8
**s.^s*» Non-Ptolil Organization i S Postage VOL.XaDNO.66 Federal Judge Bars Strikers At Work Sites By STEVEN A. MARQUEZ A federal judge Wednesday issued a temporary injunction barring Teamsters Local 115 picketers from interfering with workers at two campus construction sites. The decree, written by Federal District Court Judge Herbert Fogel, prevents the picketers from blocking construction by workers at the Quadrangle renovation site at 37th and Spruce Streets, and at a sewer repair site at 34th and Walnut Streets. The workers renovating the Quad are employed by the Bachman Construction Company; those repairing the sewers work for Jospeh Farrell, Inc. The Teamsters are representing 343 housekeepers fired by the University August 4 in an apparent economy move. The housekeepers, which were replaced by outside contractors, have been picketing at the entrances to University buildings since August 8. Director of Engineering and Construction Paul Greenberg said Thursday that many construction workers "would not cross the picket lines." Greenberg noted that workers who did cross them were abused verbally by the Teamsters. Due to the reduced manpower, construction was slowed, Greenberg said. Three times , he added, work stopped altogether for periods varing from one and two weeks. Peter Hirsch, federal regional director for the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB>, said Thursday that on September 2 he requested the injunction, after determining that "the union had engaged in conduct which was in (Continued on case 11 PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1977 founded I£85 Copyright 1977 in Dally Pennsylvania! CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research STUDENTS DO THE LOCUST WALK as classes moved Into their second day and hordes of students moved towardttemai n summer memories faded. Subjects of Security Surveillance Will be Allowed Access to Files By RICHARD E. GORDON Groups and individuals who were the subject of Campus Security surveillance in recent years ap- parently will have the opportunity to inspect Security files on their ac- tivities. University Attorney Stephen Burbank said Thursday he will an- nounce this fall that anyone named in those files he has been able to collect New Security Director Brings Changed Climate By ERIC JACOBS From his plush Franklin Building office, former Director of Security and Safety Donald Shultis had a panoramic view of a vacant lot. His successor, David Johnston, looks out from his unfinished office on a hub of campus activity, the Super-block plaza. The contrast is indicative of the difference between the two men and of the changes that Johnston is bringing Profile DAVID JOHNS TON Inspires Openness to the University's department of security following a year of con- troversy. Johnston, who comes to the University after five years in a similar post at the University of Massachusetts, appears to inspire openness in an office that has lacked it in recent years. "This department is going to have to be much more open than it has been," Johnston said Tuesday. "There are very, very few con- fidential matters that a university (Continued on page 3) will have access to them. He added, however, that he has not yet worked out a procedure for providing this access. Burbank's action came largely In response to a request from David Kairys, an attorney representing several groups and individuals who believe they may have been the subject of Campus Security in- formation-gathering activities. The surveillance was first disclosedon March 7, 1977, when The Daily Penn- sylvanian reported that "Campus Security has sent work-study students and plainclcthes detectives to gather information at meetings of campus political groups without identifying themselves as agents of the security force." These accounts were later confirmed by the University Council Committee on Open Expression, which detailed in its official report numerous "unworthy and improper" Campus Security activities and violations of the University's formal guidelines on open expression. Burbank said he has collected "half a file drawer" of non-criminal security materials, and that "a lot of it is newpapers and leaflets." Bur- bank said that as far as he knows, the materials in his possession constitute all the results of Campus Security's surveillance. Kairys, who expressed satisfaction at Burbank's action, said he doubted whether Burbank possesses all relevant files. "Just by the nature of what (former) Chief of University Detectives Harold McGrath and (former) Director of Security and Safety Donald Shultis were up to, I don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said. Shultis, who had served as security director since 1970, announced his resignation April 18, 11 days before the release of the COE report. McGrath resigned several days after the report's release, following his suspension for lying to administrators about Campus Security's activities. Kairys said he and his ap- proximately 10 clients would examine the available files and would decide whether to sue the University for damages. He added that one factor in deciding to file lawsuit would be whether the University would for- mally prohibit all surveillance ac- tivities in the future. By STEVE DUBOW The Central Intelligence Agency notified President Martin Meyerson in August that the University had par- ticipated in a secret CIA behavior- control research project, MK- ULTRA, undertaken in the 1950s and 1960s. The letter, sent to Meyerson by CIA General Counsel Anthony Lapham, did not detail who at the University was involved, when the experiments took place, or what type of ex- periments occurred. The University "isincluded among the institutions at which some portion of this CIA- sponsored research appears to have been performed or with which one or more individuals performing some aspect of this research were af- filiated," the letter stated. MK-ULTRA, the code name for a project that lasted from 1949 to 1973, cost $25 million, and utilized LSD, alcohol, and tranqullizers in an at- tempt to learn about mind control. However, the letter stated the project also used less controversial methods. Because the CIA letter to Meyerson did not divulge what type of ex- perimentation was carried on at the University, Meyerson charged University Counsel Stephen Burbank with gaining access to CIA documents on MK-ULTRA at the University. Burbank said Thursday that he planned to go to Washington, D.C. in the week of September 19, ac- companied by Vice-Provost for Graduate Studies and Research Donald Langenberg. We know the documents are largely financial and fragmentary," Burbank said. This information was contained in the letter. Burbank would not speculate further on what the documents contained. The letter to Meyerson said that CIA documents found on MK-ULTRA name in- stitutions, researchers, and funding mechanisms involved. The University stopped accepting classified research in 1967 and all classified work was completed by 1970, according to Director of Com- munications Jack Hamilton. The entire MK-ULTRA program was wound down in 1964 and again in 1967, until it was halted entirely six years later. CIA Director Admiral Stansfield Turner revealed in August that 86 institutions were involved in the MK- ULTRA project after The New York Times disclosed the scope and outline of the project in articles published August 2 and 3. Other Ivy League schools involved in behavior-control research were Harvard, Columbia, and Princeton Universities. Students at Harvard, for example, were given LSD at the Boston Psychopathic Hospital in the early 1950's, according to The New Vorfe Times- The Harvard students were aware that they were taking LSD and were paid as experimenter's subjects. However, in many cases students were given drugs un- wittingly. The letter sent to Meyerson said that individuals and institutions were sometimes unaware of CIA involvement, but it failed to elaborate with regard to the University. The CIA's interest in mind control was first evidenced through MK- ULTRA in 1949 when the United States became concerned that the Soviet (Continued on page 3) Dissident Soviet Physicist Azbel Emigrates After Six-Year Struggle Trustee Report on Administration Prompts Faculty Senate Meeting By ELIZABETH SANGER The Faculty Senate will hold a special meeting next month to take action on a report on the University's administrative structure issued this summer by the University Trustees. According to Faculty Senate Acting Chairmar. Robert Lucid, the report outlines the "structures of higher administration in the University," detailing the duties of the Provost, the position of Vice President and Director of the Office of the President Bruce Johnstone, and "changing the job description of Paul Gaddjs." Caddis is Senior Vice-President for Management. Lucid, a professor of English, said Thursday the Senate Advisory Committee is upset that the faculty was not consulted. The Committee has issued a statement that will appear in the September 13 edition of The Almanac detailing what he termed " the sins of the report." "An action response is necessary," Lucid said, noting that the special meeting falls under the "general heading of an emergency." "A meeting of the minds is necessary with the administration and maybe the trustees in defining the role of the faculty in the governance of the institution," he added. I<ucid said the report came as a "total surprise" to him when he originally heard about it in the first week of August. An ad hoc Trustees Committee headed by Trustee Robert Treacher submitted the report to the Trustees Executive Committee, which approved it on July 21, Lucid said. Trescher was unavailable for comment. The report has now been " delivered to the President for implementation," I .iii-ul said. If the Senate Advisory Committee is representative of the faculty, Lucid said, then'theoreticrlly the faculty is distressed by this business." The Committee is the Faculty Senate's steering group. (Continued on page 7) By WILLIAM SHORE Noted physicist Mark Azbel, a Soviet Jew who was offered a visiting professorship at the University, was allowed to emigrate to Israel July 6 after a six-year struggle to leave the Soviet Union. The well-known researcher has announced plans to visit the University in October, Physics professor Herbert Callan disclosed Thursday. Azbel is currently teaching and doing research at the University of Tel Aviv. It is not known if Azbel will accept the position he was offered at the University, said Physics Department Chairman Walter Wales. "Officially we have not heard anything from him." Azbel's six-year plight had inspired student interest at the University. Last year, the Undergraduate Assembly gave $419 to a committee it formed to assist his rescue, demon- strations were held in his behalf, and letters urging his release were sent from students to world political leaders. Callen spoke to Azbel last week at the Thirteenth International Con- ference on Statistical Physics held In Haifa, Israel, where Azbel presented a paper on thermodynamics and the decoding of DNA. Callen called Azbel "a very dedicated, enthusiastic, scientist. His enthusiasm for doing science is enormous." He added, "Azbel said he does not want to become an activist and cease to be a scientist. He said he will not permit his fame to interfere with his science." Azbel had been head of the Department of Electron Theory at the Landau Institute and a professor at Moscow University before he applied. for an exit visa in 1971 to teach at the University of Tel Aviv. Since then, he has been harrased by Soviet authorities and barred from doing research. Last October, Azbel was arrested for participating in a five-day sit-in with other Soviet Jews who all demanded to know why they had been denied exit visas. Earlier this year Azbel was placed under house arrest because of his involvement in a Jewish cultural conference. According to the New York Con- ference on Soviet Jewry, Azbel was "extensively interrogated in May in connection with Anatoly Sharansky," a Soviet Jew who has been charged with treason. It has been suggested that the timing of Azbel's release was geared to the upcoming Belgrade conference checking compliance with the 1975 Helsinki agreement, which binds signers to permit a free exchange of people and information with other nations. The Soviet Union signed the (Continued on page 2) MARK AZBEL Emigrates to Israel Cuomo, Koch Win in N.Y.; Goodman Gets GOP Nod Cloudy Future Casts Shadow On WXPN By JEFFREY N. BARKER Although WXPN broadcasts can still be heard at 88.9 on the FM band, the uncertain future of the University radio station's license has cast a pall over the studios where those broad- casts originate. Students who worked at the station last year are very familiar with the incidents that caused the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on April 4 to deny the station's license. However, Music Director Gordon Danis said Thursday that most students who joined WXPN this year "have only a vague notion that we were once in trouble." These new students know little of the alleged obscentites that were broadcast over the WXPN in 1975-for which the University was fined $2000-or of the 11 other violations of FCC University and even WXPN rules. While all these students, new and old, continue working at the city-wide Philadelphia station, lawyers in Washington D.C. are also hard at work. The Uneiversity in May appealed the recommendation to deny the license made by FCC Administrative Law Judge Walter Miller and filed a brief with the full FCC. The University's brief is one of several hundred under consideration by FCC attorneys in the Office of Opinions and Review. The attorneys will summarize the brief and deliver it to the seven FCC commissioners, who will make a final decision. The University is also requesting to present its appeal in an oral ar ument before the com- missioners. "I don't think it's a priority case. It's not conceivable to have the oral argument before the first of next year," a spokesman in the Office of Opinions and Records said Thursday. Whether the commissioners will vote in favor of WXPN is anyone's guess according to Alan Campbell, the University's attorney in the case. Campbell said Wednesday that the resignation of former Commissioner Benjamin Hooks this summer and the end of Commissioner Joseph Wylie's term in September will leave two appointments of FCC commissioners to be made by President Jimmy Carter. "Hook's resignation hurts the University's chances," University Trustee Morton Wilner.Chairman of the Trustee sub committee on elec- tronic media, said last May. Hooks (Continued on pane 7) B, UnltM PrMI mitrnitlonal NEW YORK-Mario Cuomo and Congressman Edward Koch Thursday won the two runoff positions for New York City's Democratic mayoral nomination, ending Mayor Abraham Beame's long political career and dashing a comeback bid by former Congresswoman Bella Abzug. Beame, who won election in 1973 campaigning on the slogan "He Knows the Buck," was defeated in a primary election that was largely a referendum on his fiscal stewardship of the nation's largest city. New York narrowly escaped bankruptcy during his turbulent administration. The 71-year-old Beame ran third, followed by Abzug in a seven-way race that saw a near-record voter turnout. Abzug was attempting a political comeback after being defeated in a primary race last year for U.S. Senate by Daniel Moynihan. In the Republican mayoral primary, State Senator Roy Goodman easily defeated New York radio personality Barry Farber, who already has the Conservative Party Nomination. With more than half the city's districts reporting, Cuomo, New York's Secretary of State and Koch each held about 20 percent of the vote. With 3.231 of 4,763 election districts reporting, Cuomo has 120,426 votes; Koch has 119,841; Beame has 107,967, or 18 percent; and Abzug has 99,783or 16 percent. Goodman had about 56 percent of the Republican vote to Farber's 44 percent. It was a near-record turnout with voters casting ballots under balmy, sunny skies. The polls closed at 9 p.m. A Board of Elections spokesman said about 750,000 Democrats-about 38 percent of those registered in the city -voted. In 1973, a record 783,000 Democrats voted in the mayoral primary. Congressman Herman Badillo, Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton and businessman Joel Harriett trailed the Democratic field. A spokesman for Abzug called the earlier returns showing the colorful former congresswoman running fourth "a little bewildering. They're so different from what we all felt they would be." A two-way runoff was scheduled for September 19 in the event no can- (Continued on page 7) MEETING fhere will be a meeting of all pastj present and prospective members of all staffs of The Daily Pennsylvanian at 4:00 PM Friday in theDP offices at 4015 Walnut St. Freshmen are especially urged to attend.

CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

  • Upload
    vulien

  • View
    227

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

**s.^s*»

Non-Ptolil Organization

i S Postage

VOL.XaDNO.66

Federal Judge Bars Strikers At Work Sites

By STEVEN A. MARQUEZ A federal judge Wednesday issued a

temporary injunction barring Teamsters Local 115 picketers from interfering with workers at two campus construction sites.

The decree, written by Federal District Court Judge Herbert Fogel, prevents the picketers from blocking construction by workers at the Quadrangle renovation site at 37th and Spruce Streets, and at a sewer repair site at 34th and Walnut Streets. The workers renovating the Quad are employed by the Bachman Construction Company; those repairing the sewers work for Jospeh Farrell, Inc.

The Teamsters are representing 343 housekeepers fired by the University August 4 in an apparent economy move. The housekeepers, which were replaced by outside contractors, have been picketing at the entrances to University buildings since August 8.

Director of Engineering and Construction Paul Greenberg said Thursday that many construction workers "would not cross the picket lines." Greenberg noted that workers who did cross them were abused verbally by the Teamsters.

Due to the reduced manpower, construction was slowed, Greenberg said. Three times , he added, work stopped altogether for periods varing from one and two weeks.

Peter Hirsch, federal regional director for the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB>, said Thursday that on September 2 he requested the injunction, after determining that "the union had engaged in conduct which was in

(Continued on case 11

PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1977

founded I£85

Copyright 1977 in Dally Pennsylvania!

CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research

STUDENTS DO THE LOCUST WALK as classes moved Into their second day and hordes of students moved towardttemain

summer memories faded.

Subjects of Security Surveillance Will be Allowed Access to Files

By RICHARD E. GORDON Groups and individuals who were

the subject of Campus Security surveillance in recent years ap- parently will have the opportunity to inspect Security files on their ac- tivities.

University Attorney Stephen Burbank said Thursday he will an- nounce this fall that anyone named in those files he has been able to collect

New Security Director Brings Changed Climate

By ERIC JACOBS From his plush Franklin Building

office, former Director of Security and Safety Donald Shultis had a panoramic view of a vacant lot. His successor, David Johnston, looks out from his unfinished office on a hub of campus activity, the Super-block plaza.

The contrast is indicative of the difference between the two men and of the changes that Johnston is bringing

Profile

DAVID JOHNS TON Inspires Openness

to the University's department of security following a year of con- troversy.

Johnston, who comes to the University after five years in a similar post at the University of Massachusetts, appears to inspire openness in an office that has lacked it in recent years.

"This department is going to have to be much more open than it has been," Johnston said Tuesday. "There are very, very few con- fidential matters that a university

(Continued on page 3)

will have access to them. He added, however, that he has not yet worked out a procedure for providing this access.

Burbank's action came largely In response to a request from David Kairys, an attorney representing several groups and individuals who believe they may have been the subject of Campus Security in- formation-gathering activities.

The surveillance was first disclosedon March 7, 1977, when The Daily Penn- sylvanian reported that "Campus

Security has sent work-study students and plainclcthes detectives to gather information at meetings of campus political groups without identifying themselves as agents of the security force." These accounts were later confirmed by the University Council Committee on Open Expression, which detailed in its official report numerous "unworthy and improper" Campus Security activities and violations of the University's formal guidelines on open expression.

Burbank said he has collected "half a file drawer" of non-criminal security materials, and that "a lot of it is newpapers and leaflets." Bur- bank said that as far as he knows, the materials in his possession constitute all the results of Campus Security's surveillance.

Kairys, who expressed satisfaction at Burbank's action, said he doubted whether Burbank possesses all relevant files. "Just by the nature of what (former) Chief of University Detectives Harold McGrath and (former) Director of Security and Safety Donald Shultis were up to, I don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said.

Shultis, who had served as security director since 1970, announced his resignation April 18, 11 days before the release of the COE report.

McGrath resigned several days after the report's release, following his suspension for lying to administrators about Campus Security's activities.

Kairys said he and his ap- proximately 10 clients would examine the available files and would decide whether to sue the University for damages. He added that one factor in deciding to file lawsuit would be whether the University would for- mally prohibit all surveillance ac- tivities in the future.

By STEVE DUBOW The Central Intelligence Agency

notified President Martin Meyerson in August that the University had par- ticipated in a secret CIA behavior- control research project, MK- ULTRA, undertaken in the 1950s and 1960s.

The letter, sent to Meyerson by CIA General Counsel Anthony Lapham, did not detail who at the University was involved, when the experiments took place, or what type of ex- periments occurred. The University

"isincluded among the institutions at which some portion of this CIA- sponsored research appears to have been performed or with which one or more individuals performing some aspect of this research were af- filiated," the letter stated.

MK-ULTRA, the code name for a project that lasted from 1949 to 1973, cost $25 million, and utilized LSD, alcohol, and tranqullizers in an at- tempt to learn about mind control. However, the letter stated the project also used less controversial methods.

Because the CIA letter to Meyerson did not divulge what type of ex- perimentation was carried on at the University, Meyerson charged University Counsel Stephen Burbank with gaining access to CIA documents on MK-ULTRA at the University. Burbank said Thursday that he planned to go to Washington, D.C. in the week of September 19, ac- companied by Vice-Provost for Graduate Studies and Research Donald Langenberg.

We know the documents are largely financial and fragmentary," Burbank said. This information was contained in the letter. Burbank would not

speculate further on what the documents contained. The letter to Meyerson said that CIA documents found on MK-ULTRA name in- stitutions, researchers, and funding mechanisms involved.

The University stopped accepting classified research in 1967 and all classified work was completed by 1970, according to Director of Com- munications Jack Hamilton. The entire MK-ULTRA program was wound down in 1964 and again in 1967, until it was halted entirely six years later.

CIA Director Admiral Stansfield Turner revealed in August that 86 institutions were involved in the MK- ULTRA project after The New York Times disclosed the scope and outline of the project in articles published August 2 and 3. Other Ivy League schools involved in

behavior-control research were Harvard, Columbia, and Princeton Universities. Students at Harvard, for example, were given LSD at the Boston Psychopathic Hospital in the early 1950's, according to The New Vorfe Times- The Harvard students were aware that they were taking LSD and were paid as experimenter's subjects. However, in many cases students were given drugs un- wittingly.

The letter sent to Meyerson said that individuals and institutions were sometimes unaware of CIA involvement, but it failed to elaborate with regard to the University.

The CIA's interest in mind control was first evidenced through MK- ULTRA in 1949 when the United States became concerned that the Soviet

(Continued on page 3)

Dissident Soviet Physicist Azbel Emigrates After Six-Year Struggle

Trustee Report on Administration Prompts Faculty Senate Meeting

By ELIZABETH SANGER The Faculty Senate will hold a

special meeting next month to take action on a report on the University's administrative structure issued this summer by the University Trustees.

According to Faculty Senate Acting Chairmar. Robert Lucid, the report outlines the "structures of higher administration in the University," detailing the duties of the Provost, the position of Vice President and Director of the Office of the President Bruce Johnstone, and "changing the job description of Paul Gaddjs." Caddis is Senior Vice-President for Management.

Lucid, a professor of English, said Thursday the Senate Advisory Committee is upset that the faculty was not consulted. The Committee has issued a statement that will appear in the September 13 edition of The Almanac detailing what he termed " the sins of the report."

"An action response is necessary," Lucid said, noting that the special meeting falls under the "general heading of an emergency."

"A meeting of the minds is necessary with the administration and maybe the trustees in defining the role of the faculty in the governance of the institution," he added.

I<ucid said the report came as a

"total surprise" to him when he originally heard about it in the first week of August.

An ad hoc Trustees Committee headed by Trustee Robert Treacher submitted the report to the Trustees Executive Committee, which approved it on July 21, Lucid said. Trescher was unavailable for comment.

The report has now been " delivered to the President for implementation," I .iii-ul said.

If the Senate Advisory Committee is representative of the faculty, Lucid said, then'theoreticrlly the faculty is distressed by this business." The Committee is the Faculty Senate's steering group.

(Continued on page 7)

By WILLIAM SHORE Noted physicist Mark Azbel, a

Soviet Jew who was offered a visiting professorship at the University, was allowed to emigrate to Israel July 6 after a six-year struggle to leave the Soviet Union.

The well-known researcher has announced plans to visit the University in October, Physics professor Herbert Callan disclosed Thursday. Azbel is currently teaching and doing research at the University of Tel Aviv.

It is not known if Azbel will accept the position he was offered at the University, said Physics Department Chairman Walter Wales. "Officially we have not heard anything from him."

Azbel's six-year plight had inspired student interest at the University. Last year, the Undergraduate Assembly gave $419 to a committee it formed to assist his rescue, demon- strations were held in his behalf, and letters urging his release were sent from students to world political leaders.

Callen spoke to Azbel last week at the Thirteenth International Con- ference on Statistical Physics held In Haifa, Israel, where Azbel presented a paper on thermodynamics and the decoding of DNA.

Callen called Azbel "a very dedicated, enthusiastic, scientist. His enthusiasm for doing science is enormous." He added, "Azbel said he does not want to become an activist and cease to be a scientist. He said he will not permit his fame to interfere with his science."

Azbel had been head of the Department of Electron Theory at the Landau Institute and a professor at Moscow University before he applied.

for an exit visa in 1971 to teach at the University of Tel Aviv. Since then, he has been harrased by Soviet authorities and barred from doing research.

Last October, Azbel was arrested for participating in a five-day sit-in with other Soviet Jews who all demanded to know why they had been denied exit visas. Earlier this year Azbel was placed under house arrest because of his involvement in a Jewish cultural conference.

According to the New York Con- ference on Soviet Jewry, Azbel was "extensively interrogated in May in connection with Anatoly Sharansky," a Soviet Jew who has been charged with treason.

It has been suggested that the timing of Azbel's release was geared to the upcoming Belgrade conference checking compliance with the 1975 Helsinki agreement, which binds signers to permit a free exchange of people and information with other nations. The Soviet Union signed the

(Continued on page 2) MARK AZBEL

Emigrates to Israel

Cuomo, Koch Win in N.Y.; Goodman Gets GOP Nod

Cloudy Future Casts Shadow On WXPN By JEFFREY N. BARKER

Although WXPN broadcasts can still be heard at 88.9 on the FM band, the uncertain future of the University radio station's license has cast a pall over the studios where those broad- casts originate.

Students who worked at the station last year are very familiar with the incidents that caused the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on April 4 to deny the station's license.

However, Music Director Gordon Danis said Thursday that most students who joined WXPN this year "have only a vague notion that we were once in trouble." These new students know little of the alleged obscentites that were broadcast over the WXPN in 1975-for which the University was fined $2000-or of the 11 other violations of FCC University

and even WXPN rules. While all these students, new and old, continue working at the city-wide Philadelphia station, lawyers in Washington D.C. are also hard at work. The Uneiversity in May appealed the recommendation to deny the license made by FCC Administrative Law Judge Walter Miller and filed a brief with the full FCC. The University's brief is one of several hundred under consideration by FCC attorneys in the Office of Opinions and Review. The attorneys will summarize the brief and deliver it to the seven FCC commissioners, who will make a final decision. The University is also requesting to present its appeal in an oral ar ument before the com- missioners.

"I don't think it's a priority case. It's not conceivable to have the oral

argument before the first of next year," a spokesman in the Office of Opinions and Records said Thursday.

Whether the commissioners will vote in favor of WXPN is anyone's guess according to Alan Campbell, the University's attorney in the case. Campbell said Wednesday that the resignation of former Commissioner Benjamin Hooks this summer and the end of Commissioner Joseph Wylie's term in September will leave two appointments of FCC commissioners to be made by President Jimmy Carter.

"Hook's resignation hurts the University's chances," University Trustee Morton Wilner.Chairman of the Trustee sub committee on elec- tronic media, said last May. Hooks

(Continued on pane 7)

B, UnltM PrMI mitrnitlonal

NEW YORK-Mario Cuomo and Congressman Edward Koch Thursday won the two runoff positions for New York City's Democratic mayoral nomination, ending Mayor Abraham Beame's long political career and dashing a comeback bid by former Congresswoman Bella Abzug.

Beame, who won election in 1973 campaigning on the slogan "He Knows the Buck," was defeated in a primary election that was largely a referendum on his fiscal stewardship of the nation's largest city. New York narrowly escaped bankruptcy during his turbulent administration.

The 71-year-old Beame ran third, followed by Abzug in a seven-way race that saw a near-record voter turnout.

Abzug was attempting a political comeback after being defeated in a primary race last year for U.S. Senate by Daniel Moynihan.

In the Republican mayoral primary, State Senator Roy Goodman easily defeated New York radio personality Barry Farber, who already has the Conservative Party Nomination.

With more than half the city's districts reporting, Cuomo, New York's Secretary of State and Koch each held about 20 percent of the vote.

With 3.231 of 4,763 election districts reporting, Cuomo has 120,426 votes;

Koch has 119,841; Beame has 107,967, or 18 percent; and Abzug has 99,783or 16 percent.

Goodman had about 56 percent of the Republican vote to Farber's 44 percent.

It was a near-record turnout with voters casting ballots under balmy, sunny skies. The polls closed at 9 p.m.

A Board of Elections spokesman said about 750,000 Democrats-about 38 percent of those registered in the city -voted. In 1973, a record 783,000 Democrats voted in the mayoral primary.

Congressman Herman Badillo, Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton and businessman Joel Harriett trailed the Democratic field.

A spokesman for Abzug called the earlier returns showing the colorful former congresswoman running fourth "a little bewildering. They're so different from what we all felt they would be."

A two-way runoff was scheduled for September 19 in the event no can-

(Continued on page 7)

MEETING fhere will be a meeting of all pastj

present and prospective members of all staffs of The Daily Pennsylvanian at 4:00 PM Friday in theDP offices at 4015 Walnut St. Freshmen are especially urged to attend.

Page 2: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

Friday, September 9,1977

: ST. MARY'S NURSERY

SCHOOL

• (Nonsectarian) at 3916 Locust : . Walk is now completing fall • ' enrollment. Morning, af- : temoon, or all-day programs : available for 2^-5-year-olds. | Call EV6-8739 for information ; and registration.

Tomorrow YELLOW SUBMARINE

7:30 & 10 PM $1 - Fine Arts B-l

MOVIE PASSES ON SALE

(Date on Movie

Schedule is incorrect)

PUC NEEDS NEW MEMBERS

introductory Meeting

Thurs. Sept. 1 5

6:30 P.M. at

Houston Hall

Franklin Rm.

The Daily Pennsylvanian

J&B TAVERN & PIPPIN WEST Welcomes You Back

To School Relax; Enjoy- Live Entertainment Wed To Sun. New Game Room Large Screen T.V. For you Dining Pleasure

A Full Lunch & Dinner Menu-

FULL COURSE MEALS FROM

3rd Anniversary Memorial Party & Rally

SEPT.16th Starts 2 P.M. Don't Miss It

Wow! Everyone Welcome

Your Hosts

Jack Park & Buddy Horn

S.E. Cor 39th Chestnut

Contact Lens Specialist Our Prices are Amazingly low

Dr. Leon BlumfifM ;o» Chestnut st. Pn,ie

uw

ANOTHER OUTRAGEOUS DISCO DANCE

Sat. Sept.10 9 P.M.

Hillel House-Cost *1

We/come Back Students

ORGANIZATIONAL BRUNCH

Sun. Sept. 11 11-1

Cost $1

5HABBAT SERVICES:

SAT. SEPT. 10 Orthodox and Conservative

9:30 A.M.

Downstairs Minyan 10:00 A.M.

202 S. 36th St. 243-7391

Page 2

CAM»U% CVCNTt 7l»J>AJ

SHABBAT SERVICE sponsored by Sembafyon (Liberal Jewish students at Penn) Tonight anc EVERY Fndey. ■ OOP M at Hlllel. Oneg inabba (food!) afterwards

NEWMAN CENTER open home, iree Deer pretzels punch Friday 4 7 p.m. All welcome 3730 Chestnut (Behind Glmbel Gym).

HILLEL SHABBAT SERVICES: Orthodox and Conservative. 7:00 Dm Ones Shaobat 1:30 pm Liberal Services 1:00 pm

PENN JAZZ ENSEMBLE organnatlonal meeting Friday September 9 s :00pm Rm Sll Annenberg Canter All trt welcome

JJHaidJ; rllLLEL SHABBAT SERVICES: Orthodox and Conservative. Saturday 9:30 am. Downstairs Mlny.n 10:00.

CONSERVATIVE SHABBAT MORNING SERVICE Recapture the spirit of Friday night. Join us at our service on the 3rd II. Hillel 9:30 am •vtrt Saturday.

NEWMAN CENTER Weekend masses. Saturday midnight. Sunday 9 30 am 11:00am Mon. Frl. 12 noon. All welcome.

COFFEE HOUSE Start the year off RIGHT with Sembatyon (Liberal Jewish students at Penn) Sunday Sept. II at S 00 P.M.. Houston Hall Ivy Room Refreshments and Entertainment provided.

FREE OUTDOOR FOLKFEST In Superblock Sat. Sept. 10 from 16 pm. Features Skooklll Express, Maraiin Krawll. Cork hill, others. Sponsored by Penn radio station WXPN.

bimM& ACTIVITIES All student organuallons using University facilities mutt lilt the annua registration form by Sept 21 in the Office of Student Life, 2nd floor Houston Hall.

ACTIVITIES DAY Sept. 16, |*| P.M. Any organization wishing to reserve a table may oo so in the Office of Student Lite. 2nd fi. Houston Hall

CHORAL SOCIETY AUDITIONS now to Sept. U Call 243 6244 or come by Sll Annenberg Center to make an appointment.

ORCHESTRA AUDITIONS Now to Sept. IS. Call 243 4244 or come by Sll Annenbarg Center to make an appointment

COLLEGiUMAUDlTlONSNowtoSept 13 or later. Call 243-6244 or come by Annenberg Center to make an appointment

PRE HEALTH FRESHMEN Interested In medicine, dentistry or veterinary medicine should sign up for a group meeting and receive handbook at 3533 Locust Walk. 1st Floor

ORCHESTRA: First rehearsal Thursday September 15 at 730 in 511 Annenberg Center

CHORAL SOCIETY: First rehearsal Wednesday, Sept. 13; and Wed.. Sept. 14 at 7:30 In 511 Annenberg Center; second and all succeeding rehearsals on Mondays.

WOMEN'S VARSITY TENNIS MEETING Mon. Sept 13th at 4 pm k< Mendeison Room of the training House All Interested please attend.

Azbel Emigrates to Israel (Continued from page 1)

accord. Azbel himself was "unable to give

any explanation as to why he was released," said Callen, although Azbel felt the efforts made on his behalf at the University were "extremely important." They (Soviet dissidents) all feel the more pressure that is put on the Soviet Union, the moreapttheyaretogetout."

Wales said that although he thinks

the visiting professorship offer is still open, the university is "not sure he would ever be coming. We had hoped that he would come, but it was by no means clear that he would be coming to the University." Wales pointed out that the purpose of offering the position to Azbel was twofold: it was intended to help him gain permission to leave the Soviet Union, as well as to try to get him to come to the University.

WXPN PRESENTS:

ipsug \wv& raw with

SKOOKILL EXPRESS (bluegrass) JWARALIN KRAWILL (blues) CORK HILL (Square dancing) RON BLUESTEIN(folkJ SURPRISE GUESTS FROM THE 1977 PHILLY FOLK FEST

in Superblock at 39th and Locust Rainplace: The C.A. 36th and Locust

it Scheduling Meeting for returning WXPN staff- Thu Sept. 7 5 th

9P.M. • At the station. Mandatory attendance

Sept q0 M77 enmg 5"7p^

t/iego//eajofthe

LAJomens^ Cultural Trust 3601 GOCUST vvaiic

WHY PAY MORE?

Xerox Copies

"ampus C°Py Centef

3947 Walnut Street 382-1829

Next to Baskin-Kobbins

Lowest Prices on

Campus

cufttjiriMt ON FINN CAMPUS...Available immediately...Large, bright 3 bedroom apartment...Furnishedor unfurnished Eva

ISO 3*0

WANTIO: Person to share my West Mt. Airy home Private 2nd lloor bedroom plus beautiful edloining sun porch study with built-in desk and bookshelves. Full use of 1st floor, all appliances, large yard and patio. 1130 00 plus shared utilities. Call VI4JS43 tor appt 30]

SPACIOUS 1 a 1 .IDROOM furnished apt near campus GR3 e7S4 jge

■ RIOHT 1BEOROOM APARTMENT Large ilvingroom, separate kitchen, new bath. Completely furnished, lust painted. 39Th 4 Samson St. CL* 7730 its

FINN DREXILL AREA 1 oorms 2 Bdrms 4 Eff'sH717«3Ev*slWknas m

fbii a*iLC

MODERN APARTMENTS On Campus

Eastern States Realty

EV6M)922

1-2-3 BEDROOM ARTS. Some with Fireplaces 5*6 bedrooms TOWNHOUSfS

with jhrtataces 362-3100 MbfatfTi

RENOVATED APARTMENTS

Effic 1 &2bdrm. 40th to 44th—Pine to Chestnut

tile bath, modern kitchen

$150-|160-$235-$350 ALSO

Effic. + 2 bdrmat . 9th & Pine in Society Hill

J150 an (11300 UNIVERSITY CITY

HOUSING CO. EV-J-29K J0-6 Daily

u MUIIH SEDAN Very good condition &5.000 miles new fires 30 miles per gallon 1750 312 ItM 3*9

NEED PERSON FOR CHILDCARI 3 afternoons weekly, for houiecleenlng once weekly, university city address Phone 474 3tSS after 4 00 1*1

COOKING YOUR HOaavr Cook supper and babysit children 10 & 13 years. 3 afternoons weekly, J 6 P.M. Chestnut HIM area. Live-in arrangement possible 343 5037 evenings; 4*11333 (work) 7|

THI JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION needs 2 work study students to help with filing, prepare mailings, and work on subscription lists. Small, informal office with flexible hours. Contact Elvira Lankford. Annenberg School. Rm. G 30. xaotS 300

WANTIO 3 3 days per week. 3 6pm Person to do housekeeping and light cooking for two in West MT Airy home SS.OOper hour Cell VI 4 SSA3.

307

PARTTIME WAITRESSES and Kitchen Helpers wented. Choco Japanese Restaurant, Call L07 M7* after Sp m. 311

PEACE AND NATIONAL PRIORITIES OROANIZATION is looking lor part time secretary. 30 25 hours per week Context SANE Educational Fund. 1411 Walnut St.. 5*44344 313

SECRETARY Must be good typist Office neer cempue. Fulltime Cell 243 7315 tor interview 315

KITCHSN A COUNTER HELP WANTIO. Will train. Pleasant personality essential. Apply In person Cornets Bar 3eM Chestnut St 337

COMPANION—7 Year old spayed female cat, Queeoueg. available tor adoption. We're going to Europe. Call Jess 313 iw 793

SPANISN TUTORINO by Penn Grad. Time 1 Price Negotiable Call 34* 79*2 30*

: Sbalin?ar •CTS. 40th St. 387-3646 •

*j1«-K Gold and Silver Jewelry, .—Chains, Earrings, rings, and*. -Bracalajts.

10 Percent Discount with Student I.D.

'UiAVll SPECIAL CHARTER FLIGHTS FOR CHRISTMAS to the Caribbean from S179 00 Europe from «?79 00 London, Frankfurt, Malaga, Geneva, Zurich and ski charters. Call Lynn Accent Travel S4S 6100 jo;

TONftTO

wwum l & 2 Rooms Ca» 8-2 Mon—Frl

222-3123

HERBERT YENTIS COMPANY

•51st Year-

Part Time Sales Help Needed

No Experience Necessary Call Gene at Martin ■ Shoes

L03-6688

PROFESSIONAL TYPIST, experienced in dissertations, statistical typing, foreign language IBM Selectrlc. Marilyn Starr. VI 9*270. xt

TYPIST, IBM SBLBCTRIC Dissertations,manuscripts, tables, figures eno alphanumerics expertly done. Excellent faculty and professional references OlANE, 477 0797. MS

PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER speclailiing in dissertations, theses, manuscripts and Foreign languages Flora Cariin779 7311 314

CERAMICS CLASSES Stoneware porcelain, raku Classes begin September 19 Contact The Cley Studio WA3 17*2 2*4

INT«R«JST«0 IN LOW COST JIT TRAVEL TO EUROPB AND ISRAEL? Student Trevel Center can help you travel with maximum flexibility end minimum cost For more info cell Toll Free *00 1251034 214

STEVEN DUBOW Night Editor

JONATHAN GREER JEFFBARKER

Copy Editors

WILLIAM ECKSTEIN MICHAEL THOMPSON

IRA WALLACE STEVE WIENER Photo Day Editors

RICH HOFMANN Sports Copy Editor

Immerse Yourself in Another Culture... The Cultural Studies Program will give the following modules in the Fall. 1977

AFRICA

Courses:

Readings in Black Literature: Modern Black South African Writing

English 281 T TH 12-1 30 Ms Ayo Ogundipe

Introduction to the History ol Sub- Saharan Africa

History 315a M 2-4 and arranged Dr Charles Berbench

African Folklore Folklore 425 TTH 1 30-3 Dr Dan Ben-Amos

Cultures and Peoples of Sub- Saharan Africa

Anthropology 514 TH9-11 Dr Igor Kopytoff

Central African Religious Move- ments

Sociology 578 W 1-4 Dr Willi de Craemer

Political Development of Africa Political Science 565 MWF 12 Dr Ernest J. Wilson III

African Art History ol Art 225 T TH 9 30-11 Dr Paula Ben-Amos

LATIN AMERICA

Courses:

Survey ol Latin American History History 387 TTH 12-1:30 Dr Nancy Farriss

Latin American Politics Political Science 154/554 T TH 9:30-11 Dr Henry Wells

Geography of Latin America Geography 411 W 3-6 Dr Thomas Reiner

Theories of Social Change Sociology 598 T TH 3-4 30 Dr. Magah Larson

ISRAEL

Courses:

Modern Hebrew Literature In Translation

Oriental Studies 459 M W 1:00 and arranged Dr Stanley Nash

Peoples of Israel Oriental Studies 442 M W F 10:00 Folklore 442 Dr Donna Shai

For further information, contact Office of Special Programs. 110 Logan Hall, telephone: 243-4940

Funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities

Page 3: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

Friday, September 9,1977

Judge Issues Injunction The Dally Pennsylvanian

(Continued from page I) violation of secondary boycott provisions'- of federal law. The Teamsters, Hirsch said, "sought to Involve other contractors" in Its dispute with the University.

According to Hirsch, the injunction will last until the NLRB in Washington D.C. issues a final decision on the housekeepers' strike. The NLRB regional board in Philadelphia, he said, will review the case before an administrative law judge. Then the national group will

Security (Continued from page 1)

police department should get involved in."

The youthful-looking director readily admits that confidence in the department has lagged during the turmoil-filled period of discoveries and revelations about the surveillance activities of campus security. "It will take time, maybe a long time, before we can fully restore the University community's respect and confidence in the security office.

"We want to make sure that people in the police department are as much like everybody else at the University as possible," Johnston said. Johnston is experienced in the area of criminal justice and law enforcement, while his predecessor was a retired air force colonel and intelligence director.

In the short time he has been at the University, he has been praised by those who work with him and for him. His superior, Vice-President for Operational Services Fred Shabel, lauded him as "a true professional." Another Operational Services department head, Dining Service Director Donald Jacobs, said that Johnston has done an excellent job so far in handling the difficult strike situation.

BACK TO SCHOOL

SALE g 3 AND 10 SPEED BIKES g

tee ft* |H lUPU/MUMI Nw • MOPEDS •

S

i

WOLFF CYCLE 4311 LANCASTER AVf.

• MIL* , PA. • Kill 71

BEAT INFLATION SAVE 50°/o TO 100°/-

SHOE WAR DISCOUNT PRICES VICTORY OVER DE FEET

CLARKS • LOW WALLY BULL-HIDE

NOwtn.ti NOW 111 •• NOW si4.n

WRANGLER JEAN SHOES AT DISCOUNT PRICES

,OLOFCLOGS HURARACHE CLOGS

• ADIDAS ROM. ) FRED PERRY LEA. .TIGER CORSAIR LEA.

FROM fll.tt NOW. I.7.M NOW. m.n NOW «JJ.M NOW 111 It

ANNE KLEIN WATCHES AT DISCOUNT PRICES

TRETORN DOCK SIDERS CAROLINA LEA. HIKER

NOW. SIM NOW KM NOW II. ■

SHOE BARN. LTD.

LOOK FOR THIS

AD ON THIS

PAGE EVERY

DAY FOR NEWS

OF WHAT'S BEST

TO SEE AND DO.

PRESENTED BY

THE MANY

PERFORMING ARTS

ORGANIZATIONS

ON THE CAMPUS.

COOHOIN&TE D RV

THf AnjNINUtRC, CtNUH

issue a decision. Greenberg said workers returned to

work Tuesday after the Labor Day weekend, but he added," the project work will be at full strength by Monday." He said he could not estimate a completion date for the construction, explaining," We want to make sure the project continues before predicting a date."

Research {Continued from page I)

Union had learned how to manipulate human behavior. At various times the program has also been called Bluebird, Artichoke and MK-Search.

Funds for MK-ULTRA were fun- nelled through two CIA fronts, the Geschikter Foundation for Medical Research in Washington D.C, and the Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology.

JTOTF or •Applications

•Passports •Resumes

While you wait service (// needed)

On Campus at SHAPIR STUDIOS

3907 Walnut St BA2-7888

NOW . . at YOUR BOOKSTORE

CAMPUS DISCOUNT

IS BACK!

SAVE AS MUCH AS

$200.00 CAMPUS DISCOUNT COUPONS!

CAMPUS DISCOUNT Coupons is a packet of 72 dollar saving coupons. 72 Big Opportunities to save on Food, Entertainment and Supplies. This Is a cooperative student activity ...put together by college students throughout Philadelphia and sold exclusively through your UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE. Yours while the supply lasts for only $2.95! You can save that much or more with just one of the 72 coupons offered In the CAMPUS DISCOUNT Packet.

This year your packet of CAMPUS DISCOUNT Coupons Include:

TK.Omt.lnMl MOUSt -.1 fAI.AMl V ..... J I -A)

tMIKUSTMlt I lA/l

HAHONSrMHI HAIM

I luAntnitiirf ICfNMN '0 OM

MMFI cmi SKO*

1'. Mill MS<. HU Ml I p.- I raMtWi

(AlWiUMMH

VAXAN AJ A I-..H-I-.■ . .. VJ.,. 1] SO

llKW H u(KKl

PIU! Q n OTHER COUPONS ARE All O Z. INCLUDED (OR THE LOW PBICE OF $2.95

Page 3

CAMPUS INDIA RESTAURANT RK BiryaM, BhiM Dishes, Ckicfcen Tandoori and

wptaroi specialties. Sen* Inch art fa*

7 Bays a week 33 S. 40th Street 243-9718

GAYS AT PENN Cordially Invites

ALL GAY MEN AND WOMEN

To Its Opening Party Monday, September 12 AT 8:00 P.M.

Room E, Basement of The Christian Association

3601 Locust Walk Refreshments, munchies and Good People

This is the semester to get your programmable.

TheTI-57. Its self-teaching system gets you

programming fast.

. making Vox*. ■ xoftuuyu/nnwig

79 95*

Tl Programmable 57. The powerful superslide rule calculator you can program right from the keyboard Comes with an easy- to-follow, self-teaching learning guide-over 200 pages of step-by-step instructions and ex- amples. Quickly learn the value of making re- petitive calculations at the touch of a key Recall entire instruction sequences. Display intermediate results at any point in a calcula- tion. Eight multi-use memories provide ad-

dressable locations to store and recall data Program memory stores up to 150 keystrokes (50 program steps). Editing too Singlestep. Backstep. Insert or delete at any point in a program. Also a powerful slide rule calculator with logs, trig func- tions and advanced statistics routines.

The TI-58 and TI-59 combine three major inno- vations to bring the power of programming to you-even if you've never programmed before: 1 Extraordinarily powerful -at remarkable low prices 2. Revolutionary plug-in modules put complex formulas to work

at the touch of a key. 3 Step-by-step learning guide that takes you from the basics of

programming through advanced programmings-language you can understand.

Tl Programmable 58. up to 480 program steps, or up to 60 memories Master Library module contains 25 prewritten programs in math, engineering, statistics and finance. Also increases number of steps - up to 5000. Library programs may also be addressed from the key- board or inserted as subroutines. Can also be used with Tl's new PC-100A printer/plot- $•< f^tk jM QC* ter It lets you plol I //I *°

print headings and prompt-messages ML ^aa/ Jl

Tl Programmable 59. More powerful than the TI-58 Up to 960 program steps or up to 100 memories Magnetic cards store up to 960 steps. And. record and pro- tect custom programs. Also 10 user JA/\/\QC* flags 6 levels ol subroutines 4 types X ^JT^aW of branches. Jam S ^2r

Optional Libraries. Applied Statistics. Surveying. Real Estate/Finance, Aviation, Marine Navigation $35 00" each

The Tl 58 and 59. Both use revolutionary plug-in Solid State Software" libraries.

^>

FREE. When you buy a Tl Programmable 58

or 59 you can get this 19-program Leisure Library.

A s35.00 value if you act now.

Football Predictor. Forecasl score, point spread Bowling Scorekeeper. Track 90 bowlers Golf Htndlcapper. Up- date handicap Irom latest round s score Bridge. Computes points Irom tricks made and bid U.S. Chen Federation Rankingi Wins losses draws Codebreaker. 3.024 possi- ble codes make Ibis a unique challenge Blackjack. Acey Ducey. Craps. Mart Lander. Pilot to a sale landing Jive Turkey. Guess mystery number tells you it you're high or low - but is it living you9 Nlm. Play the machine, each lime it gets better Sea Battle. t5 missiles to sink sub Quarterback. Call plays Photo 1. Compensate lor change in photo enlargement magnilicalion Photo II: FHI-ln-flath. Computes correct lens I slop in strong ambient light Use il with a PC-10OA and have even more fun Computer Art Hangman. Put in a word, second player guesses or hangs Memo Pad. Write, enter messages Print and record them on 59s mag card Use the card to replay the message Blorythm. Plots all three cycles

UrtonUbrorw

LBi&u't) library cornea with Plug-m module Library manual Quick reference guide Label cams Library wallet

, Panonof r. □ Otter good Irom August 15 to October 31, 1177 Here s what you to Fill out this coupon Return it to Tl with your serialized Customer Information Card (packed in the box|. along with a copy of a dated proot ol purchase showing the serial number Imeorunl Your envelope must be postmarked no later than October 31 1977

Insure Library Oiler P 0 Box S3 Lubbock. Texas 79406

Name

Address

City

State

Tl 58 or 59 Serial Number (Irom back ol calculator!

L_ Teus instmme-ts 'eserves the 'icnt to substitute software i*ra'tes ot ecu* value bawd on amiability '■tease alto* 30 flays *o< deinery Otter void *ftere D'oruMed by law Good * comntnui U S only J

"Sugojesied'elaii pr*e

• r977 Teus Instruments incorporated

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED

Page 4: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

Sty Pail The Newspaper <>f aW

An Outlook

Vbnri«. Examining a World Financial Recovery Page 4

y of I'III ii' > IV.IIII.I

Thursday, September 8,1977

CAROL J. HUTCHINSON, Executive Editor RAYMOND C. VAN DER HORST. Business Manager

DANIEL M. AKST. RHONDA OR1N Co-Managing Editors

TERI M. GROSS Editorial Page Co- idltor

LOREN FELDMAN Sports Co-Editor

WILLIAMS. ALTMAN Photography Co-Editor

GREGORY P. OUSSANI Associate Business Manager

FRED A. SCHNEYER Editorial Page Co Editor

MARKHYMAN Sports Co-Editor

PETER L. CHAPMAN Photography Co-Editor

AMYS. BORRUS Feature Editor

PH. WIEST City Editor

MB. NE1SNER, JR. Advertising Manager

JEFFREY R. EDWARDS Production Manager

RUSSELL B.LITIN Credit Manager

ELIOT KAPLAN 34th Street Co-Editor

DR US ILL A MENAKER 34th Street Co-Editor

Welcome To Pennland

By Sirena Terr Admit it, you were a freshman once.

You arrived here smiling expectantly, a little queasy in the stomach. Sitting in the back car seat clutching your Desiderata poster and the letter from your roommate while Dad drove, you were decidedly less Jaded then. In fact you were downright bright eyed and bushy tailed.

You learned. And fast. Your roommate had the good sense

to get there early and nabbed the good mattress. You were left with the bed crammed in the corner; for the rest of the year you slept with your head lodged under the sink. (In a week you were sure you'd contracted chronic post-nasal drip but it was only faulty plumbing).

Chip, your roommate brought matching bedspreads and John Denver's greatest hits. His polyester imitation denim jeans swam around his ankles a good three inches above his earth shoes.

You went to check out your next door neighbor, Andrea who sat cross legged on her bed wearing gym shorts and a t-shirt that read " the best part Is inside".

"Yeah, I really hope this is a together floor," she was saying "because my boyfriend goes to Lafayette and he told me that it's really great if your floor is together and has parties and brunches and watertight*."

You were a little rusty at making small talk so you went back to your room to examine the literature

freshman advisor left (you never did catch his name but it didn't matter since you never saw him again.)

Inside the plastic Perm bag was a small pink paperback. It had a price tag on it and you didn't know yet that it was the only free thing you would ever receive from the University. It was called "Sex is Never an Emergency" You only regretted that they hadn't broken the news to you before you enrolled.

Like you during your first days here, the new crop of freshman are caught up in the band parties, mixers and floor meetings that make college seem like a huge singles convention.

Sunday night on the Quad balcony new students wore pins with leaves drawn on them, seeking out their matches in the opposite sex. R A's functioned like the social director at Grossingers.

And then, all too soon it creeps up: classes ("until we get a bigger room you '11 have to bring your own chairs") bureaucracy ("I can't give out those

forms till tomorrow, anyway, this office is closing now for lunch" l and buying books (' 'I can't help it If you've been waiting for a half hour, this line is cash only").

The neighbors who are always dropping in to find where Rosengarten is will soon be beating down a path to its most secluded corner, regretting only that the library closes so early on Saturday nights.

Welcome to Penn. Sirena Ttrr (FAS 79) is on the staff of The Dally Pennsylvanian.

By Lawrence Klein A world recovery is in full swing and intact for 1977 and

1978, although not at a very strong pace. The moderate rates of recovery now being experienced in a

number of industrial countries are associated with a tendency toward persistence of high or rising unemployment, except In the United States where the rate has been falling.

On a very gradual scale, the rate of inflation is coming down throughout the world. But, looking further ahead, it appears that the world business cycle Is still alive.

The United States' forecast (from Wharton Econometric Forecasting) is quite bullish for 1977 and 1978 but shows definite signs of a cyclical growth-slowdown in 1979. The same is true of the West German forecast by Norbert Walter. George de Menil's forecast for France indicates this tendency toward a slowdown as early as 1978.

A note of optimism in R. J. Ball's projection for the United Kingdom is seen in the expected current account surplus for 1978, helped to a great extent by North Sea oil flows. The decrease in British inflation Is visible in Dr. Ball's projections, but it will be some tune before the rate is in one- digit figures.

While the Canadian unemployment rate has been rising this year, Michael McCracken looks for a yearly rate under the first quarter average. (This was confirmed after the World Outlook Conference when a decline In Canadian unemployment was reported for May.)

Steady growth at about 5 percent and gradual reduction inflationary pressure, coupled with a phasing out of the present control system, are in the general Canadian picture, assuming that the Wharton forecast for the United States holds up.

Election uncertainties for 1978 govern the French economic outlook. The present policy of the Barre government is aimed at preserving France's position in world trade with the current account brought Into balance and the value of the French franc upheld. This requires a policy of growth moderation in 1977, continuing in 1978 at even a reduced rate.

Chikashl Moriguchi predicts a cautious recovery of the Japanese economy with high unemployment and business failures. He predicts a continuation of moderate growth and some improvement on the inflation front, but would prefer to see a significant fiscal stimulus accompanied by a somewhat higher yen rate.

Norbert Walter predicts a real growth rate of 4 to 5 percent for West Germany in 1977 and a slightly lower _^_^ figure for 1978. Credit conditions could be a little easier. Exports remain solidly strong, but investment is more volatile. Equipment investment fluctuates a great deal but should improve in 1977. It is business construction that remains sluggish. There will be some wage cost pressures on prices.

The Italian inflation rate has recently fallen, but it remains to be seen if that signals a permanent change. There have been recent cuts In interest rates and if the inflation rate can continue to fall, even slowly, there is an expectation of balancing the current account in the near future with only modest depreciation of the lira-stopping short of 1000 to the dollar.

These are among the main points made by Mario Baldassarri. As in France, there is political uncertainty. This holds back fixed capital formation and growth.

The Soviet Union and other members of the CMEA group have weathered some recent crises brought on by past harvest failures, world Inflation and recession. Donald Green expects to find normal growth rates in terms of historical averages

for 1977-78. Large foreign debts and trade deficits will restrain the expansion of their imports. This will hold back growth performance.

Yugoslavia, more like the Western economies, should have good growth' in 1977-78 but continuing Inflation at two-digit rates and persistence of the trade deficit.

The non-OPEC developing world was set back seriously in 1974-75. It Is Improving now, in the recovery phase of the world cycle, but not performing up to target rates of growth near 6 percent. Among developing areas, African nations are In the most difficult straits and recovering slowly.

Kenneth Ruffing sees the debt problem of the developing countries as serious because the burden of servicing the debt Is growing. High growth, especially in export markets, is needed in order to reduce the servicing burden.

Rimmer de Vries, however, introduced a tone of optimism Into the discussion. He Is relying on OPEC absorption of world imports on a large scale and U.S. energy conservation as key factors in being able to coexist with the OPEC surplus. He feels that the payments outlook and the debt situation for the developing countries are better than commonly recognized. He stressed, however, that the debt problem extended beyond the developing world to some poorly performing OPEC countries.

Paul Armington, dealing with the new, fascinating problems of predicting foreign exchange rates in relation to the underlying economic situations country by country, sees the yen as clearly undervalued. He expects the deutschmark

to appreciate bui sees no reason for dollar depreciation.

He is not hopeful for sterling, in spite of the North Sea's potential earnings. Assuming that Barre's policies work in France, Armington expects to see a strong franc. But he looks for depreciation In both the lira and the Canadian dollar.

Summing up results from a model for the world as a whole, Keith Johnson cannot yet see a worldwide slowdown in 1979. It Is clear from his calculations that most countries are trying to export more to their partners than the latter are willing or able to take on a world basis. He estimates this imbalance to be growing each year for the next two or three.

Lower or slow growing commodity prices in 1978 will mean difficulties for developing countries. If the I.IX.' and CMEA countries could manage to get more credit, in spite of their outstanding debts, their import requirements would go far toward stimulating worldwide growth.

Lawrence R. Klein is a Professor of Economics at the University. This text was presented as a speech at the World Outlook Conference of Wharton Econo- metric Associates held at the University in June.

The Daily Pennsylvanian welcomes comment from the University community in the form of columns and letters to the editor. Letters to the editor and signed columns printed on this page represent the position of the author and not the official editorial position of The Daily Pennsylvanian.

Material must be typed, 66 characters to a line, triple-spaced and signed with name and phone number. Handwritten material will not be accepted. Address all contributions to: 4015 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa, 19104. We reserve the right to edit according to space limitations.

MacNelly

Letter: An Alternative

Once again, we find the University in the midst of its bi-annual labor dispute. Congratulations, University. Once again, we find the DP in the midst of its bi-always effort to dredge up letters to the editor. Being the good Samaritan that I am, I can no longer resist putting my one cent in.

A layoff is a cruel thing. There is no debating that. But the University has been paying better than average wages for the kind of work being done. And the constituents being represented have not been bargained for realistically.

If a university is In a financial bind, only a fool would expect 30 percent pay boosts. To have the university subjected to a 45-day walk-out every two years rests on equally firm reason. Lastly, to ask the University students to shell out more cash in a charity gesture that is already breaking their backs is insipid.

Yes, the layoff is cruel. But I view it as being without alternative.

K.EDWARD LEEDS WH,CEAS'78

Party Tonight. At three great bars

and restaurants right for

any mood*

A Why would anyone

come to E. R. Yokum and Company? Well our four dollar dinners are getting pretty famous. Because for about four bucks, more or less we'll give you a choice of two soups, a salad, a choice of seven entrees, and a roll and butter. Plus, our bar is noted for its' unusual beers and drinks. We're the home of the best Pina Colada around, made with fresh pineapple, and coconut juice from Puerto Rico. Tuesday is nurses I. D. night. Nurses show your I. D. and get 25« off all drinks. Wed- nesday is Banjo Joe night. So stop in soon. It's a bar and a half.

and rcompanyT

4002 Chestnut Street EV2 1940

B The Bull and Barrel. A

classic college bar with peanut shells on the floor, inexpensive drinks and lots of lusty laughter. There's always some- thing happening . . . Monday is football night. Wednesday is Peanut Night. Eat all the free peanuts, you can. Thurs- day is "double cheese- burger & french fry for 94«" night. Plus, we've got lunches under $2.00. 4. 6. and 8 oz. Sirloin Platters. Food served until 1:30 a.m. And more. Remember the Bullbur- ger, an 8 oz. burger with cheese and french fries. Won't you join us!

BULL & BARREL

NEW A typically Irish Pub.

Ohara's. A place where you can share in the kind of warmth and excite- ment only the Irish know how to provide. Enjoy a tasty dinner with us— steaks, salads, omelets, hamburgers with a vari- ety of toppings, and more. Have a drink with us, either at your table or at our comfortable, friendly bar. We even have Guinness and Bass Ale on Tap. Then settle back and watch for some interesting things to start happening, thanks to the magic of Ireland.

3925 Walnut Si Phila EV 2-5150

-i""i •< ■ i/i »-*»<>

Page 5: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

The Daily Pennsylvania!! Friday, September 9,1977

FA< IULTY c Add

►F AF itiona

ITS AND SCIl 1 Fall Courses

ENCES Courses Omitted from the Courses Which Have Changes in

Time-Location-lnstructor: Course and Room Roster: Am Civ 110 Women in Politics

Been Cancelled: mm Tu 4:30-7:10 SH C-22 GladowsW Am Civ 618 The Voice Within: American Autobiographies Chemistry 245a Experimental Organic Chemistry I

. (16624) (16508) Change of time from Th 6:30-9:10 to Sat. 9:00- AfAmS 015 Intro to Afro-American Studies 1:00 120011) Tu, Th 9:30-11:00 BH 311 Washington Anthropology 566 Seminar: Contemporary Urban Societies

(21836) Economics 46 Alternative Economic Systems Biology MO Behavioral Biology (10768) From "Arranged" location to C-18 Stiteler

1 (10313) Tu 6:30-8:30101 BB Rosenson Anthropology 666 (21836)

Social Interaction HaU

Blology354 Social Ethology Economics 326 Senior Seminar on Income Distribution and i (23520) W 12:00-3:00100 BB Smith Biology 419

03620) Field Ecology (27S69) Redistribution

Instructor: Taubman Biology 408 Population Ecology

1 23598 TTh 9:00-10:30101 BB Constantz and Horwitz Biology 450 Advanced Developmental Biology English 74 The Short Story (23668) (29568) Location: 17 Logan Hall

Biology 418 Plant Geography (23(15) MW 2:00-3:00102 BB U and A. Smith Biology 523 Plant Ecology English 92 Topics in Film and Literature

(23766) (29616) Mat3:0OinChemlO2;WFat3:00inDRLA-l Biology 480 Advanced Cell and Developmental Biology (33600) MWF 10:00-11:00101 BBTilney Biology 556 Adaptation Geography 4(2 Political Geography

(23740) (32542) From "Arranged" location to 24 Wms Hall Biology S17 Aquatic Comminities (33604) Th 11:00-5:00 102 BB and Acad. Nat. Sci Biology 755 Development Seminar Linguistics 556 Intro to Transformational Grammar

Patrick (23756) (36634) Instructor: Sag

Chemistry 351 Principles of Biological Chemistry Biophysics 60550 Probes Mol Structure Philosophy 0(1 Introduction to Philosophy (34883) MWF 12:00-1:00109 Chemistry Bldg Opella (23851) (44287? FromSHB-26toLH310

Communications 326 Introduction to Political Communication English 33 Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama Philosophy 0(3 Ancient Philosophy (25775) TTh 9:30-11:00 ASC124 Meadow (20486) (44363) From LH 310 to BH 323

Kcon 1A (Honors) Introduction to Economics English 112 Workshop for Fiction Writers Philosophy M1F Intro Probs. Phil (27156) Section 13; TTh9:30-ll:OODH-E 15 Appleton

(Students who registered in the original (10960) (44263) Section 2. From 26 Wms to LH 321

section 13 under sequence No. 27155 must re- English 115 Advanced Fiction Workshop Philosophy 001F Intro. Probs. Phil register) (2»6H) (44271) Section 3. From 26 Wms to LH 321

Econ 10 (Honors) Microeconomic Theory English 281 Black Literature: The African-Afro- Philosophy 413 Set Theory (27236) Sec tion 3; TTh 9:30-11:00 DH-E 206 Blair

(Students who registered in the original (11171) American Experience (44439) From LH 321 to 27 Wms j

section 13 under sequence no. 27235 must re- English 366F Conference in Literature Rel. Thought (61 Approaches to the Study of Religion register.) (29872) (47376) Instructor: Dunning

English 006 Short Fiction English 576 Novel of the Black World Rel. Thought 123 Introduction to Classical Judaism (10859) Section 2; W 4:30-7:10 Wms 26 Staff (29976) (47392) Instructor: Ginsburg

Epidemiology 501 Introduction to Epidemiology French 96 Ideology and Culture Rel. Thought 735 Seminar: Selected Focal Figures in Jewish (11171) M 4:00-7:00 Wms 29 Bahn (31940) (47537) and Christian Tradition

Instructor: Stone and Kraft Epidemiology 509 Occupational Health FRSEM 102 Tps Thru Literature (11181) W 4:00-6:00 Wms 23 Stellman (32666) Regional Science 607

(47264) St rat of Reg Dev From T 3:00-6:00 to W 10:30-1:30 |

French 030 Medieval French Literature Geography 569 World Geog-Manuf (31895) TTh 1:30-3:00 Wms 321 Poirion, Visiting (32558) Sociology 614 Sociology of Childhood

Professor from Sorbonne History 166D History of Mill Town

(13290) From "Arranged" location to 127 BH

General Lit. 404 Towards a Realism (3*5(6) Sociology 531 History of Sociological Theory (32474) TTh 3:00-4:30 Wms 304 Liehm (4(413) From "Arranged" location and time to W |

History 166L Arabs and Israelis 10:00-1:00 Wms 23, Bershady

History 137 (33673)

Introduction to History and Culture of (33666) Armenian People of the 14th Century Statistics 011a Introductory Statistics TTh 12:00-l:30SHC-llStone History 206C International Relations Between the Wars (13650) From "Arranged" location to Dietrich Hall

(33876? E-309 History 378TV The World Around the Revolution (11846) Section 1; W 12:00-1:00, beginning October History 385 American National Character | < 11847)

12th C-15 Stiteler Hall Peters Section 2; W 6:30-8:30 every other week, beginning October 19th 105 Wms Hall Peters

(11849)

History 507 Colonial Africa Other Changes:

Both sections Channel 3, three days a week (34189)

History 428 Armenian History and Culture History 545A European Diplomatic History Biology 102 Animal Organisms — Ne* Title

(11853) M 6:30-9:10320 Wms Oshagan (34221) (34229)

Section 1 Section 2

(103361

History of Art 225 (22330)

African Art English 86 Mod Am Fiction Imag | TTh 9:30-11:00 Paula Ben-Amos History 604 Social Thought and Material Change In the Correct sequence number is: 10871 1

(34333) 19th Century: Europe, America, and the

HSS 510 Seminar on Science and Literature Third World FRSEM 123 is actually Religious Studies 132

(34658) Th 1:30-4:30 Adams HSS 010 Science and Society FRSEM 166 was erroneously listed as a fall offering-it

HSS 640 Seminar in die Social History of Science (34581) will be gi ren in the spring '

(34660) T 3:00-6:00 Vucinich HSS 300 Science in Modern America Spanish 1M One course unit credit; not non-credit as

Italian 546 Studies in the Italian Renaissance (34621) (13390) listed.

(35159) T4:0fr6:00315WmsMelzi Italian 537 Boccaccio

Oriental Studies 422 First Year Armanian (35158) (12290) W 6:30-9:10 320 Wms Oshegan

Philosophy 260 Pro-Seminar

Oriental Studies 423 Second Year Armenian (44375) (12202) W 6:30-9:10 320 Wms Oshegan

Religious Thought 424.. Classical Jewish Thought

Philosophy 276 Selected Topics in Political Philosophy (47465) (44401) T 3:00-5:30 310 LH Friedman

Sociology 3D Sociology of Knowledge

Pol. Sri 198-1 Media and American Democracy (49324) (Part 2)

(46324) M 1:30-4:30 Council Km. Furness Bldg. von Vorys Sociology 539 Society and Feminine Personality A detailed examination of the mass- (49453) communications (point and electronic) media as a safeguard against demagogues in a Spanish 027 Great Themes in Spanish Literature

highly politicized, populist democracy and its (50456)

actual and potential contributions to the popular capacity for complex decisions. Theater Arts 218

(51836) Advanced Theater I^b

Portuguese (GH) 161 Elementary-Accelerated Portuguese 2 cu (32357) MWF 10:00 in 317 Wms and TTh 9:30-11:00 in

438WmsdaSilva

Psychology 241 Special Topics in Physiological Psychology (12825) W 6:30-9:10 204 Wms Stellar

Regional Science 633 Multidimensional Soc Ace (47178) W 3:00-5:00ILSG Schinnar

(Also listed as SPUP 733)

Rel. Thought 137 (47410)

Introduction to the History and Culture of the Armenian People to the 14th Century TTh 12:00-1:30 SH C-ll Stone

Rel. Thought 404 Significant Figures in the History of 1 (47459) Religions: Hegel vs. Kierkegaard

Organizational Meeting: 11:00 Tuesday, September 13th, 117 Duhring Wing Dunning

Rel. Thought 524 Jewish Texts of the Second Temple Period (47568) Th 3:00-5:00 23 Wms Stone /

Page 6: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

.

Page 6

FINAL CLEARANCE

SKIRTS— SLACKS — DRESSES

5.99 ALL TOPS 1" & 2 .99

3728 Walnut St.

The Daily Hennsylvanian

THE MIDDLE EAST CENTER 838 Williams HaU

243-4335 College of General Studies Evening Course in Arabic:

OS 434 Seq. No. 12297 Colloquial Egyptian Arabic. MW 5-«: 30 Wms. 103.1 cu. el-Haraml.

Friday, Segtemberjj, 1977

-afcflfl Mask &. Wig ** Rathskeller

Guitarist

BARRY BLINDERMAN 9P.M.

BASEMENT- HOUSTON HALL

EARN $6Q-PER MONTH DONATE BLOOD PLASMA

• Simple. Convenient & Profitable • Earn Weekly Income While You Study or Relax • Convenient Location • Pleasant, Com/ortable Facilities

INTERSTATE BLOOD BANK 2503 N BROAD ST.

IBB] for Info

(215)228-2343

news in brief Cornriiled from United Press International

ZERO MOSTEL DIES—Actor Zero Mostel, famous tor his starring Broadway role in Fiddler On the Roof, died yesterday at Thomas Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia at the age of 62. A spokesman for the hospital said Mostel died of a cardiac disorder. He had been admitted to the hospital Saturday apparently suffering from a virus but was released on Sunday. He was readmitted later that day complaining of feeling ill. Mostel was in Philadelphia to star in the production The Merchant, which was cancelled last week when he became ill.

SOUTH MOLUCCANS STRIKE AGAIN-South Moluccan youths protesting the trial of eight comrades charged with seizing last May a train and a school In Holland set fire to three kindergartens and a red cross station yesterday and opened fire on police and firemen. Officials said one policeman was shot in the stomach but was removed from the critical list after surgery.

DRUG TEST ON HUMANSSCRAPPED-The National Cancer Institute (NCI) has decided to sidestep a proposed test of laetrile in humans and will instead seek evidence of effectiveness in cancer patients already taking the controversial substance, Deputy Director Guy Newell said yesterday. Newell said specialists from tne NCI will meet today to decide how to carry out a study of laetrile in some of the estimated 50,000 Americans now being treated with it.

GOVERNORS DISCUSS ENERGY-Govemors from the Northeast and Southwest grumbled yesterday about shortcomings in President Carter's energy program, but apparently were not ready to formally condemn it at their 69th Annual Meeting, held in Detroit. Excluding the energy Issue, the National Governors Conference was a ringing endorsement of the administration's programs.

We've Got Our Act Together! The PennStores have expanded! This year the PennStores have their act together under one root, and we have expanded the store to serve you better. The Sport Spot, with the finest in sporting good-- and -ports wear, is now in the main store, and the PennStores now house ,i branch of Listening Booth records All ol this and more, under one root .it tl e PennStores.

We've got it all! Plants Posters Potter) t .uirniet Cookware Rugs and Wall

Hangings Records School Supplies Games Greeting Cards

Special Fall Book-Rush Hours 8:45 to 8:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday until 9/15. 8:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Fridays! 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Satur- day and Sunday, 9/10 and 9/11.

Calculators Prints Gifts Sporting Goods Sportswear Stationery Candy Photographic

Supplies Books, Books, Books

Open daily from 8:45 a.m. to 8 p.m. until September !5, closing at 5:00 p.m. on Fridays. Open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, September 10 and 11. Regular hours during the year are 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday; Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m

Page 7: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

Friday, Septembers, 1977 The Daily Pennsylvania!!

Mayoral Primary (Continued from page 1)

didates win 40 percent of the primary vote.

Since Democrats outnumber Republicans four to one in New York City, the Democratic nominee automatically becomes the favorite in the November general election.

Report (Continued from page 1)

Lucid said a "collegia] relationship should exist between the administration and the faculty. "Collegues consult, share and give advice,"Lucid said, noting that no such thing occurred in this instance.

The Senate Advisory Committee is drafting a resolution for the October Faculty Senate meeting, but will discuss the resolution with President Martin Meyer son on Saturday.

The Faculty Senate's regularly- scheduled fall meeting will be held on November 16.

The seven Democratic mayoral candidates spent some $5 million- more than was shelled out by party hopefuls in the entire 1973 election-on the race where issues took a back seat to the personalities of the star-studded field. By primary day, a fifth of the electorate was still reported un- decided.

Although the city's fiscal crisis promised at the outset to be a major issue, the 71-year-old Beame escaped heavy fall our except for a brief flurry over a Securities and Exchange Commission report that charges he "misled" investors.

But New York's financial woes did play a major part in shaping the campaign.

WXPN (Continued from page 1.

was one of two commissioners who dissented from the FCC majority opinion requiring the University to submit to public hearings with the possibility of discipliniary action in the case. The other, Robert Lee, is still with the commission.

The two new commissioners, ac- cording to Campbell, may prove crucial to WXPN's chances of regaining its license.

According to station members, the unexpected departure of former Station Manager Jim Campbell on July 1 contributed to the confusion at WXPN. Campbell left for "personal reasons," according to Director of Student Life Jerry Condon. Peter Cuozzo, who was formerly involved in radio work at Drexel University, has been named interim station manager until a permanent appointment can be made.

mmmmmtmussmmmm

Toomey (Continued from page 8)

come February, it'll be national recognition instantly," Toomey said. "It's coaching I've never had in my life. It's playing against players I've never played against before. So I

really want to make it in the worst way."

But that decision is both out of Toomey's hands and five months away.

Sweaty palm time.

martins shoes

Largest selection of Guy's & Gal's

CLuJks WALLABK8'

TREK Boots

WEEJUNS

Docksiders

OLOF Daughters

Clogs & Boots FRYE Boots

All at reasonable prices! L036688

1731 CHESTNUT ST.

Page 7 1

| GRADERS AND TUTORS NEEDED | ■ 'ITIP Honartmont rt( malKin.,,i,... »- ■ • " The department of mathematics needs graders for courses at a

variety of levels and tutors for the Pi Mu Epsilon freshman calculus tutoring program. We are also compiling a list of qualified private tutors. Interested students with good mathematics backgrounds are encouraged to apply I Qualified sophomores will be considered.).

DEPT. OFFICE DRL4W5

I

J SAMMY Back To School MIXER

featuring live music by

—ROULETTE— Friday, Sept. 9 9:30 — ?

SIGMA ALPHA MU FRATERNITY 3817 Walnut Street

MIXED DRINKS AND BEER FRESHMEN AND WOMEN FREE. BE THERE. ALOHA!

NEWMAN CENTER . OPEN HOUSE

SUE'S HOME GROOMING

ALL BREED GROOMING

CATS. TOO

BATHING. DIPPING. CLIPPING .V

tBY APPOINTMENT ONLY 476-6594 jjj;

WALNUT MALL CINEMA

222-2344 WALNUT at 39th OPPOSITE UNIV. OF PENN. CINEMA I ALL SEATS $1.50 AT ALL TIMES

CINEMA II&IIIS1.507IL2=30RM. SAt 4 SUN.

s III

Repertory—The Metro Retro "lollta" 7:15 THE LOVED ONE 7:45 "BLOWUP" BREWSTER McCLOUD 9:50

„ ,. Wrt.Tw.by _LJg_. Tinn«in«wiin«im

RACE FOR YOUR LIFE, CHARLIE BROWN

7:30 9:20 SAT tc SUN. CONT. FROM 2:00

"WAR OF THE WORLDS" »■>«'•' »'•» Mon & Tue*.

"WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE" Call For Tlmtt

"A STBFETCAB NAMIO DESIRE Fn Sit al » tl.OO S«..ril. Admimon MldnlfM

Sambatyon Presents

SHABBAT SERVICE EVERY Friday, 8:00 P.M.

at Hillel (3rd floor) 202 S. 36th St. Oneg Shabbat Afterwards

Then, Start the Year off RIGHT at Our

COFFEE HOUSE Sunday, Sept. 11 8:00 P.M.

Houston Hall Ivy Room

Refreshments Provided

V A* FR1 SEPT9- 4-7 P.M.

ALL WELCOMEII 3720 Chestnut (Behind Gimbel Gym)

*/>

EKTACHRQME PROCESSED DAIIY No Extra Charge

The Photography Department in room B-102 Ravdin Building, University Hospital, is now processing E-6 Ektachrome dailv, Monday thru Friday. Special Processing to your ASA is available for your individual requirements, also

for your convenience, INSTANT Passport and Application Photographs are available in Black & White and Color For more Information about these and other custom services, Call: 662-2093

Value up to $3.50

Sambatyon is Liberal Jewish Students at Penn

IIP

You and your guests are invited to enjoy one complimentary dinner free with the purchase of a second dinner of greater value at

Indian Restaurant 110 South 40th Street, Phila. BA2-2245 237 Chestnut St., Phila. MA7-3020

•R PfltHJlriW

[Please Bring this Coupon With You^

Announcing Courses In

Energy Management & Policy PrerequUites i 1 year of undergraduate calculus and 1 year of Physical Science or equivalent. Undergraduate student* must obtain permission of instructor or Graduate Group Chairman 8">uu«ie

"M■* P• "' Comoulw Protrammlr* lor !„.,„ Sylttm, An.1,,1,

CM «.•>..«M En..,» RMWrctt* TKiinoletv

■M.ft •> Ml Ap.hc.tion ol En.„, M.n.„m«,l t. MMMM

■M.a.p. tM< EM.a.P. »4«

Probl.m Sol,m. M.lhod.Mty

MoWlino ol Enirgy Sylltmi

Wt:309'»

T6:W?:30

TTfllilM TM:»7:« MI1HH

S.q No 1M45

ieq. No H*»7

S»fl. No MI75

S«l No 2MU J.». No. 2lt»l

Or. P. Blair

Dr. C. W.yg.nct

Dr. L. ElMOtorg

Dr. T. Saa', Dr. P. luir

IZ f^l"r^f °,KC°,)rerninAu0U^e JCOntent' and for "*'«">*». P-«W call Mrs. Helen Altersitz at

S^^^tf^Sg^; ^ °" E^,Management. Policy (Dr. Lawrence HT. I. T.tHmHHHT.H».T.«T.ttH.l.l.H. »»*■.!■■■■■»... ■■■■....i

ST. MARY'S EPISCOPAL

CHURCH

3916 Locust Walk office at

Christian Association

BEazasni

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

LIZA ROBERT MINNELLIDENIRO NEW YORK,— **

NEW YORK I BARGAIN MAT

WED.-1P.M. Mon Frl ; 30 10 00 Sat 1:00 7 X

10 00 ■««..«, . Sun 2:00 4 30 w * WMMUI 212^12.. I 7 00 9 30

I a CAMPUS

thing

DEEP » COLUMBIA/ ( V llltwtl

Mon Thurs 7 25 9« F" "i (oo l0 ,s BARGAIN MAT. s.t 1 os 5ti tooio is WED.-1P.M. Son ' 'i.

-<?

7:00

ii a CAMPUS i -.-

' 4ESRIE

WDOO- ALLEN

DIANE KEATON

'ANNIE HALL"

A nervous 'omance

UmltaAftnU [re| BARGAIN MAT. WED-1P.M.

Mon Thurs 7:40 9 35 Frt »:I0 1:10 10 10

Sat 1:13 « 10 I 10

10 10 Sun 2 00 4 00 o 10

i 00 10 00

III S CAMPUS

Hamilton Village BAZAAR EXTRAVAGANZA

11:30 A.M. - 4 P.M.

8 A.M. Eucharist 9 A.M. Choir Rehearsal

10:30 A.M. Festival Eucharist and Coffee Hour

HAMILTON VILLAGE COMMUNITY SUPPERS Every Wednesday 6 P.M. , *2 followed by Evensons at 7 P.M.

lOOM

DAILY EUCHARIST celebrated at noon in the church, on Friday at the C.A., on Saturdays at 10:30 A.M.

For more Information call 386-3916

PENN PLAYERS ANNOUNCES

CABARET AUDITIONS

WED. THURS. SEPT. 14-15 6-11PM HAROLD PRINCE THEATRE

INFO SHEETS AVAILABLE RM 520 ANNENBERG CENTER

TECH STAFF INTERVIEWS MON. SEPT. 12-RM. 520 ANNEN . CENTER 7-11 P. P.M.

WILKOMMEN ALU

HELP! We need it so we con give it.

STUDENT COMMITTEE FOR THE DISABLED

Come to our meeting on Monday Sept. 12 at 4:00

in our office on the first floor of Irvine Aud. (Houston Hall side) For more information Call x 4638 or 387-4817

Funded by the Studeni Activities Council

Page 8: CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret … · CIA Tells Meyerson University Participated In Secret Research ... don't believe that Burbank has everything," he said

- . .

Page 8 The Daily Pennsylvania!)

Special DP Soccer Issue Friday, September 9,1977

Offense, Team Unity Keys to Title Quest By JOHN E1SENBERG

Penn varsity soccer coach Bob Seddon had a secret for awhile, but there isn't much use in whispering about it anymore. Defending Ivy soccer champ Brown knows. Cornell and Princeton, both top contenders last year, know. Everybody knows.

They know that Seddon's crew of Red and Blue booters are going to be a tough, cohesive unit this year, and are not to be taken lightly.

The Quakers lost three members of last year's 7-5-1 squad through graduation, but Seddon expects to fill those holes with several capable faces.

'Our biggest loss from last year is co-captain Pete Dickstein," stated the Quaker mentor. "He was a good leader and a solid player, but I think we've found an excellent replacement in Florian Kempf."

Kempf was a second team All-Ivy performer for the Quakers in 1975, but took a one-year hiatus from Penn to go to school and play soccer in Munich, Germany. His talent and

1977 SOCCER SCHEDULE Sigl 1] 3 00 pm at St Joteph't Sept 16 1 15 pm Corntll S«pl. 20 7.30pm LaSalle Sept 24 2:00 •tVllltnov* Sept 27 3 30 atRutgen Ocl 1 10:30am atColumbla Oct ; 1:15pm Brown Oct 11 7 30 pen Lanlgn Oct IS 2:00pm atNavy oct 22 10 Xam at Yale Oct 25 7 30 pm DrtKtl Oct M 1:15 pm Princeton NOV. 8 10 30 am at Harvard No. II 1:15 pm Dartmouth

experience should solidify the Quaker defense.

The biggest plug in the Quaker defense, however, will be co-captain Paul Toomey, an honorable mentionAU-American selection last year. Toomey, who plays the sweeper back position, was granted another year of eligibility after torn knee ligaments kept him out for most of the 1975 season.

" Simply put, "commented Seddon, " Paul Toomey is an outstanding player who will help us a great, great deal. Our defense could be pretty tough to crack." Joining Toomey and Kempf in the backfield will be Steve Allison, a solid starter throughout the 1976 season. These three will form the nucleus of the Quaker defense, and probably the team.

The midfield should prove almost as strong, with a fine blend of the old and the new. Seth Roland and Pete Man 1111K1. both starters last year, are back again. Merrill Lamont, another Quaker back from Europe, is being called upon to fill the shoes of graduated Paul Harrison.

"Trading Harrison for Lamont is an even deal, as far as manpower is concerned," stated Seddon. "We're

lucky in this case in that we haven't been affected by graduation."

The goalie position is set with the return of second team All-Ivy performer Brad Hunt. last fall, he allowed only 14 goals in 12 games, and produced shutouts over Rutgers, Columbia and Harvard.

Improving the offense is Seddon's main concern. In 1976 the offense was sporadic at best scoring 16 goals in two games against Rutgers and Willanova but only 12 in the other 11 games. Returnees at the forward position are Tom Dooley, another All- Ivy performer, as well as Sean O'Donnell, Rich Barrios and Rick Whelan.

Seddon is hoping to alter this pattern by moving leading scorer and team sparkplug O'Donnell from the front line to the midfield. The hope is that O'Donnell's passing ability will help trigger the sluggish offense.

"We're going to have to go out and prove to ourselves that we can score regularly," admitted Seddon.

••We have the players, and the potential is definitely there, but we didn't do it last year. We'll have to wait and see."

Another improvement Seddon is hoping for is increased team unity. " I'll be very honest," stated the 10th year Quaker coach. "Last year we were far too individualistic to be really successful. All summer we've been stressing teamwork and solidarity, both on and off the field.

" We are just looking for the best 11 soccer players and then trying to find places on the field for them at the same time," continued Seddon. "As far as I'm concerned, it doesn't really matter where they all play as long as they play like a team. We learned a lesson last year and we know that cohesiveness is absolutely essential."

Two factors that could help the Quakers a great deal are a talented group of incoming freshmen and a favorable schedule. First year forwards Nick Pietrowski, Rick Sobel and Vince Mandato could all help increase Quaker scoring this year, while both Jim Wasserman and Andy Donnally will give the defense added depth. All five come to Penn with long lists of impressive high school credentials.

The Red and Blue will get a big break in the schedule with the three teams which finished ahead of the Quakers last year- Cornell, Brown and Princeton - all journeying to Franklin Field this season.

In all, the Quaker booters have a lot of positive factors in their favor as they head into the season. The team is deep in talent, long on experience, and should contend for the title.

Seddon has his fingers crossed.

KEY QUAKERS—Team scoring leader Sean O'Donnell (center photo left) has been moved to midfield where Coach Seddon hopes to better utilize his play- making abilities. Others expected to play Important roles in the '77 Red and Blue

title drive are, clockwise from the top right, Tom Dooley, Pete Mannlno, Steve Allison, and Brad Hunt. pnoto bv Steve Evangelloej and Mike Tnompion

Bruins Block Booters9 Path to Top By STEVE PETERS

Yes, it's soccer time again, and the Quakers' 1977 schedule runs the gamut from North (Dartmouth) to South (Navy), from excellent (Brown) to not-so-hot (Villanova). Let's dust off the crystal ball and have a look. Starting with the Ivy League:

Brown (11-3-1), (7-0 Ivy)—All-time scoring leader Fred Periera (and two teammates) are pros now, but the Bruins are favored to repeat as Ivy champs. Peter Van Deek, high point man last year as a freshman (11 goals, 8 assists), is back, and he provides the offensive thrust along with fellow forwards Tom Pelletier and Tom O'Brien. Coach Clive Stevenson thinks his duo of All-Ivy halfbacks, Ray Schnettgoecke and Pat Weir, are two of the best in the country. The Quakers haven't defeated Brown since 1973-the year before Periera arrived.

Princeton (10-4), (5-2)—Last year Princeton set a team record for wins with ten, including eight straight, tying with Cornell for second place. If their freshmen come through, the Tigers have a legitimate shot at the top. Coach Bill Muse had a tremen- dous recruiting year, picking up Ken Kryzda from the Mexican Olympic team, three high school All-

Americans, and three more New Jersey all-staters. In addition, for- ward Paul Milone (11, 2) and mid- fielder Allan Marshall, both All-Ivy. return. Guarding the net is one of the best in die East, Guy Cipriano (.94 goals against, 5 shutouts). With their youth, the Tigers are a team of the future—possibly the very near future.

Cornell (9-4-2), (5-2)-Optimism is also the watchword in Ithaca, where Coach Jack Writer welcomes back 13 lettermen, ten of them starters. Big guns for the Big Red are the co- captains, All-Ivy midfielder Sid Nolan (8, 4) and forward Rick Derella. Goalie Chris Ward must be replaced, but the new netminder will back a solid defensive corps led by All-Ivy fullback Paul Deutenmuller.

Columbia (6-5-3), (1-5-1)—Columbia

1J76 IVY LEAGUE FINAL STAN- DINGS

W L T Brown 7 0 0 Cornell 5 2 0 Princeton 5 2 0 PENN 4 3 0 Dartmouth 1 4 2 Yale 1 4 2 Columbia 1 5 1 Harvard 1 5 1

Olympic SoccerTempts Toomey MARK

HYMAN IS Some day, Paul Toomey will pace a

hospital ward anxiously awaiting the birth of his first child. And like every other sweaty-palmed dad who ever preceded him, Toomey is sure to approach first time fatherhood with all the composure of a crazed yak.

But come that day, the Penn soccer co-captain will have a slight edge on other expectant parents. He's played the waiting game before.

This July, Toomey was among 200 college soccer players invited to try out for the 1980 US Olympic team at an Olympic training site in Squaw Valley, California. loiter, when Coach Walt Cyzowych (former soccer mentor at soccer- rich Philadelphia Textile) sliced the squad to 25 bodies, Paul Toomey's name remained.

But the 21 -year old Quaker from Coventry, Conn, is not out of the woods yet. Sometime in late January or early February, Cyzowych will add to the roster

the names of seven amatuers who are currently playing in the NASL (North American Soccer League), then evaluate the current 25-man roster, and eventually lop off 12 additional names. The cuts will leave him with a final roster of 20.

Will Paul Toomey be one of those 20? Only Walt Cyzowych knows for sure. "There's not much I can do besides

wait for his decision," explained Toomey. "I didn't know what my chances were going into Squaw Valley.

"I thought the things going for me at Squaw Valley would be my size and speed," reflected Toomey, "Then there was my potential-and the fact that I've never had a great coach. I thought if I had come this far and reached this level without a good coach, Id probably be able to do something at Squaw Valley."

Were it not for an early season knee injury in 1975, Toomey may never have come upon this Olympic opportunity. In '75 as a junior, Toomey tore knee ligaments in the season's opener, but hobbled on until pain forced him out of the Quaker lineup five games into the campaign. Later, after gaining Honorable Mention AU-American and All-Ivy honors as a senior last year, Toomey learned that his abbreviated '75 season qualified him for an extra year of soccer eligibility. So the '76 senior became a '77 senior and Toomey was free to roam Franklin Field turf for another year.

All 25 Olympic hopefuls who survived the first cut were collegiate athletes-from soccer hotheads like Southern Illinois, St. Louis, and

OLYMPIC HOPEFUL Paul Toomey .pent part of hla summer In Squaw Valley, California where he tolled under the discriminating eye of Coach Walt Cyzowvch Toomey, who doubles aa Penn Socrer'a co-captain, gets the final word on hla 1980 Olympic fortunes sometime In February.

Indiana University. A handful play at West Coast institutions and two (Toomey and Textile's Dave McWilliams) attend Phllly schools. Toomey is the only Ivy League representative.

Unlike prior U.S. Olympic soccer teams, the '80 squad is receiving the royal treatment. The Olympic Committee absorbed all travel, food, and lodging, expenses for the athletes and provided a first class training facility in Squaw Valley, the site of the 1960 games.

Toomey was particularly impressed with the "scientific" training approach employed by the coaching staff. Information on playing technique, past injuries, and rate of recovery was fed into a computer to aid the coaches in the Olympic games selection process. "I was a little skeptical about the computer thing in the beginning," said the fullback, "but I talked to the guy who was in charge of the thing and he kind of convinced me that they take all factors into account. They feel they can predict how you will react to Olympic pressures."

According to Toomey, the one week camp stay broke down some longstanding collegiate sterotypes.

"I got kidded about drinking martinis for breakfast," smiled the former high school Ail-American, alluding to his Ivy League background. "And guys called me a preppie-even though I'm probably as far from it as anybody you can find."

And the Ivy league dress code? "Well yeah," smirked Toomey. "I wore an ascot under my uniform."

Toomey credits Coach Cyzowych ( a man he calls "the best soccer coach in the country") with bringing the best out of the players assembled in Squaw Valley. "Cyzowych has it set up so that you

have a job to do and you go out in the field and do it. He makes it clear exactly what it is he wants you to do," Toomey said. "It's not the kind of thing where you want the ball and you want to look great with it. That's not it at all. You just want to do your job. That's the way you look great."

And "great" is precisely the way the Olympic booters looked during an eight game Northeastern exhibition swing versus amateur All-Star teams during August. Toomey started at fullback on the team, which won all of its games by big scores-the last, a 10- 0 rout.

"Our team was far better than any I've ever played for or against," said Toomey. "On the tour, the refs were all against us and we were playing against guys who had played together a while, but geez, we kicked everybody's ass. This is a really good team."

Making that "good team" holds special significance for Toomey. Ultimately, he hopes for a pro soccer career and he figures the Olympic experience is a giant step in that direction. "If I do make the team

(G>ntmui\l ■ page 7) 1

loses only four players from last year's aggregation, proud owners of the school's first winning season since 1970. "This year should be even better," explains Lion mentor John Rennie. "The key to our season is the offense. Everything depends on how much scoring we get." An often anemic offense netted only six goals In seven Ivy games, but back for another try is leading scorer Shahin Shayin (7, 5). Freshman Tommy Panayotidi, New York City's top scorer last year, provides an additional boost. Six-foot, five-inch goalie John McElaney (U.S. Olympic 'B' team) returns, as does a defense which allowed only twelve goals behind him. If the Lions get some offense, they'll be tough. But keep in mind-Columbia hasn't defeated Penn since 1969.

Dartmouth (6-5-2), (1-4-2)—The story to Dartmouth's season revolves around the goal, where Scott Black- mun and Lyman Misslmer reside. Missimer (2.79 In 5 games) made honorable mention All-Ivy as a fresh- man, while Blackmun (1.06 in 11) was even more spectacular. Tom Ryan lends stability to the defense. The offense? Top returnee Tim Ehrsan had two goals. Mark Schneider arfd Paul Mott will add what they can up front.

Yale (4-8-2), (l-S-l)-Coach Bill Klllen has 14 lettermen back In New Haven, but except for the goalie, there's not a whole lot to get excited about. Roy Messing netmlnded in Germany last year and also starred for the U.S. in the Maccabiah Games. His goaltending partner, John Ert- mann, posted three shutouts and a 1.6* goals against average. Offensively, "We have a lot of question marks," says Klllen. The Elis' top two scorers are gone, leaving Joe Mensah (4, 0) and Paul Farago (2, 2) to lead the scoring brigade. "Much of our success depends on how we do early in the year," Killen says. "If we get decent scoring from the forwards, we'll surprise a few people."

Harvard (2-10-1)—Harvard's soccer players will probably have more fun in the classroom than on the playing field. Of the eight returning let- termen, only one had more than two goals last season.

LaSalle (10-4-2)—Bill Wilkinson returns to the Explorer soccer helm after a one-year absence. Awaiting him is an impressive array of talent from the 1976 ECAC South champions. Sweeper Vince Kelly, three years all- conference and last year's ECC co- MVP, returns along with the top four scorers: Tom Byrne (6, 5), John Kelly (5, 3), John McCarthy (4, 3), and Jim Coleman (1, 8). Seniors Dennis Sheehan and Frank Betsch will split the goaltending duties. The recruting was hampered by Wilkinson's late arrival as coach, but the Explorers should be able to get by without the freshmen.

Drexel (1-5-2)—The emphasis, as always, is on defense at Drexel. The pesky Dragons have the entire backline from last year's squad, with seniors Don Strein, Brian Murphy, and Bruce Robinson the prime movers. Goaltender Tom Shepherd played every game last year and will likely do it again. Shepherd gave up only 15 goals, but the Dragons scored only 16, and therein lies the problem. Tom Bradley (4, 2) is the only returning forward of note.

Navy (6-3-3)—The Midshipmen

boast twelve lettermen, but second year coach Greg Myers expects to carry ten to fifteen freshmen, which should make for stiff job competition. "We're still experimenting," says Myers. "The problem is getting the offense underway." ScottEckert (7,3) and Mark Decker are being counted on here. Goalie Kevin Albright "is our biggest improvement," says Myers. "He's improved a lot from last year. Overall, we're deeper and more mobile than last season."

Lehlgh (6-5-2)—It's no surprise that Lehigh Coach Tom Fleck says he expects to have a "fast, offensively- oriented" team in 1977. His goalie, the entire defense, the starting sweeper, and two midfielders have all depar- ted. "It's contrary to soccer theory to play this type of game," says Fleck. "But our strength is in our strikers." Specifically, the strength lies in the co-captain forwards, Mike Adamson and Skip DeMassa. A middle-distance track star, Emanuel Aduhenne, will try his luck on the forward line as well.

St. Josephs (5-6-2)—Four sibling combinations dot the Hawk roster. The firepower is provided by All-ECC midfielder Joe Fink (3, 4), and co- captains Jim Fink and Kevin McWilliams. The McGuires, Tom and Hugh, lend speed to the attack. But the offense was shaky last year (16 goals), and it must improve for the record to do likewise.

Rutgers (2-8-1)—One hundred and twenty prospects showed up for fall practice, the most ever at Rutgers. It's a good thing, too, because Coach Kalman Csapo needs all the help he can get. Dave Grimaldi (now a Dallas Tornado) accounted for most of last year's scoring. As in all other sports, Rutgers is trying to upgrade their program for national recognition. Unlike in football and basketball, it won't happen here.

Villanova (1-16)—Fifteen lettermen are back on the Main Line campus, but that's not necessarily good news when the only team they defeated last year was Spring Garden. Forwards Lian Lawlor (8 goals) and Bob Bosch (4) accounted for over half of last year's scoring. Five fullbacks return, along with goalie Jerry Capaci, but a massive chore awaits: patching up a defense that allowed 76 goals. Oh, well, there's always basketball.

Franklin Field Open House Athletic Director Andy Geiger will be holding open house in Franklin Field

tonight at 7:00. All students are invited to meet the school's coaches and team members. The football team will hold an intra-squad scrimmage - the last one before opening night- and the women's field hockey team will also be on display. The festivities should last till about 8:30, leaving freshmen plenty of time to catch their inaugural frat parties.