4
Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt ® founded 1885 Vol. I.XXXVIII No. 110 Philadelphia Pennsylvania Copyright 1972 The Daily Pennsylvanian Wednesday, November 22. 1972 Penn Faces Dartmouth For Ivy Football Title GEORGE OTIENO - (far left) scores after just 48 seconds against Drexel in the first round of the NCAA tournament as l.arrv lluuston (6) and Dick Fenimore Jon Ooldtxri (10) move in for congratulations. The Quakers 4-0 victory paved the way for the showdown match with Penn State early next week. Soccer Team Beats Drexel in NCAA Tournament Romp, 4-0 By KEITH MERRILL Playing in weather that only an Eskimo could love, the Penn .oner team romped to a 4-0 victory over Drexel in the first round of the NCAA tournament last night at Eranklin Field. "Your ehinces are always good before the game." Dragon COacb Don Yonker observed. Before the game Yonker could afford to offer such wituism. Just 48 seconds into the contest Quake! forward George Otieno. playing with a sprained ankle, jumped on a Larry Houston lead pass and beat Drexel goalie Jim Ixiughran with a live yard chip shot ruining Yonker's optimism. The Dragons never recovered from the initial shock as the Quakers' greatest enemy seemed to be the freezing cold. "They came to play," Red and Blue coach Bob Seddon praised. "Their main problem was they were just out manned at each position." Through the first half Drexel mounted only sporadic scoring threats IS they often played eight nun in the defensive zone. The Dragons played kick-and run praying for the breakaway point, but the Quaker defense of Bill Strauh. Don Ries. John Gribbin and Nick Altmeyer simply outnumbered the Dragon forwards and snuffed any threats before they began. "We forced them to play defense." goalie Jim Miller observed lab in the game after being replaced Conrad Jones Resigns; Will Head State Office By SCOTT GIBSON Conrad Jones, associate dean of students and head of the University's advising program, has resigned to head the Commonwealth's Office of Minority Affairs in Higher Education in Harrisburg. His resignation is effective immediately. Jones, who directed Philadelphia's Tutorial Project until his appointment to the University in 1970, will take charge of a new office designed to oversee minority problems in state colleges and universities, working directly under Higher Education Commissioner Jerome Ziegler. He will also be in charge of distributing some $2 million in state funds to 20 state schools for use in support mechanisms for minority students. Mrs. Sylvia Brown, assistant to Jones, will take over his duties until a replacement can be found. Mrs. Alice Emerson, dean of students, did not estimate when a search committee would be formed. "I have a mixed reaction about it," President Martin Meyerson said, "I'm very pleased that one of our key people will be in such an important position, but we're sorry to see him go. It's good for the state," he con- tinued, "and great for Conrad, but we're sorry to lose him." Mrs. Alice Emerson said "I doubt that anyone knows the breadth and limitless nature of Conrad's efforts here. In addition to being a superb administrator and valuable staff associate, Conrad was the one who always went to the Round House or wherever in the middle of the night, he was the one who went to executive committees as advocate for students ... I already miss him very much." In his two and one-half years at Pennsylvania, Jones worked closely with minority groups, principally- black students, and was closely in- volved with admissions and residence problems. Although he claimed he would not become a spokesman for blacks when he was hired, Jones' career here has followed closely the changing attitudes and role of black students on campus. Appointed during CONRAD JONES Takes State Post a turbulent period here, Jones has seen substantial changes in black attitudes and claims the time of in- flated racial rhetoric of the late 1960's is over. In July, 1970, two months after he was appointed. Jones said in an in- terview, "I could be a revolutionary but I have to work to achieve the goals that students here seek." He claims to have seen many of those changes occur, despite his disappointment with the University's attitude toward black and other minority students. In an interview last week, Jones said there have been many im- provements in the performance of black students here, both academically and socially, but it will (Continued on page 2} VAN PELT LIBRARY THANKSGIVING HOURS Main Collection Rosengarten Reserve Wednesday. Nov. 22 Thursday. Nov. 23 8:45 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. 8:45 a.m. -5:00 p.m. (THANKSGIVING DAY) CLOSED CLOSED Friday, Nov. 24 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 25 9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 26 CLOSED 5:00 p.m. - 12 midnight Monday, Nov. 27 Resume Regular Hours Resume Regular Hours by sophomore Jeff Gold. "We out- pla) ed them." Despite the Drexel defensive efforts, the Quakers scored twice more in the first half, each time capitalizing on Dragon errors. With 37:56 elapsed Doug King intercepted a pass from a Drexel fullback and centered to Tom Botch, playing most of the game in Otieno's place, who headed-in the pass for the second goal. Barely four minutes later King and Baumann broke behind the defense together and King tallied after a short crossing pass. "Sometimes when a team is playing this tight it's good if the other team has the initiative and let things open up," Seddon observed. "They weren't getting the ball up field though and we weren't playing particularly well so we never got good scoring chances." Great goaltending by Loughran for Drexel prevented the game from developing into a run-away as the Red and Blue played far better soccer in the second period. Loughran repeatedly snuffed scoring opportunities with miraculous saves as his defense collapsed under relentless pressure. "Loughran was as good as any goal keeper we've played against," Seddon praised. Despite turning the game into a half field scrimmage in the second half, the Quakers only managed to score once. Baumann raced down the right side line after a Drexel player slipped to the frozen AstroTurf and centered to John Burke who raced ahead of the defense to score on a breakaway with 38:22 gone in the period. The victory, the second shutout over Drexel this year, paved the way for a rematch of last year's Penn-Penn State battle as the Nittany Lions defeated St. Joe's, 2-0 in University Park. "I'd love to play Penn State, just love it," Gribbin remarked. "We've been thinking about that for a long time and it hurt us tonight." By DAVE CHANDLER Penn seeks its first Ivy League football championship since 1959 this Saturday as the Quakers face conference-leading Dartmouth on the AstroTurf at 1:30 P.M. The Quakers, winners of their last five games, possess a 4-2 Ivy slate with a (i-2 record overall, while the Big (ireen. winner of three straight Ancient Light titles, has compiled 4-1-1 and 6-1-1 slates respectively. WXPN (730 AM. 88.9 FMl will broadcast the game, starting at 1 P.M. Should Penn win. Yale (4-2 Ivies) can grab a share of the championship by beating Harvard in Cambridge. Dartmouth can clinch the title outright with a victory. A Quaker triumph would culminate one of the most amazing comebacks in Ivy League grid history. The Red and Blue, seemingly out of the race after two straight losses to Brown and Cornell, defeated Princeton, Harvard, Yale, and Columbia in succession to set up Saturday's showdown. "We played very good football against Cornell," analyzed coach Harry Gamble. "We won that game with the exception of the last 45 seconds. I felt that we were good enough to win the rest of our games if we played with a positive attitude, but you never know what the final results will be; we just took it game by game. I truthfully felt that we could beat anyone in the league." Defensive tackle Ed Flanagan echoed his coach's thoughts. "1 happened to be sitting beside coach Gamble on the busride home from Cornell." related the senior prelaw Student. "Things looked pretty- dismal then. But we charted all the games we had ahead of us, and his believing that we could win the rest of them really rubbed off on the team."' "This season is so different from last year," remarked center Bob Jameson. "We lost two games last vear and we were out of it. but this year everybody's for the team and we knew we could come back." One of the intangible (actors that Penn must overcome is the "Dartmouth mystique". The Hanoverians have been the Nebraska of the Ivy League ever since round-robin play started in 1956. copping eight titles and compiling a 107-34-3 record. The Quakers have beaten the Big Green only twice in the last 15 years, and suffered a 19-3 loss last season. "We have to conquer the Dartmouth image." observed safetj Tom Welsh. "They've been winning Ivy crowns, they've been ranked nationally, they're a formidable football team. We have to think that we're on par with Dartmouth. Just believing that we're as good as Dartmouth i. the biggest ]ob we have to do.' Tradition may be on the tide of the Big (ireen, but the Quaker- are confident that they can successfully meet the challenge. "This game means a championship, first of all," noted senior running back Ron Dawson. "I've been doing it (playing foot ball l for four years and we've never come close. It's our chance for {Continued on /'<.,.' ' Federal Court Reverses 'Chicago T Convictions By United Press International CHICAGO Citing a "deprecatory and often antagonistic attitude" by Judge Julius J. Hoffman, the U.S. Court of Appeals Tuesday reversed the five convictions returned at the "Chicago Seven" trial. The defendants can be tried again for their part in the disturbances surrounding the 1968 Democratic National Convention, the appeals court ruled. In Washington, a Justice Department spokesman said no Referral Agency Helps Match UD Roommates By STEPHEN HIGH Roommates Unlimited, a housing referral service operated by Temple student Mark Pachtman, should make it easier for students and others in the Philadelphia area to locate housing for themselves and, conversely, to fill vacant rooms. Although Pachtman's services are available throughout the city, he said that in his first three weeks of operation a majority I numbering 60 or so) of his applications have come from University of Pennsylvania students. According to Pachtman. his service consists of matching people who need a place to stay with people who have space available, and want to cut their rent costs. Pachtman said that Roommates Unlimited does not guarantee com- plete congeniality between the people it brings together. However he does guarantee that, for ten dollars, paid in advance, anyone looking for a place to live will be given listings until he is satisfied with one, and anyone looking to fill an empty bed will be sent potential roommates until one agrees to move in. Although Pachtman claimed he is not sure how many successful mat- ches have been made so far in the University area, he said he has not yet received any complaints. Pachtman. who operates out of a townhouse in Center City, said he got the idea for Roommates Unlimited when he went to Boston to set up a sandwich concession, and noticed that a number of room referral services were operating in the Boston area. He concluded that there would be a definite demand for such a service in Philadelphia, and decided to establish one himself. (Continued on pax* . decision had been made on whether to prosecute again. In a 121-page decision, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the constitutional rights of the defendants may have been violated at the nearly five-month-long trial, one of the most turbulent in the history of American jurisprudence. "We conclude that the demeanor of the judge and the prosecutors would require reversal, if other errors did not," the appeals court said. The decision overturned the con- victions of David Dellinger, Rennie C. Davis, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin and Thomas Hayden. Two other defendants, John Froines and Lee Weiner, were acquitted at the trial. The court said Judge Hoffman's deprecatory and often antagonistic attitude toward the defense is evident in the record from the very beginning. It appears in remarks and actions both in the presence and absence of the jury." The court ruled that while the anti- riot act under which the defendants were charged was constitutional and the evidence presented against them was sufficient to prosecute, there was a 'reversible error" in the selection of the trial jury by Hoffman. It said Hoffman erred in forbidding defense attorneys from conducting deeper questioning of prospective jurors concerning their attitude, and in not questioning them about the effect of pretrial publicity. The decision also said each defendant was entitled to a disclosure of, and a hearing on, certain wire- tapping logs held by the government before any new trial begins, to see if "unlawful surveillance ... tainted the government's evidence against him." University Agrees to Purchase Union Lettuce By JOHN DANISZEWSK1 The Dining Service announced Tuesday it "will purchase only iceberg lettuce which is provided by growers who have union contracts with farm workers." The policy change was contained in a statement released by Vice-president for Management Paul Caddis. Previously the Dining Service had selected lettuce on the criteria of quality, price, and availability. The University did not agree, however, to purchase only lettuce picked by members of Cesar Chavez' United Farm Workers Union (UFWU), as demanded by the Penn Committee to Boycott Lettuce. Scott Lederman, an aide to Caddis, said the University would not take sides in the dispute between UFWU and the Teamsters' Union over farm workers. Peter Wolk, a member of the boycott committee, said the Gaddis statement was "unacceptable" because the University would continue to purchase lettuce picked by non-union workers, although it may be "packed and shipped" by the Teamsters. Another member, Geoff Gilmore, charged "the University has ducked out on its social and moral (Continued on page 2) STUDENTS ANDREW ROWLAND (right) and Mark Cohen negotiate with Vice President for Management Paul Gaddis and Dean of Students Alice Emerson over Mike Rosen man the University's lettuce-purchasing policy. The University agreed to buy only Union lettuce, but did not specify- that the Union would be the United Farm Workers.

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Page 1: Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt · Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt ® ... seconds against Drexel in the first round of the NCAA ... Houston lead pass and beat Drexel Court

Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt ®

founded 1885 Vol. I.XXXVIII No. 110 Philadelphia Pennsylvania Copyright 1972 The Daily Pennsylvanian Wednesday, November 22. 1972

Penn Faces Dartmouth For Ivy Football Title

GEORGE OTIENO - (far left) scores after just 48 seconds against Drexel in the first round of the NCAA tournament as l.arrv lluuston (6) and Dick Fenimore

Jon Ooldtxri (10) move in for congratulations. The Quakers 4-0 victory paved the way for the showdown match with Penn State early next week.

Soccer Team Beats Drexel in NCAA Tournament Romp, 4-0

By KEITH MERRILL Playing in weather that only an

Eskimo could love, the Penn .oner team romped to a 4-0 victory over Drexel in the first round of the NCAA tournament last night at Eranklin Field.

"Your ehinces are always good before the game." Dragon COacb Don Yonker observed.

Before the game Yonker could afford to offer such wituism. Just 48 seconds into the contest Quake! forward George Otieno. playing with a sprained ankle, jumped on a Larry Houston lead pass and beat Drexel goalie Jim Ixiughran with a live yard chip shot ruining Yonker's optimism. The Dragons never recovered from the initial shock as

the Quakers' greatest enemy seemed to be the freezing cold.

"They came to play," Red and Blue coach Bob Seddon praised. "Their main problem was they were just out manned at each position."

Through the first half Drexel mounted only sporadic scoring threats IS they often played eight nun in the defensive zone.

The Dragons played kick-and run praying for the breakaway point, but the Quaker defense of Bill Strauh. Don Ries. John Gribbin and Nick Altmeyer simply outnumbered the Dragon forwards and snuffed any threats before they began.

"We forced them to play defense." goalie Jim Miller observed lab in the game after being replaced

Conrad Jones Resigns; Will Head State Office

By SCOTT GIBSON Conrad Jones, associate dean of

students and head of the University's advising program, has resigned to head the Commonwealth's Office of Minority Affairs in Higher Education in Harrisburg. His resignation is effective immediately.

Jones, who directed Philadelphia's Tutorial Project until his appointment to the University in 1970, will take charge of a new office designed to oversee minority problems in state colleges and universities, working directly under Higher Education Commissioner Jerome Ziegler. He will also be in charge of distributing some $2 million in state funds to 20 state schools for use in support mechanisms for minority students.

Mrs. Sylvia Brown, assistant to Jones, will take over his duties until a replacement can be found. Mrs. Alice Emerson, dean of students, did not estimate when a search committee would be formed.

"I have a mixed reaction about it," President Martin Meyerson said, "I'm very pleased that one of our key people will be in such an important position, but we're sorry to see him go. It's good for the state," he con- tinued, "and great for Conrad, but we're sorry to lose him."

Mrs. Alice Emerson said "I doubt that anyone knows the breadth and limitless nature of Conrad's efforts here. In addition to being a superb administrator and valuable staff associate, Conrad was the one who always went to the Round House or wherever in the middle of the night, he was the one who went to executive committees as advocate for students ... I already miss him very much."

In his two and one-half years at Pennsylvania, Jones worked closely with minority groups, principally- black students, and was closely in- volved with admissions and residence problems. Although he claimed he would not become a spokesman for blacks when he was hired, Jones' career here has followed closely the changing attitudes and role of black students on campus. Appointed during

CONRAD JONES Takes State Post

a turbulent period here, Jones has seen substantial changes in black attitudes and claims the time of in- flated racial rhetoric of the late 1960's is over.

In July, 1970, two months after he was appointed. Jones said in an in- terview, "I could be a revolutionary but I have to work to achieve the goals that students here seek." He claims to have seen many of those changes occur, despite his disappointment with the University's attitude toward black and other minority students.

In an interview last week, Jones said there have been many im- provements in the performance of black students here, both academically and socially, but it will

(Continued on page 2}

VAN PELT LIBRARY THANKSGIVING HOURS

Main Collection Rosengarten Reserve Wednesday. Nov. 22 Thursday. Nov. 23 8:45 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. 8:45 a.m. -5:00 p.m. (THANKSGIVING DAY) CLOSED CLOSED Friday, Nov. 24 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 25 9:00 a.m. • 5:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 26 CLOSED 5:00 p.m. - 12 midnight Monday, Nov. 27 Resume Regular Hours Resume Regular Hours

by sophomore Jeff Gold. "We out- pla) ed them."

Despite the Drexel defensive efforts, the Quakers scored twice more in the first half, each time capitalizing on Dragon errors. With 37:56 elapsed Doug King intercepted a pass from a Drexel fullback and centered to Tom Botch, playing most of the game in Otieno's place, who headed-in the pass for the second goal. Barely four minutes later King and Baumann broke behind the defense together and King tallied after a short crossing pass.

"Sometimes when a team is playing this tight it's good if the other team has the initiative and let things open up," Seddon observed. "They weren't getting the ball up field though and we weren't playing particularly well so we never got good scoring chances."

Great goaltending by Loughran for Drexel prevented the game from developing into a run-away as the Red and Blue played far better soccer in the second period. Loughran repeatedly snuffed scoring opportunities with miraculous saves as his defense collapsed under relentless pressure.

"Loughran was as good as any goal keeper we've played against," Seddon praised.

Despite turning the game into a half field scrimmage in the second half, the Quakers only managed to score once. Baumann raced down the right side line after a Drexel player slipped to the frozen AstroTurf and centered to John Burke who raced ahead of the defense to score on a breakaway with 38:22 gone in the period.

The victory, the second shutout over Drexel this year, paved the way for a rematch of last year's Penn-Penn State battle as the Nittany Lions defeated St. Joe's, 2-0 in University Park.

"I'd love to play Penn State, just love it," Gribbin remarked. "We've been thinking about that for a long time and it hurt us tonight."

By DAVE CHANDLER Penn seeks its first Ivy League

football championship since 1959 this Saturday as the Quakers face conference-leading Dartmouth on the AstroTurf at 1:30 P.M.

The Quakers, winners of their last five games, possess a 4-2 Ivy slate with a (i-2 record overall, while the Big (ireen. winner of three straight Ancient Light titles, has compiled 4-1-1 and 6-1-1 slates respectively. WXPN (730 AM. 88.9 FMl will broadcast the game, starting at 1 P.M.

Should Penn win. Yale (4-2 Ivies) can grab a share of the championship by beating Harvard in Cambridge. Dartmouth can clinch the title outright with a victory.

A Quaker triumph would culminate one of the most amazing comebacks in Ivy League grid history. The Red and Blue, seemingly out of the race after two straight losses to Brown and Cornell, defeated Princeton, Harvard, Yale, and Columbia in succession to set up Saturday's showdown.

"We played very good football against Cornell," analyzed coach Harry Gamble. "We won that game with the exception of the last 45 seconds. I felt that we were good enough to win the rest of our games if we played with a positive attitude, but you never know what the final results will be; we just took it game by game. I truthfully felt that we could beat anyone in the league."

Defensive tackle Ed Flanagan echoed his coach's thoughts. "1 happened to be sitting beside coach Gamble on the busride home from Cornell." related the senior prelaw Student. "Things looked pretty- dismal then. But we charted all the games we had ahead of us, and his believing that we could win the rest of them really rubbed off on the team."'

"This season is so different from last year," remarked center Bob Jameson. "We lost two games last vear and we were out of it. but this

year everybody's for the team and we knew we could come back."

One of the intangible (actors that Penn must overcome is the "Dartmouth mystique". The Hanoverians have been the Nebraska of the Ivy League ever since round-robin play started in 1956. copping eight titles and compiling a 107-34-3 record. The Quakers have beaten the Big Green only twice in the last 15 years, and suffered a 19-3 loss last season.

"We have to conquer the Dartmouth image." observed safetj Tom Welsh. "They've been winning Ivy crowns, they've been ranked nationally, they're a formidable football team. We have to think that we're on par with Dartmouth. Just believing that we're as good as Dartmouth i. the biggest ]ob we have to do.'

Tradition may be on the tide of the Big (ireen, but the Quaker- are confident that they can successfully meet the challenge. "This game means a championship, first of all," noted senior running back Ron Dawson. "I've been doing it (playing foot ball l for four years and we've never come close. It's our chance for

{Continued on /'<.,.' ■'

Federal Court Reverses 'Chicago T Convictions

By United Press International

CHICAGO — Citing a "deprecatory and often antagonistic attitude" by Judge Julius J. Hoffman, the U.S. Court of Appeals Tuesday reversed the five convictions returned at the "Chicago Seven" trial.

The defendants can be tried again for their part in the disturbances surrounding the 1968 Democratic National Convention, the appeals court ruled. In Washington, a Justice Department spokesman said no

Referral Agency Helps Match UD Roommates

By STEPHEN HIGH Roommates Unlimited, a housing

referral service operated by Temple student Mark Pachtman, should make it easier for students and others in the Philadelphia area to locate housing for themselves and, conversely, to fill vacant rooms.

Although Pachtman's services are available throughout the city, he said that in his first three weeks of operation a majority I numbering 60 or so) of his applications have come from University of Pennsylvania students.

According to Pachtman. his service consists of matching people who need a place to stay with people who have space available, and want to cut their rent costs.

Pachtman said that Roommates Unlimited does not guarantee com- plete congeniality between the people it brings together. However he does

guarantee that, for ten dollars, paid in advance, anyone looking for a place to live will be given listings until he is satisfied with one, and anyone looking to fill an empty bed will be sent potential roommates until one agrees to move in.

Although Pachtman claimed he is not sure how many successful mat- ches have been made so far in the University area, he said he has not yet received any complaints.

Pachtman. who operates out of a townhouse in Center City, said he got the idea for Roommates Unlimited when he went to Boston to set up a sandwich concession, and noticed that a number of room referral services were operating in the Boston area. He concluded that there would be a definite demand for such a service in Philadelphia, and decided to establish one himself.

(Continued on pax* .

decision had been made on whether to prosecute again.

In a 121-page decision, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the constitutional rights of the defendants may have been violated at the nearly five-month-long trial, one of the most turbulent in the history of American jurisprudence.

"We conclude that the demeanor of the judge and the prosecutors would require reversal, if other errors did not," the appeals court said.

The decision overturned the con- victions of David Dellinger, Rennie C. Davis, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin and Thomas Hayden. Two other defendants, John Froines and Lee Weiner, were acquitted at the trial.

The court said Judge Hoffman's deprecatory and often antagonistic

attitude toward the defense is evident in the record from the very beginning. It appears in remarks and actions both in the presence and absence of the jury."

The court ruled that while the anti- riot act under which the defendants were charged was constitutional and the evidence presented against them was sufficient to prosecute, there was a 'reversible error" in the selection of the trial jury by Hoffman.

It said Hoffman erred in forbidding defense attorneys from conducting deeper questioning of prospective jurors concerning their attitude, and in not questioning them about the effect of pretrial publicity.

The decision also said each defendant was entitled to a disclosure of, and a hearing on, certain wire- tapping logs held by the government before any new trial begins, to see if "unlawful surveillance ... tainted the government's evidence against him."

University Agrees to Purchase Union Lettuce By JOHN DANISZEWSK1

The Dining Service announced Tuesday it "will purchase only iceberg lettuce which is provided by growers who have union contracts with farm workers."

The policy change was contained in a statement released by Vice-president for Management Paul Caddis. Previously the Dining Service had selected lettuce on the criteria of quality, price, and availability.

The University did not agree, however, to purchase only lettuce picked by members of Cesar Chavez' United Farm Workers Union (UFWU), as demanded by the Penn Committee to Boycott Lettuce.

Scott Lederman, an aide to Caddis, said the University would not take sides in the dispute between UFWU and the Teamsters' Union over farm workers.

Peter Wolk, a member of the boycott committee, said the Gaddis statement was "unacceptable" because the University would continue to purchase lettuce picked by non-union workers, although it may be "packed and shipped" by the Teamsters.

Another member, Geoff Gilmore, charged "the University has ducked out on its social and moral

(Continued on page 2)

STUDENTS ANDREW ROWLAND (right) and Mark Cohen negotiate with Vice President for Management Paul Gaddis and Dean of Students Alice Emerson over

Mike Rosen man the University's lettuce-purchasing policy. The University agreed to buy only Union lettuce, but did not specify- that the Union would be the United Farm Workers.

Page 2: Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt · Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt ® ... seconds against Drexel in the first round of the NCAA ... Houston lead pass and beat Drexel Court

®l|e Jail]) ^emts^lliatnan 1885 • 1972

The Newspaper of the Iniversity of Pennsylvania

Wednesday, November 22, 1972 Page 2

I MM lil \kl VW.I.iiiutm ilu, I mOMASPAPSON, Managing Editor • rHOMAS I WING,Butinea Manager

SCOTT GIBSON, Edit/rill Chairman. NAN( \ SPARKS, Vews I dltoi STEVEN \v I N N. 34th Street Editor, PHII IP N. SHIMKIN, Sportl Editor: EDWARD ROTH. Photograph) Editor, MERRY III NIC. Advertising Manager, HOWARD P. NEWMAN, Financial Manager K scoi! sin LDON, III. Credit Manager, MICHAEL STEPHEN CROSS. 34th Street Business Manager UK I 1 . GOI I/. Production Manager: KOBI RT WEMISCHNER, ^-/r/i Siwr Associate Bdllor, HILL WI1 11 IstorfeM Sporn Editor DANII I \. KASII. Associate Photograph) Editor ANTHONY KOVATCH, Assistant Spent Editor, BENJAMIN L. GINSBERG, Contributing Editor, MARK MclNTYRI . Contributing Editor

Liberating the liberators

Letters to the editor

Death at Southern U. It is imperative that all of us show

deep and urgent concern about the death of two students al Southern University in Baton Rouge. Wherever the responsibility for these deaths may lie, it is clear that a true assessment of the situation will be much facilitated if those responsible for an investigation are aware that

people throughout the country are seriously enough interested to reject facile or implausible explanations.

This is clear if we consider that the officials concerned have already taken prejudiced positions with regard to the incident: positions which are detrimental to a truthful assessment of the situation.

"Think They've Figured Oul A System To Keep ME From Growing?"

Governor Edwards has stated that even if it should develop that the two dead men were killed by the police, he would not blame the police. Mayor Dumas has had this to say: "Two men have been shot and there may be more if necessary ... we are going to lake back over the administration building at any cost."

One may also perhaps ask why the authorities over-reacted to such an extent as to send armed policemen and state-troopers tf> deal with a protest-movement w! concerned itself with the ni reasonable demands. It is, indeed, a sorry comment on the state of affairs in this country that reasonable demands should have to be expressed in such extreme action, for lack of more gentle and effective channels. One is reminded of a line from a recent rock-song: "They said the students scared the guard, though the troops were battle-dressed."

Amit Pandya (Iraduate School of Education

'T^rW *C R L-o T »c

Letter policy

The Daily Pennsylvanian welcomes comment and criticism and we urge all members of the community to express their views publicly. All letters addressed to the editor should be sent to our offices at 34ttl and Chestnut sts. The Daily Pennsylvanian is not able to publish unsigned letters, although names will be withheld upon request. We reserve the right to edit letters according to space limitations. Letters should be typed at 66 characters per line.

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Jazz In Irvine A Benefit for the Curtis Organ

Merkuri Davis & Clouds Merkuri Davis is Miles Davis, Jr., who plays an electric trumpet with a moog voice in a 10 piece jazz group. The Curtis Organ will be played.

Monday. Nov. 27 Irvine Auditorium 8 p. $1.50 Donation at Door

B) Alice Slant'

Can women be sisterly? Has liberation changed women significantly? A jaunl through Philadelphia's women's movement, which included participation in a consciousness-raising group, the Women's Political Caucus and the Women's Arts Center, indicates that women haven't changed much — If at all. In fact, there's a vast gulf between the high-flown rhetoric of Greer, Steinem and Friedan and what's actually occurring at the grass-roots level.

First, consciousness-raising. This is just another word for group-therapy — without a therapist. A half-dozen or so women meet weekly to discuss such issues as breasts, feminine conditioning in a male-dominated society, etc.

The hottest topic was breasLs, which carried over into quite a few sessions. The term "male chauvinist pig" was used at regular intervals to describe men who preferred bosomy women to flat-chested ones. One woman, an unemployed writer who blamed 74 per cent of her ills on just this very prejudice met a 'chauvinist' who didn't care about that sort of thing and has been happily cooking and cleaning up after him ever since. He in turn spares her the ordeal of job-hunting. Needless to say, Steinem & Co. would take a dim view of such an arrangement.

Several of the women in my group discussed sexual frequency, apparently because it was an opportunity to learn how "normal" they were. It turned out that most were cohabiting about once a week or ten days, a paltry sex-life I thought. I was grimly advised that a "tender touch" or "kind word" can be more gratifying than the actual sex act ■ not an unimportant thing to learn. After a few months of this, I dropped out of the group because the flatchested members banded together against the bustier ones and gossip ensued.

Next was my brief encounter with the Women's Political Caucus. 1 attended one meeting of the Steering Committee to submit what I thought was an absolutely brilliant proposal regarding the Mullen Bill.

However, the ladies were much involved in a discussion on breast-feeding and someone's baby kept crying and screaming, interrupting the proceedings. One woman, a very pregnant full-time volunteer for McCovern, didn't like my proposal and dampened everyone else's enthusiasm for it. So I walked away quite sour-grapes as you can imagine.

Three other meetings of the caucus revealed they were badly attended though active with much letter-writing to senators re the Mullen Bill and the introduction of political candidates which was quite informative. A middle-brow element prevails in this organization and one gets the impression some of the officeholders will endeavor to entrench themselves forever - it's that much of an ego trip for them. However, the caucus' president, Sharon Wallis.is a very bright lawyer

and its main asset. The Women's Arts Center, to

date, has proven to be a fiasco. It's official opening, which was last month, resulted in a number of women using the occasion to "come out of the closet," with much handholding, kissing and hugging. There was also several hours of lesbian love poetry which was embarrassing to this writer whose name was on the program, having exhibited some paintings.

Needless to say, the Women's Movement is certainly an interesting phenomenon. Unfortunately, changes are superficial and women remain for the most part girdled to tradition, no matter what Greer, Steinem and Friedan tell you. Contrary to what the Virginia Slims ads say, the ladies have a long way to go. Alice Shane is a writer, artist and part-time CGS student

Intellectual sparkle B) Roger O'Dell

R. Buckminster Fuller's outpouring of thoughts at the Connaissance presentation Monday night was a most refreshing and provocative experience. It was a welcome surprise to find a real intellectual and a real human in this University community which has been sorely lacking in both. He is a true scholar: the extent of his knowledge includes many fields, and the breadth of his thinking is phenomenal Only he could sum up a two hour excursion into "Universe and Humans" with four words: "No other, no me."

Mr. Fuller's presence as a "World Fellow" at the University City Science Center brings a breath of fresh air to an environment which has been polluted both intellectually and aesthetically 'n fact, Mr. Fuller's presence nost seems antithetical to y of the operations of the i> .ence Center. While Mr. Fuller is very rational and very human, many of the dealings of the Science Center have been

irrational and inhuman. I wonder what ever happened to the "Sit-in Agreements of February 1969" which were designed to replace some of the housing which was torn down to make way for UCSC. Mr. Fuller will not find any geodesic domes to greet him here; only ten square blocks of vacant land.

A number of questions have been raised about the Science Center, but Buckminster Fuller has added yet another one last night: "How much does the Science Center weigh?"

If Mr. Fuller's mind has the effect which it should on this campus, the University of Pennsylvania will not be the same after he has gone. Unfortunately, he did not get back to elaborating on his design for education: an approach that would look at the whole, the system, rather than at the individual parts. I hope that Mr. Fuller's ideas will be introduced time and again during his stay here; he just touched on so many things last night, and each item was fuel for a million discourses.

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I I I I I I ■ I I I ■ ■ I ■ I I I ■ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ■ I I I I I I I I I I ■ I ■ I I I I I

University Year for ACTION is a component of the ACTION agency in Washington, D.C. UYA takes Penn

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Consumer Fraud - District Attorney's Office

Administration of Justice - Safe Streets

Drug & Alcoholism - Diagnostic & Rehabilitation Center, et al.

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..I

Page 3: Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt · Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt ® ... seconds against Drexel in the first round of the NCAA ... Houston lead pass and beat Drexel Court

Wednesday, November 22, 1972 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 8

{Continued ftvm Atfc // be five or ten years before they are ready to compete with other students on an equal basis.

"The biggest mistake anyone can make," he said, "is to take credit for something he hasn't done. But there has been a shift in the type of black student here, a shift in the attitudes of black students, a shift in the per- formance of blacks here and a real shift in their involvement."

Jones pointed to academic im- provement, higher quality applicants and a feeling that blacks are "more concerned with getting things done" as major changes in the past three years. He noted increased par- ticipation in the advising program for black students and said more graduate students had volunteered to tutor blacks, both during the academic year and in the summer.

He said there are now between 93 and 100 black students being tutored now, as compared with only 19 two years ago. He also said the number of

Conrad Jones Resigns News in Hrief

black students who needed academic help after their freshman year has dropped from 55 two years ago to 27 now. In addition, he said, there has been great improvement In the grade point average of black students.

Jones also pointed to the W.E.B. Dubois residence as a positive step for black students here. He attributed the failure of other black residence projects, notably at Antioch College in Ohio, to a tendency to "respond to rhetoric not an idea." He said the residence project here "turns kids on to what's here" as well as providing a valuable growth experience for its members. He discounted criticism that the dorm fosters a separatist attitude of blacks and makes racial understanding more difficult.

"I don't think its that sheltered," Jones said. "Kids eat out on campus, classes are predominately white, and there are whites in the dorm. These things speak to the fact that it's not a closed situation. It's a maximum two- year program and if kids are halfway

Campus Events "III' IAI

DEPARTMENT Of Mil MARY SCIENCE) Announce! in uUditlimjl underclass seminar ttul is open lo all sludt'iils Course ' lillcd, "Mililmy Hislnrv ol thr Soviel Union." rcgislration data, No. 142; Instructor, I* Saciuk/Hodder; time, Thur., 11-1:30 P.M.; MOJUencc no. 44412. l-'or additional info 504-775K.

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mature, they'll start developing mechanisms to help them cope with the University."

"To know other people is still a growth experience because minority students are not all the same," Jones said.

However optimistically Jones spoke of the dorm project, he was critical of the University's attitude towards its progress and chances for success. "I'm fearful we'll not look at it as we do other programs," he said, "the Van Pelt House took a year to really develop." He said the idea of black housing "seemed a far healthier thing than a freshman enduring his first year and then moving to West Philadelphia to live."

Jones was also critical of the University's attitude toward minority admissions and affirmative action programs. While he noted an increase of 75 percentage points in the SAT scores of minority applicants in the past two years, Jones was skeptical of the University's commitment to minority needs.

"The University gets a lot of mileage out of their commitment to black students," he said, "but I don't see the University putting anything into that commitment." He said the budget for the advising program has been cut 10 per cent each year since he has been here, although he added that it is still one of the best support mechanisms for "marginal students" in the country.

Jones was also critical of the at- titude some white faculty and ad- ministrators treat minority students here. "We still run into faculty who think of blacks in terms of the rhetoric of 1969," he said, "attitudes have changed since then but some ad- ministrators have not."

He also expressed dismay at the attitude that racial problems and academic difficulties of marginal students will disappear in a few years. "All too often, people look at Penn- sylvania in isolation. The problems just won't solve themselves in two years," he said.

BEN GINSBERG Night Editor

ELEANOR NOREIKA Copy Editor

BUZZY BISSINGER Sports Copy Editor

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S. Viet Asks Nixon Audience By United Press International

SAIGON - Vietnamese sources said Tuesday that President Nguyen Van Thieu, apparently nervous over the private peace talks between Henry Kissinger and the North Vietnamese, has asked President Nixon to hear the South Vietnamese position first-hand.

The sources said Thieu gave U.S. Ambassador Kllsworth Bunker a letter Sunday for Nixon asking Nixon to meet directly with South Vietnamese emissaries. The sources said Thieu wants Nixon to hear the South Vietnamese position directly from either Foreign Minister Tran Van Lam or Foreign Affairs Adviser Nguyen Phu Due.

Pentagon Says 100 (ils lo Stay in Viet WASHINGTON - Pentagon

officials said Tuesday they expect the American military post-war presence in Vietnam to be limited to 100 or fewer troops, who will be prohibited from advising or training South Vietnamese.

Officials told United Press International these men most likely would form a Military Equipment Delivery Team (MEDT). They said it probably would be modeled after one now assigned to Cambodia, which consists of 77 U.S. military personnel headed by a One-Star General.

A. U. S. Embassy spokesman refused to confirm or deny the report. "We regard conversations and contacts of that kind as private and I can't discuss it," the spokesman said.

Kissinger and his assistant. Gen. Alexander Haig, have met with Thieu in Saigon twice within the past two months, conveying the South Vietnamese position on peace negotiations to Nixon and to North Vietnamese negotiators. Kissinger

US-Cuba Hijack Talks May Start This Week

WASHINGTON The State Department said Tuesday that indirect talks could start "sometime this week" between the United States and its estranged neighbor, Cuba, on an agreement to deal with airline hijackings.

Department spokesman Charles W. Bray told reporters that the American government had responded favorably to a Cuban request that negotiations begin promptly, perhaps as early as Wednesday.

"The way now is open to negotiations," Bray said. "Our reply is non-substantive and merely confirms that we are prepared to have the talks begin, and in the time frame proposed by the Cubans, which is sometime this week."

Roommate Service /Continued from Page If

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Although Pachtman said that a number of applicants including several Universitv students had

specifically requested roommates of the opposite sex, he claimed, "I am definitely not in the pimping business."

"Most of these requests are kind of informal," Pachtman continued. "A number of people would like to live coeducationally, but they are satisfied if this is not the way it turns out," he concluded.

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In line with this Pachtman said he was interested in helping to establish "special interest houses." He said this would entail getting together people who share specific interests and directing them to a real estate agent

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has promised to keep the South Vietnamese closely advised on progress in Pans and met with a South Vietnamese representative after his four and a half hours of talks on Monday.

Kissinger met with the North Vietnamese again Tuesday.

Court Orders Reporter Returned to Jail

LOS ANGELES - Newsman William Karr was ordered back to jail Tuesday for defying a Judge's order to disclose the source of a news story during the Sharon Talc murder trial.

A three-justice Court of Appeal turned down Earr's petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus and ordered the 37-year-old newsman remanded to the custody of the Sheriffs department to resume an open-end contempt of court jail sentence.

Fan- indicated he would surrender at the main men's jail shortly after 3 p.m. PST. His attorney prepared to fly to San Erancisco to appeal to the State Supreme Court.

"Frankly, 1 had sort of expected It," Farr said when he learned of the Appellate Court action. "I personally was surprised when I was ordered released in the first place. But still I hoped for the best and something like this always comes as a bit of a shock."

Lettuce (Continued from page 1/

responsibility to the starving farm workers," via "legalistic excuses."

Director of Auxiliary Services George Kidd commented,"As far as we can tell the Teamsters have not backed off their intentions to unionize the lettuce pickers.

Kidd said the new policy would cost the University an additional $60-80 a week.

He acknowledged the University "may have some supply problems" in purchasing union lettuce from August to November. If the University is not able to acquire union lettuce in these months, he said, the Dining Service will not serve iceberg lettuce at all.

Lederman said he anticipated "some dissatisfaction" with Tuesday's decision, but added the "University is not a political institution" and could not consider the issue "on strictly moral grounds."

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Page 4: Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt · Wqt JJatljj flettnsglttmttmt ® ... seconds against Drexel in the first round of the NCAA ... Houston lead pass and beat Drexel Court

Page 4 The Daily Pennsylvanian Wednesday, November 22, 1972

Quakers Seek First Ivy Crown Since 1959

■r -'

STEVE STETSON Key to Indian Attack

Childs, Fikes Earn NCAA Meet Laurels

Senior captain Bob Childs finished 53rd. and junior Denis Fikes placed 93rd in the NCAA cross country championship held Monday in Houston, Texas.

"It may not seem like a very good performance." coach Jim Tuppeny related, "but to place in the top 100. you're not only good, you're super."

Neil Cusack of East Tennessee State and a native of Ireland won the individual title in the mud-slowed time of 28:23, outstanding for the conditions.

(Continued from page I)

the senior class to leave something; we really can be the start of all the great Penn teams that could follow us. We can start a string of championships."

"It's the last game I'll play most likely," related senior defensive end Don I.uke. "To go out as Ivy champions would be a great thing for the team and for me personally."

Penn's two junior quarterbacks articulated the same feelings. "We've always talked about winning a championship," said Marc Mandel. "This is the first time in a long time that we can make it a reality."

"Ever since last year I've been dreaming that we'd be playing this game for the championship." stated Tom Pinto. "This is the biggest game of my life."

The Big Green, although dropping a 45-14 decision to Yale and deadlocking Harvard. 21-21, has looked very impressive overall this season, and relies on a powerful balanced attack to overcome opponents.

"Dartmouth is a multiple-type football team." explained Gamble. "They're primarily an l-formation team, and they will use motion and will offset their backs. They're big, which is typical of Dartmouth."

The Hanoverians' two biggest offensive weapons are running back Rick Klupchak. who ranks third in rushing in the Ivy league (502 yards on 71 attempts), and quarterback Steve Stetson, the second leading signal caller in the conference behind Cornell's Mark Allen.

"Steve's execution and poise and confidence in himself has taken us a long way," noted Dartmouth coach Jake Crouthamel. "I'm very pleased with the performance Steve has given us."

The Big Green defense is no less rugged than the offense. "They play a 44, and their front four has the size to make their defense work." said Gamble. "Their linebackers aren't overly big, but they're good players. Their secondary is good because you can't play three deep without having competent people back there."

So what will the Quakers have to do in order to win

Saturday? "Just like we had to do against anyone else," replied co-captain and linebacker Phil Adams. "We have to play good football, and there's no doubt that we can beat them."

"We have to do what we did against Yale — come out and take command of the game," observed co-captain and offensive guard Joe Italiano. "If we wait around until the second half, like we did against Columbia, we're in a lot of trouble. Dartmouth has come up with the big play all year and that's helped them. The key is to get out there from the start and move the ball and control the

momentum." But whatever the outcome Saturday, this year may

well be remembered as the season when Penn football, after a lapse of more than 20 years, finally came back into Ivy League prominence.

"One of the most difficult things is to turn the corner in a losing football program, to make it into a winner," stated Flanagan. "If we can do this, then I can take an awful lot of pride in saying that we were the ones that turned the program around."

Start saying It, Ed.

Northeastern Is Opening Test For 'New Look' Penn Icemen

By TED METZGER While most of the sports action

takes place here in Philadelphia this weekend with both the football and soccer teams vying for Ivy titles, the Penn hockey team travels north to Boston to begin its season against a young but dangerous Northeastern squad on Saturday night.

The Quaker icemen have been chomping at the bit for some real competition, having only scrimmaged the freshmen, and this weekend's contest should provide some substantial clues to the quality of the Red and Blue squad.

"If we play them even through the first period we'll take them," remarked tri-captain Mike Hubbert.

"It takes a little while to get your game legs but I know we have a better team. We're going to have to bear down."

Northeastern is a team which might take some bearing down on to beat. Last year's team, which lost to the Quakers in Philadelphia, 6-3, was predominantly composed of sophomores and practically the entire squad has returned. "We have the numbers this year," commented N.U. coach Fern Flaman, referring to his 35 man squad. "We have 12 quality defensemen returning and nobody's going to score easily on us."

Offensively N.U. is led by captain I.ee Chaisson, whose 42

points led the squad in scoring last year. Other thieats include wings Bill Missner, Paul Scherer and Wayne Blanchard. "They're a very erratic team," commented Quaker skipper Bob Crocker. "One day they'll play like they could take on the Boston Bruins and the next night they'll lose to A.I.C. They were 6-20 last year but they're better than their record indicates. They're aggressive and notorious for their hitting. We're going to have to outfinesse them."

Boston may be the capital of U. S. hockey but it doesn't leave Penn's icemen or their coach in awe. In fact, this weekend it may be in for a sacking.

DP Swamis PHIL SHIMKIN (23-14)

BILL WITTE (24-13)

TONY KOVATCH (22-15)

GLENN UNTERBERGER (24-13)

DAVE CHANDLER (26-11)

MARTIN MEYERSON

CHUCK DALY

ED ROTH

KEITH MERRILL

TED METZGER

Dartmouth at Penn Penn. 20-17

Penn, 20-18

Penn, 17-15

Penn, 24-22

Penn, 33-32

Penn. 23-20

Penn. 21-18

Penn, 28-24

Penn, 21-17

Penn. 17-14

Yale at Harvard Yale, 28-27

Harvard, 24-23

Harvard. 35-21

Yale, 27-24

Harvard. 36-35

Yale. 19-17

Yale. 22-14

Harvard, 21 14

Yale, 28-14

Harvard, 28-21

Cornell at Princeton Princeton, 20

Cornell, 27-21

Cornell, 28-20

Cornell, 20-13

Cornell, 32-12

Cornell, 28-21

Cornell, 24-10

Princeton. 14-10

Cornell, 2413

Princeton. 14-10

Brown at Columbia Brown, 1-0

Brown, 1714

Columbia, 31-21

Brown. 14-13

Columbia. 28-6

Columbia. 17-10

Columbia. 18-6

Columbia, 2414

Columbia, 20-14

Columbia, 10-7

The turban-heads wrap it up for another year this weekend, and they couldn't be happier. "My all-knowing, all-seeing powers were about used up." one mystic contemplated. Still, this week decides who gets to lay claim to the title of "Top Swami", and the even more prestigious "Bottom Swami" position. As usual, the battle will be tense. All the Peerless Prognosticalors were divided over the outcome Of Saturday's action - except for one game. As one well-known Swami belched. "We may be omnipotent, but we sure don't want to be impotent." alluding to the fact that the Swamis must venture into the Penn dressing room after the Dartmouth game. Joining the regular Swamis, incidentally, is U. poobah Martin Meyerson. Quaker hoop coach Chuck "It's About Time" Daly, who ushers in The One True Sport, DP photo editor Ed "Maalox" Roth, and ace DP soccer writers Keith "You Don't Pay Me to Spell" Merrill and Ted "Dirth" Metzger.

Booters Seek Title Against Dartmouth

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It may be NCAA tourney time, but Penn's soccer eleven has one small regular-season matter to clear up before dreaming about any moons over Miami.

In a masterpiece of scheduling disproving the assertion, "Only in the NBA", the booters having already taken care of Drexel in a tournament game, face Dartmouth in their final league game 10:30 A.M. this Saturday at Franklin Field. "We'd rather have things scheduled the other way (with the regular season ending before post-season play)." affirmed Quaker coach Bob Seddon. "but there's not much you can do about it."

That's not to sa;- that the day's efi'ort will be a 'otal waste of time, though. After Harvard's obliging loss to Brown over the weekend, a win on Saturday would give the Red and Blue sole possession of the Ivy

League crown for the second year in a row. "The guys want the title outright," Seddon assured, "so there's not much chance they'll be down for this one."

-GLENN UNTERBERGER

Sports Shorts

FRANK REAGAN.who distinguished himself as a tailback on Penn's football squad from 1939-1940. died of cancer yesterday at the age of 53. On the gridiron Reagan garnered All- American honors in 1940 and was famous for his personal duels with current sportscaster TOM HARMON.

* * » Penn's basketball quintet has yet to

play a game, but that has not discouraged the AP and UPI wire services, which both rank the Quakers as ninth best in the nation.

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