Force, 35 students refuse to serve in army - … · 35 students refuse to serve in army Work on...

8
The Daily Thought we'd never come out, didn't you? VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA. PENNSYLVANIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967 - NO. 30 Air Force, Penn end Spice Rack Class standings 35 students refuse to serve in army Work on Project Spice Rack, cause of a maelstrom of pro- test in the last two years, end- ed on September 1. The U.S. Air Force, con- tractors for the germ war- fare research projects allowed Spice Rack to lapse on that date. Project Summit had been in its terminal stages since June, but the University and the Air Force had agreed to extend Spice Rack until March, 1969. FOLLOWED NEGOTIATIONS Through negotiations between the Air Force and the Univer- sity, however, a special amend- ment to the Spice Rack contract was added during the summer which allowed the agreement to end September 1. The University action to ter- minate Spice Rack came as the result of a Board of Trustees meeting last May at which the Trustees directed President Ham well to divest the Univer- sity of the contracts "as soon as practicable." 100 SLEEP-IN At that time, over 100 stu- dents slept-in at the President's office in College Had to protest the University's involvement in germ warfare research. In a related development. Dr. John N. Hobstetter, former di- rector of the Laboratory for Re- search into the Structure of Matter has been named vice- provost for research at the University. no longer reported By WILLIAM K. MANDEL The University no longer re- ports undergraduate class stand- ings to local draft boards. Class standings are no longer important for the granting of student deferments, according to Registrar Arthur R. Owens, because the new selective serv- ice law eliminates class stand- ing as a criterion for deferment. Under the Selective Service Act of 1967, Owens said, a student must submit only proof of his enrollment in an insti- tution of higher education to qualify for a student deferment. In another development on the draft, male students registering last week were given a choice heretofore unavailable persuant to draft reporting. In the past, students could re- quest the Registrar to report their enrollment and class standing to their draft board; there was no chance to report (Continued on Page 4) STUDENTS LISTEN to Dan Finnerty, a speaker at yester- day's rally in Houston Hall Plaza. During the rally, peti- tions were circulated advocating refusal to serve in the arm- ed forces during the war in Vietnam. (Photo by Paul Blumen- thal). Undergraduates hold ten votes CRO doubles student members Sign 'we won't go' petition at rally Thirty-five University stu- dents have signed a "We Won* Go" petition stating their refu- sal to enter "military serv- ice while the United States is fighting in Vietnam." The students signed the peti- tion during and after an anti- draft rally in Houston Hall Plaza yesterday morning. "We, the undersigned," the petition reads, "as American men of draft age, may be asked by our government to participate in the war in Vietnam. We have examined the history and the na- ture of this war, and have reach- ed the conclusion that our par- ticipation in it would be con- trary to the dictates of our consciences." "We therefore declare," the statement continues, "our de- termination to refuse military service while the United States is fighting in Vietnam. Our inten- tion in signing this statement is to unite with other draft-age men who share our convictions, in or- der to turn our personal moral rejection of this war into ef- fective political opposition to it." 'WE WON'T GO i By STEPHEN MARMON Undergraduate students will have half of the votes on the Committee on Residence Opera- tion, (CRO) under a new plan announced yesterday by Vice- Robinson demands houses revitalize pledge programs Unless campus fraternities "clean their own backyards," there will be a definite crack- down on all houses not conform- ing to standards. Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson said yes- terday. Robinson, formerly direc- tor of residence, was appoint* ed Acting Dean September 1 to replace Dean James Craft, who is on a year's leave to GERALD ROBINSON Cleaning up back yard write bis thesis for a doctor- ate in international relations. "There is no place on this campus for any hazing," Rob- inson said, "but we hope the fraternities will evolve a com- plete plan and then present it to us for review. We'd like to see them take up the responsibili- ty for getting a solution for these problems." He also said be plans to meet next week with Frederick Kempin, vice-dean of the Whar- ton School, who is heading the Ad Hoc Committee on Frater- nity Hazing. Kempin said yesterday the committee will move into high gear in the next few weeks and that they will present their find- ings to Vice- Provost A. Leo Lev- in as soon as possible. Student Government Assem- bly Speaker James Rosenberg also called on the Interfraternity Council to reform its practices. "The Administration must have known about the hazing prac- tices that were going on last semester," Rosenberg said. "However, they are playing a hands-off policy. If die frater- nities want this policy to con- tinue they're going to have to clean up their practices," "Hazing must be cleaned (Continued on Page 3) Provost for Student Affairs A, Leo Levin. The composition of the com- mittee will be changed from five students, five faculty, and five administration members to in- clude five more students. The members of the commit- tee will be nominated by the Steering Committee, of the Uni- versity Council on September 27. The student members will be appointed by the student gov- ernment, subject to approval by the Deans of Men and Women and the Steering Committee. The new plan was worked out after several months of discus- sion between the Administration and student leaders. Levin said that the new plan was just another example of the steady increase in student involvement In Uni- versity affairs. "We have been seeing, continually more respon- sible and involved student body and we are happy to see the di- rection it has been moving in," he said. NEW APPOINTMENTS Several new appointments have been made in the student affairs area. Dean of Women Alice Emerson has been ap- pointed Assistant Vice-Provost, replacing Robert Eilers, who is returning to a position in the Wharton School. Emerson, who retains her position as Dean, described the post as the "eyes and ears of the student affairs office." Levin spoke of the two new Special Assistants to the Vice- Provost, Drs. Robert Bamberg and Joel Conarroe. "We basic- ally want a two-pronged pro- gram. First we are locking for a more meaningful faculty-stu- dent relationship and secondly we want students to learn more about, and better use, the many fine activities the city of Phila- delphia has to offer them. In is in these two fields that the Spe- cial Assistants will be doing much of their work," he said. Both Emerson and Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson will be members of the Com- mittee on Residence Opera- tions. Emerson said it was the job of CRO to determine the out- er limits of the regulations and that the administrative details should be worked out inside those guidelines. She cited the new rules about freshmen women as an example of the progress made by CRO in the last year. (First semester freshmen women will (Continued on Page 5) The.petition forms are headed with the "We Won't Go" slogan. Another petition was circula- ted which terms the Vietnam war "unjust and immoral" and states that "no young men should be forced to participate in such a war." This petition garnered 54 sig- natures. At the rally, a speaker told the crowd of 200 that Univer- sity students should form a union to resist the draft. ANTI-DRAFT UNION Lawrence Elle, a member of the Philadelphia Anti-Draft Un- ion, said, "We're not going to (Continued on Page 3) Scarce housing forces use of YMCA as residence hall Five sophomores lived for the last week in the Philadelphia YMCA because of the lack of housing in the University area. However, the students are no* all in the men's dormitories or apartments, according to Ed- win Ledwell, newly-appointed director of residence. Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson - who was Ledwell's predecessor - said that these students were those who did not participate in room draw last spring and planned to get apart- ments upon their return to cam- pus. "They got themselves caught in this bind because of the tight situation in bousing," he said. "However, we have been able to provide places for them, even though they had said they didn't want to live in the dorms." Ledwell said that unless some- thing completely unexpected happens, sophomores will again be allowed to leave the dorms and get apartments next spring. "I can see no other solution to the housing problem cur- rently facing us. However we are all aware and concerned of need for morehousingandthe problem is being studied right now," he said. Ledwell said that the renova- tion of Morris Dormitory would begin in the next two weeks and that the completion date for the project was still January 1968. He said the Trustees had ap- proved the renovation of at least four other dormitories next year, including Bodine Dormi- tory. The cost of renovating Mor- ris is now estimated at $275,000. The Trustees originally al- located $175,000 and the addi- tional money is being donated by the Class of 1943 as its 25th Reunion Gift. »

Transcript of Force, 35 students refuse to serve in army - … · 35 students refuse to serve in army Work on...

The Daily

Thought we'd never come out, didn't you?

VOL. LXXXIII PHILADELPHIA. PENNSYLVANIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967 - NO. 30

Air Force, Penn end Spice Rack Class standings

35 students refuse to serve in army Work on Project Spice Rack,

cause of a maelstrom of pro- test in the last two years, end- ed on September 1.

The U.S. Air Force, con- tractors for the germ war- fare research projects allowed Spice Rack to lapse on that date.

Project Summit had been in its terminal stages since June, but the University and the Air Force had agreed to extend Spice Rack until March, 1969.

FOLLOWED NEGOTIATIONS

Through negotiations between the Air Force and the Univer- sity, however, a special amend- ment to the Spice Rack contract was added during the summer which allowed the agreement to end September 1.

The University action to ter- minate Spice Rack came as the result of a Board of Trustees meeting last May at which the Trustees directed President Ham well to divest the Univer- sity of the contracts "as soon as practicable."

100 SLEEP-IN

At that time, over 100 stu- dents slept-in at the President's office in College Had to protest the University's involvement in germ warfare research.

In a related development. Dr. John N. Hobstetter, former di- rector of the Laboratory for Re- search into the Structure of Matter has been named vice- provost for research at the University.

no longer reported By WILLIAM K. MANDEL

The University no longer re- ports undergraduate class stand- ings to local draft boards.

Class standings are no longer important for the granting of student deferments, according to Registrar Arthur R. Owens, because the new selective serv- ice law eliminates class stand- ing as a criterion for deferment.

Under the Selective Service Act of 1967, Owens said, a student must submit only proof of his enrollment in an insti- tution of higher education to qualify for a student deferment.

In another development on the draft, male students registering last week were given a choice heretofore unavailable persuant to draft reporting.

In the past, students could re- quest the Registrar to report their enrollment and class standing to their draft board; there was no chance to report

(Continued on Page 4)

STUDENTS LISTEN to Dan Finnerty, a speaker at yester- day's rally in Houston Hall Plaza. During the rally, peti- tions were circulated advocating refusal to serve in the arm- ed forces during the war in Vietnam. (Photo by Paul Blumen- thal).

Undergraduates hold ten votes

CRO doubles student members

Sign 'we won't go' petition at rally

Thirty-five University stu- dents have signed a "We Won* Go" petition stating their refu- sal to enter "military serv- ice while the United States is fighting in Vietnam."

The students signed the peti- tion during and after an anti- draft rally in Houston Hall Plaza yesterday morning.

"We, the undersigned," the petition reads, "as American men of draft age, may be asked by our government to participate in the war in Vietnam. We have examined the history and the na- ture of this war, and have reach- ed the conclusion that our par- ticipation in it would be con- trary to the dictates of our consciences."

"We therefore declare," the statement continues, "our de- termination to refuse military service while the United States is fighting in Vietnam. Our inten- tion in signing this statement is to unite with other draft-age men who share our convictions, in or- der to turn our personal moral rejection of this war into ef- fective political opposition to it."

'WE WON'T GO • i

By STEPHEN MARMON

Undergraduate students will have half of the votes on the Committee on Residence Opera- tion, (CRO) under a new plan announced yesterday by Vice-

Robinson demands houses revitalize pledge programs

Unless campus fraternities "clean their own backyards," there will be a definite crack- down on all houses not conform- ing to standards. Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson said yes- terday.

Robinson, formerly direc- tor of residence, was appoint* ed Acting Dean September 1 to replace Dean James Craft, who is on a year's leave to

GERALD ROBINSON Cleaning up back yard

write bis thesis for a doctor- ate in international relations.

"There is no place on this campus for any hazing," Rob- inson said, "but we hope the fraternities will evolve a com- plete plan and then present it to us for review. We'd like to see them take up the responsibili- ty for getting a solution for these problems."

He also said be plans to meet next week with Frederick Kempin, vice-dean of the Whar- ton School, who is heading the Ad Hoc Committee on Frater- nity Hazing.

Kempin said yesterday the committee will move into high gear in the next few weeks and that they will present their find- ings to Vice- Provost A. Leo Lev- in as soon as possible.

Student Government Assem- bly Speaker James Rosenberg also called on the Interfraternity Council to reform its practices. "The Administration must have known about the hazing prac- tices that were going on last semester," Rosenberg said. "However, they are playing a hands-off policy. If die frater- nities want this policy to con- tinue they're going to have to clean up their practices,"

"Hazing must be cleaned (Continued on Page 3)

Provost for Student Affairs A, Leo Levin.

The composition of the com- mittee will be changed from five students, five faculty, and five administration members to in- clude five more students.

The members of the commit- tee will be nominated by the Steering Committee, of the Uni- versity Council on September 27. The student members will be appointed by the student gov- ernment, subject to approval by the Deans of Men and Women and the Steering Committee.

The new plan was worked out after several months of discus- sion between the Administration and student leaders. Levin said that the new plan was just another example of the steady increase in student involvement In Uni- versity affairs. "We have been seeing, continually more respon- sible and involved student body and we are happy to see the di- rection it has been moving in," he said.

NEW APPOINTMENTS Several new appointments

have been made in the student affairs area. Dean of Women Alice Emerson has been ap- pointed Assistant Vice-Provost, replacing Robert Eilers, who is returning to a position in the Wharton School. Emerson, who retains her position as Dean, described the post as the "eyes and ears of the student affairs office."

Levin spoke of the two new Special Assistants to the Vice- Provost, Drs. Robert Bamberg and Joel Conarroe. "We basic- ally want a two-pronged pro- gram. First we are locking for a more meaningful faculty-stu- dent relationship and secondly we want students to learn more about, and better use, the many fine activities the city of Phila-

delphia has to offer them. In is in these two fields that the Spe- cial Assistants will be doing much of their work," he said.

Both Emerson and Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson will be members of the Com- mittee on Residence Opera- tions. Emerson said it was the job of CRO to determine the out- er limits of the regulations and that the administrative details should be worked out inside those guidelines. She cited the new rules about freshmen women as an example of the progress made by CRO in the last year. (First semester freshmen women will

(Continued on Page 5)

The.petition forms are headed with the "We Won't Go" slogan.

Another petition was circula- ted which terms the Vietnam war "unjust and immoral" and states that "no young men should be forced to participate in such a war."

This petition garnered 54 sig- natures.

At the rally, a speaker told the crowd of 200 that Univer- sity students should form a union to resist the draft.

ANTI-DRAFT UNION

Lawrence Elle, a member of the Philadelphia Anti-Draft Un- ion, said, "We're not going to

(Continued on Page 3)

Scarce housing forces use of YMCA as residence hall

Five sophomores lived for the last week in the Philadelphia YMCA because of the lack of housing in the University area.

However, the students are no* all in the men's dormitories or apartments, according to Ed- win Ledwell, newly-appointed director of residence.

Acting Dean of Men Gerald Robinson - who was Ledwell's predecessor - said that these students were those who did not participate in room draw last spring and planned to get apart- ments upon their return to cam- pus.

"They got themselves caught in this bind because of the tight situation in bousing," he said. "However, we have been able to provide places for them, even though they had said they didn't want to live in the dorms."

Ledwell said that unless some- thing completely unexpected happens, sophomores will again

be allowed to leave the dorms and get apartments next spring.

"I can see no other solution to the housing problem cur- rently facing us. However we are all aware and concerned of need for morehousingandthe problem is being studied right now," he said.

Ledwell said that the renova- tion of Morris Dormitory would begin in the next two weeks and that the completion date for the project was still January 1968.

He said the Trustees had ap- proved the renovation of at least four other dormitories next year, including Bodine Dormi- tory.

The cost of renovating Mor- ris is now estimated at $275,000.

The Trustees originally al- located $175,000 and the addi- tional money is being donated by the Class of 1943 as its 25th Reunion Gift.

»

PAGE TWO THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967

IN OTHER WORDS, THE CREEPING* DUNG»eON DEPARTMENT STORE HAS ABSORBED TUST A50UT EVERYTHING EUT TH^ MEN'S ROOM.

N6W RECORD SHOP! New &IPT SHOPi AND FOUR TIMES AS /AANY HARDBACKS LAST YEAR. i=

MOU3TON

i

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967

Living, learning to merge By ELLEN GOREN

The long-awaited integration of academics and dormitory living is finally seeing hope of realization mis year.

A pilot counseling program for residents of four freshman men's dormitories and the open- ing of the Redstone and Brown- stone housekeeping units for women are offering students an opportunity to relate their aca- demic interests with their day- to-day living.

Under the pilot plan, all the residents of a dormitory unit will be assigned the same aca- demic advisers. This is a switch from the previous method, un- der which there often were as many different advisers as stu- dents per dorm.

The rr .Jor advantage of the plan, according to Dr. Roger Walmsley, director of the Gen- eral Honors program and in- novator of the counseling plan is mat dorm counselors and ad- visers will get to know each other and will be able to work together more easily.

In describing the faculty role, Walmsley commented, "He can offer, as a more mature per- son in academia, help for a stu- dent in deciding what curricu- lum he can put together to meet educational and vocational goals. He can provide a unique and subtle insight."

If successful, the program might be implemented on a

class-wide basis for the Class of 1972.

Redstone and Brownstone Halls, although different in their emphasis, are providing their women with this same academ- ic-social relationship.

The 36 women in these two houses, at 42nd and Spruce Sts. are grouped according to the area of their general academic interest.

The principle underlying the project, as noted by Dean of Women Alice Emerson at the announcement of the dorms* opening, is "the notion that the quality of the educational ex- perience may be greatly en- hanced by utilizing opportuni- ties available in residence halls to bridge the gap between what goes on in the life of the student."

This year Mrs. Emerson ob- served that in spite of the sim- ilarities between the freshman pilot plan and the women's resi- dences, the orientation of die two projects still differs. The men's program will aid its stu- dents in selecting their future areas of interest, while group- ed in Redstone and Brownstone have already decided their ma- jor plans.

However desirable it may be to house students in this man- ner, further developments must wait until the new projects have been evaluated, according to the dean.

THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Draft protest (Continued from Page 1)

Instead, he urged, "We must circulate and sign *We Won't Go' petitions" to demonstrate to President Johnson the war in Vietnam is "immoral."

The rally which started short- ly after 11 A.M. and lasted un- til noon, was sponsored by Stu- dents for a Democratic Society (SDS) and Elle's group.

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Jonathan Goldstein, another rally speaker, said the "rea- son for these petitions is that we won't fight in a genocidal Arar.'' Goldstein claimed that the U.S. was using "the Lazy Dog bomb" In Vietnam. This bomb, he alleged, contains 10,000 pieces of razor blades that could only be used for killing and maiming people. He said this charge supported his allegation of "genocide."

Bob Brand (Col. '67) now in his first year of graduate work, told the group that Americans should be allowed "freedom of conscience" to decide whether to fight in Vietnam."

After a spectator asked Brand to differentiate "between a con- scientious objector and a coward," the speaker said it wasn't important to distinguish between them.

Brand also charged the U.S. government does not recognize as valid the Christian concept of a "just war."

Dan Finnerty, (Col. '67) who also spoke, called the recent Vietnamese elections "a farce." Finnerty, now in Pennsylvan- ia's graduate school, asked, "Is this the democracy we're fighting for in Vietnam ?"

Hazing scored (Continued from Page 1)

up," Rosenberg said, "This is definitely under the jurisdic- tion of IF and the IF Judici- ary, but if they don't handle it, some part of the Assembly and the Student Judiciary will get in there and find out what is really going on."

Ross calls for new community of students

"We shall develop a new form of student community: A self- regulating student community," the chairman of the philosophy department told 1700 entering freshman last week.

Dr. James F. Ross, associate professdr and chairman of philosophy, also called for a revitalizarion of the life and status of undergraduates in his Opening Exercises address.

"I do not want to hand over to student experiment the vital educational function which identifies the university," said Ross, * 'but we should hand over enough important power and responsi- bility to create a genuine un- dergraduate society, and one that has an identifiable life- style, with esprit-de-corps and lifelong loyalty."

Ross said that two premises must be recognized before a stu- dent community can be realized.

First, he said, the belief that the University stands in loco parentis must be dismissed. "That," said Ross, "means the student community should have its own mores, its own ethics and its own sanctions; mat is what we expect of any professional group."Thefacul- ty and administration, he add- ed, should not be thought of as "symbolic parents who must be flaunted, flattered, fooled or forced into a change."

Second, he advocated, the "ex- aggerated moral individualism which supposes that some stu- dent practices are not subject to community regulation" must be discarded. All the students' ac- tions are best considered as in regard to other members of the community.

"When we get our premises straight," said Ross, "then we can prepare for the students to undertake as large a meas- ure of the control of themselves as is possible, given the objec- tives of the whole university. This is more man a transfer of government, it is the creation of a social unit."

GPH notes expansion

The University's most urgent unmet need is additional stu- dent housing, President Gay- lord Harnwell declared at Open- ing Exercises last Wednesday.

Speaking before a large crowd in Irvine Auditorium, Harnwell described the progress Penn- sylvania is making in Its con- struction program. Six build- ings will open this year, in- cluding the Dietrich Graduate Library Center, the Gimbel Gymnasium, the Fine Arts Build- ing, the Hollenback Athletic Cen- ter, the Physical Sciences ex- pansion, and the Franklin Build- ing (General Services and Ad- ministration).

Harnwell said the over $60 million already collected in the University's $93 million Devel- opment Plan would be used in the construction of ten buildings in the coming year. He cited the Araienberg Center for the Per- forming Arts, the new Social Sci- ences Center, the Freshman Dining Commons, the Humani- ties Building, and other planned facilities as examples of the progress the University is mak- ing.

He also invited student opin- ion on the upcoming renovation of the Men's Dormitories, a $5 million project scheduled to start next week with the reno- vation of Morris Dormitory.

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PAGE FOUR THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

!

5 The f)^M^^.Tl,Trt^!^^ 1967

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967

M\y Pennsylvanian DENNIS WILEN Managing Editor

JAMES J. RESTIVO, JR. Features Editor

DONALD M. MORRISON Editor-in- cKi«f

ROBERT I. TUTEUR Business Monogor

A. STEVEN PERELMAN Executive Editor

RICHARD SHAPIRO Editorial Chairman

LAWRENCE D. KROHN Sports Editor

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

♦ >:;:::;:;-::::::;:::v:::::::::::x:::::::y:!:-:: :•::;>•:::•:>■.:■:::■: :•:;:;

Twilight time At the conclusion of the recent spring

term, this newspaper published an edi- torial that reportedly elicited somewhat severe reactions, both pro and con, from Its readership. Contending that President Harnwell had not kept pace with the problems of a changing university, the editorial suggested that he consider retiring. It is our belief that the contention still holds. Following is a reprint of that editorial with some further reflections appended.

*****

Dr. Caylord P. Harnwell — distinguish- ed professor of physics and, since 1953, president of the University — is an old man.

We do not intend this remark to be deroga- tory: Harnwell has led the University through 14 years of growth and improve- ment unequalled in the University's 227- year history.

But Harnwell is 63 years old now, and will be 64 late in September. He is fac- ing problems today that he probably didn't believe could exist when he assumed the presidency. Students and faculty are de- manding a greater voice in policy decis- ions. The University has become entangled beyond any 1953 projections in the labyrin- thine machinery of the Federal government through research contracts. And the entire field of higher education has expanded at such a rate that the University has been hard pressed to meet rising application rates and increased construction costs simply to stay abreast of the expansion.

The University's predicament today is quite different than It was 14 years ago, when it was a question of cultivating sources of revenue and undertaking studies into what the University could do if it bad more money. The goals were fairly clear then: growth and improvement within the current concept of what then constituted a good Uni- versity.

But the concept has been modified by pressures from students, faculty and the government, and by the proliferation of higher education in general.

Harnwell has adapted remarkably well to these pressures. The University has made gains in nearly every category in which uni- versities are judged, despite these pres- sures.

But the rimes show signs of overcom- ing Harnwell's rate of adaption. The two- year-old ICR controversy has grown nearly out of hand. There is considerable evi- dence in the form of Harnwell's remarks to ICR protesters that the President is fail- ing to communicate with his faculty and his student body. This failure may be due as much to his lack of understanding as to his opponents' stubbornness. In any case, he has not foreseen the dimensions that the issue would take.

Harnwell has disappointed many under- graduates by appearing to remain remote and uninterested in their desire for aca- demic reform for sophisticated social rule reform and for better undergraduate fa- cilities.

Harnwell's success as a fund-raiser and image booster may have forced him to concentrate on what he does well rather than on what students wish be would do. He is definitely not of their generation. In fact, in the lingo of newsmagazines, he has allowed a "generation gap" to arise on this campus.

It is for these reasons that we suggest to Dr. Harnwell that he think about step-

ping aside in the near future for a young- er man, a man who is a little closer In years and outlook to the students for which the University exists.

The University has firmly established itself financially. Although the $93 million Development Ran is now limping a little, the University now has the fund-raising ap- paratus necessary to accomplish almost any president's aims.

President Harnwell deserves the admir- ation of the Trustees and of every member of the University community for what he has accomplished in his 14 years. It is now for the Trustees to consider the new di- rections that higher education have taken, tne new territories that have been opened, and the changes in leadership that may be necessary to keep the University on its current climb to prominence and excel- lence.

*****

The University still needs an Infusion of young blood at the top. Although the con- troversy over chemical and biological war- fare research here has apparently been satisfactorily resolved, the lesson of the crisis is still with us. An entrenched, some- what befuddled administration persisted in dealing in evasions, half-truths, and blatant lies for a period of almost a year. No mat- ter what the subject matter of the deceit, the fact of Its use is damnable in and of it- self.

Other equally discomforting issues con- front the University, issues that could be handled most effectively by a vigorous and straightforward president. A new, young administration should begin immediately a long overdue re-evaluation of the role of the student In the University. As Dr. James Ross said in bis Opening Exercises ad- dress, the concept of "in loco parentis" is outmoded and ill-suited to the contem- porary university scene. The student and the student body must be delegated an unprecedented amount of power in the conduct of their own affairs. With that delegation of authority must come a cor- responding delegation of responsibility, so that, while the student becomes sole au- thor of his actions, he alone stands re- sponsible for the consequences of those actions.

While the University reassesses the role of students within, it must also look again at its own Institutional role from without. The core of last year's chemical and biological warfare research crisis was the difference in opinion among students, schol- ars, and administrators over the role of the university in society. That role, at least for this institution, must be clarified. This community of scholars and their apprentices must re-examine and redefine the part it wants to play in society and should opt for becoming a repository of ideas and ideals rather than for remain- ing a development laboratory for emotion- less politicians.

There aren't many young, brilliant, excit- ing, competent, humanitarian men or women in this country capable of administering the University of Pennsylvania. A national news magazine has written that more than 300 institutions of higher learning are current- ly searching for presidents. Finding the right man takes years. The outgoing presi- dent of the University of Chicago served two years notice of his retirement to enable the trustees there to find the right successor. President Harnwell could well do the same.

The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia. Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods, and the last seven class days of each term. One issue published in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall. )4dt and Chestnut Sts. at the rate of $10.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. News and editorial phones: (215) $94-7*35. Business and advertising: 594 7534 (If busy call 594-7535).

Wt> (fry

WHAT ARE THE VISITING HOURS FOR WOMEN?

Letters to the editor BOMB, GUN AND PiLL

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian:

I, a member of the College for Women, and a junior at Penn, feel that among the grosser injustices here Is the DORMITORY SYSTEM. It is time that someone said some- thing about the state of the women's regu- lations. Last year, in righteous indignation, I agreed with the complaints of the men's dormitory Inmates about their regulations. But look at ours: We have to fill out forms Just to leave after twelve midnight or on weekends, we are absolutely not allowed to sign out to the homes of single males, over- night and, to top it off, we have to live under this tyranny until we are seniors. What is more. If we decide we are rich enough to let our parents pay for our room while we slip off and live with friends, we dis- cover a new law not in the women's regu- lation book.

We may not sign out for more than half the semester - under penalty of dis- ciplinary action and perhaps expulsion. So those of us desiring escape are forced to sneak around, get kicked out, or BEAR IT. And this last thing has been the course most of us have taken.

Why must we, for no other reason except that we are women, have no choice in where or how we want to live. I, at twenty, am two years older than men who are drafted, and one year younger than people who vote. And yet, I am treated no better than a child, needing a curb on her daily and nightly de- sires.

Am 1 not as mature as my male counter parts7 They have no sign outs and may leave the dorm after their sophomore year. I am told that because of shortage In hous- ing and ideas of student unity, students are made to live in the dorms. However, this does not account for the fact that we must sign out while men do not and the fact that we must live an extra year in the dorms.

I have heard the our women's regulation are more liberal than those at other colleges. But does this make them good or fair? This doesn't make dormitory life any easier for me or many others. I am not asking for abolition of the dormitories - this is another situation. I am Just asking for the abolition of the unfair double standard. The university must get into its red-bricked head that we are living in the era of the bomb, the tear gas gun. and THE PILL I

Elisabeth Swearingen CW *69

TSK TSK

Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian!

I think it is disgraceful for a college newspaper to behave in the manner that The Daily Pennsylvanian does sometimes. The editorial board does not represent the ma- jority opiruon on campus. However, people not affiliated with the University who read The Daily Pennsylvanian take the views presented as those of a large sector of the students. Such a malicious editorial as was In the campus paper on Friday, April 28, 1967, was absolutely uncalled for. In fact your behavior was childish: you made an un- justified and irresponsible suggestion that Dr. G. P. Harnwell resign his position, and then you suspended publication of The Daily Pennsylvanian until autumn. Such be- havior is degrading to the University and disheartening to its students. Your actions speak louder than your words and you do not advocate free speech when you do not even let other views be heard on the subject.

Victor Korsun Graduate Student Moor* School

ROTC open house • The University's Army ROTC unit will hold an open house 2 P.M. Thursday at its headquar- ters, 3905 Spruce St.

The program will feature a display of captured Viet Cong equipment and an exhibition of techniques by the Penn Cadet Rangers.

Class standings (Continued from Page 1)

Owens also said that no date has been S«t for a proposed student referendum on Uni- versity reporting of draft status to the selective service.

The referendum Is the result erf a letter sent to Provost David Goddard by Philoman- thean;. Society Moderator Brie Ross late last spring. Ross suggested the referendum in

. that letter.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967

Humphrey Bogart stars at Catacombs festival

THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Campus Commentary. PAGE FIVE

By Lucy Conge'

Yes, Bogart, the perennial tough guy who 's really a sen* tlmental slob underneath, Is ap- pearing on campus this week in four of his greats.

The Bogart Film Festival, running through Friday, is the Catacombs' kick-off for the new year in campus entertainment.

Bogie's Best

Tonight's film is "Key Lar- go" an Academy Award win- ner starring Lauren Bacall, Ed- ward G. Robinson, Claire Tre- vor and Lionel Barrymore— and Humphrey Bogart. For eith- er 25 or 35 cents (costs vary with film rentals) you can see this classic at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.

"Treasure of Sierra Madre" is Thursday night's attraction. Same price, same times. The

Shabel named (Continued from Page 8)

tics when the appointment to Penn was made.

The Union City, N.J. native graduated in 1954 from Duke University where he started at basketball in his junior and senior years. After serving two years as an officer in the Air Force, Shabel became employ- ed in ESSO Standard Oil's sales trainee program where he ac- quired valuable experience In public relations.

Shabel spent only a year with ESSO, returning to Duke in the capacity of assistant basketball coach. In 1963, after six years at Duke, he was named head coach at Connecticut where he enjoyed four successful cam- paigns.

Asked why he left the Storrs campus, Shabel replied, "I wanted to be involved in athle- tic administration. I had a very easy decision to make. I'd al- ways thought of coaching as a real wholesome background for administrative work."

Catacombs' publicity bills this 1948 film as "one of •the' Bogart movies to see."

"Casablanca/' made in 1942, is on the marquee for Friday night. This is the "Play it again, Sam,' one. Show times are 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. Get there early, and avoid the freshman onslaught.

Bogart in one of his "tough guy" roles.

CRO changed (Continued from Page 1)

now be allowed unlimited late leaves and overnights while last year they were restricted to ten a month.)

Robinson said additional changes in the social rules would also be partially depen- dent upon changes in University facilities. "As lounges and commons rooms become avail- abe," he said, "we view the so- cial rules in a different light. But must consider both the free- dom of the individual and his right to privacy in viewing these rules.

BULLETIN! THE BOOK STORE IS NOW FEATURING

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now at the bookstore for just $6.75 indexed. It will still be a lifesaver ten years from now.

GET YOUR OWN COPY TODAY.

WEBSTER'S SEVENTH NEW COLLEGIATE You'll recognize Hbyti* bright nd jackot.

Penn and the Pepsi James J. Restivo Features Editor

Pity the poor freshman. The absurdies of a new academic year, which the sophisticated upperclassman has learned to take in stride, torment and confuse the staunchest of Penn yearlings. The beaucratic vexations which the University takes for granted - the rigors of registration, the drudgery of drop-and- add, the agony of searching for non-existent required reading material - leave the new- comer bom bewildered and defeated. But even more more depressingly overpowering is the CULTURAL SHOCK of entering the upside-down world of 1968 university life.

For a generation of students nurtured and educated by television, the true picture of

• campus life has never been witness. Forget the world of the "Pepsi generation." Throw away these Playboy ads. They no longer exist. The crew-cut Jock in the clean-cut clothes is extinct. The Pepsi generation has been replaced by the "flower-power" chil- dren. Potato chips have been discarded for poppy seeds. And an apple for the prof can not hold its own against a bunch of ripe ba- nanas# THE NEW BREED

Forget your oldheros: Mickey Mantle, James Bond, John Kennedy. They have been super- ceded by greater personnages: TimothyLeary, Allen Ginsburg, Staughton Lynd. Even Es- quire, the "magazine for men," will tell you that ". . . the football captain is finished as the local hero, replaced in the hearts of your classmates by the campus hippie who sells marijauna . . . anarchy reigns: restrictions, requirements, rules are all going up in ba- nana smoke."

And freshman, naive and innocent as you are, fear not. You WILL be educated. Anyone with the mental capacity to gain acceptance to an Ivy League university will soon discover that his values and ideas are outmoded and obso- lete. What you have mistaken for religion is merely superstition. For patriotism, ignor- ance. For obedience, innocence. For love, naivete.

To be IN is the thing, and you must learn the rules of the game before winning campus success. It is IN to be a non-conformist. It is OUT to refuse to conform to non-confor- mity. It is IN to be anti-Vietnam, anti-John- son, anti-administration, anti-apple pie-and- mother. And by all means it is OUT to be a neutral, moderate, or even apathetic student.

So freshmen, go out there and get ahead. Use those sugar cubes in your cakes, eat plen- ty of bananas, plant poppy seeds where ivy once grew. Sing out for student rights, carry those picket signs. Throw your razer blades

and castigate your local barber. But, be char- itable in your glorious moments. Do not forget your humble beginnings which have not passed to dust—the Pepsi generation.

• * *

Penn Comment's first issue of the semester was perhaps their best effort since the pub- lication's inception four years ago - chiefly because of the "expose" on the Penn Nursing SchooL This problem has been prevalent on campus for many years, yet nothing has ever been done to alleviate the situation. It seems that the three-year nursing students come un* der the jurisdiction of the University Hospital pres, Virginia, the same one that is responsible for Student Health) and are hence unapproach- able by any responsible student groups. In addition, the nurses'own student Council meet- ings are little more than rubber stamp approv- als of such far-reaching programs as selling Christmas cards to finance the yearbook.

ELUSIVE SOLUTION Penn Comment catagorized many abuses

prevalent in the Nursing program such as monthly * Veigh-ins." Many more can be list- ed. For example, social privileges can be lift- ed for such grave abuses as forgetting to hand in a dental or medical check-up slip, or tardiness to classes.

The solution to the problems of the nursing program is an elusive one. The nurses are in- capable of sponsoring their own ceforms due to archaic restrictions and threats. University discontent has no outlet to the Hospital ad- ministrators. But something has to be done. The question remains: Who will do it, and what?

* * •

Another publication came out this week, also. Veritas, a conservative newspaper on the Penn campus, has the potential for being the vocal organ of responsible conservative opinion at the University. But, if the first Issue of the semester is any indication, the Journal will never gain acceptance. For its editors have not discovered the difference between responsi- ble Journalism and inflated propaganda.

An advertising campaign based upon an at- tack upon another school publication indicates that the editors have not yet found a product they can promote on its own merits. The Daily Pennsylvanian prints both facts and opin- ions, and does not attempt to pass one off for the other. And Veritas knows it. It is unfor- tunate that a publication designed for a con- servative public would fall into the same error that many of today's liberals find them- selves: inability to respect the other side's view simply because it is the other side.

Houston Hall Board P^edenii

U John Fitzgerald Kennedy: Years of Lightning,

Day of Drums"

TODAY September 13

Irvine Auditorium

Shows at 4, 7, 10 P.M.

Also, tickets now on sale

at Houston Hall for September 29

Spectacular with Lovin' Spoonful and Chuck Berry

PAGE SIX THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967

C.W. announces 7966-67 Dean's List The College for Women has

announced the names of 82 wom- en who made Dean's List and 200 who made Distinction List for the 1966-67 academic year.

Freshmen on the Dean's List are Diane Abramson, Christie Anderson, Myra Bellin, Bonnie Boxer, Bonnie Brenman, Eliza- beth Ciner, Deborah Davis, Janet Declarke, Marsha Dubrow, Vincetta Ferraro, Susan Fltz- Hugh, Elaine Fort, and Susan Fulmer.

Renee Glaser, Janette God- dard, Barbara Gordon, Jane Grant, Janice Hastrup, Valerie Hobart, Judith Jones, Francine Kimel, Marcia Kipnees, Bar- bara Kleeman, Francine Kuber, Patricia Leon, Merriam Luskin, J1U Mesirov, and Gail Mitchell.

Faye Peitzman, Elizabeth Perdue, Marlene Rosenberg, Marianna Ruch, Elizabeth Sla- ter, Nona Slutsky, Patricia Wardlaw, Irene Waznakowski, andHana Wirth.

Sophomores are Roberta Agre, Nancy Alderman. Sybil Barrett, Jo Ann Berlin, Arlene Bernstein, Diane Blumenthal, Ann Brody, Barbara Burrows, Mary Caporaletti, Ellen Cohen, Ellen Coin, Laura Colker, and Julia Curtin.

Edith Feng, Joan Haverson, Susan Hildebrand, Nadya Holl- stein, Carol Jaffe, Sandra Mar- tin, Eileen Mauskopf, Lots Mc-

Lean, Alica Merrill and Diana Niles.

Marjorie Ostcrlund, Joa/i Per- rick, Rlmgaila Salys, Anita sa- met, Ellen Silverman, Ruth Ten- zer, and Karlyn Waranch.

Juniors are Patricia Bream, Mary Christman, Lisbeth Da* vidow, MadyEdelstein, Sue Gold- en, Jeanne Gorrissen, Linda Jentleson, Sharon Katz, and Ca- rolyn Lowther.

Susan Rosbrow, Susan Saslaw, Penny smith, Elizabeth Van We- zel, Judi Wallace, and Caroline Whitney.

Freshmen on the Distinction List are Beryl Abrams, Carol Avins, Efthimia Bastas, Mar- lene Bramson, Patricia Dinneen, Lucille Chia, Alice Coblentz, Cornelia Dellenbaugh, and Neidi Feldman.

Marlon Field, Marian Glick, Michaela Hamilton, Joan Hor- witz, Cathryn Kelley, Andrea Kusko, Florence Lai, Alice Mann, Mary McLaughlin, Susan Paton, Elissa Sohagrin, Bar- bara Schatz, Kathryn Schoonov- er, Eileen Schwartz, Kathryn Slott, Barbara Stocking, Deb- orah Weber, Robin Wishner, Lenore Yaffee, and Margaret Zabor.

Sophomores are Rosaline Al- drich, Roslyn Aronson, Reva Basch, Emily Brecker, Mary Celnik, Graeme Colton, Helen Cook, Nancy Denbo, June Dupre, Dean Evans, BettyForman, Ned- da Gold, Sandra Goldberg, and Myra Goldenberg.

Catherine Hearn, Patricia

Herbrandson, Mary Holt. Ann Jacobson, Emily Johnson, Kath- ryn Jones, Janet Kaplan, Toni Katz, Susan King, Diane Kole- sar, Robin Koloday, Tricia Kraftmeyer, Judith Leibert, Ja- nice Levin, Antonietta Mastro- cila, and Karen Orlin.

Also, Marsha palitz, Linda Perle, Ingrid Philipp, Sylvia Rabinowltz, Carol Radin, Diane Rubin, Carol Russell, Joan San- Rubin, Carol Russell, Joan San- der, Janet Seder, Margaret Shultz, Elizabeth Siegel, Deb- orah SUversteln, Hannah So, Ruth Sofair, Jessie Valentine, Judith Wagle, Judith Weiss, and Jan Wisseman.

Juniors are Anne Addlcks, Katharine Bagby, Louise Bec- ker, Roberta Berger, Betsy Berk, Mary Blumberg, Bonnie Blumenthal, Ronnie Brahms, Margaret Chisholm, Maria Cla- malchelo, Patricia Davenport, and Sally Dolan.

Carolyn Elsen, Deborah Fah- nestock, Sara Ferleger, Kristl Hager, Judith Halpern, JaneHu- berman. Sheila Iobst, Mer- rill Katz, Caren Kaufman, He- lene Kaufman, Karen Kress, Joanne Kunberger, Rum La- zarus, Jane Luckom, Caro- lyn Marcus, Loretta Master, and Meredith McCoy.

Elizabeth McLaughlin, Lin- da McMuUin, Sheila Millman, Linda Nicholson, Suzanne Nye, Bonnie O'Boyle, Cynthia Rock, Joan Rosenthal, Annette Roth, Rochelle Salkin. and Lvnn Sal-

(Continued on Page 7)

m^-mm:mmM,/,Mmm^m. BOWLING TEAM TRYOUTS:

Earn a chance to bowl on uni- versity financed, intercol- legiate team, 3619 Walnut St. Sept. 19 or 20, at 3 p.m. Ques- tions: Steve Goodsite EV 2- 3476.

HILLEL COFFEE HOUR: Dean Emerson will be guest at coffee hour tomorrow at 4:00 P.M.

HILLEL FOLK DANCE CLUB: Folk Dancing every Wednesday 6:30 to 8 P.M. at Hillel Foun- dation 202 S. 36th St. Israeli and International dances will be taught. Everyone welcome.

PANHELLENIC ASSOCIA- TION: Rush: Preview, tonight 3*00-5:00 in Houston Hall West Lounge. All russes must attend.

RECORD: Attention seniors: Sign up for yearbook pictures all this week in Houston Hall from 10:00 A.M. to 4-00 P.M.

DEAR CUSTOMER,

We ore writing mis letter to welcome you back to Penn, and to wish you Good Luck in the coming year.

We also wish to announce that after last year's success, "Tho Sweater Shack*' has returned to me same location at 104 So. 36th st. We are carrying expanded lines of Men's and Women's Sweaters, and this year we are introducing Blouses, Skirts, and Slacks to help you complete your Wardrobe. We feel that quality goods combined with dis- count prices and good service moke "The Sweater Shack" the plaeV to buy your fall clothing needs.

SINCERELY,

Vke Mcutcufetne+d THE SWEATER SHACK

104 S. 36th St. EV 2-9063

DAILY & SAT. 10-6 WEDNESDAY 10-9

FOR THAT SPECIAL TYPE OF MAN

THAT SPECIAL TYPE OF STORE

PURVEYOR OF

Highest Quality Pipes

Custom blended tabacs domestic and imported cigars

MEETING OF THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIA^ BUSINESS STAFF ON THURSDAY AT 4PM IN THE

BUSINESS OFFICE

3643 Walnut

222-2224

Pier 37 North

MA7 -17101

REGISTER NOW !! "PROFS" Coyle & Gray Daily 9-6 Sot. W-2

♦Complete FREE coerce ii bow to got tie »ost oit of yoor travel tine ni «oioy.

-Stand-by tickets, all airlines -Air and ship reservations —Eurail Pass -Group and individual tours -Hotel reservations as low as $5.00 a day -Purchase and rental of automobiles -Travelers cheques

Guaranteed straight A in convenience and service. Stop in and see us right next door

% to Sergeant Hall. We Care.

UNIVERSITY CITY TRAVEL SERVICE 594.5160 3331 Ch.stnut St. EV 2-2»2B

September **>*

HcMSten. Hall wesi loiuitfe

seeifou there

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967

CLASSIFIED FOR S%LE

>»68 YAMAHA 50 c.o. oycle Call: KI 6-8880 after 5

THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN PAQR

HELP WANTED

PENN CIRCLE K SMOKER

THURSDAY

September 14

8 PM

Smitb- Peniiai

Room

Houston Hall

REFRESHMENTS

MALE STUDENTS, 31 years or over wanted aa subjects for

psychophysiologtoal studies. No drugs or shook Involved. One diy (Tuesday or Friday) Prom 9 to 4:00 P M Por four const- cutive weeks required. Payment: $100. Call Dr. Persky, Albert Einstein Medical Center, DA 9- 0700, Ext. 6268.

HELP WANTED

MALE HELP WANTED: Mon. Wed., Fri. Nights From 6-12

Must have knowledge of patent medicines. Salary $1.40/hr. Call BA 2- 2702. 11-5.

See Europe for Less than $ 100 Your summer in Europe for less than Si00 (including transpor- tation). For the first time in travel history you can buy di- rectly from theTourWholesaler saving you countless dollars. Job offers may also be obtain- ed with no strings attached. For a "do-it-yourself" pamphlet with jobs, discount tours and applications send Si (for ma- terial, handling, air mail) to Dept. V., International Travel Est., 68 Herrengasse, Vaduz, Liechtenstein (Switzerland).

Dean's S«VEN

••OHT ••WPfifiK:

HtPPiE 1 CULT

**>!**>

HOUSTON HALL TICKET SERVICE

TICKETS AVAILABLE FOR ALL CULTURAL EVENTS IN THE METROPOLITAN AREA.

STUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE, LOCATED ON MAIN FLOOR OF HOUSTON HALL

WHAT'S IT LIKE TO BLOW

YOUR MIND? On a hip acid (LSD) trip you can blow your mind sky-high. It may come loose, but that's all right if that's your trip. Your trip is whatever turns you on. You can pop peyote, get high on marijuana, flash on LSD or just bake macrobiotic apple pies and wear Indian beads. You can make human be-ins, communes or Krishna your trip. If you do any or all of these, you're lifcely to do them in Haight-Ashbury.San Francisco. It's the U.S. capital of the hip scene, and it's where Post writer Joan Didion went to mix with the hippies. She'll show you where they live. You can learn their special language. Meet Deadeye and others . . . including a kindergartner who gets stoned on LSD. Read "The Hippie Generation," and you may even understand what mo- tivates the hippies. They're turned on in the September 23 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. Buy your copy today—it's hip.

(Continued from Page 6) vage.

Stephanie Schwartz, Victoria Schwartz, Ellen Soe, Judith Se- gal, Patricia Shannon, EddaSie- gal, Dorothy Stein, Maxine Stot- land, Ariel Swartly, Barbara Tripp, Julia Vance, Joyce Wei- ner, and Barbara Weisberg.

Kathryn Weyand, Rochelle Wynne, Georgianna Ziegler, and Nancy Zurich.

Seniors are Louise Aquino, Janie Auspos, Sandra Bern- stein, Rosamond Bovy, Bar- bara Bregstein, Karen Bress, Joan Burns, Susan Carter, Cath- ryn Christy, Maria Ciavarelli.

Also Marian Deutch, Marcia Devins, Pamela Diamond, Eva Dilks, Dathryn Druce, Mer- rill Dyshel, Cynthia Fastman, and Ann Fessler.

Margaret Finarelli, Joan

Freedman, Oiga Gacsi, Mary Gallagher, Franclne Gocnberg, Phyllis Green, Susan Hollar, Lisa Holsager, and Judith Hope.

Winifred House, Zola Hraur, Ruth Janover, Barbara Katz, Judith Koman, Susan KriegeL Ellen Laskin, Ann Lifdn, Peggy Livingston, and Joanne Melsler.

Marsha Metzger, Zandra Mo- berg, Elaine Morgan, Carole Obedin, Carol Oppenhlmer, Lynn Parks, Constance Pinover, Nancy Rapoport, and Bernice Slegel.

Lucia Slegel, Marilyn Silver- man, Karol Sokol, Diane Taflln, Susan Tatelbaum, Elizabeth Thompson, Margaret Tyson, El- len Varet, Bonnie Vendig, and Tinl Vonerblg.

Marcia Weiss, Barbara Wein- traub, Laura Wiesel, Janet Wik- ler, Lynn Williams, Janice Wln- okur, Lenore Woldow, Carolyn Young, Joanne Zlnger, and Ca- rolyn Zelmanoft

LOVE! LOVE!

LOVE! at the Campus Chest Mixer

starring Joe Niagara of WIBG

4 Raids

GO-GO-Girls Friday September 15

Hatcbiasoa Gyn S-1

.' ' ■ Eat at Kelly & Cohen's

♦1

V*

l/l

♦X

if you don't understand the world,

who will?

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

f>

o

H

Wednesday, September 13,7:30p.m.,christian association loung.

^FACULTY-STUDENT DINNERS ^LECTURES ^DISCUSSION GR0UP$PSJNATI0N>

Sy Penn& aman Sports PAGE EIGHT WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967

Lightweights annex Jope Cup, frosh 150s win Eastern Sprints

In 1965, the Pennsylvania var- sity lightweight crew failed to win a race.

In 1967, just two years later, coach Fred Leonard's varsity oarsmen capped as swift a re- building program as ever seen in collegiate rowing, finishing a solid second to Cornell's Hen- ley championship shell in the May 13 Eastern sprint rowing championships.

The bridesmaid finish by the Quaker eight, which lost but two oarsmen to graduation, en- abled it to cut two seconds off the Big Red regular season mar- gin of victory and to gain re- venge from Princeton, which finished a length to the rear of the Red-and-Blue.

"It was a real tribute to the boys," remarked coach Leonard who hardly figured upon Penn coming within four seconds of the undefeated Cornell Oars- men, who averaged three inches taller per man than their Qua- ker counterparts.

But kindling an equal amount of pride in coach Leonard's once-frustrated heart were the finals of the junior varsity anJ freshman events over the Wor- cester, Massachusetts, Lake Quinsagamond course.

J. V. FINISHES SECOND

The Quaker JVs, known for their closing sprints, catapul- ted from fourth to second in the final ten strokes of the 2000 meter race, edging MIT and Cornell in the blanket finish.

It was the Penn freshmen, however, who drew the most attention.

Having to come from behind the first time in their careers, the yearlings splashed past Cor- nell by 3/4 of a length for the lone Red-and-Blue champion- ship of the day.

UNBEATEN FROSH

The victory won the frosh shell a niche in Pennsylvania 150 pound rowing history; no other crew had ever finished the regular season undefeated and men gone on to win an East- ern Spring championship.

The Eastern Springs are the national championships of light- weight rowing, and the Penn Freshmen, who were coached by Jack Barclay, had themselves a national crown.

The performances of the af- ternoon- a first and two seconds in the lightweight national cham- pionships— seemed reward in itself, but there was also a material reward awaiting me Quaker crews.

In the team trophy competi- tion, the Penn performances added up to 34 points, one more than Cornell, and the Jope Cup, symbolic of national light- weight team supremacy, was Pennsylvania's for the first time.

IRA CHAMPIONS - 1967 University heavyweight varsity crew. Left to right: John Ferris, William Puray, Stephen Cook, Austin Godfrey, Howard Greenberg, William Allen, Phillip McKinley, Captain Nicholas Paumgarten, kneeling, Arthur Sculley.

Quaker heavyweight crew captures IRA crown, keeps Ten Eyck Trophy

By BOB SAVETT

Climaxing an afternoon of rac- ing on Syracuse's Lake Onanda- ga, June 17, the Pennsylvania varsity heavyweight oarsmen sped to the winner's circle of the Intercollegiate Rowing As- sociation regatta and with the victory came the Varsity Chall- enge Cup, symbolic of national collegiate supremacy.

It had been a full 67 years since predecessors of the 1967 Penn crew had had their mark carved on the cup. And the new triumph was as impressive as

it had been elusive. Taking the lead at the mile

mark, Joe Burk's crew steadily outdistanced its competition, and at the finish only one crew- defending champion Wisconsin —was within 15 seconds of the Quakers.

Regular season victims Cor- nell, Princeton and Navy led the rest of the pack to the finish of the 3-mile course.

Earlier in the day, the Penn freshmen had stroked their way to victory and the JVs had turn- ed in a bridesmaid finish.

Coupled with these perform-

First non-alum heads Penn athletics as U Conn's Fred Shabel is appointed

Bowlers seek

varsity status

Pennsylvania's Bowling Club, aspiring to varsity status next year, will begin its fifth season of competition in the Delaware Valley Division of the Eastern Intercollegiate Bowling League next month.

Penn has finished first twice in the League and last season placed third out of six compet- ing schools, which include Vil- lanova, Drexel, PMC, Temple, and Rutgers of South Jersey.

This season will be the first in which the squad will be univer- sity financed.

The eight-man team has only three returning veterans, co- captains Steve Gootzeit and Dick Lury, and Al Alderman. The five open spots will be filled at the tryouts which will be held on September 19 and 20 at 3 p.m. at the William Penn Lanes at 3619 Walnut Street.

Regular season action does not begin until the month of October and lasts through AprlL

by Lorry Krohn Sports Editor

Dr. Harry Fields, assistant to the president for athletic af- fairs, announced on May 31 the appointment of Fred A. Shabel as Penn's new director of athle- tics.

The announcement, made at a press conference in the William White Training House, climaxed two months of searching by an eleven man committee to find a replacement for Jeremiah Ford, who was dismissed from the post on March 30.

Fields Indicated that Shabel's contract would be for three years, but he refused to com- ment on the amount of Shabel'a salary, revealing only that "we fix the salary to suit the man, rather than setting it by the position."

FIRST NON-ALUMNUS Shabel, who officially took

over on July 1, is the first non-alumnus to serve as athle- tic director. Fields explained, "We are looking for what we felt was the best man for the job. We would like to have a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania come in for the job, but we just couldn't find that type of man. We feel the man we chose is superior."

Shabel is 35 years old and as Fields indicated. "We brought

in a young man to help us build the program and develop it. We thought it more advisable to ac- cept a young vibrant, individual than one with perhaps more ex- perience but set ideas."

Asked to describe his con- ception of the athletic director's

Fred A. Shabel

duties, Shabel told the press, •'I will direct the athletic de- partment of the University, I will formulate all the policies we might make reference to. My basic job will consist of dealing in people, in programs, salaries, scheduling, mainten- ance— all of these relate to the

director of athletics." Shabel commented on a number

of important issues and prob- lems he would be facing in the years ahead.

On recruiting: "I don't see why our recruiting program can't build to a point where it can compete favorabbly with the other Ivy schools."

On relations with alumni; "I would hope we could have a very warm relationship. I don't think an athletic director should think in any other terms."

On relations with Dr. Fields: "Like any administrative mem- ber of any institution, I will maintain contact with the president's office."

On "big-time" athletic poli- cies: "I'm obligated to work within the framework of the Ivy League."

SPRING FOOTBALL On slush funds; "There is a

danger if alumni groups are allowed to fool around with gifts, etc., not controlled by the Uni- versity." And on spring football practice: "I'm in favor of it."

Shabel comes to Penn from the University of Connecticut where he served as head basket- ball coach for four seasons. He retired as a coach at the end of last season and was serving as assistant director of athle-

'Contlnued on Page 5)

ances, the varsity first was more than sufficient to give the Penn crews possession, for the second consecutive year, of the Ten Eyck Trophy, symbolic of intercollegiate team suprema- cy.

In the yearling event over the shorter, 2-mile course, the Qua- kers waited until a half-mile from the finish to make their move, then overtook Rutgers with a stretch drive which had the Red-And-Blue 3/4 lengths ahead at the pole.

NASH WINS AGAIN Thus, for the second straight

season, Penn frosh coach Ted Nash had taken a new team and had trained and moulded it into the nation's finest frosh contin- gent. Nash's previous champ- ionship had broken a string of 42 winless seasons for the Red- and-Blue in I.R.A. competition.

But, the feast of victory after all the years of famine has not yet reached the Quaker JVs— which, under the circumstances, is fully ironic.

1967 seemed to be the year for the JV title. Experts pick- ing the LR.A. had the JVs (con- sisting of the bulk of the 1966 frosh champions) the most likely Penn winner of all; they were the lone unanimous favorite.

The Quaker JV eight entered the I.R.A. with an undefeated slate, including Penn's lone win in the May 13 Eastern Springs — and the JVs were in the lead by 2-1/2 lengths when the race was two-thirds over.

RAIN STOPS JV.

A sudden downpour erupted, however, and the wind and waves temporarily halted their for- ward progress. Navy, beaten thrice previously by the Quak- ers, veered from the fourth lane to the sheltered inside lane and gained first-place honors.

The Naval Victory— which caused several Penn oarsmen to lose for the first time in their lives— deprived the Red- and-Blue crews of coaches Burk and Nash of an incredible sweep of all three national rowing titles.