, I'd feel tricked into making pledges, and would prob- ably never give another cent to the school."

Lawrence added, "The house plan was probably the reason they [the alumni] supported the Rede- velopment Plan."

[Harold E. Manley, business and financial vice-president, said yes- terday only $2 million in alumni donations has been earmarked spe- cifically for the house plan. The donations come from two $1 mil- lion grants—one gift and one will —and no decision has been reach- ed as yet as to where these funds

(Continued on Page 11)

Craft Calls for Approval of Hours Extension

"Mil

INSPIRATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHS help make the long wait at Logan Hall Book Store a little easier to bear. Some students, however, have suggested they are symbolic. They didn't say what of.

Drug Evidence Could Be Used by University

By TOM KNOX Evidence inadmissible in a court

of law need not be necessarily in- admissible in a University hearing, two members of the Law School faculty said yesterday.

Their views may pertain to the case of a College junior arrested December 14 on charges of drug possession.

Police did not inform the stu- dent of his right to remain silent and to a lawyer, prior to search- ing his apartment for the drug, Paul Hiller, assistant dean of men, reported.

Consequently the drugs found, capsules of amphetamines, may be inadmissible as evidence in court.

Craft Undecided James Craft, dean of men, was

undecided Tuesday on the admis- sibility of such evidence in a Uni-

versity hearing, should the same evidence be disallowed in court.

Possession of drugs is a violation of University rules which require students to comply with state and federal narcotics laws.

"I don't think you can say that (Continued on Page 7)

By STEPHEN MARMON

Dean of Men James P. Craft has recommended that the Committee on Residence Operations approve today new parietal hours of mid- night Friday and 1 a.m. Saturday.

Commenting on the proposal, Craft said, "I hope the hours will be approved."

The Committee will vote with "little if any discussion" at 4 p.m. today, according to Committee Chairman Virginia Curtin, acting director of occupational therapy.

Al Conroy, president of the Men's Residence Board, gave the new proposal to the Committee and Craft Wednesday afternoon.

Proposal Changed Originally the MRB and the Com-

mitee on Social Regulaions had recommended an exension of the hours to 1:15 a.m. Friday, 2 a.m. Saturday, 9 p.m. Sunday, and 6 p.m. during the week.

Conroy, describing the new plan, said, "I think we can get the new proposal through without any delay. The other one might not have been passed until next semester, and I didn't think it would be fair to the residents to play around trying to get it.

Speaking about the original pro- posal Conroy said, "First I want to see how this one works. There are other things we want to work on too. Improvements on the rooms, creation of lounges, and other im-

proved dormitory facilities are im- portant, too."

Levin's Approval Needed If approved by the 15 member

(five students, five Administration officials and five faculty members) the proposal will go to Vice Provost A. Leo Levin.

If the new hours are approved by the Committee and Levin, Penn- sylvania's weekend parietals would be among the most liberal in the Ivy League.

Dartmouth has 1 a.m. on both Friday and Saturday, while Cornell has 12:15 a.m. on Friday and 1:15 a.m. on Saturday. Hours at Brown are 12:30 a.m. and 1 a.m. Columbia

(Continued on Page 7)

DEAN JAMES CRAFT Approves Compromise Plan

Free With

University Holds Registration Tentative List of 50 Courses

Wharton Professor Dissents

Secret Research Issue Antedated Vietnam War

Proponents of secret research at the University of Pennsylvania are purposely clouding basic issues in an attempt to legitimate their non- publishibility stand, a University professor charged yesterday.

In a letter to The Daily Pennsyi- vanian (page 6), Dr. Edward S. Herman, associate professor of fi- nance in the Wharton School, criti- cized an allegation that "objec- tions to the ICR are emotional re- sponses to the Vietnam war and therefore have no genuine basis in academic principles."

Majority of Faculty Opposed Rejection by "a large majority

of the University Senate ... to secret research and restriction of publication," said Herman, is one of the basic issues.

The Wharton professor further emphasized that the secret re- search controversy existed before '"the Vietnam issue by almost a full decade.'" If this debate raged even before the use of chemical

weapons in Vietnam, he argued, then the emotional objection of non-publishibility supporters is not germane to the controversy.

Herman cited the Educational Survey of the University of Penn- sylvania as historical precedent for the present debate.

This report, documenting edu- cational needs of the University recommended, "The results of re- search should not be available for publication."

Other suggestions in this docu- ment have also been violated by the Chemical and biological war- fare studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication of the re- sults should be accepted by the University. This would mean that it should decline classified proj- ects. The University exists for the promotion of free inquiry and ad- vancement of learning."

Registration for the Free Uni- versity of Pennsylvania's spring term will be at the Christian As- sociation next Thursday, Jan. 26, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

The announcement was made by Free University spokesman Steve Kuromiya.

The Free University starts its second year with a tentative spring schedule of over 50 courses and 1000 students on its mailing list. Open to all members of the Uni- versity community and the public, all courses in the Free University are free and have no admission standards. The faculty for the courses come from Pennsylvania, local colleges, and the community.

Independently Run Founded by the Students for a

Democratic Society, the Free Uni- versity is now independent of S.D.S. and is run by a Coordinat- ing Committee which publicizes the courses and scheduled meeting places. The Committee has no con- trol over the classes or their sub- ject matter.

One of the courses this semes- ter will be "Analogues to the LSD Experience: the Way Beyond.'' (Last semester approximately 100 students attended a lecture series on LSD.) The first of the Tues- day night lectures on the various aspects of LSD will be Feb. 7th, featuring Richard Alpert, Timothy Leary's former associate at Har- vard. He will be followed by Ber- nard Aaronson, chief researcher of the Bureau of Research of the Princeton Neurological Institute; Humphrey Osmond, author of How

to Live with Schizophrenia, and Morse Peckham, author of Beyond the Tragic Vision and Man's Rage for Chos, among many others.

Offer Freud, McLuhan Among the seminars to be of-

fered are Freudian Psychology - Literature and Sexuality; The World of Marshall McLuhan, taught by Ira Einhorn; The Social System of South East Asia, taught by Steve Piker, anthropologist from Swarthmore; Black Humor in the Modern Novel; The American Indian taught by Professor Hetzel, chairman of the department of en- gineering at Haverford College, a European Monarchy course taught by Susan Lane from Temple Uni- versity; Science Seminar for Lay- men by Russell Nelson; Communi-

STEVE KUROMIVA Announces New Schedule

ty Orientation by Timothy Baker, William Yocton, and Jay Wilson; Marxist Literary Criticism by Gay- lord LeRoy, professor of English at Temple University; Film as Art by R. D. Whitley; Marxism in Ideology and History by Bronson Feldman of Community College; and International Relations by Ed Dailey.

Library Workers Join AFT Union

By MIKE ADLER

A group of employees of the University have been granted a charter by the American Federa- tion of Teachers AFL/CIO, the first white-collar union at Penn- sylvania.

Gunther Cartwright, spokesman for the union, said that the two main goals of Local 1740 are higher salaries with benefits and more effective library service. Cart- wright said the unionization will create possibilities for effective service because there is now a cen- tral facility through which personnel problems, new proposals, and pro- cedures can quickly be reviewed and acted upon.

Warren Haas, director of librar- ies, declined comment. Cartwright said that Haas is mostly concerned with library effectiveness and not with salaries.

A newsletter released yester- day by the union referred to a

(Continued on Page 11)

Page 2: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967

FOLK AUDITIONS Mammoth Talent Hunt for Folk Singers and Groups to Play at Chestnut Hall.

Auditions * P.M. Monday, Jan. 93rH in the "Classroom." See Tony DiSantis.

CHESTNUT HALL 39th I Chestnut Sts.

DOM TORIELLO (B.S.Met.E.) of the Bethlehem Steel Loop Course knows where the action is. He's on the move at the nation's largest steel plant—our Sparrows Point Plant near Baltimore, Md.

Join the action. First step: pick, up a copy of "Careers with Bethlehem Steel and the Loop Course" at your placement office. Then sign up for a campus interview. Our 1967 Loop Class has openings for technical and non-technical graduates and post-grads) for

careers in steel o|>erations, lies, mining,

accounting, and other activities.

An Equal Opportunity Employer in the Plans for

Progress Program .

BETHLEHEM STEEL

CLASSIFIED FOR SALE

1966 YAMAHA YDS3. 250 CC, 6 months old, mirrors, luggage rack, owner leav-

ing country. Best offer. Call Jerry 594- 8404. EV 2-4534._ NEW & USED Hi Fi & Stereo Equip-

ment for sale. All components ampli- peaker.s. turntables, etc. All

brands available. Call LO 7-7252 after 6 P.M. VOLKSWAGEN. 19 6 0 Very, very

reasonable. Good motor. Call LO 8- 7547.

WANTED LABORATORY ASSISTANT for psycho-

logical research Lab. Part-time. College background desirable. Above average in- telligence. Conscientiousness, persever- ance, attention to detail, and willingness to learn essential. Above all, accuracy and willingness to follow complex direc- tions. Write, giving education, experience and salary desired to Mrs. Worthington, Box 51. Ill N. 49th St.. Phila. SUBJECTS Wanted for hearing experi-

ment. $1.75 per hour. Must serve same hour in afternoon for one week ipos- sibly longer). Experiment starts Monday, Jan. 23. Sign up in Rm. 16A in the base- ment at College Hall ipsychoacoustics Laboratoryi. This is on a first come, first served basis—if you sign up first you will be a subject. Do not sign up if you are tone deaf, hard of hearing, or have served in a pitch discrimination ex- periment before. PART TIME WOKK—Student over-21.

wanted for sales work. 20 hours week- ly at salary of $2.80 per hour plus com-

lon. Average income after 7 weeks of $200-$300 monthly. Call Miss Soren- sen. GR 2-4987.

SOPHOMORE MEN ARE INVITED TO HEEL

THE HOUSTON HALL BOARD

MONDAY, JANUARY 23rd IN

The BOWL ROOM AT 8 P.M.

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA SUMMER SESSION IN IRAN

June 17 July 20

GROUP FLIGHT

Courses in Archaeology Desert Ecology Farsi (Persian) Geology

For information inquire:

Summer Sessions 15 College Hall

Telephone 594-7327 Deadline for application: February 1

CLOTHES TREE WINTER SALE

WERE DRESSES NOW 18.00 11.99 30.00 14.99

WERE SKIRTS NOW 15.00 8.99

WERE SUITS NOW 25.00 14.99 35.00 19.99

WERE SLACKS NOW 15.00 8.99

WERE SWEATERS NOW 14.00 7.99 18.00 9.99

WERE BLOUSES NOW 6.00 3.99

WERE VELOURS NOW 10.00 4.99

3427 WALNUT ST. BA 2-7453

UNIVERSITY CHURCHES observe the week of

PRAYER FOR CHRISTIAN UNITY at

TABERNACLE CHURCH 5:00 P.M. JANUARY 22

Htynilist

The Reverend James J. Murphy Rector of St. Bede's Chapel, and the Newman Foundation

Dinner follows at C. A. 6:15 P.M. (students $1.00)

Speaker

Professor Elwyn C. Smith

TOPIC: The Future of Ecumenism

Exhibit of George Rouauff "Miserere" at the C. A.

January 18 - 25

WANTED ROOMMATE WANTED: Female grad-

uate student, age 25, has 2 bedroom apartment near 45th & Chester. Rent $45 00 per month per person, utilities incl. Phone: EV 6-0629. 5:30-7:30 P.M.

WANTED WANTED — Upperclassman or graduate

student to share spacious, furnished 4 room apartment. Convenient location. Reasonable. Call EV 2-6354 after 6.

in PHI A SYMPOSIUM

WITH

Gerard deLa Villesbrunne POLITICAL COUNSELLOR OF THE FRENCH EMBASSY, FORMER

SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO GENERAL DeGAULLE

PROF. PATRICK DUFFY — Former member of Parliament, visiting Prof, of Political Science, Drew University

DR. GERHARD MALLY former lecturer for Service

- European Federalist, N.A.T.O. Information

DR. ROBERT PFALTZGRAFF — Specialist in Euro pean Integration, Assistant Prof, of Political Science at Penn.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 24 7:30 P.M.

ANNENBERG AUDITORIUM ADMISSION FREE

APARTMENT FOR RENT MODERN, newly decorated two-bedroom

apt. Large living room, modern kitchen, tile bath. 2nd floor. Reasonable. LU 3-8722

MALE HELP WANTED WARNING to the public! Your Father's

mustache would like to employ honest young men who use neither alchohol nor tobacco $1.25 per hr. Inquire LO 3-8539.

Page 3: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE THREE

The Race for Governor The Future with Shafer

Education Key Issue in Shafer's Election Editor* Note: The University is the only school in the Ivy League which is partially supported by a state gov- ernment. Pennsylvania's higher educa- tion system has long been built around

•■--supported private colleges instead of state-owned schools. With the new Republican Administration in office in Harnsburg, the following analysis of the education issue and the role it played in the gubernatorial election is timely

By DENNIS WILEN Milton Shapp said it was

the most important issue of

the campaign. Raymond Shafer agreed it was import-

ant, and consistently took Shapp to taskv on Shapp's

"unrealistic position." The issue, of course, was

education in Pennsylvania,

and it proved to be perhaps the most important issue of

the campaign.

Pennsylvania, Shapp con- sistently charged, is 49th in the 50 states in the amount

of money it spends on higher education. He usually added

that Pennsylvania's average tuition rates are the second high- est in the country, and that both situations are disgraceful.

Ray Shafer stood on "the record" of his and Governor Scranton's Administration in Har- risburb, saying that education in Pennsylvania had become cheaper and better since the Republicans took over four years ago.

Agreed on One Thing Yet both candidates were

agreedon one thing. They both felt that education in Pennsyl- vania could be grately improved. The hallmark of American politics was evident once again: Both candidates agreed on the end—it was the means to reach that end that caused dissension.

Milt Shapp, the Democrat, fav- ored increased Commonwealth financing of education for students in Pennsylvania. He said that he eventually wanted free higher education here.

Ray Shafer, on the other hand, said Shapp's program was not feasible, and proposed a system that would increase state aid to Commonwealth colleges.

The Shapp Plan Specifically, the Democratic

nominee said that he wanted the Commonwealth to float a bond is- sue that would raise the cash nec- essary to give scholarships to all of Pennsylvania's college students. He wanted the state to pay all the tuition and fees of those children going to public institutions, and to give an 80% grant to those students attending private colleges.

Shapp said that the increased earning power of the college grad- uates, which would result in in- creased spending power, tax rev- enue, and other benefits would be sufficient to pay back both the loan and its accrued interest.

He also called for a greatly ex- panded system of public two- and four-year community colleges, all to be included in a "University of the Commonwealth of Pennsyl- vania"—much like the State Uni- versity of New York—one of his most often used examples.

The Shafer Alternative Shafer is a Republican, and Re-

publicans, of course, favor the

RICHARDSON DILWORTH

... He Talked Too Much

private over the public sector. Shafer consistently noted during the campaign that Pennsylvania has the best system of private colleges in the country. He wanter to preserve them and their alleged advantages. He called for exten- sion of the Commonwealth cam- puses of Penn State, increased size for "state-related" Pitt and Temple, and increased scholarship- stipend-load programs for Penn- sylvania's students. He also ad- vocated the continuation of State aid to private institutions.

His major emphasis was on the Scranton Administration's Master Plan for Higher Education, which called for increasing state scholar- ship grants from the present level of $8 million to $40 million in 1975.

Voters Undecided Both plans had merit. In a poll

taken in late October, Pennsyl- vanians gave Shapp's program a slight edge in potential effective- ness. But it was only a slight edge, and cropped up too early to be significant.

The education issue might have remained the top election issue (as Shapp said) if it hadn't been for the general circumstances and tone of the gubernatorial cam- pangn, as well as extraneous events that influenced the out- come.

The campaign was more of a clash of personalities than issues. And when it came to personalities, Shapp was clearly the loser. He had spent a record amount during

the primary to boost his image as "the man against the machine" and to show his independence from party control. But after he won, and the extent of his ex- penditures became known, he was in for trouble.

Shafer and those who campaign- ed for him unceasingly lashed out at Shapp for trying to "buy" the election. And Shapp was in the increasingly embarrassing po- sition of having to work with the party bosses he once denounced, and of cooperating with his ma- chine-sponsored Lieutenant Gov- ernor candidate. His image, so ex- pensively cultivated during the spring campaign, was slipping. And so were the votes. The Wrong Time, the Wrong Place

Two other events seemingly extraneous to the gubnernatorial race, and more specifically from the higher education issue, caused Shapp's support to dwindle. His- tory repeated itself.

Throughout the Fall, the ques- tion of Black Power, had been re- ceiving front page play in the press. At the same time there

GOV. RAYMOND SHAFER ... So HE Won

were racial clashes in the Ken- sington area of Philadelphia. Al- though both Shapp and Shafer were advocates of open housing, integration, etc., in the civil rights field, it was Shapp who eventually became a backlash victim and it was all because of a fellow Demo- crat.

Richardson Dilworth, former mayor of Philadelphia, unsucess- ful candidate for the governorship in 1962, and currently President of the School Board in Philadel- phia, has a knack for saying the

Shafer Asks Excellencein Education Here are some excerpts from the Inaugural Speech delivered

by Governor Raymond P. Shafer, Wednesday. He is expected to start sending details of his legislative program to the General Assembly later this month.

Tension, revolution, changing mores, the fear of the loss of individualism in a computerized civilization are shaking ancient beliefs and disrupting the comfort and security of old institutions.

Our youth grow restless in search of new directions. This is nothing new to man. Only when men have taken hold of the temper of their

times and moved to translate the discord of discontent into harmony through constructive thought and planning, has progress follows. . . .

The strength of Pennsylvania, and of America, has always rested in the genius of the individual. . . .

Our children will find our schools and colleges providing educations second to none. . . .

Indeed, the keynote is excellence.

CANDIDATE MILTON J. SHAPP ... He Spent Too Much

right thing at the wrong time. He'd done it before with little effect, but his faux pas last fall was a major factor in Shapp's de- feat.

Going into the final few weeks of the campaign, surveys showed Shapp and Shafer only percent- age points apart. Shafer was in the lead, but it was a small one. With Shapp's planned saturation TV, radio, and press campaign for the last days before the election, it looked like anybody's governor- ship .

Then Richardson Dilworth made a statement. Dilworth said it was unfair that the cities in Pennsyl- vania should suffer with poor edu- cation while the wealthier all- white suburbs should have qual- ity education. His speech brought on two fears—the fear of white parents in the suburbs who fore- saw their children going to school with Negro slum children, and a repeat of the fear of the infamous "Green Grab."

It was as if the record of his- tory was stuck in one grove. In the previous gubernatorial elec- tion, Philadelphia party boss Bill Green, Sr., had suggested that certain Congressional districts be realigned so that areas of Phila- delphia County would share seats with the suburbs. The City, of course, was Democratic, and the suburbs rock-ribbed Republican. Suburban Republican leaders im- mediately began a scare ad cam- paign, and called for a fight aginst the "Green Grab."

They didn't forget the play which worked for them in '62. Within days of Dilworth's ill- timed speech, ads began appear- ing in suburban weeklies linking Shapp with the Dilworth plan. (After all — weren't they both Democrats?) Thus, two fears were exploited: the unarticulated fears of school integration—significant in the era of Black Power and the White Backlash—and the old "Green Grab" with new trappings for 1966.

Shafer Victory—And the Future In the end, Milton Shapp lost.

Shafer received only 52.1% of the vote, but carried the suburbs of Philadelphia by an overwhelm- ing margin.

Pennsylvania may eventually get free higher education. But it will be a long time coming. The workability of Shafer's scholarship

aid program must be tested, and modifications made. Shapp, in his campaign, questioned the popula- tion projects that were the basis of the Master Plan. He contended that the extrapolations were too optimistic, and the student popula- tino would be much greater than the Republicans' predictions.

If Shapp was right—and almost half of the voters in Pennsylva- nia's last election thought so— Shafer's plan will need a definite upward revision. But that's what, epublican holding a maeThev. legislatures are for. And with Re:

publicans holding a majority in both Houses, there is little .chance that Governor Shafer will have trouble getting his plan—either outdated or updated—through the General Assembly.

Had there been no disputed primary, no riots in Kensington, no Black Power debates, and no Dilworth statements, things might be different four years from now, when the governor's chair is at stake again.

But history isn't written in if's.

St Joe, Princeton Villanova Game Tickets Limited

In anticipation of capacity crowds, the number of tickets to the St. Joseph's, Villanova, and Princeton basketball games will be limited to one per student, it was announced this week by John S. Rossiter, business manager of the Department of Intercollegiate Ath- letics.

A Matriculation card must be presented to obtain a ticket, Rossi- ter added. Season ticket holders will be assured of a seat, but date privileges will not be in effect.

School Share Tickets Rossiter explained that each of

the three participating Big Five schools on those nights have been alloted 1,800 tickets. These tickets, these granted to the visiting school and the advanced mail sales ac- count for all 8,500 seats in the Palestra.

About 1,100 University students hold season tickets, leaving only 700 tickets for the rest of the students in the school, Rossiter said. "We feel that the fairest way to handlt the situation is to al- low only one ticket per student as long as they last."

Princeton has been granted few- er than 1,000 tickets for their game, since they will be the visit- ing team, according to Rossiter. The school has requested addition- al tickets for its students, but this request has been denie, he said.

Palestra Expenses Divided The Big Five schools operate the

Palestra cooperatively. Rossiter said. AH expenses for the year, such as officials, heating, and lighting are pooltd and subtract- ed from the gate receipts. The resulting deficit is divided among the five schools. Therefore, no team is considered the 'home" team and no team receives a majority of tickets.

The situation has been compli- cated by the appearance of nation- ally ranked teams, such as West- ern Kentucky. "The public demand for tickets is they increased," Ros- siter said, "and a certain number of tickets must be alloted to pub- lic sales. Situations such as this occur only once as twice a year."

Page 4: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

PAGE FOUR THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967

45 Percent of U. S. Colleges Hand Out Birth Control Pills PALO ALTO, Calif. (CPS) —

Nearly half of the nation's college health services will now prescribe contraceptive pills, but only one in twenty-five will do so for sin- gle women who do not intend to marry in the near future.

Compiled earlier this year, a na- tional survey released Nov. 23 showed that out of 315 institu- tions polled:

—55 per cent do not prescribe contraceptive pills;

—26 per cent prescribe only to married women students;

—7 per cent prescribe only for medical purposes;

—8 per cent will prescribe for single, unmarried women who take a pre-marital exam or show other intent to marry in the near fut- ure; and

—4 per cent will prescribe for single, unmarried women.

No individual institutions were

identified by Dr. Ralph M. Butter- more, president of the Pacific Coast College Health Association, who released the study.

Most institutions which would not prescribe the pill said this was not an appropriate function of a college health service, but requir- ed continued supervision by a per- sonal physician, he reported.

WHAT?? You've been on campus a

whole week and you

haven't listened

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"Others thought prescribing the pill would express (tacit) approval for premarital relations, implying that colleges accept a responsibili- ty that does not properly belong to them and runs counter to the great majority of parents."

Those health services prescrib- ing contraceptive pills felt they should be treated the same as any

other drug. Most prescribed for unmarried women in conjunction with a premarital examination. Some indicated that parental ap- proval was required for unmarried minors, even when the prescrip- tion was made solely for medical reasons.

Only 19 institutions had written policies covering contraceptives.

HOUSTON HALL BOARD MOVIE SCHEDULE

-■ 1967 --

JANUARY

22 (Sunday) SWEET BIRD OF YOUTH 7 & 9:30 P.M.

26 (Thursday) BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES 7 & 10:00 P.M.

29 (Sunday) RIFIFI 7 & 9:30 P.M.

FEBRUARY

5(Sunday) THE SILENCE

8 (Wednsday) THE GREAT ESCAPE

9 (Thursday) TRIPLE FEATURE

"A Night At The Opera"

"My Favorite Spy" "It's Only Money"

12 (Sunday) HUD 14 (Tuesday) MAGNIFICENT 7

16 (Thursday) DOUBLE FEATURE

''Love Me Tender"

"G I Blues"

19 (Sunday) VIVA ZAPATA

23 (Thursday) DOUBLE FEATURE

"Freaks"

"Frankenstein"

MARCH

2 (Thursday

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

continuous

from

7:00 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M. 7 & 9:30 P.M.

continuous

from

7:00 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

FROM HERE TO ETERNITY (Annenberg Auditorium)

5 (Sunday) SEVENTH SEAL

8 (Wednesday) THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY (University Museum Aud.)

12 (Sunday) AMERICANZATION OF EMILY

15 (Wednesday) DOUBLE FEATURE

"Seven Year Itch"

"Bus Stop"

29 (Wednesday) IRMA LA DOUCE 30 (Thursday) BROTHERS KARAMAZOV

7 & 9:30 P.M. #

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

continuous

from

7:00 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

APRIL

2

4 6

Sunday) MONDO CANE

Tuesday) PHAEDRA Thursday) MAN WHO SHOT

LIBERTY VALANCE

9 (Sunday) SOUND AND THE FURY

13 (Thursday) MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY

16 (Sunday) HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME

20 (Thursday) NIGHT OF THE IGUANA

23 (Sunday) LOVE WITH A PROPER STRANGER

24 (Monday) GUNS OF NAVARONE

27 (Thursday) BLACKBOARD JUNGLE

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 10 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

7 & 9:30 P.M.

MAY

1 (Monday 7 & 9:30 P.M. SEVEN DAYS IN MAY (Annenberg Auditorium)

2 (Tuesday) ILL CRY TOMORROW 7

3 (Wednesday) BECKET 7

4 (Thursday) GOOD EARTH 7

5 (Friday) GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH

P.S.—Sophomore Men — Spring Heeling Smoker

All films shown in Irvine Auditorium unless otherwise noted.

Monday, January 23rd — Bowl Room, 7:30 P M.

& 9:30 P.M. & 9:45 P.M.

& 9:30 P.M. 7 &10 P.M.

Page 5: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE FIVE

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Attention Students of Chronology. Please note that The Era of

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Ring the Bell on

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Page 6: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967

1885

Jaiiy Pennsylvania!! STEVEN SARSHIK, Editor-in-Chief

MARC TURTLETAUB, Managing Editor JOANNE OCHMAN, Business Manager

STEPHEN CRANE. News Editor DAVID SACHSMAN. Features Editor

GUY BLYNN. Sports Editor BARRY KAYE. Executive Editor

EDWARD BLUTH. Co-Financial Manager DAVID ROMANOFF. Co-Financial Manager

ASSOCIATE EDITORS DONALD MORRISON RICHARD SHAPIRO

DENNIS WILEN

1967

RANDY SWARTZ. Associate Features Editor FEATURES BOARD

LIZ YUSEM ALFRED SCHREIBER BARBARA COMENETZ EDMUND PURDY

LARRY KROHN. JIM RESTIVO. LYNN DAVIDSON. Jr. Sports Board

VIETNAM ANALYSIS

Salisbury Destroys LBJ's Myths David Smith

Supporting the House Plan The agenda for today's meeting of the Board of Trustees

contains no mention of the House Plan controversy. The final decision, however, on whether or not the House Plan is scrapped rests with the Trustees.

Speculation about the Plan's future has already become too widespread. Rumors at lower echelons and silence at the top have cloaked discussion of the issue in an aura of mystery and intrigue.

John C. Hetherston, vice president for coordinated plan- ning, blames the House Plan holdup on a review of expendi- ture priorities. Other residence building requirements could pre-empt creation of the House system, he says.

What Hetherston and apparently the rest of the Admin- istration have failed to recognize is the fact that the House Plan is more than a different way of putting students in beds and feeding them meals.

The House Plan envisions a system of small, discreet living units, each with its own study areas, lounges, recreation and dining facilities. House memberships would presumably cross class lines, including students and even faculty members with a wide range of interests.

In other words, the House system would provide a viable atmosphere for intellectual development. The cold efficiency of the dormitory would yield to the warm corporate intimacy of the House. The stage would be set for social interaction heretofore impossible in University residences.

The House, then, would be not only a residence but much more than that. The House would be a whole, now more meaningful way of life for the undergraduate and an alternative to the fraternity.

Bearing these facts in mind, it is imperative that the Trustees today discuss and guarantee the future of the House Plan.

Time for a Change The Committee on Residence Operations meets today to

determine the status of Men's Dormitory parietal hours. The latest proposal would extend Friday hours until

midnight and Saturday hours until 1 a.m. Although the pro- posal is really a compromise measure, it must be approved if freshmen are to have any confidence in administration promises and any hope for improving their bleak social life.

After discussion of parietal hours is completed, the Administration can either close the book on freshman life for another few years, or it could begin a broad investigation of the inadequacies of the academic and social program for Penn freshmen. It has become apparent that there is a lot more needed in the freshmen dormitories than an extension of parietals and a proposed physical renovation.

Freshman year at any University is difficult, but it is especially burdensome at Pennsylvania. Crowded into a small dormitory room, forced to take subjects which are required, boring, and laborious; confused by a system which proports to offer a stimulating academic environment — but instead supports mediocrity — the freshman becomes disillusioned with himself and with the University.

It is obvious that the experiences and values forged in the freshman year contribute to the attitude and outlook of the undergraduate. The key to the absence of a challenging academic atmosphere can be found in the overcrowded rooms in the Class of '28 or a boring fifteen weeks in Math 140. It is time to get to the root of some of the problems which plague Pennsylvania. It is time to eliminate some of the second rate things which go on at a University which is supposed to be first rate.

The final Salisbury report appeared this week in the New York Times. Lauded by foreign editors all over the world, denounced by conservative American journalists, but to many readers deserving of a Pulit- zer Prize.these articles, by the first American newsman to visit Hanoi during the war, have coura- geously and forthrightly dispelled Administration myths about the war in Vietnam. They have also defined new realities of the struggle going on there.

The first myth to vanish was the one which claimed that North Vietnamese civilians were not be- ing killed by U. S. attacks upon urban military tar- gets. Military spokesmen soon admitted they had been in error.

Salisbury crushed the fallacy that China, Hanoi, and the National Liberation Front were all part of one big plot to conquer the South for international communism. Salisbury revealed that gaping dif- ferences—even animosities—exist between Peking, Hanoi and the NLF (Peking decries the Front for its revisionism and devisionism). He pointed out that the NLF actually contains more non-communists than communists; that its official (and not entirely un- credible program) is one of neutrality and democracy for all Vietnam; and that it would not willingly re- unite with the regime in the North unless it was satisfied that proper Southern intersts were safe- gaurded. How this contrasts with Dean Rusk's oft repeated fable about the Vietcong being puppets of the Hanoi and Peking aggressors!

Determined to Fight Recall the pre-election Administration stories

about the discouragement in Hanoi. Salisbury com- pares the North Vietnamese spirit to that of England during the Blitz. He describes the young men and woment determinedly and even gaily going about their wartime tasks. He tells us that even Western diplomats in Hanoi rave about the amazing spirit of the Northerners; that few doubt their determina- tion to fight on, even from the caves, if necessary.

The Daily Pennsylvanian is 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 is- sue 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 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

The official Adminisration slogan of "raising the cost of aggression until Hanoi leaves its neighbors in peace" becomes ludicrous when it is confronted by the will of the North Vietnamese to pursue to the end what they consider to be a Holy War of inde- pendence from foreign domination.

Perhaps the dominant theme running through Salis- bury's reports is the fierce independence of the Hanoi government and people is hypersensitive to any en- croachment upon its sovereignty by either Moscow or Peking. The North Vietnamese insist upon com- plete control over their sophisticated foreign weap- ons, even before they are proficient in using them. The tortured syllogism by which we equated internal Southern rebellion with Red Chinese expansionsm— our raison d'etre for the whole sorry war—has been very much enfeebled by Salisbury's reporting of the integrity of the various political groups which have temporarily joined hands to defeat their common enemy, the United States.

Myths Revealed With these myths and miscalculations revealed,

one may ask of the Administration, "What now?" The Johnson State of the Union message contained no truthful answer. The watching, anxious public was treated to a stale affirmation of an already bank- rupt policy. For the Johnson Administration knows well that the continuation of our limited war will not bring victory or even an honorable settlement— at least not until perhaps a million Americans have been committed to Vietnam for an exhausting five- to-eight-year struggle. Plainly, as the supreme prac- titioner of domestic Realpolitik, Johnson knows that this is not going to be possible. No doubt he wants to end his agonizing debacle in Vietnam before No- vember, 1968, but how will he perform this miracle? How can he avert, within the realm of the politically feasible, what is looming ahead as the greatest American foreign policy disaster of recent history? It may be asked today, not how our President plans to win, but how he plans to lose gracefully.

A Letter to trie Editor THE ICR vs. THE EDUCATIO- NAL SURVEY Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

One of the smokescreens thrown up by the proponents of secret research at the University is that objections to the ICR are emo- tional responses to the Vietnam war and therefore have no gen- uine basis in academic principles. This is the picture drawn in a misleading and inaccurate article by Fred M. Hechinger (NYT, Aug. 14, 1966), which is heavily relied upon in an editorial in The Penn- sylvania Gazette of November 1966.

While the use of chemical weapons in Vietnam has undoubt- edly influenced individual atti- tudes toward the ICR, to contend that this is the sole or even prim- ary reason for the current contro- versy neglects two major aspects of the isue. First, it ignores the implications of the consistent and repeated rejection of tht ICR- FPRI-Moore School "pro-secrecy" position by a large majority of the University Senate on the straightforward frounds of op- position to secret research and restriction of publication. Second, it totally neglects the history of the issue of contract research, a history of controversy which ante- dates the Vietnam issue by almost a full decade.

That this issue was already joined by the mid-fifties is fully in the Educational Survey of the University of Pennsylvania, a mas- sive examination of the educa- tional needs of the University, fi- nanced by a number of founda- tions, and covering mainly the years before 1958. The Survey was carried out with the aid of distinguished Boards of Consul- tants brought in from other insti- tions. These consultants surveyed their respective fields and their analyses and suggestions were then reviewed by University ap-

pointed committees. The Board of Consultants in the Engineering fields consisted of the Dean of Engineering and Sci- ence at Carnegie Tech, the Dean of Engineering at MIT, and the Chairman of the Department of Chemical Engineering at the Uni- versity of Delaware. In its dis- cussion of criteria for judging the

appropriateness of research for the Engineering Schools this dis- tinguished Board of Consultants set forth the following six basic considerations that ought to be taken into account: "1. A university should undertake

only fundamental research, that is, research that would

(Continued on Page 7)

a»i*e-/

Page 7: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE SEVEN

For College Bowl Contestants Only

Ready, Mr. Earl By Charles Krause

Dr. Joel Conarroe of the English Department and head of the Faculty Committee for the College Bowl Program has notified interested Penn students of the forthcoming test to choose four finalists and four alternates for the College Bowl contest. Conar- roe writes that the test "will be so constructed — multiple choice, short answer fill-in-the-blank — that you will be able to answer (or try to answer) a great many questions' in the hour provided."

The test will no doubt be a demanding one. After Columbia's smashing five stint, Pennsylvania will be given equal time (it is hoped).

We have decided to leave the academics to Dr. Conarroe, but are somewhat concerned that there may be a lack of knowledge about the University of Pennsylvania. When old Mr. Earl asks one of Penn's finest about his school, we hope that he will be really conversant We have therefore devised a short an- swer, multiple-choice test about Pennsylvania that will certainly help the four "university scholars" when Mr. Earl pops the question. CURRENT EVENTS: The following four questions are so devised to test the student's knowledge of current events on campus.

1. The Dirty Drug has been modernized. It is still:

a) Dirty at heart, but clean on the surface b) A prime supplier of indigestion on campus c) Less attractive than the Wall, but more

attractive than the General Services Bldg. d) The only restaurant on its block trying to

evade the University's Master Plan at any cost 2. Many students have returned from their Christ-

mas vacations somewhat altered. Which of the fol- lowing alterations is most prestigious?

a) Braces removed after 7^4 years b) suntan c) broken leg (skiing, of course) d) engagement ring, pin, or absolutely smashed

3. When Penn students play, they play hard. When Penn students work, they play hard. Between Dec. 20 and Jan. 16, it was best to be playing hard in:

a) Little Rock b) Nassau (county) c) Camden

d) Queens 4. During the first two weeks of each semester,

Penn does drop-and-add. The course most popular in the add dept. was:

a) Soc. 6 b) English 23 c) Spanish 100 d) History 467

NAMES and PLACES: The following four questions are both fill-in and multiple choice. They are designed to familiarize the student with his environment:

5. Dietrich Hall is affectionately known as the

6. The Macke vending macine refractory in Die- trich Hall is actually the:

a) birthplace of three of the five Robber Barons b) inspiration for "I Can Get It for You Whole-

sale" c) Womb of Capitalism d) research laboratory for the Philadelphia Mint

7. The Fiesta Room is located in . 8. If it is suggested that you "take a ride on the

Reading" go directly to: a) 30th Street station b) Houston Hall c) Mrs. G. P. Harnwell d) jail

GENERAL INFORMATION: The following two ques- tions are designed to allow the serious student to receive a possible 100% on this test.

9. The New University Party is: a) right-wing b) left-wing c) fledgling d) inspiring

10. Chauncey Pivnik has been recently appointed ANSWERS: 1) d, 2) c, 3) b, 4) d 5) Cradle of Capi- talism, 6) a, 7) Pagano's, 8) c, 9) c, 10) Unfortunately. Chauncey has not been appointed to anything. He still remains, however, an excellent name to use on any bibliography.

Drug Case (Continued from Page 1)

because a thing is inadmissible in a court of law, it should be inadmis- sible somewhere else," Curtis Reitz, professor of law said.

Rules governing the admissibility of evidence exist because of the serious consequences of convic- tion and to restrain police from re- peatedly breaking the law, a sec- ond faculty member said.

There might be grounds for dis- allowing illegally gained evidence in a University hearing, he observ- ed, only if it could be shown po- lice "had an understanding that the University would throw out a kid on the basis of evidence gained illicitly."

No Serious Penalties In that case, an exclusion rule

might be necessary to prevent po- lice from persistent violations. The faculty member said he did not consider the University capable of rendering a penalty on the stu- dent which would qualify as 'seri- ous.'

There is an additional consid- eration here,'" he said. "Some peo- ple might not think the Univer- sity should take advantage of evi- dence gained illicitly." He added, however, he did not seet haw any "advantage" was being taken by the University.

"If Dean Craft knows that this student possessed narcotics, what is he supposed to do? Shut his mind to it?" he asked.

Dean Craft has indicated he will await the outcome of court pro- ceedings before deciding on a Uni- versity hearing.

Fraternity Bids "Those men who did not sign

fraternity bids on Friday, Jan- uary 20, 1967, in Houston Hall; or on Saturday, January 21st in Logan Hall, must call for and sign their bids in 117 Logan Hall, not later than Friday, Jan- uary 27, 1967. No bids will be issued after that date!"

Wrestlers (Continued From Page 12)

high school with Schiffman, but the division in which each will wrestle is still not known.

Moore, who was third in the Easterns last year, will probably face Dave Labesky but the Quaker lineup is viable and Frey uses his charges where he thinks they are needed mosf. The Red heavy- weight was 8-3-1 in dual meets last year.

Schiffman feels that the Red and Blue has a good chance to upset the Ithacans. It is the second big meet in a row for the Quakers af- ter the vacation layoff.

The Penn squad is in good physi- cal condition with no major in- juries being reported. They will be trying to up their season's mark to 2-1. A victory here could be a big step in improving last sea- son's fifth place Ivy finish.

The match should be a close one which is indicated by the close- ness of the comparative losses to Harvard and may hinge on a few close matches. The Big Red has its strength in the lighter weights and in their heavyweight.

letter to tie Editor (Continued from Page 6)

be done if only private re- sources were available.

"2. Research projects and ideas must have their initiation within the academic staff.

**3. The size of the research operation as a whole must be in keeping with the academic operations.

"4. The results of research should be available for publication.

"5. The research operations should have long-range stability, bith financially and in terms of the contin- uing interests of the facul- ties.

M6. Research work should be done mainly by full-time faculty and full-time graduate stu- dents working in collabora- tion and should result in graduate theses and grad- uate degress."

In addition to these standards the Board of Consultants noted a number of corollaries that might be considered. Among these was the following: **7. No project which requires

'clearance' for participants or which forbids the publi- cation of the results should be accepted by the Univer- sity. This would mean that it should decline "classi- fied* projects. The Univer- sity exists for the promo- tion of free inquiry and the advancement of learning. The Government should look to it for aid and should support its efforts to widen basic scientific knowledge; it should set up it own laboratories and

The View From Here

The Knack 99

David B. Sachsman

ITS GAME TIME in "The Knack" as Nancy Jones (Susan Turlish) puts 'Private' Tom (Jim O'Brien) though his paces. This young-in-view comedy on how to 'get girls' by England's Ann Jellicoe, opens Thurs- day, Jan. 12 at Society Hill Playhouse West, 22nd and Walnut Sts, for an indefinate run. Performances nightly Thurs. through Sun. eve- nings at 8:30 p.m.

"The Knack" opened at the Society Hill Playhouse/ West last weekend for an indefinite run. Judging by Satur- day night's performance, the run should be made definite — short.

The Society Hill production of the Ann Jellicoe comedy never really picks up steam. The play seems to go on and on. It is an exercise in modern theatre and as such is interest- ing, but it never becomes exciting.

"The Knack" was first produced in England and then done off-Broadway in New York. It later became an absorb- ing and entertaining motion picture.

Lacks Vitality But Society Hill's "Knack" lacks the vitality seen in

the other, more professional productions. The characters are too young, too inexperienced, to carry Miss Jellicoe's com- plicated comedic style. Jim O'Brien, as Tom, is the only one who seems to know what the play is about — or what acting is about, for that matter.

The "Knack" being discussed is the "knack of seduc- tion" and the problem with the Society Hill production is that finally, the audience couldn't care less about the parti- cular seduction presented, or the characters involved.

"The Knack" makes for an interesting, and at times entertaining evening of modern theatre, but the production is simply to weak to last. The Society Hill players have done better in the past, and must know plan their future around something other than "The Knack."

testing grounds for the ap- plication of that knowledge to the needs of national defense."

In commenting on the state of affairs at Penn in the 1950's the Board of Consultants stated that

"While some of the re- search we have been in the Engineering Schools has satisfied these criteria, much of it has not. We are convinced that a deter- mined effort must be made to look upon contract re- search from the standpoint of these criteria, from which we have specifically excluded the financial ad- vantages to the school or the individual faculty mem- ber."

The Review Committee for the Engineering Schools, drawn from a wide-cross-section of the Uni- versity, was in substantial agree- ment with the Board of Consult- ants. Objections to these recom- mendations were heavily concen- trated in the Moore School, which is the backbone of the current op- position to open research. Dr. Chambers, Engineering Vice- President and head of ICR, voiced strong objections to the views of the consultants and Review Com- mittee. The Review Committee paraphrased Dr. Chambers as say- ing to them "that while he might prefer academic research to non- academic, it is necessary to in- crease the number of persons do-

ing research of some kind or something called research in or- der to show activity, hence non- academic research it all right for the time being; ..."

The November 10 action by the University Senate thus simply re- affirms basic academic principles strongly supported in the Educa- tional Survey, and concurred in by high level faculty committees. Such reaffirmation is necessary be- cause these basic principles have been unacceptable to a minority of the faculty and the Administra- tion. This is why arrangements such as the ICR were not only continued but were also expanded following the Educational Survey. In view of this past record it remains an open question whe- ther the strong stand of the Uni- versity Senate will bring research policy any closer to the objectives of open research.

Edward S. Herman Associate Professor of Finance

Craft Calls Continued from Page 1

has the same hours as those pro- posed for Pennsylvania. Harvard, Yale, and Princeton end their parietals at midnight both Friday and Saturday.

Gate will be Open Craft also announced that start-

ing tonight a guard will be put on the 36th St. entrance to the Men's Dorms and the gate will be left open until midnight.

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PAGE EIGHT PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20,

Cinema Roundup

*•*

**

Excellent

Very Good

Good

• — Fair

None — Poor

ARCADIA — "The Quiller Mem- orandum." George Segal, Alec Guiness, Max Von Sydow, and Senta Berger in a slick spy thriller written by Harold Pinter. Multi- level plotting, great dialogue and competent direction help keep the spy cycle rolling along. **•

BOYD — "Doctor Zhivago." David Lean has successfully trans- ferred all the flaws of Boris Pas- ternak's epic of the Russian Revo- lution to the screen and few of the virtues. Big, beautiful, and thor- oughly unsatisfactory. Omar Sharif, Julie Christie, Geraldine Chaplin, and Rod Steiger donate their tal- ents to this charity case. *

FOX — "Warning Shot." David Jansen, Steve Allan, and a host of other TV personalities parade themselves across the movie screen to good effect. Well-made cops-and- robbers stuff with a "Dragnet" flavor, and not afraid to take it- self seriously. *•

GOLDMAN — "Farenhit 451."-A bit too clever for its own good, and certainly more should be ex- pected from the director of a classic like "Jules and Jim," but still worth your while. Oskar Werner and Julie Christie star. **

LANE — "A Funny Thing Hap- pened on the Way to the Forum." Another joyous contribution to Richard Lester's one-man campaign to turn fudge comedy into an art form. Unfortunately, the talents of Zero Mostel, Phil Silvers, and Bus- ter Keaton get lost in the cinematic shuffle. ***

MIDTOWN — "Alfie." Socio- economic comedy with a message. Michael Caine gives an Academy Award caliber performance as a heel who uses woman until he gets used himself. Don't miss it. **••*

PALACE — "The Endless Sum- mer." The world's best home movie. Around-the-world surfing adventure features top photogra- phy, excellent music, and wishy- washy narration. Check the times on this one, or you might find your- self sitting through something call- ed "Red Tomahawk." •••

STANLEY — "Hawaii." The obligatory film version of a best seller. Director George Roy Hill shows off Julie Andrews and Max Von Sydow at the expense of the Hawaiian Islands. **

STANTON — "Murderer's Row." Another Matt Helm adventure, as if "the Silencers" wasn't bad enough. Ann-Margret is the most obnoxious actress go-going, and Dean Martin delivers the terrible dialogue as though he thought it was clever. This picture is best seen at a drive- in theatre during the daytime.

_ TRANS-LUX — "Funeral in Ber- lin." Michael Caine successfully re- peats his Harry Palmer role from "The Ipcress File," but the film lacks the razzle-dazzle Sidney Furie direction which distinguished the first production. The most impres- sive collection of plot twists since "Gambit." ***

WORLD — "Georgy Girl." Pure delight, with Lynn Redgrave quali- fying herself for an Academy Award. James Mason is very good in his usual "Lolita" type role. **••

ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE FEMME FATALE CONTEST

.1. P. WAYNE AVENUE

PLAYHOUSE

By PETE CONNOR

A recent survey compiled by Gorge Gall has revealed the follow- ing fact: male undergraduates con- sider 90 per cent of all Philadelphia girls to be desirable. The rest are Penn coeds.

We do not accept this finding. Somewhere, hidden or chained in the depths of Hill Hall, there exists a chick graced with infinite charm, beauty, and sex appeal. WE WANT HER.

Girls, put down Gall and restore the rep of dear old Penn. Enter the Femme - Fatale - Look - Alike - Contest for girls with that Elke Sommer "Deadlier Than the Male" look.

Sponsored in the Philadelphia area by Universal Pictures, pro- ducers of the new film "Deadlier Than the Male," opening at the Fox Theatre February 1, Penn Cinema, and The Daily Pennsyl- vania^ the contest offers an all- expense-paid dream weekend in New York City to the winner. That

lucky girl will be wined and dined at New York's most exclusive res- taurants, taken to the best Broad- way shows, and will stay at one of the city's finest hotels. All semi- finalists will receive free passes to "Deadlier Than the Male," and record albums.

Ten semi-finalists will be chosen on January 25. The winner, to be chosen January 27 at Houston Hall, will represent Philadelphia in a state-wide contest to be held Febru- ary 1. If she wins, New York will be on her spring agenda.

Each entering femme should sub- mit a recent picture of herself along with a sheet containing her name, address, telephone number, height, and weight to the Houston Hall desk no later than noon, Janu- ary 25, care of Penn Cinema. Girls lacking a picture can have one taken January 24 from 2-4 P.M. at The Daily Pennsylvanian offices.

The prestige of Penn is at stake. Gall notwithstanding, Penn has some fine femmes. Girls arise. Prove that you're "Deadlier Than the Male."

FARENHEIT 451 By JIM MORROW

There are so many things wrong with "Farenheit 451," now at the Goldman, it's surprising that the picture is not a lot worse than it actually is.

Francois Truffaut's treatment of the famous science fiction novel brings to the screen Ray Brad- bury's vision of a futuristic society in which book-burning is the order of the day and fireman start fires rather than put them out. As in "Brave New World" and "1984," the theme is the revolt of the hero (Oskar Werner) against the system.

It is a terrifying vision, but Truf- faut handles it with curious levity. It was generally expected that the combination of English dialogue and an over abundant budget would present an unavoidable stumbling block for the French director. Yet "Farenheit 451" is unsatisfactory neither for its budget nor its lan- guage, but for the tone Truffaut imparts to the film, which is pre- cisely the aspect he could control most thoroughly.

Little else about the picture works either. Julie Christie's idea of a dual role relies less on a change of character than a change of hair length, while the screen- play is a lame confusion of clumsy exposition and shallow platitudes about censorship. Eventually it reaches the point where there is

simply nothing more to say about book-burning, then goes ahead and says it anyway.

The paradox of "Farenheit 451" is that none of these failings pre- vent it from being a thoroughly enjoyable film. If Truffaut's style is inappropriate, it is still impeccable, and provides many an absorbing and delightful moment. We may grimace when the camera picks up a smouldering copy of "Cahiers du Cinema," but we are pleasantly amused by lines like, "Look, Mom- my, fire engines! There's going to be a fire!" When Werner escapes to the "Book People," much cute- ness ensues, most of it quite palat- able. The Book People are a society of individuals who have chosen to beat the system by committing en- tire books to memory, hoping to transcribe them to paper in some future enlightened age. They ap- proach Werner and introduce them- selves with greetings like "Hello, I'm The Martian Chronicles' by Ray Bradbury." Precious.

The credits, by the way, are spoken rather than written, a most effective introduction to the story of an audio-oriented world. To boot, "Farenheit 451" offers such pleasant entertainments as one of Bernard Herrmann's many fine scores, some engaging shots of all your favorite books going up in smoke, and the reddest fire engine you'll ever see in your life.

Elke Sommer pulls a cigar from her Freudian slip in "Deadlier Than the Male," coming to th^ Fox on Feb. 1. If you look like her, you might win a weekend in New York.

ILLYA DARLING "

Julie Christie listens to her wall screen and Oskar Werner reads the wordless funny papers in the printless society of the future where book paper bums at "Farenheit 451," now at the Goldman.

By RANDY SWARTZ Melina Mercouri is the sexiest

thing to come out of Greece since Helen of Troy. Her work in such films as "Topkapi," "Phaedre," and "Never on Sunday" confirm that she is the only actress who has patented the characterization of real turn-on woman.

Melina does what Melina does well, so it isn't very surprising to find her in "Illya, Darling," the musical version of "Never on Sun- day" now at the Shubert for a two week stay.

Jules Dassin is again at the helm as the writer-director, and Titos Vardis recreats his film role of Yorgo, a Greek's Greek intent to spend his life dancing and whoring.

Of course, that special whore, Illya, is played by Melina, an in- dependent girl who never works on Sundays and picks her own clients.

Nikos Kourkoulos, a good looking new comer, shows much promise as Tonio, the man who finally wins Illya for himself.

Into this happy coastal village, which is predominantly populated by lazy ship builders who chase after hard-working whores, comes Homer Thrace (Orson Bean), an American tourist hell bent on find- ing the glory that was Greece.

The bumbling tourists tempor- arily diverts I'lya from the bed of passion to the seat of culture much to the dismay of the hot-blooded Greeks.

Having learned his lesson. Homer returns to Middletown, Connecticut much the wiser for the visit.

There are a few subplots woven into the tale, such as the local Mafia's attempt to hike the rent on the houses that are not homes.

The merits of the story and the characters were proven in the movie version. What is left to be seen is whether the musical adap- tation will be as successful.

The music, written by Manos Hadjidakis, who also penned the Academy Award winning tile song of the movie, has a Greek flavor in its rhythm and orchestration. It is the best score heard in a long while. Oustanding are "Love,. Love,

Love," "Her Eyes. Her Eyes," and "Maressi." Hadjidakis hits the fun- ny bone when one of the whores (there isn't a female in the musi- cal who isn't a whore) explains musically "I'll Never Lay Down Any More."

The throaty voice of Melina Mercouri is both gracious on the ears and adds another dimension to the senuous qualities of Illya. She stops the show with a moving rendition of "Never On Sunday" sung in her native Greek.

The sets of Oliver Smith are ingenious, numerous, and very mo- bile. He has even concocted mov- ing clouds in the sky to add to the outdoor feeling of the shipyard.

Orson Bean, who sports a well tempered voice, does exceedingly well as the poor man's Henry Higgins.

Unfortunately, it is impossible to say the same for Onna White, who is responsible for the choreography. The dance numbers were too long, too athletic, too trite, and not Greek enough.

The authentic Greek flavor which the movie derived so easily from its actual location setting could not, of course, be carried over to the stage production. By deviating from Greek culture in her dance routines, Miss White accentuates this limitation of the theatre.

As it stands now the show runs three hours, which is about a half- hour too long. During its stay I'm sure Jules Dassin will trim it down.

As presented in the movie, the basic story is a simple one. How- ever, in its musical form it be- comes complex and is told sporad- ically in between the overlong dance ensembles.

The lively, infectous music and the leading lady are the show's strong points. If the big dance numbers can be cut down and the play shortened, it can't miss having a long and successful run on Broad- way.

Those of you who don't have tickets forget it. "Illya, Darling'' has been sold out for a month. Eat your hearts out, or better yet, plan a trip to New York.

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE NINE

SORRY ABOUT THAT The warm spot in my heart is not from smoking — I only smoke pipes — it's from my creditors . . . they give me heartburn.

YE OLDE TOBACCONIST LTD. The unusual in pipes and cigars

3643 Walnut St. 222-2224

HEEL THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN!

Cigar and Pipe Smokers

ARISE for Steve has finally arrived at his new location . . . But please hurry . . . Your mass exodus (vacation) hurt more than he and his partner — creditors — parents — pets — ad agency and land- lord expected . . .

YE OLDE TOBACCONIST LTD. Th* unusual in pipes and cigars

3643 Walnut St. 222-2224

THIS IS A TIGER CAT.

He's one of a large family in residence at U. of P.

Confront him or any one of his seven brothers with opportunity and he rips into it. Offer them careers with no ceilings on earnings and they pounce!

If they look especially self-satisfied these days, they have reason: during 1966 they out produced all our other Campus Units. (And we have them at colleges and universities all over the country . . . even at Princeton!)

Congrowltulations to U of P's Tiger Cats; JOSEPH BREMAN, DAVID DUNN, RICHARD GLENN, JOSEPH FERRIGNO, RICHARD HEACOCK, NICK LA MOTTE, PHILIP SEATON, AND LAWRENCE WEINER. And to SAMUEL G. WURTZEL, C.L.U., their Supervisor.

And to you who need to identify with a winning team, an invitation to stop by our Campus Office. Or phone us. Or just gggrrrowl.

James A. Schnaars, C.L.U. 4600 Market Street, Phila., Penna. 19139

GR 2-4987

PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY O' "»M. L A D E L »M . »

H&ADQUJlWS! HOUSTON HAU STORE

lAA/W IA/WVA

FOR ALMOST YbtlR every

HOUSTON HALL

STORE

WWWXAAAAAAA

Fraternity Bids Available Fraternity bids may be called

for and signed at the Rehearsal Room of Houston Hall (second floor, east) on Friday between 3 and 6 p.m.

CHURCH OF THE SAVIOUR 3lth at Ludlow l 3723 Chestnut St.

Staff - F. M. Brooks, G. C. Field, J. R. Harl

SUNDAY SERVICES

8-9-11 A.M., Dr. Hart PR. Bible 10; Nursery 11; Symposium 1 P.M. (Pre-Service Music 10:30 A.M. Jan. 22 & 29. Instrumental and vocal church music from the Italian and German Baroque. Car- olyn Mather, violin; Kathleen Hoff. soprano; Geo. Huber, reed; Law. Hoenig, harps'd.

Those who are unable to call for their bids at that time may sign them at the office of the Dean of Men, 117 Logan Hall, on Sat- urday between 9:30 and 11:30 a.m.

Formal fraternity rush ended last night with many houses plan- ning social activities this weekend for newly accepted pledge classes. Pledging ceremonies will take place at most houses Sunday.

Slightly less than 50 per cent of each year's freshmen class be- come fraternity pledges. Interfra- ternity council officials expect this year's turnout to be average.

YOUR FATHER'S MUSTACHE

1627 RANSTEAD STREET

PRFSFNTS THEIR FAMOUS BANJOBAND

flUS -eautootxs-

LO 3*8539 call before you come down if you need directions, (some people find us hard to find)

How soon after graduation will somebody let you run a bank? Before you're thirty, maybe. If you're good enough.

That's precisely what happened with Del Ross. He's the manager of our Forest Hills office. Responsible for 2500 accounts. $2.9 million in deposits.

Then there's the international scene to con- sider. We're going to need an even larger team of young bankers overseas within the next few years.

Of course, everybody doesn't get to run a Chemical New York office. Here or abroad.

«

Only good people.

Chemical WwYork

If you're pood, -« 'hedulf an interview with our rep- resentatives. They'll he on rampun, January 1967. Or send a letter, long or -hurt, to John K. Canham or Paul I. Smith, Chemical Hank \<w YorkTrurt Company.20 Pine St.,Ne*» York I0O15.

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PAGE TEN THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 196/

EVEN

BENnFRANKLIN WAS A

- NEWSPAPERMAN - (besides finding time for all those

other good-time activities)

0 SO CAN YOU!

HEEL THE DP HEEL THE BEST

0 SMOKER TUESDAY NIGHT

CON EDISON OF NEW YORK offers challenging

careers in engineering and related fields

Con Edison is the dynamic and forward looking Company sup- plying electricity, gas and steam to growing New York City and adjoining Westchester County.

Outstanding opportunities to assist in solving the problems of Con Edison's future growth and development are offered to grad- uates with degrees in EE, ME,

CE, ChE, Met'lE and Nuclear Engineering.

Get additional information from your Placement Officer — Arrange for an on campus inter- view with Con Edison's repre- sentative. Or, write Placement Manager, 4 Irving Place, New York, N. Y. 10003.

Equal opportunity for all.

C<mSdJUw»

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FEB. 17, 1967

When four nice boys Go Ape—

The Monkees

There's Monkee gum, Monkee caps, Monkee boots, Monkee pants, two hit Monkee singles, over 3 million copies of the Monkees' first album and soon there may be Monkee depart- ments in over 1,600 stores. However, the Saturday Eve- ning Post report on America's homegrown Beatles shows that being a Monkee is not quite as much fun as a barrel of monkeys. Their records were "prefabricated" and, ac- cording to Monkee Mike Nes- mith, "totally dishonest.. .the music had nothing to do with us." But Monkees owner and creator, Screen Gems, has big- ger problems than its stars' disenchantment. It's wonder- ing how the fans will react when they discover that the Monkee sound isn't really their own. Then there's a reported $6.85-million lawsuit charging that the Monkees TV show for- mat was stolen. And there's the question of whether Eng- land's Beatles will yell foul. But otherwise . . .

In the same issue read a major Post report on America's sex-crime rate, the world's highest, and what's being done about it. That's the January 28 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. Get your copy today.

A CUO'IS MAGAlIM

POST ON SALE NOW

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA N PAGE ELEVEN

CAMPUS EVENTS CAMPUS AGENDA

ALL GRAD MIXER — Bennett Union Board will give an all grad- uate mixer (undergraduate women) on Friday, Jan. 20, from 8:30 'til 12:30 in Bennett Lounge, 4th floor Bennett Hall. The band will be the High Hats and there is a fifty cent donation.

CATACOMBS — Open Hoot to- night! All members of the Univer- sity community are invited to bring their guitars, banjos, sitars, kazoos, etc. and participate. Enter via alley of 36th St. near Locust Wall.

INTERNATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER — Information for jobs in Europe for Summer '67 and Charter flights. Room 1, Hous- ton Hall, Thursday, Jan. 26, 7:30 p.m.

NEW UNIVERSITY PARTY (for- merly Student Power) — Will hold a general meeting Friday at 4 p.m. in the Christian Association to dis- cuss platform. All are welcome.

AcnvrrY NOTICES BALALIKA ORCHESTRA — Re-

hearsal Tuesday, Jan. 24, 11 a.m., rehearsal room, Houston Hall.

CONCERT BAND: Persons in- terested in musical or managerial positions in the Penn B and and are invited to stop by the band office in Houston Hall or phone 594-8719.

FOLK DANCE CLUB — Inter- national open house Sat. 9-12 p.m.

at the CA. Free. Everyone welcome. Folk dancing and refreshments.

CAMPUS CHEST — Senior and junior board meeting Monday, 8:30, Room 10, Houston Hall. Freshman and sophmores: Hand in hour sheets HH Information desk.

HILLEL — Sabbath services: Fri- day 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Sat. 9:30 a.m.

HILLEL — Folk dancing Wed., 6-7:30 p.m. All welcome.

HILLEL — Lecture: The annual Normal M. Regner Memorial lec- ture on Jewish Ethics will be pre- sented by Samuel D. Schecter, who will speak on "The Ethics of Busi- ness or Business Ethics: The View- point of a Jewish Businessman." Tues. 4 p.m. at Hillel.

SPHINX AND KEY — There will be a very important meeting Mon. at 4 p.m. in Hill Hail, House I, Formal Lounge. Attendance is im- perative.

TOP OF THE TOWN — All in- terested in joining this semester meet Sat. 3 p.m. at Top of City Hall.

MASK AND WIG — All man- agers report to meeting tomorrow Sat. at 2 p.m. at the Pit in Irvine. All must attend.

CONCERT BAND — Members are reminded rehearsals on Mon- days and Wednesdays in the Hous- ton Hall rehearsal room.

Penn State Drops NDEA Loans By WILLIAMS LEE

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (CPS) — Some 1700 Pennsylvania State University students returned to < >mpus this month to find that the administration had decided to drop the federal scholarship pro- gram under which they are at- tending schools.

The University announced last December that it was withdraw- ing from the National Student Loan program as of this summer. The program, authorized under the National Defense Education Act of 1958, provides more than $1 mil- lion in financial assistance to 1700 of the University's 23,000 students.

The Board of Trustees said that the NDSL program was being drop- ped because of the rising costs to the University in administering the loins. Under federal law, the Uni- versity matches $1 for every $9 of feedral funds, totaling a $132,- 009 cost to Penn State for admin- istering the program.

Seek Replac2ments At the same time, the Trustees

said that the University would seek to replace the NDSL loans with other state programs now being de- veloped. These state programs, they added, would cost the Uni- versity less 10 administer.

A newly created state education aid agency is expected to fill the void left by discontinuance of the federal program. The agency is not yet in full operation, and fur- ther action by the University has been delayed until the new pro- gram gets going.

Students can also get financial aid from several other Common- wealth of Pennsylvania programs, Penn State's own assistance pro- grams, and federal educational op- portunity grants.

A student government repres- entative pointed out, however, that none of the other suggested pro- grams make the extensiv provi- sions found under the NDSL loan system.

The decision, announced while students were on vacation between semesters, drew immdiat protest on campus. Richard Kalich, presi- dent of the Undergraduate Student Government, said he plans to in- vestigate the University's action.

Stat2 Loans Questioned

"Sudents have told me," Kalich said, "that substitution of state loans will not be adequate so we want to investigae to determine whether these complaints are just."

Other student groups represent- ing coeds, off-campus students, dormitory males, and graduate stu- dents jumped into the discussion and launched letter-writing cam- paigns to protest the school's ac- tion^

"There is no rationale to which the University holds more firmly than one involving a dollar and cents decision," said the student newspaper, The Daily Collegian. "With all the fighting and scratch- ing that can be anticipated every year in appropriation battles with the state legislature. The University cherishes the economic soundness of other programs."

Engineers, Mathematicians:

Contribute to Technical

Programs of National

Significance

Creating secure communications systems and equipments unknown anywhere else. This isthe mission of the National Security Agency—a mission which in turn creates problems of a high order of difficulty, re- quiring an uncommon amount of ingenuity.

There is no other organization like it... no other organization doing the same im- portant work, or offering the same wealth of opportunity for imaginative graduates in mathematics or the engineering sciences.

A separate agency operating within the defense establishment, NSA has a critical requirement for:

ENGINEERS. To carry out basic and applied research, design, development, testing and evaluation of large-scale cryto- communications and EDP systems. Engi- neers may also participate in related studies of electromagnetic propagation, upper atmosphere phenomena, super- conductivity and cryogenics using the latest equipment for advanced research within the Agency's fully instrumented laboratories. Career programs are de- signed to develop the professional en- gineer for a full and satisfying future in research or management.

MATHEMATICIANS. To define, formulate and solve complex communications-related problems in support of the NSA mission. Statistical mathematics, matrix algebra, finite fields, probability, combinatorial analysis, programming and symbolic logic are but a few of the tools applied by Agency mathematicians. They enjoy the full support of NSA's completely equipped computer laboratory where many of them often become involved in both the hardware and software of advanced com- puting systems. Theoretical research is also a primary concern at NSA, owing to the fact that the present state of knowledge in certain fields of mathematics is not sufficiently advanced to satisfy NSA re- quirements. CAREER BENEFITS With NSA, you enjoy all the benefits of Federal employment without the necessity of Civil Service certification.

NSA's generous graduate study program permits you to pursue two semesters of full- time graduate study at full salary with aca- demic costs paid by NSA. The Agency also encourages participation in professional

The "Cipher Disk" . . . NSA symbol and one of the oldest and most effec- tive cryptographic devices known.

associations and assists you to attend na- tional meetings, seminars, and conferences.

Located between Washington and Balti- more, NSA is also near the Chesapeake Bay, ocean beaches and other summer and winter recreation areas. The location per- mits your choice of city, suburban or country living.

Starting salaries, depending on educa- tion and experience, range from $7,729 to $12,873. Check now with your Placement Office to arrange an interview with the NSA representative visiting your campus, or write to: Chief, College Relations Branch, Suite 10, 4435 Wisconsin Avenue, N. W., Washington, D.C. 20016. An equal opportunity employer, M&F.

national security agency . . . where imagination is the essential qualification.

As of last week, the University had made no decision on a replace- ment for the federal program. It said that student protests would probably be considered and alter- native plans mapped out at a Feb- ruary trustees meeting.

Basketball (Continued Fro.n Page 12)

the Leopards are 1-3 with a come- from-behind victory over Mora- vian Wednesday, 78-76. Three Lafayette frosh, 6'2" Bob Newman, 6-foot Mike Miller, and 6'2" Bob Waller are averaging in double figures.

Miller led the squad in their win Wednesday with 24 points. The Leopards have dropped games to Princeton, Delaware, and East Stroudsberg. The Penn frosh beat Deleware's yearlings 104-91 at the Palestra.

Going into the weekend contest with the Leopards, the Quakers are, for the most part, healthy. Bruce Sadowstkas is still not completely healed but will be able to play if necessary. Phelps can go with any of eight men as his starters and only his backcourt of Murphy and Scott Beeten is set. Robbins, Brown, Cohen, Sturgess, Joe Moore, and Sadowstkas are vying for the other spots.

Offensively, the Quakers have been playing as well as, if not bet- ter than, expected.

Library Union (Continued from Page 1)

salary survey taken a year ago which indicated that the University library workers were receiving a smaller salary than other Univer- sity employees with similar educa- tion and experience working in other areas. Thus the union wiil aim to not only raise salaries but also to obtain compensation of overtime, cumulative sick leave, and payment of group life and health insurance, he said.

Cartwright said that another role for the union will be to establish better library staff to faculty and/ or administration relationships. No efforts have been made in this di- rection as of yet because "we are just getting ourselves organized," according to Cartwright. Research is being done on salaries and on what other library unions have done and are doing, he added.

Cartwright also said that more contact will be established in the future with the University of California library at Berkeley and the Brooklyn Public Library. As he put it, "We are young and have to be patient."

House Plan (Continued from Page 1)

will be reallocated should the plan be dropped, he said.]

Vice-Provost A. Leo Levin is ex- pected to make a statement late this afternoon or Monday on the future of the house plan. The is- sue is not scheduled on the agenda of the trustees' meeting at 2 p.m. today.

Harmful to Fraternities Lawrence said dropping the

house plan would have "no big effect on the fraternities, but harmful if at all." Alumni would not have the incentive to contri- bute and the pressure to improve the physical structures.

"If the system is passed, the only harm to fraternities would be temporary—until they get on the ball and rebuild," he said.

Barbara Berger, UPSG president, said she felt "certain" the house plan would not be abolished with- out student participation of some sort. "It won't be abolished over- night,"' she said.

Page 12: The Daily - Penn Libraries studies carried out at the University. Such considerations in- clude: "No project which reqquires clearance for participants or which forbids the publication

PAGE TWELVE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967

EYE ON SPORTS

The Pinkie Ball Predicts Guy M. Blynn

Deep in the bowels of Sergeant Hall, there rests a magic ball which has been used for years by Daily Pennsylvania!* swamis in the efforts to make the cloudy future of athletics at the University more clear. During the recent break in classes, the exalted crystal ball (really a Spaulding "pinkie") worked overtime and came through with the following predictions of things guaranteed to happen sometime during the coming twelve months.

• Penn will come from far behind to win its opening 1967 football game 53-49 largely on the strength of Bill Creeden's eight touchdown passes in the second half. After the game, Bob Odell will state, "We sure were holding on to our hats towards the end." Creeden will an- nounce that too much throwing too early has caused him to have a sore arm.

• Bob Brodhead will throw for three touchdowns against non- existant Continental Football League pass defenses, and Coach Wayne Hardin will exclaim that he is better than John Unitas, Bart Starr and Joe Namath put together. Hardin will also call his ends the best in the business. The statements will come from Hardin's room at luxurious Creedmore State Hospital.

Princeton Plot • Princeton will maneuver for an Ivy League capitulation in the

1.6 controversy so its basketball team can play in a post-season tourney. Yale will back them, looking toward next year when John Nelson will join Don Schollander on its swimming team. Cornell's hockey coach Ned Harkness will comment, "That's o.k. by me."

• Pennsylvania will announce home and home basketball series with Kentucky and Davidson. Students will agitate for the inclusion of U.C.L.A. on the schedule as administrators come to realize that the time of Ivy League small time athletics is growing short.

• Franklin Field will not be sold out once next season for Penn football games.

• Les Keitef will be nearly killed by a ring-tailed,howitzer fired from bloody nose alley.

• Frank Dolson will miss a Penn sporting event.

• Both Norm Snead and King Hill will be traded by mastermind Joe Kuharich leaving the Eagles with the only pro quarterback who run better than he can pass.

• Stan Hockman of the Daily News and WFIL will be elected the national president of "I love Joe Kuharich" Clubs. He will never say another bad thing about the Eagles. Stan Hockman will die of a broken heart.

Pennant For Phils • Gene Mauch will announce an official" Philly policy of trading

everyone under twenty-eight years old. Mauch will explain that the Phils are going all out to win the pennant this year and need the more mature players to carry them down the stretch. The statement will come from Mauch's cell at luxurious Creedmore State Hospital.

• The 76'ers will capture the Eastern Division by a record margin but Wilt Chamberlain will not show up for the post-season playoff's, saying that he wants to show the world that he is really unimportant on a great team.

• After being voted "Coach of the Year," Alex Hannum will be appointed Special Assistant to the Supervisor of NBA officials.

• A sea monster will envelope Penn second-boat heavyweight crew as they practice late one evening on th Schuylkill.

• Penn football players won't be satisfied with The Daily Pennsyl- vania's coverage of the 1967 season even though it will be their most successful in years.

Seven-footer Arrives • The first seven-footer will arrive on the Penn campus. Dick

Harter will smile a contented smile, but Ted Nash will convince him to go out for crew instead of playing basketball.

• Penn's 150-pound footballers will get a better break with the announcement that lights and stands are to be installed on the River Fields.

• Plans for a new sports stadium in South Philadelphia will be officially scrapped making this City the laughing stock of the Nation.

• A visiting crew's shell will be sunk on Skimmer Day by a green clad undergraduate claiming he is Robin Hood. A fat man in a brown tunic will be seen running from the banks of the river.

• Penn's track team will win an Ivy League dual meet.

• Ernie Krafschik shall return in all his glory.

• The "Doggie Man" will be moved up to an executive position with Berlo Vending and no longer hawk his wares at Penn sporting events.

• The rightfielder for Penn's women's softball will be shot by a coed practicing her archery on the Hill Hall Field.

• Tom Mallison will return to school in the fall just as tall as ever but 40 pounds heavier. He will be an All-American. He will at- tribute his sudden weight gain to not being forced to eat George Higgins' training table meals.

• Frank Burgess will buy the White Castle.

Anderson Leads St. Joes Against Taller Penn Team

By JIM RESTTVO A familiar Palestra performer

will be leading a team of St. Joseph newcomers against the Pennsylvan- ia cagers tomorrow night at 8:45. The veteran is All-American candi- date Cliff Anderson, a three year varsity standout for the Hawks; the rest of the team, including the coach, consists of different person- nel than the squad which bested Penn last year, 79-69.

Like the Red and Blue, St. Joe's lost most of its veterans through graduation. The likes of Matt Goukas (now playing with the Philadelphia 76ers) Billy Oakes, Tom Duff, and Charles McKenna no longer send the Hawk into hys- terics with their court heroics. And like the Quakers, St. Joe's enters the battle with a new young head coach. Jack McKinney, who re- placed the departed Jack Ramsay.

Anderson is the Key But Cliff Anderson returns, and

thus while Penn is struggling to remain above .500 with a 7-6 log, the Hawks are sporting a surprising 11-4 record. "We're very pleased with the way the team matured so quickly," says McKinney, "of course, our whole game is centered around Anderson, and much of the credit must go to him."

Anderson, a 200 pound 6'4" sen- ior, was the first St. Joseph's play- er to reach the 100 point plateau as a junior — and last season he set a new Hawk rebound mark with 450 caroms. Teaming up with Goukas, the All-American nominee led the Hawks to a 24-5 season and was chosen on the All-State,

CLIFF ANDERSON All-American Hawk

All-East, All Catholic, All-Confer- ence, and All-City squads.

This year, he may be going for All-World. Anderson enters the Penn tilt with a 28.1 per game average, and has already garnered over 225 rebounds as the Hawk ace.

The Best and the Rest McKinney has been using three

seniors and a junior with Anderson to round out his hustling, pressing- type attack. Bob Brenner, who tal- lied only 62 points last season, has moved into the number two scoring slot with a 12.9 ppg. At 6'4" Bren- ner is pressured into rebounding chores for the relatively small Hawk contingent — when he can move outside, his corner jumper is a deadly weapon.

The third Hawk jumper is Al Grundy, a 6*5" senior with ques- tionable scoring ability (7.5 ppg.), but the rebounder the Hawks so desperately need to offset their guards, Bill DeAngelis and Steve Donches.

"Because of Penn's greater height advantage," says McKinney, this is our toughest Big Five game. We plan to press them here and there, force Burgess to the outside, and hope Anderson plays his usual great game."

Winless Ivy Mat Champ Cornell Hosts Quakers

By BARRY JORDAN Penn's wrestlers travel to Cor-

nell tomorrow to tangle with the Big Red. The Cornell team, which now has an 0-4 record, had been 64-2-0 in Ivy competition since '55.

This season's recent loss to Har- vard was the first loss for the big Red in Ivy competition since

Frosh Five Hosts Leopards After 100-86 Setback by York

By MARK LIEBERMAN

Penn's freshmen host Lafayette's baby Leopards tomorrow night at the Palestra with the sour taste of defeat still fresh in their mouths. The yearlings lost a tough, 100- 86, decision to York Jr. College Wednesday evening at the win- ner's court and neither coach Dick Phelps nor the players are too happy.

"There's only one word to de- scribe Wednesday's game," mut- tered one disgusted frosh eager, "And that can't be printed."

Phelps was just as disgusted but will take it out on his boys in prac-

TERRY BROWN Tallies 18 Against York

tice and hopefully his hoopsters will take it out on Lafayette.

The freshmen have another de- feat to avenge although they weren't involved in it. Last season, Penn's first-year-men journeyed to Easton, Pa. to meet the Leopards and suffered a 73-68 defeat after leading by 12 at half time. This year with a home advantage, the final tally might be different.

Wednesday, at York, Penn's big men didn't come through although Terry Brown did lead five Quakers who scored in double figures. Brown hit for 18 points, Carl Rob- bins had 16, Jim Murphy had 14, and Ken Cohen and Tom Sturgess each had 11 points in the losting effort.

For York, Ron Garrick chipped in 30 points and Dick Evans had 22.

Through four games this season, (Continued on Page 11)

WEEKEND SPORTS FtlOAY. JANUAIY 20

VARSITY HOCKEY vs. OHIO STATE 7:00 Ohio

SATUIDAY, JANUAIY 21 VARSITY BASKETBALL vs ST JOSEPH S

8:45 Palestra FRESHMAN BASKETBALL vs. LAFAYETTE

5.00 Palestra FRESHMAN FENCING vs. GIRARO COLLEGE

2:00 Hutchinson FRESHMAN INDOOR TRACK vs.

LAWRENCEVILLE 2:30 lawr»nc«vill«

VARSITY WRESTLING vs. CORNELL 8:00 Ithaca

VARSITY HOCKEY vs. ERIE LIONS 800 Erf*

the 1960-61 season. The score of that meet was 20-14. Cornell has also fallen to Navy, Lehigh, and Penn State, all Eastern powers.

Cornell managed four victories against the Crimson as did the Quakers in last week's 24-12, de- feat. The difference came in the fact that they were not pinned as much as Penn. Red and Blue coach Don Frey noted that one of his objectives for this match was to "avoid the pin."

This year's Red grapplers were hurt by the loss of three Eastern champs from last year's squad which was undefeated in Ivy com- petition.

They do however, have four re- turning lettermen in Dick Beck, heavyweight Dick Moore, Don New and Bock Steck. These are the nu- cleus of this year's squad which lacks the depth that the teams from Ithaca have shown in recent years.

Quaker captain Mike Schiffman draws the assignment of New who was 9-4 in dual meets last year and finished fourth in the Easterns in 1965.

Mike Hannon and Bill Pinkerton will square off against Beck and Steck, who incidentally went to

(Continued on Page 7)

DAVE LABOSKY To face Moore?