FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1968 YAF Largest in State The University chapter of Young Americans for Freedom is now the largest campus chapter in the state, according to chapter chairman Doug Cooper. "Our being number one in the stale is a tribute to the many members who helped attract new people to the libertarian-conservative m o v e m e n t. Numbers are a reflection of the new dynamism exhibited by Penn State Y.A.F., but our impact on , the thinking of the P.S.U: community will be deter mined by the quality of our programs," Cooper explained. In other business, George Burgess, head of YAF's subcommittee on drug laws, announced that a Drug Laws For- UNIVERSITY RESEARCH CENTER, Unit 1, for which final plans have been approved by the Trustees of the University, will be located in the research area on East Cimpus. The General State Authority has authorized $1,272,656 for the project, and Federal funds of $607,888 also have been made available. Third Heart Trans.lant Patien Complication Not Vital CAPE TOWN, South Africa (RP) Doctors A hospital spokesman said a smaller at Groote Schuur Hospital yesterday re- amount of fluid had been present around moved fluid that developed around the Blaiberg's new heart for several days, but transplanted heart of Dr. Philip Blaiberg x-rays yesterday morning showed much and said they "do not take a serious view larger amounts and the sac enclosing the of this complication." heart had to be tapped. It was a setback, nevertheless, for the Blaiberg developed a slight throat in -58-year-old retired dentist, who became the fection, but it also was not considered ser world's third human heart transplant patient ions, according . to Dr. Marthinus C. Botha, Jan. 2. A hospital bulletin said "the patient's the immunologist on the heart surgery team condition is not as good today as yesterday." at Groote Schuur. Botha said the infection was being The hospital said formation of fluid treated with said a gargle. . . in the pericardial sac was not a sign Blai- Botha Blaiberg is in better shape berg's body was rejecting the alien heart. • nine days after the . operation . than the first A member of Dr. Christiaan N. Barnard's heart transplant patient, .Louis Washkansky,. transplant team said development of fluid who developed pneumonia and died 18 days around the heart was not uncommon in after his Dec. 3 operation. open heart surgery cases. The doctor said drugs being given Blai- The hospital . asid a needle was inserted berg to combat the body's natural tendency into the paricardium and the fluid removed. to reject foreign organs are being reduced "After this procedure, he feels better," because they also suppress the body's ability the bulletin said. to fight infection. Eisenhower To Get New Wing rtevised preliminary plans forming a courtyard with the Funds received from the for an addition to the Helen existing building. friends and family of the late It will include an auditorium Mrs. Eisenhower and from the Eakin Eisenhower Chapel have with approximately 200 seats, University will finance the con been approved by the Univer- to the south of the new addi- struction. • sity Board of Trustees. tion. There will also be a The project was designed by The addition, which will have series of meeting rooms for Harbeson, Hough, Livingston use in the religious program, and Larson, of Philadelphia, two floors, will be built to as well as offices for the co- the firm which designed the the west of the religious cen- ordinator of religious affairs original building, completed in ter, extending to the south and and religious counselors. 1956. ANNOUNCING THE AIR FORCE ROTC The Air Force ROTC "Two-Year Program" offers an opportunity for college students to obtain an Air Force commission with just two years of ROTC ,attendance. These Iwo years of Air Force ROTC begin with a six-week field training course at an Air Force Base during the summer of 1968. At the completion of the summer training the student begins six terms (two academic years) of AFROTC. All male students in good academic standing and good health are eligible to apply for the program. The two years (six terms) of AFROTC may be taken in any of the following combinations: Junior and Senior years, Senior year and grad school, or two years during grad school. If you would like to discuss the opportunities of the two-year program, see Technical Sergeant C. Smith on the Ist floor of Wagner Building. The deadline for applications is January 22, 1968. Jazz Club Jazz Club Jazz Club Jazz Club Jazz Club Jazz Club Jazz Club Jazz Club' at a k! ri THE JAZZ CLUB n I N a E" i " w Will hold a drawing for the winner of the XI FIRST ANNUAL JAZZ CLUB POLL I. a 1 N Monday, January 15th on Kent Hazen's N N n , N D F .i Cr Jazz Panorama Show XI t. 1 u (WDFM, 91.1 FM, 810 E p.m.) . A a" ri -1 w The winner will receive complimentary tickets to all Jazz Club Concerts this year. al a a V N N P 4 Nsm. TUNE IN, YOU MAY WIN --- (1, -I a. Op zzar gap zzar (IND zzar cm zzar gap zzar clap UM' qnp ZZOf gm ZZI3f To Study Drugs urn is being planned for the end of January. It will be a means of ex changing opinions and information be tween experts on various aspects of the drug question and members of the community who support or oppose drug control legislation, he said. Ernest C. Pollard, head of the De partment of Biophysics, will speak be fore the next YAF meeting, on Wednes day, Jan. 17, in 213-214 HUB at 7:30 p.m. He will present his views on the legitimate and illegitimate forms of "student protest" and will chair a dis cussion to follow. The public is invited to attend. YAF book sales, according to Ken Anderer are going to be expanded to locations on campus other than the TWO-YEAR PROGRAM THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA ground floor of the HUB: "We're plan ning to add several new titles to our selection of paperbacks. Students will have an opportunity," he said, "to buy copies of William F. Buckley's The Unmaking of a Mayor,' and we hope to offer Ann Rand's 'Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal.' " Chairman Cooper listed as future programs a talk by a recent refugee from Czechoslavakia, a lecture by for mer Progressive Labor Movement mem ber Phillip Luce, faculty speakers on the American political situation, condi tions behind the Iron Curtain, and "discussions relating to the interplay between society's demands and indi vidual freedom," he said. o The New York governor's ac searchers Find tion could come in the signing —or the nonsigning—'of officio , vits required to keep his name out of primaries in Wisconsin, • Nebraska and Oregon. This is- Marine Transpor sue may come to a head Feb. 29, the final day to withdraw his name if it is entered in the BATTLE MOUNTAIN, Nev. (JP) Searchers, strug- g •• gling up a snowblanketed mountain into an almost-inac- LICiIStS t`lOt cessible canyon, yesterday found the burned wreck of a Marine transport plane with all aboard dead. The - four-engine plane. carrying 18 to 30 Marines, crashed in a blizzard Wednesday afternoon near the peak To Reveal of 9,978-foot Mt. Tobin, the highest point in the desolate area of northeastern Nevada 32 miles southwest of Battle Mountain. Wally Swanson and Gene Corbridge of the Bureau of Bare Truth Land Management, who first spotted the wreck shortly after dawn, reached the spot at 12;50 p.m. PST and radioed back that there were "no survivors. Everything is burned to a crisp except the tail." It took the two men six hours on foot to cover three miles up the mountain and into the V-shaped ravine near the top where the blackened hulk lay. Forced down by heavy icing on its wings. the plane had crashed on its belly, then slip 400 feet backwards into the depression and burst into flames. Observation Confirmed Swanson and Corbridge confirmed earlier aerial ob servation that the craft was virtually intact but bunred out. "Everything on the plane was charred. and the black stood out against the white snow," said Marilyn Newton, photographer of the Nevada State Journal after flying over the wreck which was at the 8,600 foot level The nose, the wings and the tail section look like they are still attached to the fuselage. It was burned competely." The plane crashed within an hour after its pilot radioed at 1:50 p.m. Wednesday that icing conditions were forcing him down below the 10,000-foot level. The C 54 was en route to Seattle, Wash., from Buckley Air Field in Denver, polo., which reported 18 men aboard. It was on a 10-day Western tour from Quantico Marine Base in Virginia. Quantico said 20 Marines were on the flight. Denver said none left there. _ - _ The wreckage was found at dawn yesterday, after the blizzard subsided. The story of the death of the plane was told by radio and by ranchers in the sparsely settled mountain country. The pilot was flying on instruments because of the blizzard. At 1:50 p.m. Wednesday, in his last message, he told the Federal Aviaton Administration in Salt Lake City that "I am losing altitude at 10,000 feet and at present time unable to maintain 12,000." Twelve thousand feet was his minimum scheduled altitude. Then, between 2 and 3 p.m. rancher Robert Hodges heard a "boom and a roar." Because of the snowstorm he could see nothing. The plane had hit the highest peak in the area, a steep snow-covered peak towering over a valley of sagebrush. DEAREST: I can't wait to hear from you, so note the Zip Code in my addrew. And use it when you Write to me! Zip Code really moves the mail. "Largest in State" Radio, Ranchers "EMPERORS" Rockefeller's Candidacy Depends on Romney WASHINGTON (AP) Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York expects to await the re sults of the March 12 New Hampshire primary before tak ing any final action on a GOP presidential nomination draft movement. If Michigan Gov. George Romney fails to make a satis factory showing in New Hamp shire, Rockefeller then will have to decide whether to be come the candidate of Repub lican moderates against former Vice President Richard M. Nix on. • HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) Devereux Deakin isn't worried that residents of a proposed high rise apartment next door to his nudist camp will see the naked truth. He's afraid they might teel compelled to photo graph it. So, to thwart any would-be, shutterbugs, Deakin, manager' of the Coral Lakes Health Re sort, decided yesterday to plant some "high rise trees." The problem arose when Hol-1 lywood, Inc., a giant develop ment corporation, announced' Tuesday it would erect several five-story buildings about 500' feet from the nine-acre resort where naked members romp through the woods, play tennis' and volleyball and swim. "People might have telephoto lenses and sell pictures," Dea kin said in an interview. "I wouldn't mind but I sure don't want some guy selling my fire's picture around town." Faced with the possible prob lem of nosey neighbors, Deakin said he felt the trees will insure privacy for his 1,000 members. "Once we get the trees up the only way they could see us would be to fly over in a heli copter," he said. Deakin said he received of fers to sell the nine-acre site but took no action. "I don't care what they do. They can't push us out," he said of Hollywood, Inc. "The camp has been here for more than five years now." TIM COUNCIL CONCERT HUB BALLROOM Donation 75c with Gym Meet Stub —40 c Awaits First Primary Presents THE FABULOUS FRIDAY, JAN. 12 Visconsin free-for-all test on gon and Maryland draft drives April 2. and failed to dissuade those in- Withdrawal Dates However, he would have until governor cid not go beyond his March 22 to withdraw from the stereotyped statement that he May 28 primary in Oregon, is not a candidate and does not where a draft movement al- want to become one, and he left ready has been organized for the draft question open by re him. peating that if it should arise There is clear evidence that at the convention "I will then the Oregon move and the action face the situation," of Gov. Spiro T. Agnew in A cross-check of political launching a Maryland draft leaders turned up both support movement have put the New for and opposition to Rockefel- York Governor on a hot pout- ler. Most of the opposition was ical spot. from the South, where the New Despite Rockefeller's predic- York governor is no favorite of tions that Romney will spring Republicans who prefer either an upset in New Hampshire, Nixon or Gov. Ronald Reagan the gloom among his associates of California. about the Michi' about Michigan governor's chances is If Romney flounders, they think the heat on Rockefeller to become a canJidate—which al ready has produced offers to back draft movements in many states outside the South—will be intensified. Percy Discounted The Rockefeller camp is said to have discounted the possi bility that Sen. Charles H. Percy of Illinois is likely to be come a major factor in the GOP nomination battle. They have read the record of the moderates' delay in getting behind a candidate against Bar ry Goldwater in 1964 and feel that if the reluctant Rockefeller is to get into the 1968 race he cannot wait for a draft at the Aug. 5 Miami Beach conven tion. Rockefeller's associates were notified in advance of the Ore- NELSON A. ROCKEFELLER -- ALL NIGHT BOWLING EVERY SAT. KITE 12:30.5:00 A.M. $2 Per Person FOUR MINIMUM PER LANE CENTRE LANES 1600 NORTH ATH'ERTON Please call 238.1431 for reservations _ also, 8 billiard tables available volved from acting JAMMY 912:30 PAGE THREE But the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers