THEDAILY 11/12/68 PENNSYLKlMANe - Penn Libraries corresponded with Ray at the Memphis, Tenn. jail...

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11/12/68 Local THEDAILY BOND AND POWELL TO LEAD DISCUSSION HERE Noted black political leaders Julian Bond and Adam Clayton Powell will lead a discussion on Black Political Power at Irvine Auditorium at 8 this evening. Powell, a long time member of the House of Representatives and former chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, was denied his seat in Congress in 1967 for alleged malfeasance of office, but was reelected again last week from his Harlem Congressional District. Bond, one of the original founders of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, gained national fame at the Democratic Convention in Chicago where he was the leader of the challenging Georgia delegation in their successful attempt to be seated. Bond was elected three times to the Georgia State Legislature but was prevented from taking his seat by members of the Legislature because of his opposition to the Vietnam war, until a Supreme Court ruling allowed him to be seated. ADAM CLAYTON POWELL JULIAN BOND ACLU QUESTIONS DEMANDS OF COMMITTEE FOR BLACK ADMISSIONS The American Civil Liberties Union has informed the dean of the university's medical school that it is illegal to admit students because they are black. In reply to a statement by the Committee for Black Admissions of the Philadelphia Student Health Organizations demanding that one third of the students admitted in September, 1969 to Philadelphia medical schools be black, the ACLU sug- gested establishing a quota reserved for persons living in poverty areas. A poverty area quota would primarily benefit black students and would be legal, the ACLU said. The six Philadelphia medical schools involved have established two task forces, one to study the proposals as they might apply to next year and one to study their long term effects. Dr. Gordon French, associate dean of the University medical school, said that the universities, the ACLU, and the CBA are not in opposition, and that the University medical school wants to admit more black students without violating the law. The CBA has charged that it received "absolutely minimal support from the deans," in its efforts to find black candi- dates for admission. COLLEGE HOLDS FOUR HUNDRETH FACULTY MEETING Today's meeting of the College faculty is the four-hundredth such assembly to be held since regular monthly or bimonthly meetings were begun in the mid- lSSO's. President Harnwell and Provost Goddard are scheduled to attend the meeting today, along with three former deans, Dr. Glenn R. Morrow (1944-52), emeritus professor of philosophy, Dr. Lloyd W. Daly (1952-59), professor of classical studies, and Dr. Otto Springer (1959-68), professor of Germanic languages and literature. Most of the College's 360 full-time, fully affiliated faculty members are expected to attend the meeting, with Dr. William E. Stephens, acting dean, presiding. National By United Press International BLACK CHILDREN TEAR GASSED IN N.C. COURTHOUSE About 20 chanting black children marched into a room of the Hyde County Courthouse in N.C. Monday and police hurled smoke grenades inside and slam- med the door shut. A 17-year-old girl leaped from the window of the second floor room before police reopened the door and allowed the children to flee the building. The children had marched into the building to demonstrate against the county welfare department, but it was closed. They went into another room instead. Sheriff Charlie Cahoon and three highway patrolmen, wearing gas masks, tossed several smoke grenades into the room and slammed the door shut. RAY BELIEVES HE WAS INVOLVED IN PLOT James Earl Ray, accused of assassinating Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., has admitted that he believes he became " involved in some sort of plot to kill King" as early as eight months prior to the murder, it was reported Monday. But Ray is quoted in the second of a series of articles in Look Magazine as claiming he was duped into the conspiracy and "nobody told me anything about any planned murder of King or anyone else." The series is by author William Bradford Huie who corresponded with Ray at the Memphis, Tenn. jail where Ray awaits trial. Huie states that he cannot reveal all he has learned until Ray has been tried but he believes Dr. King was the secondary, not the primary, target of the plotters. "The primary target was the United States," Huie wrote. MYSTERY WITNESS IN PLOT TO ASSINATE NIXON A mystery informant will be the star witness Tuesday when a Brooklyn grand jury begins an investigation of an alleged conspiracy by three Yemeni immi- grants to assassinate President-Elect Richard M. Nixon. No one would say whether there were indications the case was linked to the murder of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles last June but acting Brooklyn District Attorney Elliott Golden said nothing was being overlooked. The Kings County grand jury is scheduled to hear testimony from a man who claims the suspects approached him to join their conspiracy. The unidentified man reportedly tipped off police who arrested Ahmed Namer, 43, and his sons Hussein, 20, and Abdo, 16, in a raid on their apartment. The three were charged with conspiracy in the first degree to commit murder, for which they face 15 years imprisonment each if convicted; criminal solicitation in the first degree, involving importuning com- mission of murder, for which they face seven years in prison; and illegal possession of weapons, for which they face up to a year in prison. International By United Prema International CZECHS EXPEL JOURNALISTS The Czechoslovak government Monday expelled seven Western newsmen and banned a magazine in what communist sources described as massive drive against the nation's press resulting from intense Soviet pressure. The sources said the campaign to bring news media in line included appointment of conser- vatives to run the free-wheeling radio and television apparatus and a total black- out on any kind of "political journalism." More action against news media was expected, the sources said, after a meeting of the communist party central committee this week. It was expected to pass a strongly-worded resolution de- tailing "antisocialist elements" in the press, radio and television. PENNSYLKlMANe Vol. LXXXIV No. 78 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, November 12, 1968 UCSC nucleus of discussion between students, trustees li^^Sffgt By RONA ZEVIN and STEPHEN MARMON Trustees and students met Monday in the first of several planned monthly gatherings of the two groups, but the afternoon's discussions in the West Lounge of Houston Hall was more a demarcation of positions than a dia- logue. The gap between the students and trustees was emphasized when Mark Bauer, a member of the University chapter of Students for a Democratic Society, called for all the members of the board of trustees to resign. Bauer later said he felt the meeting showed the lack of communication between the trustees and the students. The planned question and answer session degenerated into a series of short speeches by both students and trustees, each defending his position or attacking the other group. Student questions on the reasons for University involvement in the creation of the University City Science Center, for example, looked for the moral reasons behind trustee actions. However, the intent of these questions was often misunderstood by the 10 trustees present, who responded to the students' questions with statistics and factual answers. Another major deterrent to dia- logue between the students and the members of the board was a feeling expressed by several trustees that the 100 students at the meeting did not truly represent campus opinion. UPSG President Joseph Cooper repeated that point when he spoke a few min- utes after Bauer. Topics for discussion at the meet- ing had been submitted by students last week, and included such areas as the research and relocation poli- cies of the Science Center, possible University complicity in the war in Vietnam, and the role of the board of trustees. However, virtually all of the afternoon's discussion centered around the Science Center. The meeting began with a ques- tion by one student on the role of the University on the creation of the Science Center. Paul Cupp, a member of the board of trustees and chair- man of the board of directors of the Center, tried to respond by reading the statement of purposes of the center. He then explained the cor- porate and operational setup of UCSC.. However, students wanted to know more than just when the Center was incorporated. Several asked informa- tion on just how and when the decision was made to involve the University in the Center. Robert Trescher, chairman of the trustees' student affairs committee and moderator of the meeting, said the information was not available at the time. Cupp, one of the five original in- corporators of the Center, spoke of the need for the establishment of the Center to encourage the development of industry in the Philadelphia area. "There is a concern on the part of the University to be a good citizen of the city of Philadelphia," he said. "The University joined with the com- munity to sponsor the Center and help the city attract industry." While the trustees stressed the importance of the Science Center to the city and to small industry, stu- dents tried to find out the actual role of the University in the founding and operation of UCSC. When asked what role the Univer- sity plays in decisions made by the Science Center, Cupp said, "No single interest dominates the decision- making process." He said the idea for building UCSC originated with the planning commis- sion of the City of Philadelphia. None of the trustees present at the meeting could answer questions about who at the University actually decided to buy stock in the Science Center, and the chronology of events leading up to that involvement. Ira Harkavy, a College junior and member of the Community Involve- ment Council, asked that the Uni- versity "open its doors to black students," and help the people, especially the residents of West Philadelphia who were dislocated by the expansion of UCSC directly, in- stead of helping industry. Several trustees answered by saying the Science Center would help increase industry, which would pro- vide more jobs. "We are never going to create jobs without industry," Trustee Richard Bond said. Gustave Amsterdam, chairman of the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority, responded to Harkavy's claims that many residents of Area III, the location of UCSC expansion, were not properly relocated. Amser- dam said that, according to his sta- tistics, every family and resident of the area was relocated into a suitable home, after a personal visit from a field worker. "If you know anyone who hasn't received what is coming to him, tell me, because we have the money, and he is certainly entitled to it," he said. Michael Whitehouse, a student in the Graduate School of Fine Arts, asked what provision was being made for low income housing for the people who would work in the industries created by the research conducted at the center. Amsterdam noted the existence of a "white noose" around Philadelphia in the suburbs and said he and many other members of the trustees were working to solve the problem of housing for blacks in the outlying regions of the city. Bauer then went to the podium and spoke for almost ten minutes. He talked about the secret research pro- (Continued on page 3) photo by DAVE FITTINGOFF DAVID RUDOVSKY AND DAVID KAIRYS, two third-yeor Law School stu- dents, recently became involved in a legal case which freed a man after he served 18 years in prison. Law students help release life-termer By ANDY STARR Thanks in part to the efforts of two University law students, a man who was unjustly imprisoned for over 18 years now has his freedom. In 1950, John L. Collins, along with two other men, all of whom were under the influence of drugs, held up a tavern, and, during the robbery, a 62-year- old patron died. All three men were arrested, but the only evidence against Collins was his own confession. This confession was involuntary and was obtained while Collins was going through withdrawal symptoms. Collins was tried for first-degree murder under a Pennsylvania law which states that anyone who is involved in a felony^which someone is killed is guilty of murder. C ollins did not commit the murder. He agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a recommendation from the district attorney to the judge that Collins get a 12-year sentence. But the judge gave him life imprisonment. Collins tried to withdraw his guilty plea, but this move failed. After 12 years Collins applied for a pardon, but he was turned down. Again in 1965, he applied for pardon and it was denied. Finally he bought several law books, studied them on his own, and became somewhat familiar with the law. Late in 1965 he talked to a prison lawyer and, through him, he filed a habeas corpus petition in state court. It was denied. In 1966 he applied for habeas corpus in federal court, and on appeal the judge sent the case back to the state courts to be retried. In their roles as public defenders, David Rudovsky and David Kairys, both of whom are students at the University, along with George A. Johnson, who now is a private lawyer in New Haven, Conn., were assigned to defend Collins in this new trial. Rudovsky and Kairys are in the graduate program in criminal law and litigation, and are members of the Voluntary Defender Association, which represents about 60 percent of all lawyers handling indigent cases in the Philadelphia area. The program, which is funded by the Ford Foundation, gives young lawyers an opportunity to receive clinical and academic experience. A federal judge granted the state court time to decide whether to retry Collins or release him for lack of evidence, since Collins' coerced confession was no longer admissable. After two months, during which the state did nothing, Johnson and Rudovsky petitioned the state for a discharge. But the state set a new trial, refusing to let Collins go. Rather than spend many months in jail waiting for a new trial, Collins, who is black, agreed to plead guilty to second degree murder, a crime earring a nine to 18 year sentence, which he had already served. "If Collins were not indigent," commented Rudovsky, "he would be a free man without any record, because he could have afforded bail, thereby gaining release pending a new trial, which could never have resulted in a conviction." "Collins spent 18 years in jail unjustly," said Kairys, "and when the state should have dropped charges, they refused. There was absolutely no reason for coercing him to plead guilty again," he declared. Together, Rudovsky, Kairys, and Johnson donated about $15,000 in free legal (Continued on page 3) A STUDENT QUESTIONS the role of the University in the University City Sceince Center at the first monthly meeting of students and trustees in the West Lounge of Houston Hall Monday afternoon. About 100 students attended the meeting to question 10 trustees on UCSC, re- photo by DAVE FITTINGOFF development of Area III, and the University's moral position on the Vietnamese war. Students both supported and decried the University's involvement in UCSC, but did not have a dialogue with the trustees. I

Transcript of THEDAILY 11/12/68 PENNSYLKlMANe - Penn Libraries corresponded with Ray at the Memphis, Tenn. jail...

11/12/68

Local

THEDAILY

BOND AND POWELL TO LEAD DISCUSSION HERE Noted black political leaders Julian Bond and Adam Clayton Powell will lead

a discussion on Black Political Power at Irvine Auditorium at 8 this evening. Powell, a long time member of the House of Representatives and former chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, was denied his seat in Congress in 1967 for alleged malfeasance of office, but was reelected again last week from his Harlem Congressional District. Bond, one of the original founders of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, gained national fame at the Democratic Convention in Chicago where he was the leader of the challenging Georgia delegation in their successful attempt to be seated. Bond was elected three times to the Georgia State Legislature but was prevented from taking his seat by members of the Legislature because of his opposition to the Vietnam war, until a Supreme Court ruling allowed him to be seated.

ADAM CLAYTON POWELL JULIAN BOND

ACLU QUESTIONS DEMANDS OF COMMITTEE FOR BLACK ADMISSIONS The American Civil Liberties Union has informed the dean of the university's

medical school that it is illegal to admit students because they are black. In reply to a statement by the Committee for Black Admissions of the Philadelphia Student Health Organizations demanding that one third of the students admitted in September, 1969 to Philadelphia medical schools be black, the ACLU sug- gested establishing a quota reserved for persons living in poverty areas. A poverty area quota would primarily benefit black students and would be legal, the ACLU said. The six Philadelphia medical schools involved have established two task forces, one to study the proposals as they might apply to next year and one to study their long term effects. Dr. Gordon French, associate dean of the University medical school, said that the universities, the ACLU, and the CBA are not in opposition, and that the University medical school wants to admit more black students without violating the law. The CBA has charged that it received "absolutely minimal support from the deans," in its efforts to find black candi- dates for admission.

COLLEGE HOLDS FOUR HUNDRETH FACULTY MEETING Today's meeting of the College faculty is the four-hundredth such assembly

to be held since regular monthly or bimonthly meetings were begun in the mid- lSSO's. President Harnwell and Provost Goddard are scheduled to attend the meeting today, along with three former deans, Dr. Glenn R. Morrow (1944-52), emeritus professor of philosophy, Dr. Lloyd W. Daly (1952-59), professor of classical studies, and Dr. Otto Springer (1959-68), professor of Germanic languages and literature. Most of the College's 360 full-time, fully affiliated faculty members are expected to attend the meeting, with Dr. William E. Stephens, acting dean, presiding.

National By United Press International

BLACK CHILDREN TEAR GASSED IN N.C. COURTHOUSE

About 20 chanting black children marched into a room of the Hyde County Courthouse in N.C. Monday and police hurled smoke grenades inside and slam- med the door shut. A 17-year-old girl leaped from the window of the second floor room before police reopened the door and allowed the children to flee the building. The children had marched into the building to demonstrate against the county welfare department, but it was closed. They went into another room instead. Sheriff Charlie Cahoon and three highway patrolmen, wearing gas masks, tossed several smoke grenades into the room and slammed the door shut.

RAY BELIEVES HE WAS INVOLVED IN PLOT James Earl Ray, accused of assassinating Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., has

admitted that he believes he became " involved in some sort of plot to kill King" as early as eight months prior to the murder, it was reported Monday. But Ray is quoted in the second of a series of articles in Look Magazine as claiming he was duped into the conspiracy and "nobody told me anything about any planned murder of King or anyone else." The series is by author William Bradford Huie who corresponded with Ray at the Memphis, Tenn. jail where Ray awaits trial. Huie states that he cannot reveal all he has learned until Ray has been tried but he believes Dr. King was the secondary, not the primary, target of the plotters. "The primary target was the United States," Huie wrote.

MYSTERY WITNESS IN PLOT TO ASSINATE NIXON A mystery informant will be the star witness Tuesday when a Brooklyn grand

jury begins an investigation of an alleged conspiracy by three Yemeni immi- grants to assassinate President-Elect Richard M. Nixon. No one would say whether there were indications the case was linked to the murder of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles last June but acting Brooklyn District Attorney Elliott Golden said nothing was being overlooked. The Kings County grand jury is scheduled to hear testimony from a man who claims the suspects approached him to join their conspiracy. The unidentified man reportedly tipped off police who arrested Ahmed Namer, 43, and his sons Hussein, 20, and Abdo, 16, in a raid on their apartment. The three were charged with conspiracy in the first degree to commit murder, for which they face 15 years imprisonment each if convicted; criminal solicitation in the first degree, involving importuning com- mission of murder, for which they face seven years in prison; and illegal possession of weapons, for which they face up to a year in prison.

International By United Prema International

CZECHS EXPEL JOURNALISTS The Czechoslovak government Monday expelled seven Western newsmen and

banned a magazine in what communist sources described as massive drive against the nation's press resulting from intense Soviet pressure. The sources said the campaign to bring news media in line included appointment of conser- vatives to run the free-wheeling radio and television apparatus and a total black- out on any kind of "political journalism." More action against news media was expected, the sources said, after a meeting of the communist party central committee this week. It was expected to pass a strongly-worded resolution de- tailing "antisocialist elements" in the press, radio and television.

PENNSYLKlMANe Vol. LXXXIV No. 78 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1968 The Daily Pennsylvanian Tuesday, November 12, 1968

UCSC nucleus of discussion between students, trustees

li^^Sffgt

By RONA ZEVIN and STEPHEN MARMON

Trustees and students met Monday in the first of several planned monthly gatherings of the two groups, but the afternoon's discussions in the West Lounge of Houston Hall was more a demarcation of positions than a dia- logue.

The gap between the students and trustees was emphasized when Mark Bauer, a member of the University chapter of Students for a Democratic Society, called for all the members of the board of trustees to resign. Bauer later said he felt the meeting showed the lack of communication between the trustees and the students.

The planned question and answer session degenerated into a series of short speeches by both students and trustees, each defending his position or attacking the other group.

Student questions on the reasons for University involvement in the creation of the University City Science Center, for example, looked for the moral reasons behind trustee actions. However, the intent of these questions was often misunderstood by the 10 trustees present, who responded to the students' questions with statistics and factual answers.

Another major deterrent to dia- logue between the students and the members of the board was a feeling expressed by several trustees that the 100 students at the meeting did not truly represent campus opinion. UPSG President Joseph Cooper repeated that point when he spoke a few min- utes after Bauer.

Topics for discussion at the meet- ing had been submitted by students last week, and included such areas as the research and relocation poli- cies of the Science Center, possible University complicity in the war in Vietnam, and the role of the board of trustees. However, virtually all of the afternoon's discussion centered around the Science Center.

The meeting began with a ques- tion by one student on the role of the University on the creation of the Science Center. Paul Cupp, a member of the board of trustees and chair- man of the board of directors of the Center, tried to respond by reading the statement of purposes of the center. He then explained the cor- porate and operational setup of UCSC..

However, students wanted to know more than just when the Center was incorporated. Several asked informa- tion on just how and when the decision was made to involve the University in the Center. Robert Trescher, chairman of the trustees' student affairs committee and moderator of the meeting, said the information was not available at the time.

Cupp, one of the five original in- corporators of the Center, spoke of the need for the establishment of the

Center to encourage the development of industry in the Philadelphia area.

"There is a concern on the part of the University to be a good citizen of the city of Philadelphia," he said. "The University joined with the com- munity to sponsor the Center and help the city attract industry."

While the trustees stressed the importance of the Science Center to the city and to small industry, stu- dents tried to find out the actual role of the University in the founding and operation of UCSC.

When asked what role the Univer- sity plays in decisions made by the Science Center, Cupp said, "No single interest dominates the decision- making process."

He said the idea for building UCSC originated with the planning commis- sion of the City of Philadelphia.

None of the trustees present at the meeting could answer questions about who at the University actually decided to buy stock in the Science Center, and the chronology of events leading up to that involvement.

Ira Harkavy, a College junior and member of the Community Involve- ment Council, asked that the Uni- versity "open its doors to black students," and help the people, especially the residents of West Philadelphia who were dislocated by the expansion of UCSC directly, in- stead of helping industry.

Several trustees answered by saying the Science Center would help increase industry, which would pro- vide more jobs.

"We are never going to create jobs without industry," Trustee Richard Bond said.

Gustave Amsterdam, chairman of the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority, responded to Harkavy's claims that many residents of Area III, the location of UCSC expansion, were not properly relocated. Amser- dam said that, according to his sta- tistics, every family and resident of the area was relocated into a suitable home, after a personal visit from a field worker.

"If you know anyone who hasn't received what is coming to him, tell me, because we have the money, and he is certainly entitled to it," he said.

Michael Whitehouse, a student in the Graduate School of Fine Arts, asked what provision was being made for low income housing for the people who would work in the industries created by the research conducted at the center. Amsterdam noted the existence of a "white noose" around Philadelphia in the suburbs and said he and many other members of the trustees were working to solve the problem of housing for blacks in the outlying regions of the city.

Bauer then went to the podium and spoke for almost ten minutes. He talked about the secret research pro-

(Continued on page 3)

photo by DAVE FITTINGOFF

DAVID RUDOVSKY AND DAVID KAIRYS, two third-yeor Law School stu- dents, recently became involved in a legal case which freed a man after he served 18 years in prison.

Law students help release life-termer

By ANDY STARR

Thanks in part to the efforts of two University law students, a man who was unjustly imprisoned for over 18 years now has his freedom.

In 1950, John L. Collins, along with two other men, all of whom were under the influence of drugs, held up a tavern, and, during the robbery, a 62-year- old patron died. All three men were arrested, but the only evidence against Collins was his own confession. This confession was involuntary and was obtained while Collins was going through withdrawal symptoms.

Collins was tried for first-degree murder under a Pennsylvania law which states that anyone who is involved in a felony^which someone is killed is guilty of murder. C ollins did not commit the murder. He agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a recommendation from the district attorney to the judge that Collins get a 12-year sentence. But the judge gave him life imprisonment. Collins tried to withdraw his guilty plea, but this move failed.

After 12 years Collins applied for a pardon, but he was turned down. Again in 1965, he applied for pardon and it was denied. Finally he bought several law books, studied them on his own, and became somewhat familiar with the law. Late in 1965 he talked to a prison lawyer and, through him, he filed a habeas corpus petition in state court. It was denied. In 1966 he applied for habeas corpus in federal court, and on appeal the judge sent the case back to the state courts to be retried.

In their roles as public defenders, David Rudovsky and David Kairys, both of whom are students at the University, along with George A. Johnson, who now is a private lawyer in New Haven, Conn., were assigned to defend Collins in this new trial.

Rudovsky and Kairys are in the graduate program in criminal law and litigation, and are members of the Voluntary Defender Association, which represents about 60 percent of all lawyers handling indigent cases in the Philadelphia area. The program, which is funded by the Ford Foundation, gives young lawyers an opportunity to receive clinical and academic experience.

A federal judge granted the state court time to decide whether to retry Collins or release him for lack of evidence, since Collins' coerced confession was no longer admissable. After two months, during which the state did nothing, Johnson and Rudovsky petitioned the state for a discharge. But the state set a new trial, refusing to let Collins go.

Rather than spend many months in jail waiting for a new trial, Collins, who is black, agreed to plead guilty to second degree murder, a crime earring a nine to 18 year sentence, which he had already served.

"If Collins were not indigent," commented Rudovsky, "he would be a free man without any record, because he could have afforded bail, thereby gaining release pending a new trial, which could never have resulted in a conviction."

"Collins spent 18 years in jail unjustly," said Kairys, "and when the state should have dropped charges, they refused. There was absolutely no reason for coercing him to plead guilty again," he declared.

Together, Rudovsky, Kairys, and Johnson donated about $15,000 in free legal (Continued on page 3)

A STUDENT QUESTIONS the role of the University in the University City Sceince Center at the first monthly meeting of students and trustees in the West Lounge of Houston Hall Monday afternoon. About 100 students attended the meeting to question 10 trustees on UCSC, re-

photo by DAVE FITTINGOFF

development of Area III, and the University's moral position on the Vietnamese war. Students both supported and decried the University's involvement in UCSC, but did not have a dialogue with the trustees.

I

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Letters to the editor

A clarification Monday's editorial entitled the Lessons of Dow made

several points which are in need of clarification. First, action taken by the University Forum is binding in no way upon any University official or official body. Secondly, the Rev. Jack Russell, vice provost for student affairs, who chairs University Forum meetings, says that a resolution adopting the Mundheim Comission guidelines was unanimous- ly adopted by the Forum following two hours of debate. It was not "pushed" through as we said.

No attempt was made to impugn the integrity of Mr. Rusell, and if any impugnment was implied, we apologize.

It should be noted, however, that duplicity andoxymoronic thinking have characterized the Dow affair from the be- ginning, with University officials changing their stories from day to day and hour to hour. Just one example is the fact that the University was said to own one University place — where the recruitment was to take place — and then that fact was denied, confirmed, re-denied and finally shunted aside in the course of two days' debate.

We feared that the Forum's adoption of the Mundheim Commission's guidelines, although not officially binding on anyone, would be used by the vice provost to legitimize procedures under those guidelines. Since the demonstration never occurred, our hypothesis went untested. The vice provost denies he would have done this, and we take him at his word.

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POWER: A RESPONSIBILITY cir: In the wake of the national

A NEEDED TEACHER

Sir: Tuesday night ended the po- litical career of one of the great reformers of this century, Joseph Clark. Senator Clark was defeated for a third term by Congressman Richard Schweiker. During his long political career, Clark has served as a reform mayor of Philadelphia in the early 1950's, making this city the leader in urban redevelop- ment. From 1956 on in the Senate, Clark has shown himself to be an independent voice speaking out on such issues as manpower training, ant i-poverty programs, gun control. Congressional reform, and Vietnam,

Even without an office we know that Senator Clark will continue to make significant contributions to society. I feel it would be beneficial to the University if the Senator's alma mater offered him a teaching position. The Senator is a Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard and holds an LLd. from the University's law school. He is the author of two books dealing with the American

Congressional process. The University needs Senator

Clark. He offers to us far more than superb academic qualifications. He offers a tie between the theories and directives of classroom study and the practical administration of these concepts. It is through this unique combination that he offers to us a means of defining and inte- grating the University with its sur- rounding community. Senator Clark would be an invaluable addition to Pennsylvania.

Roger Loeb

College 1970

FEIFFER Vou ,

nsr,

Notes and comment

penn comment'- notes By WILLIAM K. MANDEL

The fall issue of penn comment came out last week, after speculation over whether it would come out at all. The reaction to the magazine was akin to the reaction towards a Chinese meal: you read it once, and two hours later, you felt as if you hadn't read anything at all.

On the outside (literally) penn comment has improved. With months and months of time to consider a cover, the editors rejected the old "Stick it in your ear" approach of last year's frantically hysterical "penn vomit," and opted instead for a nice, striking black and white line drawing. The back of the outside is beautiful as well, thanks to the Record's pleasant (as usual) ad.

For a moment there, I thought that penn comment had resolved its iden- tity crisis. When last we left our struggling hero (in the spring), the magazine was almost paralyzed with self doubt and external criticism (comment was overwhelmingly dump- ed on in a later-springUPSG referen- dum). It couldn't decide whether it was supposed to be 1) a topical maga-

zine offering articles and other items of interest and substance, 2) a humor magazine that would print stuff PunchBowl wouldn't (and that's pretty bad), 3) an underground magazine used as a vehicle for the visions and phantasmagoric movies shown inside its editorial board's collective head, or what.

Anyway, fall and the lapse of time (and the lapse of the old editors) brought some semblance of resolution to the problem and comment has de- cided to become "issue orientated." This - a mature and intelligent de- cision and much better than the old horseshit you used to read in penn comment - means that each issue will be devoted to one particular facet of the ever-flowing dialogue, monologue, and polylogue that likes to hang around urban universities. (One may wonder, parenthetically, how many issues are going to be dealt with if the magazine can't force itself into existence often enough.)

Anyway, this issue was all about the modern Multiurbanversity. A super complicated corporation that loses sight of its original goals and becomes intent on expansion for its own sake, and the hell with students,

CHARLES A. KRAUSE Editor-in-Chief

BERL N. SCHWARTZ Managing Editor

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

STANLEY H. BERKE Business Manager

ELLEN M. COIN, Financial Manager; KEN R. DROSSMAN, Advertis- ing Manager; JILL P. MESIROV, Production Manager*

RONA ZEVIN

Issue editor

ARNOLD J. HOLLAND

Night editor

BELLE SHEPPARD

Night assistant

faculty, or the human element; this is the common view held of that strange structure. Like ants trying to fell an elephant, students at Pennsylvania have tried harder and harder to point up the ways the University has left the path it was originally set onby its founders. These points have fallen, more's the pity, on ears too stuffed with money and research contracts to listen.

Penn comment, however, has added nothing to the dialogue. The articles on the theme topic, with the exception of that by Andy Wolk and Dewey Stater, bite off more than they can chew, and usually end up spitting up what they do chew.

Christopher Stalberg and Mark Bauer, for example, wrote an article that takes easily one-third of its length postulating a number of questions to be answered, and then proceeds to answer none of them.

Marvin Israelow — head of SCUE and one of the major totems on cam- pus -- has contributed an article that can only be described as hopelessly unrealistic; it might have been culled from Mario Savio'swastebasket circa 1965.

Going on in this vein of "and then . . .and then" does little for anyone except the editors of penn comment themselves, for no one remembers the magazine piece-by-piece at this late date anyway.

The magazine has made enormous strides, especially in the field of lay- out. The use of white on black is a bit overdone lately, though, and should be avoided.

What cripples the issue is the in- sertion of some truly horrible poetry an overplaying of some rather medi- ocre photography, and the will-nilly insertion of a single (one) piece of fiction, and that of debatable value.

What we are left with, then, is *a

penn comment much improved physi- cally and emotionally, but unrein- forced by the inner guts to support the thin matrix of its revised image.

The spirit of the editors of penn comment in thinking out their issue orientation is willing, but the flesh of their writers and contributors must be much stronger before the magazine can claim a place as a major publica- tion on campus.

election of a conservative and dis- sent-stifling administration, a seg- ment of the University student body has voluntarily relinquished a prof- fered role in a decision-making process. Contrary to rising student demands for educational self-deter- mination, modification of curricu- lum, and decreased teacher domin- ance, section 02 of Education 240 opted to forego the opportunity to regulate for themselves the content and structure of the course.

Unlike the other sections of Ed- ucation 240 which have provoked continual criticism for their tradi- tional approach to the relevant is-. sues in the field of education, section 02 is a progressive education course on the college level. The mode of the course, according to Dr. Richard A. Gibboney, is "that of independent student responsibility and effort within an 'open structure' in which direct experience, analysis of prob-

lems, and effective ends will be of primary concern." He has attempt- ed to help the students achieve these ends through speakers, films, and small group discussions in which student-to-student and student-to- teacher interactions are encourag- ed. Dr. Gibboney has advanced even beyond this; he has offered the stu- dents total control of the course for the rest of the semester.

Incredible as it may seem, the majority of the class rejected the proposal and thrust the entire course back into the hands of the instructor! One explanation for this reaction might be that the course is function- ing so well as is that it could hardly

be improved. The only other ex- planation is laziness. Both of these excuses show extreme shortsighted- ness on the part of the students of this class. When the freedom that students have desired for so long is finallyconcededtothem.it Is their duty to themselves and to their fel- low students to make the most of the arrangement. When complete in dependence is handed to them, and rejected, it is an unforgivable shirk- ing of responsibility and a denial of personal development through ex- perience.

Wendy Sobin

CW 1971

Ellen Si«gai

CW 1971

A LITTLE DITTY

Sin I thought this little self-com- posed ditty, written in August, is quite relevant now:

America saw her proudest days

When good King Lyndon ruled the waves,

And lovely Jackie drew forth raves In thre?- piece matching ensembles Dreamed up by former coutouriers, And dim-witted She set a record For soporvescence among speech-

makers, And king-makers banded together In Miami and Chicago, to make a king, And made the jesters kings, And the kings, jesters.

Clifford Gabrellos

College 1972

LOOKING HOMEWARD? LOOK NOWI

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UNIVERSITY CITY TRAVEL 3403 Walnut EV 2-2928

The Daily Pennsyl vanian is

published 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 Sts. at the rate

of $10.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Philadelphia,

Pennsylvania, 19104. Phone*:

(215) 594-7535.^

November 12 at 8:30 p.m.

Annenberg School Auditorium

University of Pennsylvania

3620 Walnut Street

Tickets: $1.50 it Annenberg School. Houston Hall. Gimbel's.

Wanamaker's, Glassman's

BRITISH SCIENTISTS TALK STRAIGHT WITH

Thinking of returning to the U.K. ? Get in touch with the team of ICI scientists visiting your campus shortly. They will tell you about jobs available now, where these are, how much they pay and what the housing situation is. If you've only just arrived, drop in just the same for a chat about your future prospects. ICI's recruiting team will visit your campus on Nov. 19

Contact them through Mr. A. J. Letcher, University Placement Service, One University City, 4025 Chestnut Street

GlRARD TRUST BANK

NEW OPPORTUNITIES For those interested in business careers, banking now offers greater

opportunities than ever before. Banking is constantly expanding, de- signing new services, creating new challenges for future executives.

While we are on campus, we'd like to talk to you about the broad

variety of careers open to college graduates in modern banking.

Starting assignments at Girard include assistant branch manager; computer programmer; credit analyst; investment analyst; systems analyst; and trust administrator.

Campus Interviews

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13 For more information and to arrange an

interview, see your placement office.

GIRARD TRUST BANK PHILADELPHIA

Tuesday, November 12, 1968

TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION AS TAUGHT BY MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI

INTRODUCTORY LECTURE By JERRY JARVIS

NATIONAL DIRECTOR, STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION SOCIETY

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14 AT 8:00 P.M.

NEW FINE ARTS LECTURE HALL 34th I WALNUT STREETS

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The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 3

Architects disclose their designs for graduate and computer centers

UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO LAW SCHOOL

Prof. Herbert Lazerow will discuss

CALIFORNIA LAW SCHOOLS prelaw programs, and legal opportunities

on Tuesday, November 12 at 10:00 a. m.

See Bulletin Board, 16-E College Hall

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These artists' conceptions show the new face of the University which will soon rise on the 3600 block of Walnut Street. The two buildings portrayed, the graduate center on top and the computer center below it, are shown as they will be seen by a person standing midway between 36th and 37th Streets on Sansom Street, with 36th at the left, 37th at the right, and Walnut in the background.

The graduate center, designed by Francis, Cauffman, Wilkinson & Pepper, will house the offices of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, now in Bennett Hall. The tall center part of the building, as well as the area at left along 36th will be given to student facilities such as dining rooms, lounges, study rooms, recreation areas, etc. The open part of the building just to the right of the center tower leads to a bridge over Walnut that will connect with the Annenberg School plaza. The administrative offices, as well as offices for faculty, will be in the portion of the building on the right.

The computer center, shown in the lower drawing, has been designed by Bower and Fradley to complete the complex created by the graduate center and the graduate student housing towers now rising on the 3600 block between Sansom and Walnut Streets. The center will bouse the University's IBM 360 Model 65 computers, now located at 3401 Market St. In addition, study rooms and office space are planned in the building. The architects have also planned for expansion of the computer center if more space is needed for its physical operations in the future.

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Hey, that's our job! . . . and unless somebody is trying to tell us some- thing, we don't think we're doing too badly.

Sure, Sun Oil Company needs a lot more people—in Exploration, Pro- duction, Manufacturing, Research, Engineering, Sales, Accounting, Eco- nomics and Computer Operations. But there are unusual attractions. Besides excellent pay, generous stock plan, and especially good and econom- ical living conditions in the Phila- delphia, Toledo and Dallas areas, Sunoco is an exciting company to work for.

This is the company that is pio- neering with Great Canadian Oil Sands Ltd. the famed Athabasca oil sands project in Northern Alberta a $235 million project that can multi- ply the world's petroleum resources. Also — that sponsors "Sunoco Spe- cials" and the Penske/Donohue team in major auto rafing championships to competition-prove and develop Sunoco products for the public; that is planning a new $125 million proc- essing facility in Puerto Rico; ex- panded its Toledo Refinery to the tune of $50 million; pursues a continuing program for air and water pollution

control; beautifies Sunoco service stations throughout the land; and recently broke through the billion dollar a year barrier in sales! Sound interesting? Sun is geared for growth. Perhaps we could use you.

Write us for an appointment, write for our book "Sunoco Career Oppor- tunities Guide," or contact your Col- lege Placement Director to see Sun's representative when on campus. SUN OIL COMPANY. Industrial Relations Dept. NE, 1608 Walnut Street, Phila- delphia, Pa. 19103.

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

Cafe Internationale to offer foreign food

Gourmet, gourmand, or just plain glutton, there is bound to be some- thing to suit everyone's tastes at "Cafe Internationale" sponsored by Bennett Union Board. The affair, to be held Wednesday in the west lounge of Houston Hall, between4 and6 PJvl., consists of a flavorful assortment of entrees, appetizers, knoshes, and nib- bles from over thirty countries.

When Cafe was first created, it was intended to provide cultural exchange between students.

Those American students with a domestic bend are invited to take part in the preparation of the food. For further information on cooking with a foreign student, students should contact BencieWoll, 594-5461.

Trustees (Continued from page 1)

ject on air cargo transportation now underway at the Science Center and about the activities of Trustee Chair- man William Day, who was present at the meeting, in the redevelopment of Society Hill.

Bauer mainly talked about the board itself. He noted that a major portion of the board was composed of persons from the fields of finance and law and saw the board as not repre- senting desires of the members of the University community, the students and faculty.

He recommended to the board members that they resign as a body at their next meeting.

After Bauer sat down, Day stood up and said, "You do not represent student opinion."

That brief remark was followed by a short address by UPSG President Joseph Copper. Cooper also said Bauer did not represent the majority view on campus and praised the trustees for their efforts in communi-

cations with the students. He asked students and trustees to be "open- minded" to suggestions and explana- tions and called for "dignified dissent."

At that point the discussion shifted to possible University complicity in the war in Vietnam. A representative of the Vietnam Week Committee read a statement in which he claimed the University's decision to allow Dow Chemical Co. to recruit on campus was a moral decision to support the war.

Day said it was an "outstanding statement" but that he did not agree at all with its premise that the University decision to allow Dow to recruit constituted complicity with the war.

The last speaker of the afternoon meeting, which lasted more than two hours, was College Senior James Mall ins on, leader of the Common

(Continued on page 4)

9RSMP

presented by

The Annenberg School

of Communications I Theater Lab

University of Pennsylvania

Directed by llona Gerbner

School Auditorium 3620 Walnut Street

Nov. 15. 16. 22. 23. Dec. 6. 7 at 8:30 p.m.

Nov. 17,24, Dec. 8 at 3:00 p.m.

Tickets S4 50. S3 00 & S2 00 The Annenberg School.

Houston Hall. Wanamaker's. Girnbel's. Glassman's. at the door Group Rates Available Call 594 7041 for Information

Law (Continued from page 1)

services during the several years of attempts to have Collins released.

"Involuntary confession has been inadmissable as evidence for a great many years," said Rudovsky, "This case is not one that is based on any new Supreme Court decisions.

"Considering the background of the case," he continued, "including the state's breaking its original pro- mise to Collins to release him in 12 years, and the fact that the state had absolutely no evidence with which to retry Collins, and the fact that Collins did not commit the actual murder, it seems to me that the pro- per course for the state to take would have been to release him without further delay."

Collins is not at all bitter, accord- ing to Rudovsky, who says that Collins thought he had done wrong, but also knew the state had wronged him. He was reconciled to the fact that he was unjustly prisoned.

"Collins is very well read," added Kairys, "We discussed such things as the war in Vietnam and the election. He also has close ties with his family in Cleveland. I don't think he is going to go out and commit any crimes now."

Of the other two men who committed the robbery with Collins, one is out of jail and the other is in prison awaiting a retrial because of developments similar to the Collins case. According to Kairys, he too was having withdrawal symptoms from a heavy dose of drugs when his confession was obtained. Kairys is handling this case as well.

Page 4

Penn Players present Electra

By ROBERT FINEBERG

"Penn Players has been a very dull organization in the past," ac- cording to Richard Gottlieb, assistant artistic director of the drama group. To help revitalize theatre on campus, Penn Players will present Euripides* Electra, adapted and directed by Gott- lieb, on Nov. 14-16 and 20-23 at 8:30 PJvl. in the Houston Hall Auditorium.

This is Gottlieb' first year at Pennsylvania. He spent last year at Oxford, where he directed Gogol's "The Government Inspector" and re- ceived good critical reviews in Lon- don. In 1967 he studied under the poet Robert Lowell at Harvard.

In adapting the play, Gottlieb read translations in English, French, and German, and tried to make this ancient tragedy more powerful by eliminating many quaint sections not relevant to today.

"This will not be a classical performance, in the sense that there will be no Greek choir robes," said Gottlieb. The stage at Houston Hall has been rebuilt to make it more closely resemble a theatre. Penn Players has added a dance sequence choreographed by Anita Dimonstein and Susan Finger. Music has been written by Mark Jordan and will be provided by the Edison Electric Band.

A cast of 15 includes Andrea Balis as Electra, Steve Caton as Orestes, Judy Jurgaitis as Clytemnestra, and Jack Salomon as the Old Man.

Trustees (Continued from page 3)

Sense Coalition. Mallinson said he was sickened and disgusted by students telling trustees what to do and said he and many other students were in favor of any action the trustees thought was necessary.

Mallinson said he thought students should be involved only in decisions that directly affected them, such as the dining service and parietal hours.

The Daily Pennsylvanian

PENN PLAYERS: center, Andreo Balis; from left, Steve Caton, Judy Jurgaitis, Gandalf, and Jack Salomon.

Students sought for OIC locations

Opportunities Industrialization Center was founded in 1964 by the Reverend Leon Sullivan to provide skills, training, attitude and motiva- tion guidance for the unemployed.

Since OIC began, more than 5300 persons have been placed in jobs, and the Center has .iad a financial impact of more than $20 million on Philadelphia's economy. OIC has spread to 70 cities in the United States, Puerto Rico, and in Africa.

OIC's fund-raising goal this year is $445,000. The final drive to meet this goal is now on, and OIC is look- ing for volunteers to man ticket cen- ters for a raffle which will last through January 24. There are ticket locations all over the city, including Center City (13th and Market), North Philadelphia (Broad and Olney), Ger- mantown, Cherry Hill, Ivy Ridge Shop- ping Center, King of Prussia, and Cedarbrook Mall.

Each location will be active for about a week, and hours can be ar- ranged with the co-ordinator from OIC. Complete information is avail- able in the OIC office, Rm. 25 Irvine.

Engineers investigate computer war games

Despite antiwar protests and "We Won't Go" petitions there is a frenzy of military strategem going on at the University, virtually unnoticed by the student body.

Destroyer captains are busily trying to outwit submarine commanders and destroy their subs. These battles have nothing to do with ROTC.They are in reality complicated, computer simulations of the real thing fought out weekly by research engineers at the Moore School. According to Dr. Noah S. Prywes, project director, the object of the duel is to develop an understanding of the interaction between the players and large scale, on-line computers -- those which the player can communicate with directly.

The idea was based on a war game using computers Prywes saw being played at the British Admiralty several years ago. Although that game was played under much simpler conditions, the idea did provide the complications and excitement needed.

The Moore School project, which is being financed by grants from the Office of Naval Research, recreates actual conditions so well it may provide a new training tool for Naval cadets and officers, as well as leading to new tactics or integrated control systems for naval vessels of the future.

A key to the realism of the game is a memory system — developed at the Moore School -- called "multilist," which stores and retrieves data in inter- related chunks, or modules. The system can cooperate with its human partner at speeds matching human thought. Multilist also stores all relevant past game experiences in secondary memory units. Among the data stored in the computer are detailed descriptions of the players, including everything from ship type, size, weaponry, and speed to its nationality and international call sign. Typical tasks assigned to players are to attack another player, to keep it under surveillance, to blockade a port, or to wipe out an attacker.

The goal of the project is to study the connection between the workings of the human mind and the computer. "We have an idea how a human solves problems," says Prywes, "and we are trying to put it into a computer by creat- ing a dialogue between them."

Kare named director of new senses center

Tuesday, November 12, 1968

KARATE EXHIBTI0N

BY PHILA. KARATE CLUB

WEDNESDAY 4:30

GIMIEL GYMM

A physiologist who is a world authority on the sense of taste has been named director of the Univer- sity's recently organized Monell Chemical Senses Center and an 18- member national advistory council has been appointed.

Dr. Luther L. Terry, vice presi- dent for medical affairs and chair- man of the Center's national advistory council, announced recently the appointment of Dr. Morley R. Kare as director and an ex-officiomember of the advisory council. Council mem- bers are from the fields of medical, dental and veterinary education, nu- trition, public health and govern- mental agencies, and industry.

The Center was founded last Feb- ruary with the aid of a $1 million grant from the Ambrose Monell Foun- dation and matching funds from the Veterans Administration, other foun- dations and private industry. It is the only institution of its kind in the United States. In it investigators are brought together from many disciplines in the first concerted group research ap- proach to the chemo-reception pro- cesses. Scientists on the Center's staff include physicians, dentists, vet- erinarians, biochemists, behavioral psychologists, ecologists, and bio- physicists.

Terry pointed out that research

on the chemical senses has been a relatively neglected field, yet it is related to a wide range of public problems. The world' sever-growi.i^ population needs new sources of pala- table and nourishing food. Animals

and insects who depend on the sense of smell and taste to find food and mates are threatened with extinction because pollution is altering the odor of their environment.

Research on the chemical senses may also aid in the treatment of such medical problems as malnutrition and obesity. Kare's studies of the loss of taste in people who are under- nourished has demonstrated that this loss is related to certain vitamin deficiencies. On the other hand, he has found that an individual's nutritive state affects his sense of taste. Taste diminishes when hunger is satisfied.

"The University is especially well suited as the site of the Monell Chemical Senses Center," Kare said. "It has a tradition of collabor- ative work between departments and schools."

The Center is temporarily located in the Lippincott Building at 25th and Locust Streets,but will move to its own building adjacent to the campus at 34th and Market Streets as part of the Science Center complex when con- struction is completed.

WANTED: Art work • ink, charcoal draw.

ings • creative photography -

for campus publication, call

594-5168 for information on

themes and deadlines.

Tonite See New Columbia

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Classifieds The Daily Pennsylvania!! Page 5

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FOR SALE: AJCC. REGISTERED GERMANSHEP- herd pups - champion stock; males $100, Fe- males $75.Call 10 A.M. - 10P.M.TR 6-8967. 3540

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ELECTRA NOV. 14-16,20-23

OFFICIAL

EMORY UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW, ATLANTA: A representative will be interviewing in Houston Hall on Thurs., Nov. 14, all day in Room 10.

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW: A representative will be interviewing on campus from %30-noon and 1-3:30 P.M. today. Contact Room 16E College Hall for location.

CAMPUS AGENDA

CATACOMBS: See the new flick on Columbia Student Strike. Three top strike leaders will lead discussion. 8:30 P.M. Doors open at 8.

COMMUTER COFFEE HOUR: To- day, Permiman Room Houston Hall, 11 A.M.-noon.

ENGLISH CONVERSATION PRACTICE: Foreign students and personnel: practice your English in informal groups with professional men and women, i.e., doctors, law- yers, etc. who are interested in meeting you. Every Tues. at Taber- nacle Church, 37th and Chestnut Sts., 7:30 PJvl.

HOUSTON HALL TICKET SERVICE: Tickets available for ■ By George" with Max Adrian, today.

I.A.A.: The Anspach Institute of Foreign Affairs and Diplomacy pre- sents a two part session on the work- ings of the State Department, today, 4-6 PJvl., and 7:30 PJvl., second fl. lounge, Christian Assoc. Open to all interested.

OPEN DISCUSSION: Black student leaders speak out on vital University issues. A panel discussion will be followed by a question and answer

period. Open to all University stu- dents. Phi Sigma Kappa, 3615 Locust Walk, 7 P.M. tomorrow night.

S.A.A.S.: Coffee hour and general meeting. Coffee hour with Julian Bond, 5 PJvl. today. Franklin RoomHouston Hall; meeting 6:30 P.M. Room 200 College Hall. Grad students invited.

URBAN AFFAIRS MAJOR: All those interesting in setting up an ur- ban affairs major, please come to a meeting today in Houston Hall at 11 AJvl.

ACTIVITY NOTICES

ALPHA CHI SIGMA: Meeting of pledges and brothers today, 5 PJvl., Room 108, Harrison Labs.

ALPHA EPSILON DELTA: Medi- cal school week - Nov. 18-22. Pre- medical students are invited to sit in on several classes in the medical

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COLLEGE / UNIVERSITY. A

school and to attend clinical confer- ences at H.U.P. You must register at the premedical office to attend.

THE ASSOCIATION FOR COM- PUTING MACHINERY: Mr. John Whitney will give an audio-visual presentation "Constructivist Cinema - Design in Motion With a Computer" — music and the graphic arts trans- formed by computer technology - at the Moore School, 33rd and Walnut, Room 29, tomorrow.

BRIDGE CLUB: Fractional game tomorrow, 6:50 P.M., West Lounge Houston Hall.

SKI CLUB: Ski lecture by Robert Turner, Director of Eastern States Ski Association, on ski equipment, tomorrow night, 8 PJvl., College Hall 200.

UNDERGRADUATE ECONOMICS SOCIETY: Important meeting today, 11 AM., Room W-128 Dietrich Hall. All members or persons interested must attend.

UPSG COMMUTER REPS: Infor- mal but important meeting withCom- muter Activities Board today. Come to the coffee hour, 11 A.M., Houston Hall Peimiman Room.

VIETNAM WEEK COMMITTEE: Important meeting tonight to plan the GJ. Project in Philadelphia, 7:30 P.M., 217 College Hall.

WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIA- TION: Urgent meeting at 11 AJvl. to- day, Weightman Hall. All officers and representatives please attend.

The Interfraternity Council is sponsoring a "clearing-house" for freshmen today through Friday that will serve:

1) to provide freshmen with in- formation on fraternities, such as costs, open houses, and formal rush;

2) to put freshmen in touch with a fraternity they wish to rush, but to which they have not yet been invited;

3) to put groups of freshmen, composed of foui or five men who wish to join the same house, in touch with a fraternity that might be willing to take them as a group.

The program will operate under the supervision of Thomas Phillips, IF secretary, and Steven Lerman, Chancellor of Tau Epsilon Phi. Lerman said that it was established as a "mechanism to facilitate things,'' and hopes that it will "improve communications between the fresh- men and the houses."

The clearing-house will be held from 5-7 P.M. in the east alcove of Houston Hall.

The Original House Of Pagano's Restaurant 3633 WALNUT ST.

Presents

Second Annual College Pizza Bowl

( a pizza-eating orgy )

Semi Finals To Be Held At House Of Pagano's Restaurant

Sunday, November 17,1:00 P.M.

Students Interested IN Competing

Must Register Before Friday, Nov. 15.

By Calling EV2-4105. Ask For Toddy Or Mark.

Finals Will Be Held 0a Tke Mike Douglas Skow

During Week Of Nov. 25.

No Charge For The Pizza You Consume.

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CAMPUS CHEST PRESENTS

GEORGY GIRL'

SUN., NOV 17 7 & 9:30

IRVINE AUD $1

ALL PROCEEDS TO CHARITY

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Defense, ground game help frosh

By JOHN WERTHEIMER

The undefeated Penn Quaker played ball control and tough defense Saturday morning to knock the Temple Owl out of the air for the first time this year, 19-12, in a frosh football clash.

Penn ran its record to 5-0 with the win; Temple is now 4-1. The Quakers got on the board first, late in the initial period, as halfback

Walter Konek plunged over from the one. The score capped a 13 play, 71 yard drive which featured runs quarterback Phil Procacci of 16 yards and 28 yards. The latter brought the ball to Temple's 3. The extra point attempt after the TD was foiled by a bad snap from center.

Explosive Temple came right back to score before the end of the period, moving 71 yards in 8 plays. Quarterback Doug Shobert hit Jim Dulin, who made a diving catch, in the left corner of the end zone, for a 21 yard touchdown. Ray Calabrese's kick was blocked by the Penn line.

After Penn held the ball for only three plays, the Owls, behing Shobert's passing and the running of Pedro Barez, moved from their 36 to a first down at the Penn 13. However, two runs gained only six yards, and Shobert overthrew Dulin in the corner of the end zone. On fourth down, from the seven, a tough Penn rush forced Shobert to get rid of the ball before he wanted to, and the pass was well over everyone's head.

Penn got out to the 39, but a penalty and an eleven yard loss on a pass attempt by Mike Hickok pushed the Quakers' back to their 17. Temple got the ball, following Mike Brumbach's punt, on the Penn 49, and got to the 32 before the Quaker defense stiffened. Neither team got any closer to scoring, and the half ended tied at 6-6.

Temple punted to Penn after failing to move on the first series of downs of the second half. The Quakers got two first downs, but stalled at their 45. Brumbach then boomed a punt to Temple's 12.

The Owls could move only to their 15, and Herb Grimes punted off the side of his foot, out of bounds on the Temple 30. Konek hit the line for one, Mike McMahon gained six, and on third and two at the 23, Brumbach took a pitch-out around right end. He got a key block from end Pete Luciano on the Owl corner- back and rolled into the end zone untouched. Hickok's run for the extra points failed, but Penn led 12-6.

Again, Temple roared right back. Barez returned the kickoff 17 yards to the 30, and ran three times to move the ball to the 42. On third down, Shobert rolled out and hit split end Bob Thornton, sprinting up the right sideline, for a 50 yard again. A play later, the same combination clicked for a 10 yard touchdown. Barez' kick hit the right upright, leaving the score tied at 12-12, as the third period ended.

Perm's McMahon returned the Temple kickoff 21 yards to the 31. A grabbing -the-face mask penalty pushed Penn back to the 24 and McMahon ran for six, setting up a third-and eleven at the 30. Brumbach then took a pitchout and sprinted 53 yards around right end to the Temple 17. Fullback Bob Long hit the line for seven and six yards, before Procacci rolled four yards around left end for the TD. Soccer-player Stan Startzell's kick created the final 19-12 margin.

After Temple failed to move, Penn threatened again, going from the Owl 47 to the 8, largely on a 35 yard Procacci-to-Luciano bomb. However, three runs lost two yards, and Start zell's 27 yard field goal attempt was wide.

The Owls then got their last chance. A Shobert run for 13 yards and a pass to George Chaisson got a first down on the Temple 49, with 2:21 left to play. The same combination hit for seven yards, but a Penn lineman deflected Shobert's next attempted pass. A run lost a yard, and on fourth down, the Penn line did it again, as end Tony Corallo knocked down Shobert's pass. Two Hickok plunges and one by Long ran out the clock.

An elated coach Ken Millen commented that "everybody" had played well. He especially praised Brumbach, Procacci, and defensive tackles Bill O'Neill and Dave Connell.

The ball control ground game, which he knew would be necessary, "went really well" in Millen's eyes. It gained 247 yards and all three touchdowns. The leading rushers were Brumbach with six carries for 71 yards and McMahon with 14 for 62.

Even more important was the job of the defense in stopping Temple's aerial attack. Shobert hit on 13 of 23 attempts for 183 yards but was stopped when had to be.

Harriers take third in Heptagonals for highest finish in school history

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The Red and Blue harriers surged to take third place in the Heptagonal meet Saturday on New York's Van Cortlandt Park course. The third place finish represents the Quaker's finest finish in the thirty year history of the race.

Harvard, the defending Heps champions, completely dominated the field and captured first place. The Crimson gained the second leg on their effort to permanently keep the Auerbach Trophy, which is given to the victor if the team is able to win three years in a row.

Harvard's domination was clearly shown when the Crimson took four of the top six positions in the field of

JIM TUPPENY Pleased with Team's

performance

points in gaining the win. Captain Doug Hardin took first place with a time of 24:35.2, eclipsing the old meet record of 24:47.5 set in 1966 by John Lawlor of Navy.

Princeton edged out the Quakers for second place honors by a score of 83 to 89. Yale was a distant fourth with 112 points. The fifth through tenth spots were taken by Army, Navy, Dartmouth, Cornell, Brown, and Columbia.

Captain Jerry Williams was the first Penn harrier to complete the circuit. He placed ninth with a time of 25:30, which broke the old school record he had set for the Van Cortlandt Park course last year by 22 seconds.

Williams was well on his way to a faster time and a seventh place finish when he fell coming off abridge a half a mile from the finish line. Before he could get going again, two Princeton runners passed him, giving the Tigers four of the six points in their margin for second place.

Penn tallied its 89 points by bunching four runners between 18th and 22nd place. Senior Bill Kelso posted a time of 26:11, good for 18th place, while his teammate, junior George Lokken trailed him by three seconds and captured the 19th slot.

Soph Dan Stevens took 21st place with a 26:21 clocking and senior Jud Lavin pulled in right behind him to take the 22nd position and wrap up the scoring for the Penn squad.

Senior Bill Caldwell and junior Bob Acri added displacement to the Quaker total by finishing 23rd and 32nd, so that all of the Penn runners had completed the course before half the field had finished the circuit.

JERRY WILLIAMS Quaker's leading runner

The Red and Blue harriers put another mark in the school record books by establishing a new total team time record of 2:10:38. The old mark had been 2:10:56.

"The team did very, very well," commented coach Jim Tuppeny. "They really ran a gutty race."

"Actually, only three members of the squad were in top shape and we were concerned about having the necessary depth to finish high," he continued, "But the boys really put out all the way."

"The Heps are the biggest meet as far as we are concerned," said the coach, "and our third place finish was the best job we've ever done."

"It was really outstanding." The All-Ivy team is selected on

the basis of how a runner performs in the meet. The top ten finishers are named to the roster.

Penn was able to put one man on

DOUG HARDIN Takes first in Heps

the roster, captain Jerry Williams. This will be the second year that the senior has made the squad.

Harvard dominated the selections, with four Crimson runners on the list. Senior Doug Hardin was named to the squad, along with junior Keith Colburn and sophomores Dave Pottetti and Tom Spengler.

"Harvard's team was really a- mazing," commented coach Tuppeny, "Colburn runs the half mile for track and he really ran over his head in the Heps. They'll really be tough next year, since they will only be losing Hardin."

Princeton landed three men on the squad. Tiger runners who made the list are juniors Eamon Downey and Rich Stafford and sophomore Tom Yunck.

Two men from Yale round out the All-Ivy selections. Seniors Steve Bittner and Frank Shorter are the Eli contribution to the team.

Piazza, team set records

Thinclads sweep to Invitational win

Cf SPORTS Page 6 Tuesday, November 12, 1968

By STEVE FADEM

Paced by Julio Piazza's record breaking performance and a new team time-total record, the freshman cross country team swept to its third con- secutive Columbia Invitational victory last Friday in New York. All seven Quaker runners placed among the first ten finishers in the post-season classic.

Penn's winning team total of 21 points far outdistanced second placed Dartmouth's 50. Third place Brown tallied 75points in the four-team race, while Yale took fourth with an 89 point team total.

In setting a new school record on the Van Cortland Park course, the Red and Blue harriers chopped 22 seconds off their old mark. The new total-time record, an accumulated total of the first five finisher's times, now stands at 1 hour, 18 minutes, and nine seconds.

Julio Piazza continued in his winning ways with a time of 15:02.0, beating his nearest competitor by more than twenty seconds. His time shattered the four-year old record of 15:22.0, set by Cornell's McKusick in the Invitational in 1964. Piazza's strong showing is indicative of the performances he has been putting out all year. His next big test will come next Monday in New York, where the IC 4-A's will be run.

If it hadn't been for a major team efforts, though. Piazza's record- shattering race would have been just another statistic. Penn's Paul Morri- son finished a strong third behind

Dartmouth's Eric Potter, in a time of 15:38. He was followed one second later by teammate JohnAndersonwho kicked in hard just ahead of Jeff Benson, the fourth Red and Blue finisher out of five.

The next two finishers hailed from the second and third placed teams. Steve Shirey of Dartmouth took sixth, while Charles Craig of Brown edged out Elliot Rogers, the fifth Penn finisher. Roger's time of 15:48 was just not enough to overcome Craig, who hit the line one second earlier.

The ninth and tenth place slots were filled by the familiar colors of

red and blue. Kevin Jordan finished the race in 15:59, and Ed Flynn took tenth in 16:04.

Coach Jim Tuppeny was "pleased with the overall team effort", but commented that the team would have to do much better in the IC 4-A's next week, where competition will be much tighter. The harriers main worry there will be a strong Villinova squad that has run well all season. There will be a total of 92 schools running in the New York meet, where the Penn freshman harriers will attempt to add another victory to their already impressive total.

1968 Penn football roundup INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

Pass Interceptions

No. Yds/ Rushing S. Steinberg 3 14

Atts Yds Avg. J. Brown 2 40 Jerry Santini 183 612 3.5 G. Burrell 2 14 BUI Sudhaus 41 169 4.1 F. Pfeilmeier 2 4 Bob Monahan 30 103 2.9 M. Lawlor 2 0 Jim McFillin 23 76 0.4 J. Fuddy 1 4

Possin Comp At

9 s Yds Int TD

M. Eisenhour 1 2 B. Ostrwoski t 0

B. Zbrzeznj

D. Barudin

73 134 944 4 5 38

9 0

5 0

0

G Punt Returns Burrell

No. Yds. TD Avg. Pancho 2 4 3 1

G. Burrell 26 406 1 15.6

Pass Receiving J. Brown M. Eisenhour

6 210 1 8 0

3.5 8.0

No. Yds TD Kickoff Returns No. Yds TD No. Yds Avg.

P. Blumenthal 28 378 3 B. Monahan 13 307 23.6 D. Graham 24 372 2 J. Tremba 5 112 22.4 K. Dunn 9 94 0 J. McFillin 1 24 24.0 B. Sudhaus 8 64 0 Scoring J. McFillin S 44 0 TD P R Kick F.G. Pts

Punting E. Berry 0 0 0 12-14 8-13 36

P. Blumenthal 3 0 0 0 0 18

N o. Yds TD J. Santini 5 0 0 0 0 30

B. Sudhaus 44 1486 33.8 D. Graham 2 0 0 0 0 12

C. NIcVlcker 1 35 35.0 B. Zbrzeznj 2 0 0 0 0 12

B. Monahan 1 25 25.0 G. Burrell K. Dunn J. McFillin

1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

0 0 0

6 6 6

TEAM STATISTICS Penn Opp

126 Total Points 103

61 First Downs Rushing 67 42 First Downs Passing 33

5 First Downs by Penalty 5 108 Total First Downs 105 515 Total Offensive Plays 466 1024 Net Yards Rushing 1142 985 Net Yards Passing 826

2009 Total Offense 1968 79/143 Passes: Comp/Atts 60/137 14 Passes Intercepted by 10

18/7 Fumbles-Fumbles Lost 19/10 36/403 Penalties-Yards 32-282

ba rry |or dan

IN DEPTH

The last two

Sports notice

Spring registration for men, in the Physical Education Department, will begin Monday January 13,1969, every day, through Thursday, January 16. from 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. Students must bring IBM class cards to register.

Dorm football winner - Morris Independent winner - Moore School Fraternity winner - Phi Kappa Sigma

SHAPIR STUDIOS Quality Portraiture

Applications & Passports

On the campus ot 3907 WALNUT ST.

BA 2-7888

Players of the week Fullback Bill Sudhaus and safety

John Brown were named by Penn's varsity football coaches as this week's offensive and defensive "players of the week," respectively.

Sudhaus paced the Quaker's offen- sive charge by rushing 97 yards on 16 carries for a 6.1 yard per carry average while the Red and Blue lost to Yale last Saturday 30-13. Brown's fine defensive play was highlighted by the interception of a Calvin Hill to Brian Dowling pass.

I CAFE INTERNATIONAL NOVEMBER 13 4-6 P.M.

HH LOUNGE i I ADMISSION TICKETS HH 11-3

I SPONSORED BY BUB

Sailors win Tex Poor and Jack Karabasz

finished fourth and eighth, re- spectively, out of thirty-two com- petitors in the Middle Atlantic Intercollegiate singlehanded sailing championships held at the U.S. Naval Academy last weekend.

After qualifying for the finals in a light air series on Saturday, the two sailors were confronted with a blustery northwestern and driving rain on Sunday. Poor found the heavy weather to his liking, and had it not been for a couple of costly tactical errors, probably would have placed farther up in the standings. Karabasz sailed very smartly to achieve his creditable eighth despite the fact that he was handicapped by lack of size.

Next weekend the team will again journey to Annapolis with skippers Gordon Buzby, Jack Karabasz, Tex Poor, and Steve Simkin, and crews Joe Cooper, John Cukler, Rome Doherty, Keith Gordon, and Mark Paster for the War Memorial Regatta.

Some people call it the winning habit, others call it pride. But whatever it is, once you have got it, winning becomes that much easier.

Anyone who watched Saturday saw it in action. Brian Dowling is a winner. He proved it last year, beating Harvard with only seconds to go, and he's proved it over and over since he began to play organized football.

Dowling is not the prettiest quarterback you'll ever see on a football field but he's a winner. His passes seem to float endlessly and seemingly unaimed, but they drop straight and true into the hands of his more than talented receivers.

The winning habit is tough to shake once you've acquired it and even tougher to regain once you've lost it.

The Perai gridders are at the crossroads. In the long run these next two games are more important than the two that preceded them. For this is a young Quaker ballclub. Zbrzeznj, Graham, Blumenthal, Sudhaus, Brown, Warner, Fuddy, Joseph, and many others are names that will still be seen in the 1969 version Franklin Field Illustrated.

The Quakers now stand 5-2, a record even Jeanne Dixon would have shied away from predicting. But there is a big difference between 5-4 and 7-2. Because winning becomes a habit and so does losing.

*****

These games are important for Bob Odell and his staff, who have to go out in a few months and try to convince high school kids that Pennsylvania is the place where they can best get educated, and still play winning football.

It has long been questioned as to whether the so-called "once-mighty" Quakers could again compete equally in the hry League. They have come a long way towards proving they could this season.

It is still obvious that Yale, Harvard, and Princeton get the best athletes in the league, but as a Yale safety man put it, "You can't help but get better, you've got the finest athletic facilites In the League."

In recent years the Quaker recruiters have consistently run into the hard facts of Ivy League of life — the "Big Three" have their names-ecruiting for them. The Red and

BRIAN DOWLING - CAN'T SHAKE THE HABIT

Blue needed a miracle season, just one great year, to show that Penn isn't out of the running. Now it's up to the kids, to suck in their guts and play Columbia and Dartmouth as if they were the stepping stones to an Ivy title, because in a very real sense they may well be.

*****

If freshman teams are any indicator of the future. Bob Odell must be all smiles over his undefeated freshmen. When a program gets going, it doesn't take an entire frosh squad to help the varsity, merely a few key players.

The frosh have good size and ability in the line and should help there. The quarterbacks, Phil Procacci and Mike Hickock have shown good outside speed and Bob Long could be the fullback in Penn's future.

But most importantly the frosh are getting the winning habit. They pulled a game out against Princeton by driving 85 yards on the ground in the last two minutes, and last Saturday they broke a 12-12 tie to upend unbeaten Temple with a fourth quarter touchdown drive.

The juniors, who are the heart of this year's Quaker success, gained pride and the winning habit playing together as a freshman unit. These qualities have carried them over some rough roads this season. With some help from a frosh squad with the same habits, next year could be the year of the Quaker.

It's a tough rut to get out of, winning that is, and the next two games should prove it.

mm

The "HOT" international issue-What's with Czechoslovakia?

Hear ERIC BERT, Special Correspondent, Daily World, just returned from that country, the Soviet Union and its socialist allies; an expert report on:

"Socialist Internationalism and Czechoslovakia Today" Friday, Nov. 15, Hotel Philadelphia, N. Broad St. at Vine, Bryn Mawr Room. 8:30 P.M.

Admission $1.50 - Students and unemployed 75C

Auspices: Philadelphia Social Science Forum

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