8
The Daily VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an 'unwise estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs asks $10 hike } GPH cites misjudgement added money as cause of housing crisis for Reserve Funds Student government last night recommended that the Board of Trustees increase the General Fee by $10.00. Approved by a 17 to 13 vote, the UPSG resolution also stated that all the additional $70,000 from the increase should go to the student govern- ment fund. Assembly Speaker James Rosenberg said the money was needed so that ''old activities will be able to grow and new activities be created." The resolution cited the "def- inite need" for additional stu- dent activities funds to replen- ish the UPSG's Reserve Fund. "The lack of money has tied our hands," Rosenberg said. "We have been forced to dip into funds that really should be left for contingencies." Rosenberg also announced that he will start interviewing appli- cants for three vacant seats in the Assembly this week. The openings have been caused by the resignation of Thomas Gayoski '68 (fraternity), Jos- eph Cooper *69 (fraternity) and. Dick Lewis '70 (commuter). Interviews will be held from 3t5 5 P.M. in the UPSG office at Irvine Auditorium. UPSG President Alexius Con- roy announced he has started interviewing candidates for seats on the Committee on Residence Operations and the University Committee on Dis- cipline. Conroy invited students in- terested in serving on the Po- lice Relations Committee, the Ivy League Conference Com- mittee, and the Foreign Stu- dents Committee to contact him at the UPSG office. Assemblyman Max Case said that four representatives were chosen to sit on the Athletic Committee out of 50 applicants for the positions. Committee chairman attacks Cooper plan A member of the UPSG Finance Committee yesterday attacked the chairman of the committee, Joseph Cooper, for not "utilizing or communicating with the members of the committee." Alan Beamo, chairman of the government's Investigations Com- mittee, also said Cooper's recommendation that finances be placed under the control of a select executive committee would "hurt, not help, the interests of the student body." Cooper re- signed his post last week. "I think it would be a good idea if there were some members of the Finance Committee who were appointed for long terms, but there should also be members of the Assembly on the com- mittee," Beamo said. In a related development, As- By BERL SCHWARTZ President Harnwell said yes- terday the present housing cri- sis was caused by a miscalcu- lation in the $93 Million Dollar Development Plan. "If we had not been so ap- parently unwise in estimating how much money we'd get for housing," the president de- clared, "we would have done something far earlier." "We've been getting a great deal of support for the plan," he added, "but very little for housing." Harnwell's comment, made in a press conference in his off- ice, followed the announcement Friday that all sophomores will be allowed to live in apart- ments next year because of a room shortage in the Men's Dormitories. Harnwell also indicated fur- ther liberalization in the rules regarding apartments for wom- en would take place. "The rules," he remarked, "have been liberalized over the years, and I judge that will continue." Dr. A, Leo Levin, vice pro- vost for student affairs, also at the press conference, said there is 'some division ground' in the administration concern- ing rules for women. "We ought to avoid," Levin said, "a community pressure on girls to do certain things that they really don't want to do. That's bad." "We also ought to avoid," he continued, "trying to police someone else's standards." Levin also said it is unlike- (Contitlued on page 5) PRESIDENT HARNWELL 'Unwise estimote of finances' Firm finishing study on student housing By STEPHEN MARMON Work may start by next Sep- tember on apartment house fa- cilities for 3,500 to 4,000 undergraduates, UPSG Presi- dent Alexius Conroy revealed yesterday. Conroy said Meridian Engin- eers of Philadelphia is current- ly working on a study to de- termine the type of housing that should be constructed for the University. sembly Speaker James Rosen- berg announced last night that he is recommending Buddy Hirsch, a Wharton junior, as Cooper's replacement as Fi- nance Committee chairman. The Assembly will vote on the nomination next week. COMMITTEE BYPASS Beamo said that while Coop- er had criticized the committee for not working enough, it was actually Cooper who had by- passed the committee. "But be- cause Mr. Cooper was unable to delegate either authority or re- sponsibility to the members of the committee, then he alone is to blame for any bias that is in the committee," Beamo said. COMMITMENT TO STUDENTS "Active representation by As- sembly representatives on the finance committee is the best way of safeguarding the over- all student interest. The only political commitment that most Assembly members have is to the student body, not to an in- dividual political party," Beamo said. "I don't think that the finance committee should be separate from government," Beamo said. "The Assembly representatives should be on the committee and participate in the making and approval of UPSG budget allo- cations. While it is a good idea to add non-government to the committee, finances should still remain a government com- mittee." Strausz-Hupe pledges intention to reject NSF research grant} Freyd praises faculty response Doctor Robert Strausz-Hupe, professor of political science and director of the Foreign Policy Research Institute,yes- terday added his name to a list of faculty members en- dorsing Doctor Peter Freyd's Ex Gl speaks RUEBEN BULTER (top), former Army staff sergeant who refused to fight in Vietnam, will be the main speaker at today's bitch-in, at the Houston Hall 3 laza, 11 a. m. Bulter, organized "Vietnam Veterans for Freedom". His appearance will be sponsored by the Students for a Demoncratic Society. statement of intention to refuse National Science Foundation research grants in the wake of the Stephen Smale contro- versy. "The National Science Foun- dation should not be motivated by anything but professional qualifications," Strausz-Hupe said. "I have no idea whether Smale is a good mathematician or not, but this is a matter of principle." Strausz-Hupe said that he wholly disagrees with Smale's political position, and "has no use for the man," but feels that it is not the place of the National Science Foundation to deny any man a research grant because of his political views. "If there is a provision for doing something like this, then what the NSF has done is done," Strausz-Hupe said. "However, if Smale has not done any- thing against the law, then the National Science Foundation has no business taking away his grant, and something should be done about it." Dr. Peter Freyd, originator of the petition, said that other schools are not doing as well as the University. "At first," he said, "I took this to mean that other Universities were not as interested in this prob- lem as we are, realize that Penn special place and be very proud of it." but now I is a very we should The study was authorized last April by the University Council in a resolution stating that the University should investi- gate the possibility of contract- ing out the construction of stu- dent housing to private con- tractors. "The finished study should be presented to the Board of Trustees for their approval in January," Conroy said, "and if they approve it, construct- ion should be able to start next fall." "Meridian is now doing arch- itectural designs for the build- ings, mockups of the rooms, and even landscape design.The student committee on housing, which I am on, has already re- viewed the plans once and we will see them again shortly," he said. Conroy added that Meridian's first dans incorporate the con- (Continued on page 5) ACLU to file complaint after apartment search Two University undergrad- uates yesterday charged that three Philadelphia policemen entered and searched their a- partment without a warrant at 1 A.M. Monday morning. A complaint of entry and search without warrant will be filed for the residents of the apartment by the Philadelphia office of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), ac- cording to ACLU attorney Tom Harvey. The officers stated that they were investigating reports of a "raucous party", according to William Mandel, a junior in the College, and a resident of the apartment. He said that he and his room- mate were watching television when the police entered the premises. Mandel occupies the apart- ment at 4305 Locust Street with John Seley, a College junior. The officers entered the a- partment without knocking or asking for admittance, and be- gan to search the apartment, Mandel said. The police refused to iden- tify themselves, Mandel said, and concealed their badges to avoid identification. "When I asked one of the officers for a warrant for entry or search," said Mandel, "the officer asked me, 'Do I need a warrant to punch you in your mouth?' " One of the policemen found a Turkish water pipe in the apartment, and began to ex- amine it for possible mari- juana residue, Mandel said. He added that the policeman went through his entire stock of pipe tobacco searching for, what a policeman termed, "an irregular brand." Mandel said that the precinct switchboard knew nothing of the search. (Continued on page 5) i

The Daily 'unwise - Penn Libraries · The Daily 'unwise VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs

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Page 1: The Daily 'unwise - Penn Libraries · The Daily 'unwise VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs

The Daily VOL. LXXXIII

Perhaps UPSG is making an 'unwise estimate.'

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39

UPSG needs

asks $10 hike} GPH cites misjudgement added money as cause of housing crisis

for Reserve Funds Student government last night

recommended that the Board of Trustees increase the General Fee by $10.00. Approved by a 17 to 13

vote, the UPSG resolution also stated that all the additional $70,000 from the increase should go to the student govern- ment fund. Assembly Speaker James Rosenberg said the money was needed so that ''old activities will be able to grow and new activities be created." The resolution cited the "def-

inite need" for additional stu- dent activities funds to replen- ish the UPSG's Reserve Fund. "The lack of money has tied

our hands," Rosenberg said. "We have been forced to dip into funds that really should be left for contingencies." Rosenberg also announced that

he will start interviewing appli- cants for three vacant seats in the Assembly this week.

The openings have been caused by the resignation of Thomas Gayoski '68 (fraternity), Jos- eph Cooper *69 (fraternity) and. Dick Lewis '70 (commuter). Interviews will be held from

3t5 5 P.M. in the UPSG office at Irvine Auditorium. UPSG President Alexius Con- roy announced he has started interviewing candidates for seats on the Committee on Residence Operations and the University Committee on Dis- cipline. Conroy invited students in-

terested in serving on the Po- lice Relations Committee, the Ivy League Conference Com- mittee, and the Foreign Stu- dents Committee to contact him at the UPSG office. Assemblyman Max Case said

that four representatives were chosen to sit on the Athletic Committee out of 50 applicants for the positions.

Committee chairman attacks Cooper plan

A member of the UPSG Finance Committee yesterday attacked the chairman of the committee, Joseph Cooper, for not "utilizing or communicating with the members of the committee." Alan Beamo, chairman of the government's Investigations Com-

mittee, also said Cooper's recommendation that finances be placed under the control of a select executive committee would "hurt, not help, the interests of the student body." Cooper re- signed his post last week. "I think it would be a good idea if there were some members

of the Finance Committee who were appointed for long terms, but there should also be members of the Assembly on the com- mittee," Beamo said.

In a related development, As-

By BERL SCHWARTZ President Harnwell said yes-

terday the present housing cri- sis was caused by a miscalcu- lation in the $93 Million Dollar Development Plan. "If we had not been so ap-

parently unwise in estimating how much money we'd get for housing," the president de- clared, "we would have done something far earlier." "We've been getting a great

deal of support for the plan," he added, "but very little for housing." Harnwell's comment, made in

a press conference in his off- ice, followed the announcement Friday that all sophomores will be allowed to live in apart- ments next year because of a room shortage in the Men's Dormitories. Harnwell also indicated fur-

ther liberalization in the rules regarding apartments for wom- en would take place. "The rules," he remarked,

"have been liberalized over the years, and I judge that will continue." Dr. A, Leo Levin, vice pro-

vost for student affairs, also at the press conference, said there is 'some division ground' in the administration concern- ing rules for women. "We ought to avoid," Levin

said, "a community pressure on girls to do certain things that they really don't want to do. That's bad."

"We also ought to avoid," he continued, "trying to police someone else's standards." Levin also said it is unlike-

(Contitlued on page 5)

PRESIDENT HARNWELL 'Unwise estimote of finances'

Firm finishing study on student housing

By STEPHEN MARMON

Work may start by next Sep- tember on apartment house fa- cilities for 3,500 to 4,000 undergraduates, UPSG Presi- dent Alexius Conroy revealed yesterday. Conroy said Meridian Engin-

eers of Philadelphia is current- ly working on a study to de- termine the type of housing that should be constructed for the University.

sembly Speaker James Rosen- berg announced last night that he is recommending Buddy Hirsch, a Wharton junior, as Cooper's replacement as Fi- nance Committee chairman. The Assembly will vote on the nomination next week.

COMMITTEE BYPASS

Beamo said that while Coop- er had criticized the committee for not working enough, it was actually Cooper who had by- passed the committee. "But be- cause Mr. Cooper was unable to delegate either authority or re- sponsibility to the members of the committee, then he alone is to blame for any bias that is in the committee," Beamo said.

COMMITMENT TO STUDENTS

"Active representation by As- sembly representatives on the finance committee is the best way of safeguarding the over- all student interest. The only political commitment that most Assembly members have is to the student body, not to an in- dividual political party," Beamo said. "I don't think that the finance

committee should be separate from government," Beamo said. "The Assembly representatives should be on the committee and participate in the making and approval of UPSG budget allo- cations. While it is a good idea to add non-government to the committee, finances should still remain a government com- mittee."

Strausz-Hupe pledges intention to reject NSF research grant} Freyd praises faculty response

Doctor Robert Strausz-Hupe, professor of political science and director of the Foreign Policy Research Institute,yes- terday added his name to a list of faculty members en- dorsing Doctor Peter Freyd's

Ex Gl speaks

RUEBEN BULTER (top), former Army staff sergeant who refused to fight in Vietnam, will be the main speaker at today's bitch-in, at the Houston Hall 3laza, 11 a. m. Bulter, organized "Vietnam Veterans for Freedom". His appearance will be sponsored by the Students for a Demoncratic Society.

statement of intention to refuse National Science Foundation research grants in the wake of the Stephen Smale contro- versy. "The National Science Foun-

dation should not be motivated by anything but professional qualifications," Strausz-Hupe said. "I have no idea whether Smale is a good mathematician or not, but this is a matter of principle." Strausz-Hupe said that he

wholly disagrees with Smale's political position, and "has no use for the man," but feels that it is not the place of the National Science Foundation to deny any man a research grant because of his political views. "If there is a provision for

doing something like this, then what the NSF has done is done," Strausz-Hupe said. "However, if Smale has not done any- thing against the law, then the National Science Foundation has no business taking away his grant, and something should be done about it." Dr. Peter Freyd, originator

of the petition, said that other schools are not doing as well as the University. "At first," he said, "I took this to mean that other Universities were not as interested in this prob-

lem as we are, realize that Penn special place and be very proud of it."

but now I is a very we should

The study was authorized last April by the University Council in a resolution stating that the University should investi- gate the possibility of contract- ing out the construction of stu- dent housing to private con- tractors. "The finished study should

be presented to the Board of Trustees for their approval in January," Conroy said, "and if they approve it, construct- ion should be able to start next fall." "Meridian is now doing arch-

itectural designs for the build- ings, mockups of the rooms, and even landscape design.The student committee on housing, which I am on, has already re- viewed the plans once and we will see them again shortly," he said. Conroy added that Meridian's

first dans incorporate the con- (Continued on page 5)

ACLU to file complaint after apartment search Two University undergrad-

uates yesterday charged that three Philadelphia policemen entered and searched their a- partment without a warrant at 1 A.M. Monday morning. A complaint of entry and

search without warrant will be filed for the residents of the apartment by the Philadelphia office of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), ac- cording to ACLU attorney Tom Harvey. The officers stated that they

were investigating reports of a "raucous party", according to William Mandel, a junior in the College, and a resident of the apartment.

He said that he and his room- mate were watching television when the police entered the premises.

Mandel occupies the apart- ment at 4305 Locust Street with John Seley, a College junior.

The officers entered the a- partment without knocking or asking for admittance, and be- gan to search the apartment, Mandel said. The police refused to iden-

tify themselves, Mandel said, and concealed their badges to avoid identification. "When I asked one of the

officers for a warrant for entry or search," said Mandel, "the officer asked me, 'Do I need a warrant to punch you in your mouth?' "

One of the policemen found a Turkish water pipe in the apartment, and began to ex- amine it for possible mari- juana residue, Mandel said.

He added that the policeman went through his entire stock of pipe tobacco searching for, what a policeman termed, "an irregular brand." Mandel said that the precinct switchboard knew nothing of the search.

(Continued on page 5)

i

Page 2: The Daily 'unwise - Penn Libraries · The Daily 'unwise VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs

Penn expands graduate project with Bryn Mawr

50% of '67 class in graduate school; figure surpasses previous years

A joint program in the his- tory of the biological sciences and medicine will be developed this year by the University, Bryn Mawr (Pa.) College, and the American Philosophical Society.

The program will be financed by a $234,200 grant from the Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation.

Courses leading to advanced degrees in the combined field will start in Sept., 1968, for students in Bryn Mawr*s Graduate School and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences here.

Joint faculty appointments to the program will be made by the two institutions. The American Philosophy Society will arrange seminars to be led by well-known scientists.

SOCIETY NEW PARTNER

The Society will join the two colleges in this extension of graduate programs which they have carried on for 30 years.

The University organized its graduate-level history and phil-

osophy of science program five years ago, to which Bryn Mawr was linked through a reciprocal arrangement.

Administrative head of the new program will be Dr. Philip George, research professor of biophysical chemistry and chair- man of the history and philosophy of science at the University.

Working with him will be Dr. Elizabeth Read Foster, dean of Bryn Mawr's Graduate School, and Dr. Whitfield J. Bell, li- brarian of the American Phil- osophy Society.

Dr. George said that exten- sive historical source material, the faculties of the two graduate schools, and the personnel of the American Philosophy Society will provide a unique opportun- ity for study in the history of the biological sciences and medicine.

The grant supporting the pro- gram is part of a Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation program which has awarded $1,167,000 during the past year to education and research in these fields.

A recent study by the Office of Fellowship Information and Study Abroad revealed that over 50 per cent of the Class of 1967 is now engaged in full-time grad- uate or professional studies.

The study, "Post-Graduate Plans of the Class of 1967," was compiled by James B. Yaroall, director of the office, and includ- ed in its survey 1,032 members or 83% of the class.

COLLEGE LEADS

Of the four major University divisions, the largest proportion of students entering graduate or professional studies came from the College. Following theCol- lege were the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, the Schools of Engineering, and the College of Liberal Arts for Wo- men.

All four divisions showed per- centage increases compared to the Class of 1966, with the great- est coming in Engineering with a rise from 46 to 55 per cent.

PURSUING FULL.TIME GRADUATE OR PROFESSIONAL STUDIES

% Class of 66 % Class of 67

College Wharton Engineering College for Women

84 66 46 47

87 68 55 55

AREAS OF STUDY (% OF THOSE PURSUING FURTHER STUDIES)

IF conducts community aid projects Thirty-one fraternities have

decided to sponsor community social projects this year.

Their decision was made at a meeting of the Inter-Fraterni- ty Council Thursday night.

Approximately one-half of the fraternities represented were in- terested in pledge projects, one- third in House projects, and the rest in individual program.

NEED VOLUNTEERS

Timothy Baker, director of the University Social Services, said there is a great need for

volunteers to clean and fix set- tlement houses and recreation facilities in the area, and fra- ternities might help to supply the manpower.

"The fraternity program has two major benefits," Baker said, "one is that students will be exposed to social agencies and the people they help. Last year a few people who took an ac- tive role went back on their own initiative to aid these agencies. The other advantage is that agen- cies save money by using volun- teers."

Phi Delta Theta has begun action by repairing a settlement house at 26th and Lombard Sts. on the 16th and 23rd of Septem- ber. Baker estimated the agency saved $600 by using their help.

The Settlement House serves as a meeting house and recrea- tion center for the community. It involves social action by pro- fessionals and volunteers.

EAT AT KELLY & COHEN'S

COLLEGE arts and sciences law medicine business education miscellaneous

WHARTON law business arts and sciences medicine miscellaneous

ENGINEERING engineering business arts and sciences law

COLLEGE FOR WOMEN arts and sciences education medicine law business social work miscellaneous

40 26 26

5 1 2

54 41

1 1 3

75 18

5 2

67 12 7 4 4 1 7

Lecture set at Annenberg Eric A. Havelock Sterling

professor of classics and chair- man of the department of clas- sics at Yale, will address a com- munications colloquimthis after- noon on "The Storage of Infor- mation in Ancient and Modern Societies."

Sponsored by the Annenberg School of Communications, the lecture will begin at 2 P.M. in room 126 of the Annenberg School. It will be open to all members of the University com- munity.

ATTENTION SENIORS . I

SIGN UP FOR SENIOR YEARBOOK PHOTOS

ALL THIS WEEK FROM 9a.m. to 5 p.m. WITH

MRS. ELDRIDGE, INFORMATION DESK

HOUSTON HALL.

After 6 p.m. Call EV 2-6498

PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26,1967

Page 3: The Daily 'unwise - Penn Libraries · The Daily 'unwise VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs

Comp-date

to aid coed: Freshman women are going

to have a good year. The new coeds on campus who usually have no trouble finding dates, will also be the main beneficiaries of a computerized dating form "de- signed primarily for freshmen," according to the match game's originator, Abe Shore.

"PHENOMENAL RESPONSE"

Shore, a College senior, and his co-worker, Ken Furst.Whar- ton *68, have spent the past few weeks distributing the form around campus and said the re- sponse has been " phenomenal."

"We were originally going to stop after activities night, but we decided to extend the deadline as we got most of our publicity too late," said Shore. "We now have over 250 names."

Shore emphasized the sys- tem, by which respondents will be matched according to com- puter, is primarily for fresh- men.

TOTAL INVOLVEMENT SEEN

"We hope to eventually have a system whereby any university with a computer would ask each incoming freshman whether he would like to be programmed. He could then come to school with ten dates to call," he said.

Participation would, of course, be voluntary.

As the two originators of ilie system are a non-profit "or- ganization," they are being given free use of the University's com- puter center. The $.40 charge was made mainly because they didn't know how much to charge, according to Shore.

TO CANVAS THIS WEEK

"But," he added, "at least $.35 of the $.40 will be going to some University charity." The remainder will cover the cost of any clerical work involved.

Shore and Kurst will be at the nurses* dorm Monday, Hill Hall Tuesday, and at McClelland Hall Wednesday to distribute more of their dating forms.

Israeli consul asks Jews H.H. receives computer info. to build careers in Israel

BY BARBARA SLOPAK

Israeli Consul General Yissakhar Ben Yaakov Friday called upon Jewish University students to consider building their lives in Israel.

Speaking at the Hillel Foundation, Ben Yaakov said he would guarantee employment to University students who want to spend the summer of 1968 in the Jewish state.

Commenting on the recent Israeli war, the consul said that "the move Israel made during the six-day war had one objective: To secure our survival."

He said that there was a po- tential danger of a second Jewish holocaust, referring to Hitler's massacre of six million Jews.

"We could not erase that danger with words alone," he declared. "Israel is willing to pay a price for peace — how high is another matter."

Ben Yaakov stressed that Israel would not surrender her newly won territories, despite the burden of maintaining them, until the Arab nations recognized her existence. He said that Israel would help to support any foreign nation that recognized that exist- ence.

AREA REPRESENTATIVE

Ben Yaakov has served as Israel's representative to the Philadelphia area for the last three years. Hillel Rabbi Samuel Berkowitz cited his contributions to the Philadelphia Jewish com- munity.

Rabbi Berkowitz encouraged the students to buy Israeli pro- ducts on theAmerican market to help bolster the troubled Israeli economy.

All Activity Notices Must Be

Submitted Two

Days Before

Day Of

Publication

As an outgrowth of the com- puterized Master Activities Calendar and centralization of scheduling events, an automatic information answering system has been installed in Houston Hall, Anthony S. Codding, direc- tor of Houston Hall, recently an- nounced.

The system will be used to service incoming queries after 5:00 p.m. on weekdays and all day during weekends.

The automatic answering ser- vice system operates on the Houston Hall information exten- sion 7581. All important daily events taking place at the Uni-

versity or announced in the Daily Pennsylvanian are fed into the system each day. Events for the weekend are recorded on Friday afternoon, Codding said.

In the event that the desired information is not listed on the tape, the extension of the Houston Hall night and weekend manager is given at the end of the record- ing.

Codding said that students can have campus events recorded on the tape by calling 594-7581 from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 pjn. any week- day and giving the information to the Houston Hall Information Desk supervisor.

DRIVE PART TIME

MEN AND WOMEN DAY OR NIGHT WORK

Yellow Cab Company of Philadel- phia has openings for part-time drivers. Here is an opportunity for pleasant, interesting outdoor work with good earnings.

Over the years thousands of college students have driven Yellow Cabs to aid the<r financial needs.

Qualifications: 21 years of age; current Penna. Driver's License; proof of driver's license for 2 years.

Apply

YELLOW CAB COMPANY Employment Office 105 South 12th Street

Monday throve* Thwrteey—9 AM to 9 f.M. Friday end Setwrooy—9 A.M. to 3 F.M.

Quality Reading

MtADO ALAN

<BJOO& Stole* CHELTENHAM CENTER

& BUCKS COUNTY MALL Street Rood, Feasterville

HOURS: 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.

OPEN SUNDAYS

Tickets Now On Sale For

I WANT ft&TOFF

IN IRVINE AUDITORIUM

Oct. 17 8:30p.m

.

Tickets On Sale In Houston Hall

THE R.L.C. proudly presents Alain Resnais'

HIROSHIMA, MON AMOUR TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 at 7:15 and 9:30 in the UNIVERSITY MUSEUM

Don't miss this poignant, brilliantly artistic film about the love between a Japanese architect and a French actress. Time calls it "an intense, original, and ambitious piece of cinema."

WITH the celebrated short THE GOLDEN FISH We invite you to join the club and to be a part of our 1967-68 activities. As a spocial welcome, offer FREE ADMISSION FOR MEMBERS you can join before the showings, so be sure to be there early

TONIMTU SPECIAL MBMBBRS NIMH! PAGE THREE THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967

Page 4: The Daily 'unwise - Penn Libraries · The Daily 'unwise VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs

1885 Dhaiiy Pennsylvanian 1967

DONALD M. MORRISON Editor-in- chief

DENNIS WILEN Managing Editor

JAMES J. RESTIVO, JR. Features Editor

ROBERT I. TUTEUR Business Monoger

A. STEVEN PERELMAN Executive Editor

RICHARD SHAPIRO Editorial Chairman

LAWRENCE D. KROHN Sports Editor

crow's nest

A long hot winter for Phila.? Ira Einhorn

BETTY OSTROV KENETH D. MESKIN MICHAEL S. KANAS PAUL BLUMENTHAL Financial Advertising Business Photography Manager Manager Coordinator Editor

A reliable source

A riotous time in Detroit : ■

• ■

DETROFT (Sept. 22) - The Russian poet Vosnesensky calls it "Antiworlds." To Michael Harrington, it's "The Other America." The average Detroit Negro probably sees it as the dastardy doings of the "honkies."

It's Detroit, baby. Sitting here on the sixth floor of the

nouveau gauch St. Regis, hotel, the con- trasts are easy to see. The bellhops wear tails. There's a color TV in every room. The furniture is authentic imitation French provincial. The rugs are Persian, the blankets are nylon, and the " antiqued" doors are plywood—cheap plywood.

About ten blocks away is the locus of what Detroiters (white Detroiters) call "the disturbance." Acre upon acre of rubble. Stores with boarded up windows. Little knots of people on street corners with a topic of conversation other than the dull drudgery of tightening nut number 36 with wrench 41.

About an hour away is Chev*s Warren test center. About 800 acres of space, open space, Saarinen's "industrial cam- pus." About 40 of those acres are man- made ponds, complete with mallard ducks. "Why, some of those ducks have made this campus their home," exclaims the Chevrolet PR man. Inside the buildings, you can see the 2000-odd different ex- terior color "chips" which GM is in- vestigating. Burlington Mills has sent a supply of auto carpet, blue, red, green, all designed to harmonize with the 2000- odd colors. They even have a special light to look at the colors with.

"Push this switch," says the PR man," and you get Northern daylight. And this switch is noonday sun. We want all our divisions to know what we* re talking about when we talk color."

Back in Detroit, St. Regis room ser- vice is filling the rooms of the 24 college editors with fresh bottles of Coke. The covers are pulled down, the linen changed.

On 12th St., it looks like London after the blitz. Except there's no patriotic fervir, no "Long Live the King." The national anthem seems to be "Expressway to Your Heart", which on 12th St. sounds like a dirge.

The Edsel Ford Freeway is filled with Mustangs, driven desulterily by men with "UAW, Ford Local" overseas caps. They have a lot of spare time these days.

Chevy treats the college editors to a class dinner in the plush Recess Club, located, of course, in the Fisher Building.

After the cocktails, after the small talk, after the dinner, after the Bering cigars, it's press conference time. The man with the answers is EJvi. Estes (no one in Chevy or their ad agency will reveal his first name), general manager of GM's Chevy division.

Q.: Many college students, surveys show, seem to be disinclined to enter business as a career, because they feel

Dennis Wilen industry is doing nothing relevant to help societal ills. While we might stay in the St. Regis for example, it/s only a short walk to the riot zone. Since GM is the largest corporation on the world--with a budget larger than the continent of Af- rica—we would like to know what you are doing to make life better for the residents of Detroit's black ghetto.

A.: Well, I'm glad you asked me that. Why, we have some plants near Detroit where over 70 per cent of the employees are colored.

Q- Are you actively recruiting Ne- groes.

A j Yes, but of course we don't dis- criminate against white men.

Qj This is very nice. How many of your colored employees have jobs on places other than the assembly line?

A.: About 200. Q^ How many employees does Chevro-

let have? A.: 125,000. Q.: Well isn't 200 a disproportionate

number? A.: Why, we've been trying to get these

people to come and work for Chevrolet. They just lack the necessary skills. We'd be happy to take any colored boy working on our production line and send him to night school. We do the same for our white men.

Q.: Mr. Estes, did you say colored "boys" and "white" men?

A.: (Pause, confusion.) Yes. Q.: Thank you.

The attendant (the black attendant) in the Recess Club washroom offers the students towels and choice of cologne (Lilac Vegetal, Bay Rum, etc.)

After the junket is over, after driving the '68 Corvettes around theG.M. Proving grounds Test Track, after giving Chevy the expense accounts, after the party's over, it seems that Detroit is a paradox.

All the way to the airport, in the black Cadillac limousine, with the black Detroit driver, the thoughts reoccur.

Detroit, with its millions, Detroit, with its riots, the St. Regis, the slum, the junket, the "disturbance", EM. Estes, the driver.

<<i Light monitoring and power door lock systems plus added availability of popular stero tape players highlight a list of more than 400 options and accessories offered on 1968 Chevrolet cars," reads the press release.

Detroit police were not instructed to hold back fire during the "distrubance," the Detroit commissioner of police tells a panel.

"Rusk's Daughter Marries a Negro," scream the papers.

On the limousine radio, it's "Express- way."

On the expressway, it's the limousine. On 12th St., it's America.

The Daily Pennsylvanian publishes letters to the editor subject to the following restrictions Letters must be typewritten, double spaced, 60 characters to the line, and limited to two pages. The editors reserve the right to edit letters for length.

Air of waste Blood spattered bodies The nocturnal emission Of America's forgotten dream Litter The Space Of our polluted scenario, A vapid glut That clogs the lungs With noxious odor The constant reminder Of a tainted reality That noone claims

Haunted by ghastly Spectors Stalking streets Washed with blood Spilled With craven equanimity By assassins Who protect us:

This our fate Fixed By our indifference Into contorted Forms Whose violence Beckons To our Unheard needs.

The breaking of glass and the sullen whirr of police sirens filled the air of this summer. The redness of fire and the bloated stomachs of starving Missi-

ssippi children filled the color TV sets with an awesome picture of the Great Society. We were reaping the harvest of seeds which had been sown for years with an equanimity that approaches the aspect of worship. We had ignored the continuous degradation and misery that is the daily lot of black Americans, failing to heed the pleas of their leaders who have warned us of the long hot summer to come.

The problems are immediate calling for action—now, not a year long study of problems that are obvious to everyone. The President's commission is another example of the failure of leadersliip in a society that is presently in a rapid state of decline: a Secretary of State who offers to resign, due to the "embarrass- ment" of his daughter's marriage to a black—aren't blacks human? Perhaps they ought to be required to receive per- mission from their honorable President before they dare to marry above them- selves. How dare they defame the good name of Rusk.

The windows are broken, the fires have burned, the bodies have been ripped by bullets or bloodied by the stacatto of night sticks rapping on black heads, yet our response is the same to those who wash our floors and remove our trash-be patientl After two weeks in Phila., back from a summer in California, I know that patience has come to an end, so don't be surprised if we have a hot winter in Philadelphia.

Letters to the editor ■■'■ ■ , ;:'--:::: :■ . . .•.".■■'.

COOPER LETTER

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

The following is a copy of UPSG As- semblyman Joseph Cooper's letter of resignation. Mr. Cooper asked The Daily Pennsylvanian to reprint the letter.

To: Alexius Conroy - Pres. James Rosenberg - Speaker

Dear Gentlemen,

It is with some regret that I submit my resignation from the Assembly of the University of Pennsylvania Student Gov- ernment. During the previous semester (Spring 1967) I tried to conscientiously carry-out my responsibilities as a UPSG Assemblyman and as the Chairman of the Finance Committee. However, I have found that holding these two positions simul- taneously made me subject to what might be termed political obligations and pres- sures.

It is essential that those administering the funds for undergraduate activities be free of political intimidation and be denied opportunities to use allocations as patron- age. This is not so under the present, government-controlled situation. In ad- ministering a $140,000 budget, one must be in a position to resist the adoption of a "double-standard" as far as govern- ment expenditures are concerned.

With the Finance Committee mem- bership being dominated by government representatives, and with all appropria- tion decisions subject to political debate, the possibilities for favoritism or un- founded denials are too great. In se- parating the financing and budgeting duties from legislative and executive functions, an effective system of checks and balances may be instituted. I am not intent on having an autonomous body created, but one that can study budgets, check receipts and expenses, and appropriate funds objec- tively and equitably.

Sincerely, Joseph H. Cooper Chairman of the Finance Committee

DISAGREES AGREEABLY

Editor, The DaUy Pennsylvanian:

I feel that Alfred Ross' group to abo- lish fraternities has been founded on a false premise. The Thursday D.P. article describing the group said Ross sees "the purpose of the university as exposing students to different points of view and believes that fraternities subvert that goal." I feel that Ross is wrong in assum- ing that people in a house system would be open enough to each other to share these different points of view. How often at a Houston Hall dinner for freshmen, when a single person is seated with a group of three, is there not even a single word exchanged between him and the three? Why in my first semester fresh- man English class of about twenty-five people didn't any one person know even just by name more than five others if not less in the class? Why don't men in the dorms get to know the people on the floor above or below them even though they pass them every day on the stairs and in the quad. After a survey of some of the others on my floor last year, I found that no one knew more than a total of three people from both other floors.

Mr. Ross, I joined a fraternity last year for the simple reason that I wanted to live with a group of people I could get to know well. There is a wide diversity in my fraternity religiously, economi- cally, and geographically. I found that life in the dorms had diversity, but that it was not shared. I agree with your statement about the purpose of a uni- versity, and that's why I joined a fra- ternity.

I will admit that some fraternities on campus limit their membership to a certain degree by athletic ability, prep school background, religious faith, or ability to drink. However, I feel that even the friendships among a brotherhood which, sad as it might be, restricts its membership, is far more valuable than the non-existent "sharing of ideas" found in the dorms.

Robert Anthony Wharton 1970

PAGE FOUR THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967

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Hill Hall's dinner-mixers CflUCfc rival campus restaurants

Every evening at 5:30 a dif- ferent group of suited, neck-tied freshmen men invades Hill Hall for dinner. They usually come in packs of twenty, meal-tickets in hands and phone-number books in back pockets. MissSandyGus- tafson, director of Hill Hall, smiles delightedly as they file down the steps to the Red Room. The men are part of The Plan.

"Last year we encouraged men to eat at Hill Hall," reports the dynamic MissGustafson, "but this year we have made organized attempts to invite them. Initiating the plan early in the year has resulted in the most well- acquainted freshman class in years."

RED ROOM MIXER

The dinner arrangements each night are made between a freshmen dorm counselor from the Men's Quad and a residential advisor from the women's dorms. When thedesignated night arrives his men meet her women in the Red Room first for punch, "to give a chance for the group to form." They then serve them- selves in the Hill Hall cafeteria but return to the itimacy of the Red Room to eat.

The most popular and reliable conversation-starter for the boys is "This dinner is a banquet compared to Houston Hall food." Sometimes they add, "Andl can't believe it's actually HOTI"Miss Gustafson points out, however, that the menus and the produce quality are same in both dining rooms, though of course the cooks and the kitchen utensils are dif- ferent. "I've never eaten at Freshman Commons myself," she admits, "but I intend to do so shortly." Maybe she will be able to clear up the mystery.

Perhaps one unknown benefit of Miss Gustafson's dinner ex- change is that any group of stu- dents, acting with or without dorm counselors and not necessarily freshmen, may reserve the Red Room for dinner on any given

night. Potential post-football game supper or birthday party givers should make arrange- ments several days in advance with Miss Maria Parette, assist- ant director of Hill. Dietitian Tom Smith will set the tables and serve dessert.

MEN IN HILL

Presently men may eat dinner in Hill Hall for $1.50, but only if accompanied by a woman res- ident. Miss Gustafson and her associates are in the midst of decidingwheatheror not men will be able to use their own meal tickets at Hill in the future. Lunch is available to everyone on a cash basis, but men are not permitted in Hill for breakfast, a rule which Hill women re-affirm by vote every year.

Berry, Spoonful set to rock in Palestra

CHUCK BERRY "Sweet Little Sixteen'

BY NANCY GREENBERG 'Let's get these kids off the Split it's hippy

street and into the Banana Split." This may sound like one of those crusades produced by the com- bined efforts of your local Phil- adelphia P.T.A. and D.A.R. Don't be fooled. The Banana Split is a whopping scoop of psychedelia with ice cream on top.

The Banana Split Ice Cream Shoppe of 3930 Walnut Street is currently owned by Mark Rudick, a former Wharton student. Mark, however, doesn't like the busi- ness aspects of his concern so he is selling it to a young semi- hippy who simply calls himself

and at Mabel's it's, greasy. For instance, the walls at the Banana Split are covered with psychadelic and personality posters.

These are all for sale along with cigarette papers. Ramparts, buddhas, buttons, andaHagstrom III. For more native color there is a collection box for the Legal Defense Fund. In addition, what Mabel prosaically calls a Ba- nana Split, the Banana Split calls the Highest Banana. This is three scoops of any flavor ice cream (e.g. butterscotch twirl, mint chip flake, raspberry, Caribbean cof-

John. And so much for theWhar- fee) over a banana with sauces, ton School.

There really isn't much dif- ference between the ice cream at the Banana Split and icecream at Mabel's Luncheonette in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. It's all a matter of motif --at the Banana

BY MARTIN GILMAN

It's not Homecoming nor is it Skimmer, but this year's football season at Penn will begin with a spectacular worthy of either of these two events. On Friday night, September 29, at 8:00 p.m., the Palestra will be the scene of the Lehigh Weekend Spectacular featur- ing Chuck Berry and the Lovin' Spoonful.

Chuck Berry, the big daddy father of rock will no doubt make a repeat performance of his great Skimmer show several years ago. Originally from Tennessee, Berry moved into the limelight with his memorable "Sweet Little Sixteen". Berry was an innovator with one of the first and the finest of the Southern Negro rock sounds. The sound went to England by way of Lennon-McCartney and returned to this country in the folk rock of the Lovin' Spoonful and the Mama's and the Papa's.

Harnwel

Banana Split splits hippies from squares

in the country, friday night.

nging groups are kicking off Lehigh weekend at the Palestra on

Complaint (Continued from page 1)

ACLU's Harvey said a pro- test to the police department would probably go unanswered.

"What we are really trying to do," said Harvey, "is at- tempting to build a file of un- answered complaints. In this way, we hope to convince the courts that a civilian review board is necessary in Phila- dephia."

Mandel said three squad cars and two patrol wagons were parked in front of his apart- ment during the search. Although the police said they

were looking for "people," they searched closets, drawers, and desks, he said.

The Dean of Men's office said Monday that it will "look in- to" the search, but had not been told of the raid before it occurred.

Housing (Continued from page 1)

cept of using modular units in the construction of the a- partments. "The University is taking positive action on this," Conroy said. "The plans are moving ahead as fast as is possible, and if the Trustees approve the specifics that will be presented in January, there is no reason why the project can't continue to move ahead."

whippedd cream nuts and a cherry.

The American Tasty Trip, which you'll please notice is done in all pinks and whites, is com- posed of strawberry and vanilla ice creams with marshmallow, chopped cherries, strawberries, whipped cream and a maraschino cherry. Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds is peach ice cream with raspberries. Nevertheless. John, whose favorite flavor hap- pens to be butter pecan, admits that their best seller is still plain vanilla.

John is now in the process of revamping the image of the Ba- nana Split. He wants it to be thought of primarily as a "head" shop. John, who wears a hoop with a two inch diameter through his right ear says, "I don't want the hippies to drop out of soci- ety." That's why he is buying the Banana Split. "I want it to be a place where people of mixed en- vironments can sit in a friendly atmosphere with no questions asked."

BUILD WE MUST

Yes, it seems that the Banana Split does cater to mixed en- vironments --to both the hippies from the square and the squares from the campus. Yet despite the hippy atmosphere and the more conservative nature of our cam- pus most Penn students would undoubtedly feel at home at the Banana Split. This is because, in the great University of Penn- sylvania tradition, the Banana Split is already thinking about tearing down and expanding. Back rooms will soon be made into leather shops and jewelry shops. Cold cuts will be served. Some- body named Kevin is even going to be making pipes out of door- knobs.

Apparently, the Banana Split has something for everyone . . . or almost everyone. "Anybody is welcome as long as he is friendly and not a drunk animal. Hostile people won't be happy here," asserts John.

SPOONFUL SING HITS

John Sebastian, often called the American counterpart of Len- non - McCartney, will lead the Spoonful through their great rep- ertoire. Among their most pop- ular hits are "Do You Believe in Magic", "Summer in the City", and "Younger Girl".

Penn is fortunate in hosting two of America's greatest per- former-song writing names. The Houston Hall Board will sponsor the event. According to Tony Garria-Ghilli, chairman of the spectacular, "with the exception of the new psychedelic sound, Chuck Berry and the Lovin' Spoonful represent a large part of American music; and the pack- age show should be a great one."

SELLOUT EXPECTED

Tickets for the spectacular have been going fast. As many of the best seats are already sold and advertising has been extended throughout the Philadelphia area, Penn students are advised to purchase their tickets now. All tickets are on sale at the Houston Hall desk.

As an added feature the Penn- sylvania football team will be presented at 7;45 p.m.

(Continued from page 1) ly the Administration would reverse its sophmores-in-a- partments decision when Uni- versity housing became avail- able for them. The president also gave full

endorsement to the Commun- ity Involvement Council (CIC), and announced that CIC offi- cials should come to him with an application for money. CIC was a center of contro-

versy at last week's UPSG meeting when government bud- get director Joe Cooper an- nounced that the organization would receive a $1,500 allo- cation, which represented a cut in money of nearly two- thirds from last week. The CIC allocation was returned to the finance committee for reconsideration. Harnwell said that he wish-

ed the University were "weal- thier" so that it directly fi- nanced community involve- ment projects. Harnwell said that no meet-

iing has taken place or is scheduled to take place with James Miller Gicker, the a- lumnus who reportedly with- drew a proposed $250,000 be- quest to the Law School in anger over a Daily Pennsyl- vanian editorial which asked the president, who will be 64 on Friday, to consider retire- ment.

CALL 594-7535

Action line

QUESTION: The roof in our room, 221 McKean, leaks when it rains. Could you please have someone fix it immediately? — Ronald Ballek

ACTION: "Action Line" called the Men's Residence Office and asked them to send a roofer up immediately. The secretary did not seem too concerned, explaining that someone would be there eventually. "Action Line" was dismayed at the Office's attitude but tried to impress upon the secretary the need to have the mat- ter taken care of as soon as possible. She promised that she would put in a request for immediate service. "Action Line" couldn't help thinking that if the roof in the Men's Residence Office were leaking, that would be cause for immediate action.

QUESTION: I have been unable to locate a book for Oriental Studies 586, Anthology of Japanese Literature by E. Dale Saunders. Could you please find me a copy ? -- Joel Colby

ACTION: After an extensive search of Philadelphia book stores, "Action Line" called Barnes and Noble in New York. Dr. Saunders' book is published in London and is not readily available in the United States. However, Barnes and Noble said that they would order the book for you and other members of the class if you desire. "Action Line" got the impression that it might be con- siderably faster for you to fly to London to get the book yourself.

QUESTION: Could you please find out where I can pick up a form for the Computer Dating Service and how the System will work. —A.M.

ACTION: "Action Line" talked to Abe Shore, the head of the Service and found out the following information: forms will be available on Wednesday (tomorrow) in McClelland Hall. The forms can be filled out immediately and returned. Shore said that over 125 coeds have responded so far. The forms are matched by com- puter and the results sent to you. "Action Line" takes no re- sponsibilities for further action in this area, but will be happy to arrange for a room in Houston Hall if a wedding results.

PAGE FIVE THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967

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Doctrinal hairsplitting continues

Socialists shun political organization BY ROBERT JOHNSON

NEW YORK (CPS)—They are a hardy, far-flung lot, these so- cialists.

Charles Muller, a life-long native of Brooklyn, joined the movement when he was 16. He recalls with the fondness of age how he and "about 25" other students at the City College of New York walked out of a speech by Lt. Gen. Leonard Wood, pro- testing recent United States en- trance into World War 1 in 1917.

Another among the 1000 or so delegates to the Third Annual Socialist Scholars Conference held last weekend at the New York Hilton was William Hinton, for many years a resident of China (he was last there in 1953) and now a Pennsylvania farmer. Not to be outdone by Muller's fifty-year reminiscences, he produced for his dinner com- panions pictures of his beautiful 17-year-old daughter, a fervant member of the Red Guard. "She looks awfully happy," comment-

ed one woman at the table. "She knows she is building a new country," replied her father proudly.

Socialists here and abroad have often been accused of end- less doctrinal hairsplitting, Machiavellian polemical infight- ing, and even of a stout resist- ance to domestic and inter- national political realities, what- ever the time or place.

VARIETY OF VIEWS

Certainly, if this conference was any indication, there is still no lack of a variety of view- points. Just about everybody politically left of center seem- ed to be represented, from those collecting money, distributing pamphlets, and waving flags for the National Liberation Front to many a staid old New York publisher intent only on selling a few books.

Most of the speeches and de- bates, however, were suprising- ly restrained, in sharp contrast to the National Conference on

A publisher's surrey m of wh*>?*new'" the way

of unrequited reading

14,000 cheering fans, taking up every seat of a sports stadium to hear ... a poetry reading?

Yes, it has happened - is still happening, in fact. But not, you will be unsurprised to learn, in the United States. It happens in Russia, and the poet they come to cheer is Andrei Voznesensky.

Of course, while his readings may draw a few thousand fewer souls elsewhere, Voznesensky's reputation as a great poet is not confined to Russia. Robert Lowell has written of him, "He is full of invention, fireworks and humor ... a first rate craftsman who has had the heroic patience and imagination to be himself."

Anchor Books has just published a volume of Voznesen- sky's verse, including eight new poems, entitled ANTIWORLDS

AND "THE FIFTH ACE" (edited by Patricia Blake and Max Hayward; $1.95). It is a bilingual edition, with the Russian texts on left hand pages and English versions facing them. And it is a remarkable venture in the art of translation, because six'American poets - W. H. Auden, Jean Garrigue, Stanley Kunitz, Stanley Moss, William Jay Smith, and Richard Wilbur — worked with the editors from literal translations of the poems to create English equivalents. Voznesensky has written the translators of ANTIWORLDS: "I have long been convinced that poetry must be translated by poets. A poet understands another poet, even without the help of a dictionary ..."

W. H. Auden, in a foreword to this volume, tells why he - and many thousands of non-Russians throughout the world — want to hear and read Voznesensky's poetry: "One of the primary proofs that a poem, or any work of art, has value is that, wherever, whenever, and by whomever it was made, we find it relevant to ourselves, our time, and our place. I am certain that Mr. Voznesensky is a good poet because, though I know no Russian and have never been to Russia, his poems, even in English translation, have much to say to me."

• • •

THE MOTORCYCLE BOOK (a Doubleday paperback, $1.95) has much to say to anyone who is part of, or plans to join, the new breed of cycle owners. Peter C. Reid and Don Lehr- baum, both dedicated cyclists, have written an absolutely up-to-date, non-technical handbook that explains what you need to know to buy a new or used machine intelligently; how to keep it in topvcondition; how to ride it skillfully and safely; how to deal with emergency situations; and how to enjoy it and still stay in one, unbroken piece.

The two books reviewed above are published by the spon- sors of this column, Doubleday Anchor Books, 277 Park Avenue, New York City, and Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City, New York. You'll find them both at one of the best equipped booksellers in the country — your own college store.

New Politics held a week ago in the plush surrounding of Chi- cago's Palmer House. Everyone seemed devoted to the merits and demerits of the issues and analyses at hand. There were only a handful of Negroes to be seen in the crowds and very lit- tle real political organizing go- ing on. If the papers presented by long-winded speakers differ- ed widely in content and per- spective, they almost universal- ly reflected the academic-intel- lectual backgrounds of their wri- ters and discussions rather than pragmatic, revolutionary poli- ticking.

VIETNAM RARELY MENTIONED

Vietnam was a subject almost never directly mentioned; but on the few occasions when pole- mical reference to it were made, they always drew spontaneous applause.

Students and youth in general were also paid little heed. While in abundance as delegates and tenders of literature tables, there appeared to be no one under thirty on any of the first day's panels, and little was said about them.

One exception to middle-age tedium, however, was University of California at Irving profes- sor Peter Clecak, who, with stu- dent hero Paul Goodman, has declared that the only hope for a better society rests with America's students.

The type of social criticism with which the conference was so filled was, he said, however radical, a discursive substitute for action. This "popular art form,"Clecak claimed, project- ed a "limitless universe of dis- course" built on a conventional, rheotorical call to action that stands no chance of realization. With the power of words, every- one can be assured that some- thing is being done. "President Johnson, for example, announced he would ATTACK the terrible conditions in the ghettoes; and appointed a study commission," Clecak said.

"I...The power of words legitimizes the puny efforts of the present."

It is all fine social therapy, Clecak maintained, and "legiti- mizes the puny efforts of the present." It makes "our present

HERE I AM. PICK MEW

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social system gone mad" seem like one whose pieces are al- most ready to fall together into a consistent millenium.

Criticism, he said, provides good adjustive therapy for main- taining the capitalist system, in- stitutionalizing diversity and ad- ministering verbal but never po- litical shocks.

From there, he said, there is no place to go but into one's own private world, like LSD apostle Timothy Leary who finds even words too strong a tie to a stifling world; or to take to the streets.

FIRST STEP LACKING Everybody at the conference

would probably have supported a call to action in the streets, but no one, it seemed, was ready to take the first step.

"The delusion of stability has been swept away."

Irving Howe, editor of the impeccably radical "Dissent" magazine, held forth on Sunday with a continuing stream of un- abashed literary eloquence on the state of "The Welfare State." He saw real changes in the air, he said. "Ferment, conflict, vio- lence and madness" were every- where about. "The delusion of stability has been swept away." The radicals' chance to produce real change had arrived, he seemed to be saying. With the "disintegration of the original bonding assumptions of Ameri- can society," it would be possible to build a new, more humane mythos.

He was less clear, however, about what he thought ough to be created, and how. He cheered the crumbling of the "welfare state," but worried that it was

the military who were causing it. Yet he saw little possibil- ty for a mass society of mass contentment. History, he said, is overwhelmingly against such a possibility.

One of the traditional con- cerns of socialist scholars and writers, international politics, was, however, infused with some new intellectual life and poten- tial in the course of three semi- nars devoted to very different topics: the ruling class in foreign policy making, peasants and revolutionary warfare, and the origins of the Cold War.

William Domhoff of the Uni- versity of California at Santa Cruz and David Eakins of San Jose State College presented a self-styled C. Wright Millsian analysis of "Planners for the Ruling Class," drawing for in- spiration on contemporary poli- tical research on power elites rather than older Marxist con- ceptions of more narrowly econo- mic capitalist exploiters. WEALTH CONTROLS POLICY

The empirical evidence of to- tal control by the "international- ly minded corporate rich" of foreign policy making is, Domhoff said, overwhelming. He listed a number of mechanisms by which this control is exercised. Among them:

(1) The prestigeous Council on Foreign Relations, publisher of the journal Foreign Affairs; organizer of regular, secret committee meetings all over the country for discussion among businessmen and academicians of foreign policy problems and policies; and founder of the State Department's high level Policy Planning Board.

(2) Ford and Carnegie Foun- dations, principle supporters of international studies at almost every major university in the

(Continued on page 7)

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YOUNG LADY - PHOTOGRAPHY Model-Part-time model over 21. Must have good figure. Air cond. studio and good fee. Send small photo (face). R. Millman 121 Riffs Mill Rd. Ambler, Pa. 19002 1318 WANTED - GIRL FOR PART- Time Sales position. Apply at the Shoe Bazaar, 3423 Walnut.

2537 FRESHMEN, MALE AND FE- male, wanted for psychological study, 3 to 5 hours per week, all year. $1.50 per hour. Call Mrs. Lynn, ext. 7305 for initial appointment. 3225 PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER, specializing in Master's, Doc- toral Dissertations, Term- papers. Sample of work in li- braries of all area colleges. Flora Carlin, 7922 Rugby Street, LI-8-4124 2533 TYPIST: ELECTRIC TYPEWRI- ter. Doctorates, Master's, Termpapers in all departments. Many years experience. Refer- ences. City Line, Wyimefield, Merion, Havertown areas. Mrs. Robbins. HI 9-5130. 2538 VAST, VARIED EXP. EDITING, Typing: Books, articles, theses, term papers. IBM. Rush jobs. Joan, EV-7-0295. 3218

NEW & USED HI-FI AND STEREO equipment for sale. All compon- ent parts; amplifiers, speakers, turntable, etc. All brands avail- able. Call LO-7-7252. 1313 SPORTS CAR EQUIP. - Dis- count prices to students on Parts & Accessories. Fall hand top sale. Most makes from $140 com- plete. Mag wheels for sprites $34.95, MGB 39.95.Others avail- able. DE Competition474-0243.

1320 NEW LIVING ROOM SET CON- si sting of green sofa and match- ing chair. Call EV 2-6074 after 6 P.M. 2534

PERSONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY CLASS - Eve. Beg. 10/5 B/W, All phases, 35 MM to 8x10, incl. developing, printing, etc. BA 2-1797 2535 EXPERT INSTRUCTION IN French, German, Spanish, or Italian. Reasonable rates. Call WA 7-6696 2523 "WE'LL DO rT," SAYS UCT free-ly. Book your trip, reserve your cruise, arrange your car, rent your villa. University City Travel Service, 3331 Chestnut, 594-5160 2525

Thur». Sept. 28 EUGENE ORMANDY: Anthp°r*,f gv## Bonaventura, fiano

Sat. Sept. 30 Beethoven: ••Egmonf Overture Ev«

Mon. Oct. 2 Eve.

DBBinOYOM, «_y...~... —

Bartok: Concert #2 for Piano and Orch. Bruckner: Symphony #4 ("Romantic )

EUGENE ORMANDY Anthony di Beethoven: Bonaventura, Piano

Symphony #1 , Concert. #4 for piano and Orch. Symphony #5

Located on lflein Floor of Houston Hell rrt/&*&*lV/?-

PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967

Page 7: The Daily 'unwise - Penn Libraries · The Daily 'unwise VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs

Campus events CAMPUS AGENDA

CATACOMBS: Excerpts from Dr. Jekyll and Mrs. Hyde and D.W. Griffith's Fall of Babylon will be shown tonight at 10:00 p.m. Enter via alley off 36th St. near Locust Walk.

CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION: Dan Finnerty speaks on under- graduate life at 8 p.m. Chris- tian Assn., 36th and Locust Walk.

FREE UNIVERSITY: The Free University will be register- ing people to teach courses at the desk outside the West Lounge of Houston Hall, from 10 a.m. today, and 6-8 p.m. Anyone may teach a course. Undergraduates are especially urged to lead clas- ses in their special interests. Phone at Free University desk is 594-7803. Another service of your student government.

HILLEL: Folking Dancing- Wed. 6:30-8 p.m. All welcome. Dances will be taught.

HILLEL: Lecture; Rabbi Ar- nold Kaiman will speak on "The End of the Jewish People?" - an analysis of the recent best- seller by Georges Friedman. Tues. 4 p.m. at Hillel. Cam- pus community cordially invited.

INTERNATIONAL STU- DENTS ASSOCIATION: Interna- tional Coffee Hour, Wed. Sept. 27, 4-6 p.m. West Lounge, Hous- ton Hall.

NEGOTIATION NOW: Ne- gotiation now! All students and faculty who object to the bomb- ing of North Vietnam and Ameri- can unwillingness to negotiate with the National Liberation Front of S. Vietnam are urged to sign the NegotiationNow* peti- tion all week in Houston Hall's East Alcove. Volunteers to col- lect more signatures neededl

PRIMEVIL CHORAL GROUP: Meeting Tues. 7:30 p.m. at " Frank* s" 623 S. Taney. Try- outs (Bring appropriate instru- ments).

ROMANCE LANGUAGE CLUB: Hiroshima, Mon Amour and The Golden Fish at the Uni- versity Museum, tonight, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m.

VIETNAM WEEK COM- MITTEE: Bitch-in today at 11:00 a.m. in Houston Hall Plaza.

VIETNAM WEEK COM- MITTEE: Meeting today, 8 p.m., Houston Hall Franklin Room. All invited.

ACTIVITY NOTICE

ALPHA CHI SIGMA: Meeting today 5 p.m. in 108 Harrison Lab. Bring dues if possible.

BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA:. Rehearsal for all members, to- day at 11 a.m. in the Rehearsal Room, Houston Hall. Attendance mandatory!

BRIDGE CLUB: Game this Wed. in the West Lounge, Hous-

ton Hall, 7:00 p.m. COMMUTER ACTIVITY

BOARD: Members encouraged to attend 11 a.m. meeting today in Houston Hall, room 11.

CONNAISSANCE: First meet- ing of the year will be held at 7 p.m. tomorrow night in Hous- ton Hall. All are invited.

HILLEL: First meeting of the Freshman Council, Tues., Sept. 26 at 11 a.m. All Freshmen in- vited.

I .A .A. EDUCATION COM- MITTEE: Meeting at 11 a.m. to- day, Christian Association build- ing, to discuss plans for Model UJ*J. Committee members and others interested please attend.

INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Activities meet- ing for all those who signed up on Activities Night. Tues. Sept. 26 at 11 a.m. Christian Associa- tion.

PAN AMERICAN GROUP: A meeting of all students interest- ed in organizing a group of all students interested in organiz- ing a group about Latin America will be held in the Franklin Room, Houston Hall Wednesday at 9 p.m. Students from North and South America are especial- ly welcome.

PENN CINEMA: Classes to- day, 3-5 p.m., Friar's Room, Houston Hall. All new members should attend.

PENN SPIRIT COMMITTEE: Interview in Room #2, Houston Hall between 7:00-11:00 PJvl.

PGH PSYCHIATRIC VOLUN- TEERS: Volunteer groups will meet today through Thursday at 3:00 p.m. and at 8:30 pjn. at Houston Hall Bell and then proceed to Phila. General Hospi- tal.

ROMANCE LANGUAGES CLUB: If you are interested in French, Spanish, or Italian, and would like to learn more about the activities of the Romance Languages Club, we invite you to stop by our office 303 Pot- ter Hall between 3 and 5 p.m. Tues. or call ext. 8713.

ROMANCE LANGUAGES CLUB: THE RJL.C. invites everyone in speaking French, Italian, or Spanish to join us for lunch every Tues. and Wed. between 11:30 and 1:30 in Hill Hall.

SOCIETY FOR ADVANCE- MENT OF MANAGEMENT: Smo- ker for prespective members to- day in the Smith Pennimn Room. Houston Hall at 8 p jn.

SWIMMING: Meeting of all swimmers, varsity and fresh- men; 11 a.m. today, Training House.

TRANSYLVANIA: Transyl- vania Orientation Tea will be held at 11 a.m. today in Bennett Union Lounge.

(Continued from page 6) country; founders after World War II of the immensely influen- tial RAND Corporation of Santa Monica, California, since then a major source- of ideas and in- tellectual research for the Penta- gon; and sponsors of "Ford Hea- ver" in California, the idyllicly situated Center for Research in the Behaviorial Sciences.

(3) A continuing stream of committees and task forces ap- pointed by Presidents, Cabinet members and influential Senators and Congressmen, which shape and direct all major foreign poli- cy directions for the government and which are always entirely composed of prominent business- men and financiers.

Domloff mentioned arguments that these corporate rich some- how transcend their corporate interests in their more public capacities but dismissed them with the rhetorical question and answer, '' Whose interests do they represent? Guess."

On the other hand Eric R. Wolf, an anthropology professor at the University of Michigan, was very different in his ap- proach, maintaining at least a facade of complete objectivity and detachment in his careful soft-spoken analyses of peasants and revolutionary warfare.

He noted the susceptibility of "the middle peasants" to partici- pation in rebellion of one kind or another because of their wider contacts with less predictable people and institutions and the competing pressures of their middleman role between these wider social structures and the poorer, mass peasantry.

The crunch of industrial de- velopment hits these "middle" peasants hardest with the most striking results. Wolf saw the confrontation of backward, rural peasant society with advancing

industrialism and urbanism as the central conflict of the modern world. "The nature of the rela- tion between the two sectors is the key political problem of our time," he said.

Involving much more than rural backwardness, it necessi- tates a complete reworking of the traditional multiple con- straints between growing, long- dominant sectors of the society and the traditionally backward, subservient peasant-artisan.

The influence of modern "rul- ing class" studies, however, troubled their history in the aca- demic world, and of the sober, disciplined work of well-trained social scientists like Wolf seem- ed to manifest itself in the much more traditionally socialist seminar paper on " Radicals, Li- berals and the Origins of the Cold War" by Rutgers Univer- sity Professor Lloyd Gardner, with comments by author Gar Alperovitz.

The cliches of international corporate interest, international empire-building, and market protection remained but both wri- ters sought a somewhat less rhe- torical analysis with both more substance and subtlety, drawing on social science work such as Domhoff's and Wolfs.

The issue was post-World War II American "imperialism." 'ihe international interests of Franklin Roosevelt's admini- stration were agreed upon by these two authors, but his post- war direction was not. Alperovitz argued that prior to the explosion of the atomic bomb, the U. S. was well on its way, though not after many agonies of de- cision, to a "stable stance of enlightened conservatism" in its international activities.

The bomb, however, seemed to open up limitless potential, he contended. The containment of post-War Germany could now be assured without Russia's help; the Soviet Union's Eastern Euro-

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Live Music - Dancing

Discotheque

SAT IS DATE NIW TUES. THRU SAT 9 TO 2 CHESTNUT HALL

SUN 4 TO 10 39th & CHESTNUT

Lecture HUM

Rabbi Arnold Kaiman will speak on "The End of the Jewish People?" an analysis of the recent bestseller

TODAY, 4 PM AT HILLEL Campus community cordially

invitod.

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,Vd o ooo da bo o o oTd'o B a 6*o"w'q 5 a fttTvvvvinnnnrttT PAGE SEVEN THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26. 1967 0 0 0 0 0 0©*****

pean sphere of influence agreed to at Yalta could now be chal- lenged; Western Europe could now be solidly maintained in the American camp. Suddenly the Americans' favorite slogan the open door (open, in Alperovitz's interpretation, the ruthless pro- fiteering of American capital) became a worldwide possibility.

To which Michael Wreszin of Queens College added the ob- servation that the widely pro- claimed American moral com- mitment to anti-imperialism was in fact a very pragmatic com- mitment to "spreading the American way of life."

Still, no one at the confer- ence seemed to know where to go from there. The audience did not know how to react to the scholar- ly presentations. They seemed to yearn for a more fiery brand of socialism. They got their great- est thrill in the mild commo- tion accompanying a hippie money-throwing incident during the SDS speech. (The speaker declared he was too busy trying to finish his paper to be bother- ed; otherwise he would have ta- ken it.)

More friendly than revolu- tionary, and certainly more con- ventional looking than an SDS gathering and seemingly less political, they nevertheless pre- sented an earnest front in their deliberations. And innumerable socialist and capitalist publish- ers alike did a brisk business.

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Page 8: The Daily 'unwise - Penn Libraries · The Daily 'unwise VOL. LXXXIII Perhaps UPSG is making an estimate.' PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 NO. 39 UPSG needs

The Daily vanian- sports

PAGE EIGHT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967

Penn's All-American Harriers face Rutgers; SamulMJ^S,sl50'sTuppenysees tight meet

There is a returning All- American football player at Penn, and it isn't Bill Cree- den or George Burrell. Ac-

cording to the coaches, Jin- Samuels was the top 150-lb. football halfback last year. Of course, lightweight A11-

Americans aren't in quite as select a group as the top nat- ional varsity squad; there are hundreds of varsity college teams in the nation and only the seven EIFL teams in lightweight ball. But it is still no mean feat to be selected from a fifth-place squad. To gain his All-American

status, Samuels led the Quak- ers in scoring, yards rushing and receiving. The 5' 6", 152- lb. senior was a major reason for Penn's two-place rise from the cellar last year.

LIGHT LIGHTWEIGHT

Samuels considers himself small even by lightweight stan- dards. "By game-time," he said, "a good many of the players build themselves up to ten, fifteen pounds heavier than the 154 lb. limit, which is checked two days before. In addition. Army and Navy play- ers only weigh-in once, be- fore the season I think, so they have some 180 lb. 'mon- sters' roaming the field."

Despite Samuels small phy- sical stature, new head coach Bob Murray is obviously hap- py to have the All-American in his backfield. With this year's revamped offense, how- ever, Samuels expects to carry the ball less than before.

"We're using an I-format- ion," he explained. "Also, in, my halfback position I'll be counted on more for blocking and pass receiving than run- ning. The tailback, probably Charlie Lin, rushes the most in our offense."

Samuels played high school football for Hill School and was a sub on the Quakers' freshman team three years a- go before deciding lightweight football was for him.Like most of his teammates, he has been hoping for more emphasis to be placed on 150-lb. football by Penn's athletic department.

SMALL TURNOUT

"The playing conditions," he said, "are vastly different from the varsity's. We can't really expect to be able to beat teams like Army and Navy when we

Weightlifting club

The suggestion that a weight lifting club be formed at Penn has received the blessings of George Munger, head of the physical education department. If enough students are interested, Penn will be the first in the Ivy League to have a weight lifting club. The club is being organized by sophomore Steve Tay for all those "who enjoy the sport of body building." Assistant track coach Irving Mundshine, an avid weight lifter himself, will super- vise the club's activities. The club's first organizational meet- ing will be announced in the near future.

only practice one-and-a-half hours a day with a handful of players.

"Because of the small light- weight turn-out, we will pro- bably have eight or nine men playing both offense and de- fense. The service academies, with their bigger 150-lb. pro- grams, don't have this prob- lem."

Despite the small squad,Sam- uels is especially looking for- ward to revenge against Rut- gers and Cornell. Last year with li35 on the clock and a 19-13 lead, Penn allowed Rut- gers to finish with two touch- downs and the game. The big Red, on the other hand, sound- ly trounced the Quakers 34- 8. But the lighting was poor and the Penn quarterback had to play both ways.

"So with a good start," Sam- uels concluded, "and some luck we can improve on last sea- son's fifth-place finish, pos- sibly moving right up behind Army and Navy.*

/

*t

Millen loo as freshm

By DAN KAPLAN

A strong battle for the start- ing assignments is shaping up as the freshman squad pre- pares for its opening game two weeks off. Aggressiveness is the team's

main attribute, according to Coach Ken Millen, who has the task of unifying a group of boys who have never played together into a winning foot- ball team.

LAST YEAR FROSH 6-1

Though Millen would like to duplicate last year*s frosh rec- ord of 6-1, he does not con- sider a standout record the primary function of freshman football. He would like to get his players "oriented into the Odell system of football."

JERRY WILLIAMS and BILL CALDWELL Hard work, high morale

ks for good en have de

KENNETH MILLEN Frosh Football Coach

Already the team has held two Saturday intrasquad scrim- mages in which Millen has tried to find the positions in which his new crop of play- ers will best perform. Initial indications point to a

stronger defense than offense. According to Millen, the de- fensive unit has less to learn. In the scrimmages the coach has been pleased with the way the defense was working to-

gether and gang tackling. Millen is planning a slot of-

fense with a split end,- plann- ing to go to the air half the time. Three fellows still have a crack at running the offense, and according to their coach, all know how to throw the ball.

EGAN'S MICIR IS HERE

The most familiar to Phila- delphia residents is Pancho Micir, who gained recognition playing out of Bishop Egan in the Phila. Catholic League. Egan went on to the city title last year. Also vying for the top spot is

Steve Townsend of Dallas, who has a little speed edge on Micir, and Dave Fahrenbrink from Booneville,Missouri, who stands 6' 5" and goes 200 pounds. The top halfbacks at this stage

appear to be Steve Trunso of Glassport, Pa.; Dave Hamin, Fairhaven, N.J.; Dave Whit- tington, Coral Gables, Fla.; and Charley Aho, Middletown, NJ. Originally, Millen was con-

cerned with the team's running speed, but now he is pleased with the progress, remarking, "The backs are beginninf run harder now with pr y good speed; Hamin is the fast- est." The fullbacks have almost as

much depth as the quarter- backs. JohnTarver,BillBeurdt and Merle Stein are the leading contenders. Miller is espec- ially pleased with the power of the runners and their block- ing ability. Beurdt of North Ornster, Ohio, is the biggest at 6', 210 pounds.

LINE STILL SMALL

Millen's line, keeping with Penn's tradition, is not over- ly big, but the coach believes some of their good speed will make up for their lack of size.

The biggest lineman, Don Pradonvich, stands 6' 1" and weighs 225 pounds. Dan Klich and Paul Paschuta, two other standouts at tackle, both weigh 210 pounds, and Doug Kern, also looking for a starting role, goes at 198.

At guard Jim Fuddy and Bill Oakerman, weighing 195 and 185 pounds respectively, look strong, while Charlie Williams is a standout at center.

Millen is planning to play several boys both ways. On defense he is working 54 Oak- lahoma defense with some var- iations. Outstanding on defense were the ends Tydeman and Rishofsky, Prodanovich at tac- kle and Fuddy at guard. Other strong performers were Mark Dean at guard and Fred Craven at tackle.

The frosh start their season two weeks from Saturday a- gainst Lafeyette, and Millen, pleased with his team's ability and desire to learn, is hoping for a good season.

IF results

Last Thursday's Results:

By MARK PEARLMAN

Today's meet in Fairmount Park with Rutgers will provide Quaker cross country mentor Jim Tuppeny with a good barometer to measure his team's chances for a successful season.

The thinclads of Rutgers will be seeking revenge for lastyear's surprisingly easyvictory by the Penn team at New Brunswick.

VETERANS RETURN

The visitors will have their entire squad re- turning with the one exception of Jim Ryan, who finished first in last year's varsity race.However, the Scarlet Knights will be considerably bolstered by the return of Ed Shadduck, who did not compete last season and the addition of some excellent sophomores from the freshman team.

Shadduck is highly regarded by all of the coaches in the country and is described by Tuppeny as "the best cross country runner in the East outside of Villanova."

The top sophomores on the Rutgers team are Ron Morvillo, who finished first in the freshman race last year, which the Quarkerfroshwon24-31, and Leo Bellarmino and Dick Endris, who finished sixth and seventh respectively.

INJURIES HURT The Penn thinclads have been hurt considerably

by illness and injury. Jud Lavin, who finished sixth in last year's varsity race, is still unable to com-

pete due to illness and probably will not be fit until midseason.

Dave Ladanye, the top freshman harrier who finished second to Morvillo in the frosh race, has sustained a knee in- jury and has been out of prac- tice for two weeks. He will be unable to run in competition for another one or two weeks.

season pth, spirit

Phi Epsilon Pi Phi Delta Theta

Beta Zeta

Sigma Rho Beta Tau

Kappa Alpha Theta Xi

Mondays Results:

Sigma Nu Kappa Alpha

Phi Epsilon Pi Tau Epsilon Phi

Sigma Alpha Mu Beta Sigma Rho

Theta Psi Zeta Beta Tau

12 6

6 2

6 0

50 0

18 12

18 0

6 0

DAVE GOODWIN Back on the track

Captain Earl Andrews, who finished seventh, will lead a team consisting of Bill Kelso, Jerry Williams, and Bill Cald- well, who finished second, third and fifth respectively last year, along with sophomores Bob Acri and George Lokken and senior Dave Goodwin against Rutgers.

TOSS-UP

Summing up the prospects for the meet, Coach Tuppeny commented, "The boys have worked as hard as any team possibly could, and despite the injuries, their morale is very high. However, Rutgers is much improved over last year, and this will be their third meet already this year. In short, the meet is a complete toss- up."

Varsity baseball All sophmores, juniors, and

seniors interested in playing varsity baseball should report to 48th Street and Woodland Avenue today and Wednesday at 4 P.M.