Senate ousts Denenberg from PUC HARRISBURG (AP) Herbert Denenberg, who built a nationwide reputation as a consumer advocate during four, years in state govern ment, was ousted yesterday from the Public Utility Commission. The 28-22 Senate vote against Denenberg touched off charges over who was to blame for the loss. He fell 12 votes short of the 34 needed for (confirmation to an eight year term on the regulatory agency. Dpnenberg and some senators charged that Shapp placed a role in the loss by forcing the issue in the Senate. Shapp replied angrily at art afternoon news con ference that Denenberg had twisted statements and was unwilling to accept the defeat. "He lost now, would have lost' in February, when I put my; thumb in the dike, and would have lost in the near future, primarily because he is totally incapable of working within a system which he completely alienated.” Shapp declared. "[To be presented now with the; kind of attacks he has leveled at me, in deliberate distortion of the facts, is regrettable," Shapp said. "I do hope that those who seeft to place the blame elsewhere, including Mr. Denenberg, look to the man himself." "How is it that everyone else is always responsible for his achievements. ’' Shapp praised Denenberg for helping to bring about change during his tenure as insurance commissioner. But he added, Denenberg could use some lessons in temperritent. * Shapp said he reached the end of the road" with SHILCWFARmS y 3R£*efLs ft H33GSTVDR2S ET~ 1 r gpgNil J 4:30-C,'-0Q moN-sflT 3 Chevrolet Impala 2 dr. H.T. 6-stick 1969 Plymouth Fury 2-dr. H.T. Aut, P.S. 1968 Ford Torino i 2-dr. Sedan, 8-aut. P.S. 1959 Mercury 2-dr. Aut. 1965 Buick Skylark G.S. 2-dr. H.T. Aut, Buckets 1967 Opel Kadette Sedan, 4-speed,good condition 1967 Ford Falcon 2-dr. Sedan Automatic a CLARK MOTOR COMPANY Sales and Service Irrfperial - Chrysler - Plymouth - Valiant - Jeep 1080 E. College Aye. Denenberg in a letter he sent to senators and the press. In it. Denenberg charged that' Shapp had broken his promise to keep him on the PUC. ' "Mr. Denenberg had no such promise and*he knows it,’’Shappsaid. | Shapp said hej worked to keep the nomination in committee in Febrhary, hut that a pending change in the constitution changed the strategy. | The amendment, which must be decided by the voters in May, would end the governor's interim ap pointment power, which he used to name Denenberg. The nomination had to be acted on now because iDenenberg would eventually have been forced off the PUC by this summer, the i governor argued. i Shapp did not jmake clear why . Denenberg; could not serve out the interim term without a Senate vote. Uncharacteristically, Denenberg had no immediate comment. But he promised to meet with the: press this morning. Shapp noted that lawmakers are still smarting from the no-fault insurance battle two years ago, when Denenberg accused them of conflict of interest. The governor j continues to maintain that he supported Denenberg to the hilt.” But Denenberg and some senators said Shapp pressed for a Senate yote despite warnings that Denenberg would go down to defeat. At Denenberg’s urging, Shapp asked Senate leaders Tuesday for another delay, but Democratic floor leader Thomas Nolan, a Denenberg foe. refused. He said the governor’s request didn’t seem as sincere as ‘ his previous ones. In a surprise move, Nolan brought the nomination before the Rules Committee Tuesday and called * the Senate into a special morning session yesterday for a final vote. “I’m not going to say anything,” said Nolan after the vote. l ‘The result speaks for itself.’’ Sen. Henry Messinger, D- Lehigh, a Denenberg sup porter, said Ihe.- fight was futile from the beginning. He spoke bitterly of Shapp's maneuvering through the controversy. “I don It like to be lied to with a straight face,” he said. “If things continue the way they have in the beginning of the second administration the governor is going to run into more anefmore problems.. Sen. Joseph Ammerman, chairmah of the sub committee on executive nominations, said Shapp was obviously intent on disposing Denenberg, but through the Senate. ! Republican floor leader Richard Frame said if Shapp did have that motive, then it was the right one. "By experience apd tem perment,;he (Denenberg) is unqualified for tffe position to which he aspiS'es," Frame said. Another opponent. Sen. Edwardj Zempreili, D- Allegheny, said he wants Denenberg’s replacement to be consumer oriented, but from western Pennsylvania. "1 think it's an insult, to the people of Pennsylvania to think that there is only one consumer advocate in' a commonwealth of 12 million people." he said. LOUNGE CAR 2ND FLOOR THE TRAIN STATION Backgammon satmtims *795 *795 *595 *lOO *650 *395 *695 234-4321 Prosecution strengthens case against Connally WASHINGTON (UPl)—Wa tergate prosecutors yesterday produced jlO technical wit nesses in an attempt to bolster testimony by their key witness Jake Jacobsen that he and John Connally con spired to ; cover up a $lO,OOO payoff to the former Treasury secretary 1 The prosecution was ex pected to complete its case Tuesday against Connally, who is charged with two counts of bribery in con nection with payoffs from milk producers in return for helping convince the Nixon administration to increase milk price supports. Jacobsen testified earlier that he paid the money to c Connally in 1971 and two years later conspired to hide ihe transaction from Watergate investigators. Most of the 10 witnesses were called to support Jacobsen’s contention that Connally gave him $lO,OOO in a cigar box to replace the payoff funds. Seven federal reserve bank officials from across the nation testified that the actual money was put in circulation prior to Oct. 26,(1973, the date Jacobsen said Connally gave him the money. If even one of the 280 bills that make up the $lO,OOO was not in circulation at that time, it Would discredit Jacobsen’s story. Prosecution spokesmen said five more federal reserve bank officials would be among their closing wit nesses today in an attempt to University Park Calendar Anril Ift OC\ IQ7C Items to be included in this calendar should be sent to the editor, I* Iw f w flaom 312 Old Main, by Thursday of the week preceding publication Special Events Thursday, Apr. 10 Poetry reading by Michael S. Harper, Brown University, 8 p.m., Room 112 Kern, sponsored by de partment of English, Black Cu/turaJ Cen- ter, and Graduate Student Association. Thursday, Apr. 10 ■— FSHA 410 dinner, ‘‘Mexico,” 5:30 p.m,, Maple Room, Hu- man Development, Reservations re quired, 865-7441. c Thursday, Apr. 10*— GSA workshop, 7:30 p.m.. Room 101 Kern. Thursday-Saturday, Apr. 10-12 NAIAD Show, Natatorium, B p.m. Tickets'at 105 White and Natatorium. Friday, Apr. 11 Artists Series, Newark Boys Chorus, 8:30 p.m., University Audi- torium. j Friday, Apr. 11 Folk and Square Dance Roundup, 7:30 p.m., north gym, White. Friday, Apr. 11 Commonsplace Cof feehouse, 8 p.m.; Room 112 Kern. Stan Sheperd. Friday, Apr. 11 Campus 4-H Club dancer 7.30 pm., HUB baUroom : Friday, Apr. 11 Operation Skywatch, 7:30-10 p.m., Davey Lab. weather per mitting. *lf skies not clear, postpone to next night. Friday-Saturday, Apr. 11-12 Sports: Nittany Lion Track and Field Relays, Beaver Stadium, 1 p.m., Friday. Satur day, 9 a.m. Saturday, Apr. 12 Dr. Jane Faily, clin ical psychologist,, University of North Carolina, on “A New World Society,” ' 8.30 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Sponsored by the Baha’i Students Association. , Seminars Thursday, Apr, 10 —. Man-Environment Re lations, 4 p.m., Sl3l Human Develop ment. Dr. Samuel Klausner, u. of Penn sylvania, on “Energy and the Poor.” Thursday, Apr. 10 Agronomy, 8:30 a.m . Room 111 Tyson. Richard Eshelman on “Concept of lon Activities in Soil-Plant Systems.” s Thursday, Apr. 10 Ph©/cs and Astron omy, joint colloquium, 3:35 p m., Room 117 Osmond. Edward E. Harrison, Uni versity of MasachusettsC on “Recent De velopments in Cosmology.” Thursday, Apr. 10 — : Chemistry, 12-45 p.m , Room *333 Whitmore. G. A. Somor jai. University of Berkeley, on “Elementary Steps of Catalytic Re actions on Meta) Surfaces.” Thursday, Apr. 10 Air Pollutipn Control. 2.20 p.m.. Room 145 Fehske. Floyd El der, Canadian Center for Inland Waters. Burlington, Ontario, Qp "Contamination of Water Bodies by Ai{ Pollution." Thursday, Apr. 10 Biophysics, 4 p.m.. Room 617 Life Science I. Dr. Harold Lecar, Laboratory of Biophysics, Na tional Institute of Nervous Diseases and Stroke, on' “Synthetic Excitable Mem branes.” Thursday, Apr. 10 Microbiology, 1 p.m., Room S 2 Frear. Katherine D. Thomp son on “The Defect in Translation of Poliovirus RNA at the Non-permissive Temperature;” and at 4 p.m., Room S 2 Frear, Dr. Nat Sternberg, NIH, Bethes da. on “Packaging of DNA by Bacterio phage Lambda." Thursday, Apr. 10 Transportation Insti tute. 2:20 pm, Room 189 Materials Re search Lab. Ronald Abler, geography, on “Communication vs. Travel.“ Thursday, Apr. 10 Statistics. 4 p.m.. Room 69 Willard. Lawrence A. Klimko, on “Maximum Likelihood Estimation with the Weibull and Lognormal Models.” Thursday, Apr. 10 Mathematics, 4 p.m.. Room tjls McAllister. Dr. G. Glauber man, on* algebra. Friday, Apr. 11 Physical Chemistry, 4 p.m.. Room 333 Whitmore. H. Handley, National Bureau of Standards, on “Mole cular Dynamics of Calculation of the Thermodynamic Properties of Fluids.” Monday. Apr. 14 New Communities, Architecture. 2 p.m., Room 322 Sackett. Dr: John Dickey. Director of Center for Urban and Regional Studies, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and e State Univer sity, on “Innovations on Transportation Systems for,New Towns.” Monday, Aprwl4 Genetics, 3:55 p.m., Room 11 v Tyson. Gordon Buswefl on “Techniques for Studying Anthocyanin Inheritance in PJanfs.” Monday, Apr. 14 Horticulture. 12.45 ' p.m., Room 10 Tyson. Frank A. Bfa*ich on “Cold Resistance and Injury in Woody Plants.” seal 5 what they call the “money chain’’ in the case. Defense lawyer 'Edward Bennett Williams questioned each of the bank men closely, and got one to admit that one of the bills may not have gone into circulation until Sept. 30, 1973, just a month before the alleged transaction. Jacobsen turned the $lO,OOO over to prosecutors in March of 1974, more than five months after he said he received it from Connally. It was one of two batches of bills totaling $lO,OOO each he claimed Connally gave him to replace the payoff money. Prosecutors suffered a setback when they apparently were prevented from reading to the jury portions of Con nally's testimony to the grand jury ' and the Senate Watergate committee. Prosecutor Frank Teurkheimer began to read Connally’s testimony but was prevented by an objection from defense lawyer Edward Bennett Williams. Then came two bench conferences' and one in the chambers of U.S. District Court Judge George L. Hart Jr. When court resumed, Teurkheimer called his next witness rather than reading the Connally testimony. Technical discussion of the money by three FBI agents and a Treasury Department official seemed to confuse the jurors and Hart, who said “I don’t understand all this.” Saturday, Apr. 12 Sports Golf. vs. George Washington, 1 p.m; Lacrosse, vs. Syracuse. 8 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, Apr. 12-13 Hetzel Un ion Board Arts and. Crafts Festival, noon to 4 p.m.. HUB ballroom. Items for sale. Saturday. Apr. 12 50th Annual Dairy Exposition dairy cattle judging,- 9:30 a.m. Sunday, Apr. 13 Penn State Glee Club and .Carlow College Choir. 1:30 p.m.. Music Bldg, recital hall. * Sunday, Apr. 13 Penn State Concert Blue Band program, 4 p.m.. University Auditorium Sunday, Apr. 13 Chapel Service. 11 * a.m., Eisenhower CNfepel. Rev. Leon B. Hall, Pastor, Black Christian Fellowship. Sunday, Apr. 13 Black Christian Fel lowship worship service. 11 a.m., Black Cultural Center. Monday, Apr. 14 Mary Ann Frazier, or gan recital, 8.30 p.m.. Music Bldg, re cital hall. Monday, Apr. 14 „ Library seminar on methodology and j problem solving, 7 p.m.. Room WlO6 Pattee Library. Monday, Apr. 14 Sports. Women’s soc cer and softball rotind robin tournaments begin; soccer 6 p.m . softball, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Apr. 15 Gallery talk by Carl Christian Dauterman, Metropolitan Mu seum of Art. on “The Royal Manufactory at Sevres,” 10:30 a.m., Museum of Art. Tuesday, Apr. 15 Sports- Baseball, vs. Buckneli. 3.30 p.m. Tuesday, Apr. 15 - Artists Series Mm. Ingmar Bergman’s i “Winter Light." 8:30 p.m, University Auditorium. Tuesday, Apr, 15 Plant Pathology, 9:45 a.m.. Room 213 Buckhout. Rick Latin on “Estimation of Yield Loss D.ue to Disease.” Tuesday, Apr, 15 Geosciences. 4 p.m . Boom 2$ Mineral Sciences. John M. Dennison. University of North Carolina. AAPG Distinguished Lecturer, on “In fluence of Eustatic Sea-Level Changes on Oil and Gas Accumulations in the Appalachian Basin.” Tuesday, Apr. 15 Operations Research. 3:45 p.m., Room S-131 Human Develop ment. Dr. £. Emory Enscore. on “An EOQ Model when Production Standards are,Assumed to be Normally Distributed." Tuesday, Apr. 15 Agricultural Commun ications. 7:30 p.m.. Room 301 Agricul tural Administration. Sue Benedetti and Gary Nugent. Extension Servtce-U.S.D.A., on “Youth/4-H Information and News.” Tuesday, Apr. 15 Chemical Engineer ing. 3:45 p.m., Room 140 Fenske. J. E. Lane. CSIRO, Australia, on "A Short History of Surface Science.” Tuesday, Apr. 15 Solid State, 3:45. p.m . Room 250 MBL. Dr. E. W. Mueller,' phy sics. on "Observations of Surfaces by Field lon Microscopy." Tuesday, Apr. 15— Solid Waste Manage- Films Thursday-Sunday, Apr. 10-13 Centre Cinema, “Jonathan Livingston Seagull," 7:30 and 10 p.m. Thursday. Simmons lounge. Friday-Sunday, Room 105 For um. Monday, Apr. 14 French Department film series. Ophuls’ “La Ronde.” 7 and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern Wednesday, Apr. 16 Commonsp/ace Theatre. “Citizen Kane," 7.30 and 9‘30 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Thursday-Sunday, April 17-20 Centre Cinema. "Last Tango Fn Paris," 7:30 and 10 p.m. Thursday. Simmons lounge, Friday-Surtday. Room 102 Forum. Meetings Monday, Apr. 14 USG Senate, 7 p.m., HUB assembly room. Monday, Apr. 14 Education Student Council, 7 p.m., Room 123 Chambers. Monday, Apr. 14 OTIS. 6:30 p.m., Room 203 HUB. Monday, Apr. 14 ARES (Anthropology Promotion and Enrichment Sodality), 7 pm„ Room 113 Social Science. Speaker Dr. Eugene ! Borza, history, on "The Re ality of Atlantis." Tuesday, Apr. 15 Engineering Under graduate Council, 7:30 p.m., Room 207 Satkett. Jacobsen testified earlier that on October 6, 1973, Connally gave him a cigar box containing $lO,OOO. A month later, Jacobsen said Connally called him and said some of the money in the box was "too new” to have been in circulation at the time of the alleged payoffs in 1971. Connally then gave him another $lO,OOO wrapped in a newspaper, Jacobsen said. These were the two batches of money that prosecutors displayed before the jury Wednesday. : John Craven, an official of the U.S. Treasury Bureau of Engraving and Printing, went through a complicated ex planation of the series and serial numbers on the bills. He said some of the bills from the cigar box carried the name of Secretary George Shultz, Connally’s successor in the Treasury Department. Poet to Michael S. Harper, poet and professor of English at Brown University, will read his poetry at 8 tonight in 112 Kern. Harper, who is the author of six volumes of poetry, was nominated for the National Book Award’ when his first book, “Dear John, Dear C’oltrane," came out in 1970. He has received awards Tuesday, Apr. 15 PI Lambda Theta, pro gram and initiation. 7:30 p.m.. Rooms 102 and 112 Kern. Wednesday, Apr, 16 “Noondays'’ de votional service, 12 noon. Eisenhower Chapel. Rev. Robert Boyer. Note: the program of music by Musica da Camera, scheduled originally April 16. has been changed to Thursday, May 1 at 6:30 p.m. In the Music Bldg, recital hall. Wednesday, Apr. 16 University Theatre student preview, "Jim Dandy." 8 p.m.. Pavilion Theatre. Wednesday, Apr. 16 Hillel rally for Israel Independence, 7:30 p.m., HUB ballroom. Wednesday, -Apr. 16 Valentina Litvinoff. choreographer, Jecture-demonstratio'n. 8 p.m., White Bldg. Wednesday-Thursday, Apr. 16-17 FSHA 410 dinner. 5:30 p.m., Maple Room, Human Development. Wednesday, "Uni ted States,” Thursday, "Japan." Reserva tions required, 865-7441. Thursday, Apr. 17 Food Science pro gram, film, "Food: Green Grow the Pro fits" (ABC News Close Up). 2:20 and 7.30 p.m.. Room 117 Borland Lab. Dis cussion follows. Thursday, Apr. 17 GSA garden plot workshop. 7:30 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Thursday-Saturday, Apr. 17-19 Artists Series. Martha Graham Dance Company, 8:30 p.m., University Auditorium. rient. 2:20 pm., Room 140 Fenske. Joseph Bern, Vice President for Research and Development. U.S. Utilities Corp.. Monroeville, on “Hazardous and Indus trial Wastes. Telling It Like It is." Wednesday , Apr. 16 Fuel Science and Acoustics joint seminar, 4pm. Room 301 Mineral Industries. Dr. Leonard '<3. Austin, fuel science, on "Mechanical Properties of Coal." Wednesday, Apr. 16 Remote Sensing. 230 p.m.. Room 225 Electrical Engi neering West. Film. "To Water by Air," a demonstration of the use of remote sensing techniques to prospect for water. Thursday, Apr. 17 Transportation In stitute. 2.20 p.m.. Room 189 Materials Research Lab. Charles Hoppe, U.S. Rail way Association, on "USRA's Planning '3 TJ)j for Passenger Service." Thursday, jApr. 17 Physics and Nuclear - Engineering joint colloquium. 3:35 p.m . Room 17 Osmond. Alvin M. Weinberg. Director. Energy Research and Develop ment Oifice, Washington. D C., on "Is Nuclear' Energy Acceptable." Thursday, Apr. .17 Agronomy. 830 a. nr?.. Room 111 Tyson. Joe Smith on "A‘ Source of Male Sterility in Malting Bar ley.” Tuesday, Apr. 15 Senate Committee on Academic Affairs, 8 am. Room 101 Kern. Tuesday, Apr. 15 College of Education faculty luncheon, 12 30 p.m,, Room 101 Kerrr. Tuesday, Apr. 15 Central Pa. Chapter of the Association of Computing Machin ery, 7:30 p.m.. Room 26 Mineral Sci ences. Carl P. Palmer on computers m phototypography. Wednesday, Apr. 16 USG Academic Assembly, 7:30 p.m., Room 351 Willard Wednesday, Apr. 16 A.P.E.S. (Anth ropology Promotion and Enrichment So dality), 8 p.m./ HUB Reading Room. "Cultural Perspectives on Women" ser ies. with speaker Dr. Warren Morrill, anthropology. Thursday, Apr. 17 Faculty women of College of Education, coffee. 10 a.m.. Room 101 Kern. Speaker, 11 a.m., Room 112 Kern. Thursday, Apr. 17 Department of Econo mics faculty. 2 p.m.. Room 101 Kern. Friday, Apr. 18 AIAA Central Pennsyl vania Section, 4 p.m., Room 232 Ham mond. Professor ftiro Tani, Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo, on "Some Application of Weakly Nonlinear Stabil ity Theory to the Problems of Boundary- Layer Transition." The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 10, 1975 Trombonist URBIE GREEN, New York’s top trombonist will be guest soloist with the Penn State Concert Band in t‘niversit\ Auditorium 4 p.m. Sunday. He will perform five numbers, three with the Blue Band and two with 21 trombones. The concert is free and open to the public. read his works from both the Black Academy of Arts and. Letters and the National Institute of Arts and Letters for his “grave, blunt poems (which) deal with human and black ex periences, simultaneously welcoming white Americans into their music as far as our imaginations and our hearts permit it and our history entitles us logo." Harper, who was born in Brooklyn in 1938, received his masters degree from the Writer's Workshop at the University of lowa. His Henn State appearance is sponsored bv the English department, the Black Cultural Center and the Graduate Student Associa tion. Thursday-Saturday, Apr, 17-19 Penn State Aquatic Institute, Natatorium. Thursday-Saturday. Apr. 17-19 Univer sity Theatre. "Jim Dandy." 8 p.m . Pa vilion Theatre. Thursday-Friday, Apr. 17-18 Phi Delta Kappa and Pennsylvania Educational Re search Association Conference, Confer ence Center. Friday, Apr. 18 —. Sharon Brook, piano recital. 830 p.m., Music Bldg, recital half. Friday, Apr. 18 Commonsplace Cof feehouse, 8 p.m.. Room 112vKern Friday, Apr. 18 Men's tennis, vs. Blooms burg. 2 p.m. Saturday, Apr. 19 Men's track, vs. Kent State, p.m. Women’s track vs. Pitt and Western Pa. Track Club. Sunday, Apr. 20 Kathryn Cowdrick, vo cal recital. 330 p.m., Music Bldg re cital ha/I. Sunday, Apr. 20 Chapel Service. 11 a.m.. Music Bldg, recital hall. Dr. Nor man R. Dixon, professor* of higher edu cation, University of Pittsburgh. Sunday, Apr. 20 Black Christian Fel lowship worship service. 11 a.m.. Black Cultural Center. Sunday, Apr. 20 Men's tennis, vs. East . Stroudsburg, 2 p.m. * Thursday, Apr. 17 Chemistry, 12:45 p.m., Room 333 Whitmore. J. Kochf, fo ci ana University. Thu’sday, Apr. 17 —> Microbiology, 4 p.m., RDom S 2 Frear. Or W. Munyon. Depart ment of Medical Viral Oncology, Roswell Park Memoriaf Institute Buffalo, on "Ex p ession of the Herpes Genome In Trans it rmed L Cells." and at 1 p.m.. Room $2 Frear. Dr. Mary F. Notter on “Herpes V rus Non Virion Antigen: Diagnostic ignificance." rsday, Apr. 17 Air Pollution Control. 20 p.m Room 145 Fenske. Margery rucker. U S Environmental Protection gency. Boston on What It Is Like 'orßing for a Federal Air Pollution Con ol Agency' rsday, Apr. 17 Mathematics, 4 p.m. oom 115 McAllister p . Enflo on An ys is a Thi a J rsday, Apr. 17 Ceramic Science, 11 m Room 301 Mineral Industries Or. D MacKenzie. U of California at Los ngeles, on “Glass and Ceramic Science t U.CLA." ay, Apr. 18 Ecology. 3.55 p m . Room 31 Kern. Dr. Robert May. Princeton niversity, on “Biological Populations }ith Non-Overlapping Generations; Sta ile Cycles, Chaos.” Lecture Interdisciplinary Colloquium on The Med ieval World April 10-12, Room 402 Kel- Thursday, Apr. >0 Brian Tierney, Cor- nel/ University. "Medieval Constitution alism Ideas and Realities." 10 a.m. Thursday, Apr. 10 David Herlihy, Har vard University, on "What We Know about Medievel Marriage," 3 p.m. Friday, Apr. 11 John Leyerle, University of Toronto, on "The Game and Play of Courtly Love.” 10 a.m. Friday, Apr. 11 Harry Bober, New York University, on "The Imagery of Mysticism and Mystical Revelation in a Gothic Il luminated Manuscript," 3 p.m. Saturday, Apr. 12 Edward Synan, The Pontifical Institute, Toronto, on "Love of Wisdom In the Middle Ages,” TO a.m. Tuesday-Thursday, Apr. 15-17 Health Planning and Administration, 4 p.m., Room 117 Human Development. Dr. John Dewdney, University of New South Wales. Tuesday on "New Guinea. Witch Doc tors or Which Doctors?" Wednesday, on "The Fed vs? the States: Australian Health Services." Thursday, on "Aus- tralia's Health Services Non-sociallzed Mediclne” Thursday, Apr. 17 Lecture, 8 p.m., Room 112 Kern. John N. Findlay, professor of philosophy, Boston Univer sity. on “The Good, the Mind, and the Soul in Platonic Teaching.”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers