10/1/68 pennsylmman, rotc falls under heavy crossfire upsg

6
*' o'_ Co h PL£I€ to// ~/z>/S; 10/1/68 Local PHI DELT ON SOCIAL PROBATION Phi Delta Theta fraternity was placed on six week's social probation Sunday by the juducial board of the Interfraternity Council for unlawful pre-rush activities. House members were reportedly rushing in the men's dormitories. Jeff Bishop, house president, said Phi Delt will appeal the decision to Dean of Men Gerald Robinson. Board President Sid Smith said that "rush rules are quite liberal and clearly defined. The board must enforce those rules for the benefit of those houses who are complying." The board is expected to clamp down on several other bouses this week. SDS TO STUDY SCIENCE CENTER - BOARD OF TRUSTEES The Science Center Committee of the University SDSchapter set up a special subcommittee on the relationship between members of the board of trustees of the University and the Center Monday night. It also set up a group to study the "relocation aspect" of the Science Center, as well as its research policies. In addition, the SDS unit also set up a program to coordinate its activities with those of other groups, including ones outside the University. FINAL SESSION OF DRAFT SYMPOSIUM TONIGHT The final session of a symposium on the draft scheduled for this evening will pit Col. George F. Sawyer, commander of the University's ROTC unit against Philip Pochoda, sociology lecturer and a leading campus antiwar activist. They will appear in a panel discussion at 8 P.M. in Stiteler Hall B-6. The Rev. David Seymour, director of the Wesley Foundation in the Christian Association and moderator of the symposium, said its purpose is primarily informational, to provide a means of evaluating the various alternative responses to meeting Selective Service obligations. REGISTRAR EXTENDS PRE-REGISTRATION Richard Pauman, registrar of the Unive-sity, announced Monday that pre- registration for the spring term has been extended by another week this year. Pauman said pre-registration will run from Oct. 28 to Nov. 8, instead of until Nov. 1 as previously announced. Pauman said the change was to give students more time to consult with their advisors and school offices. He also said that the registrar's office plans to complete the entire registration process this fall by mail. After submission of class schedules each student will receive in the mail a personal data form and his bill for the spring term. Students will mail back the form, the bill and a check to the registrar and will receive their class cards in the mail. CLARK SPEECH CANCELED Sen Joseph Clark, D.-Pa., who was to speak at the University today was forced to cancel his planned address. Clark was to speak at a rally at 11 this morning in the Houston Hal! Plaza, but was forced to remain -fn Washington for the important cloture vote on the filibuster concerning the nomination of Abe Fortas as Chief Justice of the I .S. Supreme Court. Clark is running for reelection this fall against Republican Congressman Richard Schweiker. At noon, the Coalition of Democratic and Independent Voters will sponsor a speech by Henry Sawyer.anex-officiomemberof the board of trustees of the University and a prominent member of the local chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. National By United Press International HUMPHREY RESTATES VIETNAM VIEWS Vice President Humphrey told the nation on television Monday night that if elected President he would halt the bombing of North Vietnam if Hanoi would give some signal of 'good faith." The Vice President, in a lengthy restatement of his Vietnam views, did not specify what kind of evidence from North Vietnam he would need before ordering a bombing halt, but he appeared to move a bit further from the Johnson Administration policies. "As President, I would be willing to stop the bombing of the North as an acceptable risk for peace because I believe it could lead to success in the negotiations and a shorter war," Humphrey said. JOHNSON INVOKES TAFT - HARTLEY AGAINST LONGSHOREMEN President Johnson invoked the Taft-Hartley Law Monday in an effort to head off a threatened strike at midnight by some 75,000 longshoremen at ports from Maine to Texas. It would be sometime Tuesday, however, before the administra- tion would be able to go to court to seek an injunction to prevent or halt a work stoppage for an 80-day cooling-off period. Johnson signed, less than five hours before the strike deadline, an executive order setting up a board of inquiry to determine whether a settlement of the labor dispute was likely. A contract be- tween the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) and shipowners ran out at midnight. SECOND HOUSE EMPLOYEE IMPLICATED A second employee of the House of Representatives was implicated by of- ficials Monday in the investigation of how a congressman was recorded three times as present and voting when he was actually out of town. House clerk W. Pat Jennings said tally clerk Thomas Cooke, who has been suspended, told him he marked Rep. Bob Wilson, (R.-Calif.) as present and voting to "help out at the request of (clerk) Walter Kennedy." Wilson was improperly recorded am present and voting on Sept. 9, 10 and 16. When he returned to Washington from California, he asked unanimous consent of the House to have the record cor- rected. International By United Press International PAPADOPOULOS TO STAY IN POWER Premier George Papadopoulos indicated Monday he plans to stay in power indefinitely despite opposition claims that a landslide vote Sunday for his new, authoritarian constitution was so lopsided that few would accept it as honest! Papadopoulos told the nation by radio that his military-based government would stay in office until it believes "total, complete productive functioning of all institutions" is accomplished. He made no mention of new parliamentary elections. Shortly after Papadopoulos spoke, officials announced that 4.6 million Greeks voted for the new constitution and only 390,000 voted against it. THEDAILY PENNSYLMMAN, Vol. LXXXIV N". 47 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, October 1, 1968 UNIVERSITY ROTC CADETS practice bayonet attacks with padded sticks in this demonstration of army skills. Both ROTC are now housed in the Hollenback Center at 30th and South Streets. The two were previously located in a building on the 3900 block of Spruce Street. ROTC CADET Is prepared ROTCfalls under heavy crossfire By BARBARA SLOPAK The Committee on Instruction of the College, the University's largest undergraduate school, started debateTuesday to decide whether ROTC and NROTC should lose credit. The Committee responded to a report, submitted by the Student Committee for Undergraduate Education (SCUE), requesting that the College remove credit from the Army and Navy training programs. The report was compiled and written by three University under- graduates: Marvin Israelow, SCUE chairman; RichardNagler and Elliot "Chip" Sober. Nagler, a College senior, said he had begun "to question the role of the University as a boudoir in the reproduction of a species." He said he had recognized an initial bias of the University in,granting credit to ROTC and "sought to explore ROTC's role on campus". Nagler said that he suggested the report to the chairman of SCUE and he, Israelow and Sober had done the investigation and writing. SCUE lists characteristics of the ROTC and NROTC programs it feels are "limitations on social and academic freedom implicit in participation in the military programs." The characteristics are: -- ROTC and NROTC instructors are professional officers, assigned and salaried by the military while other faculty arc hired and fired by members of their own department and paid by the University. -- Textbooks and curricula are selected by the military, and not by individual instructors as in other University courses. -- Post-graduate and summer obligations are incurred by students in ROTC and NROTC. --In the NROTC program, a student is limited in the .najors he can select. -- ROTC and NROTC instructors and students have limitations on political activity and must sign a loyalty oath. "Considered either from the point of view of institutional allegiance to the University or in terms of the issues of academic freedom, the ROTC and NROTC programs do not conform to the standards of the academic community,'' the report says. SCUE calls for the removal of credit to the programs of Military and Naval Science and their removal from the Pennsylvania Course Catalogue. It further asks that these programs should not receive Uni- versity funds or the exclusive use and occupancy of University build- ings. "Joining ROTC takes the student outside the University in the legal and ethical sense," Nagler said. Lt. Col. Kirk Land, assistant to ROTC commander, Col. George F. Sawyer, called the move to abolish credit for ROTC "an attempt by a small number to attack ROTC as a way of getting at some other thing." Land said he did not know what it was he thought these stu- dents were really trying to attack. Land said ROTC instructors must pass University inspection and that they can use a variety of texts in their couses. Capt. Carol Turner of NROTC said Naval faculty members are also subject to University approval. "Four or five of our proposed instructors were turned down by the University," Land maintained. Land said that the long-term effect of removing credit from ROTC would "deteriorate the security posture of the United States." "The best leaders the Army has are ROTC graduates," Land stated. "They come from the most perceptive, sensitive, innovative part of society. The most gifted people take leadership when their country is in a bind," Land continued. Land answered another SCUE charge, saying other departments outside of the military required our-of-class work, citing practice teaching in education and field trips in geology. He said the loyalty oath "goes back to pre-history when members of a military expedition swore allegiance to a leader." He added that "the Boy Scouts do it, too." Speaking about limitation of participation in subversive organiza- tions, Land said, "If someone wants to be a military officer, he'll have to skip some of these." All undergraduates undergoing military training are required to complete an Armed Forces Security Questionnaire listing 250 organi- zations cited by the U.S. attorneygeneral as subversive. Both ROTC and NROTC have "regular" and "contract" programs. Students enrolled in the "regular" NROTC and ROTC programs receive four year scholarships from the Navy and Army. "Contract" students do not receive scholarships. If a student accepts an NROTC scholarship he must agree not to major in art, dentistry, law, medicine, music, theology, physical education, premedicine, predentistry, real estate, religion or 2? other majors that are not offered by the University. (Continued on page 4) UPSG urges safety measures for campus area WITH THE FIRST FOOTBALL GAME as its premiere deathknel I, the summer is gone. As with every year, we are surprised with the ruthless demise and dis- appearance of the leaves. Chilly evenings show the shape of freezing days and nights to come. Fall is a beautiful season, but its appreciation is always tem- pered by the sad relization that winter is waiting just without. For cheering up our readers, here's a picture of what the newly nascent trees will look like in in just six months. How different do they look from winter trees? By J. L. TELLER and ALBAN SALAMAN A resolution calling on the Univer- sity, campus landlords and the city of Philadelphia to improve safety in the University area was unanimously approved by the UPSG assembly in its Monday night meeting. The bill urges an inspection of out- door lighting and installation of additional lighting where it is necessary; a re-evaluation of the function, size and equipment of the campus guard; a recommendation to campus landlords to provide safety protection for tenants; and the insti- tution of a self-defense course for women in the physical education department. Joseph Cooper, UPSG president, informed the Assembly that "if the University won't take the initiative in implementing these proposals, I will personally take the issue to Mayor Tate and Police Commissioner Frank Rizzo." UPSG is circulating the bill as a petition and according to Mike Hough, co-chairman of the communications committee, 1,000 signatures have already been obtained. UPSG is manning a table in front of the library today for all those interested in registering their opinion. In connection with the safety cam- paign, UPSG will also print a booklet containing guidelines for personal safety. It will be available to all undergraduates. UPSG also passed a resolution condemning a bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives which pro- vides for the withdrawal of federal aid to students convicted of rioting and inciting to riot of university campus-es. The resolution also asked President Harnwell to concur with this opinion in a public statement and to urge the adoption of the statement by the Ivy League Presidents' Association. The bill passed 21 to 11. Opponents claimed that passage of the resolution would in effect condone rioting on college campuses. The majority felt that the House bill would be used as a club by the federal government against legitimate campus demo- strations. Plans for a town meeting to con- sider the Mundheim Report, were also discussed. The meeting, scheduled for Monday at 7:30 in Irvine Auditor- ium, will be moderated by Jefferson Fordham, Dean of the Law School. Dr. Charles Price, chairman of the Faculty Senate will keynote the sym- posium. Cooper announced tentative plans for a student panel Tuesday (Continued on page 4)

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Page 1: 10/1/68 PENNSYLMMAN, ROTC falls under heavy crossfire UPSG

*' o'_

Co h PL£I€ to// ~/z>/S;

10/1/68

Local PHI DELT ON SOCIAL PROBATION

Phi Delta Theta fraternity was placed on six week's social probation Sunday by the juducial board of the Interfraternity Council for unlawful pre-rush activities. House members were reportedly rushing in the men's dormitories. Jeff Bishop, house president, said Phi Delt will appeal the decision to Dean of Men Gerald Robinson. Board President Sid Smith said that "rush rules are quite liberal and clearly defined. The board must enforce those rules for the benefit of those houses who are complying." The board is expected to clamp down on several other bouses this week.

SDS TO STUDY SCIENCE CENTER - BOARD OF TRUSTEES The Science Center Committee of the University SDSchapter set up a special

subcommittee on the relationship between members of the board of trustees of the University and the Center Monday night. It also set up a group to study the "relocation aspect" of the Science Center, as well as its research policies. In addition, the SDS unit also set up a program to coordinate its activities with those of other groups, including ones outside the University.

FINAL SESSION OF DRAFT SYMPOSIUM TONIGHT The final session of a symposium on the draft scheduled for this evening

will pit Col. George F. Sawyer, commander of the University's ROTC unit against Philip Pochoda, sociology lecturer and a leading campus antiwar activist. They will appear in a panel discussion at 8 P.M. in Stiteler Hall B-6. The Rev. David Seymour, director of the Wesley Foundation in the Christian Association and moderator of the symposium, said its purpose is primarily informational, to provide a means of evaluating the various alternative responses to meeting Selective Service obligations.

REGISTRAR EXTENDS PRE-REGISTRATION Richard Pauman, registrar of the Unive-sity, announced Monday that pre-

registration for the spring term has been extended by another week this year. Pauman said pre-registration will run from Oct. 28 to Nov. 8, instead of until Nov. 1 as previously announced. Pauman said the change was to give students more time to consult with their advisors and school offices. He also said that the registrar's office plans to complete the entire registration process this fall by mail. After submission of class schedules each student will receive in the mail a personal data form and his bill for the spring term. Students will mail back the form, the bill and a check to the registrar and will receive their class cards in the mail.

CLARK SPEECH CANCELED Sen Joseph Clark, D.-Pa., who was to speak at the University today was

forced to cancel his planned address. Clark was to speak at a rally at 11 this morning in the Houston Hal! Plaza, but was forced to remain -fn Washington for the important cloture vote on the filibuster concerning the nomination of Abe Fortas as Chief Justice of the I .S. Supreme Court. Clark is running for reelection this fall against Republican Congressman Richard Schweiker. At noon, the Coalition of Democratic and Independent Voters will sponsor a speech by Henry Sawyer.anex-officiomemberof the board of trustees of the University and a prominent member of the local chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.

National By United Press International

HUMPHREY RESTATES VIETNAM VIEWS

Vice President Humphrey told the nation on television Monday night that if elected President he would halt the bombing of North Vietnam if Hanoi would give some signal of 'good faith." The Vice President, in a lengthy restatement of his Vietnam views, did not specify what kind of evidence from North Vietnam he would need before ordering a bombing halt, but he appeared to move a bit further from the Johnson Administration policies. "As President, I would be willing to stop the bombing of the North as an acceptable risk for peace because I believe it could lead to success in the negotiations and a shorter war," Humphrey said.

JOHNSON INVOKES TAFT - HARTLEY AGAINST LONGSHOREMEN

President Johnson invoked the Taft-Hartley Law Monday in an effort to head off a threatened strike at midnight by some 75,000 longshoremen at ports from Maine to Texas. It would be sometime Tuesday, however, before the administra- tion would be able to go to court to seek an injunction to prevent or halt a work stoppage for an 80-day cooling-off period. Johnson signed, less than five hours before the strike deadline, an executive order setting up a board of inquiry to determine whether a settlement of the labor dispute was likely. A contract be- tween the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) and shipowners ran out at midnight.

SECOND HOUSE EMPLOYEE IMPLICATED A second employee of the House of Representatives was implicated by of-

ficials Monday in the investigation of how a congressman was recorded three times as present and voting when he was actually out of town. House clerk W. Pat Jennings said tally clerk Thomas Cooke, who has been suspended, told him he marked Rep. Bob Wilson, (R.-Calif.) as present and voting to "help out at the request of (clerk) Walter Kennedy." Wilson was improperly recorded am present and voting on Sept. 9, 10 and 16. When he returned to Washington from California, he asked unanimous consent of the House to have the record cor- rected.

International By United Press International

PAPADOPOULOS TO STAY IN POWER

Premier George Papadopoulos indicated Monday he plans to stay in power indefinitely despite opposition claims that a landslide vote Sunday for his new, authoritarian constitution was so lopsided that few would accept it as honest! Papadopoulos told the nation by radio that his military-based government would stay in office until it believes "total, complete productive functioning of all institutions" is accomplished. He made no mention of new parliamentary elections. Shortly after Papadopoulos spoke, officials announced that 4.6 million Greeks voted for the new constitution and only 390,000 voted against it.

THEDAILY

PENNSYLMMAN, Vol. LXXXIV N". 47 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, October 1, 1968

UNIVERSITY ROTC CADETS practice bayonet attacks with padded sticks in this demonstration of army skills. Both ROTC are now housed in the Hollenback Center at

30th and South Streets. The two were previously located in a building on the 3900 block of Spruce Street.

ROTC CADET Is prepared

ROTC falls under heavy crossfire By BARBARA SLOPAK

The Committee on Instruction of the College, the University's largest undergraduate school, started debateTuesday to decide whether ROTC and NROTC should lose credit.

The Committee responded to a report, submitted by the Student Committee for Undergraduate Education (SCUE), requesting that the College remove credit from the Army and Navy training programs.

The report was compiled and written by three University under- graduates: Marvin Israelow, SCUE chairman; RichardNagler and Elliot "Chip" Sober.

Nagler, a College senior, said he had begun "to question the role of the University as a boudoir in the reproduction of a species." He said he had recognized an initial bias of the University in,granting credit to ROTC and "sought to explore ROTC's role on campus".

Nagler said that he suggested the report to the chairman of SCUE and he, Israelow and Sober had done the investigation and writing.

SCUE lists characteristics of the ROTC and NROTC programs it feels are "limitations on social and academic freedom implicit in participation in the military programs." The characteristics are: -- ROTC and NROTC instructors are professional officers, assigned

and salaried by the military while other faculty arc hired and fired by members of their own department and paid by the University. -- Textbooks and curricula are selected by the military, and not by

individual instructors as in other University courses. -- Post-graduate and summer obligations are incurred by students

in ROTC and NROTC. --In the NROTC program, a student is limited in the .najors he can

select. -- ROTC and NROTC instructors and students have limitations on

political activity and must sign a loyalty oath. "Considered either from the point of view of institutional allegiance

to the University or in terms of the issues of academic freedom, the ROTC and NROTC programs do not conform to the standards of the academic community,'' the report says.

SCUE calls for the removal of credit to the programs of Military and Naval Science and their removal from the Pennsylvania Course Catalogue. It further asks that these programs should not receive Uni- versity funds or the exclusive use and occupancy of University build- ings.

"Joining ROTC takes the student outside the University in the legal and ethical sense," Nagler said.

Lt. Col. Kirk Land, assistant to ROTC commander, Col. George F. Sawyer, called the move to abolish credit for ROTC "an attempt by a small number to attack ROTC as a way of getting at some other thing." Land said he did not know what it was he thought these stu- dents were really trying to attack.

Land said ROTC instructors must pass University inspection and that they can use a variety of texts in their couses. Capt. Carol Turner of NROTC said Naval faculty members are also subject to University approval.

"Four or five of our proposed instructors were turned down by the University," Land maintained.

Land said that the long-term effect of removing credit from ROTC would "deteriorate the security posture of the United States."

"The best leaders the Army has are ROTC graduates," Land stated. "They come from the most perceptive, sensitive, innovative part of society. The most gifted people take leadership when their country is in a bind," Land continued.

Land answered another SCUE charge, saying other departments outside of the military required our-of-class work, citing practice teaching in education and field trips in geology.

He said the loyalty oath "goes back to pre-history when members of a military expedition swore allegiance to a leader." He added that "the Boy Scouts do it, too."

Speaking about limitation of participation in subversive organiza- tions, Land said, "If someone wants to be a military officer, he'll have to skip some of these."

All undergraduates undergoing military training are required to complete an Armed Forces Security Questionnaire listing 250 organi- zations cited by the U.S. attorneygeneral as subversive.

Both ROTC and NROTC have "regular" and "contract" programs. Students enrolled in the "regular" NROTC and ROTC programs

receive four year scholarships from the Navy and Army. "Contract" students do not receive scholarships.

If a student accepts an NROTC scholarship he must agree not to major in art, dentistry, law, medicine, music, theology, physical education, premedicine, predentistry, real estate, religion or 2? other majors that are not offered by the University.

(Continued on page 4)

UPSG urges safety measures for campus area

WITH THE FIRST FOOTBALL GAME as its premiere deathknel I, the summer is gone. As with every year, we are surprised with the ruthless demise and dis- appearance of the leaves. Chilly evenings show the shape of freezing days and nights to come.

Fall is a beautiful season, but its appreciation is always tem- pered by the sad relization that winter is waiting just without. For cheering up our readers, here's a picture of what the newly nascent trees will look like in in just six months. How different do they look from winter trees?

By J. L. TELLER and

ALBAN SALAMAN

A resolution calling on the Univer- sity, campus landlords and the city of Philadelphia to improve safety in the University area was unanimously approved by the UPSG assembly in its Monday night meeting.

The bill urges an inspection of out- door lighting and installation of additional lighting where it is necessary; a re-evaluation of the function, size and equipment of the campus guard; a recommendation to campus landlords to provide safety protection for tenants; and the insti- tution of a self-defense course for women in the physical education department.

Joseph Cooper, UPSG president, informed the Assembly that "if the University won't take the initiative in implementing these proposals, I will personally take the issue to Mayor Tate and Police Commissioner Frank Rizzo."

UPSG is circulating the bill as a petition and according to Mike Hough, co-chairman of the communications committee, 1,000 signatures have already been obtained. UPSG is manning a table in front of the library today for all those interested in registering their opinion.

In connection with the safety cam-

paign, UPSG will also print a booklet containing guidelines for personal safety. It will be available to all undergraduates.

UPSG also passed a resolution condemning a bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives which pro- vides for the withdrawal of federal aid to students convicted of rioting and inciting to riot of university campus-es. The resolution also asked President Harnwell to concur with this opinion in a public statement and to urge the adoption of the statement by the Ivy League Presidents' Association.

The bill passed 21 to 11. Opponents claimed that passage of the resolution would in effect condone rioting on college campuses. The majority felt that the House bill would be used as a club by the federal government against legitimate campus demo- strations.

Plans for a town meeting to con- sider the Mundheim Report, were also discussed. The meeting, scheduled for Monday at 7:30 in Irvine Auditor- ium, will be moderated by Jefferson Fordham, Dean of the Law School. Dr. Charles Price, chairman of the Faculty Senate will keynote the sym- posium. Cooper announced tentative plans for a student panel Tuesday

(Continued on page 4)

Page 2: 10/1/68 PENNSYLMMAN, ROTC falls under heavy crossfire UPSG

—Notes and comment

»

ROTC Report Warm football slices After a lapse into hasty judgment last spring when it

issued its justly forgotten report on admissions, the Student Committee on Undergraduate Education (SCUE) has returned to the high level of its original "SCUE Report" with the newly released "Report on Army and Navy ROTC."

The new report, some 19 pages long, is fully and ac- curately researched; its arguments are reasonable and logical; its conclusion is clear: the University has no busi- ness supporting the armed forces' ROTC program on campus.

We agree. ROTC has always been an academic anachronism on

college campuses. Its self-styled "professors" are no more professors in the accepted academic sense than Casey Stengel was: they are regular service officers, with perhaps some training in the National War College, but nothing that would pass as legitimate in academic circles.

The material studied is cut and dried, with no real room for original research, debate, or analysis. It attempts to appear as a legitimate academic discipline, but is trans- parently not.

The second line of defense ROTC's protagonists offer is that it serves the nation. And well it may. So may bio- logical warfare research; so might billeting troops in the men's dorms. But the University — and any university — is in business to fill one function, the pursuit and dissemina- tion of knowledge. It should no more spend its scarce re- sources on subsidizing the military establishment than it should give to the United Fund.

ROTC neither pursues nor disseminates knowledge, at least by any academically accepted interpretation of the term "knowledge." It trains men, to be sure, but so does the Pennsylvania railroad. No one has yet suggested that railroad engineer training is a legitimate function of a university.

As far as we can see, only inertia and the fear of of- fending the Federal government and conservative alumni (both big money sources) keeps the University supporting ROTC. We think it should stop, and urge the College Com- mittee on Instruction to study the SCUE report carefully, and take action to that end. ilium in iiiiiiiiiiiiniii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiii iiniiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii ii mi mini iiiiiiiiiini Minimi iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii mini iniiimmimm urn iiimmmim

By WILLIAM K. MANDEL Football weather, as defined by a Penn coed, is weather

that calls for woolen suits, not cotton dresses. To the first football game of the season, one takes two

containers of orange'juice; one for gin and guic (or is it jin and juice?) and the other to throw on freshmen.

Sun. Warmth. Ivy. The feeling of a sunny afternoon on the back of the neck.

Football weekends are one of the only things purely college- like. At Missouri, football fans go to the games dressed in jeans and ready to scream; in the Ivy League you go in suits and ties to watch the rest of the crowd look nice. Very

pleasant. It's nice, too, when the team wins; it puts a very pleasant

touch on the afternoon. It's nice but not too important; in any case, one shouldn't get used to seeing the team win.

Waiting in front of Hill Hall for the always late date. It's about 85 degrees, but most of the girls had that big outfit ready for the first game. They don't care if it's hot. Girls pouring out of the building in woolen suits with matching coats, yet. All sorts of sweat foreseen.

In the stands. Six thousand students entering through two gates; campus guards smelling everyone's juice (guice) to see if it has gin (jin). Someone might profitably smell the guards' breaths to see if they contain gin. Huge crowds of students using their new happy freebies milling around the two little entrances they are alloted.

An usher: "Students, oh, students. Yechh. Gates EH and EG." What makes up a university if it isn't students. Campus guards and ushers, it seems.

In the stands. For the first time in four seasons, both Penn decks are filled up. Glow with pride at spirit. Note the 40,000 empty seats in the stands. When those seats were built in the 1880*s, were rear ends smaller? How come the seat numbers are painted on about three inches apart?

It seems there are no more oldman ushers. Used to be able to bribe them for the reserved seats in the upper deck. Now they've got altruistic students; they won't take the cash. In the upper deck, you can't see the band, can't hear the band, can't see the cheerleaders, can't hear the cheer- leaders. Can see the Quaker and his ratty gray wig; Quaker should get a new wig. At Penn, even the Quaker is Jewish.

Little girls in the green concrete softness of the track. They are Penn Quakerettes, vestige of the losing fight for girl cheerleaders. They wear blue sneakers, bought cheap from Thorn McAn it seems because they closed out that color. Did they have pretty legs? Who knows? Those god-

awful blue sneakers. Their meaning. Les Keiter, WFIL sports director, said

in his Sunday morning rebroadcast of the game that Penn had finally got girl cheerleaders. No. These, it seems, are female adjuncts of the band. They have received permission to be on the field; that's the breaking of an old tradition, you know, men were never allowed on the field. Can we get pretty Quakerettes, please? At least some of them were black; I missed the black cheerleaders. I guess there are no black Jewish frat men around.

Halftime. The team is winning, which is nice, but opti-

mism has been shown to be follish in the past. The Bucknell band plays some soul music while imitating the University of Southwest Anystate band. Childish; music bad. Can't wait for sophisticated Ivy League Penn band to show the hicks where to get off. Eighty member football team but only fifty member band. As usual some gullible freshman has been found to strut in front of the band. Must be from western Pennsylvania. Band tries to spell BOB for Coach Odell, but not enough members to get that many letters in. Thank God we weren't saluting MIT (all spelled out, of course). Band plays some really cool numbers. Drink a Highball in two parts (at the same time, slow and fast), Hail Pennsylvania (to which no one knows the words) and Red and Blue (to which some oaf waved the bi-coloroutof time as if drugged) and also Hang Jeff Davis which was sung a lot on Saturday.

The band. Why doesn't anyone join the band? Why doesn't the band remember we're not at Duke now and try some imagination in its program. The band did one formation: a rectangle. Good showl

Second half. Great play. The team will win, it seems. Maybe something has been done "o the team. Either the band or the team has to be good. Blumenthal and Zbrjnjqskyrz (a great but heretofore underrated quarterback) connect for an exciting play. The gun, we win, yippee.

After the game. Little band marching up Spruce St. Little people won't stop their cars for the happy parade. It's a warm sunny afternoon. People on their way to cocktails, later to parties. Inside glow. Leaves starting to turn after all. Gee, it's nice to be at an hry college (don't you wish everybody was?).

All in all, a success. We win, band loses, drinks, con- cert, sun, warmth, tradition and clean afternoon. Let's do it again.

But this time, campus guards should let the freshmen on the field so we can throw that other container of juice (guice) at them.

WHAT'S HAPPENING ? Fantastic Bachelor Party vacations at great, low rates, that's what. 8 days with T nights at top hotels, dinners, breakfasts, parties, sightsee- ing and transfers included. Some give lessons in skin diving, water-ski, tennis and golf. Prices start as below, plus air fare, feature group departures with other young singles. Try:

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Letters to the editor llilllllllltlllSlllllIliilillllltllilllllliiSIHIHHmimiO'l"'"*!!*'"**"1*"*"*"""'*""""**^"!"""***"!"*"*!!!'*""^"""'"*^"*""*^**^^^*""**^""""""™""""*""""""**"*' nilllllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIMIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illll

PI LAMBDA PHI

Sin This letter is in response to Neil Levy's letter on "FratDefense" which appeared on Sept. 23,1968.Mr. Levy is president of Pi Lambda Phi and as brothers of Pi Lamb, we wish to take issue with Mr. Levy on the grounds that his opinions are far from representative of those of the house.

We have little to say about the polemics between you and Mr. Lieber- man. Admittedly his article contain- ed anti-fraternity over-generaliza- tions. But your letter brother Levy showed a complete lack of sensitivity and a graver misunderstanding about what is going on around campus and the community.

You mention Rev. Russell's hypo- crisy in reconciling the University's stand on S.A.A.S. and fraternity dis- crimination, but how can you be so blind as not to see the differences in the basis of selectivity between S.A.A.S. and fraternities? What are the moral implications? Afro- Americans select on the basis of ethnic background for the purpose of resolving problems which concern Black students at Penn. We see no great moral implications here, for their selectivity is extremely func- tional and necessary for the success of their organization.

Can that same selectivity be grounded in an organization which is "simply .a group of individuals who band together to eat and sleep and party. . . c" We feel not.

You speak of the "common ex- perience and deep feeling of com- munity" a fraternity instills in its members. If the common experience means sweat sessions and sadistic hell-week rituals, yes, wemust admit we have that. And if a deep feeling of community means suppressing our individual opinions and our initiatives to the unreasonable and unmoving power structure a freshman finds in his house, then yes again, we have that. The implications are that fra- ternities want to curtail free thinking in order to keep their house unified with that "special community feeling"; that fraternities are willing

to perpetuate a racist attitude so they can enjoy eating, sleeping, and party- ing together. Such an insensitive atti- tude only closes the lines of com- munication this society and this cam- pus must open up.

Lastly, you feel that this sense of community is absent in other areas of Penn life. Do you honestly believe that the fraternity system could perpetuate itself with the I ame success as it does not if rush were not allowed until sophomore year? Freshmen would then have the opportunity to discover themselves before their identity is suppressed in the fraternity's efforts to establish common group thinking and solidarity (i.e., community) through such questionable techniques as pledging and hell-week. Freshmen would undoubtedly have the time they need to look at the university com- munity through their own eyes and contribute where they felt it was needed. It is the sense of community we believe in. Thus brother Levy, we ask you to reconsider your blind allegiance to the fraternity system. If fraternities are to survive at Penn, and the question is moot, they must be progressive and sensitive to the needs of the community in which they exist. We find your present stand both un- tenable and disheartening.

Brothers for life of Pi Lambda Phi (by virtue of the brand on our ass)

Robert J. Hertzig '69 Stephen M. Lieppmon '69

YR RESPONSE

Sin Poor Daily Pennsylvanian Edi- tors. I am afraid you can't see beyond your own self-centered world to realize what Richard Nixon is trying to do. He is not as naive as you seem to think. As he said in his Philadelphia press conference held last Friday, he fully realizes that he is not going to be able to convert the idealistic youth that supported Senator Mc- Carthy to his cause. It is not his desire to write off any portion of the nation and this includes the disaffected youth, the black Americans, and the urban poor. He knows they may not overwhelmingly vote for him, but he is quite confident of his election, and

CHARLES A. KRAUSE Editor-in-Chief

BERL N. SCHWARTZ Managing Editor

MARK LIEBERMAN, Editorial Chairman. ERIC T. TURKINGTON, Editorial Ckairmmt: WILLIAM R. BURCHILL, JR., ,\ews Editor; WILLIAM K. MANDEL, Usoctate Editor; BARRY JORDAN, Sports Editor, STEPHEN D. RUTTER, Executive Editor, KENNETH H. KAPLAN Photography Editor; PHILIP S. ARKOW, Associate Features Editor; NORMAN H. ROOS, Associate Spurts Editor.

STANLEY H. BERKE Business Muitagcr

ELLEN M. COIN, Financial Manager;

KEN R. DROSSMAN, Advertising Manager;

JILL P. MESIROV, Production Manager

The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation parioda. On* laaua published in August* Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Sts. at the rate of $10.00 per annum. Second claas postage paid'at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1 91 04,Phones : (215) 594-7535.

it is not his desire to be elected to a meaningless administration such as the one we have now. It is his desire to have the disaffected believe in him and to do this he is trying to start a dialogue with these people. This is the reason for the National Youth for Nixon-Agnew Committee headed by David Eisenhower. This is the reason for the Nixon Youth Coalition going into the ghettos to find what it is that is troubling the poor and what they think should be done. This is why the candidate went to see the Rev. Leon Sullivan during his trip to Philadel- phia last weekend. During his ad- ministration Mr. Nixon will attempt to correct the problems, but he can only do this with the facts and some of us are trying to aid him in getting them. Mr. Nixon is asking for your opinion, Mr. Krause, not your vote.

As for Mr. Nixon's "equivocating stand" on The Daily Pennsylvanian - F.B.I. "crisis" at the Friday press conference, the question was hardly fair. He naturally knew nothing about it and the question was asked in such a way that he gained no knowledge of it. He answered it in the best way he could without the facts and inci- dentally supported The Daily Penn- sylvanian. Please do not assume, editors, that a Presidential candidate is going to pronounce anything but generalities about a local issue which is unknown to him. The newspaper is not that important.

It is a fact that Hubert Humphrey or Richard Nixon will be the next President of the United States. We have the chance to give our ideas to the one candidate who will listen. Please do not laugh at the chance unless you really don't want to be understood and are only disaffected for the sake of being disaffected. One of the major candidates last weekend attempted to laugh a group of anti- war protestors out of the park in which he was speaking. It was indeed a pitiful spectacle. You won't find Richard Nixon laughing at anti-war protestors. He does not feel they are communists, and he is hardly a fas- cist. I say, "Thank You, Mr. Nixon, for caring and for at least attempting to understand."

John G. Lothrop President, YRs

NU!?!

Sir: Needless to say the brotherhood of Sigma Nu was quite distrubed by the front page story of September 24 entitled "Frat Men: 1 in 5 drop out." My purpose in writing to you is not to bicker personally with Jim North- rup, nor is it to bicker with his personal opinions formed over a 3- year period, for that would accomplish very little. My purpose is to present the case from the viewpoint of a fraternity senior who is still an active brother. I feel that there were un- truths printed concerning Sigma Nu and I would like the opportunity to clear them up.

It was stated that".. .discrimina- tion is explicit in the (Sigma Nu) fraternity's charter. . ." This is ab- solutely false and leans toward slander. For eight years our local chapter had a waiver from a national race clause in the constitution; this waiver allowed our chapter (and a number of others across the country) to chose our members freely

neither on the basis of race nor on the basis of religious affiliation. In addition, this past summer at our national convention, the national race clause was removed in its entirety. It is a fact that discrimination is not condoned by our nation, nor has it been condoned by our local chapter in this decade.

Furthermore, as a member of the IF President's Council, I can't help but feel contempt for the DP's pre- sentation of fraternity in general. Constantly the minority viewpoint is the only one that reaches print. 1

(Contirtued on page 5)

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Page 3: 10/1/68 PENNSYLMMAN, ROTC falls under heavy crossfire UPSG

Tuesday, October 1, 1968 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 3

Vietnam Week, others plan solidarity demonstration

The Vietnam Week Committee (VWC) is in a campaign with other Phila- delphia antiwar groups designed to demonstrate solidarity with American GIs currently in uniform.

Culminating in the Oct. 21 to 27 "International Week of Solidarity," the VWC will strive to help GIs to express sentiment against the war within the Army.

At 11 this morning in Houston Hall Plaza, U.S. 101st Airborne veteran Bill Perry, 26 days back from Vietnam, will join several faculty speakers in addressing a rally. Perry is the first Vietnam veteran ever to speak on campus.

The next activity in the campaign to bring the troops home now will be a panel discussion of active-duty Gis, veterans, and a WAC in Houston Hall Auditorium, Thursday. The panel will report on the situation inside the armed forces and discuss the situation of Al Myers, a Fort Dix soldier facing court martial for distributing antiwar leaflets on the base.

Saturday the VWC will drive to Ft. Dix, Wrightstown, N.J., for a rally to defend Myers. The Student Mobilization Committee is providing transporta- tion from Philadelphia and New York City for the rally.

Myers, a Spec.-4, passed out leaflets asking GIs to attend a Philadelphia meeting with Student Mobilization Committee (SMC) representatives, a meeting which sought to determine what the soldiers wanted done for them. Military authorities have charged that the leaflets were detrimental to the interests of the command, in bad taste, and subversive.

Other VWC activities will include leafletting GIs in bus terminals, the airport, and at Ft. Dix. The project is being coordinated by the Philadelphia SMC.

Campus events

I

OFFICIAL MISSING: A carton containing

completed questionnaires for Dr. Da- vid Schwartz's Survey Study was taken from outside the Political Science office (E-20 Dietrich Hall). This data is vital to that study and its return or information about its whereabouts is urgently requested. Contact Dr. Schwartz at Univ. ext. 7697 or 6245.

CAMPUS AGENDA A.P.O.: The Book Mart will be

open today from 11 A.M. - noon for all those wishing to pick up money and/or books.

ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION: Co-ed volleyball every Wednesday night at 7 P.M., Weightman Hall Gym. All are welcome.

COALITION OF DEMOCRATS AND INDEPENDENT VOTERS: Rally today, 11 A.M., Houston Hall Plaza. Support Joe Clark and Paul O'Dwyer: hear anti-war candidates speak out on Vietnam.

HILLEL: Succoh decorating party Sunday, Oct. 6, Hillel Foundation. All are invited.

I.A.A.: Pen Model U.N. General Assembly applications available at Houston Hall information desk and I.A.A. office in Christian Associa- tion. Due Oct. 4.

INTER COFFEE HOUR: Interna- tional coffee hour, 4-6 Wed., Houston Hall West Lounge. Great conversa- tion; free food.

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STUDENTS FOR O'DWYER: Sign up for New York Trip, weekend of Fri., Oct. 4. Houston Hall Plaza, 11-2 today.

SYMPOSIUM ON THE DRAFT: A Symposium on the Draft, 8 P.M. to- night, Stiteler Hall. Col. George Sawy- er and Prof. Phil Pochoda will pre- sent alternatives to the draft and answer questions.

U.P.S.G.: Resumes for positions on the Student Judiciary, Student Traf- fic Court, Honor Board, Performing Arts Council, Disciplinary Com- mittee, and University Forum now being accepted. Submit to 117 Logan Hall by tomorrow. ACTIVITIES NOTICES

BALALAIKA ORCHESTRA: Meet- ing, 11 A.M. today, 216 Potter Hall. Please attend.

BRIDGE CLUB: Fractional game tomorrow, 6:50 P.M., west lounge, Houston Hall.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORG: Week- ly meetings each Tues., 11 A.M., Upper Room, Christian Association Bldg. Come join us.

DEBATE COUNCIL: Meeting to- day, 4 P.M., Room 17, Logan Hall. All new members must attend.

GRADUATE YOUNG DEMOCRATS CLUB: Organizational meeting to- morrow, 8 PJvl., Newman Hall, 3743 Spruce St.

HILLEL: Freshman Council or- ganization meeting today, 11 A.M., Hillel. All resident and commuter freshman members are urged to at- tend.

INTE RN ATI ON A LRELATIONS GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIA- TION: Dr. I. Svitak, Czech philoso- pher, who played leading role in liberalization crisis, speaks on "Marxist Humanism", Tues., Oct. 1, 10:15 A.M., 2nd fl. lounge, Christian Association.

(Continued on page 4)

STUDENT TUTOR SOCIETY

TUTORS ASSIGNED DAILY

1-2 P.M. CH ROOM 206

BEGINNING 0CT 1

'Simple' quarrel sparks Mexican student unrest

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Mexico City Mexico's

greatest political crisis in 40 years began as a simple quarrel among school boys from rival high schools. It was fanned by charges of police brutality and generated into a major student revolt that threatens the na- tion's security.

The government of President Gus- tavo Diaz Ordaz is worried, embar- rassed and angry. The 1968 Olympic Games are scheduled to open Oct. 12 and the current strife is a bitter blow to a nation seeking world status. Law and order, as in the United States, has become a ma jor and critical issue.

The history of Mexico is a bloody one beginning with the conquest by the Spaniards. Its landmarks are the revolt against Spain in 1810, the execution of Emperor Maximilian in 1867, the dictatorship of Porfirio Diaz, the Revolution of 1910 and his overthrow in 1911, and the formation in 1928 of the Party of Revolutionary Institutions (PRI) which has ruled the country ever since.

The students who touched off the current bloodshed were attending preparatory (high) schools before en- rolling in the autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) or the National Polytechnique Institute (IPN), known to them as "Poly" as are such in- stitutes throughout the world.

Rival students brawled on the streets and in their schools. Some- times the quarrels were over girls, sometimes over sports contests. But in July, 1968, police used force to break up the fights and the cry of "police brutality" went up. The stu- dents singled out police chief Luis Cueto Ramirez as the symbol of the establishment.

The students contented themselves at first with demands that Cueto be dismissed and signs proclaiming "Muera Cueto" -- Death to Cueto -- appeared on a few buses. They also demanded dissolution of the riot- trained "Grenadiers," the riot police.

The student unrest mushroomed and university students joined in. In August, they presented a six-point petition that included freedom for jailed communist political prisoners.

There were riots and stampedes, battles between students hurling Molotov cocktails and bricks and police, wielding truncheons and tear gas. At times the Army was called out with its tanks to break up student demonstrations.

The death toll rose steadily - -

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seven by late this week -- with hun- dreds of students under arrest.

In a State of the Union speech Sept. 1 President Diaz, shaken by the continuing violence, held out both the threat of reprisals and the promise of reforms. But mainly he said the government would not tolerate dis- order that constituted a threat to the nation's security.

"Everything has a limit," he said. "We cannot let law and order be

broken any longer... we have the unavoidable duty to impede the de- struction of the constitutional sinews under which we live and progress."

He promised to open hearings on the antisubversion laws to see if they might be changed or abolished, one of the prime demands of the students. The laws were drawn up against World War II "fascists" — a word used in Mexico to define radi- cals, and in many cases, communists.

There was continued violence and more persons were casualties. Then on Sept. 18, the government sent 10,000 Army troops in full battle dress and riding slate-gray jeeps, troop carriers.and armored vehicles to the UN AM campus.

After the shock of the move had washed away, students raised a new cry: "violation of autonomy." Stu- dent leaders who had organized one strike sent a letter to the department of interior threatening to disrupt the Olympic Games, presumably from bases at the UN AM, just across a highway from Olympic Stadium.

Universities for years have been exempt from police action, but the government said university autonomy did not extend to a threat to the peace of the city. The students replied that autonomy must be an unbreakable tradition.

The impasse set the stage for another round of violence, and two days later, on Sept. 20, a student threw a Molotov cocktail at a police vehicle.

The next day, police and youths at the Tlatlolco Apartment Project clashed in bloody fighting. Xavier Barros Sierra, Rector of Mexico Uni- versity, resigned and said he had been subjected to abuse from the ruling party, the PRI.

The same day police and students at Poly fought nine hours with forces estimated at 3,000 on the students' side and 1,500 on the police side.The Army seized the Polytechnique In-

ml s.titute the next day. ^;__ Through the weeks of disturb-

ances, Mexico City went about its business as usual. Vendors sold their newspapers only a few feet from the riot troops surrounding the Foreign Ministry. Streams of honking cars sped by, scarcely pausing for drivers to take in the scene.

The Olympic site and the Olympic Village had not been touched by the violence and Olympic workers nailed together their vending booths or checked the bie Olvmpic scoreboard only a few hundred yards from the university.

(Continued on page 4)

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Page 4: 10/1/68 PENNSYLMMAN, ROTC falls under heavy crossfire UPSG

Page 4 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, October 1, 1968

'Super 73' by adding

By LISA KORSI University students living in the

dorms can now set their radio dials permanently to 730 kylocycles, AM. WXPN, super 73, will now never go off the air.

Last night WXPN automated its program during the hours it was previously off the air.

During this time, the station will broadcast over a juke box record changer, programmed to play one side of 50 records in sequence. The records, with a 10 second interval between each, will play for two and a half hours*and then automatically start again. The intervals will be filled by either the voice of a pre- recorded D.I, a 'jingle', or perhaps short commercials.

"This is what the station needed, what our listeners wanted," said station manager Rick Rivkin. "We feel its is one of the major innova- tions in the station's history, com- parable to our first broadcast of FM or when we started playing rock in 1961."

Although completely automatic, the changer has already undergone its trial performance when it was aided without any advance notice. At that time, Rivkin said, several listeners called the station and mistakenly complemented the DJ they thought to

expands program automatic DJ

be running the program. According to Rivkin, its designer,

the invention is unique in its wiring and set-up. Constructed from an older model juke box machine, it consists of the record changer, an automatic power control panel and a cartridge machine. The changer, although re- siding in studio 1, the main control room, will not tie up any of the control room facilities.

The power control unit was necessary, for the changer runs on 24 volts, which is lower than straight line current.

Total outlay for the increased pro- gramming will be only about $50 to cover extra parts, according to Rivkin. The donation of the juke box changer by the Stan Harris Co., en- abled the station to establish the increased programming.

This innovation will occur only on AM, according to Rivkin because FCC regulations prohibit licensed FM sta- tions to operate without an engineer present. "If the engineer was there, he could run the show by himself, without the changer," said Rivkin.

According to the Wharton senior, this set-up is the first in the Ivy League. StationWRUC.UnionCollege is the only other college station to have anything similar.

WXPN-AM now has transmitters

in most dorms, including English House and Kingscourt. The station will continue expanding and in the future hopes to install transmitters on Locust Walk for the fraternities and in the women's housekeeping dorms. In the spring, the present tube model transmitters will be re- placed by less expensive transitorized sets.

Poetry to be read in Fine Arts Building

The winners of the poetry contest sponsored last spring by the creative writing program of the English de- partment will read their poems at 4:00 this afternoon in Room B-l, the Fine Arts Building.

Aaron Poller and Ronald Gelfond won the contest for students in the College, while Phillip Baum and Lousi Guida received honorable mention in that competition.

The graduate student winners are Jay Wilson and Cyn Bourgeault. Michael Roman, who also was judged a winner in the graduate student contests is now in the Peace Corps. Refreshments will be provided after the readings.

'Simple' quarrel sparks unrest (Continued from page 3)

A slogan strung in electric light bulbs at the Olympic Stadium still shines this message at night: "All things are possible with peace." But across the street at the university and in other areas of the city built upon what once was an Aztec lake, there are armed camps.

How could Mexico have avoided or ended the student unrest?

"The president should have listen- ed long ago," says a cab driver. "If the students felt they had somebody in the government who would listen to them, this might not have gone this far."

"It's those communist agitators from Cuba," says a housewife. "If it weren't that they were students and what with all the student unrest around the world -- if it had been anybody else, they (the government) would have eliminated it long ago."

A professor at the university, Dr. Leopoldo Zea, insists, "The anti- subversive law is not clear and can be interpreted any way. That can be bad-. The students think some men in the prison are there because of their ideas."

Many students want to get back to class, he said, but many want more than that to get some reforms out of the activity.

There are communists in the movement, he said, but then there are other groups,too.

"It is a bit strange and confused," he said.

Herberto Castillo, another pro- fessor, said the government used too much "public force" in responding to the student unrest. There should have been an open and free dialogue between the Students and the auth- orities, he said.

Castillo said he was treated for a six-inch gash in his forehead, in- flicted by unknown assailants.

Marcelino Parello Vails, one of the student leaders, expressed satis- faction with what has happened. The disorder has confronted the "civil conscience," he said.

"The fact there is debate over the repeal of Article 145 (the main antisubversive law) satisfies us."

There are a few certainties in the situation. One can count the jeeps, the troop carriers, the armored

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cars. One can see the glow of a policeman's motorcycle or a bus set afire by the mobs. One can follow the ambulances that fight rush hour traf- fic.

But the identification of the groups involved is difficult.

The students have a directorate committee of about 250 members of various political stripes, many with too little political sophistication to know how they stand. There is also a terrorist group which the police call "The Right-Wingers."

And then there is a telling quote from Alfonso Martinez Dominguez, President of the PRI ruling party:

"Those who believe that they are struggling for Leftist solutions, those who are serving as cannon fodder out of gullibility or obfuscation of the rioters, the conspirators, the promoters of subversion and of anarchy, are opening the way to the darkest forces of the right."

There, too, is David Alfaro Sigueiros, the world renowed muralist, a Leftist once jailed as a political prisoner.He threw nis support to the students.

Where does the student movement go from here?

One group holds to an Olympic Blackmail Theory'' - that the students are using the Olympics as a weapon. But, so far, the Olympic facilities are untouched.

One member of the student direc- torate says the group will move to seek nationwide support, largely from the laborers and farmers. Labor leaders have foreseen this and urge their members to ignore the students* appeals.

If the project should gain national support the issues no doubt would in- clude agrarian reform, rooting out of "government cor- ruption," redistribution of wealth and changes in the labor laws.

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(Continued from page 6) Although Santini's conversation picked up some ardor

while he discussed the alumni recruiting problem, he still projected the easy-going personality so radically different from the character he portrays on the field.

One very good reason for his off-the-field tranquility is that the weekly football game allows him to vent plenty of aggression. "Sure, I like the contact. But, really, football isn't a contact sport. As some coach'once said,dancing is a contact sport, football is a collision sport."

ROTC (Continued from page 1)

If a student drops out of the "regular" .program he is subject to immediate induction into the armed forces.

"It's as if a student in the archi- tecture program flunks architecture and is sent to Mesopotemia for a two-year dig/* Nagler commented. "In other words, a student who flunks the Army is sent into the Army for two years.

Navy Captain Turner said none of the University students who had drop- ped out of the NROTC regular pro- gram had been called. Both Turner and Land insisted that their students have freedom of expression within the classroom, "whether or not they are on scholarships."

"Several students in my class have expressed the opinion that they don't care for our stand in Vietnam at all. I don't know if they are on scholarship or not, but they were not repressed," Land said.

Land also said a ROTC student might be called in for a discussion if he were to become a leader inadem-

Superman Santini's liking for collision, apparent from his perfor-

mance on the gridiron, is also evidenced in his cheerful commentary on the derivation of the game of football. "Everybody gets tensed up, right? So every once in a while everybody feels like smashing somebody else's head in. To make this activity respectable, some people got together and made up a game. They said 'I'll smash your head in and you'll try to smash mine, but it will all be for sport'... football's a great game."

Campus events (Continued from page 3)

LATIN AMERICAN STUDENT SO- CIETY: Meeting tomorrow, 7 P.M., Room 33,ChristianAssoc. Discussion of MexicanStudent Revolt (inSpanish).

MOORE SCHOOL COUNCIL: Meeting today, 11 A.M., Room 107 Towne Bldg.

OMICRON DELTA EPSILON: The Economic Society of U. of P. will meet today in Room W-124, Dietrich Hall , 11 A.M. All undergraduates interested must attend.

PENN COMMENT: Mandatory meeting, for all editors, heelers, and staff, Thurs., 8 P.M., College Hall 207. Bring progress reports.

REPERTORY THEATRE OF THE AIR: Writers, actors, publicity spoonsl Meeting this Sun., 8:30 P.M., Houston Hall Room 10. All are wel- come.

SDS: Penn Chapter, SDS, general meeting tomorrow, 8 P.M., Stiteler Hall B26.

UPSG (Continued from page 1)

night to continue discussion, if student enthusiasm warrants it.

Before the meeting began Junior Assemblyman Stephen Marmon with- drew his resolution concerning the reapportionment of the membership of the University Council to include undergraduate and graduate students. Assembly Speaker Tom Brown in- dicated that the decision was based on the fact that the University Council had already appointed a committee to consider adding students to its membership. Nevertheless, a UPSG ad hoc committee was named to revise the proposal for the next government meeting.

onstration. Land and Turner stressed that a

student elects to join the military programs.

"Many argue that students join the program voluntarily," said SCUE head Israelow. "The real issue is whether the University should sanction these courses with credit.*

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Page 5: 10/1/68 PENNSYLMMAN, ROTC falls under heavy crossfire UPSG

Tuesday, October 1, 1968 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 5

Registration begins for 42-class Free University By PHIL ARKOW

As the Free University begins its fourth continuous year of on-and off- campus classes, the same variety of classes and the same diversity of individual academic pursuits are still being offered. Being given this semester are 42 courses with as wide a range of interests as ever before.

Student applicants for the courses are currently being registered in the west alcove of Houston Hall. The registration booth is open daily through Friday, from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M., and from 6 to 8 P.M. Thurs- day.

Free University Director John Mahon, UPSG assemblyman and co- chairman of the education committee, expressed his optimism for "another successful year for the Free U." Mahon anticipated another high en- rollment for the school which last semester registered more than 1,000 students in more than 30 courses.The fall, 1967 program registered 1,062 students, 42 percent of whom were not students at the University of Pennsylvania.

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tion are improvisational experiments in the arts, technical lectures in mathematics, studies of man and his environment,and a diverse potpourri of psychology, literature, political science and religion.

Ira Einhorn and Steve Kuromiya, two of the first instructors in the Free U, return once more to teach their particular views on everything. Einhorn's course is called "Inter- action," and will attempt to create "a matrix in which all may teach/ learn to their own satisfaction." He has emphasized that the course will offer much individual contact.

Kuromiya's course is called "Up Against the Wall," and will be taught by the editor of The Collegiate Guide to Philadelphia and a "joint staff."

Another former instructor in the Free U, Irene Eskin, will be teaching a course in Anarchy. Janet Abbey, who taught last semester's successful Speedreading class, will teach a class in "Self-Awareness and Educational Theories."

The relationship between racism and society is the theme for two courses. In "Economic Aspects of Racial Inequality," William Finnic, will demonstrate the cost of racial inequality to whites. Bob Gallagher, from the Christian Association, will lead a course in "White Racism and Christian Theology."

Two courses will attempt to pro- vide students with additional means to survive in today's society. " Guerrilla Warfare and Violent Soc ial Change" will be taught by Dr.Stanley Renshon, who will describe the theory and practice of this type of warfare as "one aspect of social change." The class will explore the psychologi cal and sociological aspects of guer- rilla warfare and its implications for a military approach. Gandolf will

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teach principles of "Karate and Re- lated Sports," and welcomes all blacks, SDS members and Resistance staffers to come to learn how to sur- vive in the city.

"Show and Tell -- A Revival" is a new course, being given by Robert Bernstein. The course is projected as "a storytelling revival with other things done at the same time."

In the same tradition as the Show and Tell course is a therapeutic course in "Remedial Arts and Crafts," taught by Dowdey and Woo- ton. Both instructors claim their in- competency as qualifications for teaching.

Timothy Materer, an assistant professor of English at the Univer- sity, will teach a course in "Black Humor." Other literature courses offered are "The Agony and the Agony," an investigation into the world of Kafka by William Burrison, and "Poem-making," an improvisa- tional series of creations by Bruce W, Grant, and a "highly erotic" study of "The Classical Love Poems of South India," taught by B. Chan- drasekaran.

Many of this semester's courses deal with Man's interactions with his environment. A "Group Encounter Lab" will be conducted by Dr.Robert 1 larrit, associate professor of speech pathology at Trenton State College. "The Artist as an Environmentalist" is the subjei of a course by Phillip Simkin.

Milton Spear will teach a rather unusual course in the "Art and Prin ciple? of Being a Good Husband."

Bruce McGarry will teach an in- spirational course called "Don't Be Afraid." McGarry says his course will be "a satirical critique of the normal/abnormal hang-up."

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°y Jim Lader, will attempt to demon- strate that the creative person is test suited to an age of inescapable "UX. The class will introduce a variety of techniques to show that the creative individual usually has more resources and abilities than he normally puts to use.

"The Divine Principle/* taught by George Fernsler, an instructor at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science, will attempt to explain a puzzling question. "God lives but the world's a mess," says his sylla- bus. "Why?" The class will combine Eastern and Western philosophies, and will attempt to provide a better solution to the world's problems than religion alone can offer.

Mark Blum will teach two classes in intergroup interaction. In "Move- ment and Relaxation - Improvisation," he will explain the potentialities of the body's movements, both passive and active, to focus on group and in- dividual storytelling. "Environmental Composition" will examine public spaces as the foci for creative be- havior.

A group discussion of "interde- partmentalism" will be the theme of Robert Dean Brittan's "Approach to Universal Programming." James Weinstock will explore the road to total freedom in "Scientology."

Two dramatic courses are being offered. Two professional hypnotists, Genco and Banks, will teach a course called "Hypnodrama." An experi- mental theatrical production, they will prove that hypnosis can increase creativity. The "Theatre of Experi- ment," taught by will have an actor's workshop and a separate playwright's workshop. A product on will hopefully be creat- ed and performed on campus.

Two music courses being offered are "Psychedelic Music/" taught by Mike Lake, and a "Music Is" class, taught by Sid Karp, music critic of Distant Drummer.

Political structures and man's attempts to cope with them are the themes of several courses. Michael Novaek, a founder of Perm's SDS, will show that a change of leaders is not liberation in a "Free Society." Iliv course will meet for communal

..:l- und ;v-.prandial discussions. 'Modern ( c»ns.ervative Thought" will

'•e jjiven by Robert Schadler, an in- structor in the Free University of Georgetown University.

Other political courses are: "Philosophy of the New Left," taught

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Of a more technical nature are a course in "The Stock Market," by Herbert Simpson, who describes his ability to survive three years of active trading in the stock exchange as qualifications. "New Modern Math for All," taught by J. Jackson, will be offered to those who "could not cope with regular math." Robert Brown will continue his course in the Mayan language, and a Dr. Fiderer will teach a course in "Groddeck." Wal- ter Strawbridge will teach a course in Gregg Shorthand for secretaries and Notehand for businessmen and students.

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Letters (Continued from page 2)

realize that a newspaper has the right to take a stand on a particular issue; but is it really ethical, is it really not a distortion to completely ignore the majority viewpoint -- the views of men who do liave a personal and intrinsic attachment to fraternities? Let us hear of the "4 out of 5" who choose to stay in.

It must be noted, too, that the men who were interviewed for the article were at one time members of a fraternity. They realized that fra- ternities were not for them. Although it may not seem obvious, they, too, owe something to fraternities; they were able to establish a personal opinion, be it pro or con, rather than sit back in a pool of quiet, stagnant disconcern. Fraternities stifle an ability to think? I think not.

Being that the DP constantly cri- ticizes fraternities for not displaying progressiveness, am I to assume that to present a minority viewpoint, to distort facts, is indeed a form of progressiveness? Please, gentlemen, let us open our eyes to both paths that can be taken and walk carefully down both, rather than clumsily down the smaller.

Frank Tsantes President, Sigma Nu

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Page 6: 10/1/68 PENNSYLMMAN, ROTC falls under heavy crossfire UPSG

Eye on the Ivies

Indians out to scalp Ivy foes Dartmouth College

Hanover, N.H.

Nicknames: Indians, Big Green

1967 record: 7-2 Ivy League: 5-2(second)

1968 schedule

(1967 score in parentheses)

Sept. 28 New Hampshire (no game Oct. 5 at Holy Cross (24-8)

Oct. 12 Princeton (17-14)

Oct. 19 Brown (41-6)

Oct. 26 at Harvard (23-21) Nov. 2 at Yale (15-56)

Nov. 9 Columbia (13-7)

Nov. 16 at Cornel 1 (21-24) Nov. 23 of Pennsylvania

1968 results

(23-0)

Dartmout i 21 New Hampshire 0

the sports roost

SUPERMAN

y norm roos

BOB BLACKMAN

(Sixth of a Series) Coaching; Dartmouth's 16th head football coach, Bob Black- man has directed the Big Green to an 83- 31-3 record over 13 seasons. His teams at Hanover have never been out of the first division in the Ivy League, and he has twice been named Eastern Coach of the Year, in 1962 and 1965, when the Indians posted perfect 9-0-0 slates. A bout with polio ended Blackman's playing career at Southern California after his freshman season, but he became an assistant coach at U.S.C. in 1939 while still an undergraduate. His first head coaching job in the collegiate ranks was at Pasadena City College, after which he became the skipper at the University of Denver before moving on to Dartmouth.

Offense; Captain Steve Luxford and versatile back Gene Ry/ewic/ have departed the Big Green backfield, leaving two sizable holes. Blackman considers the fate of his offense to be decided by whether or not he can find a top notch quarterback among junior Bill Koening, sophomore Jim Chasey, and senior Bill Kinschner. Bob Mlakar has the inside track for Luxford's old spot, with Bob Lund- quist and Bill Donovan battling for the other halfback post. Little Dave Boyle will again carry the ball from the full- back position backed up by Bill Johnson and soph Jim Rager. In the line All-Ivy tackle' Hank Paulson heads the list of those who are gone. Only at end do the Indians seem well set with captain Randy Wallick, Jack Wimsatt, and Steve Adams returning along with newcomers Tom Schenker,

RANDY WALLICK

and Darrel Gavle. The remainder of the line will be inex- perienced and will undoubtedly take time to gel as a unit.

Defense; Dartmouth had the Ivies' top defense in 1967, but the Big Green were hurt badly by graduation losses, losing three All-Ivy performers, Randy McElrath at end. Norm Davis at linebacker, and defensive back Gordie Rule. Also

gone are last year's two top middle guards and tackles Giff Foley and Jim Elrid^e. The Indians could, however, still be fomidable defensively if the sophomores come through. Among those being counted on are linemen Bill Skibitsky, Bill Munich, and Bob Kelcourse, and back Murray Bowden. Veterans in the line include Pete Lawrence and Bruce Henry at end, and Jeff Norton and Ernie Babcock at tackle. Linebackers Rick Lease and Mike Rieder remain, as do Randy Wallick's twin brother Rick, Bruce Saylor, and John Roberts in the secondary.

Outlook; Last year was the first in many that Dartmouth was not among the nation's leaders in total offense (the Big Green were only sixth in the Ivies in that department last fall). This season, without Luxford and Ryzewic/ and a hoct of defensive stalwarts, the Indians will depend heavily on unproven talent. If the sophs develop, however, they could very well still do some scalping.

- - MARVIN DASH

Quak in

ers to meet Haverford first home soccer match

By STEVE MICHELSON

Coming off a 1-0 victory over Temple, the varsity soccer team meets Haverford College tomorrow at Stewart field. The Fords, coach- ed by former Olympic soccer coach Jimmy Mills, are 2-1 this year.

Coach Mills has centered his hopes this year on three returning seniors: Art Newkirk, Rick Smith, and Skip Jarocki. Newkirk is the Fords' goalie.

Included in the starting eleven for Haverford are four freshmen, two of whom, inside left Mark Love and inside right Scott Kestner, have drawn considerable praise from their coach.

Haverford has been using three fullbacks this year as in the past, but have changed their offensive strategy. "We've been experimenting with our passing," said coach Mills, "and we've found that our shots are not as forced as they have been in the past."

Last year the Quakers trounced Haverford, 3-0, unleashing a phe- nomenal total of 39 shots to a mere 5 for the Fords. A tight Haverford defense, however, held the Quakers scoreless through the first half. 1968

KEN RIGDEN

Scored against Fords last year

captain Rett Sturman finally broke the ice after twelve minutes of the third quarter. All-Ivy inside Tom Hutchison received credit for the as- sist as Sturman's goal provided the momentum for Penn's fourth quarter insurance tallies. Junior Ken Rigden

scored the second,follosvinga scram- ble in front of the Haverford goal, while graduated senior Frank Cobb converted a missed shot by 1968 graduate Roger Lorberbaum into the final score.

Penn coach BobSeddon is looking for an offensive showing against the Fords. "We only scored one goal against Temple last Saturday and missed quite a few good shots," he commented. "Hopefully, we can get on the scoreboard a little more against Haverford." Seddon intends to go with the same lineup that de- feated Temple.

Coach Mills was rather optimistic about his team's chances against the Quakers. "Even though we're a small school, we have had a tendency to give Penn a lot of trouble," he said. "Perhaps we can pull an upset this year."

The game tomorrow will start at 3:30 P.M. The Quakers could use a big win to carry them into their weekend battle with undefeated Ivy champ Brown.

He's not nearly as fast as a speeding bullet; it's doubt- ful that he could leap a tall building with a single bound; and it's not quite safe to say he's more powerful than a locomotive.

But last Saturday at Franklin Field, as he sped by, flew over, and plowed through a bewildered herd of Bison defenders, Jerry Santini was hard to distinguish from Superman.

The short but solid senior tailback chewed up 148 yards and scored two touchdowns on33 carries. "It was the most times I've carried and the most yards I've gained in a game," Santini recounted in a matter-of-fact fashion which implied that he really didn't give a damn about personal statistics.

Off the field, Jerry Santini's easy-going manner strikes a Clark Kent-Superman-like contrast with the ferocious#30, who seems to enjoy nothing more than crashing, smashing, thrashing, and out-dashing the opposition for 60 minutes every Saturday afternoon.

Last Saturday Santini did most of his crashing and smash- ing while he was in possession of the ball. Last year in the Bucknell game, his crashing and smashing allowed tailback Cabot Knowlton to put in the best performance of his career.

"It's ironic. We both carried the ball the same number of times for the same number of yards. And we both had one fumble too," mused Santini in reflection of last year's Bucknell game, in which Knowlton carried 33 times for 148 yards.

Santini's sensational running performance against the Bisons on Saturday marked his debut at the tailback slot. In his past two years on the Penn varsity, he has gained recognition primarily as a tough blocking fullback.

"It's like day and night. Last year as a fullback, I was a blocking back 99% of thetime.anda running back the rest. I carried only eight times in the first four games last year. 1 had only two running plays, and used just one."

But running and blocking are all the same to the 5-foot- 8, 192-pounder from Syracuse. "I don't care--I like to run and block--but most of all I like to win. If you're blocking and winning, what more could you ask for?"

******

When asked how he felt about the team's showing on Saturday, Santini burst forth, "That's the key word—team. This is my fourth year here, and this is the first year we have a team.

"Our kicking looked good; we were covering punts better. Burrell looked good; our defense looked better.

"But the most important factor is a feeling within the team. It's an intangible quality that you can't put down on paper. It makes for a cohesiveness we just haven't had for the past two years."

One of the reasons for Penn's newly-acquired x-factor is hinted at in Santini's paraphrase of a pre-season speech by coach Ode 11: "We don't have any standouts this year--we've got a lot of good football players."

As far as Jerry Santini is concerned, this is a healthy situation. "Standouts give the press something to write about. They build him up and build him up and try to make a legend of him. Meanwhile, everybody else on the team gets sick and tired of hearing about some football player who might not be any better than they are.

"Take, for example, last week's Purdue-Nortre Dame game. (Leroy) Keyes got all the publicity. He's good-- there's no doubt about that--but he's not the key factor. There were 21 other good football players that beat Notre Dame on Saturday."

JERRY SANTINI-smashing, crasning, and thrashing.

mistake in the book and still should have won. Brown will be much tougher next week.

"They always hit hard-especially me. I broke my right hand there my sophomore year, and last year I left the stadium with two pressure bandages on my leg.

"Last year they tied Cornell, who beat us pretty badly. No. Brown won't be taken lightly next weekend."

Going beyond the Brown game, Santini, whose recently- injured right leg won't keep him out of action against the Bruins, offered little in the way of a concrete prognostication.

"There's no way of knowing (how the season will turn out). Look back a couple of years; we haven't had a major upset yet. We haven't beaten one of. the big five (Harvard, Dartmouth, Princeton, Yale, and Cornell) since I've been here.

"It's the emotional factor within a team that causes the upsets you read about all over the country every weekend. You just get sick and tired of losing and ...."

* * ** « *

While Penn's leading rusher does not rule out a brighter football future, he puts the responsibility for the apathy of Penn students (with regard to football) solely on the per-

i formances of Penn's teams of the near past. "You put a consistent winner on the field--andin a year

or so you'll have them on the edge of their seats. Kids are kids, they protest here like they do at Berkeley.

' If people would only stop looking to the past. Sure, Penn had some great teams, but so did every other school.

"Take Yale. They were good in the Ivy League and packed their stadium last year. But if Yale, the Ivy champs, played some Big Ten school, they'd get creamed.

"What's the matter with being a good Ivy League team?

That's the league we're in and are going to stay in." ******

******

Despite the impressive 27-10 opening win over Bucknell, Jerry Santini is not radiating optimism about the rest of the season.

"I didn't have any doubt about it--not against Bucknell-- they just don't play the same competition we do. Last year we gave them the game on a silver platter. We made every

Notice GYMNASTICS CLUB: Meeting for

all club members, 7-9 P.M. Hutchin- son Gym.

Jerry Santini has very strong feelings about one reason (he feels) that Penn has not recently had a very good team, even in terms of its own league.

"You've got to recruit quality. If you get a dozeablue- chip players for every freshman team, you've got yourself 36 good players--you only need 22 for a football team.

"Some of our alumni do a decent job of recruiting, but most of them sit on their tails.

"It's much easier for an alumnus to get to high school kids early, when they're impressionable--like in the 10th grade.

"For instance, Marty Domres, Columbia's quarterback, Mike Bouscaren, a linebacker for Yale, Randy McElrath, an Ail-American end at Dartmouth last year, and myself all were gathered together by alumni from Dartmouth and Yale long before recruiters from the schools came.

"If there's a good football player, with some intelligence, playing in his backyard, one of our alumni might tell the coach. If the kid is playing around the corner, most alumni wouldn't bother."

(Continued on page 4)

;>♦ ♦♦♦♦♦»♦»»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

IF football

Football statistics INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

Rushing Yds Av

Zbrzeznj McFillin Sudhaus

Monhan Barudin Santini

Total

Atts

6 6

1 5 1 33

-21 17 -3

18 2

148

52 161

-3.5 2.8

-3.0

3.6 2.0 4.5

3.1

Lgst

9 7

-3

6 2

28

28

Atts Comp Yds Int TD

TEAM STATISTICS

Bucknell

F irst downs Rushing yardage (net)

Passing yardage

Passes (comp att int)

Passes intercepted by

Punts (no. and yardageavg.]

Fumbles lost

Yards penalized

Penn

11 117

134

9-22-1 1

7-30.9

1

24

Zeta Beta Tau Theta Xi

Alpha Epsilon Pi Kappa Alpha

Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon

Delta Kappa Epsilon Phi Epsilon Pi

Kappa Sigma Sigma Chi

Sigma Alpha Mu Pi Kappa Alpha

32

0

32 6

16 0

14 0

12 0

Phi Sigma Kappa Theta Rho

Tau Delta Phi Alpha Chi Rho

Phi Gamma Delta Tau Epsilon Pi

Phi Sigma Delta Beta Sigma Rho

Beta Sigma Rho Alpha Sigma Phi

Phi Sigma Delta Sigma Phi Epsilon

Sigma Chi Sigma Alpha Epsilon

10 6

9 0

8 6

7

6

2

0

2

0

2

0

Passing

Zbrzeznj 14 10 171 1 F irst downs Rushing yardage (net)

12 161

Receiving

Graham

Blumentha Sudhaus

Cough

4

5 1

t Yds

39

16 16

TD

0

1 0

Passing yardage Passes (comp att int) Passes intercepted by Punts (no. and yardage

Fumbles lost

Yards penalized

a vg

171 10-14-1

1

) 8-35.3 1

69

Total 10 171 1

No Yd 5 Av 9 Lgst 1st 2nd 3rd 4 th

Punting Sudhaus 8 282 35. 3 51

PENN 3 Bucknell 3

14 0

3 7

7 27 0 10

C/ SPORTS

Page 6 Tuesday, October 1, 1968

Letting Your Hair Grow?

FINE. BUT WHEN YOU DO GET IT CUT, COME TO THE

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NO WAITING. WE ALSO WORK BY APP'T.

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