THE DAILY PENNSYLVANI AN. A. LEO LEVIN New Vice Provost

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m&& THE DAILY PENNSYLVANI AN The Penns^anian Daily Levin Succeeds Gisburne, VOL. LXXXI MONDAY. SF.PTEMRKR 13. 1965 TEN CENTS NO. 30 Development Group Enlarges Student Role University students should and will have a say in future plans for the house system, a new book store, campus landscaping and facilities for athletic and student activities. This was the concensus reached Friday at the first meeting of the Student Committee on Development. Meeting with President Gaylord P. Harnwell, other University officials and faculty, the graduate-undergraduate group failed to determine, however, specific mechanisms through which student opinion will be applied to the planning process. Result Of Protest The Committee was a result of campus-wide protest last spring over the site and plans for the proposed Fine Arts Building Its formation was suggested by Christopher Jennings, then chairman of the A11-University Save Open Space (SOS) Committee and a student in the Graduate School of Fine Arts. The Committee was approved by «iohn C. Hetherston, Vice-president for Co-ordinated Planning andg. Holmes Perkins, Dean of the Graduate School of Fine Arts. Presently composed of two students from both the Men's and Women's Student Governments and three graduate fine arts students the committee was to have been composed entirely of graduate students according to an original SOS proposal. It was subsequently revised by the protest group to include undergraduate representation. To Advise, Recommend The stated purpose of the Student Committee is to advise and make recommendations to University planning officials. Becomes NewVice-Provost A. LEO LEVIN New Vice Provost New Officials Will Greet Students In Presentation of 'New Faces 9 Newly appointed members of the University administration will greet students tomorrow evening at 8:30 p.m. in Irvine Auditorium. Dr. A. Leo Levin, new viceprovost, Dr. Julius Wishner, chairman of the University Senate, and Dr. Harry Fields, special assistant to President Harnwell for athletic affairs, will be among the "New Faces of the University " to be presented to the New Student Week Committee. University Provost David Goddard and John C. Hetherston, vice-president for coordinated planning, will also participate in the program. The program, according to Dr. Levin, represents "the opening shot in a continuing dialogue" between the administration, faculty, and students. Dr. Levin, professor of law, was named to his new post today. He will serve under the provost, with primary responsibility for student affairs. He will speak CalderoneUrges Sex Education In Compulsory Biology Courses Dr. Mary Calderone of SIECUS addresses an audience at the University Museum on Sex Education. Dr. Mary Calderone, executive medical director of the Sex Information and Education Council of the United States, (SIECUS), yesterday proposed a compulsory reproductive biology course for all high school and college students. Addressing students and faculty in the University Museum Auditorium, Dr. Calderone said that the course would combat "present illiteracy on the subject of sex." The lecture, "Sex and Social Responsibility," was presented by the men's and women's student governments. The mandatory biology course follows the idea of a British minister quoted by Dr. Calderone as stating that "sex is not what we do, but what we are." The course would be a science laboratory incorporating films, labs, and discussions covering subjects from the anatomy of reproductive systems, including human, to behaviorism in child development. Dr. Calderone listed fertility control, masturbation, embriology, abortion, and broken homes as subjects in the course for a society where "old thou shalt nots no longer apply." Claiming that the present sexual revolution is part of a social revolution, Dr. Calderone asserted that the male's sexual role has remained stable for thousands of years while women have undergone most of the change. For men, she continued, "premarital sexual relationships have always been taken for granted. Their response is primarily sensual." "But women, whose sexual response is learned, rather than spontaneously sensual, sexual pleasure is just beginning to be (Continued on page 2) Student Affairs to be Stressed In Law Teacher's New Post A. Leo Levin, professor of law, has been named vice provost with primary responsibility in the area of student affairs, President Gaylord P. Harnwell announced today. He will replace Gene D. Gisburne, vice-president for stu lent affairs, who has accepted the position of Director of Education for Scott Paper Company. A 1937 graduate of the University, Gisburne served Pennsylvania for twenty-four years. He became Assistant Dean of Student Affairs in 1941 and held that position until 1949 when he was named Dean of Admissions. In 1953 he was selected Vice President of Student Affairs. Levin will be responsible for the areas formerly under the jurisdiction of the vice president for student affairs except for physical education and athletics, which now report to the president for athletic affairs. A member of the faculty since 1949, Professor Levin will be responsible for the offices briefly. Dr. Wishner, professor of psychology and recently named chairman of the University Senate, will describe the work of the Senate. Dr. Levin resigned the chairmanship recently to accept his new position. Dr. Fields appointed athletic advisor to the President during the summer, will outline the University's athletic and physical education program. He is associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology in the school of Medicine. Vice-president Hetherston will narrate a slide presentation of the changing face of the campus and will discuss the development plans of the University. All members of the student body including freshmen, upperclassmen and graduate students are invited to attend. of the Dean of Men, Dean of Women, Admissions, Student Finanical Aid, Foreign Students, Fellowship Information and Study Programs Abo aid, and the University Counseling Service. Wishner Succeeds Levin In a related action Dr. Julius Wishner, professor of psychology, succeeded Professor Levin as chairman of the University Senate following his resignation from that post. The University Senate is the principal deliberative body through which the Faculty is able to express itself on important issues affecting the University. It consists only of Faculty members and all fully affiliated members of the faculty holding the rank of asistant professor or above are also members of the Senate. Professor Levin also resigned as vice-chairman of the University Council before accepting the administrative position. The University Council consists of eighty-three mem- (Conlinued on page 4) Sociologist to Analyze Parliamentary System Dr. Robert T. MacKenzie, professor of political sociology at the London School of Economics, will discuss parliamentary government at 4 p.m. today at Annenberg Auditorium. Dr. MacKenzie, who is cur- [" rently touring the country, is expected to discuss the effect of the 1964 British elections on parliamentary government in England. The British political sociologist discussed changes in the English political system at an American Political Science Association meeting last week-end and noted that British elections are becoming "Americanized." According to Dr. Edward Janosik, associate professor of political science at the University, Dr. MacKenzie has stated that a shift of power has taken place in England from the cabinet to the prime minister. Janosik added that this centralization of power in Britain is somewhat similar to the increasing responsibilities of the President of the United States. Dr. MacKenzie has commented on what he feels has been a shift in the traditional pattern of British elections. Prior to 1964, British elections centered around ideological battles rather than the personality contests - more typical of American politics. The 1964 contest marked a change campaigns, view. toward non-ideological in Dr. MacKenzie's Famous Author Dr. MacKenzie has contributed to D.E. Butler's "British General Elections of 1951." His most famous work, "British Political Parties," is a study of the distribution of power within the Conservative and Labor parties. In this work, he scrutinizes the power relationships existing between the leaders of the parties, the freshman members of parliament and the local political leaders. Dr. MacKenzie, a Canadian, was educated at British Columbia University. He later migrated to England where he received a Ph. D. at the University of London. He has taught political sociology at the London School of Economics since 1949 and has been visiting lecturer at Harvard and Yale Universities.

PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYLVANI AN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1965 SOS Finds Friends IrVPower Structure' Second of a series Chairman of the SOS Committee was Christopher Jennings, a last-year student in the Graduate School of Fine Arts and a native of England. Jennings, flamboyant in dress and oratory, carried on a "dialogue" of accusations and counter-accusations with the administration in an attempt to force it to the conference table - an attempt that met with little success. Aiding Jennings were other Fine Arts students, among them Narendra Juneja, Mary Tracy, Mildred Holmes, Carol Levy, and Jennings' eventual successor, David Streatfield. The fact that all of the initial leadership came from Grad Fine Arts led the administration to believe, erroneously, that the actual impetus - and instructions - were secretly coming from the Fine Arts faculty. The SOS movement was labeled "iresponsible, immature, ill-informed" - and, for public purposes, ignored. SOS had obtained over 700 signatures on a major petition that was circulated at the demonstration. Departmental petitions brought in an additional 350 signatures. All of these were delivered to President Harnwell. But College Hall remained silent. Nor did it comment when SOS was endorsed by eight stu- DEAN G.H. PERKINS...Man In Middle dent groups, including Men's Student Government, the Graduate Students Association, and the Student Planners' Society. SOS, aware of faculty sentiment, attempted in vain to enlist support in that body. The Graduate School of Fine Arts faculty, while largely sympathetic, in private considered itself bound to keep silent. A dozen faculty members, mostly from Liberal Arts, appeared at the demonstration and joined the picketers. Many more had agreed to appear, over the phone or in personal contacts, but backed out at the eleventh hour. Attempting to arouse more open faculty sympathy, SOS distributed leaflets at the door of a Senate meeting. Nearly au those present took them - including President Harnwell. A week after the big demonstration, SOS learned, the Board of Trustees and President Harnwell had scheduled a luncheonpress conference in the Van Pelt Library to present the "integrated development plan" to the mass media. The student group threatened a sit-in in the lobby of Van Pelt; the administration warned of severe disciplinary measures. Attempting to avoid a confrontation, SOS put on a token demonstration outside the Library, in the wind and rain. It was hoped this would be taken as a sign of responsibility; it was interpreted as weakness. At the luncheon, disparaging remarks were made about the '.'kids outside." That was the situation when the theater of war was moved from the picket line to them ineograph machine. War Of Words On February, 25, 1965, SOS mailed a form letter to the Board of Trustees, the Benjamin Franklin Associates, prominent alumni and civic leaders, informingthem of its position. Initial reaction was strong and favorable. President Harnwell received a large volume of inquiring and critical mail. The administration re acted by preparing a five-page policy paper and mailing it to the previous recipients of SOS literature. This paper - the first for public consumption - maintained that the protest was based on "failure to consider the... plan... in the context of the total development of the campus." It stated that every effort was being made to destroy as few trees as possible; that new open space elsewhere would more than compensate for that taken for the building; and that the site was in keeping with a deliberate policy of closing off the perimeters of blocks, concen- trating open space in central courts to shelter it from street noise and to create "the pleasing sensation of having turned a corner into a private world." This paper was reissued, slightly modified, on August 23. SOS countered with more materials. On April 28, it mailed a 3-page position paper of its own, replying to each of the University's points. It objected to the aesthetic and practical desirability of a "cloistered" campus, argued that quality rather than quantity of open space was the crucial factor, and attacked the administration's contention that any change in the plans now would jeopardize the finances of the building. Moreover, it provided plans showing two of several possible alternative sites which existed now but had not when the building plan was proposed. It urged that interested parties call for reconsideration of the siting. Meanwhile, a new walkway parallel to 34th street, just east of the Van Pelt Library, was installed by the University in preparation for the destruction of the diagonal one. With the semester coming to an end, and with Jennings graduating (along with Juneja and Levy,) it appeared construction might begin by registration time in September. It's Who You Know With the summer came a change in SOS leadership and strategy. Jennings was succeeded by bearded David Streatfield, another English graduate student. Conservative in temperament and determined to persevere, he turned his attention toward the Philadelphia "power structure." The move was first suggested by indications that the University would need private donations to finance the building. Even during the Jennings chairmanship, attempts had been made to persuade alumni that the project was unworthy of support. Now, though, in dozens of personal contacts with people known as "movers and shakers" in the city many of them good friends of President Harnwell Streatfield attempted to enlist support for the SOS position. He says that virtually everyone contacted was sympathetic. But time and again, he says, they declined to speak out publicly. There were personal and business transactions and relationships that might be jeopardized, he was told. Still he persisted. President Harnwell, in the meantime, was "on his trail," contacting some of the persons involved, and answering correspondence. Between SOS and the University, Philadelphia's civic establishment was subjected to an unprecedented volume of contradictory propaganda. Each response by one side stimulated another mailing by the other. SOS claims it did not lose many supporters in this tug-of-war even though, it maintains, the administration cast doubt on its responsibility and claimed the project was too far advanced to be halted. Money and Committment Cries of "public deception" were raised in some quarters, however, over the official position on the finalization of the project. The administration had administrative unwillingness to reconsider what had already been a troublesome decision was responsible for ten months of refusal to negotiate not any binding committment to the plan. The statements to the contrary, it feels, were clearly in bad faith. Who Calls The Tune The University maintained in a public statement that "GSA does not indiscreetly release its funds.. its consideration of surveys and plans, its appointment of the architects, and its approval of the design, have been a long process." Jennings, still chairman, contacted Governor Scranton in Harrisburg to find out the extent to which GSA was responsible for siting, architecture, etc. He was advised by return mail that the State agency did indeed appoint the architects, but in no way was responsible for either the siting or the architecture. A n financial administrator, it merely reviewed the plans to insure economy. Streatfield later wrote to State Secretary of Internal Affairs Dean Perkins OKs Trees At Apartment Project The City Planning Commission chaired by Fine Arts Dean G. Holmes Perkins recommended last week to the Zoning Board of Adjustment that a builder be allowed to violate parking-space requirements of the Zoning Code for a new apartment project at 21st and Hamilton Sts. Why? To save the trees. The builder, Hyman Korman, Inc., made the request to save a row of old trees on the site, formerly the Preston Maternity Hospital. Irvin Stander, Attorney for the Korman firm, argued that trees and open space "help to create an atmosphere of wellbeing" and are "more important than parking spaces." William B. Walker, a Planning Commission member, examined the site and reported to the Commission that "the idea of saving the trees is just great." Assistant Executive Director Paul F. Croley stated that the builder will be allowed to reduce the size of parking spaces from the legal 20 x 10 feet to 20 x 81/2 feet. The Commission recommendation endorsed Stander's contention that trees were psychologically and esthetically necessary in an urban environment. Stander maintained that the Commission should give its support to such a policy in the public interest. from the start maintained that it and the General State Author- : '.j - - which was providing over half the funds for the building were too "thoroughly committed" to the project for any change to be feasible. On this basis, Dr. Harnwell claimed that protest was futile and should be terminated. Streatfield directed inquiries into the extent of commitment and learned that no contracts had been let nor had bids been called for. Moreover the plans had been stalled in the bureaucratic machinery at Harrisburg for months. The bombshell came on August 31 when President Harnwell admitted that the University "has not and will not" discuss the possibility of postponement or revision of the project with the General State Authority. Streatfield charged that this was confirmation that the University alone was responsible for "commitment." SOS maintains that Genevieve Blatt, a member of the Presidential Task Force on Natural Beauty. She replied: "I shall do whatever is possible to keep GSA from any errors which it would be... impossible to correct later on... (but) GSA operates simply as the construction agency..and would have nothing to do with determing the location or style of the building." (August 13) Uncle Sam Enters Late in the spring it was revealed that a Federal Higher Education Grant of $850,000 had been given to the University for the building. Streatfield, claiming that the project ran directly counter to the Federal Natural Beauty Policy, immediately contacted officials in Washington. Again, he was told that the University was the?only determining agency and that protest should be directed to it. But a new avenue for protest soon appeared. Late in July notices appeared on the site that the Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment was to meet to consider an application by the University for a zoning variance for the building. The point at issue was the legal requirement that the building provide 80 off-street parking spaces - a requirement the administration sought to waive. With 95% of the interested parties - students and faculty - on vacation, the SOS leadership prepared to plead its case before the Zoning Board. To be continued SOS x (Continued from page 1) Undergraduates attending the Friday meeting were Misses Judith Seitz and Jane Slater of Women's Student Government, Thomas Lang and Bruce Rodin of Men's Student Government, and Stephen H. Klitzman, Editor-in- Chief of The Daily Pennsylvanian. David C. Streatfield, Chairman of SOS, represented the graduate students. Goddard Attends Also attending the meeting were Provost David R. Goddard, new Vice-provost A. Leo Levin, Vice-president for Co-ordinated Planning, John C. Hetherston, Assistant to the vice-president, Francis M. Betts HI and Professor Dan M. McGill- Dr. Goddard stated that work could begin on the proposed Center!or Performing Arts "as soon as the money is in hand." The Center is tentatively scheduled to be constructed on the corner of 37th, and Walnut Sts next to the AnnenbergSchool. On Campus Dr. Levin suggested that the open forum on campus development to be held tomorrow night at 8:30 p.m. in Irvine Auditorium serve as a beginning in the search for means to apply student thinking to University planning. In outlining current and future development plans for the Committee, Hetherston stated that be - tween July 1965 and December 1967, the University will have constructed buildings worth over 75 million dollars. Calderone {Continued from page 1) thought of as desirable for just itself." Dr. Calderone added that traditional shields from early sexual experience have been lifted from females of all ages. Dr. Calderone suggusted companionship and procreation as a new basis for marriage. She stated that women no longer must rely on a husband for financial support and that men need not rely on a wife for housekeeping. Sexual relationships can easily be found out of wedlock. In addition, she continued, the extended family and all of its emotional supports have been replaced by the nuclear family. Dr. Calderone commented that since many marriages are still based on sex, divorce and other marital problems are prevalent. "For the first tfme in history, man can separate reproduction and sexuality." Seminars on the lecture were held with faculty members in various fraternity houses and women's residences.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1965 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE THREE 1885 My Pennsylvania!!,965 Published for the University of Pennsylvania community by its undergraduates "Outstanding" is the word to describe the appointment of Professor A. Leo Levin to oversee student affairs at Pennsylvania, For many years the Student Affairs Division has been operated as a purely administrative entity, largely divorced from the total educational experience of the undergraduate. Much of the hostility, controversy and misunderstanding surrounding studentadministration relations derived from this unhappy fact. So, too, did a certain amount of the faculty apathy toward undergraduate affairs. The Levin appointment represents a farreaching change in the philosophy of student affairs. Dr. Levin, formerly chairman of the The Joint Committee on Development had its first meeting last week. The crisis that brought it into being the SOS protest--has not been resolved. But the Committee, announced in the closing days of the spring semester, has as its principal task the creation of a student-faculty-administration dialogue on development one that will insure that no repetition of the events leading up to SOS ever occurs on this campus. The Committee is still an amorphous thing, without a permanent chairman. The student representatives have been chosen well and represent a good cross-section of concerned undergraduate and graduate groups. There is every reason to expect outstanding things to result from their deliberations. The Committee has let it be known that it is open to suggestions as to the best way of fulfilling its function. We offer the following: (1) The University has a thick sheaf of plans as part of the Integrated Development Plan. These projects cover a wide range of buildings, landscaping, etc. Most of the University community has never seen them. They should be made more public through The Daily Pennsylvanian, through models and exhibits and lectures forming a wellknit campaign to educate the community on what is programmed for the future. The Development Forum last year was a beginning. Perhaps forums might be held at which the development of specific areas or disciplines might be discussed e. g., the future of the Physics-Mathematics groups of structures, the anticipated fate of fraternities, STEPHEN H. KLITZMAN Editor-in-Chief LANCE E. LAVER Managing Editor MARK BIRKEN Business Manager ROBERT I. SLATER Executive Editor ROBERT A. GROSS News Editor ARTHUR M. SHAPIRO Editorial Chairman ALFRED R. CAMNER Features Editor ROBERT ROTTENBERG Sports Editor HOWARD LEVINE Advertising Director MARC RODSTEIN Photography Chairman SERGEANT HALL 34th and Chestnut Streets Letters to the Editor should be typed double-spaced with 60 characters to the line. All letters must be signed by a member of the University community. Names will be withheld upon request. Address correspondence to the Editor, Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Streets. The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday a* Philadelphia, Pa, during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods, and the last seven days of class each term. One issue published during August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Streets at the rate of $10.00 per annum. Second Class Postage Paid at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Faculty Senate and the Undergraduate Publications Committee, has long been closely associated with undergraduate activities. His friends know him as a man with exceptional qualifications for the delicate post he now assumes. They also know him as an outstanding scholar and as a man with the acute sensitivity that working with students requires. Dr. Levin assumes the title of Vice-Provost for Student Affairs. As Vice-Provost rather than Vice-President he will be serving in the academic sphere - where student affairs has always belonged. We look forward to the Levin administration with enthusiasm and anticipation of great things. To Dr. Levin, our very best wishes. Development Dialogue etc. Certainly the House System rates high on this list. (2) Opsn hearings should be held on more controversial projects, following the publicity effort. Any concerned individual could appear and question the planners on the issues -- and make suggestions. (3) A permanent "Development Mailbox" should be set up and publicized so that individual questions, suggestions, etc. can be gotten to the right parties without bureaucratic stumbling blocks. (4) The MSG and WSGA Development Committees should work actively with the Joint Committee and act as continuing contacts with the general undergraduate community. All of this, it goes without saying, will be effective only if the administration takes it seriously. After the past ten months, we rather suspect and certainly hope it will. Letters To The Editoi ADA Disputes Harnvsell F ditor. The Daily Pennsylvanian: Campus ADA regrets the tone of the opening day ceremonies held Wednesday. We believe that the student body should have the right of advocacy beyond mere debate. While we fully support the "more mature and thoughtful methods in the conduct of their (student) affairs," there are occasions when demonstrations may effectively serve to further the "thoughtful methods" of which President Harnwell spoke. One need only look to the civil rights movement to find instances where protests, when combined with other means of arousing public opinion, led to a social revolution greater in scope than anyone could have predicted ten years ago. Although Campus ADA does not approve wholly of the actions of the Berkeley demonstrators, we observe that that protest also brought to the national consciousness an awareness of the impersonality of our massive institutions of higher learning. The university is, in terms which the administration can readily understand, a joint partnership of students and teachers. It is the role of the administration to facilitate the best possible functioning of this partnership. In such an atmosphere the student could perhaps return to the ranks of the scholars. Campus ADA recognizes demonstrations as one way in which the student can effectively play a part in such a partnership. Jeffrey Albert Chairman, Campus ADA "Peculiar, None Of Them Have Come Back Yet" ON HARNWELL AND DEMONSTRATIONS" Point of View In his rejection of demonstrations on the University campus at opening exercises last Wednesday, President Harnwell attempted to apply traditional ideals of a university to situations where they no longer apply. The President's speech sought to reaffirm the classical view of education. The primary goal of a university, he suggested, is knowledge as an end in itself. Although activities of Universities may serve society's needs, the pursuit of truth supersedes these contributions. While the university is in society, it must not always be of society. Consistent with this view of education, the President condemned campus demonstrations as instruments of action. For the primary goal of agitation - the pursuit of ideas as means to action-often conflicts with the primary goal of the university - the pursuit of ideas never merely as means to an end. Since demonstrators seek knowledge to serve policy, the pursuit of power threatens todisruptthe quest for truth. And thus President Harnwell believes that demonstrations threaten to become "disturbances on campuses which tend to the disadvantage of universities as a whole." While" agree firmly with President Harnwell's emphasis on the pursuit of truth as an end in itself, his strictures against demonstrations avoid the basic question. Students do not demonstrate at the slightest whim; they do so often when administrators have based policy on unreasonable grounds, when they have closed all avenues for rational debate. The modern university has many goals, the most important of which is not always the pursuit of truth as an end in itself. Fund-raising, development, public relations, and the quest for research funds often demand actions which do damage to university ideals. The urh iversityis at the center of what Clark Kerr calls the "knowledge ROBERT A. GROSS industry;" and it is naive, at the very least, to claim that institutions in which Americans have so great a stake are not subjected to pressures which conflict with the pursuit of truth as an end in itself. Aristotle's view of the "reasonable man" - the man whose actions are based upon rational knowledge - is no longer the most perceptive analysis of human motivation. While one wishes to avoid arguments ad hominem, it is essential to analyze the motivation of the actors in university disputes. Alumni, professors, and administrators not only act on the merits of a question but also pressures at hand. The alumni can create trouble for educational plans if the football team doesn't win enough games; they might withhold money from certain projects if they dont get their way. The faculty has as its main support the American Association of University Professors, the trade union of the professional in higher education. Sanctions from the AAUP have severely weakened colleges which have incurred its displeasure. Administrators gain their power from their central role in the implementation of policy on the campus. The professional bureaucrat often acts conservatively out of sheer instinct for self-protection. The students are the only group left. What power do they have? Generally, students lack any organized pressure except the demonstration and the picket, i.e. the ability to embarass and disrupt the university. In the face of actions which are often based more upon the power of specific groups at the university than upon the "truth-value" of the issue, students often find it necessary to resort to their only organized pressure - the demonstration. When demonstrations occur, they are generally an index of the failure of an administration, not of the unreasonableness and irrationality of students.

PAGE FOUR THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 196 Dean's List Sixteen students have been named to the dean's list of the School of Nursing for the 1964- -65 academic year. The list, released recently by Dr. Dorothy A. Mereness, dean of the school, includes: Ann Lewis Ballard, 791 Crescent Blvd., Glen Ellyn, 111., a sophomore; Eleanore Borrow, 10 Nardone Road, Newton, Mass., a senior; Rebecca Bowers, 3439 Raymond St., Laureldale, Pa., a senior; and Rene Chalfin, 1056 East 23rd St., New York City, a junior. Also: Carol Christ, 105 Arlington Ave., Linwood, N.J., a senior; Julia Ann Clark, 1531 Wynnewood Road, Ardmore, a junior; Carol Dakin, 421 Rutherford Ave., Trenton, N. J., a senior; and Elaine Gerstein, 307 Cumberland Road, West There s NO place just like this PLACE Anywhere near this PLACE So this must be the STEAKS PLACE H0AGIES I Hartford, Conn., a junior. Also: Susan Kaltman, 28 Roseld Ave., Deal, N.J., a senior; Susan Marcus, 3304 N. 4th Street, Harrisburg, a May, 1965, graduate; Lois Messina, 227 Arlington Ave., New York City, a May, 1965, graduate; Carol LynnMonheit, 1000 Sharpless Road, Philadelphia, a sophomore. Also: Jill Sheridan, 20 White Oak Drive, North Caldwell, N., a May, 1965, graduate; Carol Ann Sites, 102 Blue Hen Road, New Castle, Del., a sophomore; Sarah Claudia Stout, 556 West Bainbridge St., Elizabethtown, Pa., a sophomore; and Katherine Zinger, 312 W. 11th Ave., Conshohocken, a junior. Miss Christ and Miss Clark were named to the dean's list with distinction. Come On Down To Z ;unl STEAK HOUSE Hrs. 11 AM to 11 PM 233 S. 40th Street BA 2-9016 B GIRLS! GIRLS! Rubberized Raincoats Our Price - $5.99 Varsity Shop 3711 Spruce St. Wishner Heads Faculty Senate (( tititinued from page 1) bers representing the faculty and administration. It was the recommendation of the Undergraduate Affairs Committee of the Council that led to today's reorganization of the student affairs division. The committee, headed by Dean of the College Otto Springer, suggested to the Council last spring that the office of student affairs be placed under the provost's jurisdiction and that a successor to Vice-P resident Gisburne be chosen. The Council appointed a selection committee chaired fcr Professor of Law Curtis Reitz, with University-wide representation. Professor Reitz formerly served on the selection committee which chose James P. Craft to succeed Robert Longley as Dean of Men. In announcing the appointment of Levin as new vice-provost, President Harnwell noted the increasing involvement of the faculty in the administration of University affairs. "This appointment reflects the marked changes in undergraduate life which have evolved in recent years. Characteristic of these changes are the increased student concern for the educational process and for clossr faculty-student relationships. "As former chairman of the University Senate and of the University Council's Undergraduate Publications Committee, Professor Levin has been closely identified with both student and faculty affairs. As vice provost, his special responsibility will be centered in the chief educational office of the University, insuring that the administration of student affairs will be concerned with the total educational experience of the undergraduate." Former College Editor Professor Levin received the bachelor of arts degree in 1939 from Yeshiva College, which a- warded him an honorary doctoi of laws degree in 1960. At Yeshiva he served as editor of the "Commentator," the student newspaper. He received a bachelor of laws degree from the University in 1942 and was a member of the board of editors of the "Pennsylvania Law Review." After graduation, he entered the U.S. Army, serving as a first lieutenant until 1946. During 1946-47 he was a University Fellow at Columbia University Law School. He went to the University of Iowa the next year as a instructor in law and was named assistant professor in 1948. Professor Levin returned to the University Law School in 1949 as assistant professor and was promoted to associate professor in 1951 and to professor of law in 1953. During summers, he has been a visiting professor of law at Northwestern University, the University of Colorado, University of California at Los Angeles, New York University, and Stanford University. During 1959-60 he was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, Calif. In addition to having been chairman of the University Sen- at and vice chairman of the University Council, Professor Levin was chairman of the Review and Evaluation Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences and College of Liberal Arts for Women which was part of the Educational Survey at Pennsylvania, He is a former member of the Baccalaureate Council and of the University Council's Committee on Undergraduate Affairs. He is co-author of "Dispatch and Delay: A Field Study of Judicial Administration in Pennsylvania" and "Cases and Materials on Civil Procedure." He has published in the area of evidence and the behavioral sciences. He has lectured widely before professional meetings. Professor Levin is national vice president of Order of the Coif, honorary legal society, a member of the advisory committee for the Columbia University Project for Effective Justice, and a member of the board of advisors to the Comparative Study of Administration of Justice. He will continue to teach a course in civil procedure in the Law School. Mastermind 'world affairs Read The New York Times - r *' Have The Times delivered every morning at low college rates. For service, get in touch with: Come to the Membership meeting Monday, Sept. 13, 7:15 pm I Houston Hall Auditorium George Koval Student Newspaper Agency Rm. 201 C Logan Hall

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1965 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAGE FIVI First Week First Impressions Photo essay by Frank V. Hemburg, John Kalinger, and Robert Kosiba. These junior girls are smiling and eating Abbots ice cream Education at Houston Hall i s always a crushing experience At the week's end, intellectual communion

PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1965 Graduate Grants Offered for 1966 U. S. Fellowships AwardedlDanforth Aids For Work in 55 Countries The competition for 1966-67 United States government graduate grants for academic study or research abroad, and for professional training in creative and performine arts, is presently unaerway, the Institute 01 International Education has announced. The Institute conducts competitions for U.S. government scholarships provided by the Fulbright-Hays Act as part of the educational and cultural exchange program of the Department of State. Under this program, more than 800 American graduate students will have the opportunity to study in any one of 55 countries. The purpose of the awards is to increase mutual understanding between the people of The U.S. and other countries through the exchange of persons, knowledge and skills. Candidates who wish to apply for an award must be U.S. citizens at the time of application and have a bachelor's degree or its equivalent by the beginning date of the grant, and be proficient in the language of the host country. Selections will be made on the basis of academic and/or professional record, the feasibility of the applicant's proposed study plan and personal qualifications. Preference is given to candidates who have not had prior opportunity for extended study or residence abroad and who are under the age of 35. Creative Artists Creative and performing artists will not require a bachelor's degree, but must have four years of professional study or equivalent experience. Social workers must have at least two years of professional experience after the Master of Social Work degree. Applicants in the field of medicine must have an M.D. at the time of application. Three types of grants will be available under the Fulbright- Hays Act: U.S. government full grants, joint U.S.-other government grants, andu.s. government travel-only grants. A full award will provide a grantee with tuition, maintenance, round-trip transportation, health and accident insurance and an incidental allowance. In Japan, Nepal, India and the Republic of China, a maintenance allowance will be provided for one or more accompanying dependents. Joint U.S. -other government grants will provide tuition and full or partial maintenance from a foreign government, plus travel costs from the U.S. government. These grants will be available in three countries: Poland, Rumania and Yugoslavia. Travel-Only Grants Travel-only grants will supplement maintenance and tuition scholarships granted to American students by universities, private donors and foreign governments. Countries participating in the full grants program will be: Afghanistan, Argentina, Australia, Belgium-Luxembourg, Bolivia, Brazil, Ceylon, Chila, China (Republic of), Columbia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Finland, France, Germany (Federal Republic of), Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Iceland, India, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Nepal, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Philippines, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, United Arab Republic, the United Kingdom, Uruguay, and Venezuela. Travel-only grants will be a- vailable to Austria Brazil, Denmark, France, Germany, Iceland, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands and Sweden. Because of the growing interest in Inter-American studies, there are grants available to a number of Latin American republics in the fields of history social sciences, political science, law, and humanities and other suitable fields. Grantees will live in university housing when available and will be expected to participate in the academic and social life of the students in the country of assignment. Applicants should have an interest in and knowledge of the Latin American area and specifically in the country or countries for which they are applying. Preference will be given to single applicants and to applicants who are well informed on the A- merican political and social scene Candidates for grants to Latin America may be called for a personal interview. CLASSIC SUB SHOPS "Education in Good Eating" 256 So. 37th - 3436 Samson St. Fast & Courteous Service MEN'S WEAR Buy it for less! Varsity. at Shop 3711 Spruce 120 Teachers Inquiries about the Danforth Graduate Fellowships, to be a- warded in March, 1966, are invited, according to James B. Yarnall, Director of Office of Fellowship Information & Study Programs Abroad the local campus representative. The Fellowships, offered by the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis, Missouri, are open to men and women who are seniors or recent graduates of accredited colleges in the United States, who have serious interest in college teaching as a career, and who plan to study for a Ph. D. in a field common to the undergraduate college. Applicants may be single or married, must be less than thirty years of age at the time of application, and may not have undertaken any graduate or professional study beyond the baccalaureate. 120 Fellowships Available Approximately 120 Fellowships will be awarded in March, 1965. Candidates must be nominated by Liaison Officers of their undergraduate institutions. The Foundation does not accept direct applications for the Fellowships. Danforth Graduate Fellows are eligible for four years of financial assistance, with amaximum annual living stipend of $1800 for single Fellows and $2200 for married Fellows, plus tuition and fees. Dependency allowances are available. Financial need is not a condition for consideration. { M Sove Your Watv" Wiiti CAMPUS EVENTS OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS Professor Robert T. McKenzie of the London School of Economics will lecture on the British Political System today at 4 p.m. in Annenberg Auditorium. All invited. CAMPUS AGENDA Anyone interested in volunteering to serve in the Catacombs Coffee House once every two weeks, please come to a meeting in the Catacombs on Monday evening, September 13 at 8:00 p.m. today. If you cannot come to the meeting but wish to volunteer, please call EV.6-2596 or 594-5336. The Catacombs is located up the alley on 36th Street between Locust Walk and Walnut Street. Try-outs for Penn's championship bowling team to be held at Wm.Penn Lanes 36th and Walnut on Monday, September 20 3 p.m., Tuesday, September 21 4 p.m., and Wednesday, September 22 3 p.m. Report two of the above days ready to bowl. Freshman welcome. At the Hillel Forum tomorrow Dr. A. Leo Levin, Professor of Law at the University, willspeik on "Some Jewish Roots of the Common Law," at 4 p.m. All invited to attend. ACTIVITY NOTICES BAND Rehearsal 406 on Tuesday in Band Room, Houston Hall. There are still a few openings for new members. DP Compulsory meeting at the Business Office Monday, September 13, at 4:30 p.m. for all past staff members associated with the paper and any Freshmen or others THIS IS IT! Absolutely the LAST WEEK iimmmmmimi sign or who wish to heel the paper. HILLEL Choir meets today at 7 p.m. to organize. Committee meetings tomorrow at 11 a.m. All interested are invited to attend. IAA Orientation meeting for all old and prospective members, p.m., Houston Hall. All invited. Executive meeting, Wednesday, September 15, 7 p.m., Room 1, Houston Hall. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS' WIVES CLUB Wives of all international students at Penn are eligible for membership. International girl students are eligible for associate membership. Meeting at 1:30 p.m. on Thursday, September 16, in Christian Association on 36th and Locust. IVY CLUB The Ivy Club is the only social organization open to freshmen males. Anyone interested in joining this year should attend the first meeting tomorrow at 11 a.m. in the Franklin Room of Houston Hall. LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL The Lightweight Football Team will hold its organization meeting on Monday, 13 September at Murphy Field at 4:00 p.m. If you wish to play this season, you must either attend or at least send word. Come prepared to work-out. Formal practice begins Saturday, 18 September. MSG Men's Student Government meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in the West Lounge. The student body is cordially invited. {Continued on page 7) SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAITS Portraits begin one week from today Houston Hall, Monday through Friday 4K**!

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1965 THE DAILY PENNSYLVANI AN PAGE SEVEN y>r r -s Z* o- / *'*: EVERYBODY would Subscribe to the 1966 RECORD FOR a discount of TWO DOLLARS This Week Then The entire STUDENT BODY WOULD SAVE Thirty-Six Thousand Dollars Monday through Friday Houston Hall 3S $ ANY FRESHMAN $ who sent in - *» CAMPUS EVENTS Continued from page (>) PTP People to People orientation and membership meetingfor all old and prospective members, tonight, 7:15 p.m., Houston Hall Auditorium. All invited. Executive meeting, Wednesday, September 15, 4 p.m., Room 10, Houston Hall. RECORD Meeting for all editors, staff members, and all interested in heeling for the yearbook, tomorrow 4 p.m., Friars Room, Houston Hall. RUGBY CLUB Meeting Wednesday, 8:30 p.m., Benjamin Franklin Room, Houston Hall. The entire student body is eligible, freshmen through graduate students. SOPHOMORE MEN The women of the class of '68 challenge you to a football game. Find out more at the meeting tomorrow at 11 a.m. in the Houst I Formal Lounge of Hill Hall. SOPHOMORE WOMEN Class meeting tomorrow at 11 a.m. in House I Formal Lounge of Hill Hall to discuss football game. TENNIS Freshaman Tennis Tournament starts Wednesday, September 15. Sign up for the Tournament in Hutchinson Gym. WSGA Freshmen women: Class meeting for the nomination of officers Tuesday, September 14 at 11:00 a.m. in Logan Hall 17. Copies of class song will also be distributed. for Course Guides and have gotten neither a Course Guide or a letter Harnwell Greets Foreign Students University President Gaylord P. Harnwell, addressing the second Annual Welcome Banquet for Incoming Foreign Students Friday, called for all American and foreign students to join together to help educate each -jther. Dr. Harnwell's address, delivered at Houston Hall and sponsored by the University's Office of Foreign Students and People marked the close of a comprehensive foreign student orientation program. In discussing the increasingly international nature of the University community, Dr. Harnwell emphasized that' i;here are two kinds of education - the formal, classroom education -but, as important, the cultural, informal education." Department Head Changed In order to remove the stigma that is sometimes attached to the word "foreign", he continued, the Office of Foreign Students will henceforth be called the Office of Students from Other Countries. Dr. Harnwell then described a few of the programs that the University is involved in overseas. Among those mentioned were an exchange program involving romance language education with France, the American Institute of Indian Studies in Poona, India, and programs in Turkey, Japan, Berlin, Pakistan, New Zealand, Ethopia, Colombia, and Iran. He stressed the great advantages that the University affords the student by containing the eighth largest foreign student population in the United States. Last year eighty-seven different countries were represented on this campus, with an approximate foreign population of 1700., Dr. Harnwell concluded that everyone in the world today has a desire for a decent life and a "trust in the future," and that "education is a means of ensuring such a future." Classified Ads RENOVATED SINGLE APT. 34TH ST. and Samosnt. Hardwood floors, shuttered windows. $55 per. mo. Wasn't available before Sept. 7. Call Kl 5-2527 2901 WANTED COPIES OF SOCIAL RESPON sibilities of The Business Man. Harper 1953 Houston Hall Store will pay up to (5.00 depending on condition. Call 594-7594. 1684 1961 WHITE VALIANT EXCELLENT CONdition 1-owner, 4-door Sedan 24,000 miles. New tires, heater, transistor radio. Call Murray EV 2-4063 6 P.M. to 11 P.M. 1681 TYPIST-ELEC. TYPEWRITER. MASTERS, Doctorates, Termpapers. Work corrected for form, grammar, punctuation. Reasonable rates. Fast service. Mrs. Robbins GR7-4332 2904 GRAD STUDENT WANTS ROOMMATE FOR groat furnished apartment - 4 rooms, separate bedrooms, $50 apiece/month. JOEL ABF.R FV 2-4847 228 Buckingham PI. (near 44th & Walnut) 1682 come in Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 14 to AIR YOUR GRIPES ff ff ^ ff ^ ^ ff ^p ^p ^ra ^p ^ra ^p ^p collect WRITE TO I your money THE DP