8
The Daily vanian fl^ Prescription for Student Health: Take two aspirin and call back tomorrow morning. VOL. LXXXII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA >«. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966—NO. 48 Student Health Report Reveals Shortcomings The Student Health Service is plagued with inadequate facilities and an insufficient staff, the service's medical di- rector has admitted in his recent annual report. One of its major difficulties Di- rector Paul Schrode stated, is the service's lack of space. The report states, "Out-patient space is in- adequate, in efficient, and poorly located." The primary space complaint is inaccessibility during night-time emergencies. A student unfamiliar with the University Hospital would waste essential time searching through the labyrinth of clinics and offices which surround the en- trance to Student Health. Cramped Bed-Space Facilities for in-patient care are limited to beds for a scant 22 pa- tients, the report revealed. Rooms, located in the old part of the hos- pital, are plagued by heating, cool- ing and ventilating problems. Double rooms "become a hope- less shambles with two students in the room," the report said. There are no provisions for students who must be isolated. Admittance is limited onyl to extremely ill stu- dents, leaving less desperate cases to recuperate in dormitories and apartments. Part-Time Staff Staffing the Service with a full complement of physicians also presents difficulties, according to Dr. Schrode. Many student health physicians work on a part-time basis in addition to their other hospital duties. The situation pre- vents many students form complet- ing their treatment with one physi- cian, forcing them to consul t a round of doctors, Dr. Schrode ad- mitted. The arrangement with a part- time staff results in many students (Continued from Page 7) Chemistry Chairman Favors Open Research The new chairman of the chemistry department said Fri- day, that he favors "a policy of complete publishability, as most scientists do." In commenting on the the current controversy over the chemical and biological warfare research programs at Penn- sylvania, Dr. David White said, "I've just learned about this situation so I can't make any STUDENTS on Hill Hall bench discuss Admissions Office latest decisions. College Eliminates Math Requirement The College of Arts and Sciences has dropped its distributional re- quirement for two credit units of mathmatics or logic, it was an- nounced last week by the Commit- tee on Instruction. Mathmatics courses which would have fulfilled the requirement (Math 120, 121, 140, and 141) may now be used toward the natural science distributional requirement. Logic (Philosophy 5 and 6) may be used to fulfill the humanities re- quirement. The Faculty approved the modi- fication on May 3 "after consider- able debate," said Dr. Thomas Wood, chairman of the Committee on Instruction. According to Dr. Wood, there were three objectives for maintain- ing the math requirement: to ex- pose students to (1) process of for- mal thought, (2) the power of mathematics, and (3) the language necessary for understanding science. One of the reasons for dropping the requirement, he said, is that the objectives have already been Three Biology Professors Named To College Faculty Three noted biologists have been named to the faculty of the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences, Dr. Otto Springer, dean of the College, has announced. They are: Dr. Shinya Inoue, pro- fessor of biology, and Dr. Gordon W. Ellis and Dr. Hidemi Sato, associate professors of biology. All were members of the faculty of the Dartmouth Medical School until this summer, Dr. Inous is regarded as the world's foremost authority in polarization miscroscopy. He has improved the technique of polar- ization microscopy by achieving simultaneously high resolution and high sensitivity to a degree which earlier had been considered impos- sible. In the field of cellular biol- ogy, he was the first to demon- strate clearly that spindle fibers exist in living dividing cells. A member of the molecular biology panel of the National Sci- ence Foundation since 1962, Dr. Inoue received a Ragakushi (bache- lor of science) degree in biology from Tokyo University in 1944 and master of arts and doctoral de- grees in biology from Princeton University in 1950 and 1951. He has taught at the University of Washington, Tokyo University, and the University of Rochester. He served as chairman of Dartmouth Medical School's anatomy depart- ment from 1959 to 1963 and as chairman of the cytology depart- ment from 1959 until this year. Dr. Ellis was born in Berkeley, Calif., in 1927 and received A.B. and Ph.D. degres from the Uni- versity of California. He was as- sistant professor of cytology at Dartmouth Medical School from 1962 until this summer. Dr. Sato, born in Fukuoka City, (Continued from Page 7) fulfilled by most entering College freshmen, who come to the Uni- versity with three and one-half years of high school mathmatics, on the average. Wood said none of the faculty would disagree that mathmatics is an integral part of western cul- tural. Those who favored abolish- ing the requirement, however, did not think that an extra year of math would have much significance for students. Wood emphasized that many faculty members did not agree with the committee's deci- sion. Another reason for the change, (Continued on Page 6) so specific comment about it. On the whole, though, most governmental research agencies are fairly liberal, althought in some cases modifica- tions are needed." Professor White received his B.S. in chemistry from McGill Univer- sity in 1944 and his Ph.D. in physi- cal Chemistry from the University of Toronto three years later. He worked for three years at Ohio State's Cyrogenic Laboratory and became an assistant professor there in 1954. He was appointed an as- sociate professor in 1957 and in 1961 became a full professor. Speaking of the differences be- tween Pennsylvania and Ohio State White said, "One of the great ad- vantages of Penn is its selective enrollment. The very capable stu- dent body makes its easier to con- tinue to improve all activities; even though in these times of growth it is hard to successfully plan a top-notch program." A Fulbright Professor at the Uni- versities of Koyto and Tokyo in 1965, White also praised the planned expansion of the chemistry department. "The plans now under- way to expand and remodel the Harrison Labs will play an import- ant part in the development of our new program. We also plan to build Dr. David White the department through a modest staff increase over the next few years. I hope that the coming years will see a large increase in general research on all levels throughout the department." A member of the post-doctoral committees of the National Aca- demy of Sciences and the National Research Council. White, his wife and their three children are now living in Ardmore. Another addition to the Univer- sity department is Dr. Jerry Dono- (Continued on Page 7) Administration, Students Form SCUE Committee Undergraduates, faculty, and ad- ministration have formed a com- mittee to implement the findings of the Student Committee on Under- graduate Education (SCUE). Dr. R. Jean Brownlee, Dean of College for Women, Dr. A. Leo Levin Vice-Provost for Student Affairs, and Dr. Edward Janosik, Chairman of the University Coun- cil Committee on Undergraduate Affairs, have been appointed to the Committee. Undergraduate members are SCUE Chairman Stephen Marder, Lynne Miller, and Larry Bass. President G a y 1 o r d Harnwell, Provost David Goddard, and Vice- Lynne Miller and Stephen Marder, SCUE chairman, discuss the committee's latest proposals. Provost Levin met with the Deans of the Undergraduate schools on May 3 to evaluate the SCUE Re- port. Goddard stated that "all of us were impressed with the serious- ness of the students' endeavor and with the quality and the character of the students' report." The College Faculty have adopted a resolution "That the Stu- dent Committee on Undergraduate Education be commended for its well-organized and responsible report and that it be encouraged to continue its work in the same well- considered manner." The pass/Fail system proposed by the Comittee is now University policy. Any course not taken to fulfill a requirement may be taken Pass/Fail. A Pass/Fail course may be taken by following the Drop and Add procedure, indicating on the Add card that the course will be taken Pass/Fail. Other proposals include more publicity for means of initiating new courses, better course and pro- fessor evaluation, increased stu- dent participation on faculty and administration committees, and more seminar courses.

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The Daily vanian

fl^ Prescription for Student Health:

Take two aspirin and call back tomorrow morning.

VOL. LXXXII PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA >«. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966—NO. 48

Student Health Report Reveals Shortcomings

The Student Health Service is plagued with inadequate facilities and an insufficient staff, the service's medical di- rector has admitted in his recent annual report.

One of its major difficulties Di- rector Paul Schrode stated, is the service's lack of space. The report states, "Out-patient space is in- adequate, in efficient, and poorly located."

The primary space complaint is inaccessibility during night-time emergencies. A student unfamiliar with the University Hospital would waste essential time searching through the labyrinth of clinics and offices which surround the en- trance to Student Health.

Cramped Bed-Space Facilities for in-patient care are

limited to beds for a scant 22 pa- tients, the report revealed. Rooms, located in the old part of the hos- pital, are plagued by heating, cool- ing and ventilating problems.

Double rooms "become a hope- less shambles with two students in the room," the report said. There are no provisions for students who must be isolated. Admittance is limited onyl to extremely ill stu- dents, leaving less desperate cases to recuperate in dormitories and apartments.

Part-Time Staff Staffing the Service with a full

complement of physicians also presents difficulties, according to Dr. Schrode. Many student health physicians work on a part-time basis in addition to their other hospital duties. The situation pre- vents many students form complet- ing their treatment with one physi- cian, forcing them to consul t a round of doctors, Dr. Schrode ad- mitted.

The arrangement with a part- time staff results in many students

(Continued from Page 7)

Chemistry Chairman Favors Open Research

The new chairman of the chemistry department said Fri- day, that he favors "a policy of complete publishability, as most scientists do."

In commenting on the the current controversy over the chemical and biological warfare research programs at Penn- sylvania, Dr. David White said, "I've just learned about this situation so I can't make any

STUDENTS on Hill Hall bench discuss Admissions Office latest decisions.

College Eliminates Math Requirement

The College of Arts and Sciences has dropped its distributional re- quirement for two credit units of mathmatics or logic, it was an- nounced last week by the Commit- tee on Instruction.

Mathmatics courses which would have fulfilled the requirement (Math 120, 121, 140, and 141) may now be used toward the natural science distributional requirement. Logic (Philosophy 5 and 6) may be used to fulfill the humanities re- quirement.

The Faculty approved the modi- fication on May 3 "after consider- able debate," said Dr. Thomas Wood, chairman of the Committee on Instruction.

According to Dr. Wood, there were three objectives for maintain- ing the math requirement: to ex- pose students to (1) process of for- mal thought, (2) the power of mathematics, and (3) the language necessary for understanding science.

One of the reasons for dropping the requirement, he said, is that the objectives have already been

Three Biology Professors Named To College Faculty

Three noted biologists have been named to the faculty of the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences, Dr. Otto Springer, dean of the College, has announced.

They are: Dr. Shinya Inoue, pro- fessor of biology, and Dr. Gordon W. Ellis and Dr. Hidemi Sato, associate professors of biology. All were members of the faculty of the Dartmouth Medical School until this summer,

Dr. Inous is regarded as the world's foremost authority in polarization miscroscopy. He has improved the technique of polar- ization microscopy by achieving simultaneously high resolution and high sensitivity to a degree which earlier had been considered impos- sible. In the field of cellular biol- ogy, he was the first to demon- strate clearly that spindle fibers exist in living dividing cells.

A member of the molecular

biology panel of the National Sci- ence Foundation since 1962, Dr. Inoue received a Ragakushi (bache- lor of science) degree in biology from Tokyo University in 1944 and master of arts and doctoral de- grees in biology from Princeton University in 1950 and 1951. He has taught at the University of Washington, Tokyo University, and the University of Rochester. He served as chairman of Dartmouth Medical School's anatomy depart- ment from 1959 to 1963 and as chairman of the cytology depart- ment from 1959 until this year.

Dr. Ellis was born in Berkeley, Calif., in 1927 and received A.B. and Ph.D. degres from the Uni- versity of California. He was as- sistant professor of cytology at Dartmouth Medical School from 1962 until this summer.

Dr. Sato, born in Fukuoka City, (Continued from Page 7)

fulfilled by most entering College freshmen, who come to the Uni- versity with three and one-half years of high school mathmatics, on the average.

Wood said none of the faculty would disagree that mathmatics is an integral part of western cul- tural. Those who favored abolish- ing the requirement, however, did not think that an extra year of math would have much significance for students. Wood emphasized that many faculty members did not agree with the committee's deci- sion.

Another reason for the change, (Continued on Page 6)

so specific comment about it. On the whole, though, most governmental research agencies are fairly liberal, althought in some cases modifica- tions are needed."

Professor White received his B.S. in chemistry from McGill Univer- sity in 1944 and his Ph.D. in physi- cal Chemistry from the University of Toronto three years later. He worked for three years at Ohio State's Cyrogenic Laboratory and became an assistant professor there in 1954. He was appointed an as- sociate professor in 1957 and in 1961 became a full professor.

Speaking of the differences be- tween Pennsylvania and Ohio State White said, "One of the great ad- vantages of Penn is its selective enrollment. The very capable stu- dent body makes its easier to con- tinue to improve all activities; even though in these times of growth it is hard to successfully plan a top-notch program."

A Fulbright Professor at the Uni- versities of Koyto and Tokyo in 1965, White also praised the planned expansion of the chemistry department. "The plans now under- way to expand and remodel the Harrison Labs will play an import- ant part in the development of our new program. We also plan to build

Dr. David White the department through a modest staff increase over the next few years. I hope that the coming years will see a large increase in general research on all levels throughout the department."

A member of the post-doctoral committees of the National Aca- demy of Sciences and the National Research Council. White, his wife and their three children are now living in Ardmore.

Another addition to the Univer- sity department is Dr. Jerry Dono-

(Continued on Page 7)

Administration, Students Form SCUE Committee

Undergraduates, faculty, and ad- ministration have formed a com- mittee to implement the findings of the Student Committee on Under- graduate Education (SCUE).

Dr. R. Jean Brownlee, Dean of College for Women, Dr. A. Leo Levin Vice-Provost for Student Affairs, and Dr. Edward Janosik,

Chairman of the University Coun- cil Committee on Undergraduate Affairs, have been appointed to the Committee.

Undergraduate members are SCUE Chairman Stephen Marder, Lynne Miller, and Larry Bass.

President G a y 1 o r d Harnwell, Provost David Goddard, and Vice-

Lynne Miller and Stephen Marder, SCUE chairman, discuss the committee's latest proposals.

Provost Levin met with the Deans of the Undergraduate schools on May 3 to evaluate the SCUE Re- port.

Goddard stated that "all of us were impressed with the serious- ness of the students' endeavor and with the quality and the character of the students' report."

The College Faculty have adopted a resolution "That the Stu- dent Committee on Undergraduate Education be commended for its well-organized and responsible report and that it be encouraged to continue its work in the same well- considered manner."

The pass/Fail system proposed by the Comittee is now University policy. Any course not taken to fulfill a requirement may be taken Pass/Fail. A Pass/Fail course may be taken by following the Drop and Add procedure, indicating on the Add card that the course will be taken Pass/Fail.

Other proposals include more publicity for means of initiating new courses, better course and pro- fessor evaluation, increased stu- dent participation on faculty and administration committees, and more seminar courses.

PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966

1885 The Daily vaman ™

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

DAVID HARDMAN, Photography Editor

ASSOCIATE EDITORS DONALD MORRISON RICHARD SHAPIRO

RANDY SWARTZ DENNIS WILEN

Then Turn Down Slightly And Allow To Simmer"

Publish or Perish University President Gaylord P. Harnwell has made

numerous pronouncements regarding the University's classi- fied chemical and biological warfare research. But his state- ments, and the administrative sleight of hand involved in disbanding the ICR, have only obscured the central issue: Should the University undersake research which cannot be published? Fortunately, this issue has not always been in the closets with the other skeletons.

It was only last November when the Faculty Senate overwhelmingly endorsed Harnwell's resolution stating "it is the obligation of a faculty member to make freely available to his colleagues and to the public the significant results he has achieved in the course of his inquiries." The result of research, the Harnwell-Senate resolution said, may be de- ferred no longer than one year from "public release."

The Senate resolution, which became University policy when it was approved by the University Council, is now binding on the Administration.

Listening to the President now, however, one could easily become convinced that the events of 1965 were mere play- acting to pacify the critics of non-publishable research. And the critics were, in fact, pacified by the strong resolution. But the controversy is one that refuses to be submerged. The expose in Ramparts magazine once again brought the issue to a head.

The administration acted out Scene II of the scenario with the announcement that the Institute was to be dis- banded. It appeared to some observers that the research was finally gone.

The faculty, which voted 193 to 57 to abolish non- publishable research at Pennsylvania, were not fooled how- ever. The proposed faculty committee to review research contracts with an eye to the publishability of results is a good first step. It must be remembered, however, that the Faculty Senate is only an advisory body.

And the policy-making University Council, while it en- dorsed the resolution, left its enforcement up to the Admini- stration.

So the Administration, then, has to confront the issue: Should the University undertake non-publishable research? The policy of the University on the matter couldn't be clearer. It states that the results of research conducted at the University of Pennsylvania by faculty members must be published. Classified research — whether it is at the ICR or under the Office of the Provost — cannot, by definition, be pubished.

The Administration only has to call a halt to such research to implement University policy.

We're waiting for their decision.

■m* <«A««/'**'U*/ ^9r

The Viewing Box

Premieres By Lorna N. Campbell

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.

This is the week in which all the networks officially bid for the con- tinuing viewing audience of mil- lions of Americans, although ABC jumped the gun last week, display- ing twelve of its new shows in "preview."

With classes just beginning, it's a good time for college students to get the impulse for regular TV series viewing off their chests.

Fads Are Foremost Most of the new series are try-

ing to capitalize on the successful fads of former years (see ABC's Green Hornet, NBC's Girl from Uncle, CBS's Run, Buddy, Run, and all the new time space-outer limits shows debuting on all three net- works this week). Some are even reaching into the collective con- sciousness as far back as screen- land's inimitable Tarzan.

Princetonian Ape Those of us in college might even

find a greater than average interest in this newest revival, because Tarzan has been sent to "the finest schools" since his exposure to the apes. One never did know who might turn up at the next desk in old English comp.

The point is that most busy col- lege students will quickly and, in some cases, prematurely come to the conclusion that there is nothing worth watching on television ex- cept the always popular sports events. This season, as in most sea- sons for the past few years, work- ing on that assumption will lead many students to miss the occa- sional valuable special or even the worthwhile weekly series. This column will attempt to keep stu- dents in touch with what local TV offers in the way of entertainment and information.

Television has been making va- liant efforts to irrigate the "waste- land" image, and patches of lush green can be spotted up on all (count 'em) seven channels that Philadelphia now boasts. Color is

coming to the fore. One can even see Dr. Charles Lee of the Penn faculty on WCAU late news in liv- ing color as he acts as that sta- tion's roving theatre and movie critic.

Susskind on NBC David Susskind plans to follow

suit on NBC in April. Meanwhile, National Education Television (Channel 12) has a weekly series of plays and movies by Maxwell An- derson, Ossie Davis, Christopher Fry, Arthur Miller, Plautus, Shaw, Thornton Wilder, and Tennessee Williams. Also scheduled for Chan- nel 12 is Andres Segovia Master Class, 14 half-hour programs with the great classical guitarist.

Arkin, Gielgud and King ABC's opener on Stage 67 at

10 pm this Wednesday will be "The Love Song of Barney Kempin- ski" with Alan Arkin (Luv, The Russians Are Coming), Sir John Gielgud (no identification neces- sary), and Alan King (The Impos- sible Years, Ed Sullivan Show). Broadway comedy writer Murray Schisgal (Luv, Typist and Tiger) wrote the video-play about a New York character and his ecstatic view of life in the metropolis he loves.

Upcoming shows in the series will include "A Christmas Mem- ory," by Truman Capote, with Geraldine Page; "The Human Voice," by Jean Cocteau, with In- grid Bergman; "Noon Wine," by Katherine Anne Porter, with Jason Robards Jr. and Olivia de Havil- land; "Deep I Weep, Dare I Mourn," by John Le Carre, with James Mason and Hugh Griffith; musical based on an Oscar Wilde story, with songs by Jerry Bock and Shel- don, and starring Michael Red- grace; "Olympus 7-0000." a musical fantasy by Jerome Chodorov and Richard Adler; "The Bob Dylan Show"; "David Frost's Night Out in London," with Sir Laurence Oli- vier, Peter Sellers and Albert Finney.

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian: The proposal of the Senate Ad-

visory Committee that a contract review board of eight persons be created, half of whose members will be designated by the Admin- istration, will not solve the situa- tion in which the University now finds itself. There have been many committees appointed over the past year to consider the problem of classified research in chemical-bio- logical warfare, their recommenda- tions have been rejected when they urged a basic change in existing policies, and another committee would simply postpone the time when a clear policy is determined and any change is effected in the existing University structure.

Since President Harnwell was cited in the September 6th Inquirer as stating that no research now at Penn was classified save in a tech- nical sense, the proposed review committee, whose recommenda- tions will not be binding, may soon discover the Administration be- lieves there is very little, if any- thing, to review. This position, which President Harnwell has maintained over the past year, has not been altered by numerous statements by I. C. R. officials that their CB research is extensive- ly classified, or by the report of Paul F. Levy in the Sept. 7 Bulletin that Pentagon officials informed him the work of Spicerack and Summit was classified. Indeed, any satisfactory relationship between the Administration and the faculty will be contingent on a greater de- gree of confidence in the faculty than when the Administration re- newed the Spicerack contract last spring, in the midst of the con- troversy, without notifying the

DR. GABRIEL KOLKO

Steering Committee it claimed was its advisory body.

The reputation of Penn, its fa- culty and leadership, is now at stake, perhaps for decades to come. If the Administration wishes to take its position on the right of its non-educational staff to do classi- fied or unclassified work on modes of warfare universally condemned as illegal and reprehensible, des- uite the opposition of a majority of the faculty, it will grievously undermine the morale and status of the larger University commun- ity. Or Penn can choose to as- sume that role of leadership in the American university system on which the New York Times pre- maturely congratulated it in its Sept. 7 editorial.

It is the responsibility of every faculty member and student to as- sure that the University makes the correct choice.

Dr. Gabriel Kolko

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE THREE

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PAGE FOUR THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966

Wharton School to Study Racial Views of Employers

The Ford Foundation has an- nounced the awarding of a $180,000 grant to the University of Pennsyl- vania's Wharton School of Finance and Commerce to finance a three- year study of racial employment policies of American employers.

The study is being headed by Dr. Herbert R. Northrup, professor of industry, chairman of the Wharton School's Department of Industry, and director of that department's Industrial Research Unit.

Dr. Northrup believes that if economic conditions of minority groups are to be improved, it must be known why some industries are more hospitable to minority group employment than are others and why some companies within the same industry have vastly different racial employment policies.

The findings of this study, com- bined with labor market analysis and trends and with business and job forecasting would, Dr. Northrup believes, permit a more rational at- tack on discrimination in employ- ment in terms of potential results for effort expended.

The project will include research in the following areas:

— The relation of racial em- ployment policies and consumer market orientation.

— The nature of work performed by Negroes and its effect in help- ing or hindering advancement to skilled or semi-skilled positions.

— The time and nature of an in- dustry's development as a determin- ing factor in its Negro employment practices.

— The nature of union organi- zation.

— The concern of the industry or company with its image.

— Industry's relation to the mores of the community.

— Influence of the southern school crisis over integration in shaping company racial policies in

Solomon Eons APA A won!

Dr. Richard L. Solomon, pro- fessor psychology at the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, is one of three members of the American Psychological Association to re- receive that organization's 1966 "Award for Distinguished Scien- tific Contributions."

The award was presented to Dr. Soloman at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Asso- ciation yesterday (Sept. 5) in New York City. Dr. Solomon also received a citation, a $1,000 prize, and an invitation to address the annual meeting next year.

Dr. Solomon has been active in the American Psychological As- sociation and has served on both the Council of Representatives and the Publications Board, and has been past editor of the Psycho- logical Review.

Dr. Solomon received a bach- elor degree from Brown Univer- sity in 1940 and a master of science degree in 1942, also from Brown. He served as a research psychologist on the National De- fense Research Committee before receiving a Pr.D. from Brown in 1947. He was named an assist- ant professor of social psychology at Harvard University and pro- moted to associate professor in 1950.

Dr. Solomon was appointed a full professor and associate direc- tor at Harvard's Laboratory of Social Relations in 1957. He was named a professor in the Depart- ment of Psychology at the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania in 1960.

recent years. — Employment policies of com-

panies headed by individuals of minority ethnic stock.

— Employment patterns of the service industries.

— Impact of government on employment policies.

The varying racial employment policies of American industry have been a subject of Dr. Northrup's study and observation for more than 20 years. A native of New Jersey, Dr. Northrup spent 12 years in industry before coming to Penn- sylvania in 1961. He was named chairman of the Department of In- dustry in 1965

Dr. Northrup received a bachelor of arts degree from Duke University in 1939, and a master of arts (1941) and (1942) degrees from Harvard University.

From 1958 and 1961 Dr. Northrup served as employee relations con- sultant for the General Electric Company. In that capacity, he was responsible for the firm's indus- trial relations within 70 plants em- ploying 100,000 persons.

Dr. Northrup taught at Cornell University from 1942 to 1943 and was an assistant professor of indus- trial relations at Columbia Uni- versity from 1945 to 1949. He has been a visiting professor at New York University, the University of California at Berkeley and the Co- lumbia Business School.

Dr. Northrup is the author of more than 150 articles and six books, including Economics of Labor Relations and Government and Labor.

Working with Dr. Northrup will be Dr. Richard L. Rowan, associate director of the study, Dr. Leonard Rico and Dr. Lowell E. Gallaway, all associate professors of industry in the Wharton School's Depart- ment of Industry.

The University's Industrial Re- search Unit was founded in 1921 to engage in intensive and continuous study of the business and social problems of industry.

Hubel Named Press Director

Gordon Hubel, general manager of Princeton University Press since 1964, has been appointed director of the University of Pennsylvania Press. The appointment is effective immediately.

Mr. Hubel has been a member of the Princeton University Press staff since 1957. He was social science editor there during 1957-58, and became assistant to the direc- tor in 1959 and executive assistant in 1961.

A graduate of Upsala College, Mr. Hubel later was with the Col- lege Division of Prentice-Hall, Inc., which he left in 1957 to go to Princeton.

During the past year he has been deeply engaged in various aspects of the proposed new federal copy- right legislation as chairman of the copyright committee of the Asso- ciation of American University Presses.

In the development of the Press, Mr. Hubel will work closely with the University Council's University Press Committee, individual faculty members, and with Dr. Michael H. Jameson, dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Marvin E. Wolfgang, professor of sociology, is chairman of the Uni- versity Press Committee.

Mr. Hubel and his family, who reside at 500 State Road, Prince- ton, will move in September to 5301 Woodbine Ave., Philadelphia.

CAMPUS EVENTS OFFICIAL NOTICES

Dr. Richard Windell, Washington University, St. Louis Graduate School of Business, will be at the Office of Fellowship information and Study Programs Abroad on Wednesday, Sept. 14 from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. to interview students in- terested in graduate study of busi- ness administration. For appoint- ment call ext. 8348.

Philosophy 235 Contemporary Ethics):

Classes as scheduled this week. Assignment for Tuesday: Wellman "The Language of Ethics" (on re- serve) pages 1-22, 24-54.

ACTIVITY NOTICES ATHLETIC MANAGERIAL

BOARD — Important meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Training House. Bring money for dues; foot- ball passes will be distributed. All new managers are invited to attend.

CAMPUS GUIDES — All mem- bers: Tuesday, Sept. 13 meeting at 11 a.m. Hill Hall Formal Lounge, House 3. Please come!

COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT COUNCIL—Meeting 8:30 p.m. for all freshmen interested in working for CIC. Franklin Room of Hous- ton Hall.

HILLEL—All students interested in participating in Reform High Holy Days as either a reader or as an usher, contact Fred Natkin at Hillel after 2:00 p.m. or leave a message in his mailbox there.

IVY CLUB—The only social, cul- tural, and athletic organization on campus that is open to the inde- pendent. If you're looking for a full social life, why not give us a

try? No pledging or heeling! Fresh- man and independents are cordially invited to our first meeting: to- morrow in Room 1 of Houston Hall at 11:00 a.m. Details of our open party this weekend will be announced.

KAPPA DELTA EPSILON — Opening Tea: All Freshmen and upperclass women interested in teaching as a career are invited to attend our opening tea at 4:00 p.m. today in Bennett Union Lounge. Dr. Helen Bailey, former assist- ant superintendent of Philadelphia schools, will be the guest speaker

PANHELLENIC COUNCIL— Meeting Tuesday at 11:00 a.m. in Sussman Room.

PENN PLAYERS—Tryouts begin tomorrow, open to the entire un- dergraduate student body of the University, for Sheridan's "The School for Scandal". Auditions will be held tomorrow, Wednesday, and Thursday, Sept. 13-15, from 2—6 p.m. and from 7—10 p.m., in Irvine Auditorium, except Thursday eve-

(Continued on Page 7)

Perm Players

The Pennsylvania Players yes- terday announced tryouts, open to the entire undergraduate body of the University, for Richard Brin- sley Sheridan's comedy, "The School for Scandal."

Auditions will be held this week, Tuesday and Wednesday, Septem- ber 13 and 14, from 2-6 p.m., and from 7-10 p.m. in Irvine Auditor- ium, and from 7-10 p.m. in Hous- ton Hall Auditorium.

"The School for Scandal" will be presented by the Players as the first major production of the Fall Term, Friday and Saturday evenings, October 28 and 29, at 8:15 p.m. The play will be directed by Miss Kathleen C. Quinn, Di- rector of Dramatic Production at the University.

The players have achieved crit- ical acclaim in the past for their interpretations of contemporary and classical works. Last year, the troupe presented "The Amorous Flea," a Broadway comedy and Maxwell Anderson's "The Days Between."

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE FIVE

Penn Cinema To Recruit Actors For "Canterbury Tales" Picture

The Penn Cinema announced Friday that tryouts are being held today, Tuesday, and Wednesday for modern film adaptations of two of Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales." Randy Swartz and James Mor- row, the club's president and Vice-President respectively, also outlined the group's new "Penn Director Program."

The campus undergraduate movie-making organization will seek out acting talent for this year's 16mm productions of "The Reeve's Tale" and "The Friar's Tale" from 3-5 PM in Room 1 of Houston Hall each day. After the

initial try-outs, screen tests will be filmed on Wednesday, Thurs- day, and Friday of the follow- ing week.

Swartz emphasized that Penn Cinema has openings in many other departments besides acting.

"If you are interested in any facet of movie making," he said, "or if you have any creative abil- ities, we'd like you to heel the Penn Cinemo."

"We want people who want to learn to make movies," Swartz added.

The first heeling meeting will be held in Room 3 of Houston

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Hall at 7:00 PM this Wednesday. "The heeling program," explained Swartz, "will consist of classes in film-making to be conducted at the end of the month." The area of movie production which he said would be taught including lighting, set design, sound, promotion, cine- matography, and editing.

James Morrow explained the projected "Penn Director's Pro- gram" as "an attempt to involve a great many students in the ac- tul directing of films. Penn Cinema heelers who exhibit talent this year," Morrow said, "will re- ceive the opportunity to make their own 16mm shorts next year, us- ing Penn Cinema facilities and funds."

Houston Hall Rehearsal Room

Penn Cinema will also bring its two previous pictures, "The Book" and "Brother Emmanuel," to the University campus at the end of the month. "The Book" was shown commercially last year at the Wayne Avenue Playhouse and was exhibited at collegiate film festivals. The mass battle scene in "Brother Emmanuel," shot last Winter at Valley Forge with the ROTC Rangers, was the subject of an extensive write-up in last week's Sunday Bulletin Maga- zine.

The present "Canterbury Tales" project has aroused considerable interest among the faculty of the University. Dr. Richard Hoffman, our Chaucer scholar, will act as all-over advisor on the production, and has made some contributions to the script of "The Reeve's Tale." This film will be directed by Swartz and shot in sound on loca- tions in and around the Philadel- phia area.

"The Friar's Tale" will be a silent film written and directed by Morrow, who describes it as "the basic Chaucer plot in a bizarre, Kafkaesque setting." After comple- tion of these productions, the group will consider tackling "The Pardon- er's Tale."

Swartz had only one comment regarding the Chaucer project:

"No, we are not doing 'The Miller's Tale.' "

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That if you placed every college man who slept in class end-to- end, they'd be much more com- fortable?

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PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966

University's Engineering Schools Gain Six New Faculty Members

Six persons have been named to the faculty of the engineering schools of the University of Penn- sylvania, and one has been appoint- ed adjunct professor, Dr. Carl C. Chambers, vice-president for en- gineering affairs, has announced.

The new faculty members are: Dr. Iraj Zandi, associate professor of civil engineering, Towne School of Civil and Mechanical Engineer- ing; Dr. Ira M. Cohen, assistant professor of mechanical engineer- ing, Towne School; Dr. Harry E.

Jameson New GSAS Dean

Dr. Michael H. Jameson, profes- sor of classical studies, has been named dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

He succeeds Dr. Roy F. Nichols, who retired June 30.

Last summer Dr. Jameson was visiting professor of classical stud- ies at the American School in Athens, Greece, and engaged in excavations at a site in the north- ern Peloponnese. He is a research associate in classical archaelogy at the University of Pennsylvania Museum, as well as professor of classical studies.

A resident of Rosemont, Dr. Jameson was born of American parents in London in 1924. He spent much of his childhood in Peking, where his father was a college teacher.

"I was particularly impressed," he writes, "by the work and per- sonality of Pere Teilhard de Char- din, the Jesuit paleontologist. At that time ne was working on Peking man, and I still have some bone and ash from the cave which Pere Teilhard gave me."

Dr. Jameson earned his bache- lor's degree in Greek from the University of Chicago in 1942. He served three years with the United States Navy, and then returned to Chicago where he took his Ph.D. in Greek in 1949.

After a year at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens, he went to the University of Missouri where he served as an assistant professor of classical languages and of archaeology from 1950 to 1953. He studied at the Institute of Social Anthropology at Oxford University from 1953 to 1954, when he joined the Pennsyl- vania faculty as assistant professor of classical studies. He became as- sociate professor in 1957 and professor in 1962.

The author of numerous articles and of a verse translation of Sophocles' "Women of Trachis," Dr. Jameson has held a fellowship in classical studies at the American Academy in Rome, Fulbright re- search scholarship for study in Italy, American Council of Learned Societies research grant, Ford Foundation fellowship and Bollingen Foundation fellowship.

While on academic leave during the past year, Dr. Jameson has been engaged in the study and preparation of revised texts of re- ligious inscriptions of Attica through fifth century B.C., in the University of Chicago's study and publication of inscriptions from the sanctuary of Poseidon at Isthmia, in the study and organization of finds from the University of Penn- sylvania's excavations at Halieis, and in directing part of the Argolid exploration project.

Dr. Jameson was active in setting up the University Senate.

Hardebeck, assistant professor of electrical engineering, Moore School of Electrical Engineering; Dr. Michael Kaplit, assistant pro- fessor of electrical engineering, Moore School; Dr. Samuel A. Musa, assistant professor of electrical en- gineering, Moore School; and Dr. Samuel Schweitzer, assistant pro- fessor of mechanical engineering, Towne School. Dr. Harold Kwart was named adjunct professor of chemical engineering in the School of Chemical Engineering through June 30, 1967.

Dr. Zandi, born in Tehran, Iran, in 1931, received a bachelor of science degree in electro-mechani- cal engineering from the University of Tehran in 1952, a master of science degree in civil engineering from the University of Oklahoma in 1957, and a doctorate in 1959 from Georgia Institute of Tech- nology. He has served twice in the Ministry of Health of the Iranian government, from 1952 to 1956 and 1960 to 1961. A former faculty member at Tehran Institute of Technology and Abadan Institute of Technology, Dr. Zandi is cur- rently assistant professor of civil engineering at the University of Delaware.

Dr. Cohen was born in Chicago in 1937. He earned a bachelor of aero-nautical engineering degree from Brooklyn Polytechnic Insti- tute in 1958 and a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1963. He has been an assistant professor at Brown University since 1963.

Dr. Hardebeck, a native of Flat River, Mo., took a B.S. at the Uni-

versity of Missouri and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at Cornell Univer- sity. Since 1965, he has been re- search associate with the Center for Radiophysics and Space Re- search. He is thirty-nine years old.

Dr. Kaplit, 26, received a B.S. in electrical engineering from Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology in 1961 and an M.S. in electrical en- gineering (1962) and a Ph.D. (1965) from the University of Pennsyl- vania. He has been a research as- sociate in the Institute for Direct Energy Conversion at the Towne School since 1965.

Dr. Musa has been a staff assistant in the Aerospace Research Center of General Precision Cor- poration since 1965. He earned a B.S. in electrical engineering at Rutgers University in 1961 and took an M.S. in 1962 and a Ph.D. in 1965 at Harvard University. Born in Bagdad, Iraq, he is a United States citizen.

Dr. Samuel Schweitzer, a 34- year-old Israeli citizen, received a B.S. in agricultural engineering from the Israel Institute of Tech- nology in 1956, an M.S. in mechan- ical engineering in 1960 from Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1966.

Dr. Kwart is H. Fletcher Brown professor of chemistry at the University of Delaware. He earned an A.B. from Brooklyn College in 1937 and a Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1947. He taught at Bryn Mawr College from 1949-51 and has taught at Delaware since 1951.

College Eliminates Math Requirement (Continued from Page 1)

Wood said, is that departments for which math is necessary already require it. Moreover, many faculty members believe that the power of math is best handled through science. Other considerations are the fact that no other Ivy League university retains a math require- ment, and that no other distribu- tional requirement at Penn is so inflexible. (The humanities and sciences offer five or six ways to fill the requirement.)

Since so many students major in subjects which require math or logic, Wood estimated, the change will affect only about half of the enrollment in the College.

"Removal of this requirement should allow math faculty to be used to improve existing math courses, and to develop new courses of an interdisciplinary na- ture," Dr. Wood said. The new course "would be of more direct interest to students in the human- ity areas." He suggested that math courses be developed concerning computer theory, music theory,

linguistics and similar areas. In conjunction with the inter-

disciplinary nature of mathematics, the Committee on Instruction will continue to explore ways of expos- ing students to formal thought in places other than the conventional math class, Dr. Wood noted.

"This modification might be com- pared with the recent changes in the English curriculum, in which the elimination of English 1 and 2 will free faculty members to strengthen courses such as English 101 and 102," he said.

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE SEVEN

New Director Appointed for Int'l Services

William L. Carr has been ap- pointed Acting Director of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania's Office of International Services.

Mr. Carr, Assistant Director of the Office since 1964, will take over the duties of Director Jack D. Burke, who has been granted a study leave by the University. Stephen M. Arum, of Long Beach, N.Y., has been named the new Assistant Director.

Mr. Carr, of Burlingame, Califor- nia, received both a bachelor's de- gree in international relations and a master's degree in counseling from Stanford University. Before coming to Pennsylvania, he served an intership at the Bechtel Inter- national Center at Stanford, and was international student director of the Intervarsity Christian Fel- lowship, U.S.A.

Mr. Arum received a bachelor of arts degree in 1961 from Hobart University, a master of arts degree

Open Research (Continued from Page 1)

hue, former chairman of the chem- istry departments of the University of Southern California. The new professor of chemistry received his bachelor's and master's degrees in chemistry from Dartmouth College and got his doctorate at the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology. A Guggenheim fellow at Cambridge University in 1952, he had been with the University of Southern California since 1953, and chairman of the department since 1963.

Dean's List Announced

in 1964 at Yale University and this year, a professional diploma in guidance and student personnel services at Teachers College, Columbia University. He has taught secondary school English in Tanganyika and New York.

The University of Pennsylvania is eighth in the country in the number of foreign students on campus. During the 1965-66 aca- demic year, a total of 1,280 stu- dents and 390 faculty were at Pennsylvania.

The Office of International Ser- vices is responsible for the admin- istration of all programs of inter- national exchange at the University involving students or faculty from abroad.

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Named to the Freshmen's Dean's List of the College for Women were:

Abrams, Eileen F.; Aldrich, Rosa- lind; Aronson, Roslyn; Auerbach, Theresa; Berland, Susan; Blechman, Phyllis; Becker, Emily; Celnik, Mary; Chappelle, Wendy; Colker, Laura; Colton, Graeme R.; Cook, Helen; Cooper, Joan; Corash, Janet; Demuth, Marjorie A.; Derevere, Barbara; Feng, Edith; Fletman, Pamela; Freedman, Elizabeth, Gel- fer, Leslie; Hermann, Vivian L.; Hertz, Nancy; Heyneman, Harriet; Hildebrand, Susan; Hollstein, Nadya; Holt, Mary; Hootstein, Denise E.; Insull, Bonnie; Jannelli, Angela F.; Jones, Leslie; Kaplan, Susan J.; Kolodny, Robin; Leibert, Judith; Levy, Mildred; Mauskopf, Eileen; Merrill, Alice; Morganroth, Susan J.; Newman, Deborah; Perle, Linde; Philipp, Ingrid; Radin, Carol L.; Rago, Dolores M.; Rahman, Diane; Russell, Carol; Sault, Bar- bara; Schwarz, Gail; Seton, Diane; Shuman, Nina; Spielman, Rhoda: Stern, Marsha; Waranch, Karlyn R.; Wordley, Jeanne F.

Freshmen of distinction included Agre, Roberta D.; Berlin, JoAnn: Caporatletti, Maryanne; Forman, Betty; Goesswin, Marina; Golden- berg, Myra J.; Hastrup, Janice; Heller, Sara; Herbrandson, Patri- cia; Jacobson, Ann; Kraftmeyer, Tricia A.; Mastrocola, Antoniett; O'Brien, Kathleen; Orlin, Karen; Papazian, Armine L.; Perrick, Joan; Sander, Joan M.; Sofair, Ruth; Stonehill, Karin; Tierman, Jane M.; Woolfolk, Donna; Wisseman, Jan.

Distinguished members of the class of '68 were:

Abelowitz, Marjorie F.; Albert, Rita; Bagby, Katharine; Blumen- thal, Bonnie; Borgogno, Irene; Brahms, Ronnie; Breath, Patricia; Chisholm, Margaret; Dolan, Sally; Erber, Marilyn; Gomberg, Francirv; Horn, Barbara; Iobst, Sheila; Katz, Sharon; Kaufman, Caren; Kaufman. Helene; Klein, Claudette; Leono- wich, Lorraine; Malder, Francine; Martin, Judith; McDonald, Susan; Miller, Anne P.; Oberlander, Janet; Ogle, Anne C; Roth, Annette; Sayers, Lenore J.; Schwartz, Ste- phanie L.; Schwartz, Victoria; See, Ellen H.; Segal, Judith; Siegel, Edda; Stein, Dorothy; Tasca, Diane.

Sophomores on the Dean's List were:

Berger, Roberta; Blume, Linda H Saben (just married - on leave); Chernofsky, Merle; Christman, Mary; Conlin, Joyce; Cortell, Vic- toria; Darr, Elizabeth; Dorward, Jeanne C; Dunning, Mary T; Fine- stone, Judith; Gain, Gwendolyn S.; Gee, Barbara; Goldman, Leah; Greenwald, Sarah; Hager, Kristi J.; Katz, Merrill; Kelner, Elizabeth; Marcus, Carolyn; Mdnn, Linda; Markel, Diane L.; Marsh, Fayette; McGinnis, Mary E.; McLaughlin, Elizabeth F.; Miura, Karen K.; Moore, Dorothy L.; Nahm, Nancy; Nicholson, Linda; Rin, Hades; Rock, Cynthia; Salkin, Rochelle; Salvage, Lynne; Saslaw, Susan: Ward, Geralding M.; Weisberg, Barbara; Weyand, Kathryn E.; Whitney, Caroline; Wynne, Ro- chelle; Ziegler, Georgianna; Zurich, Nancy.

Juniors who were named by the Dean's were:

Ballard, E r n e s t a ; Benedetto. Roseann; Bobman, Myra; Evans, Carol-Beth; Green, Phyllis; Henly, Lenore; Highstein, Sharon; Hraur, Zoia; Levy, Judith; Marshall, Carol; Morgan, Elaine; Rosen, Rochelle; Rubenfein, Roberta; Rubenstein, Rae; Rubin, Ruth; Siegel, Lucia; Snyderman, Carol; Tatelbaum, Su- san; Zelmanoff, Carolyn; Zinger, Jeanne.

Class of '67 members named last year were:

Arms, Carolyn; Auspos, Janie; Bovey, Rosamond; Bress, Karen; Brill, Esther; Brill, Janice; Cahn, Susan; Christy, Cathryn; Engman, Cynthia; Fastman, Cynthia; Hecht, Carol; Hewlett, Susan; Holzsager, Lisa; Korman, Judith; Laskin, Ellen; Liff, Ellen, Livingston, Peggy; Metzger, Marsha; Miller, Lynne; Obedin, Carole; Olsen, Mar- lette; Oslick, Judith; Pflueger, Judith; Plunkett, Judith; Raju, Ali- son; Rosenberg, Janet; Rubinstein, A 1 b e r t i n e ; Schwartz, Martha; Schwarz, Laurie; Shien, Elaine; Sokol, Karol; Taflin, Diane; Thomp- son, Elizabeth; Thompson, Phyllis; Tyson, Margaret; Warshauer, Sa- rah; Weintraub, Barbara; Wenrich, Joanne; Wikler, Janet; Winokur, Janice.

Graduating with distinction were: Arlin, Isabel; Barrett, Maudann:

Bluestone, Janet; Buffingston, Pa- tricia; Cherny, Judith L.; Clowney, Deborah; Cole, Elenore; Collidge, Karen; Davidson, Ann C; Davison, Joanne; Dittmar, Gertrude; Dyen. Doris; Felter, Frances; Freedman, Nike; Gale, Jill; Giannone, Jean; Greenber, Cheryl; Greenfeder, Ju- dith; Greenley, Lynn; Grossman, Linda; Harbison, Katherine; Hol- lander, Helene K.; Holstein, Nancy L.; Hoffer, Sandra; Humenny, Bob- bie; Idema, Jessica; Kerson, Doro- thy S.; Koerner, Dagmar; Lafferty, Rachel E.; Lebowitz, Marcia; Levin, Constance; Lifschitz, Judith; Man- die, Joan; Mannocchi, Phyllis; Nor- ton, Gail; Philipson, Lorrin; Plas- kow, Elaine; Preiss, Linda; Ratner, Bevin; Rosen, Marjorie H.; Reath, Shelia; Roses, Lynn; Seitz, Judith; Simons, Barbara; Stehle, Eva; Steinberg, Joan; Unger, Rustine; Weiner, Karen; Wiener, Myra S.; Winograd, Carol E.; Wisbrun, Helen; Wright, Joanne H.; Youn- german, Miriam.

College Names Biology Profs.

(Continued from Page 1) Japan, has worked with Dr. Inoue on the establishment of the planes of nucleotides in chromosomes in the living cell. He studied zoology and cytology at Kyoto University, where he received a D.Sc. degree in 1963. He taught biology at Hosei University from 1956 to 1959 and was a research assistant and re- search associate at Dartmouth Medical School from 1959 to 1962. He was assistant professor of cytol- ogy at Dartmouth from 1962 until this summer.

.

Student Health (Continued from Page 1)

waiting for a physician who is de- tained with an emergency on his normal service. Few doctors are willing to work on a full-time basis for out-patient care, he continued.

The report concludes that a com- promise must be reached with "a nucleus of good people, supple- mented by the part-time people."

Revisions Demanded The 1965-66 annual report calls

for a policy decision on "what is expected of the Student Health Service in terms of both the con- venience to the student in out- patient care and the extent of in- patient care." Once this decision has been made, Dr. Schrode noted, it can only be implemented by providing the appropriate funds and space, and in searching for the necessary personnel."

Until then, students may take comfort in Student Health's repu- tation for excellent medical atten- tion only for the desperately ill, he said. Those with less pressing complaints must continue to brave the so-called "three-ring circus" of Student Health.

Campus Headquarters LEVI DUNGAREES

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City Planners Join Faculty

Two city planners have been ap- pointed to the faculty of the Grad- uate School of Fine Arts G. Holmes Perkins, dean of the school, has announced.

The new faculty members are Norman D. Day, associate profes- sor of architecture and city plan- ning, and Dr. David E. Boyce, as- sistant professor of city planning.

Professor Day, a native of Min- nesota, presently serves as head of the .design section of the Twin Cities Metropolitan Planning Com- sion, St. Paul, Minn. After receiv- ing a bachelor in architecture de- gree from the University of Min- nesota in 1955, he earned a master in architecture degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology in 1958. He has been assist- ant professor of architecture at the University of Utah (1958-59), a Graham Foundation Fellow (1962-63), and the consultant to the city of Chicago on preparation of a design plan for the Chicago central area.

Dr. Boyce was born in 1938 in Newark, Ohio, and received a B.S. in civil engineering at Northwest- ern University in 1961. He earned a master of city planning degree in 1963, an MA. in 1964, and a Ph.D. in regional science in 1965 at the University of Pennsylvania. He is currently research economist at the Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, Ohio.

Campus Events (Continued from Page 4)

ning in Houston Hall Auditorium. PANHELLENIC — Register for

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PEOPLE TO PEOPLE—Member- ship meeting today, Monday, Sep- tember 12, 7:30 p.m., Houston Hall Auditorium. All Welcome.

RECORD—All staff and fresh- men: First meeting at 4:00 p.m. to- morrow in Houston Hall. All are in- vited to attend.

TRIANGLE—Regular staff meet- ing, Wednesday, Sept. 14, 320 Towne Bldg.

WANTED: Male students, over 21 years old, to participate in psychophvsiologi-

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PAGE EIGHT THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966

Soccermen Impressive In Pre-Season Workout

by MARK LIEBERMAN Nineteen sixty-six soccer hopes

for the Quakers of Pennsylvania took on a brighter look Saturday as the Penn varsity outran, out- scored, and generally outplayed a more experienced alumni squad, 8- 2

Two big question marks were satisfied in the Saturday encounter and coach Charlie Scott left Stew- art Field with a contented grin on his face closely resembling a man contemplating an Ivy League crown. This might be a slight bit of optimism over a team which lost 7 of 11 starters of last year's Ivy runner-ups to graduation.

COUNTING ON SOPHOMORES What Scott is counting on is the

emergence of sophomores at key line and back positions as well as the continued fine play of veterans Roger Lorberbaum and goalie Ted Isaacson.

Lorberbaum was the leading Quaker scorer last season and was selected to the first string of the All-Ivy soccer squad. The flashy junior showed that he had not lost his scoring touch Saturday as he contributed in a goal as well as several key passes which led to scores.

Isaacson played the first half in the net and allowed just one goal, and that on a penalty kick. His ex- perience in the goal dates back to

Rugby Tryouts Begin Today

Rugby football, one of the fastest growing sports on collegiate cam- puses across the nation, returns to the Hill Hall field once again this fall. Beginning today at 5 p.m., try- outs will be held for the team which is hoping to better the 5-2 mark it posted last fall.

Captain Oli Larmi is cautiously optimistic about doing so, even though the team will face such stiff competition as Princeton, Colum- bia, Villanova, and Fordham.

At Pennsylvania, rugby is con- sidered a club sport and therefore is able to combine the keen com- petition of a varsity sport with the "beer-brawling" sociability of a fraternity.

Moreover, physical education is awarded to playing members and eligibility extends throughout the University community, from fresh- men to graduate students.

Practice sessions will be held daily at 5:00 p.m. at the Hill Hal! Field. Captain Larmi is hoping for a large turnout.

Any sophomore interested in heeling for the position of manager of the crew team should contact either Richard Greenberg, the cur- rent head manager, or Ted Nash, the freshman heavyweight coach. A message should be left at Weight- man if either man cannot be reach ed personally.

Francis "Reds" Bagnell, Penn's All-America tailback in 1950 scor- ed a single-game record of 276 yards gained passing in a 42-26 victory over Dartmouth.

From 1942 to 1953 Penn play- ers were elected 14 times to All- America squads. At least one Quaker was elected to a squad every one of those eleven years.

TED ISAACSON Shows Fine Form

last season when he backed up Ted Underwood who manned the alum- ni net Saturday.

Isaacson is not short of credits, notably shutting out Dartmouth as well as teaming up with Under- wood for a whitewash against Yale last season.

Penn tied the Elis for second place in the Ivies in 1965 with a 5-2 mark behind Brown's perfect 7-0 slate. The 1966 outlook is for four teams to be on contention for the league crown with Harvard joining last season's top three.

Injuries Important Penn's hope will depend on their

ability to fit the new sophomores into the starting lineup as well as their ability to find replacements for the injured Bobby Dea and Win Walp.

Dea, a co-captain of the 1966 squad and a key man on the line was operated on last June for a knee injury and has been replaced by sophomore Rett Sturman. Dea was an honorable All-American choice as well as a second team All-Ivy selection last season.

The other co-captain, Louis Mil- ler, the bolster the Quaker defense at center half.

The varsity eleven will have two more exhibitions before opening regular season play against Tem- ple on September 27. Scott should be able to round out his starting squad by then to fully prepare the Red and Blue for the Ivy slate which opens the following Satur- day when the Quakers journey to Providence to tackle Brown.

The 1966 schedule will be one game longer than last year's with the addition of Haverford as a Quaker opponent.

Season Tickets On Sale Today Season football tickets go on sale

today at the Franklin Field Ticket Office. The season book is good for all five home games and will cost eight dollars and a matric card.

The season ticket also includes date and away game privileges. Date tickets may be purchased for all home games at a coast of $2.00 against the normal $4.00 rate.

Also available will be half price tickets for the away games at Co- lumbia, Cornell and Harvard.

East Stroudsberg Shocks Penn, 34-12 In Quakers' First Pre-Season Battle

by JIM RESTIVO The Pennsylvania eleven, plagued

by penalties, fumbles, and a poor pass defense, dropped a disappoint- ing 34-12 decision to East Strouds- burg Saturday at Franklin Field in the Quakers first preseason scrim- mage game.

The Red and Blue started poor- ly and went downhill while East Stroudsburg was piling up its huge margin through the passing efforts of quarterbacks Bob Holderbaum and Bob Waite.

The initial series of downs set the stage for the afternoon's ac- tion. On Penn's first play, the Quakers fumbled. The Red and White recovered and drove for yardage before punting. After a 45

yard return by soph George Bur- rell, starting quarterback Bill Creeden got Penn moving again, mostly on halfback bursts by Cap Knowlton. Then the drive was stalled again, this time by a fif- teen yard penalty-the first of 110 yards assessed against Odell's charges.

And so it went in the first half, with almost every potential Penn threat thwarted by a penalty or a fumble.

East Stroudsburg's first tally came early in the contest on a pass from Holderbaum to Doug McNamee. Senior Rich Flaherty soccer-kicked the extra point. And Penn was behind 7-0. A 27 yard pass from Holderbaum to John

With Tony Cantafio (32) leading the interference, quarterback Dave Barudin rolls out to pass in Saturday's scrimmage against East Stroudsburg, which the Quak?rs lost, 34-12.

Olympic Star George Breen Chosen New Swim Mentor

by LARRY KROHN Penn Director of Athletics Jere-

miah Ford II announced Friday the selection of George T. Breen as supervisor of aquatics and head swimming coach at Penn.

Breen, a former United States Olympic swimmer, replaces former mentor James Campbell who re- signed in late May.

Collaborating with Ford in the decision was a selection committee composed of George Munger, Dr. Harry Fields, Dr. Tristram Coffin, Reverend Stanley Johnson, Profes- sor Adolph Matz and Mary Kelley.

Breen, 30 years old, married and father of one, received his under- graduate education at Cortland (N.Y.) State University and later earned an M.S. in Education at the University of Indiana.

Olympic Hero Before coaching, Breen won fame

as an Olympic swimmer, earning two bronze medals in the 1956 Games and another in 1960 when he served as captain of the squad.

Penn's new mentor also captain- ed the 1959 Pan-American swim team and gained a first place in the 400 meters event during that com- petition.

Breen was selected to the Ail- American team three times, earned national champion laurels on fifteen

separate occasions and held or co- held five world records.

Coached at Vesper His coaching career was initiated

at the Riviera Club in Indianapolis where he met with immediate suc- cess. The new Quaker skipper coached for three years at Vesper Boat Club in Philadelphia and dur- ing that time won three AAU dis- trict titles while coaching several national champions.

In 1964 and 1965, Breen skip- pered Philadelphia Country Club swim teams, and then journeyed to the West Coast where he served as staff member at the Jack Roth Swim School in Pasadena, Califor- nia—his most recent post.

During the past year, Breen, who will head both the men's and women's programs at Penn, also taught at Amarillo (Texas) College. He is an inductee of the Helms Foundation Hall of Fame and a member of the board of the Amer- ican Swimming Coaches Associa- tion.

Gary Wood, scampering second- string quarterback for the New York Giants, scored a 61-yard touchdown run from scrimmage in the 1962 Cornell-Penn contest.

Lenny Moore, star halfback for the Baltimore Colts, ran 57 yards for a Penn State touchdown against Penn in 1954.

Hurst minutes later made the score 14-0.

Penn Tallies In the second period coach Bob

Odell alternated Pete Wisniewski and soph Dave Barudin at Quarter- back. The Quakers narrowed the margin after Senior John Pinnel recovered an East Stroudsburg fumble on the 12 yard line. Wis- niewski passed to Burrell for 7 yards, and on the second play took it over from the five. Half- time score: 14-6.

East Stroudsburg started the second half with transfer student Jim Waite, a 6*4" 200 pound quar- terback at the helm. Waite ran the score up to 20-6 with a pass play to Bob Hollaron that covered 64 yards. Throughout the game the opposition's receivers got be- hind the Penn secondary as Waite and Holdenbaum combined for a total of 156 yards in the air.

Penn's last tally came on a Ba- rudin quarterback sneak after passes to tight end Dennis Blake and Jim McPhillin brought Penn to the three yard line. Blaik ap- peared to be the chief Penn pass- ing target in the second half, as Rick Owens, who led the league in Pass receptions last year, watch- ed the game from the sideline with the aid of crutches.

Interference Hurts Late in the fourth period Holder-

baum ran for a TD, after Penn was called for pass interference in the endzone. The extra point was good, and minutes later waite passed to Hollaran after another interfer- ence call to close the scoring. The game ended with Penn on the two yard line of Stroudsburg.

Despite the drubbing handed by East Stroudsburg, who has cap- tured the Pennsylvania State Teachers College Crown two years in a row, there were a few bright spots in the Penn attack.

Fine Soph Showing The four Penn Quarterbacks

combined for a total of 186 yards in the air, and would have had even more had it not been for the many Quaker penalties. Another promising spot was the fine show- ing of Odell's sophomores, particu- larly last year's frosh MVP, George Burrell. And the Penn mentor has found a more than adequate re- placement for Bill McGill in trans- fer student Cap Knowlton, who exhibited speed and agility in his first Penn contest.

Time is now the key factor in Penn's football picture. Odell has the basic elements for a good team, but with only two weeks before the Lehigh game, the Quakers have a lot of work to do before fielding a cohesive, winning ballclub.

The Athletic Managerial Board will hold its first meeting of the year this evening at 7:30 P.M. in the William White Training House adjacent to Franklin Field.

All head managers as well as their assistants are requested to at- tend the meeting which will for- mulate the organization's policy for the coming year.

Penn's overall record since 1876 stands at 562 won, 280 lost, and 38 tied. The Quakers have scored 16, 118 points to their opponents' 8,530.