PAGE FOUR, As Result of Census House Shifts Seen WASHINGTON, (AP)—Five states will gain House teats and 10 mill lose .if present population trends' continue through the 1970 census. New York State, having sent the largest delegation to Congress every year since the early 1800 s, would be shoved into second place by Califor nia. The official national head count on which congressional apportionment is based is still more than two years, away, but the results in most- cases can be seen now in Census Bureau estimates. 206 Million Population With a predicted national population of 206 million in 1970—up 15 per cent from the 1960 count of ,179 million —a state that has shown only an average increase in t h e 1960 s will have to 0 give up • one or more congressmen. New York is expected to come in 'a 19 million, up 13.5 Pre-Homecoming Schedule Friday, Sept. 29 time and place Sat, Sept. 30 to be Sunday, Oct. 1 determined by chairmen Chairmen Meeting 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 1 218 HUB Participating Groups 7 p.m. Tues., Oct. 3 160 Willard Meieting Committee Meetings Chairmen Meeting 7 p.m. Thurs.. Oct. 5 218 HUB Overall Committee 7 p.m. Sun., Oct. 15 160 Willard Meeting-Chairmen and Members Chairmen Meeting Chairmen Meeting Recommendations fooe•o•oosoo•orseeeosiefiiiesioe•••••••••••0000 • 0 • • • • • e • 0 • • • e • • • • • a o e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • P•011100111•••111.00555 0000000000000 000•1 " Binai Friday evening Sept. 29 Sabbath Services Speaker: Rabbi Norman , T. Goldberg Oneg 'Shabbat following Services Saturday morning Sept. 30 Sabbath Service Saturday evening Sept. 30 MOVIE FAIL SAFE with Henry Fonda Sunday morning Oct. 1 LOX and BAGEL BRUNCH Wednesday evenings Israeli Dancing TONIGHT ! TRAFFIC JAMMY THE INTRIGUES 9 -12:30 FUB 25c GIRLS FREE 'TIL 9:30 per cent in 10 years. But Cali! fornia will • probably muster 20.8 million, a 33 per cent in crease that indicates the boom in the West is far from over. New York now sends 41 members to the House bu t probably won't even be able to maintain that force. It is expected to suffer one cas ualty, cutting back to a 40- member delegation. California In The Lead And onrushing California -38 members in the House at present—will move into the lead with an expected new total of 44. These other switches in the make-up of Congress can be read from interim figures 'coughed up by the Census ,Buredu if the present trends continue. The region that will be bled most to compensate for the build-up in the West will be the Midwest, which stands to lose at least six seats. 7 p.m. Thurs, Oct. 19 218 HUB - Sun., Oct. 28 218 HUB Birith Hillel Foundation Weekend Activitiei ; ANTHONY TUDOR'S 'Lilac Garden" is part of the -Pennsylvania Ballet Company's lec Hall program tomorrow night. Starring are Patricia Turko (left), Robert Rodham (center) and 'Fiona Fuersiner. Scheduled for 8:30 p.m., the program is presented by , the Artists Series at the University, in cooperation with the Pennsylvania Council on I the Arts. Tickets are available free to students at the HUB desk. Wednesday Marks University Concert Season Debut The ,1967-68 concert season Scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in wife, Joanne Zagst Feldman, gets under way Wednesday, at the Recital F 11 of the Music and Donald Hopkins, violinists; the University, featuring the Building, the quartet will play and Raymond Page, violinist. works 1V Mozart and Williams Spratlan is a n:w addition to nationally-known Alard String Schuman. the faculty of the department Quartet. Later they will 1 joined by of music and is a recognized other University personnel, composer, teacher and per- Raymond Brown, playing bass, former. He came from the fac- Lewis Spratlan, playing oboe, ulty of the Bay Path College and June Miller, playing harp- in Longmeadow, Mass., and sichord, in a performance of plays oboe with the Springfield, Bach's "Ich habe gunug." Mass., and New Haven, Conn., Ndw in residence at the Uni- symphony orchestras. versity, the Quartet is launch- Miss Miller is' the Univer ing its 13th season of concert sity's oragnist and harpsichord appearances and holds a rec- ist, and Brown is director of ord of continuity in personnel. the University's Chapel Choir. The group is made up of All are members of the music Leonard Feldm-n, cellist; his faculty at the University. 8:00 P.M. 10;30 A.M. 8:00 P.M. 11:30 A.M. 7:30 P.M. THE DAILY 'COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Corbett To Give Architecture Talk Mario Corbett, Los Angeles architect, will present the first of the Fall Term department of architecturp. lecture se-ies 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in 105 Forum Building. A native of San Francisco, Corbett is a licensed architect in California and Nevada. He has built 135 houses, 15 com mercial structures, and 25 churches and schools through out these'two statc.:. Corbett, recipient of five na- cussed in features in tai°rciteacwtuarradls f e o x r ce ? l t l i e t n st c a e ndin in g z " i T n i e m s e" and "Holiday" maga- union Development College;Nornes Three Clothing-Textile . Instructors Students Notified That , USG Does Not Endorse Life Insurance Company The Undergraduate Student Government notified all stu dents that the Life Assurance Co. of Pennsylvania Is not en dorsed by USG. This life in surance plan should not be con fused with the USG Student Accident and Medical Plan. planning and design, has lec tured at the University of Cali fornia, Yale, Stanford and Cornell Universities and Cali fornia State Polytechnic Col lege. His biographical (lat.] appear in "Who's Who in the West" and-the "American Architect's Directory," as well as other source material. His work is cited in numerous professional publications and has been dis ld feat -- "Life." . . Three instructorp have been ment, Pietermaritzburg, South pervisor 10 1 1. the Chesapeake appointed to the faculty in Africa; worked as an extension Bay Girl Scout Council, Wil clothing , and textiles of the officer with the department of mington, Del., during the sum college of human development agriculture in Pretoria, South mer of 1985, She is a member at the University, beginning Africa, and taught home eco- of Omicron Nu, American Any student' still having the with the Fall Term. nomics at the Durban Indian Home Economics Association original .envelope in which he They, are Naomi Roux Reich, Girls , High School, Pieter- and American Association of received literature from the Mary Sabolsice Zentner, both aritzburt : This summer she University Women. Life Assurance Co. of Pennsyl- full-time, and Mary ; _Frances visited European countries on A doctoral candidate in vania -is urged to bring_, ds Drake Pasnak, pa: -. time. a fashion and fabric study tour. clothing and textiles with a Mrs: Zentner • earned the graduate assistant..liip, Mrs. envelope to the USG office in Mrs. Reich received the . achelor of science degree and Pasnak receivedi the bachelor the Hetzel Union Building, bachelor of science degree room 209, as soon as possible. from the University of Pre- has completed the work for ' of science :and •the master of toria, ;South Africa, and has the master of • science degree science degrees from the Uni completedin clothing and textiles from the versity of Tennessee. She has work for the masters S th during of arts degree in clothing and eurnmer University and was part-time instructed in clothing and tex textiles at Colorado State Uni- instructor in that departmenttiles at Kansas State Univer has taugh t home economics in - Term. She versity. She has be_.l a lecturer city. Mrs. •Pasnak is a mem in physi 4 ology and hygiene with Bayville, N.J., Trenton, N.J., ber of Omicron Nu and Phi the Natal Education Depart- and was dietitian and food su- Gamma Mu. DAILY COLLEGIAN LOCAL AD DEADLINE 4:00 P.M. 2 Days . Before Publication WESLEY FOUNDATION Methodist Student Center FOUNDATION STUDIES IN FAITH 9:15 and 10:45 a.m. Sunday STUDENT FORUM ' 2:00 p.m. Sunday SNACK SUPPER 5:30 p.m. Sunday STUDENT VESPERS 7 :00 p.m. Sunday WEEKNIGHT STUDY PROGRAMS ' IMAGE SERIES-BIBLICAL SERIES 256 E. COLLEGE AVE. , 238.6739 Pennsylvania Ballet Program Tomorrow Th e PennsylVania Ballet ' Company, "borne' on a Paoli estate in the summer of 1963 and since acclaimed far beyond Penn sylvania's borders, will perform at the Uni versity tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in Recreation Building. It is the first program' of , the 1967-68 Artists Series. Tickets for students and on sale to, the general, public, are available at the main desk of the Hetzel Union Building and.prior to the performance tomorrow night, will be available at the doors to Rec Hall. Special Tickets A special ticket for school children throughout the area has been made available through the schools at no charge to the chil dren. The company is touring Pennsylvania as the first performing arts organization to be named recipient of support, enabling the tour, from the state council on the arts of Pennsylvania. . Barbara Weisberger's young professional troupe became in 1963 one of eight AmeriCan ballet companies to receive a Ford Founda tion grant stabilizing its future growth. The handful of dancers who first performed to gether on that open-air stage in Paoli has blossomed by now into a polished ensemble of 28 dancers, praised for their "spirit, talent, sensitivity" and "notable style" by the New York Times critic Clive Barnes. Aside from its successful subscription series at Philadelphia's Academy of Music, the Pennsylvania, Ballet won acclaim last season while performing in a week-long fes- House Hassle Threatens To Break Federal Agency WASHINGTON (I?) More than a score of federal agencies will become technically penniless starting Sunday because of a House hassle over whether.-Congress or President Johnson should cut the budget. Their present emergency financing ex pires at midnight tomorrow. Their coffers may be replenished next week by a temporary appropriation bill - to tide them over until Oct. 10. They have been- living on month-to month money rations because the annual , appropriations bills financing them for the year that started July I have not been passed. Money Bill Veto The House on Wednesday turned down a 30-day emergency money bill after a Re publican-backed proposal directing the Pres ident to cut $5 billion from nondefense spending was ruled out of order. The Appropriations Committee came back yesterday with a 10-day emergency proposal, still minus the GOP cutting plan. Its action was taken by a 30-20 vote with RepUblicans in the minority. Chairman George H. Mahon (D-Tex.), called up the new measure yesterday after noon under procedure requiring unanimous consent for its immediate consideration. He told the House that if the committee had 10 days in which to work, it might come up with some recommendations for specific cuts in the area of $5 billion. . Rep, Frank T. Bow, R-Ohio, author of the $5-billion spending cut proposal, objected to Jackman To Deliver First in a Series Chemistry Lectures Lloyd M. Jackman, professor Jackman was head of the de- metal hydrides, i biosynthesis of of chemistry at the University, partment of organic chemistry aromatic compounds and bio will present the first 1967-68 at Australia, the Universityof Melbourne, logically important quinones, before 1 . 3 joined the rotational barriers in amides, Chemistry Colloquium Series University faculty earlier this rapid proton transfer reactions lecture, 'Catalysis of Hydro- year. of amines,lsynthesfs of sporici genation Re. ztions by Cobalt dal agents, electronic struc- Pentacyanide," at 12:45 p.m. His research Interesti include catalysis of homogenous Thursday, in 310 Whitm ore ccles and reactivities of car- Laboratory: hydrogenation by transition ba y nions. tival in Chicago, also in New York City and St. Petersburg, Fla. I Southward Bound This Pennsylvania tour will be followed by a similar trek southward under auspices of the ,Delaware State Arts Committee in October. The Company will 'give a week of performances at New York's City Center in January. Mrs. Weisberger had pioneered in Amer ica's regional ballet movement as director of the Wilkes-Barre Ballet Theater, until she determined to launch a 'professional com pany in 1962. Her first step was to establish the School of the Pennsylvania Ballet in Philadelphia. This has since become one of the finest professional dance academies in the region. Ballet master, resident choreographer and a principal dancer of the Pennsylvania Ballet is Robert Rodham, young artist from West Pittston, Pa., who toured internation ally as a soloist of the New York City Ballet before returning to his native state. Music director is Maurice Kaplow, former violist with the Philadelphia Orchestra and now head of the conducting department of the Philadelphia Musical Academy. In the performance, with symphony orchestra, the' company will balance classi cal, dramatic, romantic programming—from Antony Tudor's poignant "Lilac Garden" to George Balanchine's poetic ,"Scotch Sym phony," fr o m Rodham's good - natured whimsy in "Trio" to the stormy passions and heroic corn' in Williarr Dollar's "The Duel." Music ror the program is by Chaus son, de Banfield, Ibert and Mendelssohn. Mahon's request and suggested that the bill be considered under procedure allowing it to be amended. Mahon said he would ask 'the Rules Com mittee to clear the measure Monday without provision for amendment. Republicans will ask the rules group to permit amendments. ' Regardless of what course the Rules Committee recommends, Mahon saidte plans to seek House action Tuesday. In. the meantime, Democratic leaders hope to shift some votes to beat down a re newed GOP effort to amend the measure on the floor., Wednesday's motion that returned the bill to the Appropriations Committee had the backing of 34 Democrats, with 31 others not voting. The moneyless agencies, meanwhile are caught in the middle of a tug-of-war over who should' get credit for budget cuts and who should take the . blame 'tor any adverse reaction. Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan suggestdd that the bill be consid ered today, a day on which the House seldom meets because of heavy weekend absentee ism. He promised that the 'Republicans would be on hand, but Democrats obviously weren't' so sure their votes would be there. Democratic Leader Carl Albert of Okla homa said that to consider the bill under terms and timing prescribed by the Republi cans "Would be a capitulation of leadership on the part of the Democratic party:" • Fletcher To Discuss Situation Eth ics Joseph Fletcher, past presi- Helen Eak i n dent of the Association for Vol- Chapel. untary Sterilization and of the Fletcher iis a vice president American Society for Christian -of the Associa:!on !Jr the' Study Ethics and author of the book, of Abortion and director of the "Situation Ethics," will discuss- Euthanasia Soicety of America and is Robert Treat Paine Pro "Tha Situation and the Situa- I fessor of Social Ethics in the tionist" at 8 p.m.,- tomorrow in ' Episcopal , Theological School, the memorial hi nge of the Cambridge, Mass. WEST HALLS COUNCIL PRESENTS the "SOUL FINGER" jammy Saturday 8:30.12:30 pan, WARING LOUNGE * GIRLS FREE FIRST HOUR * FRIDAY, ,SEPTEMBER 29, 196? Tug of War Eisenhower
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers