6
10/6/69 anian Vol. LXXXV No. 51 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1969 The Daily Pennsylvania^ Monday, October 6, 1969 **'*',. *.*+»•*.•*# Kite & Key prexy quits; open membership nixed STEVE TALESNICK (center), president of Kite and Key, resigned along with three other members of the organization at a meeting, Sunday night. The defeat of a proposal for open membership precipitated Talesnick's resignation, Med. students challenge U Council representative BARBARA FEAREY By JOHN RILEY Five of the 23 Kite and Key mem- bers, including President Steve Talesnick, resigned from the pres- tigious organization at a stormy meeting Sunday night. The resignations came following the defeat, by a vote of ten to seven with one abstention, of Talesnick's proposal calling for open membership in the organization. Associate members, or heelers, also rejected Talesnick's recom- mendation, 32 to 16. Talesnick, who is president of the senior class, had called for the aboli- tion of heeling, immediate member- ship for anyone except first semester freshmen, and the reorganization of the society in a committee structure. Kite and Key in the past has been a high-status campus service organi- zation. It provides campus tours and helps the admissions department in recruiting. Traditionally, students have been required to heel for a year, before being voted on for membership. A three-quarters vote of the previous year's members is required for acceptance as a member. Talesnick, who predicted the de- feat of his proposal prior to the meeting, had hoped to change Kite and Key from what he called an "elitist society" into a group more dedicated to campus service and less involved with "politicking." Bill Conger, who will replace Talesnick as president, opposed Talesnick's motion, saying it was ideal but inefficient. Conger said the defeated proposal would have prompted committee, rather than or- ganizational, loyalty. Resigning along with Talesnick were Jim Hively and Tim Carson, president and vice-president of the Interfraternity Council, David Kane and Howard Schonfeld. Hively and Carson's resignations came in emo- tion charged addresses, although Schonfeld's resignation was by proxy and Kane's was announced early this morning. Hively, in his resignation, said. "You people are still clinging to an aristocracy. When it gets right down to it, you don't want an open society. You want an elitist group and you all want to be members." The soft speaking Talesnick com- mented, "I can no longer be presi- dent of this organization in its present state. Our projects have become stifled. All our free thinkers either aren't free or don't know how to think." Following the five resignations, one associate member remarked, "I think this is the biggest cop out in the whole world." Stu Widman, a member of Kite and Key, commented, "Talk about hypocrisy, quitting is about as hypocritical as you can get." Conger, continuing the meeting, presented an alternative plan for or- ganizational change. This proposal stated, in part, "We the writers of this proposal believe that confusion could result if the Kite and Key (Continued on page 4) By BOB HOFFMAN A group of Medical School students have challenged the legitimacy of the school's first representative to the University Council. The challenge is being tendered by a sub- Unit of the Medical School's student govern- ment the University Medical Association (UMA) on the grounds that the present representative was not elected. The present representative, Peter Andrus, is vice presi- dent of UMA. Andrus, said of the challange, it is "un- fortunate that one or two people got uptight." Philip Hagen, a spokesman for the group that is making the challange, the Com- mittee on University Medical Institutional Structure (CUMIS) said that following the decision by the University Council last spring to seat students the president of the UMA, Alan Cross, indicated that he would serve as the Medical School's representative. When several persons objected to this arrange- ment, Hagen said, it was agreed that Cross would serve as an interim representative until a formal election in the fall. It was planned at that time to hold the election early in the semester, but no election has yet been held. Cross attended Council meetings in the spring and during the summer. He is cur- rently in Yugoslavia, and Andrus has since been designated his temporary successor. There was no Medical School representative at the Council's first meeting on Sept. 25. \t that meeting, the first undergraduates to be elected to the important policy-making body, were in attendance. Harber, chairman of CUMIS, said that his group is trying "to stir up pressure to hold an election and to encourage a broader range of people to run." Hagen contended that most of the leaders of L'MA and other Medical School activities tend to be more conservative than the rest of the medical students. Andrus attributed the delay in holding the election to organizational problems and said that a representative should be elected by mid-November. He said that all medical students will receive a letter this week inviting them to submit nominations to the Council and that the various stages of the election will proceed from there. The elec- tion, he said, would be open to all medical students. He said he anticipates that he will attend at most two Council meetings. He also said that he will make an attempt to keep all medical students informed of the Council's actions. Also at issue is the legitimacy of UMA as a body representative of the Medical School students. Hagen said, that while its present officers were legitimately elected, voter turnout was low. He said he believes that UMA, does not reflect a significant repre- sentation of the student body." The University Council, the highest governing body in the University under the trustees, voted last March to add 14 under- graduates and 16 graduate students to its ranks. The council held its first meeting with students in attendance Oct. 24. i BERNIE ZBRZEZNF' SHABORG Fred Shabel> the University's di- rector of intercollegiate athletics, has been named director of the newly formed division of recreation and ath- letics, President Harnwell announced Friday. The new division will handle all the programming of recreational and athletic facilities and activities at the University. In a telephone interview at his home Sunday, Shabel said the crea- tion of the new division was' a major step" in the history of athletics at the University. "I have often said that you can't defend intercollegiate athletics un- less you also have a. wholesome recreational program for the entire University," the former Duke and University of Connecticut basketball coach said. "This new division is a major step in improving athletic op- portunities here," he concluded. Previously, intramural athletics were handled by the department of physical education. The intramural program was considered highly suc- cessful with basketball, but a short- age of facilities hindered the growth of the program. Shabel said this current inade- quacy would be corrected by the construction of the ice rink, the use of Gimbel gymnasium facilities, and the fulltime use of the Franklin Field's AstroTurf field and Tartan track. He said the construction of lights for Franklin Field would begin today. A committee of administrators. Injury cuts short Zbrzeznj career By BOB SAVETT and IRA GARR Bernie Zbrzeznj, Penn's star senior quarterback regarded as one of the best in the East, will never play football again. The 5-8, 172-pound Wharton School dean's list student sustained a shoulder separation on the third play of Saturday's game with Brown when hit by 211-pound defensive tackle Vic Zwerg. Dr. Erwin R. Schmidt, Jr., will perform the first of two neces- sary operations this morning at 10:30 at University Hospital, in- serting several metal pins between the scapula and clavicle of Zbrzeznj's right shoulder. Today, Zbrzeznj will be under the knife approximately 45 minutes: four weeks from now, he will undergo surgery to remove those pins. "There are several ways of treating an injury like Bernie's," asserted Schmidt, the team doctor. "We feel the best way is to put everything back the way it was. The real pity is that Bernie spent every spare moment of the last 14 months directed toward a goal and it all came apart so quickly, through no fault of his own." For Schmidt, it will be the second such operation this season; earlier, he treated junior halfback Roy Supulski for the same injury. A third Quaker athlete, sophomore Mike Hickok, also suffered a shoulder separation Saturday, but his condition is not as severe. Unlike the others, Hickok, who replaced Zbrzeznj in the game only to be injured on the very first play of the second quarter, will probably be able to play football this season. "The dream is still there, I'm just not part of it," commented Zbrzeznj Sunday about a possible Ivy title for Penn, as his eyes scanned the two TV sets in his room at Student Health, simultaneously viewing the Washington-San Francisco pro football game and the New York-Atlanta National League playoff. "I've played football for nine years and Saturday was the first game I've missed. "It was such a beautiful day to play football," the 21-year-old accounting major continued. "I came out there and felt like Ernie Banks. I had all the confidence in the world and I knew we'd win, it was just a question of the score. Les Keiter (of WFIL-TV) inter- viewed me before the game and I wasn't nervous at all." The separation occurred on the tackle, as the weight of the two bodies pinned the shoulder to the turf, tearing all the ligaments. "I knew it when I reached under my shoulder pad," said Zbrzeznj, who was immediately taken to the locker room, where he remained until the middle of the third quarter, when he returned to watch his teammates. Then he was driven to the hospital for x-rays and a taping. (Contiriued on page 5) SDS Labor unsuccessful in posting Council candidate (Continued ~>n oan e4) By ANITA SAMA The SDS Labor Committee has failed to have its party's named placed on the ballot for the race for the City Council seat in Philadelphia's 1st Councilmanic District. The labor committee is a city-wide group unaffiliated with the Uni- versity's chapter of Students for a Democratic Society. The Alliance Party, the labor com- mittee's party, first sought to run Steve Fraser, a Temple University student and head of the labor com- mittee, as candidate, in the South Philadelphia district. This idea was abandoned, however, because Fraser, a * 23, is two years under the minumum age requirement of 25. Then, the Alliance Party filed Petitions for the nomination of Arnold Burnstein. But, when accosted by reporters Thursday, Burnstein denied all connection with the party. The party claims that Burnstein was approached and agreed to run on the Alliance party ticket. Burnstein, however, told a re- porter from the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin "They asked me if I'd help them out. I said that I would help them get signatures or something. I have nothing in common with them. "They asked me if I would be a candidate. I said definitely not. That night they called and told me they'd put me in as a candidate." The Alliance Party issued a state- ment Saturday attempting to explain the discrepancies in the story. The statement said that dozens of persons heard Burnstein agree to run on the Alliance program and several Alliance members heard him insist upon a misspelling of his own name. This misspelling is now the basis for a large part of the Election Commis- sion's case against the party. The statement also said that a half dozen persons watched Burnstein sign the petitions for his candidacy at a notary public, and five people accom- panied Burnstein to City Hall and watched him file for the race. Jane (Muffin) Friedman, a spokes- man for the SDS Labor Committee and the Alliance party, descirbed Bern- stein as "a suspicious character at past meetings." She also said that he had agreed repeatedly to his candi- dacy in talking to Fraser and Robert Muelle, another SDS member, who, to- gether with Burnstein, formed the Alliance Party's nominating com- mittee, while he was at the same time denying this candidacy to the press. Miss Friedman said that the nom- inating committee was alerted to Eurnstein's "duplicity" by a Bulletin reporter who also said that the legal- ity of Burnstein's candidacy was being challenged by Thomas Gilhool, the Urban Action (a reform Demo- cratic splinter) party's candidate for the vacant seat in City Council. In response to this challenge, (Continued on page 2) KEN SOUSER MUFFIN FRIEDMAN

10/6/69 - Penn Libraries anian Vol. LXXXV No. 51 Philadelphia, ... By BOB HOFFMAN ... dozen persons watchedBurnstein sign

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10/6/69 anian Vol. LXXXV No. 51 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Copyright 1969 The Daily Pennsylvania^ Monday, October 6, 1969

■**'*',. *.*+»•*.•*# Kite & Key prexy quits; open membership nixed

STEVE TALESNICK (center), president of Kite and Key, resigned along with three other members of the organization at a meeting, Sunday night. The defeat of a proposal for open membership precipitated Talesnick's resignation,

Med. students challenge U Council representative

BARBARA FEAREY

By JOHN RILEY

Five of the 23 Kite and Key mem- bers, including President Steve Talesnick, resigned from the pres- tigious organization at a stormy meeting Sunday night.

The resignations came following the defeat, by a vote of ten to seven with one abstention, of Talesnick's proposal calling for open membership in the organization.

Associate members, or heelers, also rejected Talesnick's recom- mendation, 32 to 16.

Talesnick, who is president of the senior class, had called for the aboli- tion of heeling, immediate member- ship for anyone except first semester freshmen, and the reorganization of the society in a committee structure.

Kite and Key in the past has been a high-status campus service organi- zation. It provides campus tours and helps the admissions department in recruiting. Traditionally, students have been required to heel for a year, before being voted on for membership.

A three-quarters vote of the previous year's members is required for acceptance as a member.

Talesnick, who predicted the de- feat of his proposal prior to the meeting, had hoped to change Kite and Key from what he called an "elitist society" into a group more dedicated to campus service and less involved with "politicking."

Bill Conger, who will replace Talesnick as president, opposed Talesnick's motion, saying it was ideal but inefficient. Conger said the defeated proposal would have prompted committee, rather than or- ganizational, loyalty.

Resigning along with Talesnick were Jim Hively and Tim Carson, president and vice-president of the Interfraternity Council, David Kane and Howard Schonfeld. Hively and Carson's resignations came in emo- tion charged addresses, although Schonfeld's resignation was by proxy and Kane's was announced early this morning.

Hively, in his resignation, said.

"You people are still clinging to an aristocracy. When it gets right down to it, you don't want an open society. You want an elitist group and you all want to be members."

The soft speaking Talesnick com- mented, "I can no longer be presi- dent of this organization in its present state. Our projects have become stifled. All our free thinkers either aren't free or don't know how to think."

Following the five resignations, one associate member remarked, "I think this is the biggest cop out in the whole world."

Stu Widman, a member of Kite and Key, commented, "Talk about hypocrisy, quitting is about as hypocritical as you can get."

Conger, continuing the meeting, presented an alternative plan for or- ganizational change. This proposal stated, in part, "We the writers of this proposal believe that confusion could result if the Kite and Key

(Continued on page 4)

By BOB HOFFMAN

A group of Medical School students have challenged the legitimacy of the school's first representative to the University Council.

The challenge is being tendered by a sub- Unit of the Medical School's student govern- ment — the University Medical Association (UMA) — on the grounds that the present representative was not elected. The present representative, Peter Andrus, is vice presi- dent of UMA.

Andrus, said of the challange, it is "un- fortunate that one or two people got uptight."

Philip Hagen, a spokesman for the group that is making the challange, the Com- mittee on University Medical Institutional Structure (CUMIS) said that following the decision by the University Council last spring to seat students the president of the UMA, Alan Cross, indicated that he would serve as the Medical School's representative. When several persons objected to this arrange- ment, Hagen said, it was agreed that Cross would serve as an interim representative until a formal election in the fall. It was planned at that time to hold the election early in the semester, but no election has yet been held.

Cross attended Council meetings in the spring and during the summer. He is cur- rently in Yugoslavia, and Andrus has since been designated his temporary successor. There was no Medical School representative at the Council's first meeting on Sept. 25. \t that meeting, the first undergraduates

to be elected to the important policy-making body, were in attendance.

Harber, chairman of CUMIS, said that his group is trying "to stir up pressure to hold an election and to encourage a broader range of people to run." Hagen contended that most of the leaders of L'MA and other Medical School activities tend to be more conservative than the rest of the medical students.

Andrus attributed the delay in holding the election to organizational problems and said that a representative should be elected by mid-November. He said that all medical students will receive a letter this week inviting them to submit nominations to the Council and that the various stages of the election will proceed from there. The elec- tion, he said, would be open to all medical students. He said he anticipates that he will attend at most two Council meetings. He also said that he will make an attempt to keep all medical students informed of the Council's actions.

Also at issue is the legitimacy of UMA as a body representative of the Medical School students. Hagen said, that while its present officers were legitimately elected, voter turnout was low. He said he believes that UMA, does not reflect a significant repre- sentation of the student body."

The University Council, the highest governing body in the University under the trustees, voted last March to add 14 under- graduates and 16 graduate students to its ranks. The council held its first meeting with students in attendance Oct. 24.

i

BERNIE ZBRZEZNF'SHABORG

Fred Shabel> the University's di- rector of intercollegiate athletics, has been named director of the newly formed division of recreation and ath- letics, President Harnwell announced Friday.

The new division will handle all the programming of recreational and athletic facilities and activities at the University.

In a telephone interview at his home Sunday, Shabel said the crea- tion of the new division was' a major step" in the history of athletics at the University.

"I have often said that you can't defend intercollegiate athletics un- less you also have a. wholesome recreational program for the entire University," the former Duke and University of Connecticut basketball coach said. "This new division is a major step in improving athletic op- portunities here," he concluded.

Previously, intramural athletics were handled by the department of physical education. The intramural program was considered highly suc- cessful with basketball, but a short- age of facilities hindered the growth of the program.

Shabel said this current inade- quacy would be corrected by the construction of the ice rink, the use of Gimbel gymnasium facilities, and the fulltime use of the Franklin Field's AstroTurf field and Tartan track. He said the construction of lights for Franklin Field would begin today.

A committee of administrators.

Injury cuts short Zbrzeznj career

By BOB SAVETT and IRA GARR Bernie Zbrzeznj, Penn's star senior quarterback regarded as

one of the best in the East, will never play football again. The 5-8, 172-pound Wharton School dean's list student sustained

a shoulder separation on the third play of Saturday's game with Brown when hit by 211-pound defensive tackle Vic Zwerg.

Dr. Erwin R. Schmidt, Jr., will perform the first of two neces- sary operations this morning at 10:30 at University Hospital, in- serting several metal pins between the scapula and clavicle of Zbrzeznj's right shoulder. Today, Zbrzeznj will be under the knife approximately 45 minutes: four weeks from now, he will undergo surgery to remove those pins.

"There are several ways of treating an injury like Bernie's," asserted Schmidt, the team doctor. "We feel the best way is to put everything back the way it was. The real pity is that Bernie spent every spare moment of the last 14 months directed toward a goal and it all came apart so quickly, through no fault of his own."

For Schmidt, it will be the second such operation this season; earlier, he treated junior halfback Roy Supulski for the same injury. A third Quaker athlete, sophomore Mike Hickok, also suffered a shoulder separation Saturday, but his condition is not as severe. Unlike the others, Hickok, who replaced Zbrzeznj in the game only to be injured on the very first play of the second quarter, will probably be able to play football this season.

"The dream is still there, I'm just not part of it," commented Zbrzeznj Sunday about a possible Ivy title for Penn, as his eyes scanned the two TV sets in his room at Student Health, simultaneously viewing the Washington-San Francisco pro football game and the New York-Atlanta National League playoff. "I've played football for nine years and Saturday was the first game I've missed.

"It was such a beautiful day to play football," the 21-year-old accounting major continued. "I came out there and felt like Ernie Banks. I had all the confidence in the world and I knew we'd win, it was just a question of the score. Les Keiter (of WFIL-TV) inter- viewed me before the game and I wasn't nervous at all."

The separation occurred on the tackle, as the weight of the two bodies pinned the shoulder to the turf, tearing all the ligaments.

"I knew it when I reached under my shoulder pad," said Zbrzeznj, who was immediately taken to the locker room, where he remained until the middle of the third quarter, when he returned to watch his teammates. Then he was driven to the hospital for x-rays

and a taping. (Contiriued on page 5)

SDS Labor unsuccessful in posting Council candidate

(Continued ~>n oan e4)

By ANITA SAMA The SDS Labor Committee has

failed to have its party's named placed on the ballot for the race for the City Council seat in Philadelphia's 1st Councilmanic District.

The labor committee is a city-wide group unaffiliated with the Uni- versity's chapter of Students for a Democratic Society.

The Alliance Party, the labor com- mittee's party, first sought to run Steve Fraser, a Temple University student and head of the labor com- mittee, as candidate, in the South Philadelphia district. This idea was abandoned, however, because Fraser, a* 23, is two years under the minumum age requirement of 25.

Then, the Alliance Party filed Petitions for the nomination of Arnold Burnstein. But, when accosted by reporters Thursday, Burnstein denied all connection with the party.

The party claims that Burnstein was approached and agreed to run on the Alliance party ticket.

Burnstein, however, told a re- porter from the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin "They asked me if I'd help them out. I said that I would help them get signatures or something. I have nothing in common with them.

"They asked me if I would be a

candidate. I said definitely not. That night they called and told me they'd put me in as a candidate."

The Alliance Party issued a state- ment Saturday attempting to explain the discrepancies in the story. The statement said that dozens of persons heard Burnstein agree to run on the Alliance program and several Alliance members heard him insist upon a misspelling of his own name. This misspelling is now the basis for a large part of the Election Commis- sion's case against the party.

The statement also said that a half dozen persons watched Burnstein sign the petitions for his candidacy at a notary public, and five people accom- panied Burnstein to City Hall and watched him file for the race.

Jane (Muffin) Friedman, a spokes- man for the SDS Labor Committee and the Alliance party, descirbed Bern- stein as "a suspicious character at past meetings." She also said that he had agreed repeatedly to his candi- dacy in talking to Fraser and Robert Muelle, another SDS member, who, to- gether with Burnstein, formed the Alliance Party's nominating com- mittee, while he was at the same time denying this candidacy to the press. Miss Friedman said that the nom- inating committee was alerted to

Eurnstein's "duplicity" by a Bulletin reporter who also said that the legal- ity of Burnstein's candidacy was being challenged by Thomas Gilhool, the Urban Action (a reform Demo- cratic splinter) party's candidate for the vacant seat in City Council.

In response to this challenge,

(Continued on page 2)

KEN SOUSER

MUFFIN FRIEDMAN

Page 2 The Daily Pennsylvania!!

U.S. compensates widow of victim in Green Beret murder case

By United Press International SAIGON -- The U.S. Government has paid the widow of the alleged victim

in the Green Beret murder case $6,473 as full compensation for the disappear- ance of her husband, U£. embassy officials announced Sunday. The widow, Mrs. Phan Kim Lien Chuyen, said she understood the payment to represent the U.S, Army's portion of total compensation and that she expects further reim- bursement from the embassy. The embassy announcement, however, made it clear that the equivalent of $6,473 paid to her in South Vietnamese Piastres was the total compensation to be made for the disappearance of her husband, Thai Khac Chuyen. Eight members of the UJS. Army's Special Forces, or Green Berets, were charged with involvement in the murder of Chuyen but he was described only as missing in a letter of the widow and the embassy state- ment announcing payment of compensation. The charges against the Green Berets were dismissed last week by order of Army Secretary Stanley Resor in Washington. "Mrs. Chuyen, in the presence of her attorney, accepted the

Forman to speak on black manifesto

James Forman, who earlier this year demanded reparations for black economic development from Ameri- can churches and synagogues, will speak on "The Dynamics of the Black Manifesto" tonight in Irvine Audi- torium at 8 PJM.

Forman first entered national prominence on May 5 of this year when he seized the alter of the Riverside Church in New York City, forcing cancellation of the service. Forman made numerous demands of the 500 people in the congregation including the payment of 60 percent of all church income each year to the National Black Economic Develop- ment Conference, of which Forman is the founder. Forman also asked for rent free office space for members of the Conference, classrooms in the church for Harlem residents, and unrestricted use of the church's FM radio station for 12 hours each day.

Forman told the congregation, "the demands of black people are relevant to any church which is

S.D.S. (Continued from page 1)

Fraser, Mueller and Burnstein were were subpeoned by the County Board of Elections. All three men were called upon to testify andMiss Fried- man said that Burnstein denied the testimony of the other two.

Miss Friedman said that Maurice S. Osser, the head of the Elections Board presided over the hearing, but also was among the recipients of the petitions delivered to City Hall.

The result of the hearing was the Alliance Party's being thrown off the ballot and Fraser and Mueller being charged with criminal fraud. The case has now been turned over to the district attorney's office.

Miss Friedman now expects the Alliance party to appeal the decision of the hearing on the basis of the 19th Amendment's guarantee of due pro- cess, and file suit against Burnstein for libel. She pointed out that if the decision of the committee is over- turned Arnold Burnstein will again be the candidate of the party and will have to reappeal to the Board of Elections to remove himself from the ballot.

Miss Friedman implicated Gilhool, the notary public, and the Board of Elections in a "frame-up" of the Alliance Party.

Miss Friedman said of the motives of the party's opponents, "Our politics are obviously different from any other party. Our programs stand in the interest of all the working people in the city. Our politics threaten them. They are grasping to slander us in the eyes of the working population of the city.

"The future of our politics stand on how we can discredit the frame-

operating in or near a black com- munity or anywhere in the United States for that matter." He contends that churches and synagogues are part of the capitalist establishment which has "aided and abetted" the exploitation of America's black population.

The Manifesto was adopted in April of this year by members of the National Black Economic Develop- ment Conference in Detroit. It calls for a vast effort to create Black industrial, educational and cultural programs to be financed in large part by reparations from religious groups. The total reparations demanded is $500 million. Forman has pointed out that this amounts to $15 for each black person in the United States.

Forman has been arrested on numerous occasions for civil rights demonstrations both in the North and South. He is a former executive director of the Student-Non Violent

Coordinating Committee, but was re- placed in the power struggle that brought Stokely Carmichael to the group's leadership.

Forman's lecture, which is open free to thepublic, is sponsored by Connaissance, a student group at the University which presents current political issues.

Power failure A power failure Sunday afternoon

dimmed the lights in the Gimbel Gymnasium, the University Law School and the English House, a nurse's residence hall. Robert McDowell, director of buildings and grounds, said the blackout was caused by the installation of new switches in the University's electrical system. The blackout was anticipated, McDowell said, and the residents of the buildings effected were notified beforehand.

McDowell said that the newly- added switches will allow the three buildings to be served from two electrical feeders and provide an alternate source of electricity.

Power in the three buildings was restored shortly before 9 P.M.

The New York Mets edged closer to the World Series Sunday, blasting the Atlanta Braves, 11-6, in the second game of the National League playoff. The Mets now lead the best- of-five series, 2-0. In the American League, Baltimore holds a 2-0 lead over Minnesota.

OPEN TRYOUTS FOR THE FORTHCOMING PRODUCTION OF

The Fantasticks MONDAY OCT. 6 AT THE CATACOMBS

(36th & Locust)

6:30 - 8:30 EVERYONE INVITED FOR INFORMATION CAUL

EV 2-9104

R.N.S.A. ALL GRAD MIXER FRIDAY OCT. 10 9P.M

HOUSTON HALL WEST LOUNGE

LIVE MUSIC

missing person gratuity from representatives of the U.S. foreign claims com- mission," said a U.S. spokesmen announcing payment of the compsensation. "The amount of the settlement was mutually agreed upon and represents what was determined to be adequate compensation to Mrs. Chuyen. This is in full settlement of her request for compensation from the U.S. Government." Mrs. Chuyen, who has a 4-year-old son and an infant daughter, had asked for com- pensation in the form of monthly payments for an indefinite period equal to her husband's salary of $160 per month, which he earned as an interpreter for the Green Berets. The compensation announced Sunday was the equivalent of approximately 40 months' salary. Defense attorneys for the Green Berets charged that Chuyen was a double agent, working for the Communists as well as the Americans. In charges against the Green Berets, the Army alleged that he had been shot to death and the body dropped from a boat in an unspecified body of water. Chuyen's body has not been found.

THE NEWLY ELECTED BUSINESS AGENT OF

LOCAL 54, AFSCM;AFL CIO ROLAND J. DELANEY

Left Roland J. Delaney And Charles Evers, Mayor of Fayette Miss., The Brother of Medgar Evers, The Slain Civil Rights Leader.

; w>

Rendezvous With The Undefeated Champion of the World, Muhammad Ali. Roland J. Delaney Is Endorsed By The Executive Board

And Bonzell Harrison, President of Local 54.

Monday, October 6, 1969

"SOCIALIST CUBA and the World Revolutionary Movement7'

Speaker: Henry Winston, Chmn., Communist Party, U.S.A.

Leader of delegation just returned from several weeks visit to Cuba on invitation of C.P. of that country, where it was accord, ed exceptional opportunities for observation and interviews.

Discussion period follows FRIDAY, Oct. 10 Hotel Philadelphia, N. Broad

8:30 P.M. at Vine - 6th floor Admission SI.50 Students & unemployed 75* Auspices: Phila. Soc. Science Forum

In the old days, they smacked us across

the knuckles if we read with our hands.

Today, reading with your hand is quite acceptable.

In fact, it's somewhat t»f ;i .status symbol, because people who read with their hands are graduates of the Kvelyn Wood Course.

The hand, however, hasn't always been the symbol of rapid reading. The old method of tuacliiiijf students to in- crease their readiUK speed was to equip them with a readiUK machine.

The theory was that a motorized arm on the machine would extend out over the page. The arm would move down the pa«e at a sti'.uly speed. Hope- fully, your eyes would go along for the ride.

The machine, while seemingly a good idea, didn't live up to its expecta- tions. It couldn't slow down when the reader ran into a confusing passage. And it was too awkward to use in easy chairs or beds.

In 19-15, Kvelyn W I discovered the hand as a device for reading faster.

Her reason for using the hand as a tool was to "give my students the ability to read groups of words at a time and to increase their concentration so thee won't have to %<> back and re-read so often."

Her principle worked. Since 19.-)!). 150.000 people have

taken the Kvelyn Wood Course and have increased their reading speed by an average of 1.7 times.

Using the hand to read faster is a ri i ii interesting experience.

If you would like to try your hand at Mi why don't you K.IIM- to a Mini- l.es.son™? In one hour's time, we'll have you rvadjiiK down the, page, faster than you can imagine.

In fait, you'll actually take home with you a definitely faster reading speed that can he used on newspapers, magazines, correspondence, textbooks. and technical journals.

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FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF OF UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA:

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OF UNIVERSITY OF 0 PENNSYLVANIA: Tuesday, Oct. 7 7:00 PM Wharton School, Dietrich Hall, Rm. W-l Thursday, Oct. 9 7:00 PM School of Engineering, Towne Building,

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Monday, October 6, 1969 The Daily Pennsylvania!!

Campus events Page 3

OFFICIAL NOTICES '■ PRE-LAW ADVISORY BOARD:

Vanderbilt University - School of Law. Professor Karl Warden will be interviewing in Houston Hall on Thursday, October l6,from9:00A.M. to 5:00 P.M. in Rm. 2. Maxe appoint- ments at Pre-Law Advisory Office, Rm. 16E, College Hall.

PSYCHOLOGY PASS MAJORS: Important meeting tomorrow, 11:00 A;M. Stiteler Hall B-6.

CAMPUS AGENDA

CATACOMBS: Rest your eyes from study among the candlelight and luxurious surroundings of the Christian Association's basement.

FREE UNIVERSITY: Student Reg- istration continues today 10 A.M. -

8 P.M. in the West Alcove, Houston Hall. 80 courses are offered. Reg- istration closes Friday. The center page is reversed (8 and 9) in the catalogue.

HILLEL RUSSIAN JEWRY DEM- ONSTRATION: Concerned with poli- tical and religious repression? Mar- shall needed for torchlight rally and drama on Oct. 11. Leave name, address and phone no. at Hlllel «r call 7391.

RIPON FORUM: Top level govern- ment, academic panel evaluates strategy for solving the housing crisis. Find Arts building 6:30 P.M. tomorrow Students welcome.

RUSSIAN COFFEE HOUR: Today, 3:30 - 4:30 P.M. in the Slavic Lounge (Potter Hall). Everyone Welcome.

UNDERGRAD BIOCHEMISTRY:

Biochemistry Colloquium (course no. Biochemistry 301) will meet Tuesday at 5:00 PJvI. in Room 101, New Bio. Building. Dr. Hartnut Wohlrab will speak on "Rapid Reactions In Bio- chemistry." Everyone Welcome, Majors please attend.

ACTIVITY NOTICES

ACLU- Important General meet- ing originally scheduled, for last Thurs. will be held tonight at 7:30 in Dietrich W-51.

ALPA PHI OMEGA: APO meeting tonight at 8:00 in the Bishop White room of Houston Hall.

ASME: All ME's are invited to hear speaker at 11 A.M. tomorrow. T.B. 266.

BAHA'I WORLD FAITH: Meeting

Classifieds

tonight 8:30 Stiteler C-5 All Welcome". COMMUTER ACTIVITIES BOARD

Meeting for all memb- rs, tomorrow at 11 A.M. Room 1, Houston Hall.

CONNAISSANCE: There will be an organizational meeting for all those interested in working onConnaissance Thursday, October 2 at 7:30 in C 10 Stiteler Hall Everyone is welcome.

FRENCH HONOR SOCIETY: Im- portant meeting Wednesday, Oct. 8 at 3:30 in Red Rm. Hill Hall. All members please come. Those who cannot attend, please contact Kathy Slott 594-5268

GRADUATE STUDENTS ASSOCI- ATION: Open Meeting of GSAC to meet and discuss candidates for the GSAS - seats on the University Council today at 8 P.M. in the Conference Room on the 1st floor of theLipincott

Library. GRADUATE STUDENTS ASSOC.:

Council (GSAC) meeting at 11 A.M. in the conference Room of the Lipin- cott Library (1st floor) tomorrow. Cathy Barlow, chairman of the Black Studies Research Commission will be speaking to GSAC. All invited.

IAA: The IAA office will be open from 1-5 P.M. daily for those inter- ested in becoming members and work- ing on IAA programs - Office in basement C.A. Building.

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS MAJORS: Important meeting Thurs. at 7:30 P.M. in Dietrich Hall W-51. Interested freshmen, sophomores, and majors attendeance extremely important.

INTERNATIONAL STUDENT AS- SOCIATION: Meet your candidates

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INTERSTED IN MAKIN MONEY7THE DAILY Pennsylvanian needs advertising salesmen. For information contact the business office 594-6581 or Miml at 561-7645. 4559

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THEATRE - YOl'NG BUT SUCCESSFUL song-writing team seeks playwright with interest in musical comedy for assault on on-or off Broadway. Call Joel or Charles at 732-8626 evenings after 8. 4517

GIRLS WANTED: TWO SOPHOMORES WISH to meet intelligent, good looking girls. Send letter of interest to 300MorrisHall,U of P men's dorms, unlisted phone. 4523

WANTED: STUDENTS TO REPRESENT iw.ai wash & Wear Stretch Wig Co. earn $ while in school - Can Fling Wig Co. GR 3^ ■«708- 5188

WANTED BAND MANAGER AND/OR announcer for the U. of P. bands. For in- formation: 594-8719. 3896

BABYSITTFR(s) WANTED FOR3CH1LDREN Thursday 8:30 AJvI. - 12:30 P.M., Fridays 8:30 A.M. - 12:00 noon. Monday or Tuesday 2 to 3 hrs at your convenience. Near campus. GR 2-7594. 4950

GRADUATE ART SCIENCES STUDENT DE- sires to meet attractive female. Serious relationship. Call Michael EV 2-5610. From 5'7 P-M. 4561

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SALES: ELECTRIC PORTABLE SMITH Corona 110-10" carriage elite; manual re- turn: 18 months old. Overhauled. With case $115.00. Telephone 1-609-546-9676. Even- ts. 3892

PLYMOUTH '62 GOOD CONDIT. GOING away, must sell, $260.00 only. Call LA 5-6653 after 6:00 P.M. week days. 1048 Sprout Rd. Bryn Mawr. 3895

1967 YAMAHA 350CC. EXCELLENT CON- dltion, $500. Call EV 6-8052 after 6. 4525

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and Votel From 7:00 to 9:00 P.M. on Thursday, Oct. 2. Christian Associa- tion Auditorium. 3601 Locust Walk.

LECTURE: 11:00 E-12 (D.H.) Opportunities for inspire.) Manage- ment: consulting, Europe/U.S.A. John Humble, Director Urrwick, Orr and Partners.

OUTING CLUB: Well, we've done it. Outing Club has moved lock, stock, and sleeping bags to a new location. We meet every Monday night at 7:00 P.M., now on the third floor of Houston Hall. Climb on up tonight.

P.U.S.H.: All undergraduates who participated in this past summer's High School Recruiting Program (P. UJ5.H.) should submit a brief evalua- tion of the program to the Admissions Office, 1 College Hall, by October 3. Summarize your efforts and seriously criticize or offer suggestions for P.U.S.H. for the future.

S.D.S.: Meeting Mon. night 7:30 Open Steering committee meeting 7:00 DJL W-l.

STUDENTS FOR ISRAEL: Second organizational meeting 7:30 PJvl. to- day, E-ll Dietrich Hall.

TALKING POINT: HASSLED? HUNG UP? Visit the Talking Point. Sun - Thurs. - 8 PJvl. - 11 PJvl. at HillHall, Houston Hall, orMcClelland Hall. Or call anytime 839-3437.

U. OF P. BAND: Wind Ensemble: The first rehearsal of the newly formed wind ensemble of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania will be at 7:30 PJvl. on Wed. Oct. 8, in the H.H. Rehearsal Room. Information call 594-8719.

YAF: Penn YAF will hold its first meeting tomorrow at 11:00 A Jvl. in Houston Hall Room 10. Anyone interested in invited.

YOUNG DEMOCRATS: Meeting and report on activities for Lindsay on Tuesday, October 7, 7:30 at New- man Hall.

All Psychology Pass Majors- Important Meeting Tomorrow

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■Commentary

The first meeting The Community of Students, meeting in

its first Plenum session Thursday night, more than justified its existence as the University's mode of student governance.

Over 1,300 persons gathered in Irvine Auditorium to discuss, debate, and resolve the issues raised by America's unforgivable war in Vietnam. Topics under consideration ranged from the proposed October 15 boycott to lowering the flags to half-mast. No de- cision was reached on some of the questions; the Plenum learned the hard fact that demo- cracy is a time-consuming form of govern- ment.

The Plenum's major decision Thursday—its call for a boycott of classes on October 15—is one to which we hope the students, faculty, administrators and em- ployees will pay heed. October 15 is a day of national protest, and of national mourning; protest against the senseless policies which snared us into an Asian imbroglio; mourn for the 38,000 soldiers who have died for America's nearsighted commitment.

On Tuesday, the Plenum faces four more resolutions. It must decide on the Houston Hall sanctuary question, on expansion of its demands, lowering the flag, and a full endorsement of the whole full anti-war offensive.

We wholeheartedly endorse the proposal regarding the Houston Hall sanctuary. Legally, we do not know the precise impli- cation of such a retreat; symbolically we sympathize with the feeling that a student union should protect its members from the onslaught of extra-university forces which attempt to imprison—or draft—student conciences.

But regarless of the action taken on the remaining problems the Plenum has proved that every student can have a part in determining student direction of this cam- pus. Microphones at the Plenum are open; every viewpoint has an opportunity for expression.

The Plenum of course is not without its problems. Much haggling over parliamentary rules occured Thursday night; a portion of the debate centered on procedure rather than substance. But these problems hopefully are minor, and will be solved before Tuesday night.

The first meeting of the Plenum, with an average attendance of more than 800, has gone along way to eliminate much of the cynicism and skepticism which greeted the structure at its inception. We wish it as much luck with its second.

Trial is today for Australian arsonist

By United Press International Jerusalem — An Australian Christian accused of setting the fire at

Al Aqsa Mosque, igniting demands in the Moslem world for Jihad (holy war) against Israel, goes on trial here Monday. Security and publicity arrange- ments were unparalleled since the trial of Nazi mass-murderer, Adolf Eich- mann.

Denis Michael Rohan, 28, an itinerant sheep shearer and member of the Messianic Christian Church of God sect, is charged with arson and desecration of the mosque in old Jerusalem — the third holiest shrine in Islam.

The fire Rohan is accused of starting August 21 raised cries throughout the Arab Middle East and some of the old Moslem countries for a Jihad against Israel.

The Arabs hold Israel, which captured Old Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 war, responsible for the fire. Some Arab spokesmen accused Israel of making Rohan a scapegoat even though Israeli police said he had confessed.

The Israeli government is going all out to convince the world Rohan is no scapegoat, and to display Israeli justice.

Not since Eichmann was convicted and condemned in the early 1960" s has an Israeli trial been prepared so elaborately, with such concern for an onlooking world — or with greater security precautions.

The trial is being held in a chamber music hall of the Hughe Modernistic Binyanei Ha 'Ooma Auditorium instead of the small Jerusalem District Courthouse.

There will be simultaneous translation into English of the Hebrew pro- ceedings. Press, radio and television correspondents will tape, film and photo- graph from the hall gallery and file through a news center with international communications facilities set up in the building.

Tight police security will envelop the trial. Rohan will sit behind a bullet proof glass barrier, reported to have been made from the glass booth that protected Eichmann during his trial.

Israel hanged him in 1961. Officials say the booth is for Rohan's own protection.

Rohan faces a maximum penalty of 44 years in jail if convicted consecu- tively of all four counts in the indictment. Two are for arson—the first an abortive attempt Aug. 11 in which only a door keyhole was scorched -- and the other two for twice desecrating a holy place.

Al Aqsa is a vast columned hall, part of the famous Dome of the Rock Compound, and after Mecca and Medina is the third holiest shrine of Islam.

The fire damaged Al Aqsa's roof and eastern and southern walls. That damage is being repaired but some of the treasures that were lost are irre- placeable. The most priceless is Al Aqsa's pulpit of finely carved wood Inlaid with ivory and mother of pearl. The great Arab Sultan Saladin in- stalled the pulpit when he captured Jerusalem from the Crusaders in 1188.

The Mosque dates from around the year 700, although little of the original structure has survived the centuries.

Rohan was arrested the day after the fire at the Mishmar Hasharon Kib- butz, 40 miles north of Tel Aviv. He had spent the first three months of his five months in Israel working in its orange groves and studying in its "crash course" Hebrew language school.

People who had known and worked with him helped piece together a strange picture of Rohan. They described him as a "Bible fiend," a "queer fellow who fasted two or three times a week," a man who grew passionate when a religious topic came up.

The tall, blond and frecklefaced Australian will face a three-judge bench headed by Judge Henry F. Baker, a 61-year-old native of Glasgow, Scotland, President of the Jerusalem District Court.

Kite & Key (Continued from page 1)

society were under a system of com- pletely open membership; however we also firmly believe that everyone de- siring to work with our society for the betterment of the University of Pennsylvania should not be hampered from doing so."

Conger's plan would grant a vote to each student who had attended four meetings in one semester. It would provide a system of checks and balances under which board mem- bers, who would take care of basic administration problems, would be selected by the previous board, as is now done, but would also need to be ratified by their peers on the new board.

Most members and associate members who opposed Talesnick's plan asserted that they were in favor of opening up the organization, but opposed to an all or nothing idea, as represented by Talesnick's defeated motion.

The meeting was attended by about 80 people at its peak, but in the ensuing chaos it dwindled to 20.

GET WELL SOCN,

3ERNIE

Editor's note: All letters to the editor should be sent to Editor, The Daily Pennsylvanian Sergeant Hall; and should be typed, double spaced, at 66 spaces to the line. The Daily Pennsylvanian will attempt to print all letters that are recieved.

Day editor BOB HOFFMAN

Copy editor DAVID TIVE

Sports copy editor MARK SCHLESINGER

Nigfit editor PHYLLIS KANISS

THIS CAN GET YOUR HEAD TOGETHER

Lead your own life. Enjoy it. Don't let life let you down because of a silly head- ache. Happiness is as far away as an Anacin® bottle. Anacin is twice as strong in the specific pain re- liever doctors recom- mend most as the other well known extra strength tablet. Anacin may not bend your mind, but it sure will get your head together.

Like pulling teeth By TOM APPLEQUIST

Students at the University inevitably grow accustomed to tangling with the bureaucracy and during their years here often become skillful (through painful experience) at dealing with various red tape-laden agencies (Student Health, depart- mental offices, advisers, etc.)

It is all the more striking, there- fore, when a member of the University community, whose en- durance is exceptional, who is conditioned to expect long lines, petulant secretaries, and generally shoddy treatment, and who is adept at combating the omnipresent ''pebble on the mountainside" syndrome, finds a procedural experience with which he cannot cope.

Attempting to obtain treatment at the University Dental School is such an experience.

The first problem encountered when seeking dental care is how to determine what time of the day to come to the school. There is, in fact, no way to choose a suitable time. Any- time between 8:30 A Jvl. and 3:00 PJvl. is wrong. Any other time the service is closed.

Some prospective patients have discovered, after several days of waiting in line, that it can be helpful to take a number. The numbers, it turns out, are ingeniously hidden from the view of all those but the first three in line, who already have theirs.

When one at last reaches the first human being in the procedure, relief is short-lived. Confronting a series of surly office helpers, who are caught daily in the quagmire of their ineffi- ciency, the patient is directed from

window to window, to pay registration fees, to get assigned a number, to fill out life history forms, and so on.

Finally, the patient is invited into the inner sanctum where he is assigned a dental student, who examines his medical history.

"Hmm, only three yes's and all the rest no's, that's what I like to see," the dental student remarks, as he notes that the patient had tonsilitis, hives, and the measles.

"I just wanted to have my teeth examined and cleaned," the patient volunteers.

"Well, OJC., I'll show you to the X-ray desk and the hygenist's desk," the dental student replies.

Once again in line, first on one side of the room, them on the other, then back to where he started, the patient is literally led around in circles.

Appointments, he learns, are not available until two weeks from next Thursday.

Arriving for the appointment the patient travels window to window, (its the old ring-around-the-rosie routine again), but the lines are nothing compared to the ordeal of the x-rays. Incredibleincompetancepre- vails. Patients have nearly choked to death while fourteen fingers (the student's, the instructor's, and the patient's own) attempt to adjust the x- ray cardboard in the patient's mouth.

"I know this is choking you," the student calls as he retreats behind the iron door to shoot the x-ray, "It'll only take a second."

While his placement of the, card- board in the mouth does not inspire confidence, the student's handling of

JUDITH L TELLER Editor-in-Ch ief

DAVID N. KAYE Managing editor

STANLEY H. BERKE Business Manager

ROBERT A. SAVETT Sports editor

JILL P. MESIROV Financial editor

TOM APPLEQUIST 34 th Street editor

JEFFREY STERLING Photography editor

MIMI ROGERS NEIL B. BUNIS Advertising manager Production manager

DEBORAH KRAVETZ MARK PEARLMAN Course guide editor Associate sports editoi

The Daily Pennsylvanian is published Monday through Friday at Philadelphia, Pa. during the fall and spring semesters, except during vacation periods. One issue pub- lished in August. Subscriptions may be ordered at Sergeant Hall, 34th and Chestnut Sts. at the rate 01 $12.00 per annum. Second class postage paid at Philadelphia Pennsylvania 19104- Phones: f215) 594-6581. Display and Classified Advertising may be placed at the same address.

the X-ray machine itself is clearly hazardous to the patient's life. Banging cheekbone and jaw, the dental student discovers after consulting his instructor, that he has been shooting at an angle perpendicular to the correct one, obtaining as a result an X-ray of the toenails rather than the teeth.

After one hour and fifteen minutes of being bruised and choked, the patient's ordeal is over.

"A few of these may have to be redone," the dental student concludes.

"Well, is someone going to examine my teeth?" the patient asks.

"Oh, did you want that done?" "That's why I'm here." "I don't know. Some of these X-

rays may not turn out. We won't know for several weeks. I really don't have anything to do with it. Someone will call you."

"Jesus Christ", is the expression heard most frequently from patients as they leave the X-ray room. It is understandable when an investment of a dozen or more hours has resulted in no dental work done and dismal prospects for future treatment. All there is to show for the time spent is a set of X-rays (of the eyeballs or sinuses, very likely) which is destined to tioat around the files of some con- fused secretary, until she shuffles through them, notices theX-rays,and decides to schedule the patient for another series of lines, fees, and more bungling.

A person here, in need of dental treatment, would follow a wiser and faster course if he enrolled in dental school and learned how to do it himself.

Shabel (Continued from page 1)

faculty members, and students has also been selected to direct a search for a director of recreation, who would serve under Shabel and direct all recreational athletics. The di- rector of recreation would have a staff assisting him in the planning and instrumentation of a comprehen- sive program of intramurals, includ- ing such sports as ice hockey, volley- ball, water polo and soccer.

Charles Scott, formerly associate director of athletics, will serve as associate director of the division of recreation and athletics and will assist Shabel with the intercollegiate athletic program.

mjr r rMARK 7. SCHLESINGER

Do You Have A Special

Interest orTalent?

HOUSTON HALL BOARD COMMITTEES ARE OPEN TO ALL

MEN AND WOMEN OF THE UNIVERSITY.

ADVERTISING

SPECTACULARS

THE COMMITTEE

COFFEE HOURS

ART EXHIBITS MOVIES

THEATRE

SPECIAL INTEREST PROGRAMS

OPEN COMMITTEE MEETINGS TONIGHT 8:00 P.M.

HOUSTON HALL

Monday, October 6, 1969

Zbrzeznj Football (Continued from page 1)

Following a successful career at Hempfield High, Manor, Pa., Zbrzeznj led the Penn freshmen to a 6-1 record. Pressed into service against league champion Yale as a sophomore when his predecessor. Bill Creeden, was injured, "Mr. Z." responded with a two-touchdown, 229-total-yardage performance. "He gave us fits," exclaimed Yale's Carmen Cozza afterwards, in what may have the nicest compliment the 5-8 quarter- back ever received.

As a Junior, he completed 101 of

188 passes for a 53 percent comple- tion average, leading the Quakers to a 7-2 season and showing the inac- curacy of Newsweek Magazine's de- scription of him as "not a very good passer." Second last fall in Ivy passing statistics—behind Colum- bia's Marty Domres and ahead of Yale's Brian Dowling—Zbrzeznj had every expert thinking he would be the league's top quarterback this fall. Last November, The New Yorker Magazine called him "a sure pro."

"It's all part of the game,' Zbrzeznj said stoically.

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(Continued from page 6) thrusts, however, stayed confined between the " 20* s". When they got close, the Red and Blue dug in and refused to budge.

"It was a great team effort, des- pite Procacci's exhibition or what- ever you want to call it," exalted Odell. "I've never been more proud of a team in my 21 years of coach- ing. No team ever came back from such adversity.

"Brown is a good football team" he continued. ' "The score is not indl - cative of the difference between us. Our defense was great, wasn't it? Boy did that Fuddy let them have it."

Fuddy came up with 13 unassist- ed tackles and was in on innumerable others. Mike Chwastyk and Dave Pot- truck had nine tackles apiece, while defensive back Steve K6noyer had seven big ones.

Odell refused to comment specifi- cally on next week's encounter with Dartmouth. "They all scare mel Dartmouth has been impressive, Princeton will be ready by the time they play us, and wait until you see Harvard, boy, they're something."

As the coach finished his con- ference and prepared for a ITIPM-

The Daily Pennsylvanian

ing with his staff to assess the vic- tory more closely, a newsman asked, "Who would you have put in if Pro- cacci had gotten hurt?"

Odell hesitated for a split second smiled and replied, "me".

Soccer (Continued from page 6)

at the 2:50 mark of the final stanza In a brilliant individual effort, the All-Ivy halfback made his way through the Brown secondary, then flicked a bouncer with his left foot into the far corner. From then on, as Seddon later remarked, "it was all over by the showers."

By defeating Brown before an estimated crowd of 1500, the largest in recent years, Penn reestablished itself as a leading contender for the Ivy championship .

Yet no one isbuyingticketsforthe NCAA regionals in Maryland or for the finals in San Jose, California. Seddon and his Quaker booters remember only too well last year's 2-0 upset loss at Cornell, a week after beatingBrown.So they know they must look forward to Saturday's en- counter with Dartmouth. After all, .vhat a difference one day makes.

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U Press aims for scholarly works

By JACK GORMAN Arguing vehemently with the designer and editor of a small paper-bound

monograph soon to be published, the new director of the University Press, Fred Wieck, proved that in his business, a book's success may well depend on its cover.

Authors think, Wieck said, that a beautiful manuscript will automatically be successful on the market. On the contrary, it may stand or fail, on its cover, he said. Although presses in many American universities have had the reputation of being "vanity presses," publishing books to please authors and preserve professor's jobs, the University of Pennsylvania Press demands that what it publishes be of scholarly significance and good style.

"Publish or perish types of manuscripts," said Wieck, "the bane of aca- demic publishers, seem to be less prevalent on the Penn campus than on many others." This observation was made on the basis of what Wieck has seen at the University in his three weeks here.

The avowed purpose of the press is to publish books, as opposed to journals, of "scholarly distinction or educational importance in any field in which the University is active," Wieck stated. A faculty committee along with the director must pass on any book before it can be published by the University Press.

Past director since 1966 of the Press, Gordon Hubel, is now working for a commercial publishing firm in Philadelphia. Wieck has worked as an editor for the presses of the University of Chicago, University of Michigan, Har- court Brace and World, and Haspur and Row . He dislikes discussing his own biographical information, he said, because "what is important is what books we print. I don't get printed, books do."

In general, Wieck said that the University publishes books to appeal to a small, collegiate audience. "The smaller the audience, the more difficult die financial arrangements are," he said. For this reason, the Press is not only supported by the University itself, but often by scholarly foundations and agencies. Many books are printed for such small audiences that they are not expected to pay their own way.

Wieck admits that large segments of the population would undoubtedly be unaware of many of the books published by the University Press. This, he says, does not disturb him at all. He would be "mortified," however, to find that specialists in a particular field, are unaware of books published by the University in that field. For example, he cites an English-Serbo-Croatian dictionary that will be published either late this year or early in 1970. While Wieck said he hardly expects many people to even know of the existence of such a book, he would expect all professors of the Yugoslav language to be aware of it.

The University Press began 100 years ago as the "University Press Company." In 1920 the "Press of the University of Pennsylvania Inc." was created. It now has a full-time staff of editors, production and promotion specialists, and business and clerical staff. In addition to publishing books, the Press advises members of the University community on design, royalty rates, permission, and copyright laws.

Wieck considers there to be definite standards concerning the books the University is "competent" to publish. If a University professor wrote a book on campus unrest, Wieck explained, he would advise the author to take it to a commercial publisher. Novels, he added, would also fall into the cate- gory of books which the Press is not prepared to handle or market.

Once the committee does decide to have a book published, Wieck takes great pains, he said, to make the design of the book as appealing and mar- ketable as possible. Arguments over three words in a book's sub-title are not uncommon. Despite the fact that a book may be written for a special- zed audience of no more than 2,000 Wieck insists that it be made to sell.

FOOTBALL RECORDS

Dartmouth 2-0 PENN 2-0 (1-0 Ivy) Brown 1-1 (0-1 Ivy) Harvard 1-1 Princeton 1-1 (1-0 Ivy) Yale 1-1 _.., ,

Columbia 0-2 (0-1 Ivy) .i Cornell 0-2

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Page 6 The Daily Peimsylvanian Monday, October 6, 1969

Zbrzeznj out, Procacci in, result the same-Quaker win

PHIL PROCACCI GARY COWEN

By IRA GARR

An icy chill crept up the spines of thousands of Red and Blue rooters Saturday when late in the first quarter the Franklin Field P.A. system de- livered the ominous announcement,"PennsylvaniaquarterbackBernieZbrzeznj has suffered a total shoulder separation."

On the field, the Quakers seemed locked in the grip of defeat. The season, with its title aspirations, was vanishing quickly and the stage was set for a Bruin upset. Only it never happened.

Bob Odell's forces, "the greatest bunch of guys I've ever coached," pulled together behind third-string sophomore quarterback Phil Procacci and a truly inspired defense to batter the Bruin, 23-2.

Despite the loss of Zbrzeznj, Penn didn't die. The day belonged to Procacci, and it was evident after the game in the locker room as the players huddled around captain George Joseph.

"We have the potential to be a championship team," exhorted the big center. "We pulled together when we had to. I suppose this ball could have gone to the defensive unit but it should go to the best looking player on the field — Phil Procacci."

The 5-9, 163-pound native of Hollywood, Fla. was pressed into service when QB Mike Hickok, Zbrzeznj's replacement, suffered the same fate on the very first play of the second quarter.

Procacci then stepped in, throwing TD tosses of 60 and 25 yards to ends Dave Graham and Pete Blumenthal, while running 69 yards himself for Penn's other TD, despite a shaky start. On his very first play, he was gang tackled in the end zone for a safety which gave the Bruins a short lived 2-0 lead.

The visitors, however, could not shake their jinx at Franklin Field where they have not won since 1911, despite 263 yards rushing, 90 by soph Tom Spotts.

Six interceptions by stalwart defenders John Brown, Jay Gillogly, Mark Warner, Dave Pottruck, Mike Brumbach—2, kept the Bruins from mounting a TD drive as Brown quarterback Bryan Marini could only complete 4 of 17 passes for a mere 31 yards.

Odell, emotionally spent, revealed at a post-game press conference that Procacci had not practiced at the quarterback slot in a month.

"We had been using him at cornerback but shifted him to offensive halfback last week when Sudhaus was hurt. One thing for sure, we knew he was a heck of an athlete—he always seems to come up with a big play."

The first big play was the TD bomb to Graham which electrified the 21,603

fans. On that third down play, Procacci ran to his left after faking a handoff. The entire Brown line met the fullback, Penn needing only a yard for the first down.

Graham, meanwhile, looked like he was going to block somebody, then slipped a few yards in back of the Brown defenders. Procacci put the ball right in his hands and the senior end outran two Bruins to the end zone.

"We practiced that all week," grinned captain Joseph. "All I heard was a hit in the line, and then the cornerback yelled out, 'Oh shit,' and Gra- ham was streaking."

Eliot Berry added a 34-yard field goal before the half ended, then Pro- cacci kept the Quakers moving in explosive fashion throughout the third and fourth quarters. On his 69-yard TD gallop, he faked to the fullback, sending the Brown flow in one direction and cut back in the other.

"I thought/Heyl, maybe we'll get a first down," surmised Odell. "Then I saw Phil outrunning them all. I didn't realize he was that fast."

Procacci's speed was also instrumental in his TD toss to split end Blumen- thal. Aided by a vicious block from fullback Bob Long, Procacci fled to his right and fired a bullet crossfield to Blumenthal, who took the ball over his left shoulder while running full tilt into the end zone.

Odell, obviously buoyed by the great team effort and by Procacci's emer- gence, couldn't help being slightly melancholy about Zbrzeznj's injury. * I feel so badly about Bernie. I'm afraid he's through for the year. Hickok may be able to play some later on.

"I never saw two quarterbacks go so fast in my life," the Quaker men- tor reflected. "After Hickok got hurt, I called Procacci over and asked him if he could run the 52 and 53 and the 18 and 19 block. He said, 'Yeah, coach, and I said, 'Okay, here we go,' and he went in."

"Later, Jim Roe called down and said hefelt the 30 and 31 should go. When Phil came out, he practiced those two plays with the second string backs along the sidelines."

Procacci shared Odell's sympathy for Zbrzeznj. "It's a shame about Bernie," he said calmly, not knowing exactly what to say. "The team really pulled together. The defense was outstanding. My first play was a little shaky but I became more confident as the game progressed — I had a hell of a team behind me."

He certainly did. The Bruins opened up as if they were going to stuff the Quakers In their cannon and blow them up like puffed rice. The Bruins' offensive

(Continued on page 5 '

Booters stun Bruins, 4-2 By JEFF R0THBARD

On Friday, Brown was the fifth best team in the country, according to the newly-released soccer polls; by the same criterion, the Quaker booters were ranked 15th nationally. What a difference one day makesl

On Saturday the Red andBlue handed the Bruins their second Ivy loss in five years, 4-2.

Utilizing a short pass game to split the Brown defense, Penn dom- inated first half play, outshot the Bruins 16-8, and raced to a 3-1 lead.

Senior wing Bruno Vogt's second goal of the season at 6:33 of the first quarter started the scoring. After Bruin fullback Walt Scott- Craig had booted the ball over the Brown endline, Vogt centered a corner kick, which curved incredibly into the net through the hands of surprised goal tender Gene Colice for an important score.

"It gave Penn a tremendous psychological advantage," pointed out Brown All-America forward and co-captain Herman Ssebazza after the game. "If we had finished the first stanza without a score, the com- plexion of the game might have changed. But to fall behind on a shot like that . . . ."

At 4:56 of the second period, Bob Watkins scored his third goal in three games to give the Quakers a two-goal edge. The lanky sopho- more forward dribbled past Bruin center halfback Chip Young and lined a 30-footer over the head of Colice, who had come out of the net to cut down the angle.

The powerful Penn offense continued to pressure Bruin fullbacks Joe Savarese, Craig-Scott, and Fred Armenti, but the diminutiveCo- lice turned back several sharp shots by Watkins and senior Tom Hutchinson.

However, with the clock showing 12:30, sophomore wing Tom Lieberman emerged with the ball following a scramble in front of

the Brown goal. With Colice badly out of position, Lieberman found the right corner of the Brown net to give the Quakers a 3-0 lead.

In the dying moments of the half, Ssebazza, previously contained by a rugged Red and Blue secondary led by fullback Alex Spector, received a cross from center-forward George King (older brother of Quaker wing Dave). The Uganda native drove the ball past pre- viously unscored-upon goaltender Dan Beigel with only eight seconds remaining.

The 20-minute intermission served as a panacea for coach Cliff Stevenson's Bruins. Inspired by Ssebazza's last second score, the Brown offense caught fire. Forward George Thompson seemed to voice the sentiment of the squad: "They gave us the first goal. Now we're going to get some of our own."

Conversely, the Red and Blue failed to heed coach Bob Seddon's halftime advice "not to become complacent and satisfied. Brown was behind 2-0 against Dartmouth last year and came back to win 6-3."

With the third period just five minutes old. King beat Beigel to a loose ball to the left of goal, spitting the open net with a bullet to make the score 3-2.

For the remainder of the game, Brown peppered the Quaker net, as Stevenson alternated two line^ of halfbacks and forwards, hoping that a fresh team would have that little bit extra punch. The Bruins clearly did not want to lose to Penn for the second year in a row and they outshot the Red and Blue 13-8 in the second half. But captain Andy Gibson managed to arouse the Penn defense to keep the visitors off the scoreboard.

Gibson, forced to the sidelines with torn knee ligaments during Penn's earlier wins over Temple and Haverford, clinched the victory

(Continued on page 5)

JEFF STERLING

PENN I as a Sruno

, BROWN 0 This mad scramble occurred in front of Bruin goal Saturday Vogt corner kick incredibly curved into the far corner of the net.

more than the scoreboard lights

REALITY Shoulder separation. Say those words to yourself. Shoulder separation.

Say them again.Shoulder separation. They mean nothing, absolutely nothing. You don't hear a moaning, a cry of anguish, a dreadful sharp pain, as bone, ligaments, and muscles rip apart. You hear nothing.

Shoulder separation. No agony, no emotion whatsoever. You sit up in the press box, or up in the stands, and you hear Bernie Zbrzeznj has suffered a shoulder separation and been taken to the dressing room. You sit where you are, and maybe curse, but no image pops into your mind. None of agony, any- way. And you say to yourself, maybe, that's a shame or that's too bad or we won't win now. But the words shoulder separation mean nothing, they're cold and impersonal. Even if you sort of feel the horror, you worry but go on watching the AstroTurf.

And then you watch Bernie Zbrzeznj walk down the Hospital steps, and the words mean something.

Walk? Did he really walk? Well, kind of. The two arms were taped to his side, useless, the back couldn't swing as he stepped, and his feet moved slowly, coming to earth every nine inches or so. The plaid bell bottoms looked out of place, the shirt was open to the waist so you could see the wrapped-up arms, and there were tears in his eves. The tears couldn't be hidden.

He stooped low to fit into the waiting Rambler, and the pain was evident in his contorted face. But you couldn't reach out and help, there was no place to touch him where it wouldn't hurt.

I go under the knife Monday," he announced,trying to hide the emotion as he revealed the doctor's verdict and much, much more. "Procacci did a heckuva job, didn't he? (pause) Dartmouth won't be expecting us to do much, now, maybe they'll look past us and we'll surprise them, huh?"

It's no cliche to say that Bernie's heart wasn't in it. *****

It was an unreal afternoon, one that a lot of people, a lot of people, will remember for a long, longtime. Bernie's father will. To the day he dies, he'll vividly remember the way his son sobbed in the Training House when told he'd never play again. (Bernie's shoulder is split in half you know, they have to put some pins in to stick it back together.)

He would never play after this year anyway, of course, but this is not the way a career should end. It never happened to Chip Hilton this way, and isn't athletics all Chip Hilton fun and games, all victory and no defeat? Clair Bee would never have stood for such a plot, unless the team went out and won one for the Gipper.

To most people, sports is nothing but a kind of Phil Procacci story. You know, two guys get injured, sophomore who hasn't played quarterback in weeks comes off the bench, gets thrown for safety in first play, but comes back with the pressure on and22,000watching to lead his team to victory.

That's the script that 22,000 viewed Saturday, the kind the world is used to seeing, but how many saw the Bernie Zbrzeznj drama?

A father who saw his son cry for the first time in recent memory (it's a tough world, no room for tears), a girl friend who wept the minute she saw her man's powerful arms limp and useless, a friend who escorted the girl to the hospital. Maybe 20, 30 others. Not 22,000. Who ever sees this side of the coin, the other way the cookie crumbles?

"After all he's put in, for it to happen like this," the father was saying, and you knew what he meant. For Bernie Zbrzeznj isn't the kind of guy who has always had things his way. No Joe Namath, he's a stumpy five-foot-eight with hair in a crew cut—in this day and age--because it would look silly any other way.

IS UNREALITY by bob savett

Put him on the football field and he has to pass on the run; he can't drop back because he's too short to see deep receivers. And he's slow, probably runs the 100 in 12 seconds flat (the world record is 9.1).Procacci made a69-yardTD

gallop without a hand laid on him, something you know wouldn't have happened

* <;" JEFF STERLING

BERNIE ZBRZEZNJ if Bernie's been in there. Some fat lineman would have grabbed him from behind.

But Bernie brings other tools to the gridiron--or is the word now brought.? The first is a mind, keen and alert, the kind that brought him a 3.5 cum last football season. He's great, superb for reporters to interview--you can ask

him about any play and he'il remember, his memory is near-photographic. When coach Bob Odell was asked after the game, "Who made that great

third-and-one call when Procacci hit Graham for the touchdown?", the first words out of his mouth were, "Well, that's what Bernie would have called." No greater tribute exists, when a man in his 101st game as head coach immediately thinks what a 21-year-old would do. You can bet that for the rest of Penn's 1969 games, Z will be on the sidelines, calling a lot of the plays.

But it was more than mental ability Zbrzeznj brings/brought to the field. Desire, for instance. He may not run very fast, but you should have seen him move his ass at football camp when he ran a 5:22 mile, amazing under the conditions and 20 seconds better than any other Penn football player. You don't push yourself into that kind of shape sitting back and drinking beer every niEht-

Don't think for a moment his attitude hadn't rubbed off. Ask anyone of the players and they'd have said, the secret to our winning is/was defense--all the defense had to do was stop the other team, then Bernie'd take us in for the score. Bernie was the focus, the field general who oozes/oozed leadership.

Take Eliot Berry. The All-Ivy kicker refused to practice with anyone but Bernie doing the holding, because Bernie was an integral part of every field goal and extra point. This, of course, is why Berry missed his first extra point Saturday—with Zbrzeznj off the field, Penn had no other experienced holder. There had never been a need for one.

***** Unreality took command of the turf. Never in Bob Odell's freakiest night-

mares could this have happened. A whole quarter and the furthest you got is your own 42, they run 18 plays on your half of the field. Already Sudhaus is hurt, then Bernie after three plays. Of your top eight running backs, seven have missed a week or more of practice thru injuries, then Hickok goes down. Calling signals is a third-string sophomore you really never knew what the hell to do with, who had been so bad at QB that you had been playing him for the last month at defensive and offensive halfback. In back of him is only one more guy, a soph who missed his entire frosh year thru a broken ankle.

And then came the unimaginable, something Phil Procacci could never, never have conceived of in his wildest ego-tripping dreams. He knew only four plays so while the defense saw action (and did they ever see a lot of action), he learned two more on the sidelines through practice with the second-string backs.

And Penn stayed with the Wishbone-T offense, with all sorts of tricky moves for the quarterback, adopted only because of Zbrzeznj's presence. It was not designed for a sophomore who hadn't played quarterback in almost a month. And Phil Procacci goes and unloads 60- and 25-yard bombs, while running 69 yards for a third TD.

Meanwhile, a defense which didn't intercept a pass against Bucknell--and has only one letterman among its secondary quartet—is picking off six passes. The result: Penn--which didn't win an Ivy game last season by more than six points—triumphs by 21.

"In my 20-some years, I've never seen a team come back from adversity like that," a stunned Odell was saying after the game.

"A team like this with so many good guys doesn't really need a great quarter-, back," Zbrzeznj said as he slowly pulled his battered frame into the car outside the hospital steps. Wereyou justwishingthis, Bernie, or were you telling it like it is?

It would never be this way for Chip Hilton, of course, but after Saturday, Bernie, anything could be in the Penn football script. Anything. >And get well soon.)