war foes protest in irvine

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THE 4/25/69 DAILY PENNS YL KINL4N. Vol. LXXXV No. 27 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian, Friday, April 25, 1969 ® Founded 1885 Local S EN. JACOB JAVITS JAVITS TO SPEAK ON CONSTITUTION Sen. Jacob Javits (R.-N.Y.) will speak in Irvine Auditorium Monday at 8 P.M. concerning the possibility of a consitutional crisis this summer. All but two of the required two-thirds of state legislatures have already called for a constitutional convention for amendments concerning reappor- tionment of state legislatures. Javits, a member of the Eastern liberal wing of the Republican party, fears such a convention may rewrite other sections including the Bill of Rights. The for- mer New York state attorney general is afraid the constitution would lose its flexibility and simplicity and be- come a cumbersome instrument of the law. He will discuss steps being taken by both proponents and opponents of the convention. Javits, first elected to the Senate in 1956 had been a strong critic of former President Johnson's Vietnam war policy. He is a member of the foreign relations and labor and public welfare Senate committees. ARTHUR OKUN TO DELIVER THREE LECTURES Arthur Okun, former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers during the Johnson administration, will deliver three lectures concerning "The Poli- tical Economy of Prosperity" next week in the Fine Arts auditorium. The lectures, sponsored by the Howard Crawley memorial lecture series of the Wharton School are scheduled for Monday at 4 PJvl., Tuesday at 4 PJvl. and Wednesday at 2 PJvl. Okun, now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., was a member of the Yale faculty before being appointed by former President Johnson to the government post. The Crawley lecture series was established in 193S in honor of an alumnus of the Wharton school. 4000 SIGN ANTI-ABM PETITIONS A spokesman for a committee circulating anti-ABM petitions said Thursday that over 4,000 signatures have been obtained. Signed petitions collected over a three day period will be brought to Washington, along with petitions from the University of Rochester and Bucknell University, and will be presented to legislators who are wavering in their stands on the ABM issue. Minority whip Sen. Hugh Scott (R.-Pa.), is included among the waverers. ACTIVITIES COUNCIL TO MEET MONDAY The Activities Council will hold a meeting Monday at 9:15 P.M. in the Houston Hall auditorium. Before that meeting each activity must verify their representative. Council by-laws and the Finance Committee will be discussed at the meeting. National By United Press IntrrnHliun.il NIXON RECOMMENDS POSTAGE PRICE HIKE President Nixon asked Congress Thursday to raise the price of a first-class postage stamp from six to seven cents. Nixon promised major reforms to end postal deficits that have doubled the cost of mailing a letter in the past decade. Postal rates for all classes of mail except air mail cards and letters would increase under Nixon's plan to cut the Post Office Department's record expected deficit of 1.2 billion by more than half. Effective July 1, first class letters would require a seven-cent stamp, and the cost of cards would also go up a penny to six cents. Postmaster General Winton H. Blount said the admini- stration also intended to ask for removal of "public service costs," including special postal rates for educational institutions, nonprofit organizations and veterans, which have risen from $37 million in 1960 to a current rate of $750 million. HUEY NEWTON DENIED PAROLE LOS ANGLES- -Huey Newton, the co-founder of the Black Panthers who is serving a prison term for the fatal shooting of a policeman, has been denied parole and will not be eligible to apply again for another year, prison authorities disclosed Thursday. Newton, 26, was denied his application for parole Wednes- day by the California Adult Authority. Newton was sentenced to two to 15 years in prison after he was convicted last Sept. 8 of voluntary manslaughter in the death of Oakland policeman John Frey, 23, who was shot with his own gun after he stopped Newton for a routine traffic violation on Oct. 27, 1967. Newton was wounded in the gun fight and was arrested when he sought treatment of the wound at a nearby hospital. During his long trial, 2,500 demonstrators, carrying signs and shouting, "Anything happens to Huey, the sky's the limit," ringed the courthouse. International By Unite.! Press International RELIGIOUS WARS PLAGUE IRELAND BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND--The Northern Ireland Government Thursday ordered British army helicopters into action and called up thousands of police reserves to quell Roman Catholic-Protestant violence threatening to topple Premier Terence O'Neill. Extremists bombed an aqueduct carrying water to Belfast and a Catholic school in the Villaga of Maghera. The damage to that aqueduct, a few hundred yards from a British guard post, and an ex- plosion earlier in the week at an aqueduct in nearby Silent Valley cut off half of Belfast's water supply. An estimated 10,000 police were involved in the reserve call-up. Political opponents of O'Neill predicted he would be out of power within a few days for forcing the governingUnionist party to support equal voting rights for Catholics in local elections. LEBANESE GOVERNMENT IN TROUBLE LEBANON--The Lebanese government reached the brink of collapse Thurs- day on a wave of violent support for commando raids against Israel. Police killed or wounded 17 pro-commando demonstrators and furious parliamentary critics forced Premier Rashid Karami to announce his resignation. Parlia- mentary sources said Karami was expected shortly to submit his resignation in writing to President Charles Helou who chose him to lead Lebanon out of a similar crisis only 12 weeks ago. As Karami's move hurled Lebanon deeper into national turmoil, Egyptian snipers along the Suez Canal killed one Israeli soldier and a mine planted on a road near the Sinai town of El Arish wounded nine others. Senior Israeli defense sources warned that strong retalia- tion could follow further Egyptian attacks across the canal. Resistance members Thursday planted crosses in front of College Hall commemorating thi se who have died in Viet Nam. UPCS holds 1st meeting By JOHN RILEY The University of Pennsylvania Community of Students at its first organizational meeting Thursday, formulated a list of five priorities to be acted on before next September. Larry Cohen, author of the new student government constitution headed the informal organizational meetine. Students attending the meet- ing, however, shied away from electing anyone as a formal clialrtnan, anil, in fact, hesitated to do anything that could be considered permanent or binding. Cohen indicated that any action taken in the organizational meetings between now and the fall would have to I)e approved by the formal government when it begins operating. The 35 students attending the meeting formed a steeringcommittee to set up bylaws and make suggestions for a general outline of operation for the three commissions designated by the new student government constitu- tion. These three commissions include the education commission, extra-aca- demic affairs commission, and com- munity affairs commission. The steering committee, which i open to all students, will formulate bylaws for the mode of election and the length of terms of members of these commissions. This committee will also try to organize suggestions over the summer to serve as a general guide to the commissions when they begin operation next semester. A communications committee was also formed at the organizational meeting. This committee plans to contact UPSG members, including (Continued on page 3) War foes protest in Irvine By JUNE EICHBAUM Nearly 50 draft resisters stood Thursday night in Irvine Auditorium and received the applause of the more than 700 persons who attended the Uni- versity's second Vietnam Com- mencement. The convocation in Irvine was held in honor of those men who have re- fused induction into the armed forces. The ceremony also challenged the concept that graduation from the Uni- versity represents unobstructed passage into a free society, a spokes- man for the commencement organi- zers saia. Michael Ferber, convicted on con- spiracy charges in Boston last year, condemned what he called the "surro- gate activism of the new left, "People say let someone else start the revolu- tion and we'll follow." They're only passing the buck," he explained. Ferber charged that "we believe that the ruling class is our enemy without realizing that the rulingclass also consists of us. We are the enemy," he said. The draft resister recognized the need to "disengage oursleves from our complicity." Calling on the crowd to "bring about a revolution from where you're at," Ferber advocated "taking serious steps in your own life that can effect the country as a whole. "The examples we set are more important than the precepts," he emphasized. Ferber spoke about accusations made against Resistance, charging that its supporters speak too much about their lives and not enough about politics. "We believe that the rulingclass is our enemy, without realizing that the ruling class consists of us. We are the enemy," Ferber asserted. Earlier in the day, Resistance members planted about 30 white MICHAEL FERBER Surogate activism' MBA is first of thirty to be chosen for University Council By ARNOLD HOLLAND The first elected student to the University Council is Gary Blackton, first year M.B.A. student in the Wharton School. The University Coun- cil, highest governing body in the University under the trustees, voted at its March meeting to admit 16 graduate students to its membership. Four will be chosen from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, two from the Wharton Graduate School, and one each from the Annenberg School of Communications, the School of Dental Medicine, the Graduate School of Fducation, the Graduate Engineering School, the Graduate School of Fine Arts, the Law School, the School of Medicine, the School of Nursing, the School of Social Work, and the School of Veterinary Medicine. Blackton, a first-year marketing major, received 82 out of 141 votes cast in anelection held Wednesday and Thursday. One thousand seventy-two persons were eligible to vote. Michael Solly was Blackton's only opponent. Also re- cently appointed to the Council are Robert C. McCloud from the Annen- berg School of Communication, and Peter G. Ham from the Graduate Engineering School. The other rep- resentative from graduate Wharton will be appointed by the M.B.A. As- sociation, which Willis Winn, dean of the Wharton School, certified as representative of 98 percent of the students. Paul Stulgaitis, president of the M.B.A. Association, said the designee would almost certainly be himself, but added that he is calling a meeting of the executive committee of the association to formally decide the matter. The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences is having more trouble se- (Continue -• ) Forty-five awards for outstand- ing achievement in the Army and Navy Reserve Officers Training Corps were presented to University students at the ROTC day ceremo- nies Thursday. Four of the major awards were received by Allan J. Candell, a Wharton senior, Alfred B. Cherry, a College junior, Robert Peck, a College senior, and Douglas D. Mitchell, a College senior. Candell received the defense supply association senior cadet key. Cherry was awarded the Blog- Guilfoyle saber. Peck received the Commandant's award, qiven to the senior cadet leader. Mitchell was honored with the Major General Anthony Wayne saber, given in honor of "Mad Anthony" Wayne, a Revolutionary War hero who attend- the University. The ceremony was held in Irvine Auditorium. Among the University officials presenting the awards were Donald K. Angell, vice-president assistant to the President, and Dr. S. Reid Warren, assistant vice- president for undergraduate engi- neering affairs.

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Page 1: War foes protest in Irvine

THE

4/25/69 DAILY

PENNS YL KINL4N. Vol. LXXXV No. 27 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian, Friday, April 25, 1969

® Founded 1885

Local

S EN. JACOB JAVITS

JAVITS TO SPEAK ON CONSTITUTION

Sen. Jacob Javits (R.-N.Y.) will speak in Irvine Auditorium Monday at 8 P.M. concerning the possibility of a consitutional crisis this summer. All but two of the required two-thirds of state legislatures have already called for a constitutional convention for amendments concerning reappor- tionment of state legislatures. Javits, a member of the Eastern liberal wing of the Republican party, fears such a convention may rewrite other sections including the Bill of Rights. The for- mer New York state attorney general is afraid the constitution would lose its flexibility and simplicity and be- come a cumbersome instrument of the law. He will discuss steps being taken by both proponents and opponents of the convention. Javits, first elected to the Senate in 1956 had been a strong critic of former President Johnson's Vietnam war policy. He is a member of the foreign relations and labor and public welfare Senate committees.

ARTHUR OKUN TO DELIVER THREE LECTURES

Arthur Okun, former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers during the Johnson administration, will deliver three lectures concerning "The Poli- tical Economy of Prosperity" next week in the Fine Arts auditorium. The lectures, sponsored by the Howard Crawley memorial lecture series of the

Wharton School are scheduled for Monday at 4 PJvl., Tuesday at 4 PJvl. and Wednesday at 2 PJvl. Okun, now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., was a member of the Yale faculty before being appointed by former President Johnson to the government post. The Crawley lecture series was established in 193S in honor of an alumnus of the Wharton school.

4000 SIGN ANTI-ABM PETITIONS

A spokesman for a committee circulating anti-ABM petitions said Thursday that over 4,000 signatures have been obtained. Signed petitions collected over a three day period will be brought to Washington, along with petitions from the University of Rochester and Bucknell University, and will be presented to legislators who are wavering in their stands on the ABM issue. Minority whip Sen. Hugh Scott (R.-Pa.), is included among the waverers.

ACTIVITIES COUNCIL TO MEET MONDAY

The Activities Council will hold a meeting Monday at 9:15 P.M. in the Houston Hall auditorium. Before that meeting each activity must verify their representative. Council by-laws and the Finance Committee will be discussed at the meeting.

National By United Press IntrrnHliun.il

NIXON RECOMMENDS POSTAGE PRICE HIKE

President Nixon asked Congress Thursday to raise the price of a first-class postage stamp from six to seven cents. Nixon promised major reforms to end postal deficits that have doubled the cost of mailing a letter in the past decade. Postal rates for all classes of mail except air mail cards and letters would increase under Nixon's plan to cut the Post Office Department's record expected deficit of 1.2 billion by more than half. Effective July 1, first class letters would require a seven-cent stamp, and the cost of cards would also go up a penny to six cents. Postmaster General Winton H. Blount said the admini- stration also intended to ask for removal of "public service costs," including special postal rates for educational institutions, nonprofit organizations and veterans, which have risen from $37 million in 1960 to a current rate of $750 million.

HUEY NEWTON DENIED PAROLE

LOS ANGLES- -Huey Newton, the co-founder of the Black Panthers who is serving a prison term for the fatal shooting of a policeman, has been denied parole and will not be eligible to apply again for another year, prison authorities disclosed Thursday. Newton, 26, was denied his application for parole Wednes- day by the California Adult Authority. Newton was sentenced to two to 15 years in prison after he was convicted last Sept. 8 of voluntary manslaughter in the death of Oakland policeman John Frey, 23, who was shot with his own gun after he stopped Newton for a routine traffic violation on Oct. 27, 1967. Newton was wounded in the gun fight and was arrested when he sought treatment of the wound at a nearby hospital.

During his long trial, 2,500 demonstrators, carrying signs and shouting, "Anything happens to Huey, the sky's the limit," ringed the courthouse.

International By Unite.! Press International

RELIGIOUS WARS PLAGUE IRELAND

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND--The Northern Ireland Government Thursday ordered British army helicopters into action and called up thousands of police reserves to quell Roman Catholic-Protestant violence threatening to topple Premier Terence O'Neill. Extremists bombed an aqueduct carrying water to Belfast and a Catholic school in the Villaga of Maghera. The damage to that aqueduct, a few hundred yards from a British guard post, and an ex- plosion earlier in the week at an aqueduct in nearby Silent Valley cut off half of Belfast's water supply. An estimated 10,000 police were involved in the reserve call-up. Political opponents of O'Neill predicted he would be out of power within a few days for forcing the governingUnionist party to support equal voting rights for Catholics in local elections.

LEBANESE GOVERNMENT IN TROUBLE

LEBANON--The Lebanese government reached the brink of collapse Thurs- day on a wave of violent support for commando raids against Israel. Police killed or wounded 17 pro-commando demonstrators and furious parliamentary critics forced Premier Rashid Karami to announce his resignation. Parlia- mentary sources said Karami was expected shortly to submit his resignation in writing to President Charles Helou who chose him to lead Lebanon out of a similar crisis only 12 weeks ago. As Karami's move hurled Lebanon deeper into national turmoil, Egyptian snipers along the Suez Canal killed one Israeli soldier and a mine planted on a road near the Sinai town of El Arish wounded nine others. Senior Israeli defense sources warned that strong retalia- tion could follow further Egyptian attacks across the canal.

Resistance members Thursday planted crosses in front of College Hall commemorating thi se who have died in Viet Nam.

UPCS holds 1st meeting

By JOHN RILEY

The University of Pennsylvania Community of Students at its first organizational meeting Thursday, formulated a list of five priorities to be acted on before next September.

Larry Cohen, author of the new student government constitution headed the informal organizational meetine. Students attending the meet- ing, however, shied away from electing anyone as a formal clialrtnan, anil, in fact, hesitated to do anything that could be considered permanent or binding.

Cohen indicated that any action taken in the organizational meetings between now and the fall would have to I)e approved by the formal government when it begins operating.

The 35 students attending the meeting formed a steeringcommittee to set up bylaws and make suggestions for a general outline of operation for the three commissions designated by the new student government constitu- tion.

These three commissions include the education commission, extra-aca- demic affairs commission, and com- munity affairs commission.

The steering committee, which i open to all students, will formulate bylaws for the mode of election and the length of terms of members of these commissions. This committee will also try to organize suggestions over the summer to serve as a general guide to the commissions when they begin operation next semester.

A communications committee was also formed at the organizational meeting. This committee plans to contact UPSG members, including

(Continued on page 3)

War foes protest in Irvine

By JUNE EICHBAUM

Nearly 50 draft resisters stood Thursday night in Irvine Auditorium and received the applause of the more than 700 persons who attended the Uni- versity's second Vietnam Com- mencement.

The convocation in Irvine was held in honor of those men who have re- fused induction into the armed forces. The ceremony also challenged the concept that graduation from the Uni- versity represents unobstructed passage into a free society, a spokes- man for the commencement organi- zers saia.

Michael Ferber, convicted on con- spiracy charges in Boston last year, condemned what he called the "surro- gate activism of the new left, "People say let someone else start the revolu- tion and we'll follow." They're only passing the buck," he explained.

Ferber charged that "we believe that the ruling class is our enemy without realizing that the rulingclass also consists of us. We are the enemy," he said.

The draft resister recognized the need to "disengage oursleves from our complicity."

Calling on the crowd to "bring about a revolution from where you're at," Ferber advocated "taking serious steps in your own life that can effect the country as a whole.

"The examples we set are more important than the precepts," he emphasized.

Ferber spoke about accusations made against Resistance, charging that its supporters speak too much about their lives and not enough about politics.

"We believe that the rulingclass is our enemy, without realizing that the ruling class consists of us. We are the enemy," Ferber asserted.

Earlier in the day, Resistance members planted about 30 white

MICHAEL FERBER

Surogate activism' ■

MBA is first of thirty to be chosen for University Council

By ARNOLD HOLLAND The first elected student to the

University Council is Gary Blackton, first year M.B.A. student in the Wharton School. The University Coun- cil, highest governing body in the University under the trustees, voted at its March meeting to admit 16 graduate students to its membership. Four will be chosen from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, two from the Wharton Graduate School, and one each from the Annenberg School of Communications, the School of Dental Medicine, the Graduate School of Fducation, the Graduate Engineering

School, the Graduate School of Fine Arts, the Law School, the School of Medicine, the School of Nursing, the School of Social Work, and the School of Veterinary Medicine. Blackton, a first-year marketing major, received 82 out of 141 votes cast in anelection held Wednesday and Thursday. One thousand seventy-two persons were eligible to vote. Michael Solly was Blackton's only opponent. Also re- cently appointed to the Council are Robert C. McCloud from the Annen- berg School of Communication, and Peter G. Ham from the Graduate Engineering School. The other rep-

resentative from graduate Wharton will be appointed by the M.B.A. As- sociation, which Willis Winn, dean of the Wharton School, certified as representative of 98 percent of the students. Paul Stulgaitis, president of the M.B.A. Association, said the designee would almost certainly be himself, but added that he is calling a meeting of the executive committee of the association to formally decide

the matter. The Graduate School of Arts and

Sciences is having more trouble se-

(Continue -• )

Forty-five awards for outstand-

ing achievement in the Army and

Navy Reserve Officers Training Corps were presented to University students at the ROTC day ceremo- nies Thursday.

Four of the major awards were

received by Allan J. Candell, a Wharton senior, Alfred B. Cherry, a College junior, Robert Peck, a

College senior, and Douglas D. Mitchell, a College senior.

Candell received the defense supply association senior cadet

key. Cherry was awarded the Blog-

Guilfoyle saber. Peck received the Commandant's award, qiven to the senior cadet leader. Mitchell was honored with the Major General Anthony Wayne saber, given in honor of "Mad Anthony" Wayne, a

Revolutionary War hero who attend- the University.

The ceremony was held in Irvine Auditorium. Among the University officials presenting the awards were Donald K. Angell, vice-president assistant to the President, and Dr. S. Reid Warren, assistant vice- president for undergraduate engi- neering affairs.

Page 2: War foes protest in Irvine

Letters to the editor

Long summer What do powerless groups do within a societal structure

which responds only to power? How do blacks react to an intra-city structure which not only ignores the strengthened currents of housing and job reform, but represses these as well? How do students react to a university which dictates what they must learn, and a government which tells them how they must live, and incredibly, whom they must fight?

The answer is, as we have seen, simple. The powerless groups march, sit-in, and riot. In an effort to gain an ef- fective entre into the decision-making strata of which they are not a part, students occupy buildings. In an expression of unleashed rage, born of centuries of being shut out, blacks take to the streets.

Protest groups are constantly railed for their lack of civility, and for the disruptions they cause. It is often argued that organized protest is largely ineffective, and conceivably even harmful to the goals of the group, because of the uniformly negative public reaction.

But it is clear that student protests have effected change both on the campus, and, to a lesser extent, within the government. It is also clear that cities are granting gradual, although often token concessions to an increasingly motile and vocal black society.

To condemn a modus operendi, such as organized pro- test, without offering a better one is fallacious, as is to criticize protest as ineffective without pointing to a better means.

As Yale professor Michael Parent! has pointed out, those who assume that American style democracy is built on the forces of reason, and morality have only half the picture in front of them. And those who believe that change is brought about within strict, debating-society guidelines should look to the Ivy League schools, which last week admitted freshman classes with one in 10 students black.

Five years ago, not one of these schools was prepared to make such a move. After all, there was no way to recruit any larger number of blacks without a massive educational restructuring throughout the country. We were told that there just weren't enough qualified blacks to go around.

What happened in these five short years? Did the quality of secondary education across the nation increase fourfold? Did the admission of blacks become any more right, or moral? It is clear that, within these five years, the pressure of students protesting inadequate minority admissions made it a psychological imperative that the universities make this change.

In pointing to the black admissions phenomenum, we de- fend the right and encourage the duty of students to march and to sit-in, and we concur with the rationale behind these means. We do not disparage other modes of change, but it is patent that collective student pressure, not structured debates or committee reports, made possible this and other changes.

It will soon be summer, and most students will leave the university, and the city, and in so doing leave the intense and crucial problems of the campus and city behind. We stand now where we can look with some perspective at our colleges and universities. Many more closely resemble armed camps than institutions of higher learning. We look at the cities and we understand a small measure of the futility, the anger, and the impotence which the blacks must endure.

It will be a long summer, and the cities will be hot and restless. It can also be a good summer,but this will depend upon the willingness and the enthusiasm of students who will choose to forego a summer of relaxation. These are the students who work this summer in the streets of the city. They will sacrifice, perhaps, a summer of travel because they see the crisis in our cities and schools. They know they want change, because everybody wants change, but they will be "willing to work for it.

Then in September, let us look back at the summer proud that we are indeed three months closer to a solution rather than three months further away.

JUNIOR NEWS BOARD STAFF: Susan Grober, Bob Hoffman, Deborah Jameson, Joan Rieder, Alban Salomon, Mark Schlesinger* Arnold Holland

NEWS STAFF: Chris Allen, Sophie Balcoff, John Charney, Claudia Cohen, Hope Davidson, Clarence Greene, Bob Feinberg, Andy Fischer, Don Horowitz, Phyllis Kaniss, Mark Lieberman, William K« Mandel, John Riley, Berl Schwartz, Linda Seltzer, Jon Talmadge*

EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS: Jan Lieb, David Tive JUNIOR SPORTS BOARD: John Cohn, Marvin Dash, Steve

Fadem, Steve Levene, Steve Michelson, Jeff Rothbard, Mark Schlesinger, John WeUheimer*

SPORTS STAFF: Ira Garr, John McCuskey, Mady Kutcher* FEATURES COORDINATOR: Barbara Slopak PHOTO STAFF: Uinslow Borkowski, Dave Cohen, Bruce

Dichter, Judy Gorden, Steve Heinz, Lenny Katz, Hal Kleiderman, Jerry Marcus, Chris Raborg, Greg Riley, Chuck Rosenblum, Marvin Ruderman, Ken Schonwalter, Paul Schwartzman, Martin Smith, Ken Souser, Bill Vitka, Bruce Wallace*

JUNIOR BUSINESS BOARD: Matt Bogin, Marsha Freifelder, Sue Geggel, • Gary Katz, Jeff Pretsfelder, Jay Radetsky, John Zelnicker

BUSINESS STAFF: Mike Bien, Ken Ernstoff, Jay Gottlieb, Steve Lamb, Margit Novak, Jon Sheikman, BarbaraStein- hardu

PRODUCTION BOARD: Oreta Richardson, Helen Sessoms. ACTION LINE: Dick SaxU

SUE GROBER

Issue Editor

BOB HOFFMAN AND JEFF ROTHBARD

Night Editors

The Dally Pennsylvania!! la publlahed Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods. One issue published in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Stl. at the rate of $10.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104. Phones: (215) 594-7535.

A LANGUAGE ERROR

Sir: As you are aware, the accu- racy of your story of April 22, l%$ on the Department of Romance Lan- guages was unhappily impaired by a printing error that resulted in the omission of several words at the end of the third paragraph. In my present letter to you, I quote in its entirety one paragraph from the original press release we prepared for you, so that your readers and the undergraduate majors in Romance Languages, whose suggestions were of significant help to us, may form a clear idea of the scope of the changes in the French and Spanish major programs that the Department will recommend to the College and the College for Women.

"The new major program, which the Department hopes it will be au- thorized to put into effect in the fall of 1970, would require the student to complete sixteen credit units above the four level in major and major- related courses (an increase of two credit units since at the present time twelve credits above the six level are required). However, only six credit units would be required in specific courses: 5-6, 12, 14, and both semesters of 300. It will be strongly recommended, but not re- quired, that the student choose the remainder of his ten major courses so as to take at least one in each of eight groups of courses representing the various chronological divisions of French, Spanish, and Spanish Ameri- can literature. A student may decide to prepare himself in one or more of these areas by relying on the new undergraduate major reading lists that will be given out at the beginning of the junior year rather than by tak- ing courses in them. This would allow him to take more courses in major- related areas like Fine Arts, History, Linguistics, other languages and lit- eratures, and Philosophy, and thereby give him the freedom to shape his major program to his individual needs. No matter which way he pre- pares himself in the eight areas, it is felt that the new guidelines will be more effective than the old require- ments in insuring the student's success on the departmental senior comprehensives. According to pre- sent practice, students are required to take courses in only four of the areas mentioned above, but are exam- ined on all eight on the comprehen- sives. The Spanish senior compre- hensives were discontinued for several years but will be reinstated in Spring, 1970."

Russell P. Sebold Chairman, Department of Romance Language

POLITICAL SCIENCE Sin In recent weeks you have

featured a number of articles on the Political Science Department, the most recent one presumably pertain- ing to curriculum and tenure policies. Through what appears to be an editor- ial policy your reporters have a pen- chant for cramming out-of-context direct quotes into these articles. On matters which involve fairly com- plex ideas or arguments, this often has a distorting effect.

In the most recent article, the implication conveyed is that the De- partment is (1) forcing out faculty members who have interests in poli- tical philosophy and down-grading the status of theory in the Department, (2) moving toward stressing method- ology and statistics in undergraduate courses at the expense of theory, and (3) sacrificing undergraduate teaching by subordinating under- graduate to graduate considerations in personnel policies. The first two of these assertions are simple fact- ually untrue. We have increased the number of appointments and courses in philosophy and theory in recent years. Unfortunately, we have had two resignations in that area, nei- ther of which can be fairly attributed to any anti-philosophy departmental orientation. The references to sta- tistics and methodology are sheer nonsense as stated. As to the third point, I do not believe this is the case, but opinions vary on the prior- ities between and within the two programs. This is one reason the Department is moving toward the acceptance of a larger student re- presentative role for policy develop- ment at both the graduate and under- graduate levels.

The issue of a potential tension between graduate and undergraduate programs is a very real one. Speak- ing personally, and not as Chairman of the Department, I think there is a real problem theoretically but one which affords itself to practical so- lutions. One way in which the issue presents itself is over what consti- tutes proper preparation for teach- ing. Just to promote discussion on this point, let me offer the follow- ing observation. It has often occurred to me that we have really inverted the proper teaching career pattern for professors. It is customary to start the recent PhJD. recipient as an undergraduate teacher, usually in lower division courses. He gradually works his way up until, as a full professor he teaches only graduate students and then only advanced ones in a seminar. Perhaps we should simply invert this for the following reasons.

While all social scientists seek the construction of theory in the broadest terms, the nature of in- quiry in fact today often involves

team research, technical skills, spe- cialization and the handling of large data sets. Graduate departments and graduate training must deal with these conditions. Graduate students and newly franchised PhJD.'s are often specialized.

On the other hand undergraduate education focuses on such questions as: how should I live? The under- graduate asks the social scientists to develop broad-gauged theories which will interpret society, so that the student can decide how to relate to it.

From this one might conclude that recent PhJD.'s should teach gra- duate students and full professors should teach freshmen. By the time the academic career is fully matured the professor will have become suf- ficiently emboldened by experience and hopefully informed through the accumulation of insight so that he can make the kind of sweeping state- ments of which undergraduates are eager consumers.

As ingenious and insightful as this plan is, it falls somewhat short of resolving all intramural univer- sity priority problems. An alterna- tive solution is to hire only people who can do all things from the very outset in either the graduate or un- dergraduate program. That is our present policy, of course.

Oliver P. Williams Chairman, Department of Political Science

ELECTION CONFUSION Sin Regarding the confusion over the election of undergraduate representa- tives to the University Council, I am afraid the DP is looking for villians where none exist. You have been extremely unfair to Jack Russell in your editorials on this issue, and I would like to correct some of the misimpressions you have left.

In point of fact, we, the student members of the University Forum, were far more responsible for the misinterpretation of the UPSG mandate to select students to serve on University committees than Mr. Russell was. The mandate was di- rected to us, not to Mr. Russell, and we are the ones who did not bother to check the precise wording of that document. We were not free to interpret the "spirit" of the man- date; we were bound by its words, not its intention.

You also misrepresent the mo- tives of the Vice-Provost in choosing the alternative he did once it became clear that the Forum's student mem- bers could not legally hold an elec- tion. Under the rules of the Council^ and as its steering committee of faculty and administrators virtually demanded, the Vice-Provost was sup- posed to run elections for Council seats in schools where no govern- ment existed. This would have meant 5 students from the College, 3 each for Wharton and CW, 2 from the Engineering Schools, and 1 for both Nursing and SAMP.

To his everlasting credit. Mr. Russell resisted such pressure. In- stead, with the approval of the students on the forum, he decided to delay the elections until early next semester when a legitimate government shall be constituted. In so doing, Mr. Russell supported undergraduates in their determination not to allow them- selves to be split into meaningless academic camps (like the Faculty) which bear little relation to their feelings on University issues.

It is gratifying to see that at least one administrator has the courage to begin to put a stop to the needless fragmentation which is serving to destroy the very concept of a Uni- versity. In making the best of a bad situation. Jack Russell has re- affirmed his commitment to strength- ening the fabric of this community. He deserves our thanks, not our condemnation.

Jay Steptoe College 1969

ROTC AND SDS

Sir: In a letter in the April 21 DP, Richard Shiffman made a long com- parison between ROTC and SDS, im-

The world outside Mommy? I'm afraid of the dark.

By PHIL ARKOW

plying that the two organizations are equivalent (if not indistinguishable) except that their philosphies and ac- tivities lie at opposite ends of the political spectrum. Maybe he was being sarcastic, trying to claim that ROTC's government affiliation makes an essential difference; but I've never been very good at detecting sarcasm.

The letter ends with the point that "No one at Penn has been com- pelled to enroll in ROTC". True. SDS, like ROTC,. is a voluntary ac- tivity in that nobody is forced to join it. Perhaps the existence of the draft and the Vietnam war influences a few people to join ROTC, just as the problems of military imperialism and authoritarian power in this so- ciety encourage students to join SDS; but the members of each group have entered it of their own free will. So what?

Returning to the comparison: ROTC differs from SDS in at least two ways. 1) It has University build- ings and parts of buildings all to it- self. 2) Some of its activities are recognized as courses; ROTC stu- dents get academic credits for them-- except in the College, starting with freshmen who enter in 1970.

Since SDS and ROTC are equivalent (except with opposite politics), why not treat them alike? Give SDS a building; let SDS members get course credit for their political discussions, and for talks given by speakers who they bring to campus. Or, if we feel that a university should have no for- mal ties with any political (including military or anti-military) organiza- tion, then why not make ROTC an extracurricular activity too? just like SDS is. Membership in either group can be extremely educational; but that's not the point, since so can dating. The question is, What kinds of activities should a university give formal, institutional recognition to?

I feel that neither ROTC nor SDS belong in the official, academic part of a university. In the non-academic extracurricular part, just about any- thing does--anything that any people want to do. So I prefer the second solution.

Another reason for preferring it is the shortage of land and buildings around here. Reappropriating the ROTC building, certainly, ought to solve a good part of Penn's expan- sion problems.

Bart Jones Grad A and S

6TH GRADE AUDIENCE

Sin In his article "Thurmond Bab- bles," Alban Salaman has voiced a valid criticism of Thurmond's Mon- day night lecture. I agree that most of his arguments were specious, his answers less than satisfactory, and his scope quite narrow. However, when Mr. Salaman asks "Didn't Con- naissance indicate to Thurmond be- fore-hand he was speaking to Uni- versity students and not pre-high- schoolers?", he fails to look at the other side of the coin.

We did indicate to Thurmond that most University students were quite liberal (or radical) in their views. However, it is not our purpose to dictate the content of any of our guests' addresses. We are striving to present an open forum of all poli- tical philosophies without any advoca- tion of our own. To this end, we felt that a conservative point of view was needed to compliment our more li- beral speakers this year, including John Kenneth Galbraith, Sen. George McGovern, Sen. Mark Hatfield, and Rep. Julian Bond.

It is unfortunate that students on this campus come to hear only what they want to hear, and if they do not hear it, they react in a some- what less than mature manner. Uni- versity students are suoposedly dedi-

cated to an openness of thought and a fair consideration to those who hold views that are directly opposed to their own. I do not claim that the Senator's remarks are necessarily of the calibre of a United States Senator; nor do I claim that they were never conducive to outright disbelief, laughter, or even ridicule.

But in answer to Mr. Salaman's question, no, we did not deem it neces- sary to indicate to Thurmond before- hand that we are an Ivy League Uni- versity, and not a junior high school. But it was indeed difficult to different- iate the conduct of our University students from that of a group of pre- high school students. Their behavior was crude, rude, offensive, dis- respectful, and certainly not becoming of an audience of open-minded, ed- ucated people. There were those of conservative persuasion who came to hear the Senator put forth their own arguments; there were those who came expressly to jeer his speech. But what of the rest of the audience? I agree that themajority of his lec- ture was an insult to their intelligence and remarkably closed-minded. But should we react like 6th graders when we are treated like 6th graders? Should we respond to closed-minded- ness with an equivalent level of close- mindedness? Should we answer insults to our intelligence with direct and ma- licious ridicule to a man who is, de- spite his lack of insight, nevertheless a member of the Senate?

Finally, I want to consider Mr. Salaman's closing question, "What is a narrow-minded man like this doing in a complex place like the federal government?" I honestly do not know, and agree that he should not be there. But on the other hand, what are such intolerant and imma- ture students as those Monday night doing in an ideally open-minded and tolerant place like the University of Pennsylvania?

Mitch Bernstein Co-Chairman, Connaissance

COMMUNITY OF STUDENTS

The meaning of the word "com- munity" in the campus dialect is changing. A year or two ago, "com- munity" meant "The Community",' and that meant Mantua, or West Philadelphia, or wherever it was lived. In the past year we have begun to understand that the Uni- versity can and must become a com- munity, if we hope to have anything left once hallowed but dehumanizing structures have collapsed under their own weight. The Community of De- monstrators showed us what we might otherwise have refused to believe: that students are willing to assemble as members of a community to de- termine their own goals and res- ponsibilities.

The Community of Students plan for governance (the Cohen proposal) is based on the principle that stu- dents have the right and the res- ponsibility to govern themselves in a democratic fashion. The Cohen constitution manifests both careful consideration of the problems of gov- ernance and committment to the idea of direct participation of all students in decision-making.

The failure of this proposal in the referendum would signify massive regression on the part of a student community which seems to have begun to mature. I prefer to say that its overwhelming acceptance will lay the groundwork for a University community in which "student inter- ests become an integral part of the University decision-making process.'

Alice Mann CW '71

When you were a freshman there were a dozen questions that went unanswered!

We need undergraduates that want to Spend time with the freshman class and answer

those questions - 91 1/au. Ate WdU^Uf, 1* /?e A Mem SU<U*d Week AdttiiM, *1u>ut 9*1 1j<uiA Alame, £u»uKe>t. AddUeM,,

And S«m*»e*, PUone 9* Ike 2>e<ui Q{ Met'l Oftice, f*7 Jlofatt Jtall.

New Student Week Needs You !

Page 3: War foes protest in Irvine

Friday, April 25. 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 3

Individual majors Campus events provide flexibility

594-7535

By BOB FEINBERG

Despite the recent accent on freedom in course selection, few undergrad- uates at the University are aware of the opportunities for major program flex- bility available to them.

According to Dr. David Williams, associate professor of psychology, and chairman of the Committee on Special Programs, almost any student can devise his own individual major program.

In order to have his major approved, a student must find an adviser of his own choosing, with whom he selects all the courses included in his planned major. Once the program is drawn up, the Committee on Special Programs, a nine-member body composed of faculty of the College and College for Women, considers the student*smajor.

Williams explained that the prerequisites for a good program are the fol- lowing:

The major should involve a set of interrelated courses, beyond the intro- ductory level, building to a certain end; it should include a senior course in- volving individual attention and an individual project--whether a seminar or conference course, or a thesis.

As would be expected, these special majors are very varied in nature. Some examples of these programs are Americanminorities (courses from history, sociology, and economics), Russian area studies (history, Slavic languages, political science, and economics), behavioral anthropology (anthropology and sociology), and aesthetics (philosophy and English).

There are some combinations which often become special major programs,

such as sociology with psychology, ana economics with mathematics. Some departments have arrangements among themselves to handle inter- departmental majors. An example is the natural sciences major in- volving mathematics and several science departments. In this case the Committee on Special Programs does not consider the proposed ma- jor, leaving the matter up to the re- spective departments.

Williams said that only about 25 students per year enter a special major program through his com- mittee. He suggested that not enough people know about this opportunity to individualize their major.

MAKE MONEY DRIVING THIS SUMMER...

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You can work full time or part time, night or day, on a schedule that best coincides with your free hours.

Of course, you must be 18 or over, and have a Pennsylvania driver's license. We also require two year's driving experience.

(Openings for girl drivers, too - but only for day work.)

For more information or an appointment, phone: MA 7-7440, | Ext. 246.

Or come in person to 105 So. 12th Street, Monday through Thursday - 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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CAMPUS AGENDA THE BACKBENCH: "Gretchen and

Dolores Take A Trip Come and See them Off," a jazz group with Dennis Saputelli performing tonight and to- morrow night at 8:30 the backbench, 32 So. 40th St.

CLASS OF 1970 SENIOR PIC- TURES: Pictures taken all this week at Mask and Wig Dormitory. If you cannot make your appointment come any time today from 9 AJvl. to 12:30 PJvI. and from 1:30 to 5 P.M.

THE COMMITTEE: Revelations in Black, elective folk-rock at 9:15 to- night.

H1LLEL: "The Jew in American Literature", lecture/discussion with Drs. Charles Bassett, Peter Conn, Joel Conarroe, and Robert Lucid, Tues. April 29 at 8 PJvl., Fine Arts Auditorium.

HUMANIZATION OF THE UNI- VERSITY: Seminar #6, 8 PJvl. Mon- day, Room 200 College Hall.Speaker: Bernard Watson, Ass't. Superinten- dent of Education in Philadelphia. Topic: What Should an Urban Uni- versity Be? Group discussions fol- low lecture. Everyone welcome.

HUMPHREY BOGART: Petrified Forest! that film classic to delight the cinemanic aficionado of Ameri- ca's divine art. Tonight in Houston Hall Auditorium at 7 and 9:30 PJvl.

PENN DRAFT COUNSELING COMMITTEE: Office located in the basement of Houston Hall is open weekdays 10-5 PJvl. Come or call for an appointment. 7441.

PRE-FINALS BUST-OUT: Party at Lea's place, 4815 Walton St. Last chance to break loose before the dreaded holocaust known as finals. Sat. April 26 at 9 PJvl. #34 trolley to 48th and Baltimore, walk 1/2 block north.

SKYDIVING CLUB: No jump on Saturday 26 (competition). For Sun- day: 9:30 Hutchinson Gym flagpole. Prospective divers welcomed.

STUDENT RADICALISM TODAY: Panel discussion with representatives from Penn and Temple groups: SDS, SDS Labor, YSA. Today at 8:30 P.M. Militant Labor Forum, 686 North Broad St. (Fairmount stop on sub- way).

ACTIVITY NOTICES BRIDGE CLUB: Last game of

season Wed. 6:50 PJvl., West Lounge

Fir fast delivery or pickup call (

EV6 \ 1333

1M S 3Mb

Houston Hall. COLLEGE YOUNG DEMOCRATS:

Grape boycott meeting. A film will be shown Tues. April 29 at 11, in Houston Hall.

GERMAN CLUB: Lecture and slides on travel and study in Ger- many, 7 PJvl. Monday, Friars Room, Houston Hall.

MANTUA: Church of the New Life, New Life New Horizons, invites resi- dents of all communities surrounding the University to a public meeting, to discuss community representation on the University's 4-part Commis- sion. Monday, April 28, McMichael School, 35th and Fairmount, 7-10 PJvl.

PENN COMMENT: Stuff yourself crazy tonight at 7:30 PJvl. in Hayden Hall - all editors, staff and heelers be there.

SOCIETY OF SIGMA XI: will be holding its Initiation Dinner and meet- ing on Friday May 2 at 6 PJvl. in the Egyptian Room of the University Museum. The evening's program will include: a reception at 6 PJvl.; din- ner at 6:30 PJvl.; a speaker, Dr. Walter Rosenblith, Prof, of Com- munications Biophysics from MIT, who will lecture on*'BrainSciences", at 8 PJvl.

UPCS (Continued from page 1)

Joseph Cooper former president and Tom Brown former speaker, so that the committee can get a feeling of some of the projects the now defunct UPSG had pending before its dissolu- tion.

The communications committee also plans to make contact with all incoming freshmen regarding the new student government organization, and to establish lines of communication with student governments at other schools.

The communications committee will hold an open meeting at 9:30 PJvl. Sunday, in the old UPSG office.

The other three priorities which committees were organized to deal with were budget, free university, and facilities for Plenum meetings. The budget committee will regulate the outflow of money over the summer, and determine how much money is needed for the whole organizing process.

ACCOUNTING MAJOR Corporation being formed in auto- motive field desires accounting major;

Excellent Academic record Strong drive Ability to locate in Boston Interest in automobiles Draft exempt status

OPPORTUNITY TO START AT THE TOP

Write. KT. Washborn, 4502 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa.

*Pack up all your cares and woes... And sweaters. And shoes.

And those Roger Williams LP's your grandmother sent you. And the psychedelic poster that art major you were dating in January painted so you'd have something to remember him by.

Pack your entire campus collection in a trunk. Then call United. We'll pick up your trunk and send it home, safe-and-sound, via air freight. Pay nothing till it gets there. It's the quickest, surest way to get your prized possessions home. Costs a lot less than you think.

United's a great way to get yourself home, too. If you're a member of our 12-21 ClubQiake the trip for half-fare. Ha\ i nice summer. For information call 724-9400.

friendly skies

United. -*Si* "I think I forgot

to pack my toothbrush!"

J^

"actioN I'lNE QUESTION: Who is Bobby Beck? I've seen his name scrawled on buildings,

bridges, and walls throughout Philadelphia.

ACTION: Action Line called the Mayor's office to find the answer to this far reaching and pertinent question, and was stymied when the Mayor's as- sistant replied that Bobby Beck was "probably one of those kooky rebellious kids." He then proceeded to check his SDS lists, but couldn't find anything. Rumor has it that Bobby Beck is some totally irrelevant egomaniac doing his thing.

QUESTION: Does the College still require one lab science?

ACTION: Dean William E. Stephens told Action Line, "Nope, starting next year."

QUESTION: When and where are they moving the Dirty Drug? — Sooz

ACTION: Cy says we can all move and groove at the Dirty Drug for another year. During the summer of 1970, Cy's Luncheonette will become a "stereo- typed cafeteria" at 38th and Walnut.

QUESTION: When does daylight savings time begin?

ACTION: Daylight savings starts April 27th, the last Sunday in April, at 2:00 A.M. and you lucky people lose another hour of sleep.

QUESTION: I would like to know if the construction companies which are building on campus would consider hiring students for summer employment. - - Duncan Towers '71.

ACTION: Mrs. Gloria Jones of Student employment informed Action Line that the construction companies in Philadelphia are union-coptrolled, and summer employment of students is almost impossible. Action Line suggests that you contact Gloria for other thrilling and lucrative means of gainful summer employment.

QUESTION: I keep hearing the rumor that Action Line makes up most or all of its questions. Is it true?

ACTION: Dear Readers, Action Line, with the exception of a few Affection Line questions, has not made up any questions, nor does it intend to. We are usually sent about twenty question? per week, of which twelve to fifteen are deemed suitable for publication, which is the reason action Line ap- pears only two or three times per week. If names and telephone numbers are submitted with the question, Artion Line tries to notify the inquirer what we have found out, even if the question is not printed. Keep bringing questions to the DP office or call them in. Make Action Line eat it words.

Mademoiselle seeks models

University women looking for a chance to model for Mademoiselle magazine should meander through Houston Hall at 11:30 Friday. Marcy Moore, a representative of that publication, will lie oncampus to photograph part of Mademoi- selle's August College issue. She will interview women to select several for photographic sessions this weekend.

AUTHOR - PSYCHIC Arthir Ford discusses

'Till: DRAMA OF LIFE UTI.K DEATH"

in the final lecture on

THK CURRENT SCENE Tuesday, April 29, 8 P.M.

TIIE FRF.F LIBRARY OF PHILADELPHIA

Logan Square Lecture Hall—Admission Free

Doors Close Promptly

Honor group elects juniors, picks officers

The following sophomores were elected to Phi Kappa Beta, the na- tional junior society, and named officers of the class of 1971: Jim Fuddy, president; Dayton Duncan, vice-president; Bob Finke, treasurer, and Peter Wertimer, secretary.

Also elected to the honor group were Christopher Bastis, Eliot Berry, Erik Brown, Mark Estes, Jay Gil- log] y and Steve Kramer;

Also, Steve Michelson, KarlReis- ner , Roy Supulski, Art Swanson, Laurence Tarika, Lee Wagman, and Larry Yakulis.

WHY IS THIS

DAY DIFFERENT ?

It's our last issue

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SPEND SUMMER AT SHORE !

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ENROLLING OTHER COLLEGE STUDENTS IN NATIONAL STUDENT INSURED SAVINGS PROGRAM.

CALL FL 2. 4060, FL 2-3525, OR FL 2- 6188 FROM 10 A.M. - 4P.M. DAILY.

ACADEMY OF MUSIC

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Tickets on sale now HOUSTON HALL TICKET SERVICE 1

Page 4: War foes protest in Irvine

Page 4 The Daily Pennsylvanian Friday, April 25, 1969

/MODERN OVNCE GROLP I«KK ui> m marvena taiz

sajiu.2bt.amiu.zi BJOIM SIOO

xerox copies: 5t for the 1st cop v

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OFFSET PRINTING * FOR IMMEDIATE

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OPEN DAILY

9-9

FOR SALE 5TEREO RECORD PLAYER, NOT FRIGHTFULLY expensive but with a happy sound. Call after 6 P.M. EV 7-3319. 5146

AIR-CONDITIONED SUMMER SUBLET - BED- room, living room, kitchen, and bath. New furniture. Clean. Available May 12. $85/month. 4419 0sage Ave. Call BA 2-2294 after 7. 5147

SUMMER SUBLET - 5 BEDROOM HOUSE AT 37TH and Powelton Ave. $35/month. Call EV 2-5747.

| 4249

TELEVISIONS RE 9-5984, 21" WITH UHF J149UP Portables $35 up, 21" console and table models $29 up. 21" RCA color $145, open 10 A.M.- 10 P.M. Metropolitan T.V. 3322 Kensington Ave.

4444

MORGAN '67, RARI AND FOUR DROP HEAD cabriolet, radio and heater, BRG, new clutch, luggage rack, perfect condition. • Call WA 3- 4390. 5122

JAGUAK XK 150. FM STER1 O. PERFECT BODY, Reflpn. engine; Mock convertible. Must see. TR 7- 0740, M:> 4-2491. TF- 9-7262. 5119

1963 FIAT 1)00 $150. $50 DOWN. RECENTLY replaced block, transmission, starter, valve job, new caborator, radiator. Mitchell 594-7674,1 V 7 1967. 5121

1961 RAMBLER CLASSIC SEDAN - 50,000MILES. R&H, whitewalls, new brakes and clutch.594-5953, 9-5 PJvl.; 649-7451 after 6 P.M. 5138

ITALY-BOUND - MUST SELL '66 EMBER GLOW Mustang. 8 cyl. 289, 4-speed synchromesh trans., 28,000 mi., GT-wood interior, radio, heater, wire wheel covers, 7 tires. Upkeep investment. Call 561-2758 next week. Asking $1,400. 4933

YAMAHA 250 - AVON FAIRING. JUDSON CD ignition, 1. rack, tools,Chilton manual, depth gauge. $400. SA 4-2555. 4047

STEREO COMPONENTS - AM-FM STEREO RE- ceiver, Garrard turntable, new cartridge, speakers. Good quality. Need cash. $125 or best offer.Casey, EV 2-2884. EV 2-2884. 4049

VOLKSWAGEN LATE '63 - FINE CONDITION. New white-walls. Bendix AM/FM radio. $590 or best offer. Call Chris EV-2-6150. 4845

MOTOR CYCLE HONDA 160 LOW MILEAGE. Electric starter, like new. EV 2-0109. 4032

1966 VW SQUAREBACK. EXCELLENT CON- dltion. Fully serviced since new, new tires, radio, seat belts. Original owner asking $1,450. EV 6- 5570. 4034

TYPING - QUICK SERVICE AND ACCURATE. Call GR 4-4490 after 8:30 P.M. 5083

1965 FORD FALCON STATION WAGON. LOW mileage, good condition. Priced to sell as owner is leaving country. Call GR 4-5704. 5052

BICYCLE - RUDGE - EXCELLENT CONDITION. $20 firm. Call Berl EV 6-0694 evenings. 5067

•67 YAMAHA 100 C.C. TWIN JET ELECTRIC starter, chromed fenders, metallic red. Garaged, exc. shape. $250. VI 4-1867; CE 6-1308. 5074

REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE. VERY LARGE. GOOD condition. Call EV 2-7241 or EV 2-1723. 5076

HONDA S90CC MOTORCYCLE - 1966 MODEL good condition. Must sell, $150, will negotiate. GR 6-8738 ask for Bob or leave message. 5081

FOR SALE - 1961 WHITE RAMBLER STATION wagon. 6 cylinder, standard shift, r & h, new battery, radiator, good tires, dependable, economi- call transport. $300 EV 2-2984. 5066

ORGAN. FARFISA COMBO DELUXE. 6 MONTHS old; also 1952 Rolls Rogce-Bentley, excellent con- dition. VI 3-6421. 5089

APARTMENTS LOOKING FOR MORE THAN ONE ROOM AND A toilet for your bachelor pad7 Small living room separate Dearoom (double bed), kitchen, and bath. Top floor, seven blocks from campus, handy to all services, certain major leasing advantages.Avail- able from May. Ready? $90 monthly, all utilities included. Worth a phone call, right? EV 2-6451 anytime. _____

SUMMER SUBLET: MODERN, I I'XURIOUS, MAR campus, sundeck, air-conditioned-ideal for two cheap and negotiable. EV2-9966-great buy. 404?

NICE 2 1/2 ROOM APARTMENT. 4222 SPRUCE. Take over or sublet. Call EV 6-3735. Evenings. after 8:00. 48*6

CHESTNUT AT 42ND - 6 BEDROOM APARTMENT. 2 baths, living room, kitchen, furnished. Available June $275 including utilities. BA 2-6254 or MO 4- 4294. 5134

SUMMER SUBLET - 39TH AND SANSOM ST. Furnished 3 bedroom apartment. $120 month or best offer. EV 2-1639. 4240

PRIME LOCATION FOR SUMMER SUBLET: 2 - bedrooms, big panelled living room, modern kit- chen, beautifully furnished, 40th & Spruce. Call EV-2-7213. 5112

SUMMER SHU I I, AIR-CONDITION! D, SI (T rity, 3 rooms, furnished. Call Mike, EV 6 9300, ext. 310.

LUXURY GARDEN APARTMENT FOR NEXT fall, w/w carpet, air-cond. large rooms, beautiful on-campus location. Call EV 2-8147 after 7 P.M. 4849

SUMMl-R APARTMENTAlR-CONIirriON] D-40TH and Pine. May to September -bedroom, nie bath, dining room, safe: large. Ideal single or couple- Completely furnished. EV 6-8236 after 11 P.M.

3858

TOWNSHOUSE, WALNUT AT 42ND. NICELY FUR- nished, 7 bedroom. Living room, kitchen, bath. $300/month. BA 2-6254 or MO 4-4214. 5136

APT. FOR NFXT YEARI TWO Bf-DROOMS. AIR conditioned, panelled living room, fireplace, park- ing, very large rooms. Furniture investment 43rd & Chester. 1 V 6-5375. 422?

SUMMF-.R SUBLET - 2 BEDROOMS, FURNISH] I). air-conditioning, rear 43rd and Pine. Call Harold at EV 2-6892. 4224

SINGLE GIRL LOOKING FOR 2 OR 3 OR 4 ROOM- matei and apartment, 1st summer session. Call colllct 301-771-4422. Ask for Taffy. I. -

2 ROOMMATI S WANTED TO SHARE 9-ROOM house; single bedrooms. 39th & Baltimore. EV-2- 4657, EV-2-4390. 5106

PERFECT FOR MARRIED COUPLE OR facsimile. Furnished. 1-2 man/woman. 4119Wal- nut St. large bedroom, living room-kitchen, bath- room. Rent negotiable. Worries are over. Call EV 2-4032. 4811

ROOMMATE WANTED - SEPT. - 2 BEDROOMS. 5 room - partly furnished apt. - 48th 81 Pine. Grad stud, preferred. Call Jeff GR 4-8950. 4934

GIRL WANTED TO SHARE CENTER CITY APT. (21st. and Spruce) for summer or longer. Girl's English racer for sale $25. PE 2-9273. 5064

1 ROOMMATE NEEDED TO SHARE FANTASTIC 4-man apartment at 44th and Spruce. $60/month for everything starts Sept. KI 5-8130. 5065

NEEDED - ONE OR TWO ROOMMATES FOR apartment at 39th and Chestnut Rent approximately $55/month. Initial furniture investment. Call BA 2-2846. 5071

AIR-CONDITIONED SUMMER SUBLET, 3 ROOM, nicely furnished, free parking, available May 15th. Option for next year. $100 includes utilities. BA 2-5258. 4236

CHESTNUT AT 42ND - 6 BEDROOM APART- ment, 2 baths, living room, kitchen, furnished. Available June $275 including utilities. BA 2- 6254 or MO 4-4294. 5135

INTRIGUING APARTMENT - 1 BEDROOM, kitchen, sunken bathroom, black light room. 2 blocks from Art Museum, Rodin Museum, Fair- mount Park. May 15 - Sept. 1. $75/month. Incl. utilities. Dean CE 6-6761. 4040

SUMMER SUBLET: 4 BEDROOM, AIR-CONDI - tioned newly renovated, Beautiful & large. June 15-Sept. 7. Call GR 6-5676. 4042

FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY TO GROOVE IN A lioturious 3 bedroom, furnished apartment for the entire summer. Convenient campus location. Call EV 2-3291 or EV 2-1261. 6102

SUB-LEASE LOVELY CENTER-CITY APART- ment. 2 Br., dishwasher, disposal. Completely furnished. Parking space available. May 25-August 22. Phone 561-4398. 4919

WALNUT AT 41ST - LARGE 2 BEDROOM FUR- nished, living room, kitchen, bath. $145. BA 2- 0254 or MO 4-4294. 5137

SUMMER SUBLET: BEAUTIFUL WOOD panelled apt., 3 bedrooms, living room, close 10 campus, $55/month/person. EV 2-8548. after 6 5131

SUMMER SUBLFT-ALL OR PART OF SUMMER starting June 1, 2 bedroom furnished apt. ideal for 2 or 3, 41st & Locust. Reasonable rent. EV 2-4297. 4225

SUMMER SUBLET-AIR-CONDITIONED FURN- ished 2 bedroom apt. Married couple with or without children preferred $150. EV 2-6088.

4226

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT 47TH AND CHESTFR. available May 21, $125/month: furnished, including utilities. Summer sublet or base. CailSA 6-6451.

4228

WANTED - ATTRACTIVE SAFE FURNISHED single 1-bedroom apartment—through 1st. summer session (Mid-May- July 1). Call Susan, EV 2 3935, 10-12 P.M. 5116

APARTMENT FOR SUMMER. BEAUTIFULLY furnished, large air-conditioned bedroom: living room: dining room, parking, quiet street. $90/month or best offer. SA 7-9844 after 5. 5117

FOR SECOND SUMMER SESSION - PLEASANT room, 42nd Street. $1.75 perday.CallCarol.EV 2- 2637. 5148

NOW OPEN! GOLF 45 TEES GOLF DRIVING RANGE PROFESSIONAL LESSONS]

18 HOLE MINIATURE GOLF COURSE

NEW MODERN EQUIPMENT REFRESHMENTS FREE PARKING

GR 7-2055 OPEN EVERY DAY AND EVENING

PARKSIDE GOLF RANGE 52nd AND PARKSIDE AVENUE

COLLEGE MEN

SUMMER JOBS FULL TIME WORK THIS SUMMER

* 15 $1000 CASH SCHOLARSHIPS * EARN IN EXCESS OF $135 PER WEEK * PLENTY OF TIME FOR RELAXATION * WIN ONE OF MANY ALL EXPENSE PAID TRIPS TO MADRID,

SPAIN.

BASIC REQUIREMENTS: 1. Must be over 18 2. Hove Minimum of one semester of college 3. Neat appearance

Those students who successfully complete the summer may con- tinue on a part time basis in the fall.

For Interview Appointment

CALL MR. ODAY

Philadelphia LO 3-1797 Allentown 1-437-2683

10 A.M. to 2 P.M.

APARTMENT TO SUBLET FOR SUMMER OR second session. 3921 Pine safe location. 2 bed- rooms, furnished. Good for 2-4. Call Alberta 594-5468. 5069

1 OR 2 MAN SUMMER SUBLET IN NEW BUILDING. 2 single bedrooms. 38th and Chestnut. Very cheap. EV 2-3130 or EV 2-5747. 5070

SUMMER SUBLET-4040 SPRUCE: 2 BEDROOMS, full carpeting, wood panelling. 3431 Walnut: 1 bedroom, new refrigerator, sun porch. Call BA2- 5507. 5072

SUMMER SUBLET-TAKE OVER LEASE. CENTER city townhouse. Rirtenhouse Square area. Two bedrooms, furnished, air-conditioned. Call KI 6- 8525. 5075

SUMMER SUBLET - EFFICIENCY APARTMENT, furnished, four blocks from campus. May 15 to Sept. 1. Call EV 2-2373. 5077

SUMMER SUBLET - CLOSE TO CAMPUS, 4034 Spruce St. 2 Bedroom, furnished, panelled living room. Available May 10. Call EV 2-4833. 5078

SUMMER SUBLET: 4 BEDROOMS - FURNISH! D- 43rd & Chestnut. Starting May 15th. Call Susan 594 -5325 or Nancy 594 -5323. 5079

SUMMER SUBLET - 1ST FLOOR. FURNISHED. 2 bedroom apartment. Yard and porch. 43rd & Baltimore. $125/month all utilities included. Option on fall lease. EV 2-0839. 5080

SUMMER SUBLET - ROOMMATE WANTED FOR second session summer school. 3 rooms basically furnished. 4106 Spruce St. Call EV 2-6541. 5082

INTRIGUING APARTMENT - 1 BEDROOM, KIT- chen, sunken bathroom, black light room. 2 blocks from Art Museum, Rodin Museum, Fairmount Park. May 15-Sept. 1. $75/mo. inc. utilities. Dean, CE 6-6761. _4040

SUMMER SUBLET - 2 MAN APT.. BEST ON campus. 34th and Chestnut. So3 per man or best offer. You need not take it for the whole summer. Call Dick. EV 2-7510. 5133

APARTMENT TO SUBLET - JUNE 1-SEPT. 1, 1969. 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen. Completely furnished. 42nd St. and Chester Ave. EV 2-4744M. Katz, Ev 2-8559 D. Zander. 4399

SUMMER SUBLET - ART MUSEUM AREA. 2 bedroom?, kitchen, living room, one bath, furnish- ed. Call EV 2-5276. 4237

SUMMER SUBLET - 44TH AND WALNUT, LARGE furnished apartment. $135/momh. EV 2-6926even- mgs. 4248

SIMMER SUBLET - AVAILABLE JUNE 1-SEPT. 1. Suitable for General Heterosexual Debauchery and other various immorality. Call Mark, EV 2- 6456. 4931

SUMMER SUBLET - JUNE 1-AUG. 31. 3 BED- rooms, new kitchen and bath, modern furn. 2 min. from campus. EV 2-0392. 4862

SIMMER SUBLET - CLEAN, SPACIOUS 2 BED- room (5 room) apartment in excellent condition. Campus location. Extremely reasonable rent. Available June 1 or earlier. Call Charles, EV 2- 7510 or Phil, SA 4-4388. ' 3859

SUBLET - FACULTY ON LEAVE NEXT YEAR. Available August 15 - July 31st. Four rooms, furnished, modern, air-conditioned, back yard. Powelton Village $165. Couple preferred. EV 7- 3442 or Ext. 7648. Dr. Elkin. 5084

SUMMER SUBLET - ENTIRE THIRD FLOOR OF townhouse. Furnished, air-conditioned. Quiet street. 42nd and Osage. $80/month. EV 2-9182.

5065

SUMMER SUBLET: 2 BEDROOM. FURNISHED, vinciniry 34th 81 Powelton. Rent $110 utilities included. Call EV 2-0502. 5087

SPARTMENT SUBLET. HAMILTON COURT. 39TH and Chestnut, 3 bedrooms, kitchen, living room, furnished, 6th floor, elevator in the building, plenty of room for 4 people. $50 person/month, including utilities. Available May 15 - Aug. 31. Call EV 2-6662. 5088

BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED EFFICIENCY - built in bar and bookshelves - summer sublet-with option to renew - 44th & Pine - Call BA 2-5908.

5097

FEMALE GRAD STUDENT (MUSIC) DESIRES roommate at N.YJJ. next year for 2-bedroom apartment. Call Susan EV-2-3935 from 10-12 PM. 4836

SUMMER SUBLET. 5 ROOM FURNISHEDAPART- ment. 3 bedrooms. Hamilton Motor Court, 39th & Chestnut. Available May 15-August 31. EV-2- *io6. 42;,

GOING TO BE HERE FOR ONLY THE 2ND SESSION of summer school and need a snappy place for 1 or 2 to stay? Call Mike BA 2-1442. 5099

SUMMER SUBLET - IDEAL LOCATION. 34TH & Sansom. 2 bedrooms, carpeted bathroom and other signs of civilization. Call Jan, BA 2- '442. 5100.

NAME YOUR PRICE. TWO BEDROOM SUMMER sublet. 39th & Pine. BA 2-7182. 5093

HAMILTON COURT, 39TH & CHESTNUT 5 ROOMS. 2 bedrooms, summer sublet. Call EV 2-6892 or BA 2-8278. 5053

M MMI I- SI Bl I I - FURN1SHI I) APARTMI-N1 - suitable for 2 or 3. Excellent center city location IV 2-8263. 512H

APARTMENT FOR SI II I I I'NTIl SEPT. 1.1969. 3925 Pine St. utilities included. $80/month. Call CA 4-2641. Mrs. Godirey. 5129

MINI - PI-NN IXiRM FOR 12 STUDENTS; ONLY 5 place left, available 1969-70, contains kitchen, laundry and parking facilities, luxurious living room, T.V., study room. 4211 Chester Ave., contact Mr or Mrs. Arum EV 6-9067. 4217

APARTMENTS TO SUBLETI MODERN FURNISH- ed efficiency, one or two bedroomapts.Call Rosen, BA 2-6356 or GR 7-4322. 5139

SUMMER SUBLET: 39TH AND PINE. ONE BED- room furnished apartment for one. Available June 1-Aug. 31. Call EV 2-3697 after 10P.M. 6103

SUMMER SUBLET - SPACIOUS, INEXPENSIVF apartment for 2, 3, or 4 guys. 3924 Chestnut, EV 2-3909, EV 2-8250. 5054

SUMMER SUBLET MAY 15-SEPT 1.3 BEDROOMS, furnished apartment. 4513 Pine. Best offer. GR 2- 7088. 5092

SUMMER SUBLET - LUXURY HIGH RISE FUR- nished 1-bedroom, balcony apartment, air-condi- tioned. Society Hill. Guaranteed sun and luxury. Will negotiate. MA 7-1437 or LO 4-5635. 5063

SUMMER SUBLET OPPOSITE LIBRARY, 34TH. and Walnut. Bedroom, living room, kitchen, bath. Light and spacious. Available May 20. Call Debbie, 594-5341. 5062

SHARE APT. OPPOSITE LIBRARY. 3425 WALNUT: $50; summer or year; bright airy, fan-cooled: comfortably furnished; graduate student, call Alki, EV 2-1022. sal

SUMMER SUBLET: 1 BEDROOM . FURNISHED, separate kitchen, living room, bedroom and bath - very large rooms. Vic. 40th and Spruce. Ideal lor 2 students or married couple. May 20 - Sept 1. EV 6-6551. 5060

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT TO SHARE -MODERN furniture, new carpeting, new kitchen. Convenient location, quiet. Incredible bargain. Grad. student only. Available May 25. Call EV 2-1818. 5059

TOWNHOUSE AVAILABLE: FOR SUMMER (2 or 3). and 2 roommates wanted for next year. Newly furnished, central air-conditioning. Just off cam- pus. Free parking, must see to appreciate. 5058

SUMMER SUBLET - 3 1/2 ROOM APT. WALNUT and 42nd. Option to renew. Near all services, 10 min. from Campus. Price negotiable EV 2

*7i7- ^5066

CENTER CITY SUBLET - 1904CHESTNUT-JULY 1, take over lease. 2 bedroom apartment, unfur- nished, convenient location, 2-4 people - jpg _,_ eluding utilities. LO 1-1299 after 6. 5Qb8

ATTRACTIVE, SPACIOUS HAMILTON COURT apartment available for summer sublet mid-May. 2 bedrooms, ideal for 2 or 3.Call after 9 PJvl., EV 2- 4882. 5143

RENT NOW FOR NEXT SEPTEMBERI CLEAN, modern, furnished apartments. Efficiencies, one, two, and three bedroom apartments. Call Rosen, BA 2-6356 or GR 7-4322. 5140

ATTRACTIVE 3-ROOM APARTMENT IN MAY I nfurnished - yr. lease. 4405 Osage. Ideal for one person-grad. student preferred. Call ME 5- 5769 or 594-5875. 5125

THREE OR FIVE ROOM VERY NICE APTS. Avail, in August or Sept. 102 S. 42nd St. Married couple or grad. students preferred. Call ME 5- 5769 or 594-5875. 5127

THREE ROOM APT. AVAILABLE IN MAY. Unfurnished - yr. lease. 4400 Samson. Married couple or grad. students preferred. Call ME 5-- 5769 or 594-5875. 5126

WANTED - FEMALE TO SHARE 1 BEDROOM apartment with same. May 10 - Sept. 1. 42 Chester $55/mo. Call Janice, EV 2-3344. 5124

APARTMENT TO SUBLET TILL AUGUST 1ST OR take over lease from June 1st or before, 41st and Walnut. Large, efficiency, furnished. 382-5166.

3861

SUMMER APARTMENT - 2 BEDROOMS: 1 double, 1 single; kitchen; full bath; living and dining rooms; Ideal Summer School location: Hamilton Court, 39th 81 Chestnut. Call EV 2- 4050. . 5105

DINING ROOM, LIVING ROOM, AND BEDROOM furniture. Also an organ. Fine condition. Call Jeff Levy, WA 2-0684 from 7-11 PJvl. 3860

21/2 ROOM APARTMENT-LARGE, FURNISHED, for takeover or sublet. 42nd and Pine. $80 plus utilities. Call EV 2-8235 after 9 PJvl. 5145

APARTMENT WITH FURNITURE FOR TWO. HAS courtyard. Overlooks girls' dorm. Well patrolled. Shopping nearby.Convenient parking.Low, low rent. B^_2-7517. 5149

EFFICIENCY FOR SUMMER SUBLET WITH option f >r Fall. 42nd Locust. Furnished. EV 7- 1824, 5 P.M.-6:30 P.M. 5113

Chamber Concert Friday, May 2, 8:00 p.m.

Sprite Hall Lounge

42nd & Spruce • Free

THE COMMITTEE PRESENTS-

REVELATIONS IN BLACK FRIDAY, APRIL 25th 9 P.M.

H.H. COFFEE SHOP FREE

RLC PRESENTS

CHAPPAQUA

3 PM (free)

NAZARIN 7PM

THE SOFT SKIN 9PM

IRVINE, ADMISSION $1

TOMORROW MEMBERS 50*

BALTIMORE AT 41ST: 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED apt. suitable for 3. Available Junel. $145. BA 2- 6254 or MO 4-4294. 4023

sll Iili) TO SHI LIT, SOCIETY fill L, 251 II floor, furnished, air-conditioned, utilities Incl. 24 hour guard. $156 rent. WA 5-2752. 51 is

SI'MMI R Sl'BI I T AVAII ABI I JIM IS I IDI M for 3; handsomely furnished -Hamilton Court 39th (.Chestnut. Call 222-7071 Bob or llowell. 4920

3 OR 4 PERSON APT. AT 43RD AND SPRUCE. Completely furnished, newly decorated. Avail Sept. BA 2-6254 or MO 4-4294. 4022

CINTI R I m SI MMI K M M.I 1. 23RD W> IK Jam i-y bedroom, living roomch .,air-condition- ed. Available May Is Sept. l or part there of $90. n 5115

MAGICAL APARTMENT FOR SUMMFR - 5 rooms, including 2 bedrooms, air-conditioner, fully furnished. 1 or 3 people. ?110/month. Half block from Clark Park, store, laundromat. 44th «.. Baltimore. May 15-Sept. 1. Call Dave SA-9- 5471 or Harry BA-2-7365. 4036

AIR-CONDITIONED SUMMER SUBLET - 3 room, nicely furnished, free parking, available May 15th. Option for next year. $100 includes utilities. BA 2- 5258. 4236

FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY' TO GROOVE IN A luxurious 3 bedroom furnished apartment for the entire summer. Convenient on-campus location. Call Marvin the Dope at EV 2-1261 or EV 2-3291.

4244

SUMMER SUBLET: 2 MAN APARTMENT ACROSS Btrcrt from library. Available mid May thru August. Reasonable. Call FV 2-2850. 4897

ONE HALF 4 ROOM FEMALE APT. AVAILABLE for summer. Close to Pe.in. Own room, much privacy. Will haggle over rent. 48th _ Baltimore. Call EV 2-6433 anytime. 4241

F'JMMER SUBI FT-FALL OPTION. 2-3 PERSON furnished apartment, panelled living room, large kitchen, 3rd floor, convenient location. EV 2- 2886. 5132

3-4 MAN APARTMENT AVAILABLE FOR SUM- mer sublet, 39th and Chestnut. Call EV 2-1136,

after 7 PAL 4242

BEAUTIFUL POWELTON VILLAGE APT. FOR summer sublet to grad student or married couple. 2 floors, 1 1/2 bath, sunlight, air-conditioned.Only $100. Call EV 2-3350. 4243

YOUNG PROFESSIONAL WOMAN SEEKS ROOM- mate (s) to share Center City apt. , beginning June 1st. F.V-2-3008 after 5. 5111

AMAZING LOCATION OPPOSITE VAN PELT LIB- rary, now available for summer sublet. Gocd for 3 or 4 people. Furnished. Large kitchen and living room. Call EV 2-8551. 5130

FIVE 3-ROOM APARTMENTS. ONE 2-FLOOR Unfurnished. 10 minute walk from College Hall. Call Ext. 8374 from 9-5 weekdays. Other times Call EV 6-3010. 4840

SMALL PENN DORM FOR 12 STUDENTS - ONLY 5 spaces left (male and/or female, undergraduate and/or graduate) available 1969-70. Contain kitchen, laundry, parking facilities: luxurious living room, T.V., study room, 4211 Chester Ave. Contact Mr. Arum, evenings, EV 6-9067. 4015

APARTMENT BONANZA - SPACIOUS, CON- venient 2-3 man apt. located 42nd St. andChestnut. This is a legitimate apt. (not plasterboard excuse) with 2 large becrooms, 1 1/2 bathrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen,porch. Reasonable rent and furniture investment. See it to believe it. Call EV 6-4591. ask for Fred or Rick. 4014

WANTED

SUMMER JOBS IN PHILADELPHIA. MUST BE 21 or over. Males preferred. For information - call Mr. Grant at GR-4-7000 between 1 and 3 P.M. 4210

WANTED DESPERATELY: ONE TICKET ON FIRST Univ-Charter flight to Europe (May 25-Aug. 22) Call Beryl 594-5307. Leave Message. 4212

WANTED - FULL TIME SECRETARIAL Posi- tion available in dean's office. Typing, dictaphone, interest in students essential. Call 594-7325 or 116 College Hall. 4245

WANTED - GIRL'S ENGLISH BICYCLE. CALL Debbie, EV 2-6558. 5051

WANTED: RIDERS TO CALIFORNIA TO SHARE expenses. Leaving May 11-12. Call John, EV 2- 4758. If necessary leave name and number. 4041

WANTED TO RENT JUNE, .11II V AND AUGUS1 3 Bedroom furnished house for family of five 3 children ]9, 17, 14. Please contact Professor Harold I. Sharlon, Department of History, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50010. 4215

I'M DRIVING TO CALIFORNIA OR ASPEN, COL., for summer. Need riders, place to stay and/or roommate and/or job. Also roomate for next year. _V 2-3496 till 3A.M. 4046

APTS. AT OSAGE AND 42ND. LUXURY 2 ROOMS and dressing room, tile bath.walltowallcarpeting. new furniture. $95/mo. incl. utilities. BA 2- 6254 or MO 4-4294. 4021

FLYING OR DRIVING TO SAN FRANCISCO SOON? Kitten needs a ride.Call Harold Chapman, 594-7124.

4050

FOUND - BLACK AND TAN C.OONHOUND MALE, 33rd and Walnut. Call LO 6-9117 between 8 and 9 P.M. 4234

RtXIMMATF WANTED TO LIVE IN NEW YORK City this summer. Call Laura after 6 P.M. at BA 2-7996. 4219

301NG TO THE WEST COAST? RIDERS WANTED :o San Francisco; share expenses; leaving around May 12. Call LO 7-6542 after 11 PJvl. 4044

ROOMMATE WANTED (MALE) - FALL TERM only. 3 room furnished. 545/month. 46thandBalti- more. Call 729-6030. 5144

PHOTOGRAPHY CLASSES - SUMMER CLASSES now forming B-W, 35 mm to 8x10. Including de- veloping, printing, etc. Darkroom facilities pro- vided. Class size limited. If interested call collect station-to-station Michael Smith, 201-996- 2682. 4994

JOIN NATIONAL VAGABOND SPORTS CLUB AND take advantage of low cost European group flights. Departing and returning many times during summer. Contact Alan 221-5386. 4221

TEACHERS: COLLEGE, PUBLIC OR PRIVATE school. Let us help you find the teaching position you seek. Now is the time to register for Sept. 1969. Call FIsk Teachers Agency, KI 5-1745. 4852

LOOKING FOR AN INEXPENSIVE BUT COM- fortable summer sublet? 3 large bedrooms, fully furnished and equipped, convenieni to stores, sampus and Center City. Everything S60 per person, entire or part. Call SA 6-4627. 5134

PASSPORT AND FDENT. PHOTOS. COLOR, BL. & white processing, mounting, fast copy service. Custom Foto Studio, 4515 Walnut St. BA 2-4145.

5257

VOLKSWAGEN REPAIR BY HONEST AND RE- liable law student. Free consultations. EV 2-8881.

4246

THE TALKING POINT HAS AN EAR FOR EVERY one. Why don't you come. Sunday through Thurs- day 8-11 P.M. at McClellan Hall, Hill Hall and Houston Hall. 4188

KAWA SAKI 650 MOST ACCESS. HI AITIEUL. very quick and cheap. GR 6-H864. 4930

COMMUNE. WE ARE FORMING A COMMUNE IN Philadelphia. If you feel you can commit your energies into building and sustaining a communal home, and want to Join us, then call. Please - no full-time students - only free people. Carl EV 2- 6482 eve. - 594-8551 day. Diane SA 7-2178. 5073

FEMALE GRAD STUDENT NEEDS ROOMMATE for next fall or this July to find an apartment or share my 2 bedroom. Call Judy after 5:00 EV 2- 7499. 5091

EUROPE THIS SUMMER? TRY AMSTERDAM OR Istanbul. We'll be on the Riveria too - but no Hiltonlans...the real European's Europe with an ex- perienced tripper EV 6-0407 keep trying. 5090

TYPIST TYPIST - ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, FOREIGt and chemistry symbols. Experience in PhX>. dis- sertations, scientific, arts, business. Fast, ac- curate, excellent references. DORIS, MI 9-6694.

3769 *'l 1 I li STENOGRAPHl R SPE< 1 \l l/l\(. IV

ttw's and Doctoral dissertations. Sample work in ..11 arc, olleges. MORA CARLIN,

;.-'"■ _^

HELP WANTED WITH HISTORY I TERM PAPER. Call PO 9-9928, ask for Grady, Well paid. 4230

M&M TYPING BUREAU: TYPING SPECIALISTS for Master Theses, Doctoral Dissertations, Term Papers, Manuscripts, Law, Business, Medical. Accurate-rapid-low page rate, pick up and de- livery available - office open 24 hours, 7 days weekly, deposit required. HO 7-0961. 5582

A-Z TYPING SERVICE. EXPERT THESIS TYPING -- 8 years experience. Work guaranteed. 20 min. from campus. Teli (609) 845-2792. 4377

TYPIST, IBM ELECTRIC. EXPERIENCED, FAST, accurate term papers, thesis, medical typing. Work always completed by your deadline. CL 9-3732.

5057

Page 5: War foes protest in Irvine

Friday, April 25, 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 5

Day claims fund ready for housing

'69 Record better book Freshman week planned

Class of 73

By MARK SCHLESINGER

The $10 millionforcommunity re- newal which the University promised to try to raise as a part of the agree- ment between the trustees and the demonstrators at the February Col- lege Hall sit-in is available for use, William L. Day, chairman of the board of trustees indicated in an interview last week.

However, Lorenzo Graham, presi- dent of Renewal Housing, Inc. (RH1) and co-chairman of the quadripartite commission, said he has no knowledge of the availability of such funds.

Day said that a variety of local and national financial institutions have pledged funds for low-cost housing which could be made available to the quadripartite commission. The funds would become available followine ap-

SHAPIR STUDIOS Qualify Portraiture

Applications & Passports On th« campus c.r

3907 WALNUT ST.

BA 2-7888

WILL SELL ALL OR PART OF

TOTALLY FURNISHED

HAMILTON COURT APARTMENT

AVAILABLE JUNE 1 EV 2- 5296

proval of housing projects by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

Area mutual savings banks have established a fund of $20 million for low-cost housing, Day said. He also commented that local commer- cial banks have organized a five mill- ion dollar fund and that national insurance companies have pledged one billion dollars for low- rental develop- ments.

Day said the problem in gaining access to the money is the myriad of government red tape which has to be cut through.

For a project to receive insurance and mortgage interest subsidy, it must be approved by "*he Federal Housing Authority (FHA), division of HUD. The FHA takes a long time in giving approval to projects, Day said.

The chairman of the board said FHA and HUD approval is a require- ment for receiving federal assist- ance, as provided for in Section 235 of the Federal Housing Act of 1968.

Graham agreed that the red tape of getting projects planned and ap- proved has made visible progress on new housing very slow. However, he added that he was unaware of the availability of $10 million as Day mentioned.

ACE AUTO

CENTAL CAR & TRUCK RENTAL

BA 2-4250 4220 Lancaster Ave.

5 mil), 'rom Carrviui

Some may argue that the Uni- versity signs the same old song but it's a brand new Record that will appear on campus May 1.

The college of colorful pictures trying to mask the uninteresting copy and standard mug shots we saw in the 1968 Record are gone, replaced by an attempt to achieve a sketch of campus life drawn with creativity and good taste.

"This yearbook is dedicated to the people to whom it really belongs--the students at the University of Pennsyl- vania," Jonathan Rawle the book's editor notes in his message.

"It is not for the parents of those here of the high school seniors who come, but the University community. It is not a snapshot album with every- one a face included and the unpleasant weeded out, but a presentation of the important movements of the year..." Rawle continues as he explains why one mad flip through the pages to find the faces of the familiar will not do with the 1969 Record.

Rawle, himself a professional photographer, became the Record's editor after a long apprenticeship in the publications darkroom. The College senior has clear ideas on good and bad photography and had enough courage to practice restraint in selecting shots.

(Continued on page 7)

Austin Healey, MGB, Austin America

Al Filippone (Wh '49) Imported Cars Authorized Sales/Service, New, Used. 441 E. Balitmore Ave. — 5 miles straight out Baltimore Ave. MA 6-3313 MA 6-331.2

B. U. B. presents another SUNDAE SUNDAY

in honor of all winter and spring sports

Sunday, April 27th 2:00 25<

, Houston Hall West Lounge

- the catacombs presents-

OUT OF ORDER 9:45

FUN GAMES, AN ORIGINAL ONE ACT

GEOF AND JOOY SING 9:15 & 11

ADMISSION 35c

By LYNN ZEITLIN

Next year's incoming freshman class will have a hectic introduction to the University when they arrive °n September 1.

The New Student Week Committee bas planned a week of both social and intellectual events to orient stu- dents to their place in the Univer- sity and the University's place in their lives.

Colby Smith, assistant dean of men, and one of the committee mem- bers, said that this year's new stu- dent week will emphasize a "March 4 type thing." To achieve this end, Smith said, the committee is "postponing social functions until the end of the week."

This year the New Student Week committee is organizing a group of advisers to help the students get along, create an intellectual atmos- phere, and stimulate discussions. The advisers will be undergraduate men and women who will live closely with about five freshmen during the first week. Smith said his committee need more students for this program. Interested students should contact the dean of men's office.

The week will begin with an in- formal reception on the College Hall Green and then an official welcome in Irvine Auditorium. The fresh- men will picnic in the men's quad for their first dinner.

On Tuesday the new University members will be tested and will once again picnic, but this time it is for lunch. Throughout the after- noon there will be speakers and discussion groups led by various campus activities leaders. At night a guest speaker will address the class of '73 on the student's role in the University and the community.

The formal beginning of the academic year is on Wednesday at noon. The New Students Committee is trying to have Dr. Alfred 1. Rie- ber, Chairman of the history department as the main speaker at

the opening exercises. The next activity will be a bus tour of Phila- delphia. At night the big social event of the week will take place in Hill Hall. There will be two bands, a hard rock one, and a jazz ensemble. Movies will also be shown outside.

The beginning of classes on Thurs- day certainly does not bring the new student week activities to an end. Thursday evening Activities Night will be held on Locust Walk. The rv»-nose of activities night is to in- troduce freshmen to the many extra-

cirricular programs offered at the University.

On Friday, there will be a Per- forming Arts Night which will include

such groups as Penn Players and the Glee Club. To continue the enter- tainment, on Saturday night, Houston Hall Board is trying to bring a Living Theatre group to the University.

The long exciting first week draws to a close on Sunday with a possible string quartet concert in the afternoon and a discussion on sex and drugs at night.

For those freshmen, who find themselves with time on their hands, the new student week committee is also planning supplementary activities. The Gimbel gym will be open all week as will the Catacombs and Committee.

CAFE'THEATER OF ALLEN'S LANE (ALLrrrs LA- A M \* V MHY)

PRESENTS

WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF EDWARD ALB

FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS 8 P.M. THROUGH APRIL 26 ADMISSION S2.25 STUDENTS, FRIDAY ONLY SI.00 FOR RESERVATION CALL CH 7-8771 OR GE 8-4222

MEMBERS of the New Student Week Committee plan activities for incoming freshmen. The September weekend will include discussions, receptions, lectures, and social events.

I Meeting of all Activity heads or their authorize

representatives MONDAY, APRIL 28th

9:15 P.M. Houston Hall Auditorium

To approve bylaws for and

appoint a finance committee

.;.:-:-:-:-:-:->:-:-:-:-:-:-x-x*:-:-»:-:-:-:-:-:v

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Grand Opening OF Of It NEWEST STORK

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Coupon must M presented *»ltn jny Incoming ordar.

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TROUSERS SLACKS

CltANtO AND FINISHED

Coupon mutt bm o'«*«nt«d wltn *ny Incoming order

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DISCOUNT PRESENT COUPON WITH INCOMING OROER

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Page 6: War foes protest in Irvine

Page 6 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Friday, April 25, 1969

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Page 7: War foes protest in Irvine

The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 7

Students celebrate Israel's 21st birthday with traditional Israeli dances in front of Houston Hall

• • . the in place Is CKY'S ROMAN RESTAURANT

Record (Continued from page 5)

There is rarely more than one Photo on a Record page. The staff worked on the premise that one nice picture is better than five mediocre shots.

One page, void of any written copy, shows.the faces of a black and and a white girl, displaying both the nega- tive and positive of the photo and saying something about color super- ficiality that a ream of copy could not express.

Rawle and his staff included a six- page photographic essay illustrating Leonard Cohen's poem Suzanne, a longer spread on the year's national political scene and a still longer essay on relationships in their efforts to deal with stimuli in the lives of University students. The love section includes

a studio photograph of a nude couple embracing.

The 1969 record is not directed specifically to the actions of the senior class. In fact, the names of the seniors who will graduate are not listed under their mug shots. A two- page spread reveals a group of 60 faces and their legends must be un- woven by turning a page for a list of their activities.

The Record is not a perfect book and some may argue it's not a great book. It takes five minutes of scann- ing last year's edition to realize how much of a "better book" it is. BARBARA SLOPAK

VERDI WROTE HIS MANZONI REQUIEM IN 1874.

WE THINK IT HAS MEANING FOR 1969. COME AND HEAR IT

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Historian speaks on black American

By JOHN TALMADGE

The noted historian Dr. Benjamin Quarles asserted Wednesday that blacks played a "vital" role in colonial and revolutionary America.

In an address entitled "Black Presence in Colonial and Revolutionary America," Quarles, a professor of history at Morgan State College, said, "although the black man was not acting independently as he does later, this set the stage for his subsequent role."

During his lecture the 65-year-old Quarles traced the history of the black man from his arrival in America until the years directly following the Revolu- tionary War. This talk was the seventh in an eight-part series on "The Negro in America," sponsored by the Morgan-Pennsylvania Cooperative Project.

Quarles, the author of more than half a dozen books on black history, stated that by the end of the colonial period one-sixth of the American popu- lation was black. "This," Quarles continued, "caused a great deal of cross fertilization in speech and cultural patterns of white and blacks." And he added "many American behavior traits stem from early contact with blacks."

Despite the general misconception, blacks were a major part of the South's skilled work force during the early colonial period, the native Bostonian said.

In addition Quarles asserted that the "North got rich off black slaves. The wealth of the North was based on the slave trade." And, the author of "Lincoln and the Negro" added, "the role of black merchandise was es- sential to the economy of New England."

Quarles then went on to discuss the role of the black man in the Revolu- tionary War. The first man killed during this struggle, the Shaw University graduate commented, was Crispus Attucks, a black man, at the Boston Mas- sacre in the spring of 1770.

And Quarles continued, although the leaders of the Revolution were re- luctant to use blacks as soldiers, ("they did n't want to disturb the relations between slaves and masters,") when a shortage of soldiers developed in 1777, the Continental Army and Navy began to employ black soldiers and sailors.

The British also turned to the black labor supply to fill the ranks of their army. In return for service in the British army blacks were promised their freedom. However, Quarles added, "very few blacks were able to escape their masters and reach the British."

And when the War ended, Quarles continued, "it looked as if slavery was suffering a blow from which it would not recover." He went on to cite the establishment of the first abolition society, the freeing of Pennsylvania slaves in 1785 and the prohibition of slavery in the Northwest Territory, as steps towards the emanicipation of the black man.

However, he added, it would take at least another 70 years for the black to advance significantly.

During a question and answer session which followed his lecture Quarles said that the condition of the slave depended more on his master than on the country in which he was enslaved. However, he added, "the degree of color prejudice was not nearly as striking in the Latin nations as it was in America."

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Page 8: War foes protest in Irvine

Page 8 The Daily pennsylvanian Friday, April 25, 1969

Council (Continued from page 1)

War lecting its apportioned students. John Hobstetter, dean of the GSAS, has refused, after two weeks of delibera- tion, to certify the GSA as repre- sentative of the school, and therefore the organization is unable to appoint representatives to the University Council. GSA is the only student or- ganization in GSAS.

"I don't see how the hell we can hold an election until September," Walter Markham, president of GSA, remarked. "I am a little bit unhappy that it took so long to get a decision," he said. Markham added, however, "I hesitate to impute any ill-will out of that."

Markham, a political science in- structor, said he was not "awfully surprised" at the decision, adding "1 don't think we can stand up in court and claim that we're the most rep- resentative group."

Blackton, a graduate of Franklin and Marshall College, is a first-year marketing major at the Wharton School. An English major during his undergraduate years, he said he want- ed to be on the Council "for two basic reasons." The first is because he thinks "it is very important for students to participate in a University governing body." He said his other goal is to see "what I can do for Wharton Graduate.''

Blackton said he was disappointed in the poor turnout for the election. He said, however, that there were "extenuating circumstances" leading to a "tremendous lack of communi- cation" at the graduate school. If it

wasn't for students living far away or working part-time, he said, the low participation might "tend to demean the University Council."

The member-elect of the council termed the idea of putting students on the Council "an act of faith" with students, prompted by student dem- onstrations here and elsewhere.

"! really v/ant to go to that May meeting," Blackton remarked.

McCloud was appointed by the Annenberg Student Committee, of which he is one of seven members. He said his activities on the Council would be "educational for me and for the other students at Annenberg, to whom I report directly." He also said, "It is extremely important for both graduate and undergraduate students to play a continuous role in how the University is going to function in re- lation to the local, national, and inter- national community." McCloud ob- tained his undergraduate degree from Williams College, where he majored in philosophy.

The Rev. Jack Russell, vice- provost for student affairs, stressed that all appointed students will have to be approved by the steering com- mittee of the University Council. To be appointed, a student must be matri- culated in a school where there exists a student organization certified rep- resentative by the dean and by Mr. Russell.

(Continued from page 1)

crosses in disorderly rows onCollege Hall green. Each cross represented a thousand University graduates who could die in Vietnam in the next year, a Resistance spokesman said.

The Rev. David Gracie also spoke at Thursday night's convocation. Gracie challenged the government's right to channel the lives of men into service for the state. He argued that the "state is not God," an affirmation which the audience responded to with overwhelming approval.

Tom Cornell, a draft resisterwho works with the Catholic Peace Fellowship in New York, also spoke Thursday night. He did not direct his remarks specifically to the problems of the draft, but centered on the allen- tation that "plagues most middle- class whites."

Robert Eaton, who was arrested by the FBI last Friday at the Back- bench for failure to report for armed service received a standing ovation after his speech calling on the crowd to "recognize the difference between a committment to ideals and a com- mitment to be a man. Cheap identifi- cation doesn't do a damn thing," he said.

Eaton, who is now out of jail on bail, asserted that "the liberation of all men has to begin within our- selves."

Harbingers of the Commencement have been in evidence on College Hall Green for a week. Last Thurs- day, members of the Resistance, an antiwar, antidraft organizations, set up tables in front of College Hall.

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Page 9: War foes protest in Irvine

Friday, April 25, 1969 The Daily Pennsylvanian Page 9

Engineering and Science at IBM

"You're treated like a professional right from the start!' "The attitude here is, if you're good enough to be

hired, you're good enough to be turned loose on a project," says Don Feistamel.

Don earned a B.S.E.E. in 1965. Today, he's an Associate Engineer in systems design and evalua- tion at IBM. Most of his work consists of determin- ing modifications needed to make complex data processing systems fit the specialized requirements of IBM customers.

Depending on the size of the project. Don works individually or in a small team. He's now working with three other engineers on part of an air traffic control system that will process radar information by computer. Says Don: There are only general guide- lines. The assignment is simply to come up with the optimum system."

Set your own pace

Recently he wrote a simulation program that enables an IBM computer to predict the per- formance of a data processing system that will track satellites. He handled that project him- self. "Nobody stands over my shoulder," Don says. "I pretty much set my own pace."

Don's informal working environment is typi- cal of Engineering and Science at IBM. No matter how large the project, we break it down into units small enough to be handled by one person or a few people.

Don sees a lot of possibilities for the future. He says, "My job requires that I keep up to date with all the latest IBM equipment and systems programs. With that broad an outlook, I can move into almost any technical area at IBM—development, manufacturing, product test, space and defense projects, programming or marketing."

Check with your placement office If you're interested in engineering and science at IBM ask your placement office for more information.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

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Page 10: War foes protest in Irvine

Page 10 The Daily Pennsylvanian Friday, April 25, 1969

Villanova shoots to equal '68 showing

JUMBO JIM ELLIOT Predicts only two wins

Relays highlights Frldav

12:00 College 440 yard hurdles heats 1:00 High School 440 yard relay heats 1:40 College 440 yard relay heats 2:00 Prep school 440 yard relay heats 2:15 Women's Olympic develop. 440 yd. relay 2:25 High school 440 yard relay finals 2:30 College 880 yard relay heats 3:00 College distance medley relay champshp. 3:30 College 120 yard high hurdles 3:45 College 100 yard dash 3:55 College mile relay heats 4:10 Metropolitan mile relay 4:15 Heptagonal mile relay 4:20 Middle Atlantic Conference mile relay 4:25 High sch. distance medley relaychmpshp. 4:35 High school mile run championship 4:55 High school rwo-mlle run championship 5:15 480 ya.d shuttle hurdle relay chmpshp. 6:00 College sprint medley relay heats

1:00 High school pole vault, high "imp, fcshotput 1:00 Discus throw & h:n-' -- >w atRiv.Ild. 1:00 College long jump c *^n

Saturday 9:20 College two-mile ru. 9:40 High School wo-nile

10:40 HighScho- -nik. reli 2:20 Olympl lop. sprl. ■-..■=... '. 2:25 college sprint medley IP...

2:30 Silver baton honors ceremon) 2:40 College sprint medley reby chmpsp. 2:45 1C4A sprint medley relay 2:50 Masters mile run 3:00 College 440 yard relay championship 3:05 IC4A 440 yard relay 3:15 Prep school 440 yard relay hmpsp. 3:20 High school 440 yard relay chmpsp. 3:25 Women's Olympic development 440 yd.

relay 3:35 College 120 yard high hurdles final 3:45 College 100 yard dash final 3:55 College two-mile relay championship 4:05 Women's Olympic develop. 440 yd. dash 4:10 Olympic development 880 yd. run 4:20 College rwo-mlle relay championship 4:30 High school rwo-mlle relay chmpsp. 4:40 College 880 yard championship. 4:50 IC4A 880 yard relay 5:00 High school mile relay championship 5:05 College mile relay 5:10 College 3,000 meter steeplechase 5:20 1C4A mile relay 5:25 Olympic development mile relay chmpsp. 5:35 College mile relay championship

10:00 High school triple jump 12:00 College triple jump

1:30 College high Jump 2:00 College pole vaul' 2:45 College javelin throw 4:30 College shot put

(Continued from page 12)

as Mason, Bob Whitehead, Murphy, and Liquori are capable of breaking the meet record of 9:37.9. Manhattan and N.Y.U. are others to watch.

Elsewhere, Florida A. & M. lost its entire quartet which set a new Penn Relays best time of 40.4 last spring, but it returns with a unit that ran a 40.9 at the Florida Relays. Tennessee clocked the same time there, as did Florida State, and, along with Johson C. Smith and Nor- folk State, all are potential winners.

The 880 relay should be a dogfight amongst defending champ Western Michigan and six other schools. The shuttle hurdles should be Tennes- see's, anchored by Flowers, with Penn and Yale slugging it out for second.

In all, 126 colleges are entered in the Carnival's 132 events, which also include Olympic Development and high school events.

Former Villanova great Dave Pa- trick will run for the Baltimore Olympic Club in the Olympic Develop-

RICHMOND FLOWERS

Tennessee's defending relays champion

ment mile relay, while the New York Athletic Club features ex-Wildcat Hal Nichter, and Sports Internationalist, which has posted the fastest indoor time in the country, 3:11.2, has two- time Olympian Ed Roberts.

Grand Street Boys Club, with Olympic star Charlie Mays, and New York A.C., boasting Herb and George Germann, Sports Internationalist, and the Philadelphia Pioneer Club are favorites in the sprint medley.

Brooklyn Boys, Seton Hall Prep, Taft High School of New York City, and Bloomfield (N.J.) are the class teams of 369 entered in the high school mile relay.

Excelsior, Jamaica, B.WJ., and defending titlist BrooklynBoys should battle it out for the 440 yard relay crown, and 1968 winnerRoselle(N.J.) Catholic, anchored by JoeSavage, last year's outstanding prep athlete, should repeat in the two mile race.

Penn only entrant in all events

THEY'RE OFF at the start of the four mile relay last year. The race was

won by Villanova, but Harvard, N.Y.U., and Western Michigan which finished 2, 3, and 4, will be back to challenge the 'Cats again.

Top individuals here (Continued from poge 12)

the Cadets undergo to find a sport in which they might participate (par- ticipation in at least one is manda- tory), he was detected by a track coach who decided to make him a hammer thrower. The results could hardly have been better; during his freshman year, Frankel got off the second-best effort by a yearling in the country.

However, during his second fall on the Hudson, (in which he did not compete in track). Rod began to feel "that I might get more out of a civilian school." So he took a year off and worked as a chemical lab technician for Eastman Kodak, in his home town. While at work, he applied to transfer to Penn. Last year, except for work with the Phila- delphia Pioneers, was also one of idleness, because of the NCAA rule which requires a year of residence before a transfer-student can com pete. This spring, finally, came var- sity competition.

He also apparently is looking for- ward to the Penn Relays. The com- petition will be top-notch (Tuppeny predicted that the top five at River Field could be the top five in the NCAA champs.), and Frankel's show- ing could give him an idea of his prospects for the rest of the spring.

The season's progress for the whole squad will be measured to a large degree this weekend, as the

Quakers keep up a tradition by enter- ing every relay and every field event. The outstanding Red and Blue entries in the field events include Frankel and Ken Dietz, whose University- record setting discuss effort of 181*8 3/4" last week was the best college or AAU toss in Franklin Field ever. Only four-time Olympic champ Al Oerter, representing the U.S. against the U.S.S.R. in 1959 has done better (188' vs. the USSR). The relays record is 179'9", by Art Swats, of South Carolina, in 1967.

Ed Myers, who turned in a per- sonal best (by 18') of 168' last week, will also throw the hammer, as will Kevin Kubie, while Dietz will be join- ed in his event by Jack Levithan and Frank Craven.

Jed Olmstead will throw the jave- lin, while Craven, Levithan, and Bob Eichman will be in the shot put. Mark Lipsey will high jump; Fran Kubovsak and Tom Herman will pole vault. John Tremba and Paul Dykstra will wear the Red and Blue in the broad jump, while Tom Flynn, Bob Krick, and Andy Watkins will triple jump.

In the running events, a real challenge will be whether the 480 yd. shuttle hurdle team can do as well or better than last year's third place. The hurdlers are confident they will shatter the University re- cord of 62.0, but the competition is enormous. The big question mark

It's an adventure story. It's a suspense story. It's a comedy story. It's a war story. It's a warm story. It's a wild story. It's a love story. It's a moving story. It's an elephant story. It's a super story.

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is the performance of University record-holder Greg Slivinski (14.5), who is returning to competition after a two year layoff. He will supple- ment the strong crew of Ed Wheeler (14.6), John Kinahan (14.7) and Andy Watkins (15.0).

Perm's other relay teams will look like this: Mark Neufeld, John Herbert, John Aldridge, and Dave Hammond in the 440; Neufeld, Arn- ie Papowitz, Roy Supulski, and Jim Pollack in the 880; Pollack, Steve Race, John Accardi, and Papowitz in the mile; Bruce Hrivnak, George Lokken, John Acri, and Jerry Wil- liams in two miles. The Red andBlue were IC4A two-mile champs last April.

The Quaker four-mile relay quar- tet will be Bill Caldwell, Dan Ste- vens, Bill Kelso, and Gene Maffcy, with Duane Stephens, Jay Epstein, Stevens, and Caldwell in the distance medley. Accardi, Supulski, Race, and Williams will take care of the sprint

medley. The only freshman team entered

is a mile relay quartet of Steve Mait, Marvin Hodge, Karl Thornton and Ed Flynn.

(Continued from pege 12) member of Villanova's world- record 2-mile relay quartet now run- ning for the Philadelphia Pioneers, and Peter Farrell of the N.Y.A.C..

Other topcompetitors intheOlym- pic Development events include pole vaulters Peter Chen, (17*1"), Mike Ilanna, (16*9") and former Villano- van Vince Bizzarro,(16'8"), plus high jumper Mike Bowers (7'-2-l/2"). A woman's 440 yard dash will also be included in the Carnival.

An interesting sidelight is the Masters Mile for men past the 40 mark. Among the entries are a car- diologist, an ornithologist and a phy- sicist. Dr. Richard Packard, NASA physicist, is the national Masters Marathon Mile champion, with a 4:- 45.9 time indoor. He will be chal- lenged by James Hartstare and Dr. George Shehan, among others. Hart- stare, the bird watcher, was clocked in 4:41 this year at the AAU's in Wash. D.C. Dr. Shehen, the cardio- logist, best performance was 4:47. Although a few seconds behind his counterparts, it is difficult to fault this 50 year-old father of 12.

In the high school ranks, track fans will be able to observe tomor- row's top college and Olympic pros- pects. Perhaps the most exceptional

field is in the triple jump, where five of the top-ranked 15 in the country prepare to assualt Olympic champ

Bob Beamon's high school record of 49'5" in 1966. Defending champ Doug Dickinson, from Newport News Virginia, has already bested his Penn Relay performance of 46*11" by al- most three feet. Challanging Dickin- son are Norm Kearney, Maurice Peo- ples, Zack Gillan and Howard Cor- win.

The situation in the shot is al- most identical, as seven men have thrown 60* or better. Outstanding are Steve Adams, who tossed the shot 63'11" in the Eastern States, and last year's fifth place finisher Randal Sokolik, who has thrown 61'- 9".

The mile run should also provide many thrills. Massapequa's Brian McElroy must hold off a host of challengers if he wishes to retain his title.

Relays tickets Penn Relays tickets will be avail-

able all week at student prices. Friday's action can be seen, upon presentation of a matriculation card, for $1, while Saturday tickets can be purchased for $1.50.

Look what you can get away with now.

Page 11: War foes protest in Irvine

Friday, April 25, 1969 The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 11

Lightweights face Princeton; prepforSprints

By STEVE FADEM

With the May 10 Eastern Sprints rapidly approaching, the Quaker lightweight crews will face a crucial test Saturday when they take on their Princeton counterparts in an attempt to regain the Wood-Hammond Cup.

The Bengal eight took the prized trophy home last year for the sixth straight time, handing the Penn 150-pounders one of three setbacks in their 18-opponent schedule. The Red and Blue oarsmen did avenge the loss at the Eastern Sprints by leaving the Organge boat in their wake, and Saturday they will be out to bring the prized trophy back to Philadelphia after so long an absence.

The now 155-pound lightweights go into Saturday's en- counter with three wins without a loss. After running over Rutgers and Cornell, coach Fred Leonard's varsity shell ran into stiff competition from Yale last weekend at the Skim- mer Day races, managing to pull off a win by a narrow 0.3 second margin.

The JVs also have three wins be- hind them, but they found it a bit easier ^"^""■"■■■■"^^^^ going against Yale and Columbia. In last year's race against the Tigers, the varsity's second shell garnered the only Quaker win. The boat-and-a- quarter victory hopefully will be re- peated this year, but conditions on the Schuylkill could very well tighten up the race considerably the way they did last weekend.

Coach Bob Harrison's froshteam, also out to get back at Princeton for last year's results, has been rowing consistently well all year. Saturday could be the telling day for the year- lings, who look ahead for a hopeful win at the Sprints. They, too, are 3-0.

Princeton, rowing against Colum- bia earlier in the month, swept to three wins, but the varsity margin of victory could be revealing.The three- second advantage, as opposed to Penn's 18-second win, leaves a 15- second margin between Saturday's foes. Conditions could very well have played a key role in the large dif- ference, but perhaps overall team performance is something to look at.

Heavies' season has just started

PENN'S HEAVYWEIGHT CREW pulls away from dock for practice this week. The Quaker heavies

ace Princeton Saturday.

Lone senior on varsity

Si be 11 sees nine improving

MILES SIBELL The only graduate

RedandBluebriefs RON WHITE AND DAVE POT-

TRUCK have been named wrestling co-captains for the 1969-1970 sea- son. White, a junior 130-pounder, is 16-3 over two varsity seasons and placed fourth in the East in March. Pottruck, the middle guard on the football team, was second in the Easterns at 191 pounds, sport- ing a 9-0-1 record. —

Rick Smith will continue as swim- ming captain. Smith, a junior back- stroker, won his specialty against West Chester, Cornell, and LaSalle, highlighting his season with a second place finish against powerful Yale.

Earlier this spring, Al Cherry and Peter Singer were named to lead the Ivy champion fencing and squash teams, with sophs Bob FinkeandTom Davis and junior Howard Mooney to act as hockey tri-captains. Next win-

ter's basketball captain will be elected in the fall.

* * * * THE VARSITY SAILORS will be

represented this weekend in both the Middle Atlantic Spring Monotype Championships and the Princeton Dinghy Cup.

Last Sunday, they easily qualified for the Middle Atlantic Sprint cham- pionships May 10 and 11 at the Naval Academy. Four sets of crews com- peted, as coach Bruce Birkholz ex- ploited the team's depth. Steve Sim- kin, Gordon Buzby, Jack Karabasz, and Mike Gratch acted as skippers, with John Cuckler, Jerome Doherty, Mark Paster, and Joe Cooper doing the crewing.

* * * *

THE BAND IN CONCERT

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THE RUGBY TEAM travels to Fairfield this weekend for the sea- son finale, sporting a 5-4 record.The Quakers topped the .500 mark last week with victories over St. Joe's and Colgate, 13-5 and 3-0.

Dave Fisher scored twice against the Hawks, while JoeGantz scored a third try and did the kicking. Gantz did all the scoring in the Skimmer contest against the favored Red Raid- ers, but it was the ball control tactics and hustle of senior Danny Kaplan, Skip Chase, and Carl Shulman which spelled the difference. The "B" team fell to Colgate, 12-0, however, despite the running of freshman Clay Craw- ford.

By STEVE LEVENE

If you ask Miles Sibell a few ques- tions about baseball, the 5-foot 9- inch centerfielder, and only senior on Penn's varsity team, will probably start talking about everything else except the game. But, that's to be expected from a guy who's got a lot more than athletics on his mind.

"I'm a cynic by nature and by experience," spewed the 165-pounder in a late night conversation. "But that doesn't mean there aren't some things where man can still find his place and hope for the future."

Five years ago, as a senior in high school, Miles had some great plans for the future-- the prospects as a professional baseball player seemed brightest. He was considering University of Miami, a school well- know for the sport, but ended up at Penn and in Wharton on his parents' advice.

Since becoming a Quaker, Sibell's performance on the field has im- proved immeasurably, mainly through the efforts of varsity coach Bob Mur- ray.

"Coach Murray raised my batting average by about 150 points in less than an hour," said the outfielder, who as a senior at Manhasset High School, was one of the best defensive players on Long Island, but a poor hitter.

Yet, being a baseballer at Penn has its setbacks, and perhaps more than at most other schools. Miles Sibell agrees.

"The baseball program here has been dumped on for many years. I

Doherty (Continued from page 12)

crew of officials. Seventy-seven of the 122 have served, all without pay, for 10 years or more. Twenty-one have worked for a quarter-century or more.

"Not one receives a nickel," Doherty exclaims. "They report at 10 today and at 9 Saturday--just be- cause they're interested. They come ready to work. You can use any explitives for them you wish," he instructs.

Next year, however, the efficient Irishman will be writing books, while present Quaker track skipper Jim Tuppeny grapples with the scheduling of a likely 7,000 athletes, each with his own wants and desires.

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think we have one of the worst fields in the league and poor indoor practice facilities, which only make things worse. In addition, there is little sup- port for the team."

There have been a lot of positive accomplishments for Sibell himself. As a sophomore, Miles hit .320 and had surprised everyone bymakingthe varsity after not playing as a fresh- man. By the fall of his junior semes- ter, however, mononucleosis had trimmed the New Yorker to an emaciated 150 pounds and left him extremely weak.

It took some heavy workouts and a summer of Stan Musial League ball (a college level club that plays a 75- game schedule) to put Sibell back into shape for this year. The chattering team man, while so far only hitting .250, has come through with the singles and walks when needed. But being a senior hasn't been the reason for his keeping a hotly contested starting spot.

"It doesn't make any difference what year you're in here, as long as you do the job," Sibell said. "There are plenty of guys to fill my shoes when I leave."

Right now, this weekend is the most important tiling on everyone's mind, though. Sibell believes that wins over Yale today and Cornell on Saturday could put the Quakers in contention for the league championship. Both games are afternoon contests at River Field.

By MARK SCHLESINGER

With one clean sweep under their belts, the heavyweight crews face Yale and Columbia in the Blackwell Cup Saturday on the Housatonic River.

Last weekend, the Quakers neatly put away the same Columbia shells in the Childs Cup races at Princeton. Yale was facing Navy, posting triumphs in the varsity and freshmen races, but dropping the JV encounter by four seconds.

The Blackwell Cup clash, how- ever, is little more than apreludefor what could be the race of the year, the Adams Cup battle on the Schuyl- kill next Saturday, which will pit the Quakers against underdog Navy and perennial national rowing champ Harvard.

Harvard has won 33 consecutive collegiate races since 1963. The loss came in the Adams Cup match- up against Penn --on the same river where the crews willberowingSatur- day.

In the last six years, the Quakers have compiled an almost equally im- pressive record, undefeated ex- cept for annual losses to Harvard in the Adams Cup and the Eastern Sprints.

The Quakers' last outing with the Crimson, the Olympic Trials at Long Beach, Cal., cut Harvard's winning margin to 0.035 seconds — four inches. The Red and Blue oarsmen will be out to reverse that margin this time, in a race which pits pupil against teacher.

Harvard coach Harry Parker row- ed for the Red and Blue from 1955 to 1957 and Burk doesn't take his pupil very lightly. "I feel Harvard has a crew as strong as lastyear's," declared the Quaker mentor, "and Harry's crew is always tough at this time of the year."

With the three cup races behind them, the heavies travel to Worces- ter, Mass. for the Eastern Sprints on May 10. The Sprints will give the Quakers another shot at Harvard and the other crews from the Ivy League and the East.

Following the Sprints, the oars- men get a week off from racing before travelling to Ithaca for the Madeira Cup battle with Cornell on Mav 24.

The IRA races on June 12, 13 and 14 cap the season for the crew team.

KEN DREYFUSS Heavyweight commodore

The oarsmen will be out to defend their national title. Unfortunately, Harvard won't be there, since the IRA's conflict with their annual mara- thon battle with Yale.

The campaign, which began with fall practice in September, will be a memorable one for Ken Dreyfuss, commodore of this year's heavyweight crew. Dreyfuss, the current varsity cox, is the first non-oarsman to be elected as the team's captain.

The boatings from now until June are still a question mark. Burk, the developer of the point system, is keep- ing his crews rowing and competing, right until the end.

Home schedules Baseball

April 25 Yale April 26 Cornell April 28 La Salle May 3 Dartmouth

Heavyweight crew May 3 Adams Cup

Lightweight crew April 26 Wood-Hammond Cup

Lacrosse

April 30 Princeton

May 3 Dartmouth Tennis

April 25 Georgetown April 26 Navy May 3 Columbia

Track April 30 Rutgers

May 3 Cornell

May 10 Heptagonals

Hays happy with golfers' log By JOHN COHN

When the golf season started, Penn coach Bob Hays said he would be happy if his team compiled a winning record. "With so many sophomores and only three out of 16 matches at home, I think that's the best we can do," he explained.

The Quakers are now one win short of guaranteeing this pre-season prediction, because of a 161/2- 1/2 victory over Swarthmore last Monday. Today they are hoping to finish the job when they travel to Georgetown, with two matches yet to be played next week. Hays thinks they can not only win this afternoon but also beat Lafayette next week, giving the Red and Blue a 9-6 season, a record that he said would elate him.

While at the start of this season, the Red and Blue mentor was looking for a winning record, his sights for next year are aimed much higher. "Golf looks very good, I mean very, very good for next year," he began.

Next year's Quakers will have all but captain Tim Shel-

•:J:W*W::£W::T:T>:*:*^

§ BEGINNING JUNE 11

don returning. In addition the varsity will be joined on the links by Tim Megear and Joe Perry from the freshman team. Their schedule has them playing more matches home.

Hays claims the scheduling has really hurt this season. ''Take Lee Burke for example," he tells anyone who will listen. "He was 11-2 with both of his losses being by one hole. If he had been playing at home, he could have been un- defeated."

Burke is not the only Pennsylvanian who will be returning to add strength to next year's team. Junior Gary Yohe is only 9-4, but he has the lowest average on the team, 75.9. Another 9-4 golfer, John O'Shaughnessy, is a talented sopho- more who picked up needed experience this year.He will be a valuable asset next season when they go for the Ivy title.

"Next year. I hope I'm herel With almost everyone back and with more home than away. .." At that point the captain of the 1943 Penn golfers trailed off into dreams of an un- defeated season, an Ivy League Crown, an NCAA title, a. . .

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Page 12: War foes protest in Irvine

6,900 athletes to compete in Penn Relays Olympiansdot individual events; Patrick, Richey, Flowers, to participate

By IRA GARR

The Penn Relay Carnival has always represented excellence in track and field circles and this year's 75th running is no exception.

Some of the nation's finest college and high school talent is expected to participate at Franklin Field this weekend. In addition, many unattached performers of Olympic calibre are expected to compete.

If last year's carnival can be used as a barometer, this spring's spectacle should be a dandy, as many of last years' individual vic- tors return to defend their titles. Noticeably absent is Dave Hemery, who won the 440 hurdles (in 50.7) and later went on to capture a gold medal in Mexico City, but many other big names will be present.

The much awaited duel between Villanova's Erv Hall and Tennes- see's Richmond Flowers, defending champ and Penn Relay record holder (13.5), in the 120 hurdles, however, has been postponed. Jumbo Jim Elliot's Olympic silver medalist has a pulled muscle and is unable to compete. Both have already done 13.3 for the dis- tance. Although Flowers will be challenged by Michigan's Larry Midlan and Florida State's Mike Kelly, his only real competition wil' be provided by the clock.

The two mile shapes up as one of the more interesting matches. Pittsburgh's Jerry Richey, 8:46.4, and 1968 Penn Relay champ, locks horns with Villanova's Dick Buerkle, who did 8:45.4 at the NCAA championships this winter.

Other track events include the 100, steeplechase, and 440 hurdles.

The competition in field events is remarkably close. Last year Har- vard's Rick Benka won the shot put with a toss of 58*10-1/2". Benka has already done 61*5" indoors but will be severely pressed by a number of per- formers, notably, Maryland's John Henly, Tennessee's Chip Kell, andSt. John's George Allen. With a strong performance each is capable of sur- passing Gary Gubner's record of 61'4-l/2".

Other wide open events are the discus, polevault, and jumping events. Rich Dreischer (Maryland) is the leading contender for the discus title. James Reardon (Bowling Green) and ever-improving Pennsylvania sopho- more Ken Dietz should be right up there. Here too, a record is in jeo- pardy as both Drescher and Dietz have bettered Art Swat's 179*9" mark.

Miami's (Ohio) Leo Smith, defend- ing champ in the pole vault, has already leaped 16'7".WesternMichi- gan's Wayne Lambert and Tennes- see's Bob Spring both have cleared 16'6" this season.

Yale's football hero and Dallas Cowboy draft pick Calvin Hill heads a list of talented jumpers in both the long and triple jumps. Hill's best leaps are 25'2" and 51' 5" respectively.

In the high jump, NCAA champ Ron Jourdan, has to be the favorite. He's already cleared 7'2", but Ten- nessee's KarlKremsen(7'-l/2")may push him. Bill Skinner of Tennessee (252') heads the javeliners, while Navy's Ed Potts (192'9") and Har- vard's Charles Ajoution (1%') are the top hammer throwers. Penn's record holder Rod Frankel has an outside chance to place.

The Olympic Development events are specially designed to accomodate exceptional non-college talent. In the Olympic year of 1968, the Relays were blessed by the presence of medalists Al Oerter, John Carlos, and Charlie Green. With Mexico now a memory and Munich still far in the future, the events have been reduced to nine. Nevertheless, the talent is abundant.

The outstanding race is the 880 yard run, featuring Dave Patrick and Olympians Benedict Cayenne and Bob Zieminski. If in shape, Cayenne, run- ning for the Grand Street Boys, is the man to beat. He reached the finals last fall in Mexico in the 800 meter event.

Patrick, former Villanova star and local favorite will be running for the Baltimore O.C. He has run the fastest mile ever in the East, 3:56.8., with a best 800-meter time of 1:46.9. Zieminski, formerly of Georgetown and an Olympic Trials finalist, has recorded a 1:48.3 in the 880. Rounding out this magnificent field are Craig Nation, last year a

(Continued on page 10)

ERV HALL HANDS OFF TO DAVE PATRICK for the onchor leg of the sprint medley relay, as Villanova raced to an unprecedented five of eight Championship of America titles last year.

-

FLORIDA A&M's JIM ASHCROFT breasts the tape ahead of Johnson C. Smith's Vince Matthews in last year's 440 relay qualifying heats. The Flori- dians won the finals the next day, with Smith fourth. Although A&M is entered.

all four victorious runners have graduated, three to play pro football; Matthews, a member of the gold medal winning U.S. Olympic 1600 meter relay quarter, is back, however, and will undoubtedly provide still more exciting finishes.

Penn's Dietz, hurdlers also contenders

Frankel shoots to place in Relays

ROD FRANKEL Aiming for 190'

By JOHN WERTHEIMER Bill Penny, of NCAA indoor track

and field champ Kansas, won the ham- mer throw last Saturday in the Kansas Relays, a carnival that attracts most of the top Midwestern competition. His best toss was 166'.

Last Saturday, there was a tri- angular track meet at Franklin Field between Penn, Columbia, and Brown, a trio few would consider likely to provide top competition for anyone. Penn's Rod Frankel won the hammer throw in that meet. His best was 176*6"

So? Is there something terribly unusual going on? Not at all. Quaker coach Jim Tuppeny explained, "It's a combination of factors.The field at Kansas was not that strong. But cer- tainly, Rod is a very talented boy."

Rod himself agrees with the first statement, "Most of the good hammer men in the nation are from the East."

Doherty to retire as Relays head; Tuppeny to take over

KEN DOHERTY 'First—largest—best'

By BOB SAVETT

The 75th Penn Relay Carnival will be Ken Doherty's last.

Doherty, the 63-year-old carnival director who has helped build the two-day championship affair into the greatest in the world in terms of both the number of athletes competing and of overall efficiency, is scheduled to retire at 5:45 PJvl. Saturday.

But don't bet on it. Like last year, Doherty may com-

plete the meet--which hosts twice as many competitors as does the Olympic Games - and his active track career a few minutes early.

Aided by 122 officials, Doherty will spend today and Saturday trying to keep the 6,878 competitors hurrying along. His goal is nothing short of perpetual motion.

"Do you realize that during the first two-and-a-half hours last year, we ran an event every three minutes and six seconds?" asks the gray- haired Quaker track coach of a de- cade ago.

"Do you know what that means?

For each race, 32 competitors must be placed, staggered in their correct lanes in fourpassingzones. Each must be given time to work out baton- exchange distances. There must be a minimum of false starts. Official times for all teams must be taken and recorded, rules violations reported and judged, and places and times reported to the press and spectators- all within three minutes and six secondsl

"There's no meet like this any- where," boasts the 1928 national de- cathelon champion and Olympic bronze medalist, with increasing em- phasis. "Oh, sure, people say that's just Doherty talking- but no one's ever challenged me."

With over 600 high schools, 126 colleges, and countless unattached individuals entered, planning a relays is a year-round job. It's been Do- herty's baby since 1956, and one item the Michigan Ph. D., who directed the 1959 USA-USSR meet in Franklin Field, points to with pride is his

(Continued on page 11)

And although he wasn't about to sing his own praises, he did admit being pleased at last Saturday's effort, which broke his own then week-old Pennsylvania mark.

Still, when you're lookingat things on the national scale, 176' isn't a figure to get very excited about. As Tuppeny says, "The top guys in the NCAA's will do about 190'." And, per- haps coincidentally, perhaps not, Frankel noted that, "Before the end of the year I'd like to hit 190."

Also high on the list of the strong- man's ambitions are a good showing in the Maccabiah Games this summer in Israel. But a lot closer is a meet for which he also has a lot of ambi- tion—the Penn Relays. "It would be a really great meet to do well in. This week I'm putting a big push on."

The big push consists simply of more concentration in Frankel's daily workouts, which usually consist of throwing and weightlifting. "I'll work from about 2:30 to 6:00, be- tween being out on the field and in the weight room. I don't lift just before a meet (because it tends to tighten you up), but I usually do lift three times a week. I do something six days a week," he said.

However, the crew-cut blond was not too reluctant to admit that "I'm not the most conscientious worker. I do my best to work hard at the field, but I don't need the wind or the en- durance of a distance runner. Con- sequently, my sleeping and training habits are not the same." More spe- cifically, they include no reluctance to frequent that noted campus den of whatever-it-is-a-den-of, Smokey Joe's. And it's no secret, at least among the team and its coaches. "Mr. Tuppeny will generally send me home from a Friday practice with a 'Stay out of Sloppy Joe's to- night'," Frankel admitted. "But," he added, "I really wouldn't think of going in there on a Thursday or Friday night."

He expounded further on his out- look, "I'm keeping at the hammer seriously, probably because I've found myself better at it than I expected, and I want to drive for higher goals." But at the same time, "1 like to mix sports with taking advantage of the things that are available on cam-

t$ pus. These are apparently unorganized

Carnival is biggest ever; Wildcats aim to repeat five relay win record

By MARVIN DASH Villanova set a meet record of five Relay Championships of Amer-

ica in the 1968 Penn Relay Carnival, but coach Jumbo Jim Elliot forecasts only a modest two victories for his Wildcats this time.

Most tract experts, however, disagree. They have the Wildcats pegged for an equally outstanding performance, although they would agree with Jumbo that "It's going to be a very good meet."

With 6,878 athletes entered in the biggest relays the world has ever known, it won't be easy for Villanova to repeat its performance of a year ago. The 75th edition of the oldest and largest track and field meet of its kind figures to be one of the best in its long history.

Sixty-two Olympic champions have competed at the Franklin Field carnival since 1895, and today and Saturday, more than twice as many contestants as participated in the entire 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City will be in action.

Elliot Wednesday predicted his team would capture both the dis- tance medly and four mile relays, but the Wildcats look tough in the mile, two mile, and sprint medly relays as well, all of which they won a year ago. Even without Olympic silver medalist Erv Hall, the Main Liners' tremendous depth should carry them far.

Hall, who suffered a pulled hamstring muscle in his right leg three weeks ago in a dual meet against Penn State, was slated to see action in the 440, 880, and sprint medley relays, plus the 120 high hurdles. Harge Davis will take Hall's place in the sprint medley event, and the Villanovans must still be considered a threat there.

Olympic 400 meter silver medalist Larry James is the only member of 1968*s sprint medley team to return, but he, Davis, Dave Fender, and Frank Murphy are capable of bettering 3:18.1, the winning time last year.

Tennessee, with Richmond Flow- ers running one of the 220 legs, will have to be reckoned with. The Vols have already been clocked in 3:19.3 in Florida this year, and along with Yale, Michigan and Manhattan, they have the best chance to upset the Wildcats.

This winter the 'Cats, runnerupto Kansas in the NCAA indoor track championships, set a world record in the two-mile relay. Their indoor time of 7:22.8 is 4.7 seconds better than Tennessee's outdoor mark at the Florida Relays, and with Andy O'Reilly, Chris Mason, Olympian Marty Liquori, and Murphy, the Vil- lanova quartet is quite capable of breaking the meet record of 7:21.4, set by Fordham in 1967.

The 'Cats were placed in a slow qualifying heat for the mile, but that doesn't mean they won't be a factor there. Last year James, the "Mighty Burner," overcame a 10-yard lead by Rice flash Dale Bernauer, and rocketed to a 43.9 clocking for the final 440, the fastest quarter-mile ever recorded at that time, to give the Wildcats their fifth big win.

This year, Tennessee, with a team of Gary Womble, Audry Hardy, Larry Kelly, and Hardee McAlhaney that has already been clocked in 3:08, is the favorite. The Wildcats, who topped the Vols in a dual meet this spring, Yale, Catholic University (which plac- ed third in the NCAA indoor mile relay), and Johnson C. Smith, boast- ing Olympic 1600-meter relay gold medalist and last year's outstanding Penn Relays Athlete, Vince Matthews, will provide stiff competition.

Also in the running are strong foursomes from Florida A. & M., Florida . State, Michigan, Rutgers, N.Y.U., and Mayaguez A. &M.(Puer- to Rico), the dark horse in the race, according to Elliot.

The two races Elliot predicts the Wildcats will win - the four mile and distance medley relays--were events in which they set Carnival marks in 1968.

Dave Patrick is gone, but Jumbo still has a pair of sub four-minute milers, Liquori and Murphy, to cou- ple with Dick Buerkle and Tom Don- nelly, the NCAA cross country champ, for the longer distance. Elliot picks N.Y.U., anchored by the versatile Byron Dyce, to be the most serious contender, with Tennessee, Harvard, and Manhattan providing strong com- petition, although none should threat- en Villanova's 16:27.4 meet record.

In the distance medley, the Wild- cats again are the class of the field,

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individual forays into the world of recreation, since Rod's official ac- tivities are limited to membership in Phi Kappa Sigma and ROTC. He explains, "I was in a lot of activities in high school, and I enjoyed them, but here I'm more serious, and - of course - also find that track takes up a good part of my time."

High school was Monroe High in Rochester, New York, where Frankel player' "ootball, basektball, and base- ball, and high jumped as a sophomore. ("But I wasn't very good.") He never saw a hammer in high school, but he didn't see much of Penn either.

He entered West Point after grad- uation, something which he says had been his ambition most of his life. There, during a screening process

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OLYMPIC SILVER MEDALIST LARRY JAMES anchors the 'Nova mile relay quartet last April, qualifying the foursome for the finals over Vince Matthews of Johnson C. Smith College, James, the Mighty Burner," whizzed to a 43.9 440 clocking last year in the finals; he will be running in the mile, sprint medley, and distance medley relays.