WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1968 Vance Reports No Progress SEOUL (AP) President Johnson’s trouble shooter, Cy riu R. Vance, had "rough going” yesterday in talks with South Korean leaders, Korean sources reported. Vance met for almost three hours with Premier Chung ll kwon and top Cabinet ministers on problems r ised by the crisis involving South Korea’s wor ries over Its defense posture in the face of Communist North Korean threats. The sources reported little progress was made. Vance planned yet another meeting with Chung today and was expected later in the day to pay his sec ;nd visit to Presi dent Chung Hee Park. Whether that, would be Vance's final conference here nobody in authority was willing to say. The atmosphere of strain had been produced by developments since Jan. 21, when a North Ko rean Communist commando team invaded Seoul in an at tempt to assassinate President Park, and by North Korean capture of the U.S.S. Pueblo. South Koreans planned to be Notes: Fuel, Music, Memory, Pascal “Reprocessing of Power row in 101 Chambers on Reactor Fuel” will be the “Models for Short-Term topic of tomorrow’s Depart- Memory.” ment of Nuclear Engineering Robert J. Nelson, professor Colloquium. of romance languages, will The session will be held lAect“r® 1 A ect “ r ® T ‘‘Pascal’s Finished from Ito 2 p.m. in 158 Wil- £f°A ogy T o at 8 P# 1 ' tomo / r ° w lard. ’ in , laurel Room of the rnnd u-tnr C ' IT [ US ' C A ..group of architecture conductor and record colum- students will present on lv SP T> ak «°j- A a°V s » slides and film "Magikal Mys tics and the Recording Arts tery Tour—The Sights and . tom ° rr °T l n ! he Sounds of Europe.” Hetzel Union Building As- The program will be held sembly Room. at 8 p.m. Friday in the exhi-1 Bennet B. Murdock Jr., of bition hall of Hammond. ! the University of Toronto, All the above lectures are will speak at 8 p.m. tomor- open to the public. APPLICATIONS FOR BOOK EXCHANGE CANDIDATE Will Be Available At The Store t . ' Ground Floor HUB WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14 ONLY FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORES MAY APPLY present today at a full public meeting of the Military Armis tice Commission at the truce village of Panmunjom, request ed by the U.N. Command to discuss North Korean violation of the armistice. The presence of South Korean defense officials at thr meeting with Vance indicated that high on the agenda was South Ko rea’s defense needs. The South Koerans insist that these needs are far more than the Ameri cans concede. South Korea wants a better air force and m.vy, now greatly mismatched by Communist North Korea. The army wants modernized arms because much of this country’s weaponry is of World War II vintage. The Sout'i Koreans were pic tured as in a mood to tell Vance —and through him Johnson— that this country would act in dependently on defense meas ures unless the United States recognized what Seoul con-, siders ,to be a serious threat implied by the assassination attack on the South Korean president. YOU WE HAVE TURTLENECKS! 40 Pop and Op NOW Prints at HUB AN EXHIBITION of pop and op prints by Jim Dine, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol and other top pop artists will be on display through Feb. 26 in the main gallery of the Hetzel Union Building. The prints represent the newest in techniques and materials, including aluminum foil and blown vinyl. The gallery is open daily from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. ' 19 Pound Boy Bom in Paraguay ASUNCION, Paraiv.ary (AP) The mother, Mercedez Benitez, —A 19.6-pound boy was born, to 42, died of complications from a woman in the town of Puerto childbirth, but her son was Embalse, officials reported, reported in good health. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• For Resuifs-Use Collegian Classifieds iThe Fall Pledge Class Sicpna o£)elta wishes to thank the sisters r \jj' for their pledge formal jP*t ft CL __ f'Af i r GOTTA' BE FAMOUS FOR SOMETHIN'... COTTON... $ 1.99 ACRYLIC.. ‘3.99 8ANL0N...‘6.95 INTERLOCK 0RL0N...‘7.95 DOUBLE KNIT ORLON... ‘8.95 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA -4-? /f..". rift nits Ay'e, over 1,000 sweaters on 222 W. Hamilton Avenue, State College Open Monday thru Friday, 10 a.m. 'til 9 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. 'til 0 p.m. NEXT TO THE STATE STORE The Daily Collegian Bring a Pencil Draft Boards Take Hard Line on Objectors WASHING! uN APX The two national organizations that counsel conscientious objectors to military service say draft boards are taking a harder line toward such young men. “War’ psychology has made it more difficulty to get .a C-0 classification," says Arle Ta tum, executive secretary of the Central Committee for Con scientious Objectors. “Very lately we’ve been get ting some cases that seem to indicate a growing hard line,” adds J. Harold Sherk, execu tive secretary of the National Service Board for Religious Ob jectors. Selective Service says there haj been no increase in the pro portion of draft registrants holding C-0 exemptions. But it ha no figures to show how many such exemptions are granted in any given year or how many men apply for one and are refused. Handles Vietnam Protesters Tatum’s organization, based in Philadelphia, has become linked to some V'H-'-n. pro tests because it will-help selec tive objectors—young men op posed specifically to the Viet nam war. The National Service Board, op n rating a block from the White House, is more religion oriented than the Central Com mittee and does not accent the principle of selective objection. Business Candidate Exam TONIGHT! 6:30 P.M. 118 Sackett Bldg. The Central Committee is nanced mostly by individual spendim $150,000 this year to donations, counsel objectors, the Service The National Service Board Boarc $53,000. Both organiza- is financed about half by tions mail out thousands of ch.rches, half by individuals, pieces of literature to inquiring says Sherk. It handles many young men, but each says it cases involving-Menncnites ana uoesn’t try to tell anyone what Brethern. to say to his draft board. Selective Service says ii pro- Two Classifications ’ vides no literature for men Selective Service uses two classifications for C-Os. It can give a 1-0 classification to a man who for religious reasons opposes any induction into mili tary service. The . ran can be drafted for two years of civilian national-service work, how ever, for example as, a hospital orderly. A man with a I-A-0 classifi cation can be inducted into military service but not re quired to bear arms. These men often serve >s medics. Selective Service says there are 1.7 conscientious objectors pe-' 1,000 registrants, the same as during the Korean War. At th- end of the year, 11,'Ml men were classified I-O, An addi tional 6,367 were working in national-service jobs in lieu of induction and 6,830 hr 1 com pleted such work. The Penta gon says about 4,000 men now in service ljeld I-A-0 classifi cations. Tatum says the Central Com mittee has 3,'00 active cases ar has tripled its counseling caseload since 1965. It is .fi- PAGE .FIVE seeking conscientious objector classifications. It gives local draft boards o guidelines be cause, a spokesman said, too many religions and beliefs are involved. Draft law requires a consci entious jbjector to base his ob jections on “reason of religions training and belief.” "t ex cludes “essential, political, so ciological of philosop 1. ic a 1 views, or a merely personal moral code” as grounds for conscientious objection. 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