Very warm and pleasant today with m ?® tl y s “ n ny skies; high of 67. Continued m Jnn'Sht, skies becoming overcast with light rain in 'the early morning hours, low 53. Rain showers Thursday turning cooler and windy with falling temperatures by afternoon, morning nigh of 57: Outlook Friday, mostly sunny but cold, high of 37. Vol. 72, No. 97 Chomsky for Keddie NOAM CHOMSKY, noted linguist and New Left theoretician, speaking on behalf of Wells Keddie last night in SchwabrKeddie. leftrwho earlier expressed his thanks to the students and faculty who support him in his quest for a review of his tenure denial, listens intently. Chomsky speaks of political purges By BARB SNYDER Collegian Senior Reporter Noam Chomsky, radical theoretician of bothdinguists and the New Left, spoke last night on the “large scale political purge” taking place largely among junior, faculty members in the nation’s universities. I Speaking in Schwab before about 650 students who came to hear the Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor speak on the Wells Keddie tenure denial and related issues, Chomsky gave example after example of political firings. The firings, he said ran the gamut of universities from the lesser-known University of Nebraska . to elite Stanford University, which saw fit to dissolve its Institute for Latin American Studies, which reported the forthcoming Bay of Pigs invasion, but saw 'as necessary its Hoover Institute dedicated to “demonstrating the evils of the doctrine of Karl Marx.” These political firings, Chomsky said, form an “obvious and pervasive pat tern” a phenomenon which has been reenacted many times before in American history. Chomsky injected a note of optimism when he said he believes “there is a possibility-in; the United- States-and in- American universities that there are grounds to overcome this latest on slaught of state power.” He added however, the spirit of op timism is countered-by the. “general repressive tendencies of the last few years which have wiped out or greatly weakened what Chomsky considers many of the important political elements in our society, such as the Black Pan thers. ’ Citing as an example both the con tinual indictment and imprisonment' New group to prod abortion commission Two local women have formed an make recommendations to help, in the Abortion Action Committee to put changes.” pressure on the Governor’s Abortion Kathy Domenig (graduaterEnglish- Law Commission to,.repeal state State College), one of the organizers, Abortion statute's!": . encouraged persons to testify by con- „ . , ~, tacting Mary Stack, the chairman of the The committee will . .. commission, at Room 505, Governor’s minute film on abortion at 8 tornght in ~ office> Harrisburg, Pa,, 17120. “We’d the Hetzel Union Building like to get people to write letters too,” Room, at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Wesley she F Foundation, 245 E: College " The flyer also encourages people to B:3oand 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday wr j te to Louis Heilman, deputy assistant at the Jawbone, 415 E. r oster-Ave. secretary for population affairs', A flyer distributed committee Department of Health Education and calls the state’s present law “cruel,.. Welfare, Washington, D.C., to protest a' irrational and discriminatory” and plan which would stop funding of family encourages private citizens to testify planning clinics which do abortion before the commission ' "to hear and referral or counseling. Saily doUpgt 6 pages. itograph by Noel Roche without bail of Black Panther leaders and the Chicago “gestapo style assassinations” of Panthers Fred Hampton and Mark Clark, Chomsky asked, “what other country .has had an incident like that in the last generation?” “And although it was unique,” Chomsky added, “it was not all that unique if you know the details of what is going on every day in the inner-city.” He said that in Roxbury, a black ghetto m Boston, the police broke into the home of a man they thought to be a Black Panther. They beat and bloodied him in bed, then arrested him for murder. And although someone found the bloodied sheets, the press covered up the question of police brutality, he said. - This case, and many others like it, “are, the real cases of repression in American society,” Chomsky stressed. “Those who have the power will use it to set the terms” by which certain questions can be posed, Chomsky said. For example, is )t valid to prosecute seven people who allegedly plotted to kidnap Henry Kissinger, , or rather should we prosecute. Henry Kissinger “one of the mass murderers of this society.,!! who helped in the for mulation of plans for the Laos invasion? Chomsky asked. Exploding the myth of the “neutrality” of the American university in politics, Chomsky pointed out that at his university, faculty are involved in the design of the .“electronic battlefield” of the Vietnam War. “At MIT these crimes obviously _hav.en’.t .-been, looked into, but. the students have been evicted from the University .for occupying offices in protest of this,” Chomsky said. “Power sets the terms once again,” he mused. “Universities are in no sense the free marketplace of ideas they claim to be,” - Chomsky said. Consequently, if a faculty -member tries to counter this, he is considered a “dangerous-radical-or a '. dreamer,” and gotten rid of. Students for Keddie is calling for student support in the form of a rally,' 12:30 p.m., Wednesday, March 8, at Old"’” 4 Main; when they present the 9500 student signatures' in support of Keddie to University President Oswald. • Keddie . took • the stage for a few moments to thank the people who sup port him. “I do- want to thank you,” Keddie said. “I may not have another chance.” ... Published by Students of The Pennsylvania State University University Park, Pennsylvania Wednesday, March 1,1972 Legislature agrees on $2 million Hershey funding passes By GARY MAYK Collegian Senior Reporter Appropriations for the state’s medical schools finally have passed the state legislature,after months of debate over enrollment and restrictions on medical graduates. Penn State’s Hershey Medical Center pulled in $2,217,000 after the Senate’s Monday vote and the House of Representatives’ vote yesterday on a compromise version of Senate Bill 1127. awarded $5,233,000 to Temple; $3,994,000 to the University of Pittsburgh and $2,613,000 to the University of Penn- Student legal advisor resigns; Gov. Shapp ciitdhe figure to $2.3 million «'«' in his recommendation to the legislature _.. ' ? last summer. When appropriations bills • ~W ■ ~m ~m • I*} ~M~M ‘ 9 were introduced, the Senate included' jTw /yW /)TI I C Of V) /t/Y Q## /mm nothing for Hershey, but the House 9m (hss9 9 O/M J. UI>C ’ • v passed $2 ; 3 million. Later, the Senate came up with a $l.B million figure When the bills hit an impasse, Sen. Benjamin R. Donolow, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, garnered approval of a plan to consider medical bills separately from other state related appropriations. Other University allocations passed in August. ' In December, a House-Senate con ference committee was named to con sider medical appropriations. The compromise bill arrived at a figure $141,000 less than the House version and $403,000 more than the Senate version. Would have stripped federal court power Senate reverses WASHINGTON (API The Senate, version of the Griffin rider or other with most of its absentees back in town, stringent antibusing amendments still reversed itself yesterday and rejected could be offered. the Griffin amendment to strip- the After rejecting the Griffin amend federal courts of power to issue busing ment, the Senate voted 63 to 34 to adopt orders in school desegregation cases. again the plan offered by the Senate The vote against it was 50 to 47, which leaders, Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., and compared with the 43-40 tally last Friday Hugh Scott, R-Pa., as a compromise, to adopt the proposal of Sen. Robert P. Later it sealed this into the bill 66-29. tariffin’ R-Mich. It contains some mild restrictions on Three of the five Democratic busing but does not challenge the power presidential contenders who had been of the federal courts to continue to.issue absent Friday returned for the test and busing orders where the judge decides furnished the margin of victory for civil these are required to end state-imposed rights advocates to reject Griffin. school segregation. The victory was not final, however. The three Democratic,.-hopefuls who, The Senate will continue to debate the voted were Sens. Edmund S.'Muskie of higher education-school desegregation Maine, Hubert H. Humphrey of Min bill up' to 2 p.m. today and another nesota and George S. McGovern of South Apartment gets By RICK MISEJKA • Collegian Staff Writer ~ College Borough Manager, Woskob A new apartment complex to be the received a special exemption from the tallest structure in State College, has Zoning Hearing Board since the been welcomed with mixed emotions structure will exceed the 65-foot limit set throughout the community. up by the board by almost 40 feet. The 12-story building, to be located on Fa j rbanks defended the action savine East Beaver Avenue' between McAllister ’ f a^J Street and Locust Lane will be con- such a structure makes better use of Street ana Dane, win De con , d since jt wjll be cons tructed near Se developer ’ ' campus and should hel P alleviate man * building 3 will be a steel frame, of the parking problems presently facing structure with dark brick walls and tfte ® ' exposed white panels. It will contain a He added “the building perfectly dark steel frame parking area with a implements a model of the area patio over more than one half of the previously set up for the downtown second level of the parking deck district." Up, up and away Although Hershey’s request has met ■severe, opposition each, year since its introduction, all, medical appropriations faced stiff legislative consideration this year. Senate Educatiort'Committee .member Patrick J. Stapleton, D- Indiana, tacked an amendment onto all medical bills forcing medical graduates to repay the Commonwealth if they left the state to practice. Because of the controversial nature of the bill, however, it has been introduced separately in the Senate. It is being considered- by the ' Benjamin Novak, who has been counseling University students ,with legal problems since FallGTerm, '1970, has announced 1 his- resignation as Student Legal Advisor, effective March 31. Novak has declined to comment on his resignation. The new postition was created in Fall, 1970 to serve students needing legal aid. According to a spokesman from the Organization of Town Independent Students, as many as 10 to 20 people have been referred to Noyak each day. Novak counsels students until a According to Carl Fairbanks, State —photograph by Bob Kochman STATE COLLEGE’S biggest apartment developer, Alex . view of anotheyiearly completed Vyascob project on East Wascob, has begun excavation on East Beaver Avenue Beaver, Cedarbrook Apartmeijfs, -directly ‘adjacent to r~ _ for what will become the borough’s tallest apartment Beaver Hill. When Wascob’s newest project is completed, building. —Wascob, who developed Parkway Plaza, walking on Beaver Avenue will become,.in the words of Fairmount Hill and Beaver Hill; received special per- one borough official,'"like walking between two huge mission Jo exceed the building tieight limit. At right is a walls of brick.” Senate Appropriations Committee. During Monday’s Senate session, debate arose over the accessibility of the Hershey Medical Center to Penn sylvania residents. Hostility developed when several senators complained their constituents were qualified to attend Pennsylvania medical schools, but were turned away in favor of non-residents. Sen. Joseph D. Ammerman, D- Clearfield, told the Senate President Oswald had pledged Hershey would accept no more than 15 per cent out-of situation becomes serious enough that civil action is necessary. At that time, he must recommend that the student retain a lawyer, because he cannot represent or “counsel” students in court Many of the cases'Novak handles deal with apartments. According- to N.ovak, these cases usually arisejrom “am biguities in the law.” M. Lee Upcraft, Dean for Student Affairs, under whom Novak works, said he has done no thinking yet about hiring another legal advisor. “First I want to decide how to provide for students’ legal problems Spring Term. Then we’ll have busing rider Dakota. Each voted against Griffin and describe the Mansfieft-Scott com for_the Mansfield-Scott compromise. promise as meaningless. Some said it Henry Jackson of Washington, actually would produce more busing, campaigning in Florida,, said the The compromise, would leave it up to Griffin amendment is unconstitutional local school boards to decide whether to and the Mansfield-Scott ineffectual. agk federal funds for busing to carry out Opponents of the Griffin rider had desegregation orders and would bar use described-it as-an-unconstitutional at- of federal money for this purpose, when tempt to deprive the courts of the right to the busing r would risk the health of the use an important remedy for school children or impinge-on the educational segregation. process. , ( The rider had a second provision It.also-would prohibit federal officials which would have killed a key section of from inducing local officials to use the 1964 Civil Rights Act. busing where students would be moved This provision would have forbidden from good schools to poor schools, and it federal officials to withhold or threaten would sthy until all appeals had been to withhold federal funds to induce use of' exhausted the implementation of any busing in a desegregation effort. court order for busing across school Southern -senators continued to district lines.- mixed reviews Borough Councilman Allen Df Pat terson said he was extremely reluctant to see-this building approved. “If per mission is given for a 12-story structure then what is. to stop construction of 16 and 18-story buildings in the future?” Patterson said he felt a : 65-foot-limit should be adequate for" any building in State College, and anything over this would “stick out like a skyscraper.” He pointed out the highest ladder possessed by the fire department merely reaches 85 feet while, the building will exceed. 100 feet. Franklin Cook, head of the zoning board which approved the high-rise, said Woskob received approval on the basis BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE ♦ . 4cen.tsj>aid - r T State College,-pa. 16801 / Permit No.“lb"" * state students. Because of assurances by Stapleton and Donolow that the situation would improve, the medical.bills passed the Senate with only light opposition. Oswald’s position had an apparent influence on the Senate, as .the Hershey bill received the only unanimous Senate vote. Sen. Edward Zemprelli, D- Allegheny, who voted against all but the Hershey bill, congratulated Oswald for his stand. The medical school package passed the House without debate. . to recruit along those lines” Upcraft said. Raymond 0. Murphy, vice president for student affairs, said “It is my un derstanding that Novak will be teaching a course in business law in the college of Business Administration Spring Term.” Many administrators were unaware of the resignation. Novak received his bachelor’s degree from Penn State in 1965 and his law degree from Georgetown University in 1968. In 1964, he served as President of the Undergraduate Student Govern ment. that the building fulfilled the “proper setback" specifications. “All we are interested in is the moral and general welfare, health and safety of the com munity.” " - Cook later pointed out the board was not unanimously in favor of the buildings construction. He said “one member felt that if present building trends continue, walking on Beaver Avenue will be like walking between two huge walls of brick.” Cook said he believed if buildings are made more attractive through design and landscaping, high rise structures could be made more acceptable in, the State College area. wen cents